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FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2016

n 75 CENTS n LANCASTERONLINE.COM

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Former drug exec
takes the Fifth
n Nation & World, page A8

TM

ELECTION 2016

CITIZENS PACK A MANHEIM TOWNSHIP SCHOOL BOARD MEETING AFTER


A LEAKED RECORDING REVEALS THE BOARD ATTEMPTED TO AVOID PUBLIC SCRUTINY

Clinton,
Sanders
face off
in N.H.

RESIDENTS TELL
BOARD: RESIGN

Democratic debate is last


before Tuesdays primary

Speakers blast
members for
operating in
secrecy

NANCY BENAC
AND LISA LERER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

DURHAM, N.H. Fireworks flying


in their first one-on-one debate, Hillary Clinton accused Bernie Sanders on
Thursday of subjecting her to an artful
smear while Sanders suggested the former secretary of state was a captive of the
political establishment.
It was a markedly more contentious
tone than the two candidates set when
they last debated before the presidential
voting began in Iowa, and it signaled how
the race has tightened five days ahead
of the first-in-the-nation primary next
Tuesday.

SUSAN BALDRIGE
AND KARA NEWHOUSE
SBALDRIGE@LNPNEWS.COM
KNEWHOUSE@LNPNEWS.COM

Amid calls for their resignations, members of the


Manheim Township school
board tabled a plan to hire
a superintendent search
firm something an audio
recording revealed they had
deliberated about in secret.
Droves of angry township
residents packed a special
meeting Thursday night
and expressed outrage over
the boards repeated efforts
to operate out of the public
view.
More than 20 people
spoke out, calling the
boards latest actions reprehensible, deeply troubling and embarrassing.
The board had planned to
take swift action on hiring
either Ray and Associates
Inc. or Templeton Advantage.
An audio recording of a
Jan. 28 executive session,
anonymously delivered to
LNP, revealed board president Bill Murry had arranged private telephone
conversations with board
members last week in an
attempt to avoid public discussion on the selection of a
search firm.
The revelations, published Thursday by LNP,
followed a six-month,
$71,000 investigation into
an undisclosed personnel
issue and the resignation of
BOARD MEETING, page A4

DEBATE, page A5

Rivals try
to quell the
rise of Rubio
Senator pitching himself as
the candidate to unify party
CHRIS MEGERIAN
LOS ANGELES TIMES

SUZETTE WENGER | STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER PHOTOS

Top, Cari Kimberley speaks during the Manheim Township school board meeting on Thursday.
Above, residents, including students, pack the special meeting. The board tabled a plan to
hire a superintendent search firm after angry residents spoke out over a lack of transparency.

FIRMS FOR HIRE

TRANSCRIPTION

MORE ONLINE

School boards differ on


superintendent searches,
page A4

Read key quotes from


the audio recording at
bit.ly/1obiG0j

For the latest


updates, visit
LancasterOnline.com

WEATHER

Snow is expected
early next week

ALSO INSIDE

TKNAPP@LNPNEWS.COM

With the recent rain


and higher temperatures, Lancaster County
has finally rid itself of
most of that snow.
Just in time for more.
Although the county
might be waking up to
a dusting of snow this
morning, the bigger
question is whats coming next week.
Forecasters say theres
a good chance of another
measurable, even plowable, snow Monday into
Tuesday.

INDEX
BUSINESS.................A6
CLASSIFIEDS............ C8
COMICS..............B8, B9

But dont be too quick


to buy the hullabaloo
surrounding the coming
storm, Eric Horst, director of the Millersville
University Weather Information Center, said
Thursday.
Its way too early to
hype, he said.
Theres going to be
a clipper that comes
through, and that could
give us snow showers Monday night into
Tuesday, he said. Snow
showers arent what the
snow lovers are hoping

LOTTERY...................A2
NATION & WORLD... A8
OBITUARIES............ A11
OPINION.................. A16

SNOW, page A4

GOP, page A5

CRIME

Police probing ties


in recent robberies

Too early to tell, but forecasters say


county could get plowable amount
TOM KNAPP

MANCHESTER, N.H. With the New


Hampshire primary poised to cut down
the Republican field, candidates are
sharpening their knives in a desperate bid
for survival that on Thursday resembled
a group attack on Sen. Marco Rubio, the
freshman senator from Florida.
Ted Cruz, the Texas senator, has been
telling crowds that Rubio agrees with
Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton
about giving amnesty to immigrants in
the country illegally. Jeb Bush, the former Florida governor, gave Rubio a backhanded compliment, calling him a great
speaker who appears incapable of making a tough decision.
Then there is New Jersey Gov. Chris

8 area convenience stores have been struck


since Jan. 15; authorities seek publics help
JENNIFER TODD

Lancaster Township and


East Petersburg fall under
Police in multiple jurisdic- the jurisdiction of Manheim
Evidence of explosives found
tions say several in a string of Township police.
on Somali jet after blast
recent armed holdups of area
Officials from all three den World, page A13
convenience stores appear to partments said theyre workbe connected, but they dont ing together to solve the
Exercise your body and mind
believe all were committed by crimes.
to slow agings decline
the same person.
On Wednesday, Lancaster
page B1 Data File
Since Jan. 15, eight stores in police
Lt.on
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Fry atsaid
surn Together,
DigiCode
Created
11-11-99
16:12:42
Lancaster
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ACCOUNT
: 8275701 LANCASTER NEWSPAPERS, INC.
hit; all but one was a Turkey ous robberies
show the
SYMBOLOGY,
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L-L boys basketball tourney
ORDERED BY : RORY MACKISON
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starts on
Saturday night
Four of the robberies oc- holdups 612-331-6200
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P.O.
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:
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n Sports, page C1
curred 0%
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others in Lancaster Township,
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falls to Spring Grove
Hempfield Township and East
Were still looking at evHOLDUPS, page A4
Petersburg
Borough.
n Sports, page C1
SUNDAY NEWS
INTELLIGENCER JOURNAL
LANCASTER NE

PUZZLES............B6, B7
SPORTS......................C1
TOGETHER.................B1
TV............................... B5

JTODD@LNPNEWS.COM

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TODAY'S WEATHER
6

77490

PAGE C12
12000 FORECAST,
8

MAG 140 NBAR .0182

221st Year, No. 233

COPYRIGHT LNP MEDIA GROUP, INC.


ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
6

77490

21000

LOCALLY OWNED 6
SINCE 1794
77490

A2

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2016

2.5.16
TODAY IN HISTORY

PA. LOTTERY

QUOTE, UNQUOTE

THURSDAY, FEB. 4

It was a big jolt ... It kind of felt like


they slammed on the brakes a little
too soon, but they did a pretty good
job bringing the plane to a stop.
n Unidentified passenger on an Allegiant Air jet that
had two tires blow out as it landed Wednesday at Lehigh
Valley International Airport near Allentown. The plane
carried 158 people. There were no injuries.

Hip surgery

of Rhode Island, Roger


Williams, and his wife, Mary,
arrived in Boston from England.

n 1917: Congress passed, over


President Woodrow Wilsons
veto, an immigration act
severely curtailing the influx
of Asians.

n 1937: President Franklin D.

Riccardo Muti

Roosevelt proposed increasing


the number of Supreme
Court justices; critics accused
Roosevelt of attempting
to pack the court. (The
proposal failed in Congress.)

n 1971: Apollo 14 astronauts

n 1989: The Soviet Union

announced that all but a small


rear-guard contingent of its
troops had left Afghanistan.

n 2015: RadioShack filed

for Chapter 11 bankruptcy


protection and said it would
sell up to 2,400 stores.

ASSOCIATED PRESS

n A monkey decoration is on display at a shopping mall in Hong Kong on

Thursday. The Chinese will celebrate the Lunar New Year on Monday this year,
marking the start of the Year of Monkey on the Chinese zodiac.

ON LANCASTERONLINE

n How to: Make a rose pen out of duct tape for Valentines Day.

bit.ly/LNPAlwaysCraftingRose
n Watch: LNP sports reporters discuss the matchup between the Carolina
Panthers and the Denver Broncos. bit.ly/LNPSuperBowlReplay
n Audio: Manheim Township school board conspired to deliberate privately on
superintendent search. bit.ly/LNPMTAudio

(REALLY) NEED TO GET AWAY? BUY A BUNKER

CAMS PANTS

n Lots of athletes have style, but

ASSOCIATED PRESS PHOTOS

n It has no windows

but offers unrestricted


views of Armageddon.
Northern Ireland is selling its
Cold War-era nuclear bunker, an
underground installation that sellers
imagine could be transformed into a
tourist attraction or a blast-proof storage
facility. Journalists took a tour Thursday of the
strange real estate offering, The Associated Press reports. For 575,000
pounds (thats $850,000 to you), the successful buyer would acquire
the 46,363-square-foot grass-topped building discretely situated on
3.74 acres northwest of Belfast in Ballymena. Northern Irelands leaders
have decided they can survive without the bunker, which was built in
the 1980s to protect key government and legal figures from a Russian
nuclear strike. Its existence was a state secret until 2007. The facility
includes a conference room, a broadcasting suite and, shown here, blast
doors at its entrance and sleeping quarters.

CORRECTIONS
LNP wants to correct substantive errors of fact.
To request a correction or clarification, call the news desk at
291-8622 or email news@LNPnews.com

From Bollywood
to Concerto

L. Subramaniam and Kavita Krishnamurti Subramaniam

February 2021, 2016

Sat., 3:00 pm and 8:00 pm; Sun., 7:30 pm


Fulton Opera House

The international premire of a violin concerto and


symphonic and vocal poems by one of the worlds
greatest living Indian composers, L. Subramaniam.
Kavita Krishnamurti Subramaniam will debut her
husbands new vocal works.
Authentic Indian Food Tasting tickets available.

Tickets: (717) 397-7425


www.LancasterSymphony.org
Lancaster Symphony Orchestra
STEPHEN GUNZENHAUSER~MUSIC DIRECTOR

Day
Pick 2: 09
Pick 3: 308
Pick 4: 6247
Pick 5: 72728
Treasure Hunt: 101119
2527

The Gossip Corner

YEAR OF THE MONKEY

n Feb. 5, 1631: The co-founder

Alan Shepard and Edgar


Mitchell stepped onto the
surface of the moon in the
first of two lunar excursions
on that trip.

Night
Pick 2: 47
Pick 3: 718
Pick 4: 0654
Pick 5: 83366
Cash 5: 0313283842
Match 6: 02041521
2230
Cash4Life: 081223
4054
Cash Ball: 01

could they rock the Cam pants? Super


Bowl 50 is just days away and already
has a breakout star: the $849 Versace
skinny pants of Carolina Panthers
quarterback Cam Newton.
Newton was snapped Sunday
in the zebra stripe, gold swirl
rocker pants as he boarded
a plane to California,
immediately setting
off a frenzy on social
media and among TV
talking heads.
Designer and football
fan Tommy Hilfiger
gave Newton a
thumbs up for his
fashion choice. I
think hes very cool,
Hilfiger said, and
I think hes not
only an iconic
athlete but hes
a fashion
icon as
well.
People
look up
to him.

Conductor Riccardo
Mutis official website
says the conductor has
undergone hip surgery
in Italy following an accident. The website said
Wednesday that as a result the music director of
the Chicago Symphony
Orchestra cannot conduct concerts planned
this month in Chicago. It
said the accident was not
serious, but provided no
details. The news agency
ANSA reported that Muti
underwent the surgery in
the Italian city of Ravenna after a fall at home.
Muti, 74, had a pacemaker implanted five years
ago after fainting during rehearsal in Chicago.
Muti has just completed
an Asian tour with stops
in Taiwan, Japan, China
and South Korea.

Seeks injunction

Kate del Castillo

Actress Kate del Castillo has filed a petition


seeking an injunction
against any arrest related to Mexicos investigation of her relationship
with detained drug lord

Joaquin El Chapo
Guzman, a court official
confirmed Wednesday.
Del Castillo arranged
a meeting between the
drug boss and actor
Sean Penn in October.
Guzman was arrested in
a raid in January. Later
that month, Mexicos attorney general said officials were investigating
possible money laundering involving Guzman
and the actress tequila
business.

Haggard ailing

Merle Haggard

Country legend Merle


Haggard has canceled
his shows in February due to health issues
caused by pneumonia in
both lungs. A statement
released by his publicist
said the singer-songwriter was still feeling
weak from his recent
struggle with the illness
and has decided to seek
further treatment. The
statement said Haggard
is hopeful he will be
back on the road later
in the spring. Haggard
had shows scheduled
in California and Nevada in February. The
78-year-old singer of hits
like Okie From Muskogee, Mama Tried and
Workin Man Blues
had a battle with lung
cancer in 2008. He still
keeps up an ambitious
touring schedule.
The Associated Press

BIRTHDAYS

n Baseball Hall-of-Famer Hank

Aaron is 82. Football Hall-of-Famer


Roger Staubach is 74. Rock singer
Al Kooper is 72. Actress Charlotte
Rampling is 70. Racing Hall-ofFamer Darrell Waltrip is 69. Actress
Barbara Hershey is 68. Actor
Christopher Guest is 68. Actor Tom
Wilkinson is 68. Actress Jennifer
Jason Leigh is 54. Actress Laura
Linney is 52. Singer Bobby Brown is
47. Country singer Sara Evans is 45.

n An incorrect movie time was listed on page 4 of


Thursdays Entertainment Lancaster. At the MoviETown theater, The Boy will run at 5 p.m. Friday,
Saturday and Sunday.

Hank Aaron, 82

Time to
prepare for
spring at
the beach!
breast
augmentation
breast lift
breast
reduction

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With this ad. Patient financing available.
Most credit cards accepted.
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FOR TICKETS & MORE INFORMATION, VISIT
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A MEMBER OF THE PENNSYLVANIA STATE SYSTEM OF HIGHER EDUCATION.

LOCAL

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2016

EMERGENCY

FIRE DAMAGES BUILDING

A3

PARKING

Council to
decide on
expansion

Final decision on $3.4M East King


garage project comes Tuesday
DAN NEPHIN

DNEPHIN@LNPNEWS.COM

BLAINE T. SHAHAN | STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER PHOTOS

Firefighters respond to the scene of a two-alarm fire at 29 E. King St. in Lancaster on Wednesday evening.

A cleaning crew inside the downtown structure was unaware it was aflame
JENNIFER TODD

JTODD@LNPNEWS.COM

A fire in the basement


of a downtown Lancaster building caused about
$350,000 in damage and
cleanup costs, fire officials said.
No one was injured in
the 29 E. King St. fire,
which was reported at
7:01 p.m. after an automatic fire alarm was activated.
The building, which
houses The Art Store on

the first level, stretches from King to Grant


streets and is adjacent to
the old part of the Lancaster County Courthouse.
Firefighters entered
the four-story structure
and discovered significant smoke on the top
floor. The call was upgraded to a second alarm,
bringing in off-duty city
fire crews who worked
for nearly four hours.
FIRE, page A14

City Council faces a


tough decision Tuesday when it considers
a proposed garage expansion, one opposed
by nearby residents but
sought by the business
community.
Lancaster
Parking
Authority
explained
Monday why the $3.4
million East King
Street Garage extension is needed. Opponents
repeated
concerns theyve presented to other city
bodies involved in the
approval process.
Existing parking in
the area is maxed out,
the authoritys executive director, Larry Cohen, told council. And
the East King garage

Employer faces
OSHA penalty
Fire damaged the building that houses The Art Store.

PRESERVATION

COURT

Trust releases its Man is convicted


Most Threatened of assaulting teen
Lancaster man repeatedly
list of properties Former
abused girl, 13, starting in 2003
2 new sites flagged this year by group
CPRATT@LNPNEWS.COM

The Historic Preservation Trust of Lancaster


County this week released its 2016 list of the
10 Most Threatened
Historic Properties.
Many sites identified this year were also
flagged by the group in
2015, but the updated list
now includes Stehli Silk
Mill in Manheim Township, a former silk manufacturing site that dates
back to 1897.
Also on the new list is
the 19th century farmhouse property located
at 151 Pitney Road in
East Lampeter Township. The site, which includes a tobacco barn,
was originally developed

by a descendant of Benjamin Landis, one of the


original settlers of Lancaster County, according
to the trust.
By flagging the most
threatened properties,
the trust hopes to spur
residents into getting
involved in saving these
endangered structures.
The threatened properties may ignite a desire
to help with this ongoing challenge. These
sites are unique to our
communities and deserve our stewardship, a
statement from the trust
said.
Board member of the
trust, Dick Lundgren
said Wednesday it will
take cooperation between nonprofits, busi-

DAN NEPHIN

Andrew
Todd
Frantz
was found
guilty of
sexual
assault.

DNEPHIN@LNPNEWS.COM

A former Lancaster
city man has been convicted of sexually assaulting a teenage girl
repeatedly for more
than two years starting
a dozen years ago.
A county jury deliberated about an hour
Wednesday
before
returning guilty verdicts on all charges
brought to trial against
Andrew Todd Frantz,
33, recently of Stehm-

an Road, Conestoga
Township.
The victim told police
in January 2015 that
Frantz began abusing
her in October 2003,
when she was about
13, according to court
records and the LanGUILTY, page A14

Landscaping company to review


safety procedures after accidents
The U.S. Occupational Safety and Health
Administration is proposing fines of $42,000
on a Lancaster landscaper cited for eight
safety and health violaENVIRONMENT

Club accepting
grant applications
STAFF

March 1 is the deadline for local groups


to apply for green
project grants being
offered by the Sierra
Club-Lancaster Group.
Lancaster
County
organizations
want-

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Mon-Sat 9:30am-5:00pm Free Parking on Shippen Street

Newsroom: Tips, stories and


announcements, 291-8622,
news@LNPnews.com
Advertising: 291-8800,
advertising@LNPnews.com
Classifieds: 291-8711,
class@LNPnews.com

ONLINE

Home delivery &


subscriptions: 291-8611,
circulation@LNPnews.com
E-Editions free to 7-day subscribers.
Please allow 3-5 business days to
discontinue for vacation.

GREEN, page A14

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Engagements, weddings
& anniversaries: 291-4957,
celebrations@LNPnews.com,
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THREATENED, page A14

CONTACT

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CITY COUNCIL, page A14

BUSINESS

STAFF

CHRISTOPHER
PRATT

is already oversold, he
said.
The expansion would
be built on a lot owned
by the authority, which
considered other locations.
Kelly Dantinne, who
along with her husband
and investors renovated and are about to
open the long-vacant
Excelsior Hall on East
King Street, said shes
booking
weddings,
corporate events and
the like for 100 to 500
people.
I will need a lot of
parking, she said.
Kevin Molloy, executive director of
the Lancaster County
Convention
Center
Authority, said lodging
and parking have been

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A4

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2016

FROM PAGE A1

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

Board meeting
Continued from A1

Superintendent
John
Nodecker
only
18
months into his contract.
During the investigation, the board met in
executive session at least
11 times and gave little
or no explanation to the
public about why it was
meeting.
If you are going to hire
a search firm, it should
be in the light of day, not
in secret meetings and
private phone calls. I find
this deeply, deeply troubling, one resident said
Thursday night.
Several
residents
praised the anonymous
person who provided the
audio recording and at
one point cheered LNPs
reporting on the issue.
The school board was
warned last month by
Lancaster County District Attorney Craig
Stedman about apparent violations of the
Sunshine Act, which requires transparency in
government. A spokesman for his office said
Thursday the latest actions were being investigated.

Accountability
We deserve more. We
do not want behind-thescenes phone calls. We do
not want snide, flip answers, Manheim Township resident Dianne
Mousley said Thursday.
We want accountability
from the people who we
elected to listen to us and
heed our voices. And you

should all be ashamed of


yourselves.
Said Dan Holler, resident and former Manheim Township employee: There are three
things that need to be
done tonight: One, we
need to cancel whatever
contract is lined up for
this firm.
Two, Mr. Murry, you
need to resign, he said
to thunderous applause
from the room.
The third thing that
needs to happen is we
need a new solicitor, one
that wont give you such
awful advice.
District Solicitor Robert Frankhouser said he
had no time to make a
comment after the meeting.
Murry said after the
meeting that he had not
given much consideration to residents calls
for his resignation.
Weve
already
changed the way we are
doing things, and Im not
going to get into a debate
about it, Murry said.

Apologies
During
Thursdays
meeting, several board
members apologized for
their actions.
I listened to all the
comments that were
made, and I cant disagree with anything.
This is embarrassing.
I agree with that, and I
apologize, Todd Heckman said.
He suggested the district might be able to
form its own community

SUZETTE WENGER | STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER PHOTOS

Residents applaud during the Manheim Township school board meeting on Thursday.

search team. Several residents had questioned


the need for an outside
firm to do the job.
Board member Stephen Grosh was not at
the Jan. 28 executive
session.
I must say that I listened tonight to what
you all have to say, and
Im not going to vote for
either search firm, he
said. I think the prudent
thing to do would be to
table it.
Board member Grace
Strittmatter also apologized for embarrassing
Manheim Township.
The board voted unanimously to table the the
hiring of a search firm.
Board member Mark Anderson suggested inviting the two search firms

to present to the public


before picking one.
In public comments at
the end of the meeting,
resident Chris Moritzen
asked the cost of the two
firms.
Murry
responded,
Those will be presented
at that time, which elicited groans from the audience.
Moritzen asked why
it wasnt being shared,
and Heckman said
the firms would cost
$17,000 and $15,000.
Several students got a
real-life lesson in civics
by attending the meeting
and speaking out.
I feel pretty strongly
about this, senior Olivia
Salembier said. Its unacceptable the way this
board has been bend-

ing the laws. If you cant


come and speak out
about your local government, then you no longer

have a democracy.
Board members Nate
Geesey and Lynn Miller
were not in attendance.

EDUCATION

School boards differ


on search firms
KARA NEWHOUSE

KNEWHOUSE@LNPNEWS.COM

Manheim Township
is one of three Lancaster County school
districts to lose its top
leader this year, but
school boards vary on
whether they use an
outside firm to fill such
vacancies. Heres a rundown of local superintendent searches in
recent years.

Manheim
Township

Year: 2014
Search firm: Pennsylvania School Boards
Association
Cost: $13,750
Selected: John Nodecker
Year: 2008
Search firm: Ray and
Associates Inc.
Cost: $17,000
Selected: Gene Freeman

Columbia

Year: 2016
Search firm: None.
The district also didnt
use a search firm when
it hired Carol Powell in
2014.
Cost: $0
Selected: Not completed.

Hempfield

Year: 2015
Search firm: None,
but the board hired a
strategic planning consultant Geoff Davis
of Conversations, Inc.
to help identify hiring criteria.
Cost: $500
Selected: Chris Adams

Lancaster

Year: 2003
Search firm: Ray and
Associates Inc.
Cost: $15,000
Selected: Kevin Singer

Year: 2015
Search firm: Ray and
Associates finished the
search after the board
severed a contract with
ProAct Search, which
was facing a national
scandal with its CEO.
Cost: $10,725 for ProAct and $15,000 for Ray
and Associates.
Selected: Damaris Rau

Cocalico

Solanco

Year: 2016
Search firm: None.
Cost: $0
Selected: Ella Musser

Year: 2014
Search firm: None.
Cost: $0
Selected: Brian Bliss

A crowd listens during Thursdays school board meeting.

Holdups: Are crimes connected?


Continued from A1

erything as a whole and


seeing if anything fits
with any of the other
robberies, he said. I
think at this point we can
say there are some that
dont match up (with any
of the crimes).
Fry said a robbery Jan.
29 at a Turkey Hill on
East Chestnut Street,
which resulted in the arrest of 23-year-old Joshua M. Ortiz, does not appear to be related to any
of the other incidents.
The robbery of a McDonalds at 575 N. Franklin St. on Jan. 30 also
is not tied to the other
crimes, he said.

Cigarettes and
Turkey Hills
Asked whether police
plan to release surveillance images to the public, Fry replied, Were
keeping it internal at this
point because we feel
theres a good chance we
might be able to ID some
people.
Manheim Township
police Chief Neil Harkins also noted possible
ties in two of his departments cases.
He said the robbery of
a Turkey Hill early Monday on New Holland Avenue and a holdup Monday evening at the Turkey

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Hill in East Petersburg


were very similar.
In both robberies, a
man asked for cartons
of cigarettes. When the
clerk placed the cartons
on the counter, the man
displayed a handgun and
fled with the cigarettes,
Harkins said.
Manheim Township
police released surveillance images of the man
to the media Tuesday in
the East Petersburg robbery.
Asked why a person
might be seeking cigarettes rather than money, Harkins said police
discussed that Tuesday.
Thats something I
cant answer; I just dont
know at this point, he
said. In the past weve
had stolen cigarettes
turn up for sale at corner stores, but its just
something I cant say for
sure.
Neither Fry nor Harkins could say why Turkey Hill stores are being
targeted, but both said
authorities are working
closely with The Kroger

THE ROBBERIES
n Feb. 1: Turkey Hill, 5959

Main St., East Petersburg


n Feb. 1: Turkey Hill,
806 New Holland Ave.,
Manheim Township
n Jan. 29: Turkey Hill, 410
E. Chestnut St., Lancaster
city
n Jan. 25: Turkey Hill, 1349
Millersville Pike, Lancaster
Township
n Jan. 21: Sunoco, 2141
Marietta Ave., Rohrerstown,
East Hempfield Township
n Jan. 21: Turkey Hill, 870
Manor St., Lancaster city
n Jan. 20: Turkey Hill, 410
E. Chestnut St., Lancaster
city
n Jan. 15: Turkey Hill, 520
Hershey Ave. Lancaster city

Co., which operates Turkey Hill Minit Markets.


Anyone with information about any of the incidents is asked to contact Lancaster city police
at 735-3300, Manheim
Township police at 5696401 or East Hempfield
Township police at 8983103.

Snow: Coming
Continued from A1

for.
The clipper could
still develop into a
noreaster, he said.
What starts off as
an ordinary clipper,
no big deal, winds up
being a noreaster that
drops a foot of snow
in Boston, he said.
Thats what people
are hyping and hoping
for.
But the likelihood of
that happening here,
he added, is, at best, a
1-in-3 chance.
Its far too early
to predict snowfall,
Horst said, although
he added odds are
good it will be a plowable amount.
Meanwhile, for the
weekend, we can expect seasonably cool,
mainly dry condi-

tions, Horst said. By


Monday, a shot of arctic
air will shift daily high
temperatures down by
about 10 degrees.
Accuweather meteorologist Alex Sosnowski
said highs this weekend
will hover in the 40s.
The amount of snow
that hits southcentral
Pennsylvania will depend on how quickly
that storm strengthens
before taking full aim at
New England, he said.
The latter part of next
week will be colder, he
said, with highs within a
few degrees of freezing.
Highs during the second week of February
will average in the upper 30s. Overnight lows
will range in the mid-20s
through the weekend,
dropping into the upper
teens later next week.

Saturday:

Faith &
Values

The social and ethical fabric of community

FROM PAGE A1

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

Debate
Continued from A1

The two argued over


ideas, over tactics and
over who has the liberal
credentials to deliver on
an agenda of better access to health care, more
affordable college and
more.
It was Clinton who
went on the offensive,
saying he could never
achieve his proposals.
Then she took after the
Vermont senator for his
efforts to cast her as beholden to Wall Street
interests because of the
campaign donations and
speaking fees shes accepted from the financial
sector.
Its time to end the very
artful smear that you and
your campaign have been
carrying out, she said.
Sanders, for his part,
suggested her loyalties

GOP
Continued from A1

Christie, who seemed to


be competing for a prize
in aggressiveness, calling Rubio the boy in the
bubble who is sheltered
from tough questions
and portraying him as
too callow to serve as
president.
Rubios side took some
shots of their own. In response to Cruzs charges
about amnesty, the campaign said in a statement:
Cruz is lying. Marco opposes amnesty.
The intensity of the
rhetoric is a sign of how
much is riding on New
Hampshire, the perception that Rubio is on
the rise and the degree
to which his rivals have
a common interest in
stopping him.

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2016

A5

were colored by a reliance


on big corporate donors.
Secretary
Clinton
does represent the establishment, he said. I
represent I hope ordinary Americans.
Clinton may say the
right things, he suggested, but one of the things
we should do is not only
talk the talk but walk the
walk.
On policy matters,
Clinton called Sanders proposals just not
achievable, while Sanders countered that Clinton was willing to settle
for less than Americans
deserve.
I do not accept the
belief that the United
States of America cant
do that, Sanders said
of his plan for universal
health care and of his efforts to take on the ripoffs of the pharmaceutical industry.
Clinton insisted they
both wanted the same

thing; the disagreement


is where do we start from
and where do we end up.
The race for the Democratic nomination, once
seen as a sure thing for
Clinton, intensified this
week after Sanders held
the former secretary of
state to a whisper-thin
margin of victory in Iowas
leadoff caucuses. The tone
of their back-and-forth
has become increasingly
sharp, and the candidates
agreed to add four more
debates to the primary
season schedule, including Thursdays faceoff in
Durham.
The debate is the last
before Tuesdays firstin-the-nation
New
Hampshire primary, and
Sanders holds a big lead
in polls in the state.
In fresh evidence of the
tightening race, Clinton
reported that her campaign had raised $15 million in January $5 million less than Sanders

and the first time shes


been outraised by her
opponent. Her finance
director called the numbers a very loud wakeup call in a fundraising
email to supporters.
Heading into the debate, Sanders was eager
to lower expectations for
his finish in New Hampshire, casting himself as
an underdog against the
most powerful political organization in the
country.
Clinton, for her part,
signaled her determination to at least narrow the
gap before Tuesdays vote
in the state where she defeated Barack Obama in
2008 before ultimately
losing the nomination to
him. Her prospects are
much stronger in primaries and caucuses after
New Hampshire, as the
race moves on to states
with more diverse electorates that are to her advantage.

The two campaigns


have even skirmished
this week over why Sanders is doing so well in New
Hampshire polls. His
campaign accused Clintons of insulting New
Hampshire voters by suggesting they only support
the Vermont senator because hes from a neighboring state. That was
after Clintons campaign
manager referred to New
Hampshire as Sanders
backyard.
Clintons
campaign
also criticized Sanders
camp for what it said
were misleading ads that
suggest the senator received the endorsement
of two newspapers that
have not backed his bid
for the White House.
Sanders countered that
the ads didnt say hed
been endorsed but merely passed along nice
words the newspapers
had written about him.
The Durham debate

will be the first faceoff


for Clinton and Sanders
since former Maryland
Gov. Martin OMalley
dropped out of the race
after a poor showing in
Iowa.
Clintons
razor-thin
win in Iowa was the latest twist in an election
campaign that, until recently, had been dominated by the crowded
and cacophonous field of
Republicans, who spread
out across New Hampshire this week.
Donald Trump, who
finished second in Iowa,
stepped up the pace of
his campaign and acknowledged he should
have had a stronger
ground operation in
Iowa. Jeb Bush, his campaign lagging, brought
in his mom, former first
lady Barbara Bush, who
praised him as decent
and honest and everything we need in a president.

A strong showing by Rubio here could make him


the main rival to Cruz,
who finished first in the
Iowa caucuses, and cripple efforts by Bush and
Christie to consolidate establishment support.
By contrast, Donald
Trump, still the leader
in New Hampshire polls,
has largely ignored Rubio. So, too, has Ohio
Gov. John Kasich, who
held his fire Thursday,
even though hes staked
his candidacy on New
Hampshire. He demurred when given an
opportunity to draw
sharper contrasts with
Rubio.
This is the time now
to be positive, he said.
Rubio, who finished
third in the Iowa caucuses, is pitching himself to
Republican voters as the
only candidate who can

unify the party and deliver them a victory in Novembers general election. Clinton is scared of
him, he told a Manchester crowd on Thursday.
I give the party the
best chance to win, Rubio said, eschewing criticism of his opponents
in favor of broadsides
against President Barack
Obama.
For his supporters, the
attacks from other candidates are just proof
that theyre backing the
right one.
Everyone else is fighting among themselves,
said Debora Hallahan, 60,
a nurse from Manchester who went to see the
senator speak on Thursday. Marco Rubio goes
straight to the issues.
An average of New
Hampshire polls by the
political website Real

Clear Politics shows Rubio in second place, 20


points behind Trump.
Nipping at Rubios heels
is Cruz, followed by Kasich, Bush and Christie,
in that order. Polls here
can shift rapidly in the
closing days of the campaign, however, particularly with multiple candidates in the field.
Poor outcomes in the
Iowa caucuses already
have ended the bids of
three GOP candidates
former Arkansas Gov.
Mike Huckabee, former
Pennsylvania Sen. Rick
Santorum and Kentucky
Sen. Rand Paul.
That still leaves nine
Republican candidates,
but New Hampshire
likely will eliminate several of them.
Bush said hes prepared to continue his
campaign in South Caro-

lina, but hes also counting on New Hampshire


to reset the primary
battle and resuscitate his
flagging candidacy.
Christie is more publicly counting on New
Hampshire, telling The
Washington Post that
he would have to reconsider his campaign if he
doesnt beat his fellow
governors, Kasich and
Bush, in the state.
Kasich has held nearly
100 town halls in New
Hampshire in the hopes
that his moderate brand
of Republican politics
will connect with voters
here.
Cruz doesnt have as
much riding on the state
as any of the three governors, but he has his own
reasons for targeting Rubio.
If he lets Marco get
his legs underneath him,

and becomes someone


who mainstream conservatives can rally around,
then this game is over financially, said Rick Wilson, a Republican strategist who has worked with
a pro-Rubio super PAC.
Rubios momentum is
also a concern for Jeff
Kuhner, a conservative talk show host from
Boston who backs Cruz
and introduced the Texas senator at a Nashua
event on Wednesday.
If Cruz and Trump
keep fighting each other,
and the governors keep
fighting over the same
slice of the moderate
electorate, it creates an
opportunity for the Florida senator, Kuhner said.
With everyone bleeding each other, he said,
Rubio and the establishment come up the
middle.

A6

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2016

Business
Dividends

CONSTRUCTION

MT project starts today


New Worthington building to include apartments, commercial tenants
TIM MEKEEL

TMEKEEL@LNPNEWS.COM

Construction will begin today on the fifth,


final and largest commercial building in the
Worthington mixed-use
development.
The $7.9 million structure will add 37 luxuryloft apartments and
19,000 square feet of
commercial space to
the Manheim Township
community at Oregon
Pike and Royer Drive.
Demand is high for
upscale residential apartments, and the same is
true, in this good location, for commercial
space, said Greg Hill, of
Worthington developer
Keystone Custom Homes.
The new buildings
commercial tenants will
be Eye Doctors of Lancaster, SOLA Salons and
Infinity Health Advisors,
according to Hill, vice
president of commercial
real estate.
At 70,000 square
feet, the three-story,
L-shaped building is
scheduled to be completed in October. It will
be the southernmost

WORTHINGTON
n 65 apartments
n 259 homes
n 44,000 square feet of
commercial space

commercial building in
the development.
The general contractor
for the project is Speedwell Construction. Its
architects are Cornerstone Design-Architects
and Minno & Wasko. Financing came from M&T
Bank.
The new building will
bring Worthingtons total commercial space to
44,000 square feet all
leased or sold and its
total number of apartments to 65.
Worthington also is
developing 259 singlefamily duplex and townhouse homes, located
on both sides of Oregon
Pike, near Westminster
Presbyterian Church. To
date, 98 have been built
and sold.
Plans for Worthington
were unveiled in 2005,
on a site created by Keystones purchase of three

Farm markets
NEW HOLLAND CATTLE
(USDA-PDA) NEW HOLLAND
SALES STABLES - NEW
HOLLAND, PA, CATTLE AND
CALF AUCTION REPORT FOR
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 04, 2016
CATTLE: THIS WEEK: 767, LAST
WEEK: 695, LAST YEAR: 862.
CALVES: THIS WEEK: 611, LAST
WEEK: 774, LAST YEAR: 571.
Compared to last week, slaughter steers sold mostly steady to
1.00 higher. High dressing Lean
Steers are steers sold primarily
to the ethnic market and most
are extremely lean. Today these
steers sold mostly steady.
Slaughter Holstein steers traded
mostly 1.00-2.00 higher on
better quality supplies and good
demand. Slaughter heifers sold
steady to 2.00 higher compared
to a light test last week.
Slaughter cows sold mostly
4.00-5.00 higher. Demand
was very good. Slaughter bulls
traded mostly steady to 1.00
lower. Demand was moderate.
Cattle supplies included 196
steers; 75 heifers; 4625 cows; 22
bulls; and 12 feeder calves. All
prices per cwt.
SLAUGHTER STEERS: High
Choice and Prime 3-41200-1600
lbs 129.50-136.00. Choice 2-3
1200-1600 lbs 125.50-131.00.
Select 1-2 1100-1700 lbs 120.00127.50. High Dressing Lean Steers
125.00-147.00.
SLAUGHTER HOLSTEINS: High
Choice and Prime 3-4 1300-1700
lbs 115.00-126.00. Choice 2-3
1300-1700 lbs 108.00-121.00.
Select 1-2 1300-1700 lbs
102.50-115.00.
SLAUGHTER HEIFERS: High
Choice and Prime 3-4 1200-1600
lbs 125.00-130.00. Choice 2-3
1200-1600 lbs 121.00-126.00.
Select 1-2 1200-1600 lbs
117.00-123.00.
SLAUGHTER COWS: Premium
White 65-75 Percent Lean,
Avg. Dressing 82.00-90.00,
High Dressing 91.00-96.00,
Low Dressing 71.00-84.00.
Breakers 75-80 Percent Lean,
Avg. Dressing 73.50-85.50,
High Dressing 83.00-93.00,
Low Dressing 67.00-79.50.
Boners 80-85 Percent Lean,
Avg. Dressing 70.50-83.50,
High Dressing 81.50-90.00, Low
Dressing 67.00-77.50. Lean 8890 Percent Lean, Avg. Dressing
68.00-75.50, High Dressing

74.50-82.00, Low Dressing


60.00-69.50.
SLAUGHTER BULLS: 1250-2100
lbs Avg Dress 98.00-105.00;
High Dress 114.00-119.00; Low
Dress 94.00-98.00; Very Low
Dress 86.00-90.00.
RETURN TO FARM HOLSTEIN
CALVES: Compared to last week,
Holstein bull calves sold mostly
steady to 10.00 higher. Holstein
heifer calves sold 20.00-30.00
higher. Demand was moderate.
Ag Market News LLC under
the USDA-QSA-LMAR program
graded 473 head for Thursdays
sale. All calves are sold by the
cwt.
GRADED HOLSTEIN BULL
CALVES: Number 1 94-128 lbs
172.00-185.00. Number 2 120-128
lbs 162.00; 98-118 lbs 170.00180.00; 80-96 lbs 187.00-212.00.
Number 3 90-130 lbs 160.00177.00; 72-80 lbs 177.00-190.00.
Utility 60-110 lbs 130.00-157.00.
HOLSTEIN HEIFER CALVES:
Number 1 85-110 lbs 240.00300.00; few 350.00-360.00.
Number 2 80-130 lbs 180.00230.00. Utility/Non-tubing
60-95 lbs 40.00-100.00.
Price and grade information is
reported by QSA-USDA Market
News Service. While market
reports reflect the majority of
Livestock sold at each sale, there
are instances where animals do
not fit reporting categories and
are not included in this report.

WEEKLY CATTLE
(USDA-PDA) NEW HOLLAND,
PA, LANCASTER WEEKLY
CATTLE SUMMARY FOR WEEK
ENDING FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5,
2016
CATTLE: THIS WEEK: 2449, LAST
WEEK: 1622, LAST YEAR: 2084.
CALVES: THIS WEEK: 1887, LAST
WEEK: 1769, LAST YEAR: 1707.
This week in Lancaster County,
there is still evidence of last
weeks snowfall even with milder
temperatures and rain across
the county. Slaughter steers
were quoted steady to 3.00
higher for the week. Slaughter
Holstein steers were 1.00-4.00
higher for the week. Slaughter
heifers were steady to 3.00
higher for the week. Slaughter
cows were steady to 2.00 higher
Monday and Tuesday. Thursday

Demand
is high for
upscale
residential
apartments,
and the same
is true, in
this good
location, for
commercial
space.
Greg Hill, Keystone
Custom Homes

tracts of farmland. Manheim Townships commissioners


approved
the final plans in 2008;
construction began that
same year.
Worthington is a mixedthey were 4.00-5.00 higher as
a new packer came in to buy
Slaughter cows. Slaughter bulls
were mostly steady for the week.
Cattle futures started this week
down again and rebounded
every day to end up on Thursday.
February Live cattle on Thursday
were at 137.07/cwt or 1.65/cwt
higher than the previous week.
April cattle saw the same thing
at 135.65/cwt on Thursday or
1.13/cwt higher than the previous
week. June futures closed at
124.80/cwt or .83/cwt higher
than the previous Thursday. Box
beef prices rebounded slightly
this week with Choice cutouts
at 223.03/cwt or 2.91/cwt higher
than the previous Thursday.
There are no Feeder Cattle sales
to report this week. Holstein calf
prices slowed the downward
trend this week with Holstein
bull calves steady to 100.00
higher for the week. Holstein
heifers were 20.00-30.00 higher.
Dairy replacement fresh cows
sold mostly steady to 100.00
lower. Replacement springing
cows sold mostly. Replacement
bred and open heifers sold
mostly steady to firm on a light
test compared to a light test
last week. Not enough bulls last
week to compare to but a firm
undertone was noted on better
quality supplies. Supply was
light and demand was moderate
for all classes. All cattle are sold
per cwt with exception of dairy
replacement cattle which are
sold by the head.
SLAUGHTER STEERS: High
Choice and Prime 3-4 1200-1600
lbs few 129.50-132.00. Choice
2-3 1200-1600 lbs 128.00-131.00.
Select 1-2 1100-1700 lbs 122.00127.50. High Dressing Lean Steers
125.00-133.00, individual 139.50.
SLAUGHTER HOLSTEINS: High
Choice and Prime 3-4 1300-1700
lbs 120.00-126.00. Choice 2-3
1300-1700 lbs 113.00-120.00.
Select 1-2 1300-1700 lbs
105.00-113.00.
SLAUGHTER HEIFERS: High
Choice and Prime 3-4 1200-1600
lbs 125.00-128.00. Choice 2-3
1200-1600 lbs 122.00-126.00.
Select 1-2 1200-1600 lbs
122.00-123.00.
SLAUGHTER COWS: Premium
White 65-75 Percent Lean,
Avg. Dressing 85.00-90.00,
High Dressing 91.00-96.00,
Low Dressing 77.00-84.00.
Breakers 75-80 Percent Lean,
Avg. Dressing 80.00-85.50,
High Dressing 86.00-93.00,
Low Dressing 75.00-79.50.
Boners 80-85 Percent Lean, Avg.

use/planned residential development. As


Hill explained, the
zoning
designation
means the development provides places
to live, work and play,
all within walking distance of each other.
Keystone has considerable experience
with the concept.
In Lancaster County, Keystone also is developing mixed-use/
planned residential
developments in East
Donegal
Township
(Castleton) and East
Lampeter Township
(Devon Creek). Its
proposing that kind of
development in Strasburg Township (Hartman Bridge).
L a n c a st e r- b a s e d
Keystone was founded in 1990 by Jeff
Rutt. It has 44 communities in Adams,
Berks, Chester, Dauphin, Lancaster, Lebanon, Montgomery
and York counties
in Pennsylvania and
Cecil, Harford and
Frederick counties in
Maryland.
Dressing 78.00-83.50, High
Dressing 84.00-90.00, Low
Dressing 70.00-77.50. Lean
88-90 Percent Lean, Avg.
Dressing 70.00-75.50, High
Dressing 76.00-82.00, Low
Dressing 62.00-69.50.
SLAUGHTER BULLS: Yield
Grade 1 850-2285 lbs
Average Dress 102.00-112.00,
High Dress 117.00-126.00,
Very High Dress 127.00136.00, few 141.00-147.00,
Low Dress 91.00-101.00, Very
Low Dress 82.00-90.00.
FEEDER CATTLE:
RETURN TO FARM HOLSTEIN
CALVES:
MONDAY - HOLSTEIN BULL
CALVES: Number 1 80-105
lbs 200.00-230.00. Number
2 60-125 lbs 175.00-205.00.
Number 3 70-110 lbs 135.00160.00. Utility 75-100 lbs
100.00-125.00.
TUESDAY - GRADED
HOLSTEIN BULL CALVES:
Number 1 112-121 lbs 173.00180.00; 95-103 lbs 190.00193.00. Number 2 102-114
lbs 170.00-178.00; 83-95 lbs
185.00-188.00. Number 3
93-109 lbs 138.00-145.00; 7384 lbs 165.00-168.00. Utility
93-105 lbs 126.00-137.00;
73-82 lbs 160.00-170.00; 64
lbs 125.00. Graded Holstein
Heifers: Number 1 104-113 lbs
300.00-325.00; 85-93 lbs
355.00-360.00. Number 2
93-103 lbs 320.00-325.00;
75-82 lbs 250.00-305.00.
Utility/Non-tubing 83-108 lbs
100.00-105.00; 75 lbs 60.00.
THURSDAY - GRADED
HOLSTEIN BULL CALVES:
Number 1 94-128 lbs 172.00185.00. Number 2 120-128 lbs
162.00; 98-118 lbs 170.00180.00; 80-96 lbs 187.00212.00. Number 3 90-130
lbs 160.00-177.00; 72-80 lbs
177.00-190.00. Utility 60-110
lbs 130.00-157.00. Holstein
Heifer Calves: Number 1
85-110 lbs 240.00-300.00;
few 350.00-360.00. Number
2 80-130 lbs 180.00-230.00.
Utility/Non-tubing 60-95 lbs
40.00-100.00.
Price and grade information
is reported by QSA-USDA
Market News Service. While
market reports reflect the
majority of Livestock sold at
each sale, there are instances
where animals do not fit
reporting categories and are
not included in this report.

THURSDAY DIVIDENDS DECLARED




Period Rate
IRREGULAR
BP PLC x.....................................................Q
Sabine Royalty Tr......................................M
ECA Marcellus Tr 1.....................................Q
y- Pay date unannounced.
z- Approx. amount per ADR or ADS.
STOCK
Biostar Pharma Inc.................................... x
x- 1 for 7 reverse split, effective 02-05
ION Geophysical........................................ x
x- 1 for 15 reverse split, effective 02-04
INCREASED
Avalonbay Communit................................Q
Brookfield Renewable...............................Q
CEB Inc.......................................................Q
CSG Systems Intl........................................Q
Dunkin Brands...........................................Q
Eversource Energy.....................................Q
Intercontinental Exc...................................Q
Nelnet Inc..................................................Q
Orbital ATK Inc...........................................Q
Shore Bancshares Inc................................Q
Xylem Inc...................................................Q
REDUCED
Conocophillips...........................................Q
SPECIAL
BP PLC..........................................................
SUSPENDED
Tribune Publishing
REGULAR
AVX Corp....................................................Q
Aceto Corp.................................................Q
Ametek Inc................................................Q
Aspen Insuranc Hldg..................................Q
BCE Inc.......................................................Q
CME Group Cl A.........................................Q
Capital One Finl.........................................Q
Celanese Corp...........................................Q
Chesapeake Granite..................................Q
Clifton Bancorp..........................................Q
DCT Industrial Tr........................................Q
DHT Holdings Inc.......................................Q
Evolution Petro..........................................Q
Exco Tech Ltd.............................................Q
Exponent Inc..............................................Q
Fidelity Natl Finl.........................................Q
Fluor Corp..................................................Q
GEO Group (The).......................................Q
Harley Davidson Inc...................................Q
KLA-Tencor.................................................Q
Kemper Corp.............................................Q
Orchids Paper Prd......................................Q
PPL Corp....................................................Q
MSCI Inc.....................................................Q
Microchip Tech..........................................Q
Patterson-UTI Energy.................................Q
Selective Insurance....................................Q
Six Flags Entertain.....................................Q
Shore Bancshares......................................Q
Tahoe Resources.......................................M
Union Pacific Corp.....................................Q
Vectren Corp..............................................Q
Virtu Financial A........................................Q
Westwood Hldg Grp 4...............................Q
Weis Markets.............................................Q
Wi-LAN Inc.................................................Q
g- Payable in Canadian funds.

Stk of
record

Payable

2-12
2-15
2-19

3-4
2-29
2-29

1.35
.445
.4125
.185
.30
.445
.85
.12
.30
.00
.1549

3-31
2-29
3-15
3-16
3-7
3-2
3-16
3-1
3-7
0-0
2-18

4-15
3-31
3-31
3-31
3-16
3-31
3-31
3-15
3-24
0-0
3-16

.25

2-15

3-1

.60

2-12

3-4

.105
.06
.09
.21
.6825
.60
.40
.30
.2195
.06
.29
.21
.05
.07
.18
.21
.21
.65
.35
.52
.24
.35
.38
.22
.359
.10
.15
.58
.03
.02
.55
.40
.24
.57
.30
.0125

2-19
3-11
3-17
2-19
3-15
3-10
2-15
2-11
2-19
2-19
2-15
2-15
3-15
3-16
3-4
3-17
3-2
2-15
2-16
2-15
2-15
2-15
3-10
2-19
2-22
3-10
2-15
2-15
2-12
2-18
2-29
2-15
3-1
3-11
2-15
3-22

3-4
3-25
3-31
3-8
4-15
3-28
2-26
2-26
2-29
3-4
3-1
2-24
3-31
3-30
3-25
3-31
4-4
2-26
3-4
3-1
3-1
3-1
4-1
3-11
3-7
3-24
3-1
3-7
2-29
2-25
3-31
3-1
3-15
4-1
3-1
4-6

.60
.13361
.066

EARNINGS

PPL posts 43% drop


in its 4Q net profits
STAFF

PPL Corp. on Thursday


reported a 43 percent
drop in net profits for
the fourth quarter, citing
special items.
Net profits of $399 million (59 cents a share)
fell from $695 million
($1.04 a share) in 2014s
fourth quarter. Revenue
dropped 9 percent to
$1.78 billion.
The bottom line was
hurt by fewer favorable
special items. Excluding
them in both quarters,
net profits would have
fallen 11 percent.
For the year, net profits plunged 61 percent

to $682 million ($1.01 a


share) from 2014s $1.74
billion ($2.61 a share).
Revenue grew 2 percent
to $7.67 billion.
Hurting the years profits were $807 million in
after-tax charges from
the June 1 divestiture of
power plants to Talen
Energy. Excluding special items, net profits
would have risen 10 percent.
PPL also said it will
increase its dividend to
38 cents per share from
37.75 cents. The new
dividend is payable April
1 to shareholders of record March 10.

FOOD

Dunkin Donuts is set


to make its own deals
NEW YORK (AP)
Dunkin Donuts, feeling
sidelined by a discounting fight in the fast-food
industry, is planning to
jump into the game with
its own deals.
The coffee-and-doughnut chain said Thursday
that customer visits in
the last three months of
the year slipped at U.S.
stores open at least 18
months. Dunkin CEO
Nigel Travis blamed the
loss on aggressive promotions at burger chains.

To win back customers,


Travis said Dunkin is
planning three national
value promotions for
2016, and meeting with
franchisees next week to
finalize plans.
For Dunkin, finding the
right national price promotion could be tricky
because the popularity
of its menu items varies
more by region. In the
Northeast, the company
sells more drinks, while
other markets rely more
heavily on doughnuts.

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LNP | LANCASTER, PA

DOW
16,416.58 +79.92

NASDAQ
4,509.56 +5.32

S&P 500
1,915.45 +2.92

Economists predict hiring in the


U.S. declined in January after
climbing the previous month.
They expect the Labor Department will report today that
nonfarm employers added
200,000 jobs last month. That
would not be quite as strong as
the 292,000 workers hired in
December, but a solid showing
amid a global economic slowdown
that hurt U.S. economic growth in
the final three months of 2015.
Nonfarm payrolls

1,960

350 thousand

307

est.
200

D
15

17,500

2,080

17,000

2,000

16,500

1,920
1,840

The Allstate

HIGH
LOW
16485.84 16266.16
7058.65 6831.90
626.72
620.81
9591.30 9465.87
4545.52 4463.99
1927.35 1900.52
1315.82 1295.53
19783.56 19499.31
1025.10 1008.58

DOW
DOW Trans.
DOW Util.
NYSE Comp.
NASDAQ
S&P 500
S&P 400
Wilshire 5000
Russell 2000

5,087 2,142
5,071 2,396
1972 1644
1132 1114
51
13
68
84

15,500

CLOSE
16416.58
7051.25
622.07
9534.31
4509.56
1915.45
1306.98
19655.42
1014.78

CHG.
+79.92
+216.49
-4.57
+39.09
+5.32
+2.92
+9.41
+48.49
+4.49

%CHG.
+0.49%
+3.17%
-0.73%
+0.41%
+0.12%
+0.15%
+0.73%
+0.25%
+0.44%

YTD
WK MO QTR %CHG.
s t t
-5.79%
s s t
-6.09%
s s s +7.66%
s t t
-6.01%
s t t
-9.94%
s t t
-6.29%
s t t
-6.55%
s t t
-7.14%
s t t -10.66%

Charge it
The Federal Reserve issues a
report today on how much credit
U.S. consumers took on in
December.
The report, which excludes
mortgages and other loans
secured by real estate, is
expected to show that consumer
borrowing increased by $15 billion
in December. Consumers typically
rely on credit more in December
as they ramp up spending on
holiday shopping. Consumer
borrowing rose $14 billion in
November to a record high of
$3.53 trillion.

Theyre called junk bonds for a reason.


Bonds issued by the riskiest companies are
known as high yield because of fat interest
payments they offer investors. A recent report from
Fitch Ratings shows why the more popular term
junk may be more apt:
Companies reneged on
promises to pay on $48 billion
worth of the bonds last year,
the highest since 2009. The
number of corporate
deadbeats rose to 74, double
a year earlier.
Many of the defaults were
in energy, metals and mining
industries hit hard by a plunge
in the price of oil and other
commodities. Investors in

Defaults are rising ...


$151.0

Trade deficit

seasonally adjusted, in billions


-$30

est.
-42.4 -48.8 -42.5 -44.6 -42.4 -43.2

-40

-50

20.5 18.5
11.9 15.9
09

10

11

12

13

Sources: Fitch Ratings; Morningstar

Company
Spotlight

$34

-4

52-WEEK RANGE

$54

Price-earnings ratio: 25

(Based on past 12-month results)

*annualized

FUND

ASSETS
(Mlns)

TOTAL RETURN/RANK PCT


NAV 4-WK
1-YR
5-YR LOAD

Vanguard 500Adml
146,311 176.94 -4.7
Vanguard TotStIAdm
120,312 47.34 -5.3
Vanguard InstIdxI
100,346 175.19 -4.7
Vanguard TotStIdx
92,592 47.32 -5.3
Vanguard InstPlus
85,157 175.21 -4.7
Vanguard TotIntl
73,995 13.52 -4.9
Fidelity Contra
73,007 91.54 -5.5
American Funds IncAmerA m
68,659 19.60 -2.2
American Funds GrthAmA m
68,248 37.62 -7.1
American Funds CapIncBuA m 66,938 54.90 -0.7
Vanguard WelltnAdm
65,584 61.25 -2.7
Vanguard TotBdAdml
62,206 10.79 +1.5
PIMCO TotRetIs
58,942 10.11 +0.6
Dodge & Cox IntlStk
57,028 32.14 -10.0

-4.2/B
-5.9/C
-4.2/A
-6.0/C
-4.1/A
-12.7/D
-1.7/A
-5.3/B
-4.4/C
-6.1/B
-3.6/A
+0.2/B
-0.7
-23.1/E

+10.2/A
NL
+9.7/B
NL
+10.2/A
NL
+9.5/B
NL
+10.2/A
NL
-0.7/E
NL
+10.3/B
NL
+7.1/A 5.75
+9.3/C 5.75
+5.9/A 5.75
+7.6/A
NL
+3.7/C
NL
+3.7
NL
-0.5/D
NL

NAME

52-WK RANGE
TICKER LO
HI CLOSE CHG%CHG

AT&T Inc
Air Products
Alcatel-Lucent
Alcoa Inc
Applied Indl Tch
Armstrong World Inds
BB&T Corp
Bco Santander SA
Bon Ton Store
CNH Indl NV
Campbell Soup
Carpenter Tech
Clarcor Inc
Costco Wholesale
Donegal A
Donnelley RR & Sons
Exelon Corp
Frontier Comm
Fulton Financial
GlaxoSmithKline PLC
Harley Davidson
Henry Schein Inc
Hershey Company
Intl Paper
Johnson & Johnson
Kellogg Co
Kroger Co
L-3 Communications
M&T Bank
Merck & Co

T
30.97
APD 114.64
ALU
3.06
AA
6.14
AIT
35.55
AWI 36.48
BBT 30.72
SAN
3.69
BONT 1.10
CNHI 5.67
CPB 44.45
CRS 23.99
CLC 44.13
COST 117.03
DGICA 12.69
RRD 12.37
EXC 25.09
FTR
3.81
FULT 11.15
GSK 37.24
HOG 36.36
HSIC 126.17
HSY 82.41
IP
32.50
JNJ 81.79
K
61.13
KR
27.32
LLL 101.11
MTB 101.51
MRK 45.69

0 36.80
5158.20
2 4.96
2 17.10
4 45.56
1 60.70
2 41.90
1 7.79
1 7.67
2 9.72
9 57.08
3 45.42
2 67.10
5169.73
6 16.25
2 20.22
7 36.99
2 8.46
5 14.59
4 49.08
2 65.20
7161.62
3107.57
2 57.90
0105.49
9 74.14
8 42.75
6132.92
3134.00
2 61.70

36.53
136.16
3.41
8.31
39.34
38.19
32.16
4.07
1.66
6.27
55.34
29.73
47.28
143.28
14.60
13.58
32.25
4.70
12.62
40.98
41.25
150.11
88.64
35.07
103.90
71.83
38.96
117.39
108.19
48.59

YTD 1YR
Vol
WK MO QTR%CHG %RTN (Thous) P/E

LocalStocks

-.19 -0.5 s s s +6.2 +12.4 30301 16


+2.78 +2.1 s s s +4.6
-7.9 3206 21
-.03 -0.9 t t t -11.0
-3.9 2997
+.76 +10.1 s s t -15.8 -53.6 53385 14
+1.08 +2.8 s s t -2.8
-8.7
206 15
+1.29 +3.5 t t t -16.5 -28.6 2491 28
+.38 +1.2 t t t -14.9 -10.0 7106 12
+.21 +5.4 t t t -16.4 -41.3 4955
+.02 +1.2 t t t -21.0 -67.4
96 dd
+.09 +1.5 s t t -8.3 -17.9 5723 78
-.95 -1.7 t s s +5.3 +23.1 1828 27
+3.01 +11.3 s s t -1.8 -31.3 1744 20
+1.66 +3.6 s s t -4.8 -28.1
462 17
-3.42 -2.3 t t t -11.3
-0.3 5261 27
-.03 -0.2 s s s +3.7
-5.6
86 17
+.15 +1.1 t s t -7.7 -14.6
775 12
+.64 +2.0 s s s +16.1 -11.0 14040 12
+.10 +2.2 s s s +0.6 -31.6 26100 dd
+.11 +0.9 t s t -3.0 +11.3 1319 15
-1.07 -2.5 t s s +1.6 +0.4 6113
+1.40 +3.5 s t t -9.1 -35.3 4978 11
-.56 -0.4 t t t -5.1 +8.5
388 26
-.14 -0.2 s s t -0.7 -13.1 1289 21
+.90 +2.6 s t t -7.0 -33.4 6388 14
-.24 -0.2 t s s +1.1 +4.5 10119 17
-.51 -0.7 t s t -0.6 +11.5 1576 70
-1.22 -3.0 s t t -6.9 +15.1 7123 19
-.18 -0.2 s s t -1.8
-5.3
534 17
+2.02 +1.9 t t t -10.7
-7.9
967 15
-1.46 -2.9 t t t -8.0 -15.0 19709 23

DIV
1.92f
3.24
...
0.12
1.12f
...
1.08
0.35e
0.20
0.14
1.25
0.72
0.88f
1.60
0.54
1.04
1.24
0.42
0.36
2.46e
1.24
...
2.33
1.76
3.00
2.00
0.42f
2.60
2.80
1.84f

$36.69

D
52-week range

$29.99

SolarEdge Tech.

SEDG

Close: $29.54 2.10 or 7.7%


The photovoltaic products maker reported better-than-expected fiscal
second-quarter profit and revenue
and gave an upbeat outlook.
$30
20

D
52-week range

10

$9.64

$15.02

PE: ...
Yield: ...

FUELS
CLOSE
Crude Oil (bbl)
31.72
Ethanol (gal)
1.41
Heating Oil (gal)
1.08
Natural Gas (mm btu) 1.97
Unleaded Gas (gal)
1.03
METALS
Gold (oz)
Silver (oz)
Platinum (oz)
Copper (lb)
Palladium (oz)

$43.00
PE: 75.0
Yield: ...

PVS.
32.28
1.40
1.08
2.04
1.03

%CHG %YTD
-1.73
-14.4
+0.21
+1.0
+0.18
-1.8
-3.24
-15.6
+1.43
-18.8

CLOSE
PVS.
1157.60 1141.30
14.84
14.72
906.30 880.10
2.13
2.09
516.85 516.85

%CHG %YTD
+1.43
+9.2
+0.79
+7.7
+2.98
+1.6
+1.72
+0.1
...
-7.8

TREASURIES

PVS.
1.37
1.22
3.71
0.62
251.90
1.36
8.77
4.80

WK MO QTR

0.33
0.45
0.53
0.73
1.27
1.89
2.71

-0.04
-0.02
-0.01
-0.03
-0.04
-0.05
-0.03

t
r
s
t
t
t
t

YEST PVS

NET
CHG

WK MO QTR

1YR
AGO

t
t
t
s
t
t
t

2.27
4.14
2.00
6.37
3.42
1.57
2.86

.29
.43
.52
.70
1.23
1.84
2.68

Barclays USAggregate

Moodys AAA Corp Idx


Barclays CompT-BdIdx
Barclays US Corp

%CHG %YTD
+0.16
+0.9
+1.36
-2.8
-0.67
+2.7
-2.76
-4.8
-0.60
-2.8
+0.74
-2.4
-0.26
+0.4
-1.51
+0.6

NET
CHG

YEST PVS

PRIME FED Barclays US High Yield


RATE FUNDS
YEST 3.50 .38
6 MO AGO 3.25 .13
1 YR AGO 3.25 .13

D
52-week range

Vol.: 4.1m (3.4x avg.)


Mkt. Cap: $1.18 b

The yield on the


10-year
Treasury fell to
1.84 percent
Thursday. Yields
affect rates on
BONDS
mortgages and
other consumer Barclays LongT-BdIdx
Bond Buyer Muni Idx
loans.

Source: FactSet

2.48
4.03
2.33
9.45
4.01
1.31
3.64

2.49
4.03
2.32
9.37
4.01
1.33
3.62

-0.01
...
+0.01
+0.08
...
-0.02
+0.02

s
t
t
t
t
t
t

t
t
t
s
s
t
s

1YR
AGO

s .01
s .06
s .19
t .49
t 1.25
t 1.75
t 2.35

t
t
t
s
t
t
s

GlobalMarkets
INDEX
S&P 500
Buenos Aires Merval
Frankfurt DAX
London FTSE 100
Hong Kong Hang Seng
Paris CAC-40
Mexico City Bolsa
Tokyo Nikkei 225
Seoul Composite
Singapore Straits Times
Sao Paolo Bovespa
Sydney All Ordinaries
Toronto S&P/TSX
Shanghai Composite

YEST
CHG %CHG
1915.45
+2.92 +0.15%
11421.99 +300.59 +2.70%
9393.36
-41.46 -0.44%
5898.76 +61.62 +1.06%
19183.09 +191.50 +1.01%
4228.53
+1.57 +0.04%
43751.93 +494.39 +1.14%
17044.99 -146.26 -0.85%
1916.26 +25.59 +1.35%
2558.49
+7.75 +0.30%
40821.73 +1232.91 +3.11%
5029.26 +98.50 +2.00%
12774.50 +181.48 +1.44%
2781.02 +41.77 +1.52%

NAME

52-WK RANGE
TICKER LO
HI CLOSE CHG%CHG

Natl Penn Bcs


Nwst Bancshares Inc
PNC Financial
PPL Corp
Patterson Cos
Penn Natl Gaming
Penney JC Co Inc
Pfizer Inc
Rite Aid Corp
Sears Holdings Corp
Skyline Cp
Supervalu Inc
TE Connectivity Ltd
Talen Energy Corp
Tanger Factory
Tegna Inc
Tyson Foods
UGI Corp
Univrsl Corp
Urban Outfitters
Verizon Comm
WalMart Strs
Weis Mkts
Wells Fargo & Co
Windstream Hldgs
YRC Worldwide Inc

NPBC
NWBI
PNC
PPL
PDCO
PENN
JCP
PFE
RAD
SHLD
SKY
SVU
TEL
TLN
SKT
TGNA
TSN
UGI
UVV
URBN
VZ
WMT
WMK
WFC
WIN
YRCW

9.75
11.52
81.38
29.18
38.51
13.00
6.00
28.47
5.88
16.27
2.17
3.99
53.56
5.73
30.30
21.30
37.10
31.51
39.96
19.26
38.06
56.30
37.92
46.51
4.42
8.13

$14.44

3-month T-bill
6-month T-bill
52-wk T-bill
2-year T-note
5-year T-note
10-year T-note
30-year T-bond

ASSETS
TOTAL RETURN/RANK PCT
(Mlns)
NAV 4-WK
1-YR
5-YR LOAD
56,830 47.34 -5.3
-6.0/C +9.7/B
NL
54,845 148.67 -7.4 -10.4/D +8.4/B
NL
52,857 90.42 -4.9 -12.6/D
-0.6/D
NL
52,521 31.98 -2.9
-5.4/B +9.0/C 5.75
49,551 40.65 -4.7
-9.9/D +5.1/B 5.75
48,827 67.41 -4.7
-4.2/A +10.2/A
NL
48,205 23.06 -2.4
-1.8/A +8.5/A 5.75
47,662 36.47 -3.8
-4.6/A +10.2/A 5.75
44,335 10.74 +1.2 +0.1/B +4.9/A
NL
43,644
2.00 -2.9 -12.1/E +3.5/D 4.25
43,125 13.27 -0.2
-1.7/D +3.6/C
NL
42,832 14.44 +1.3 +3.3/A +5.3/B
NL
42,262 47.42 -5.0
-3.3/A +8.9/C 5.75
39,021 47.68 -9.1
-2.7/A +11.0/A
NL
36,605 83.26 -8.7
-1.1/A +18.2/B
NL
36,124 42.83 -5.3
-5.9/C +9.8/B
NL

FUND
Vanguard TotStIIns
Dodge & Cox Stock
Vanguard IntlStkIdxIPls
American Funds InvCoAmA m
American Funds CpWldGrIA m
Fidelity Spartan 500IdxAdvtg
American Funds AmBalA m
American Funds WAMutInvA m
Metropolitan West TotRetBdI
FrankTemp-Franklin IncomeA m
Dodge & Cox Income
Vanguard MuIntAdml
American Funds FnInvA m
T Rowe Price GrowStk
Vanguard HltCrAdml
Vanguard InstTStPl

10

VHC

Interestrates

5-yr*
34.6

CS

VirnetX

Bernard Condon; J. Paschke AP

3-yr*
Price change 1-yr
PBH
40.0% 30.8

$95.90

Close: $14.89 -1.80 or -10.8%


The financial firm is cutting roughly
4,000 jobs to reduce costs after announcing a massive pre-tax loss in
the fourth quarter.
$25

AGRICULTURE
CLOSE
Cattle (lb)
1.37
Coffee (lb)
1.23
Corn (bu)
3.69
Cotton (lb)
0.60
Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 250.40
Orange Juice (lb)
1.37
Soybeans (bu)
8.74
Wheat (bu)
4.73

year earlier
earl to $200.2 million, beating analysts
expectations
for almost no growth. Prestige
expectati
Brands
Bran earnings per share also topped
Wall
W Streets forecast.
The company has built its suite of
brands through a series of
acquisitions. The latest addition will
be DenTek, which makes dental floss
picks and other oral-care products.
Prestige Brands expects the acquisition to close
in the early part of this month.

Vol.: 5.4m (3.0x avg.)


PE: 7.0
Mkt. Cap: $24.75 b
Yield: 5.0%

J F M A M J J A S O N D

Thursdays close: $49.25

Vol.: 12.6m (3.2x avg.)


PE: 45.5
Mkt. Cap: $77.03 b
Yield: 3.0%

2015

AP

30 Biggest Mutual Funds

D
52-week range

D
52-week range

Credit Suisse

AZN

15

-6

*open-end mutual funds, estimated

$66.35

20
N

Vol.: 12.3m (2.7x avg.)


PE: 34.6
Mkt. Cap: $31.18 b
Yield: 2.5%

32

Commodities

Prestige Brands churns higher

Prestige Brands (PBH)

AP

15

Shares of Prestige Brands, which sells


ells
Chloraseptic, Beano and other
over-the-counter products, had theirr best day
in nearly a year after the company
reported stronger-than-expected
quarterly results.
Customers bought more of the
companys products last quarter,
which offset the pinch in revenue
that the company felt from the strong dollar
in its foreign sales. Revenue rose 1.3 percent from a

2015
Source: FactSet

14

$72.52

34

The price of
U.S. crude oil
edged lower on
Thursday after
a huge gain the
day before. In
metals trading,
gold, silver and
copper rose.

-2

-8

65

Close: $30.47 -1.92 or -5.9%


The drug developer expects revenue to decline in 2016 as it loses
patent exclusivity on the anti-cholesterol drug Crestor.
$36

$1.95

$6

-10

AstraZeneca

Vol.: 17.2m (15.6x avg.)


Mkt. Cap: $374.5 m

The nations trade gap has been


trending mostly lower in recent
months.
It fell to $42.4 billion in November, the lowest level since July.
A lower trade deficit is a positive
for the nations economic growth.
Still, economists anticipate that
the trade gap widened again in
December, a trend they expect will
continue this year. The Commerce
Department reports its latest tally
of the trade gap today.

$54.12

D
52-week range

Vol.: 5.5m (2.0x avg.)


PE: 10.8
Mkt. Cap: $24.03 b
Yield: 1.9%

31.7

Economic bellwether

70

55

Close: $7.06 2.27 or 47.4%


The Internet security software company won a $625.6 million verdict in
a patent infringement lawsuit
against Apple Inc.
$10

Dollar flows into and out of junk funds*


(billions)

48.3

75

60

$29.50

and investors are worried

Dollar value of junk


bonds in default
(billions)

$65

30

bonds sold by hotels, restaurants and gaming


companies suffered big losses, too. Bankrupt
casino owner Caesars Entertainment Operating
Co. defaulted on a $12.4 billion issue.
For all the pain, defaults are just 3.4 percent of
the dollar value of all junk
held by investors. That
compares to 13.7 percent in
2009 when the economy
emerged from recession.
Still, Fitch expects
defaults to keep rising this
year, and investors are
spooked. Morningstar says
they pulled $15 billion from
high yield mutual funds last
year, most of that in
December.

YUM

Close: $72.31 -0.14 or -0.2%


The owner of KFC and Pizza Hut
reported mixed results for its troubled China business, which it is
spinning off.
$80

Trouble in junkland

Source: FactSet

Yum Brands

ALL

Close: $62.05 2.41 or 4.0%


The insurer reported earnings that
beat analysts expectations.

16,000
A

EURO
$1.1214 +.0125

Sharp gains for producers of raw materials helped lift the stock
market Thursday. The sector was the biggest gainer in the Standard
& Poors 500 index. Consumer staples stocks fell the most. Stocks
spent much of the day oscillating between modest gains and losses
as investors looked ahead to a key jobs report on Friday. The report
could offer insight about the U.S. economy and help determine
whether the Federal Reserve raises interest rates again next month.
Investors have scaled back expectations of another Fed rate hike
amid signs that the slowdown in global economic growth is hurting
the U.S. economy.

Close: 16,416.58
Change: 79.92 (0.5%)

10 DAYS

GOLD
$1,157.60 +16.30

Closing prices for Thursday, February 4, 2016

18,000

Vol. (in mil.)


Pvs. Volume
Advanced
Declined
New Highs
New Lows

J
16

15,840

CRUDE OIL
$31.72 -.56

Dow Jones industrials

16,180

2,160

NYSE NASD

153 145
150

50

10 DAYS

StocksRecap

292
252

250

Close: 1,915.45
Change: 2.92 (0.2%)

1,900

seasonally adjusted change

30-YR T-BOND
2.68% -.03

16,520

S&P 500

1,840

10-YR T-NOTE
1.84% -.05

Money&Markets

Today
Eye on hiring

A7

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2016

5 12.80
3 14.11
2100.52
0 37.05
4 53.07
2 20.23
4 10.09
1 36.46
6 9.47
1 46.23
8 5.00
1 12.00
1 73.73
1 27.00
3 39.87
2 33.40
9 54.59
6 38.60
7 58.89
2 47.25
0 51.02
4 88.00
2 51.91
2 58.77
2 14.05
2 21.37

11.11 +.15
12.06 -.05
84.89 +1.04
36.66 -.03
43.24 +.16
13.80 +.31
7.36 -.37
29.00 -.67
7.85
...
17.69 +.26
4.20 +.08
4.33 +.23
54.90 +1.10
7.21 -.05
32.28 -.28
23.49 -.04
51.95 -.97
35.24 -.10
52.76 -1.59
23.74 -.08
50.43 -.19
66.42 +.15
40.12 -.48
48.25 +.65
5.45 +.07
10.71 +.84

+1.4
-0.4
+1.2
-0.1
+0.4
+2.3
-4.8
-2.3
...
+1.5
+1.9
+5.6
+2.0
-0.7
-0.9
-0.2
-1.8
-0.3
-2.9
-0.3
-0.4
+0.2
-1.2
+1.4
+1.3
+8.5

WK
s
s
t
t
t
t
s
s
s
t
s
s
s
s

MO
t
s
t
t
t
t
s
t
s
t
s
t
s
t

QTR
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t

YTD

1YR

Vol

-9.9
-9.9
-10.9
+7.4
-4.4
-13.9
+10.5
-10.2
+0.1
-14.0
+18.1
-36.1
-15.0
+15.7
-1.3
-8.0
-2.6
+4.4
-5.9
+4.4
+9.1
+8.4
-9.4
-11.2
-15.4
-24.5

+10.8
+7.0
-2.0
+13.1
-13.1
-14.1
+2.2
-2.9
+7.7
-46.9
+15.1
-59.5
-19.2
...
-14.8
-9.1
+37.3
-6.0
+32.7
-34.0
+10.5
-20.8
-12.3
-7.5
-44.3
-41.3

1956
433
2221
8110
758
2342
14873
55200
11265
613
19
3048
5174
1111
884
1389
4922
973
365
2734
19115
12617
41
30273
2068
1789

WK MO QTR%CHG %RTN (Thous) P/E

t
t
t
s
s
t
s
t
s
s
t
t
t
s
s
t
t
s
t
s
s
s
t
t
t
s

t
t
t
s
t
t
s
t
s
t
s
t
t
s
t
t
t
s
t
s
s
s
t
t
t
t

t
t
t
s
t
t
s
t
s
t
s
t
t
s
t
t
t
s
t
s
s
s
t
t
t
t

14
19
12
12
19
dd
dd
17
36
dd
dd
7
9
26
5
17
19
16
13
11
14
19
12
dd
12

YTD
-6.29%
-2.17%
-12.56%
-5.50%
-12.46%
-9.59%
+1.80%
-10.45%
-2.30%
-11.25%
-5.83%
-5.90%
-1.81%
-21.42%

DIV
0.44
0.56
2.04
1.51
0.88a
...
...
1.20f
...
...
...
...
1.32
...
1.14a
0.56
0.60f
0.91
2.12f
...
2.26
1.96
1.20
1.50
0.60
...

Dividend Footnotes: a - Extra dividends were paid, but are not included. b - Annual rate plus stock. c - Liquidating dividend. e - Amount declared or paid in
last 12 months. f - Current annual rate, which was increased by most recent dividend announcement. i - Sum of dividends paid after stock split, no regular rate.
j - Sum of dividends paid this year. Most recent dividend was omitted or deferred. k - Declared or paid this year, a cumulative issue with dividends in arrears.
m - Current annual rate, which was decreased by most recent dividend announcement. p - Initial dividend, annual rate not known, yield not shown. r - Declared
or paid in preceding 12 months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximate cash value on ex-distribution date. PE Footnotes: q - Stock is a closed-end
fund - no P/E ratio shown. cc - P/E exceeds 99. dd - Loss in last 12 months.

A8

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2016

Nation&World
FOR THE LATEST UPDATES, GO TO LANCASTERONLINE.COM

In brief
CHICAGO

6 dead in possible
murder-suicide
Chicago police on Thursday found
the bodies of four men, one woman
and a child inside a home on the citys
South Side in what they say could be a
murder-suicide, even as they added extra patrols in the neighborhood.
Interim police Superintendent John
Escalante told reporters that police
checked the house after receiving a call
from a co-worker worried about someone who lived there. Police looked inside and saw one body, entered and
found five more bodies.
WASHINGTON

Senators grill
nominee over hack
President Barack Obamas nominee
to head the Office of Personnel Management on Thursday promised to
strengthen the agencys cybersecurity
and information technology systems
after whats believed to be the largest
data breach in U.S. history.
Beth Cobert was nominated to succeed Katherine Archuleta, who resigned in July after hackers stole the
Social Security numbers, health histories and other sensitive data belonging
to more than 20 million people.
SEATTLE

Teens to be tried in
homeless killing
The oldest two of three homeless
teen brothers suspected in a deadly
drug-related mass shooting at a Seattle
homeless camp last week have been
charged as adults, a prosecutor said
Thursday.
King County Prosecutor Dan Satterberg said all three have been charged
with first-degree murder and assault
and that only the youngest would face
the allegations in juvenile court.
The shooting came at a homeless encampment near Safeco Field.
PLANNED PARENTHOOD

Video activist
offered probation
An anti-abortion activists plan to reject a plea deal offering probation for
charges related to making undercover
Planned Parenthood videos likely
means his goal is to use a trial as a public platform to criticize the nonprofit,
according to legal experts.
David Daleiden posted $3,000 bond
and made two court appearances
Thursday on the felony and misdemeanor charges he faces before prosecutors offered him pretrial diversion.
SALT LAKE CITY

Woman killed by
industrial mixer
A Utah woman died after she was
pulled into an industrial-size bakery
mixer at a suburban Salt Lake City grocery store in what investigators think
was a fluke accident.
Carmen Jackie Lindhardt, 45, was
using the mixer in the bakery of Reams
Food Stores on Wednesday morning
when she got caught in the machinery.
Lindhardt was putting ingredients in
the bowl-like mixer that is 2 feet deep
and 2 feet in diameter.
MARIETTA, OHIO

Retired officer gets


to buy K-9 partner
A recently retired Ohio police officer
will get to keep his K-9 partner after all.
Officials in Marietta created a socialmedia stir when they said Matt Hickeys police dog, Ajax, had to be sold at
auction because Ajax was city property
and could still work. The pair worked
together for three years, and the dog
lived with Hickey.
On Thursday Hickey was allowed to
buy Ajax from the southeastern Ohio
city for $1.
SOURCE: WIRE REPORTS

THE NEW YORK TIMES

Martin Shkreli, the former chief executive of Turing Pharmaceuticals, is shown during a hearing Thursday before the
House Oversight and Government Reform Committee on Capitol Hill.
WASHINGTON

Drug exec takes the Fifth


MARCY GORDON
AP BUSINESS WRITER

Infuriating members of Congress, a smirking Martin Shkreli


took the Fifth at a Capitol Hill
hearing Thursday when asked
about his jacking up of drug prices,
then promptly went on Twitter and
insulted his questioners as imbeciles.
The brash, 32-year-old entrepreneur who has been vilified as the
new face of pharmaceutical-industry greed was summoned by the
House Oversight and Government
Reform Committee, which is investigating soaring prices for critical
medicines.
Four times, he intoned: On the
advice of counsel, I invoke my Fifth
Amendment privilege against selfincrimination and respectfully decline to answer your question.
Lawmakers erupted. Rep. Elijah
Cummings of Maryland, the top
Democrat on the committee, all
but told Shkreli to wipe the smile
off his face.
I call this money blood money ...
coming out of the pockets of hardworking Americans, he said as
Shkreli sat through the lecture.
I know you are smiling, but I am
very serious, sir, Cummings said.
I truly believe you can become a
force of tremendous good. All I ask
is that you reflect on it. No, I dont
ask, I beg that you reflect on it.
The former hedge fund manager
with a frat-boy swagger has been

Hard to accept that


these imbeciles
represent the people
in our government.
Martin Shkreli

reviled in recent months for buying


Daraprim, the only approved drug
for a rare and sometimes deadly
parasitic infection, and unapologetically raising its price more than
fiftyfold.
Shkreli is out on $5 million bail
after being arrested in New York
in December on securities-fraud
charges unrelated to the price increase.
Shkreli, wearing a sport jacket
and open-collar shirt, was dismissed less than an hour into the
hearing, but not before chairman Rep. Jason Chaffetz, R-Utah,
shouted down a request by Shkrelis attorney to speak. Lawmakers
instead took turns denouncing his
conduct and attitude.
Minutes after he left and even
before the hearing had ended
Shkreli thumbed his nose at the
committee.
Hard to accept that these imbe-

FEDERAL BUDGET

Obama seeks oil tax


to help climate fix
WASHINGTON (AP)
President Barack
Obama wants oil companies to pay a $10 fee
for every barrel of oil to
help fund investments
in clean transportation that fight climate
change.
Obama will formalize
the proposal Tuesday
when he releases his final budget request to
Congress.
The $10-per-barrel fee
is expected face solid
opposition from Republicans who control Congress and oppose new
taxes and Obamas energy policies.
Still, the White House
hopes the proposal will
drive a debate about the
need to get energy producers to help fund such
efforts to promote clean
transportation.
The White House said
the $10 fee would be
phased in over five years.
The revenue would pro-

vide $20 billion per year


for traffic reduction, expanding investment in
transit systems and new
modes of transportation
like high-speed rail. It
would also revamp how
regional transportation
systems are funded, providing $10 billion to encourage investment that
lead to cleaner transportation options.
The White House said
the tax would provide
for the long-term solvency of the Highway
Trust Fund to ensure the
nation maintains its infrastructure. The added
cost of gasoline would
create a clear incentive
for the private sector to
reduce the nations reliance on oil and drive
investments in clear energy technology.
House Speaker Paul
Ryan called the plan
dead on arrival and an
election-year
distraction.

ciles represent the people in our


government, the former CEO of
Turing Pharmaceuticals tweeted.
Shkrelis attorney Benjamin Brafman later said in his defense: He
meant no disrespect, but in truth,
statements made by some of the
members of the committee were
wrong, unfair and difficult to listen
to without responding.
Shkreli calls himself the worlds
most eligible bachelor and the
most successful Albanian to ever
walk the face of this Earth. He
strums his guitar on YouTube and
paid a reported $2 million for the
only known copy of an album by
the Wu-Tang Clan.
After Shkrelis departure, Turings chief commercial officer and
the interim CEO of Canadas largest drugmaker, Valeant Pharmaceuticals, received a bipartisan
lashing from the lawmakers.
Internal documents released by
the committee show that Valeant
and Turing have made a practice of
buying and then dramatically raising prices for low-cost drugs given
to patients with life-threatening
conditions such as heart disease,
AIDS and cancer.
Chaffetz, an admitted conservative guy who accepts that companies need to make profits, said he
was disgusted. And Rep. Carolyn
Maloney, D-N.Y., told them: This
is a scandal, an absolute abuse of
power, an abuse of the pharmaceutical industry.

STATE DEPARTMENT

Classified email also


from Powell, Rice
DEB RIECHMANN
ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON Former Secretary of State


Colin Powell and the
immediate staff of former Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice also
received classified national security information on their personal
email accounts, according to a memo written
by the State Department
watchdog that was released Thursday.
Former Secretary of
State Hillary Clintons
use of a personal email
server has dogged her
presidential campaign.
Her campaign could try
to blunt the criticism
with the news that her
predecessors in Republican
administrations
might have received
such information on
nonsecure servers.
Steve Linick, the inspector general for
the State Department,
said in a memo dated

Wednesday that two


emails sent to Powell and
10 emails sent to Rices
staff contained classified
security information.
None of the material
was marked as classified,
but the substance of the
material and NODIS
(No Distribution) references in the body or
subject lines of some of
the documents suggested that the documents
could be potentially sensitive, Linick wrote.
He wrote that in October his office sent 19 documents to the inspector
general for the intelligence community, which
determined in December that they didnt contain intelligence community information.
Later, however, the
State Department told
Linicks office that 12 of
the 19 documents contain national security
information classified at
the Secret or Confidential levels.

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2016

A9

Wolf will
seek pre-K
cash boost

POLICE

DA: 12
shots fired
after man
stabs K-9
PITTSBURGH (AP)
Prosecutors say Pittsburgh-area police shot
12 times at a man they
killed after he fatally
stabbed a police dog.
Allegheny County District Attorney Stephen
Zappala released the information Thursday as
he investigates whether
Port Authority officers
were justified in Sundays killing of 37-yearold Bruce Kelley Jr.
He says its not clear
how many bullets struck
Kelley.
Authorities say Kelley
and his 60-year-old father were drinking alcohol in a busway gazebo
in Wilkinsburg when
they fought with officers.
Zappala says officers
had already tried to stun
Kelley at least six times,
with no effect, when they
released the police dog.
Zappala says Kelley
stabbed the German
shepherd and then was
shot at 10 times by one
officer and two times by
another officer.
The dog, Aren, was buried Thursday in Wilkinsburg.

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Pennsylvania State Police Commissioner Col. Tyree


Blocker, standing at the podium, addresses the media
in a file photo from last month.
STATE POLICE

Academy cheating
probe confirmed
MARC LEVY AND
MARK SCOLFORO
ASSOCIATED PRESS

An
investigation
into possible cheating
at the Pennsylvania
State Police academy
has involved dozens
of interviews and an
extensive collection
of evidence since it
began in December,
the forces commander said Thursday.
The statement from
Commissioner Tyree
Blocker gave no other
details about what he
called a full and comprehensive investigation by the internal
affairs unit.
No actions by a
small group of individuals can ever undermine a century of
tradition built by our
troopers, and I am
confident that those
graduating in March
will continue to build
on our proud traditions and serve the
Commonwealth with
the utmost honor,
integrity, and trust,
Blocker said.
With about 6,000
uniformed and civilian personnel, the
Pennsylvania State
Police is one of the

nations largest law enforcement agencies.


Blocker did not describe the manner of
cheating that is under
investigation cadets
are subject to a battery of
written tests during the
more than six months
of training or what
spurred the investigation.
He also did not say
whether any cadets in
one of the two current
academy classes or state
troopers have been disciplined or dismissed as
part of the probe. Blocker said no other information would be revealed
until the investigation is
complete.
Sen. Charles McIlhinney, whose committee
has oversight of state police issues, said Blocker
told him that the investigation was initiated from
within the academys
ranks of administrators,
but gave no other information. The agency
is taking the issue very
seriously and taking the
appropriate steps to investigate it, McIlhinney
said.
In his statement,
Blocker suggested that
anyone caught will be
punished severely.

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Men and Women are cancelling expensive


appointments, treatments and prescriptions
for fixing their damaged hair, turning instead
to Dr. Lins all-natural formula.
Special Report by Health Reporter
Chris Stella

ow much hair do you lose everyday?


As you age, you not only grow less
hair but you can lose 50-100 strands a day!

If youre one of the millions who suffer


from hair loss and thinning hair then youll
be excited to hear theres been a major
breakthrough.
In fact, this natural hair loss discovery
has already helped countless men and
women, from all around the country,
achieve thicker, fuller, healthier hair.
And unlike todays solutions
Is NOT a prescription or procedure
(so its side effect free)
Is NOT a shampoo or topical (so its
not messy or oily)
Is 100% NATURAL (so its safe to
use every day)
And best of all, it works in days not
months, to stop hair loss and regrow
longer, stronger, thicker hair.
Sound too good to be true? I thought so
too but that was before catching up with
the doctor who made this discovery and
then hearing from her patients.

Top Hair Loss Doctor Makes a


Remarkable Nutrient Discovery
Recently, Dr. Susan Lin, considered
todays leading expert in hair restoration,
announced shes made a remarkable
discovery while working with patients in
her California Clinic.
Dr. Lin revealed that while treating her
hair loss patients with a special type of
plant nutrient called Lilac Extract, she was
able to regrow her patients thinning and
dying hair.
In just weeks, most of my patients
experienced new hair growth and less
shedding without any additional changes
to their daily regimen said Lin in a recent
interview.
Dr. Lin explained the secret to her
discovery is in the Lilac Extracts unique
ability as an antioxidant, which protects
the scalp from free radicals, which many
experts believe to be the #1 cause of hair
loss in men and women.
You see as you get older, your bodys
ability to produce antioxidants becomes
impaired. When this happens, you lose the
ability to fight off free radicals. Ultimately,
these deadly chemicals make their way
into your scalp, affecting your hair follicles.
Dr. Lin graduated from
Boston University School
Six Year Medical Program
with a NIH Cancer Research
Fellowship. She completed
her postdoctoral training in
Obstetrics and Gynecology at
Kaiser Permanente Oakland,
Felix Rutledge Oncology
Fellowship at MD Anderson
Cancer Center and Galloway Fellowship in
Gynecologic Oncology at Memorial Sloan Kettering
Cancer Center. Its great when science meets
reality and that is what MD is all about.

After making this discovery and seeing


how well it worked with her patients,
Dr. Susan Lin decided to formulate Lilac
Extract along with six other powerful
ingredients into a formula called MD
Nutri Hair.

Guaranteed to Stop Hair Loss


and Improve Hair Thickness
MD Nutri Hair is one of the first
physician-formulated
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PROMOTE stronger, longer, fuller hair

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ADVERTISEMENT

Dr. Lins Breakthrough


Hair Treatment Helps
Get Rid of Bald Spots

BUDGET IMPASSE

HARRISBURG (AP)
Democratic Gov. Tom
Wolf says he wants a $60
million boost to statesubsidized
pre-kindergarten programs in
Pennsylvania next year.
The figure he announced Thursday will
be part of the budget
proposal he delivers
to the Legislature next
week. It would increase
the states current prekindergarten subsidy by
one-third.
Wolf initially sought
a $120 million increase
for
pre-kindergarten
programs last year, but
signed a $30 million
increase in December
after the Republicancontrolled Legislature
passed a budget measure
he opposed.
Wolf is fighting for
another $30 million
for
pre-kindergarten
programs in this years
budget after a bipartisan deal collapsed amid
House GOP resistance
to the accompanying tax
increase Wolf wanted to
boost education aid and
narrow a deficit.
The budget fight has
left billions in limbo in
the current fiscal year.

ADVERTISEMENT

Lin explains My formulation takes


advantage of recent advances in plant
tissue culturing. We are able to selectively
harvest cells from certain plants and
generate cultures rich in plant stem cells
and complex compounds that can act as
natural liposomes to deliver powerful
antioxidants and factors needed to protect
and fortify anti-aging skin cells.

From Bald to BoldLifeless to Lavish Heres


The New Way Millions of Men and Women are
Stopping Hair Loss and Growing Thicker Hair

And unlike todays ineffective, cleverly


marketed products, Nutri Hair is
FAST ACTING - works in days rather
than months
DRUG FREE - so there are no side
effects
CONVIENENT - just one small
capsule a day

MD Nutri Hair Sets New Industry


Standard with a Natural
Solution for Problem Hair
Skeptical? I dont blame you at all
I know youve heard every claim (and
then some) when it comes to vitamins
and supplements. I have too. As a health
reporter, Im constantly bombarded with
mailings and phone calls from sales people
trying to get me to review their product.
And my response to all of them is
show me your happy customers and
thats exactly what Dr. Susan Lin did when
we asked
Because both of my parents have hair
loss, I started to have thinning hair in
my 20s and more severe after childbirth.
I tried everything (except for prescription
medications) and was frustrated. Got to a
point I needed to wear extensions to make
my hair look fuller. Now my hair is full
because of taking MD Nutri Hair. Noticed
my scalp does not get greasy anymore and
I can stop shampooing every day. I will
always take the product to keep my hair
full and healthy Lynn
I saw significantly less hair shedding
after one month of using MD Nutri Hair
Joan
After 2 months of use, my hair was
noticeably thicker NH
After one month Ive now stopped
wearing a hat to cover my bald spot will
continue to use Chris
I am so grateful I found Nutri Hair.
I have been experiencing serious hair
loss since 2009. I tried various topicals
without effect. The hair was so fine and
weak ever since. I searched the MD Hair
Restoration web site and discovered Nutri
Hair which sounded promising. Its now
my fourth bottle. I noticed significantly
less hair shedding and the hair density
seems to have improved. I will now add
Scalp Essentials to the routine hoping
to further address the scalp grease and
irritation problem. Thank you so much
for producing such wonderful products
Kiki

Special Opportunity For The


Always Lancaster Readers
This is the official release of MD Nutri
Hair in your area. We are offering a special
discount supply to those who call within
the next 48-hours. Readers can receive a
full 60 days to try MD Nutri Hair at home
completely Risk free.
Thats how confident we are that
our MD Nutri Hair Formula will work
for you. A regional Order Hotline has
been set up for you that you can call to
take advantage of this special risk free
opportunity. And...If you call today we
are offering a limited number of FREE 30
day bottles as part of our Fix My Hair
special promotion.
Call 1-800-354-9761 to receive a full 60
day risk free trial and to find out how to
get a 30 day supply absolutely free.
Its 100% risk-free. If MD Nutri Hair
doesnt improve the look and feel of your
hair, giving you fuller more dense hair you wont pay a penny.
Important: You must call immediately
to take advantage of this limited offer. If
the lines are busy keep trying, all calls will
be answered.

THESE STATEMENTS HAVE NOT BEEN EVALUATED BY THE FDA. THIS PRODUCT IS NOT INTENDED
TO DIAGNOSE, TREAT, CURE, OR PREVENT ANY DISEASE. RESULTS MAY VARY.

PA005901

NATION/WORLD

A10 FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2016

CALIFORNIA

Times up on $63 million jackpot


LOS ANGELES TIMES

LOS ANGELES A
SuperLotto Plus ticket
went from a $63 million prize to a worthless scrap of paper after
the person who bought
it failed to show up by a
deadline.
The winner of the multimillion-dollar ticket
had 180 days from the
drawing on Aug. 8 to
claim the prize. California Lottery had even put
out a public call, warning
the winner to claim his
or her prize money before 5 p.m. Thursday.
But despite all the
hype, lottery officials
said the would-be winner never came forward.
That didnt mean the end
of someones $63 million

deal came without some


controversy.
Brandy Milliner, a
Los Angeles County
resident, filed legal
documents Wednesday
morning claiming he had
turned in the winning
ticket to the California
State Lottery Commission within the claim
period.
He said the commission
even sent him a letter
congratulating him for
the winning ticket, saying
he would receive a check
in six to eight weeks.
Milliner said the commission later reneged
on his payment. Lottery
officials said they routinely send congratulatory letters to people
who claim to be winners

before it the ticket is


confirmed.
According to the
L.A. County lawsuit,
the commission sent a
second notice in January, saying the ticket
was too damaged
to be reconstructed
and his claim could
not be processed.
Milliner is now asking a judge to declare
him the winner.
The winning, unclaimed ticket was
purchased at a corner 7-Eleven in the
San Fernando Valley
the type of place
that brings a steady
stream of lotto buyers
who returned in large
numbers on Thursday
to check their tickets.

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HEALTH

Texas Zika case


puzzles scientists
MIKE STOBBE

AP MEDICAL WRITER

NEW YORK A sexually transmitted case of


Zika in Texas has scientists scrambling to understand how much of
a risk infection through
sex is for the usually
mosquito-spread illness.
Experts still stress that
mosquitoes are the main
culprit in the Zika epidemic menacing Latin
America and looming
over the United States.
Mosquitoes would be
the great river of transmission, while sexual
transmission is going to
be akin to a mountain
stream, said Dr. William
Schaffner, an infectious
disease expert at Vanderbilt University.
But the Texas case has
spurred more discussion about additional
ways in which Zika and
other illnesses, commonly thought to be carried only by mosquitoes,
might be spread.
Other types of transmission can be hard to
spot in the midst of outbreaks in which mosquito-borne infections are
occurring, noted Dr. Ali
Khan, a former disease
investigator for the U.S.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Its very hard to parse
this out in the middle of
an epidemic, said Khan,
now dean of the University of Nebraskas college
of public health.
Discerning something
like sexual transmission
would have to occur in a
place where an outbreak

was not raging, he


said.
Thats what happened in Dallas.
The current Zika
epidemic is on track
to cause millions of
infections in Latin
America and the Caribbean, but no transmission was reported
in the United States
until the Dallas case
this week.
Health officials said
a person there who
had not traveled to an
outbreak area was
infected. An investigation concluded the
person caught the virus through sex with
a person who had recently returned from
Venezuela.
Officials
released
few details about the
case, except to say
both patients have recovered. But it wasnt
the first to raise the
possibility of sexual
transmission.
A Colorado State
University researcher
picked up the virus in
Africa and apparently
spread it to his wife
back home in 2008.
More recently, it was
found in one mans
semen in Tahiti.
Most people infected with Zika experience, at the most, only
mild symptoms. But
mounting evidence in
Brazil has suggested a
connection between
the virus and babies
born with brain defects and abnormally
small heads.

PA#001962

NORTH KOREA

Newest
weapon:
Old butts
CHOE SANG-HUN
NEW YORK TIMES

SEOUL, South Korea


North Korea likes to
call South Korea a land
of political filth and its
leaders, including President Park Geun-hye,
human trash. Now, apparently to highlight its
contempt, it has begun
sending balloons into
the South loaded with an
unusual payload, the police here said Thursday:
cigarette butts.
North and South Korea have escalated their
propaganda war across
their heavily armed border since Jan. 6, when
the North conducted its
fourth nuclear test.
The South turned on
high-powered
loudspeakers to blare pop
songs and harsh criticism of the Norths leader, Kim Jong Un, across
the border. The North
began sending balloons
into the South loaded
with leaflets.
The balloons were
timed to detonate their
payloads,
scattering
thousands of messages.
Some of the timers
failed to function, however, and the airborne
cargo crashed onto rooftops and cars in South
Korean villages near
the border. Inspecting
the debris, military and
police personnel discovered that the balloons
payloads included things
they had not seen before.
We can confirm that
they included cigarette
butts, Kim Hak-young,
a chief superintendent
of the police, said Thursday.
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Getting you back to what you love.


Low Back Pain & Sciatica Workshop
Date: Saturday, February 13th, 10am-11am
Where: 1697 Oregon Pike, Lancaster, PA

See
Nanas Naughty
Knickers
Great Laughs! Great Food!

Call 800.292.4301 or visit:


RainbowComedy.com

Do you suffer from back pain or leg pain when you


stand or walk? When you sit or drive? Do you have
pain, numbness or tingling in your butt, groin or
down your leg? Are you afraid your back will go
out if you move the wrong way? If yes, then our next
workshop about back pain and sciatica may be the
turning point for you.
Join us to discuss and learn: 1) Common causes of
low back pain and sciatica, 2) Mistakes we make that
slow or prevent healing, and 3) What you can do to
get relief and get back to what you love, without the
side-effects of medications and injections.
Back pain and sciatica can greatly affect our lives
- cause us lost time with family and friends; make
things like work, hobbies, and shopping difficult;
and ruin travel plans. And less movement and activity
many times leads to larger health problems. But it
doesnt have to. Hundreds of area residents have
gotten back to what the love, and you can too!

Please Call 717-945-6938 to register.


Registration is free. Attendees will receive our e-book
about back pain and sciatic free for attending.
www.hersheyrehab.com

GPS mixup brings


celebrity
DAN BILEFSKY
NEW YORK TIMES

When Noel Santillan typed the word


Laugarvegur
instead
of Laugavegur into his
rental cars GPS, the New
Jersey resident couldnt
have imagined that the
extra r would make him
a celebrity in Iceland.
Santillan, 28, arrived
at Keflavik International Airport on Monday
morning after a fivehour flight from New
York and was eager to
get to the Hotel Fron
on Laugavegur, a main
street in Reykjavik, Icelands capital.
While driving nearly
six hours over icy roads,
Santillan had an inkling
that something might be
wrong.
His suspicion was
confirmed when he arrived in Siglufjordur, a
remote fishing village in
northern Iceland that is
roughly 270 miles from
the airport and has a road
named Laugarvegur.
There, a local woman
informed him that he
was not in Reykjavik,
which is about 45 minutes by bus from the airport at which Santillan
arrived.
I was very tired after
the flight and wanted to
get to the hotel as soon as
possible, Santillan was
quoted as saying. I did
enjoy the scenery on the
way. Ive never seen anything quite like it. And
the horses!
Santillans unintended
journey has captured the
imagination of Iceland,
and the people of Siglufjordur have embraced
the American, who has
since visited the local
herring museum and
tasted a favorite local
delicacy, putrefied shark.

OBITS
A11 FRIDAY,
LNP | LANCASTER,
PA FEBRUARY 5, 2016

Deaths
Reported
Auker, Ruth S.
81, wife of James S.
Auker, of Ephrata.
February 4, 2016.
Stradling
Funeral
Homes, Inc., 733-2472
Bellantese, James J.
86, husband of Barbara
(Pohlig) Bellantese, of
Denver. February 1,
2016. Marvil Funeral
Home Ltd., 610-5832727
Bomberger, Samuel
W.
88, of Lancaster. February 2, 2016. DeBord
Snyder Funeral Home
& Crematory, Inc.,
394-4097
Chico, Benjamin Corchado *
78, of Lancaster. January 15, 2016. Cremation Services of Lancaster, 273-6283
Davis, Joyce L. (Metzger)
Of Lancaster. February 3, 2016. DeBord
Snyder Funeral Home
& Crematory, Inc.,
394-4097
Deets, Walter E. Jr.
86, of Marietta. February 2, 2016. SmedleyFinkenbinder Funeral
Home & Crematory,
426-3614
Erb, Martha Jean
90, of Hamilton Arms
Center,
Lancaster.
January 29, 2016. Nissley Funeral Home,
653-1151
Gallagher, Catherine
M. (Strickler)
85, of Mount Joy. February 4, 2016. Sheetz
Funeral Home, Inc.,
653-5441
Marcuson, Frederick
E. III
62, husband of Deborah (Arnoldin) Marcuson, of Lancaster. February 2, 2016. Charles
F. Snyder Funeral
Home & Crematory,
872-5041
Misetic, Constance
Harmony *
57, spouse of George B.
Misetic, of Kinzers.
January 31, 2016. Cremation Services of
Lancaster, 273-6283
Sims, John R. *
80, husband of Marie
D. Sims, of Lancaster.
February 2, 2016. Cremation Services of
Lancaster, 273-6283
Wert, Edgar D. Jr.
65, husband of Marietta (Gustantino) Wert,
of Laureldale. February 2, 2016. Milkins
Giles Funeral Home,
610-921-3121
Young, Betty Jane
86, of York. February 3,
2016. The Groffs Family Funeral & Cremation Services, Inc.,
394-5300
* No Obituary appears
Obituary notices are provided as an advertising service
by the Classified Advertising
department of LNP Media
Group, Inc.
Deaths Reported and Obituaries may be placed by first
calling the Obituary Coordinator at 295-7875, then submitting the written notice either
by
e-mail
(obits@LNPnews.com) or by
fax (717-399-6523), MondayFriday, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.; Saturday, 2 to 6 p.m.; Sunday, 3 to
6 p.m.
The advertising department
publishes obituaries provided
by funeral homes or crematoria, based on information provided to them by families. It
does not accept obituaries
from individuals. Obituaries
and related materials, submitted to LNP Media Group, Inc.
may be edited for style, policy
or legal reasons, and they
become the property of LNP
Media Group, Inc.

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2016

Obituaries
James J.
Bellantese

James J. Bellantese,
age 86, of Denver,
PA, died
Mo n d a y,
Fe b r u a r y
1, 2016 at
Ephrata
M a n o r
U n i t e d
Church of Christ.
Born in Philadelphia,
he was a former longtime resident of Darby,
PA and member of
Blessed Virgin Mary
Church.
Mr. Bellantese was a
veteran of the Korean
War who served in the
Army and Air National
Guard.
He was a member of
American Legion Post
429 in Ephrata.
He was the son of the
late Duilio and Ida (nee
Marcone) Bellantese.
He is survived by
his loving wife of 58
years, Barbara (nee
Pohlig) Bellantese. He
is also survived by his
sisters, Mary Silverio
Guagenti and Gloria
Turchi;brother-in-law,
Richard Alrich; and many nieces and nephews.
Relatives and friends
are invited to the
Funeral Mass 10 a.m.
Tuesday at Blessed
Virgin Mary Church,
1101 Main Street, Darby.
There will be a Viewing
8:30-10:00 a.m. Tuesday
at Marvil Funeral Home,
1110 Main Street, Darby,
PA.
Interment
at
Indiantown
Gap
National Cemetery will
be private at the convenience of the family.
Contributions to
SPCA of PA, 350 E. Erie
Avenue, Philadelphia,
PA 19134 or a charity of the donors choice
would be appreciated.
The Guest Book may
be signed online at www.
marvilfuneralhome.
com.
Arrangements by
Marvil Funeral Home,
Ltd.

Wa
alter E.
Red
Deets, Jr.

Walter E. Red
Deets, Jr., 86, of Marietta,
passed away
on Tuesday,
Fe b r u a r y
2, 2016 at
his home.
He was rst
married
to the late
Edna B. Deets.
After Ednas
death, he later
married the
late Doris M. Pat
Deets.
He is survived by
daughter, Trudy G.
Signor and husband
Harry Snook, of
Columbia; a stepdaughter, Deb K. Bayman,
wife of George Bayman
III; four grandchildren
and two great-grandchildren. He was predeceased by an infant
daughter, Edna B. Deets
and a brother, Oscar
Deets.
Funeral Services
will be held at 11 AM
on Monday, February
8, 2016 at the SmedleyFinkenbinder Funeral
Home & Crematory
y, 29
N. Gay St., Marietta, PA
17547. Burial will follow in Silver Springs
Cemetery with full military honors. Closed
casket visitation will
be held at the funeral
home from 10 AM until
the time of the service
on Monday.
In lieu of flowers,
memorial contributions
may be made in Reds
memory to Hospice and
Community Care, www.
hospiceandcommunitycare.org.
Condolences
and memories ma y
be shared at www.
SmedleyFuneralHome.
com

Services Today
Finn, Joseph R.
Buch Funeral Home, 21
West Main St., Mount
Joy, 7 PM
Flick, Robert J., Sr.
Charles F. Snyder
Funeral Home & Crematory, 441 N. George
St., Millersville, 11 AM
Geiter, Curtis L.
The Groffs Family
Funeral & Cremation
Services, Inc., 528 W.
Orange Street, Lancaster, 8 PM
Hill, R. Arlene
Roseboro
Stradling
Funeral Home, 533
Walnut St., Denver, 2
PM
Kauffman, Raymond
S.
Weavertown Amish
Mennonite Church,
2900 Church Rd., Birdin-Hand, 10 AM.
Furman Home for
Funerals
King, Reuben Stephen
The Lords House of
Prayer, 139 East Vine
St., Lancaster, 7 PM.
Shivery Funeral Home
McFadden, James T.
Sacred Heart of Jesus
Catholic Church, 558
West Walnut Street,
Lancaster, 11 AM.
Andrew T. Scheid
Funeral Home
Naraghi,
Metra
Sharene
Trinity
Lutheran
Church, 167 East Main
St., Ephrata, 7 PM.
Stradling
Funeral
Homes, Inc.
Nguyen, Van Dang
Charles F. Snyder, Jr.
Funeral Home & Crematory, 3110 Lititz Pike,
Lititz, 10 AM

Rineer, Arlene W.
Furman Home for
Funerals, 59 West Main
St., Leola, 11 AM
Robertshaw, George
St. James Episcopal
Church, 119 North
Duke St., Lancaster, 2
PM. Andrew T. Scheid
Funeral Home
Sauder, David J.
Hempfield
United
Methodist
Church,
3050 Marietta Ave.,
Lancaster, 10 AM.
Andrew T. Scheid
Funeral Home

Betty Jane
June Yo
oung

Betty Jane June


Yo
oung, 86, formerly of
L a n c a s t e r,
died at her
home in
Yo
ork, PA on
Weednesday
evening,
Fe b r u a r y
3, 2016. Born in Rome,
Georgia, she was the
daughter of the late
Leonard D. and Mattie
G. Sanders Atkins
t
. June
was the wife of the late
Howard M. Young
o
who
died in 2001.
June was a member
of the NCHA
A Camping
Club, she also enjoyed
s qu a r e d an c i ng a n d
bowling.
S h e i s s u r v i v e d by
her son: Edw ard L.
husband of Elizabeth
Young
o
of Lawton, OK;
and a daughter Sandra
M. Lutz companion of
Terry Kreider of Ajo,
AZ. Betty is also survived by a granddaughter Jodi wife of Timoth
hy
Bird of Yo
ork, PA and a
grandson Mattthew husband of Pascale Young
o
of Fircrest, WA
A, fiive
great-grandchildren:
Coty Sauder (Courtney),
Ta r y n
MacLaren
(Christopher), Kelsey
Bird, Ryan Bird, Brianna
Yo
oung and one greatgreat grandaughter.
June w as prede c e a s e d by h e r b r ot h er Jay D. Atkins of
Milledgeville, GA and
three sisters: Belle Byars
of Rome, GA; Frances
Young of Clements Falls,
OR and Mary Harden of
Clarksville, IN
N.
Relatives and friends
are respectfully invited
to attend Junes Funeral
Service to be held on
M onda y, February
8, 2016 at 11:00 a.m.
at The Groffs Family
Funeral & Cremation
Services, Inc., 528 Weest
Orang e Street, (corner of Orange & Pine
Sts.), Lancas ter, PA
17603 with Reverend
Leon G. Bird offfiiciating. The family will
receive friends at The
Groffs from 10:00 a.m.
until the time of service. Interment will
take place immediately
following the service in
Cones toga M emorial
Park, Lancasterr, PA
A.
Memorial contributions in Junes name
may be made to Hospice
& Community Care,
685 Good Drive, P..O.
Box 4125, Lancaster,
P A 17604-4125 or
Jessica and Friends
C
Community
ity, 1625 E
East
Market Street, York,
o PA
17
74
403.
Online condolences
m a y b e p o st e d o n o u r
Weeb site:
www
w.TheGroffs.com

Shoffstall, Daniel J. Sr.


The Groffs Family
Funeral & Cremation
Services, Inc., West
Orange and Pine
Streets, Lancaster, 1 PM
Thompson, Chris
Miller-Finkenbinder
Funeral Home & Crematory, 130 North Market Street, Elizabethtown, 11 AM
Waltman, Martha M.
Calvary Bible Church,
629 Union School
Road, Mt. Joy, 11 AM.
Reynolds Funeral &
Cremation Services,
Inc.
Yeager, Enedina
St. Peter Catholic
Church, 121 South Second St., Columbia, 11
AM. Clyde W. Kraft
Funeral Home, Inc.
Yeagley, Annabel Sue
St. Pauls Evangelical
Lutheran Church, 1258
Newport Road, Penryn,
2 PM. Groff-High
Funeral Home

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t
M
M.
(Stricklerr)
Gallagher

Catherine
M.
(Strickler) Gallagher, 85,
of M ount
Joy, passed
away o n
T h u r s d a y,
Fe b r u a r y
04, 20 16
at Hospice
and Community Care,
Mount Joy. Born in
Mount Joy, she was the
daughter of the late
Os ca r G. an d Me lv a
R. (Cover) Strickler.
Catherine w as the
wife of the late Walter
a
R. Gallagher Jr., who
passed away November
30, 1991.
Catherine w as a
graduate of the former Mount Joy High
School class of 1948. She
worked as a Registered
Nurse at Saint Joseph
Hospital for over 30
years in the pediatric
ward, providing care
and love to the children
as if they were her own.
She was a member of
Mount Joy Church of
God, Lancaster Nurses
Alumni and a life member of Fire Department
Mount Joy. Catherine
h a d a l i f e l o n g l ov e o f
cooking. Most of all she
enjoyed spending time
with her familyy.
Catherine is sur vived by eight children,
Denise Bixler, of Mount
Jo y, Gary Gallagher
husband of Beth, of
Hummelstown, Jeffrey
Gallagher companion of Carol Eisner, of
Enola, Rory Gallagher
husband of Joan, of
Elizabethtown, Gregory
Gallagher husband of
Candyy, of Landisville,
Sheree Gorski wife of
Garyy, of Mount Joy, Lori
Evans wife of James, of
Mount Joy, and Beth
Kraus wife of Caseyy, of
Mount Joy; Fourteen
grandchildren; Ten
great grandchildren; and
three brothers, Henry
Strickler husband of
Pat, of Manheim, Robert
Strickler husband of
Faye, of New Holland,
and Amos Strickler, of
Lititz.
She was preceded in
death by three grandchildren,
Michael
G a l l a g h e r,
Ryan
Gallagher, and Sara
Evans; two sisters, Jean
Rice and Patricia Chant;
and a brother, Kenneth
Strickler.
A funeral service
honoring Catherines
life will be held at the
Sheetz Funeral Home,
Inc., 16 East Main Street,
Mount Joy, on Sunday,
February 7, 2016 at 2
PM. Family and friends
will be received at the
fu ne ra l h om e be for e
the service from 12:30
PM to 2 PM. Interment
will be private at Mount
Joy Cemeteryy. In lieu of
owers, memorial contributions may be made
to Mount Joy Church
of God, 30 East Main
Street, Mount Joy, PA
17552 or Hospice and
Community Care, 685
Good Drive, PO Box
4125, Lancas ter, PA
17604.
To send an online
condolence, please visit
sheetzfuneralhome.com
Sheetz
Funeral Home, Inc.
Mount Joy

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A11

OTHER OBITUARIES
ON PAGE A12

Frederick
E. Fred
Marcuson, III

Frederick E. Fred
Marcuson, III, 62,
of Lancaster passed
away unexpectedly on
Tuesday, February 2,
2016. Born in Annapolis,
MD he was the son
of Virginia (Shiroky)
Marcuson of Severna
Park, MD and the late
Frederick E. Marcuson,
Jr. He was married to
Deborah (Arnoldin)
Marcuson for over 34
years.
He was a graduate of
Mount St. Joseph High
School in Baltimore,
MD.
Fred was a master
craftsman who enjoyed
and could build anything, especially musical
instruments.
He was an avid surf
sherman who enjoyed
his yearly trips to the
Outer Banks, NC along
with his family and
friends.
In addition to his
mother and wife, he
is survived by a sister,
Ruth Brower wife of Jay
of Severna Park, MD.
A Celebration of
Freds Life will be private and held at the
convenience of the family. In lieu of flowers,
contributions in Freds
memory may be made to
a charity of ones choice.
To send an online condolence, please visit
SnyderFuneralHome.com

Martha Jean
Erb

Martha Jean Erb, 90,


formerly of Mountville,
Pa. passed away on
January 29, 2016 at the
Hamilton Arms Center,
Lancaster, Pa. where
she had been a guest
for many years. She was
a daughter of the late
Howard G. and Mabel
Kline Erb. Martha was
the last of her immediate family.
A Graveside Service
will be held for Martha
on Saturday, February
6, 2016, at 11:00 A.M.
at the Silver Spring
Cemetery, Silver Spring,
Pa. Nissley Funeral
Home, Mount Joy, Pa. in
charge of arrangements.
717-653-1151

Frieda
Barnes

9/5/1932 - 2/5/2012
Its impossible to say
in a few words how
much we love and
miss you.
Your loving family
OXOX

OBITS
A12 FEBRUARY
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY
5, 2016
A12 FRIDAY,
5, 2016

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

Obituaries
Ruth S. Auker

Ruth S. Auker, 81,


of Ephrata, PA, passed
away on Thursday,
February 4, 2016. She
was the wife of James
S. Auker, with whom
she shared 61 years
of marriage. Born in
Selinsgrove, PA, she
was the daughter of the
late William B. and the
late Lydia B. Stauffer.
She was a member of
the Denver Mennonite
Church.
In addition to her
husband, she has six
surviving children,
Connie, wife of Kenneth
Gehman,
Denver;
Glenn, husband of Erla
(Zimmerman), Mendon,
MA; Ray, husband
of Faye (Hostetter);
Jay, husband of Carol
( Witmer), both of
Denver, PA; Timothy,
husband of Martha
(Ehst), Scipio Center,
NY; Michael, husband of Ronda (Horst),
Gettysburg, PA; 41
grandchildren and 30
great-grandchildren.
She is also survived by
two sisters, Dorothy,
wife of Lester Martin,
Denver and Anna
Stauffer, East Earl.
The funeral will
be held on Monday,
February 8, at 10:00
AM, at the Denver
Mennonite Church,
95 Monroe Street,
Denver, with Harold
Good, Wilmer Weaver,
Luke Sensenig, Mark
Sensenig and Philip
Sensenig officiating.
Viewings will be held on
Sunday, 2:00-4:00 PM
and 6:00-8:00 PM at
the church. Interment
will be in the adjoining
church cemetery.
Kindly omit owers.
Arrangements by
Stradling
Funeral
Homes, Inc., Akron/
Ephrata. Online condolences can be given at
stradlingfuneralhome.
com.

Joyce L.
(Metzgger
er)
Dav
vis

Joyce L. (Metzg er)


Da vis, of Lancas ter,
passed into
the
lo v ing arms
of Jesus on
Fe b r u a r y
3, 2016. An
Altoona,
PA nativ e, she w as
the daughter of the
late Charles & Gladys
(Lo ng ) Metzg er, a nd
married for 29 years to
the late Dean D. Davis of
Altoona.
Jo yce is surviv ed
by 2 daughters, Diane
J. Da vis (Debra J.
Kilpatrick) of Essex
J unction, VT and
Beverly J. Parmer (Dale)
of Millersville, as well
as 2 granddaughters,
Devica and Deanna also
of Vermont.
e
Her sister, Marjorie Ritchey
of Altoona, PA and her
brother, Allen Metzger
of Huntsville, AL also
survive. She will be
missed by her fam ily including numerous
nephews and nieces.
In addition to her
husband, Jo yce w as
predeceased by 2 sons,
Douglas D. and Thomas
D., and her brother,
Donald Metzger.
A Funeral Service
will be held on Saturday,
February 6, 2016 at 12:00
P..M. at the Son Light
Bible Church, 2503
Oregon Pike, Lancaster,
PA with Pastor Michael
Nolt officiating. Friends
may call at the church
on Saturday from 11:00
A.M. until the time of
the service. Interment
in Green
nw
wood Cemetery
will be private at the
convenience of the familyy. To leave an online
condolence, please visit:
DeBordSnyder.com

717-394-4097

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Enrolling Now Early Childhood


through 8th Grade

Open House
Saturday, February 6 | 10:00 am
Tour The School. Meet The Faculty.
Learn how SWS shaped our
alumnis future.
LEARN MORE ABOUT HOW WALDORF WORKS...
whywaldorfworks.org

Please RSVP: admissions@susquehanna.org


or 717-426-4506 ext. 224. Families Welcome.

15 W. Walnut Street | Marietta, PA


www.susquehannawaldorf.org | AWSNA accredited

Always

In Loving Memory:
Steven Fisher

We little knew that morning that God was going to call


your name. In life we loved
you dearly, in death we do
the same. It broke our hearts
to lose you, you did not go
alone; for a part of us went
with you, the day God called
your home. You left us peaceful memories, your love is still
our guide; and though we cannot see you, you are always at
our side.
We miss you Dad. May your
soul rest in peace.
Tom, Jen and Sis

Create your own ad to


celebrate and honor the life
of a loved one. Memoriams
are available daily on the
obituary pages. Ads start at
just $25 and include a full
color picture!

EDGAR WHITCOMB

Samuel W. Bom
B berge
er

Samuel
W.
Bomberg er, 88 , of
Lancas ter ,
passed away
on Tuesday,
February 2,
2016
at
Hospice &
Community
Care. He was the loving
husband of the late
Elizabeth Betty H.
B o m b e r g e r ( Ho f m a n n )
wh o p ass ed away i n
2013.
Born in Lancaster on
March 1, 1927
7, he was the
son of the late Paul S., Sr.
and Emma E. Stoneroad
Bomberger. He attended
McCaskey High School,
served in the Navy (at
the ag e of 17 ) during
WWII. Upon return, he
earned his Bachelor s
degree from Rider
College.
After completing his
college education, Mr.
Bomberger entered into
the family business
building homes. From
there he moved into the
banking industry and
built a successful career
as an Internal Auditor.
In 1992 he retired as Sr.
Ex ecutiv e V.P. of
Internal Audit. He returned to his passion of
building by remodeling
his shore house and
daughter s home. He
took on an even greater
challenge by building his
other daughters home.
He was a member of
Firs t Presb yterian
Church and formerly attended
Bethany
Presbyterian Church in
Lancaster.
Sams memberships
included Masonic Lodge
#43 F. & A.M., Hamilton
C l u b,
Conestoga
Country Club, Ground

H o g L od g e , Be ac h
Haven Park Yacht Club,
American Legion.
In his spare time, he
enjoyed shing, traveling, g olfing, duckpin
bowling, family dinners,
and spending time with
friends and family at his
summer home on Long
Beach Island.
He is survived by two
daughters: Letitia Smith
(wife of Melvin), and
Paula Mae Bomberger; 4
grandchildren: Cody
S mi th , D ar c y Tayl o r,
Erin Millerr, and Ali Daly;
great-grandchil
and 4 great-grandchildren: Nolan Dalyy, Clive
Taylor, Baylee Miller,
and Brody Dalyy.
Relatives and friends
are respectfully invited
to attend a Funeral
Service
at
Firs t
Presbyterian Church,
140 E. Orang e St.,
Lancaster, PA 17602 on
T u e sday, Fe b ru ary 9,
2016 at 11:00 AM. A
viewing will be held on
Tuesday at the church
from 9:00 AM until the
time of the service.
Interment will be private at Green wood
Cemeteryy.
In lieu of flowers,
contributions in Mr.
Bomberg er s memory
may be sent to Hospice
and Community Care,
685 Good Drive, P..O. Box
4125, Lancas ter, PA
17604-4125, American
Cancer Socie tyy, 314
Good Drive, Lancaster,
P A 1 76 0 3 o r F i r s t
Presbyterian Church at
the address listed above.
To send an on-line condolence, please visit:
DeBordSnyder.com

717-394-4097

Edggar
a Ed D. Wert,
e Jr.

Edgar Ed D. Wert,
e
Jr., 65, off Laureldale,
passed away
T u e s d a y,
Fe b r u a r y
2nd, 2016 in
Penn State
St. Joseph
Medical
Center of natural causes.
Ed is married to
Marietta (Gustantino)
Weert.
t
Born in York
o PA
A, he is
the son of Lorraine
(Spangler) Wert of
Ephrata and the late
Edgar D. Weert, Sr.
He graduated from
Ephrata High School
and Juniata College.
He serv ed in the
P enns ylvania Arm y
National Guard.
Ed started his professional career at Family
Guidance Center in
Reading as a Therapist.
He then was an intensive mental health case
manager for Service
A ccess Manag ement
Inc.
Most recentlyy, Ed was
a mental health case
manager for folks with
persistent mental health
conditions. He was planning to retire this summer.
Ed w as an activ e
member of Chris t
Church United Church
of Christ in Temple. Ed
loved cooking, especially
for church functions. He
se rv e d a s a n e lde r,
served on consistoryy,
was on The Kitchen
Krew
w, and loved singing
in the choir.
He was a devoted
Muhlenberg
High
School Football Fan. His
favorite times included
watching and talking
sports with his family

and friends.
He loved spending
time with his family on
vacations in Cape May,
NJ.
Surviving along with
his wiffe, Marietta, is a
daughter, Chris tine
Weert Radka, wife of 2nd
Lt. Dylan J. Radka of
Columbus, Mississippi.
There are three siblings, Sharon Owens,
Geoffrey Weert and wife
Diana, and Timo thy
Weert and wife Carolyn.
Nieces, Wendy
e
Weert
Button and husband
K evin, Shelb y and
Madison Button and
Emily Weert.
Nephew s ,
Sco t t
Owens and wife Alex,
Jeffrey Owens, Thomas
Owens, and Jonathan
Weert.
A funeral service will
be held on Saturday,
February 6th, at noon in
Christ Church United
Church of Christ, 4870
Kutztown Rd., Temple,
PA 19560 with Rev. Dr.
Harry L. Serio officiating.
A viewing will be held
on Saturda y in the
CHURCH from 10 a.m.
until time of service.
Interment will be private at the convenience
of the familyy.
In lieu of owers, memorial contributions
may be made to the
Greater Reading Mental
He a l t h A l l i a n c e , 1 2 3 4
Penn Ave., Wyomissing,
y
PA 19610.
Th e M ilk in s Gi le s
Funeral Home, Inc.,
Temple is entrusted
arwith the funeral ar
rang ements . Online
condolences ma y be
made at www.milkinsgilesfuneralhome.com

To get started, visit:

LancasterOnline.com/
celebrations/create

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Indiana governor,
World War II POW
INDIANAPOLIS (AP)
Former Indiana Gov.
Edgar Whitcomb, who
escaped from a Japanese
prisoner camp by swimming overnight during
World War II and then
made an around-theworld solo sailing trip
while in his 70s, has died
at age 98.
The Republican smalltown lawyer, who was
quick to veto legislation
even though the Legislature was controlled by
fellow Republicans, died
on Thursday, according
to his daughter, Patricia
Whitcomb. He began a
years-long quest around
the world in 1987, more
than a decade after leaving office, that included
seeing his sailboat sink
off the coast of Egypt.
Governor Ed Whitcomb was a great man
whose life of courage,
service and adventure
inspired
generations
of Hoosiers and he will
be deeply missed, Gov.
Mike Pence said in a
statement
Thursday,
adding that the former
governor died at his
home near the Ohio River community of Rome,
Indiana.
Whitcomb was governor from 1969 to 1973, a
tenure marked by ongoing disputes over spending and taxes. He vetoed
scores of bills, most notably a plan backed by
then-House
Speaker
Otis Bowen in 1971 to
cut property taxes by increasing the state sales
tax. Whitcomb had won
the GOP nomination for
governor at the partys
1968 state convention

over Bowen, and he took


a strict stance against
any tax increases.
Bowen went on to win
election as governor in
1972 and push a similar property tax plan
through the Legislature
the following year. The
changes were well received by the public, and
Bowen was wildly popular when he left office.
Whitcomb,
though,
didnt retreat from his
position, saying his work
to economize state government and block tax
hikes had benefited residents.
Surely the hundreds
of millions of dollars
which are in the hands
of taxpayers as a result of
your refusal to increase
general taxes have contributed to this surge in
personal income, Whitcomb told legislators
in his 1973 farewell address.
Whitcombs term as
governor also saw the
Legislature
establish,
over his veto, that most
of the state would follow Eastern Standard
Time year-round. That
decision to not have
time changes in 80 of
the states 92 counties kept Indiana out of
synch with much of the
country until legislators
approved statewide daylight saving time in 2005.
He also helped ensure
decades of Republican
dominance of Indianapolis by signing into law
the government unification of the city and its
GOP-leaning suburban
communities in Marion
County.

MAURICE WHITE

Earth, Wind & Fire


band founder, 74
DAVID BAUDER
and HILLEL ITALIE
ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK Earth,


Wind & Fire founder
Maurice White, whose
horn-driven band sold
more than 90 million albums and made hits like
September, Shining
Star and Boogie Wonderland, died Wednesday at his home in Los
Angeles, his brother Verdine said.
White, who was 74, suffered from Parkinsons
Disease and had retreated from the public even
as the band he founded
kept performing.
My brother, hero
and best friend Maurice White passed away
peacefully last night
in his sleep, Verdine
White, also a member of
the band, said Thursday.
While the world has
lost another great musician and legend, our
family asks that our privacy is respected as we
start what will be a very
difficult and life changing transition in our
lives. Thank you for your
prayers and well wishes.
Earth, Wind & Fire,
a nine-piece band centered featuring the two
White brothers, singer
Philip Bailey and the
distinctive horn section, were inducted into
the Rock and Roll Hall
of Fame in 2000. The
bands most successful
period started with the
1975 album Thats The
Way of The World and
continued through the
rest of the decade. Other
hits included Serpentine Fire, Thats the
Way of the World and a
cover of the Beatles Got
to Get You Into My Life.
White publicly revealed he had Parkinsons at the time of the
bands Hall of Fame

induction, but he had


shown symptoms of the
neurological
disease
back in the 1980s. He
stopped touring with
the band in 1995 because
of weariness from the
road combined with his
health problems.
White said in an interview with The Associated Press in 2000 that he
wanted the bands music
to inspire instead of just
entertain.
That was the whole
objective, to try to inspire young people to
believe in themselves
and to follow through
on their ideas, he said.
Weve touched so many
people with these songs.
A former session
drummer, White founded the band Salty Peppers in the Chicago area
in the late 1960s and had
some modest success in
the Midwest. After relocating to Los Angeles
and ditching all of the
band members except
Verdine, he renamed the
outfit Earth, Wind & Fire
after the three elements
in his astrological chart.
Baileys bright falsetto
defined many of Earth,
Wind & Fires hits. We
experienced pure magic
together, Bailey said
during the bands Rock
and Roll Hall of Fame induction, standing next to
White.
The bands early sound
was jazzy, but evolved
into an exuberant, horndriven mix of jazz, funk,
gospel and Big Band
music. Their appeal
wasnt just on records
but on stage, their concerts a whirl of dancing,
fog machines, multicolored lights and glittery costumes. Earth,
Wind & Fire performed
everywhere from the
Super Bowl to the White
House.

WORLD

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2016

A13

ISRAEL

Anger at MPs who


met relatives of
Arab attackers

THE NEW YORK TIMES

French troops deploy in northern Niger in November to create a buffer against jihadist advances from Libya.
ISLAMIC STATE

Obama pressed to open front in Libya


ERIC SCHMITT

determined.
The White House just
has to decide, said one
senior State Department
official, who spoke on
condition of anonymity
to discuss internal deliberations. The case has
been laid out by virtually
every department.
The number of Islamic
State fighters in Libya,
Pentagon officials said
this week, has grown to
between 5,000 and 6,500
more than double the
estimate
government
analysts disclosed last
fall. Rather than travel to
Iraq or Syria, many new
Islamic State recruits
from across North Africa
have remained in Libya,
in militant strongholds
along more than 150
miles of Mediterranean
coastline near Sirte,
these officials said.
The top leadership of
the Islamic State in Syria
has sent half a dozen top
lieutenants to Libya to
help organize what Western officials consider the
most dangerous of the
groups eight global affiliates. In recent months,
U.S. and British Special

NEW YORK TIMES

WASHINGTON

President Barack Obama


is being pressed by some
of his top national security aides to approve
the use of U.S. military
power in Libya to open
up another front against
the Islamic State.
But Obama, wary of
embarking on an intervention in another
strife-torn country, has
told his aides to redouble
their efforts to help form
a unity government in
Libya at the same time
the Pentagon refines its
options, which include
airstrikes, commando
raids or advising vetted
Libyan militias on the
ground, as Special Operations forces are doing
now in eastern Syria. The
use of large numbers of
U.S. ground troops is not
being considered.
The debate, which
played out in a meeting
Obama had with his advisers last week, has not
yet been resolved, nor
have the size or contours
of any possible U.S. military involvement been

Operations teams have


increased clandestine
reconnaissance
missions in Libya to identify
the militant leaders and
map out their networks
for possible strikes.
Military planners are
still awaiting orders on
whether U.S. involvement would include
striking senior leaders,
attacking a broader set
of targets, or deploying
teams of commandos to
work with Libyan fighters who promise to support a new Libyan government. Any military
action would be coordinated with European allies, officials said.
Teams of American
Special Operations forces have over the past year
been trying to court Libyan allies who might join
a new government in a
fight against the Islamic
State, also known as ISIS
or ISIL. But commanders say they are dealing
with a patchwork of Libyan militias that remain
unreliable, unaccountable, poorly organized
and divided by region
and tribe.

How long will the


United States and the
Europeans wait until
they say, we have to work
with whatever militias
we can on the ground?
said Frederic Wehrey,
a Libya specialist at the
Carnegie Endowment
for International Peace,
who frequently visits the
country.
When Obama assembled his national security advisers last Thursday
to discuss escalating the
fight against the Islamic
State, he asked them to
prepare whatever military measures were necessary to combat the
militants in Libya while
not undercutting the international effort to help
form a national unity
government.
For Obama the challenge is to avoid embarking on yet another major
counterterrorism campaign in his last year in
office while also moving
decisively to prevent the
rise of a new arm of the
Islamic State that if left
unchecked analysts say
could attack the West,
including Americans.

SOMALIA

Airline CEO: Explosive residue found


ADAM SCHRECK
ASSOCIATED PRESS

The head of the airline whose jetliner was


damaged in an explosion shortly after takeoff from Somalia said
Thursday that investigators have found what appears to be residue from
explosives, though he
cautioned that the findings were inconclusive.
Still, the preliminary
discovery lends weight
to the possibility that
a bomb was to blame
for the blast that tore
through the Airbus 321
shortly after takeoff
from the Somali capital
Mogadishu.
Theres a residue,
theyre saying, of explosives. ... Theres a trace,
Daallo Airlines CEO Mohammed Ibrahim Yassin
said during an interview
at the carriers corporate
office in Dubai. But that
cannot really make 100
percent that its a bomb,
he added, saying that he
expects initial findings
to be released in a matter

CASH

&

ARRY

ASSOCIATED PRESS

A photo taken Tuesday shows a hole in a Daallo Airlines


plane as it sits on the runway of the airport in Mogadishu, Somalia.

of days.
The planes pilot, Capt.
Vlatko Vodopivec, has
said previously that he
and others were told the
explosion was caused by
a bomb.
Yassin too acknowledged that a bomb could
have been to blame, saying we cannot exclude
anything right now. He
declined to speculate
who might be responsible.
Somalias government
confirmed
Thursday
that a passenger who had

been missing since the


explosion had died. It
identified him as Abdullahi Abdisalam Borle,
but gave no details about
how he died.
In a statement issued
after a Cabinet meeting,
Deputy Prime Minister
Mohamed Omar Arteh
said the government
would tighten the airports security to prevent

security threats.
Local police have previously said residents of
Balad, a town about 18
miles north of Mogadishu, found the body of
a man who might have
been blown out of the
Airbus 321 in the blast.
Somalias
transport
minister, Ali Jama Jangali, said preliminary
information from an ongoing investigation had
produced what he called
a suspicious finding,
although he added that
it required further investigation in collaboration with international
experts.
No group has claimed
responsibility for the
blast. Somalia faces an
insurgency from the Islamic extremist group
al-Shabab, which has
carried out deadly attacks in Somalia and
neighboring countries.

JERUSALEM (AP)
Steps should be
taken against three
Arab members of Israels parliament who
met this week with
families of Palestinians who committed
deadly attacks against
civilians and security
personnel,
Israels
prime minister said
Thursday.
Israeli media reports said the families asked for their
relatives bodies to
be released to them,
and held a moment of
silence to honor the
martyrs.
Members of Knesset who go to comfort
the families of terrorists who murdered Israelis do not deserve
to be in the Israeli
Knesset, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said. I have
asked the Speaker of
the Knesset to examine what steps can be
taken against them.
Israel is struggling
to combat almost five
months of near-daily
Palestinian attacks on
civilians and soldiers
that have killed 27
Israelis in stabbings,
shootings and carramming
assaults.
Meanwhile, some 154
Palestinians, the majority of whom Israel
says were attackers,
have been killed by Is-

raeli forces.
The Arab lawmakers
from the Joint List, an
alliance of Arab-backed
parties, met with the
Palestinian families on
Tuesday.
Among them was the
father of a Palestinian
who on Oct. 13, 2015 carried out one of the deadliest attacks in recent
months, Israeli media
reported. Two Palestinian men boarded a bus
in Jerusalem that day
and began shooting and
stabbing
passengers,
while another assailant
rammed a car into a bus
station before stabbing
bystanders. Three Israelis were killed and several other people were
wounded.
The Arab parliamentarians, Hanin Zoabi,
Basel Ghattas and Jamal
Zahalka, reportedly said
they would help the families get back the bodies
of their family members.
Israel has said it is
holding the attackers
bodies due to security
concerns. The issue has
become a sore point with
Palestinians.
Posters of the dead are
plastered on walls in east
Jerusalem and the West
Bank, and residents
hold frequent demonstrations calling for the
bodies release. About
two dozen bodies were
transferred to the Palestinians last month.

EGYPT

Student died slow death


CAIRO (AP) The
body of an Italian
graduate
student
who
disappeared
last month has been
found with multiple
stab wounds, cigarette burns and other
signs of torture and
a slow death on a
roadside on the outskirts of Cairo, an
Egyptian prosecutor
said Thursday.
Giulio Regeni, a
28-year-old
Cambridge
University
PhD candidate who
had been researching
labor rights in Egypt,
went missing on Jan.
25, the fifth anniversary of the popular
uprising that toppled
longtime
autocrat
Hosni
Mubarak.
His body was found
Wednesday.
News of the slaying and evidence of
torture spurred diplomatic tensions. An
Italian government
delegation cut short
a visit to Cairo and
Italy summoned the

Egyptian ambassador in
Rome, calling for a full
investigation with participation by Italian experts.
Regenis
disappearance came at a time
when Egyptian officials
and media have often
depicted foreigners as
plotting against Egypt
and particularly as
seeking to foment unrest surrounding the
Jan. 25 anniversary. In
the days leading up to
the anniversary, police
were on high alert, conducting sweeps aimed at
preventing any possible
protest. Pro-democracy
activists were arrested
and some foreigners
whose visas had expired
were deported.
Egypt is also battling
an insurgency by militants who have sworn
allegiance to the Islamic
State group. The militants are active in the
Sinai Peninsula but have
also carried out attacks
elsewhere,
including
kidnapping and beheading a Croatian oil worker.

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FROM PAGE A3

A14 FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2016

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

Fire: Downtown building damaged

Threatened

Continued from A3

5
8 1

9 10
7

THE 10
MOST
THREATENED
HISTORIC
PROPERTIES

BLAINE T. SHAHAN | STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

A man makes an adjustment on a fire truck Wednesday.

The 2016 watch list of the most


threatened historic properties in
Lancaster County includes many of the same sites as 2015.
Two spots on last years list were removed the Armstrong
pedestrian bridge and the Musselman/Christian Herr II
farmhouse. The Stehli Silk Mill and farmhouse property at 151
Pitney Road replaced them on this years list.
Year
Property, Address

Constructed

1. Circle Creek Farmhouse/Guys Distillery,


1467 Long Lane, East Donegal Township.
2. Dorsey Station, east of Peach Bottom
village, Fulton Township.
3. Eagle Tavern, 901 Village Road,
West Lampeter Township.
4. Herrs Mill Covered Bridge,
101 S. Ronks Road, Paradise Township.

1826
1876
1815
1875

5. Hoober-Eby Barn,
2797 Lititz Pike, Neffsville.

1860

6. Stehman-Rohrer House,
1772 Charlestown Road, Manor Township.
7. Swan Tavern Carriage House,
East Vine and Christian streets, Lancaster city.

1833
1824

8. James Anderson II House, North


mid-1780s
Waterford Ave., Marietta, East Donegal Township.
9. Stehli Silk Mill, 700 block of Martha Avenue, 1897
Manheim Township.
10. 151 Pitney Road, farm property,
East Lampeter Township.

1800s

SOURCE: HISTORIC PRESERVATION TRUST OF LANCASTER COUNTY

PHOTO
GALLERY

Continued from A3

nesses and municipalities to preserve the


sites.
The
annual
list
should serve as a call
to action, and he hopes
people interested in
saving structures will
contact the group.
Lundgren, a former
real estate broker, said
the cost of revitalizing
some of the properties
could run into millions
of dollars.
After being listed on
the watch list as recently as 2013, the former silk mill was missing from the list for the
past two years.
However, a fire there
last fall dealt a setback
to the project to renovate it, Lundgren said.
He is still hopeful
that the renovation
plan will come to fruition.
Two sites identified
by the trust in 2015 are
not on the 2016 list.
One of them is the
Musselman/Christian
Herr II farmhouse in
West Lampeter Township that was demol-

Read the story at


LancasterOnline.com to
view a gallery of pictures
of all the historical
properties on the latest
threatened list.

ished by the municipality due to financial


issues, according to the
preservation group.
Armstrong pedestrian bridge in Lancaster
city was also on the list
last year.
The bridge was dismantled early last year
as part of a development plan by Franklin
& Marshall College
and Lancaster General
Health.
The city is seeking
grants to refurbish the
bridge so it can be put
over the Conestoga
River to connect Conestoga Pines Park with
the Walnut Street fishing area.
For more information about the trust
and its work, visit
hptrust.org or call
291-5861.

Green: Grants
Continued from A3

program, the Lancaster


Group awards grants of
up to $500 to charitable,

educational or business
associations that demonstrate a commitment
to the Sierra Clubs mis-

Because were

Happy Birthday to our baby


girl Grace! You are so bright,
so special. You are brighter
than the sunshine and calmer
than the moon, you brighten
up our mornings and also our
afternoons, You are so special to us words will never be
enough to say, you make us so
happy each time you come to
dance and play.
So a very Happy Birthday to
a person so very dear, may you
always go around and spread
your happy cheer!
Love, Mom & Dad

Create your own ad to


celebrate and honor friends
and loved ones! Categories
include birthdays, birth
announcements, cards of
thanks, prayer requests, and
more. Ads start at just $25 and
include a full color picture!

To get started, visit:

LancasterOnline.com/
celebrations/create

according to Barton.
They all safely exited.
Thursday
morning,
Fire captain Fred Lenhart estimated damage
and cleanup costs at
about $350,000.
The building also
houses offices for the Department of Labor and
Industry and unemployment compensation, a
fire official said.
The fire closed a portion of a main thoroughfare and caused minor
traffic tie-ups.

City Council: Project on the agenda


Continued from A3

identified as needs for


the convention centers
growth.
To address lodging,
Penn Square Partners,
the owner of the Lancaster Marriott at Penn
Square, is planning to
build a 12-story, 105room addition.
But would economic
development halt without the garage, someone
asked.
Randy Patterson, the
citys director of economic
development,
said its not that development would stop, but
attracting
businesses
without adequate parking is a challenge.
A business recently
overlooked Lancaster
city because downtown
didnt have 150 parking
spaces for it, he said.

In response to a suggestion that the city consider shuttle lots outside


downtown and bring
people in, Patterson
said while they can help,
shuttles arent practical for people who want
to dine or shop downtown.
And having people
rely on ridesharing services such as Uber, another suggestion instead
of building a garage,
doesnt address daytime
parking for employers,
Patterson said.
Matt Kroll, pastor
of the Lords House of
Prayer on West Vine
Street directly behind
the proposed garage
said his church members would use parking.
Membership is from
all over the county and
churchgoers do more in

the city than attend services, he said.


Opponents contend a
six-level lot, about the
height of a four-story
building, would harm
the
neighborhoods
character and hurt property values.
Other concerns are
that the garage would
be in a designated historic district and would
be 10 feet from the back
of some of residential
property lines.
Some residents have
said they may sell their
houses and move if garage plans go ahead.
Cohen said the authority modified plans to address concerns such as
light spillage from inside
the garage and landscaping.
Although it is a garage,
the (authority) has done

everything in its power


to address community
concerns, he said.
Two city review agencies the planning commission and the Historical Architectural Review
Board oppose the garage.
But planning commission decisions are not
subject to council approval and the historical
boards recommendations are not binding.
And because the planning commission postponed voting on preliminary plans last month,
the plans were deemed
approved under the
states planning code.
The historical board
previously determined
the garage wouldnt fit
with the neighborhoods
historic character and
would be too large.

OSHA: Landscaper could be fined


Continued from A3

Inc., which is based at 716


Catherine St. and does
business as The Ground
Guys, reported that incident in August 2015.
That was, according to
OSHA, less than three
months after a separate
rollover incident in which
an employee sustained
serious injuries and was
hospitalized.
The company has 15

business days to contest


OSHAs findings.
Melissa Briske, spokeswoman for The Grounds
Guys nationwide franchise headquartered in
Texas, confirmed in an
email that the Lancaster
company is one of its independently owned and
operated franchisees.
Briske wrote that the
company is reviewing the
matter and that each fran-

Guilty: Verdict
caster County District
Attorneys office. She
testified at the trial.
The abuse, which occurred at a Lancaster
city home, stopped in
April 2005 when she was
15 and told the defen-

Continued from A3

dant she was pregnant,


according to court records. The child was not
Frantzs, the prosecutors office said.
Frantz was convicted
of two counts of involuntary deviate sexual intercourse a first-degree

sion of exploring, enjoying and protecting


the planet in Lancaster
County.
Organizations applying for a grant should
consider how their
projects might blend
with the Sierra ClubLancaster Groups areas
of interest: water retention, stormwater man-

agement, rain gardens


and rain barrels; native
plantings;
pollinator
plants; organic gardens;
composting programs;
and hands-on educational programs.
The Lancaster Group
also will offer its expertise and labor to support
those projects that are
awarded grants.

Connect
with us

Happy 2nd
Birthday Grace

City fire Captain Ken


Barton said around
8:30 p.m. that the blaze
started in an elevator
mechanical room in the
basement. The sprinkler system controlled
the fire but heavy smoke
traveled throughout the
building, he said.
A cleaning crew was inside when the fire broke
out but they were working in a different part of
the building and didnt
realize there was a fire,

LancasterOnline

DOLLAR DAYS ARE HERE!

chisee is responsible for


knowing and complying
with all laws and creating
a safety program.
We want our franchisees customers to know
that we do not condone
these types of practices
and urge each franchisee
to make safety a key component of their business,
she wrote.
A separate emailed
statement from Scott

Sensenig, who owns the


Lancaster operation, said
it takes abundant precautions to ensure the
safety of our employees
and customers.
The company has taken
OSHAs
recommendations and implemented
an even more robust safety program, he wrote, including a new disciplinary program for those
not in compliance.

felony and one count


each of statutory sexual
assault, unlawful contact
with a minor and corruption of minors.
Several related charges
were not pursued at trial
and will be dropped at
sentencing.
Brett Hambright, a
spokesman for the prosecutors office, said prosecutors felt confident in

the charges brought to


trial.
Frantz is being held at
Lancaster County Prison
because he was unable
to post $400,000 bail.
Judge Howard Knisely, who presided over
the trial, will sentence
Frantz when a background check is completed in about three
months.

To apply for a grant,


visit the Grant Program
webpage,
http://lancastersierraclub.org/
grant-program/grant/,
which defines the program, and then access
the Online Application
at the bottom of the
page.
After submission, an
email will be returned to
confirm that the grant
proposal has been received.
Winners will be notified via email on April
22 (Earth Day) and soon
after a list of the awardees will be posted on the

website, LancasterSierraClub.org.
The grant program
is supported by funds
raised through the Sierra
Club-Lancaster
Groups annual Polar
Bear 5K Trail Run/Hike,
a community effort of
the group and its members, volunteers from
the area, the Lancaster
County Department of
Parks, the Lancaster
Road Runners Club, and
numerous sponsors.
For more information,
contact Jim Meenan at
475-0586 or jimsmeenan@gmail.com.

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OPINION

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2016

A15

National Conversation
GEORGE WILL
THE WASHINGTON POST

Will Republicans finally


be able to dump Trump?

Rubio says he has a new generations answers


to the nations economic problems. The
answers are mainly about reducing business
taxes and regulations, but he says them in a
much more youthful way.

GAIL COLLINS
THE NEW YORK TIMES

Here we are, in the Marco Rubio


moment of the campaign
The Republican establishment is
thrilled: A moderate-sounding Gen
X senator from a swing state! And
one so good at spin that he managed
to give a victory speech in Iowa after
he came in third. No wonder all the
other candidates are jealous.
This isnt a student council election, everybody. This is an election for
president of the United States. Lets
get the boy in the bubble out of the
bubble, Chris Christie snarked. He
was referring to Rubios tendency to
be rather scripted in his appearances
one New Hampshire reporter compared him to a computer algorithm
designed to cover talking points.
Christie, pressing further and
when does Chris Christie not? has
also been saying that the speech Rubio sticks to is the same one hes been
giving since 2010. Its true that theres
always the part about his parents, the
striving Cuban immigrants. And you
do get the feeling youre supposed to
vote for him because his dad and mom
believed in the American dream.
As a young man, Rubio himself
was not particularly hardworking.
In his memoir he admits he could be
insufferably demanding. But he did
sympathize with his parents struggles, and when his father, a bartender,
went on strike in 1984, young Marco
became a committed union activist.
And then American dream! the
bartenders son became a senator, who
opposes raising the minimum wage
and wants to eliminate rules that
empower unions. You know, you grow.
Rubio was a slow starter, educationwise, but he eventually graduated
from law school, saddled with a load
of student debt. This is, as he always
points out, a familiar American story.
The next part, in which he instantly
runs for office and acquires a billionaire benefactor who helps him out by
underwriting low-stress jobs for Rubio
and his wife, is slightly less average.
The $800,000 advance he got for
his memoir the one that fails to
explain his trajectory on the union
issue is also not exactly typical. But
hes been a terrible money manager,
which he explains by saying that I
didnt inherit any money.
On the issues, Rubio says he has
a new generations answers to the
nations economic problems. The answers are mainly about reducing business taxes and regulations, but he says
them in a much more youthful way.
Hes anti-choice, even for victims of
rape and incest. Lately, hes taken to
pointing to instances when he supported legislation that did include
an exception. This is true. As long as
a bill makes it harder for women to

have access to abortion rights, hes


there.
And then theres the Great Immigration Switcheroo. Follow the
timeline:
2010 Running for the U.S. Senate,
Rubio is against giving people who
are in the country without documentation any path to citizenship. Thats
amnesty, and its just wrong, like
failing to enforce the speed limit.
2013 Marco is a senator, and hes
totally changed his mind about that
path-to-citizenship matter. Why do
you think that happened? Uncharitable observers thought he wanted
to cozy up to big Republican donors
who like the idea. But maybe he was
just growing.
He becomes one of the famous
bipartisan Gang of Eight pushing
for immigration reform. Rubio is a
valuable partner for the gang, and
he makes them pay with repeated
concessions, including a very strong
provision for additional border security. Finally, the path-to-citizenship
bill passes the Senate 68 to 32. We
are a compassionate people, he says
on the Senate floor.
2013 Fast-forward a few weeks.
The tea party is enraged, the House is
unenthusiastic, and Rubio is backtracking wildly. Look, he tells Fox
News, its not the most important
issue facing America. Obamacare is
more important, for example.
2015 Marco Rubio is a candidate
for president. He hates amnesty.
And he says you cant have immigration reform until you have additional
border security.
In the competition with the other
superconservative Cuban-American
contender, Ted Cruz, Rubio is regarded as more likable. This is not a
heavy lift. He is also competing with
Cruz for the affection of Christian
conservatives. While Rubio has
always mentioned God in his political speeches, lately hes been ramping things up. One of his ads in Iowa
was about the free gift of salvation
offered to us by Jesus Christ.
Rubio himself goes to two churches. Sometimes the family attends a
Baptist-affiliated service Saturday
night and a Catholic Mass on Sunday.
Quick question: How would you
feel about a presidential candidate
whos both Protestant and Catholic?
A) Thats great. Maybe its a sign
hes open-minded. B) Thats OK, unless its just another way to fudge his
positions. C) I am strongly against
bringing a persons religion into the
political arena. Which is why I wish
Marco Rubio would stop telling us
about his.

n Gail Collins is a columnist for The New York Times. Twitter: @nytimescollins

When Huck Finn asked Tom


Sawyer what a Moslem is, Tom said
a Moslem is someone who is not a
Presbyterian, which is true, but not
the whole truth.
Donald Trump says he is a Presbyterian ( I drink my little wine ...
and have my little cracker), which
apparently was not good enough for
enough of Iowas evangelicals.
One person who left Iowa having earned the nations gratitude is
Nebraska Sen. Ben Sasse. He campaigned with three Republican aspirants (Ted Cruz, Marco Rubio and
Carly Fiorina) in order to advance
this years most urgent task, which
is to elevate the Republican race by
removing the Trump distraction.
Given Trumps sexual boasts (If
I told the real stories of my experiences with women, often seemingly
very happily married and important
women, this book would be a guaranteed best-seller), Sasse tweeted:
You brag abt many affairs w/ married women. Have you repented? To
harmed children & spouses? Do you
think it matters?
Noting Trumps evident intention
to replicate Barack Obamas anticonstitutional executive authoritarianism, Sasse tweeted, You talk
A LOT about running the country
as tho 1 man shld run America. Will
you commit to rolling back Exec
power & undoing Obama unilateral
habit?
Finally: These r sincere questions
& I sincerely hope u answer rather
than insult. Trump responded:
BenSasse looks more like a gym rat
than a U.S. Senator. How the hell did
he ever get elected?
Iowans who made up their minds in
the last month broke heavily against
Trump, perhaps a harbinger of voters
everywhere recoiling from the prospect of this arrested-development
adolescent sitting in Lincolns chair.
Cruzs theory of the race, including
the general election, is that he can locate and motivate voters who, having
concluded that voting is futile, have
turned away from politics.
The 2008 and 2012 presidential
elections were momentous because
they empowered a progressive president to vastly expand the administrative state, often by unilateral executive actions.
But the 2010 and 2014 off-year
elections also were momentous. Although they substantially expanded
the congressional strength of Republicans pledged to resist progressivism, subsequent events convinced a
significant portion of the Republican
electorate that those pledges were
pointless that only presidential
elections are significant, because
congressional power is insignificant.

Mondays record turnout for the


Iowa Republican caucuses may be a
sign of civic health. Or not.
Lincolns 39.9 percent of the 1860
popular vote is the lowest in history
for an electoral vote winner, but the
81.2 percent turnout of eligible voters in 1860 is the second highest in
history: High turnouts can coincide
with high anxiety about irrepressible
conflicts.
Distributional conflict is written in
the arithmetic of economic sluggishness. Mondays beginning of the
2016 nomination process came one
week after the Congressional Budget
Office issued its 10-year outlook, projecting cumulative deficits over the
next decade at $8.5 trillion, resulting
in a 2025 debt-service cost of $772
billion. And Iowans voted three days
after the government announced the
economys fourth-quarter growth
rate of 0.7 percent, completing a lost
decade 10 years without a year of
even 3 percent growth.
Time was, Republicans preached
realism about the demographic
pressures on the entitlement state as
every day 10,000 more baby boomers
become eligible for Social Security
and Medicare. This year, the subject
rarely enters the political conversation.
Time was, the Democratic Party
was at least thoughtful about its
Keynesian economics. Today, the
intellectual tone of the worlds oldest political party is set by Bernie
Sanders, who thinks America has
one problem, or perhaps 536: That,
according to Forbes magazine, is the
number of Americans in what Sanders calls the billionaire class.
Sanders, a sandbox socialist,
promises a revolution but actually
represents dreary continuity with
the current president, who has said
ATMs and airport ticket kiosks cause
unemployment.
Sanders has similar economic
sophistication: You dont necessarily need a choice of 23 underarm
spray deodorants or of 18 different
pairs of sneakers when children are
hungry in this country. The connection between childhood poverty and
multiple deodorants is as unclear
as the reasons Americans should be
unhappy that Steve Jobs became a
billionaire by producing Apple products that make Americans happy.
It probably is too late for the Democratic Party to get what it needs,
which is a third candidate, someone
somewhat likable and somewhat
plausible. It is not too soon to hope
that Republicans will soon get what
they need, which is a contest without
Trump. He is a negative illustration
of Emersons axiom that the force of
character is cumulative.

n George Will is a columnist for The Washington Post. Twitter: @GeorgeWill

Iowans broke heavily against Trump, perhaps a


harbinger of voters everywhere recoiling from the
prospect of this arrested-development adolescent
sitting in Lincolns chair.

A16 FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2016

Opinion

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

LNP | Founded 1794

FORMERLY KNOWN AS THE INTELLIGENCER JOURNAL/LANCASTER NEW ERA/SUNDAY NEWS

Beverly R. Steinman

Barbara Hough Roda

Robert M. Krasne

Suzanne Cassidy

Chairman Emeritus

Chairman of the Board

Executive Editor

Editor of the Opinion Page

Publishers: 1866-1917 Andrew Steinman | 1921-1962 J. Hale Steinman |


1921-1962 John F. Steinman (Co-Publisher) | 1963-1980 John F. Steinman |
2013- Robert M. Krasne

FOR THE LATEST UPDATES, GO TO LANCASTERONLINE.COM

In our words

On football, the Super Bowl


and concussions
THE ISSUE
Super Bowl 50, between the Carolina Panthers and Denver Broncos, arrives
this weekend, providing an opportunity for friends and family to gather around
the television and enjoy the most anticipated game in North Americas most
popular sport. With more and more news and evidence flooding in regarding the
dangers of football, including brain trauma and, quite possibly, CTE, or chronic
traumatic encephalopathy, it is also a stark reminder of the reality of the game.

In the past two weeks, we were once again


reminded of the devastating effects of footballrelated brain trauma.
Several times, in fact.
Tuesday, Jan. 26: The New York Times reported Tyler Sash, a former New York Giants
safety who died of an accidental overdose of
pain medications at age 27, was discovered to
have an advanced stage of CTE, a degenerative brain disease caused by repeated head
trauma, which can only be diagnosed posthumously. Symptoms include memory loss,
lack of focus, irritability and irregular behavior.
Friday, Jan. 29: The NFL released its 2015
concussion data, stating there had been 182
reported concussions during regular-season
games this year the highest number in four
years, and a steep rise of 58 percent from
2014.
Thursday: According to The New York
Times, iconic Super Bowl-winning quarterback Ken Stabler also known as the Snake
who died of colon cancer in July at age 69,
also was diagnosed with CTE after his brain
was tested by scientists in Massachusetts.
Sash and Stablers names are added to a list
containing more than 100 NFL players who
have been diagnosed with CTE, at least seven
of whom belong to the Pro Football Hall of
Fame: most notably, Junior Seau, Mike Webster and Frank Gifford.
And, yet, when Super Bowl 50 arrives Sunday, sadly, none of that will matter.
More than 100 million Americans will likely
flock to CBS, giving last years Super Bowl a run
for its money for the most-watched broadcast
in U.S. history. At least $4.2 billion in bets will
be placed by millions of gamblers, legally and
illegally. Advertisers will dish out millions of
dollars for their 30-second slice of the commercial pie.
Its an unofficial holiday.
We ask that you enjoy it. Responsibly.
And that starts with awareness. When you
sit down with your children Super Bowl
Sunday, make sure theyre not only absorbing the glitz, glamour and excitement, but
they understand the risks involved with the

sport.
Knowledge is power, Dr. Jon E. Bentz, a
neuropsychologist specializing in brain trauma and dementia at Lancaster General Health,
wrote in an email to LNP. Only through open
dialogue can our children learn to identify
potentially significant events, injury or symptoms.
As with any other potentially dangerous
activity, parents need to decide whether its
worth the risk of exposing their children to the
sport of football, especially when it comes to
participating.
Some experts have advised barring children
from tackle football until age 18, when the
brain becomes fully developed.
I cant say at what age it is appropriate to
play football or any sport in which there is repeated contact or force to the head, Bentz
wrote. The better question might be, is it ever
safe, at any age, to take repeated blows to the
head?
Yet, there are improvements to be made
to the precarious nature of football. Bentz
mentions a few suggestions: teaching
proper tackling technique, designing safer
headgear and limiting practice time for all
ages.
The NFL, albeit slow to accept the reality of its relationship with brain trauma,
has taken steps in the right direction since
2013. Under the new concussion protocol, each team is assigned a spotter, who
can stop a game if he sees a player showing concussion-like symptoms. One of the
reasons reported concussions are so high
is that fewer are going unnoticed, which,
in the end, is a positive result. The league
has also cracked down on illegal helmetto-helmet hits.
However, there can only be so much change
before the very essence of football becomes
skewed. Football is, and always will be, dangerous.
So, go ahead and cheer, laugh at those funny
commercials and enjoy those high-calorie
snacks.
Just keep in mind the risk these players take
each and every time they run onto the field.

FIND MORE ONLINE

bit.ly/1NufEcR l bit.ly/1KqMW0Y

DAVID BROOKS
THE NEW YORK TIMES

The party, wrestling with Trumps


disdain for manners, still may win
Donald Trump was
inducted into the World
Wrestling Entertainment Hall of Fame in
2013. Hed been involved
with professional wrestling for over a quarter
of a century. At first
his interest was on the
business side, because so
many of the events were
held at his hotels. But
then he began appearing
in the ring as an actual
character.
His greatest moment
came in 2007 with the
pay-per-view series called
Battle of the Billionaires, when he verbally went up against the
WWEs chief executive,
Vince McMahon. The
feud started when Trump
interrupted McMahon on
Fan Appreciation Night
and upstaged him by
raining down thousands
of dollars in cash on the
crowd in the arena. It
continued with a verbal
barrage and proxy match,
and ended with a triumphant Trump shaving
McMahons head in the
middle of the ring.
From the moment he
entered this presidential
race, his campaign has
been one long exercise
in taking the low
manners of professional
wrestling and interjecting them into the
respectable arena of
presidential politics.
This is an anxious and
angry nation. Many
people have lost faith
in its leadership. Somewhere in his marketers
brain, Donald Trump
intuited that manners
are more important than
laws; and if you want to
assault the established
powers, you have to assault their manners first.
By shifting the cultural
language, Trump initiated a new type of culture
war, really a manners war.
He seemed fresh, authentic and resonant to a lot of
people who felt alienated
from the way elites govern, talk and behave.
What matters is not
so much who wins or
loses, or whether you
are good or evil, but the
aggressiveness by which
you wage each mano-amano confrontation.
Trump brought this
style onstage at the first
Republican debate, and
a thousand taboos were
smashed all at once. He
insulted peoples looks.
He stereotyped vast
groups of people Mexicans and Muslims. He
called members of the
establishment morons,
idiots and losers.
Trump was unabashedly masculine, the lingua
franca of pro wrestling.
Every time he was challenged, he was compelled
by his code to double
down the confrontation
and fire back.
Social inequality is
always felt more acutely
than economic inequality. Trump rose up on
behalf of people who
felt looked down upon,
made them feel vindicated, and turned social
conduct on its head.

But in Iowa on Monday night, we saw the


limit of Trumps appeal.
Like any other piece
of showbiz theatrics,
Trump was more spectacle than substance.
Many supporters may
have been interested in
symbolically sticking
their thumb in somebodys eye, but they are
reality TV watchers, not
actually interested in
politics or governance.
They didnt show up. We
can expect similar Trump
underperformance in
state after state.
Furthermore, we saw a
big management failure
in Trumps organization. Bernie Sanders is a
good enough executive
that he was able to lead
a campaign that brought
outsiders to the polls.
Trump is not as effective
a leader as Sanders.
Trumps whole
campaign was based
on success breeding
success, the citing of
self-referential poll victories to justify his own
candidacy. How does he
justify a campaign built
entirely around his own
mastery? Can an aggressor like him respond
gracefully in the days
ahead to self-created
failure? His concession
speech was an act of
pathetic self-delusion.
What happened in
Iowa was that some
version of normalcy
returned to the GOP
race. The precedents of
history have not been
rendered irrelevant.
Ted Cruz picked up the
voters who propelled
Rick Santorum and Mike
Huckabee to victory in
previous caucuses. His
is a tea party wing in the
GOP. But its size and geographic reach are limited.
The amazing surge
for Marco Rubio shows
that the Republican
electorate has not gone
collectively insane. At
the last moment, and in a
state that is not naturally
friendly to him, a lot of
Republicans showed up
to support a conservative
who could conceivably
get elected and govern.
Rubio now has his
moment. He is the only
candidate who can
plausibly unify the party.
Desperate Cruz-hating
Republicans will turn
their faces to him.
But can he rise to this
moment? Can he see that
the Trump phenomenon
touched something,
even if the blowhard
candidate offered people
nothing but bread and
circuses? Can Rubio take
his growing establishment base and reach
out to the working-class
voters with a message
that offers concrete assistance for those who
are being left behind?
The Republican Party
usually nominates unifying candidates like
Marco Rubio. The laws
of gravity have not been
suspended. He has a
great shot. But he has to
show one more burst of
imagination.

n David Brooks is a columnist for The New York Times;


Twitter: @nytdavidbrooks

OP-ED/LETTERS

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2016

A17

Letters to the editor

Thanks to all who


aided after storm
I use a motorized wheelchair to ambulate, and I drive
a wheelchair-accessible van.
At the very least, I need curb
cuts, ramps and sidewalks.
I spent 10 months worrying
about managing downtown
Lancaster during the winter.
I was pleasantly surprised to
find my concerns unnecessary, following last months
snowstorm.
Umbrella Works maintenance team worked tirelessly
to clear both of their parking
lots, the two driveways and
sidewalks. Instead of fretting
about the limited mobility, I
got permission to wheel on
the road providing it was
done safely plus a short
distance on the clear streets
downtown.
Thank you, Mayor Rick
Gray, for making parking in
the garages free.
Last but not least, kudos to
the gas station owner on Lime
Street. I suggest that motorists fill up their vehicles there.
Sue Schaffer
Lancaster

Wallet arrives home


ahead of its owner
Faith in humanity restored:
Went to the carwash today
(along with half of Lancaster
County). On my way home,
my husband called to tell me
he has my wallet. Uh oh. I remembered that I left it out in
the carwash bay. I drove off
and forgot it.
Before I could get home,
two young men went out of
their way to drive it to my
house. The reward given to
them was nothing compared
to what would have happened
if someone else had found it.
Thank you. Thank you.
Thank you.
Terri Bair
Akron

Recalling 2 one-room
schoolhouses here
This is in regard to the article on one-room schoolhouses in Lancaster County
(Four walls and a bell, Jan.
29):
I attended two different
ones. Chestnut Grove School
on Chestnut Grove Road in
Manor Township is now a
house. I was there during the
1950-51 school year. I was at
Swamp School in the Ephrata
School District starting with
the 1951-52 school year, then
transferred during the 195455 school year. This school
building does not exist any
longer because it was part of
the Middle Creek Project 70
area.
I am curious to know how
many people can say they actually attended a one-room
schoolhouse in Lancaster

LETTER POLICY
n Letters to the editor are welcome. All letters must include an

address and telephone number for verification purposes. Letters


should be limited to 300 words and on topics that affect the public.
Writers are limited to one published letter every 14 days. Letters
will be edited for grammar, clarity and length. Material that has
appeared elsewhere and form letters are discouraged, and any
detected will not be published.
How to submit letters:
Email LancasterLetters@lnpnews.com
Fax 399-6507
Mail to Letters, c/o LNP, P.O. Box 1328,
Lancaster, PA 17608-1328

County. I would also like


to know when the last one
closed (excluding any Amish
schools).
Raymonda Clymer
Wrightsville

Blame Republicans
for budget impasse
Here we go again about
who is trying to work for us
in Harrisburg regarding the
budget or should I say the
lack of a budget.
Republicans say they are
trying to hold the line on taxes with their usual smokeand-mirrors budget that
will result in less money for
our schools and a tremendous increase in future real
estate taxes. Democrats recognize that you cant pass a
balanced budget without increasing our sales tax, especially if you want to increase
the money to our schools.
Republicans say the increase in the state sales tax
would hurt the majority of
Pennsylvanians, especially
low-income individuals and
renters. Naturally, a sales tax
increase would cost everyone
more money, but it would
most affect people who buy a
lot of nonfood items those
who own homes and are in a
higher income bracket.
Republicans want to continue our dependency on real
estate taxes, which is killing
our economy and putting a
lot of retired people out on
the streets. Just today my
school district stated it will
petition the state for a real
estate tax increase exceeding
5 percent. That adds an additional $250 to my annual real
estate tax bill.
I dont understand why so
many people are against the
tax increase being proposed,
especially since those who
own homes are supposed to
get a real estate tax break
that would more than pay for
any increase in the sales tax.
In fact, homeowners could
come out of this with more
spendable cash, which in
turn would help the economy.
Just remember that our
state Senate did compromise with Gov. Wolf over
two months ago on the bud-

get and that the House of


Representatives turned the
budget into a personal vendetta against Gov. Wolf. After watching Terry Madonna
interview the House majority leader and hearing a York
Republican leader say about
Gov. Wolf, We had him
down on the floor with our
foot on his throat, and we let
him up. Next time, we wont
let him up, I dont wonder
that we have no compromise
and no budget.
If you really want future
budgets passed, remember
to vote against all Republican House members whenever they come up for election or re-election.
Larry Harsh
West Lampeter Township

Keystone Degree
recipients impress
I read with interest the article about Keystone Degrees,
the highest honor awarded
by our statewide FFA (Lancaster County students earn
Keystone Degrees, Jan. 18).
These are future farmers
in our rich Lancaster County
farmland. We should all feel
proud of them.
I thought farming was
mostly a male occupation
and was greatly surprised
that there were 25 girls and
15 boys receiving this degree.
Congratulations, girls.
Paul H. Ripple
Lancaster

Snow means pasta


party in Millersville
Winter sometimes brings
out the best in people, particularly when the skies open up
and transform our ordinary
world into a wonderland.
And we at Thorngate Place in
Millersville are blessed with
good people
Every year, with the first
snowfall of 3 inches or more,
Bob and Elaine Muschlitz
throw a pasta party for residents of our street. It is a time
to get together with old and
new residents and enjoy the
good food and camaraderie.
Thanks, nice neighbors!
M.H. Kirkham
Millersville

JACK BRUBAKER
THE SCRIBBLER

Questions grow on trees;


answers ready for harvest
The answer is: Paulownia!
The question was: What
type of tree died more than
four decades ago near the
corner of Millersville Pike and
Bausman Drive?
The Jan. 22 Scribbler
column featured a birch tree
that has been growing out of a
dead tree for 15 years. Nobody
seemed to recall what the
dead tree was.
Bill Bitzer, who has operated a tree service in Willow Street for four decades,
remembers that tree. He is
certain it was a Paulownia
tomentosa, also known as an
empress or princess tree. He
recalls the large purple flowers produced by the Chinese
ornamental.
Paulownias are known for
forming hollow spots in their
trunks and limbs, Bitzer says.
A birch seed sprouted in the
hollow spot of this tree and
flourished.

Ive never seen a tree that


large growing out of a fork of a
dead tree, he says.
Bitzer believes the seed
that created the birch was not
dropped by a passing bird but
blew in from another birch.
One birch creates tens of
thousands of seeds a season,
he says, and the wind can
carry them as far as half a
mile.
Bitzer has watched the birch
tree grow since he noticed
the first green shoots in the
hollow of the Paulownia
many years ago. He has been
surprised by the sturdiness of
the new tree and suspects its
roots have descended through
the Paulownia to the ground.
He has not been surprised
by how long the dead tree has
stood in place.
Paulownia is a tough
wood, he says. A lot of oaks
that size would have been on
the ground.

Mysteries solved:
What species
is the dead tree
thats cradling
the birch?
Who built the
treehouse in it?
And another mystery has
been solved. Helen Kirchner,
who owns the property where
the intertwined trees stand,
had said that the older tree
once held a treehouse.
Now we know who built it.
Greg Schreder, who still lives
nearby in Lancaster Township, and Terry Reilly, who
has moved to Houston, Texas,
built a bilevel treehouse in
the late 1960s when they were
youngsters and there were no
homes nearby. The tree grew
at the edge of a vacant field.

By bringing costs in under budget,


Manheim Township has generated savings
to help fund fire rescue services without
resorting to a fire tax increase.

IAN HODGE
SPECIAL TO LNP

No need for alarm: Fire service


funds are there, without tax hike
Sam Mecum, a member of
the Manheim Township Board
of Commissioners, outlined
his views in LNP recently on
the shortfall in fire tax revenue
versus fire rescue service expenditures (Time for a report
card on MT Fire Rescues
finances, future, Dec. 2, 2015).
At public meetings, the
Democrat has called for a 28
percent hike in the fire tax
an increase from 0.43 to 0.55
mills.
But the four Republican
commissioners have demonstrated that responsible
fiscal stewardship provides
Manheim Township with
model fire protection without
reaching deeper into taxpayers wallets.
Even though it is much
easier to raise taxes than to
do the hard work of drilling
down into township expenditures to find savings to pay for
essential services, the majority commissioners rejected
Mr. Mecums position. They
opted instead to use $500,000
in 2015 surplus net revenues
to fund the projected fire tax
fund shortfall for 2016.
The 2016 budget estimates
that general fund revenues
from all sources will exceed total general fund expenditures
by $3.2 million enough to
cover any 2017 anticipated fire
tax fund deficit and still have
money available for contingencies.
Fire-rescue services all over
Pennsylvania are facing difficult times; a lack of volunteers and escalating costs for
equipment and insurance are
the biggest culprits.
Manheim Township saw
these trends before they affected public safety. Officials
proactively moved to ensure
that our hybrid department
of paid part-time firefighters
and live-in volunteers was

properly staffed, equipped


and funded, ensuring that we
have adequate personnel at
all times in every firehouse to
respond to calls.
Manheim Township continues to seek out ways to
make our fire-rescue services
more efficient and less costly.
Insufficient funding is not an
option. Lives are literally at
stake.
Our efforts have not gone unnoticed. Manheim Township
Fire Rescue was featured in a
documentary by Pittsburgh
television station WTAE, titled
Burning Questions: A Better Way? The piece focused
on how the organization was
effectively managing the
dearth of volunteers in ways
that could serve as a model
for other fire-rescue services
throughout the state.
Currently, collected revenues adequately fund
township requirements. By
bringing costs in under budget, Manheim Township has
generated savings to help fund
fire-rescue services without
resorting to a fire tax increase.
The townships recently
upgraded AAA debt rating
affirms the prudent financial
management undertaken by
the present Board of Commissioners.
The bottom line is: There is
no need to raise the fire tax, as
Manheim Township has sufficient revenues and reserves
to cover contingencies.
The monies in the townships reserve fund do not
belong to the commissioners.
They belong to the taxpayers
of Manheim Township. We
commissioners are merely
stewards of that money. As
such, we need to work hard
to keep expenses and taxes
down in order to pay for what
is needed, and not call for tax
hikes at the drop of a hat.

n Ian G. Hodge Jr., a member of the Manheim Township Board of Commissioners, is the commissioner of golf, public works, code compliance, and
planning and zoning.

Schreder lived on North


Bausman Drive; Reilly lived
on Montrose Avenue, across
Millersville Pike.
Every day in the summer
we would sneak tools and
nails from our dads garages,
Reilly recalls. We would
scour the neighborhood for
scraps of wood. It took quite
some time, but after awhile we
had a nice place to hang out
during the summer and fall.
We put so many nails in the
wood, I thought we killed the
tree, Schreder says.
What did kill the tree, he
adds, was the leveling of that
lot in the mid-1970s, not long
before Helen Kirchner bought
it. The tree was in a low spot,
and it was partially covered
with earth.

Scooters to go
Charles Wolf bought an
electric scooter so he could
navigate the spacious campus
of Woodcrest Villa off Harrisburg Pike.
Since the retired Millersville
University professor usually
goes somewhere with his wife,
Virginia, he needed transportation for her as well.
So he purchased wheels, a
seat and a lawnmower bar.
He took these materials to
an Amish blacksmith. The

Charles and Virginia Wolf ride


their twin Two-Go scooters at
Woodcrest Villas.

blacksmith assembled a second, motorless scooter. Then


he welded a hitch to Wolfs
scooter so it could pull the
other one.
The Wolfs use this contraption to scoot to distant
apartments in the retirement
complex.
Wolf calls his invention the
Two-Go. He knows of no
other like it.

n Jack Brubaker, a retired LNP

staff writer, writes The Scribbler


column twice a week. He welcomes
comments and contributions at
scribblerlnp@gmail.com or 6691929.




















   







   

   



  

    


 

 
  



 












 
 

    


  
 





 
 








  

     

 
                 
    
  

  
  
  


         
 
 
     
            

     

 







 

 




  





  



  

 

  





 

 

 



 




 




  
       
        

 
  


 



  


 



    





 

 


 



   
  



 
 


 



    

  







 

 










    

    
                       
      





 
 






       


 



        

 
 



  
  
   



 

  

  
 
  
 
   
  
  
 

 




 


       


     
        
         
                                 
            
        
              
       
      
       
                              


Together

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2016

n SEND STORY TIPS & INFO TO: JON FERGUSON, 291-8839, JFERGUSON@LNPNEWS.COM

ALSO INSIDE: PUZZLES & COMICS

HEALTH

Slowing agings decline


As you get older, exercise both your body and your mind

ERIN NEGLEY

ENEGLEY@LNPNEWS.COM

hen Dr. A. Peter Calusic looks at the deleterious effects of aging,


he begins at a younger
age than you might imagine.
Most of us, he says, have a free pass
until were 30. Even if you drink,
smoke and eat whatever, its probably
OK.
Usually they can recoup from that
at an early age, said Calusic, with
WellSpan Family Medicine.
Starting at 45, however, laissez faire
living can lead to a quick decline in the
quality of life.
All isnt lost, though.
Calusic, who gave a WellSpan

HealthTalk called Younger Next


Year: A Guide to Living like 50 into
Your 80s that attracted a crowd at
Garden Spot Village this week, shared
tips that explained the biology of aging, and how to slow and even prevent
the declines that accompany it.
The crowd consisted primarily of
people in their 70s, 80s and 90s, and
Calusic told them they could take actions today to improve how they feel.
A lot of us, even some of us in this
room, will live longer than we are
well, he said.
He said there doesnt have to be a
steep decline during the later years.
Doing things like regularly breaking a
sweat, lifting weights and eating well
will improve quality of life as we age.

About 70 percent of the symptoms


associated with aging weakness,
sore joints and balance problems
can be alleviated through lifestyle
changes, he said.
For example, exercise will help your
body repair instead of decay.
Suzanne Browns been slowly returning to an exercise routine after an
illness and surgery.
When I would start to sweat, I
would stop, she said after Calusics
talk. I guess I have to keep going now.
Calusic shared information from
his practice and books like Younger
Next Year and The Doctors 5-minute Health Fixes. It was aimed at promoting wellness instead of treating
problems.

WHATS YOUR LIFE


EXPECTANCY?
Dr. Calusic shared this quiz
developed by longevity expert
Thomas Perls.
Men start with 86 years.
Women start with 89 years.
n 1. Stress. Dwell on problems
and internalize stress? Subtract
5 years. If you dont let stress
bother you, add 5 years.
n 2. Genes. If you have at least
one family member who lived
to age 90, add 10 years.
n 3. Tobacco. If you smoke,
subtract 15 years.
n 4. Exercise. If you exercise
30 minutes a day, four days a
week, thats great. If you dont,
subtract 5.
n 5. Brain. If you regularly
exercise your brain with things
like word or math puzzles add
five years.
n 6. Eating. If youre
overweight (waist more than 41
inches for men or 36 inches for
women), subtract five years.
Your final total is your life
expectancy. A more detailed
analysis is available on Dr.
Perls website, livingto100.com.

IMPROVE
HOW YOU
FEEL
While some
health problems
are genetic
or caused by
accidents, most
illnesses or
symptoms thought
to be signs of
aging can be
improved through
lifestyle changes.
Dr. Calusic shared
these tips aimed
at improving how
you feel as you
age and extending
your life.
n Exercise six
times a week for
30 to 45 minutes.
Exert yourself
enough to raise
your heart rate or
break a sweat.
n Lift weights
twice a week.
Soup cans work
just as well as
hand weights.
n Exercise
your brain with
crossword puzzles
or Sudoku.
n Dont eat junk
food.
n Eating one or
two ounces of
dark chocolate
daily will lower
blood pressure.
n Make sure
portion sizes
arent too large.
Try whole grain
bread instead of
white.
n Eat nuts,
especially
walnuts.
n Floss.
Removing
the plaque
between your
teeth reduces
inflammation,
which can lead
to cardiovascular
disease.
n Replace
hostility and
hopelessness with
joy and play.
n Avoid tobacco.
n Lower your
stress level by not
letting the little
things bother you.
n Incorporate
faith and
spirituality into
your life.
n Stay connected
to others in your
life, even if you
are single.

THINKSTOCK PHOTO

RESEARCH

For 96-year-old woman, age just a bigger number


Researchers are pursuing genetic discoveries and pharmacological interventions to stall aging process at cellular level
COURTNEY PERKES

ORANGE COUNTY REGISTER

NEWPORT BEACH,
Calif. When the end
comes, LaVerne Bugna,
96, will reunite with
her beloved husband in
a single plot at Pacific
View Memorial Park,
where shes instructed
their children to place
her coffin face down over
his, as if poised for an
eternal kiss.
Bugna, a recently retired attorney who lives
by herself in Newport
Beach, Calif., and still
drives, has attended too
many funerals not to

think about her own. Her


biggest grievance with
aging isnt any particular
ailment but rather that
shes outlasted most of
her friends. Those still
living are too frail to
golf, sail or attend happy
hour, where she favors a
Manhattan on the rocks.
Now I know what the
term bored to death
means, Bugna quips
about her languishing
social life. I can see it
happening.
But in the future, isolation may not be an inevitable side effect of a long
life.

We really do need a revolution to change


the mechanisms by which we go about
trying to keep people healthy.
Brian Kennedy,
Buck Institute for Research on Aging

Researchers are pursuing genetic discoveries and pharmacological


interventions to stall
the aging process at the
cellular level. So-called
super agers like Bugna,
who live far beyond their
expected life spans while
maintaining
physical
health and mental acuity,

could become the norm


instead of the sometimes
lonely outliers.

90+ Study
Longevity researchers
at UC Irvine are learning
from Bugna and roughly
400 other still-living
participants enrolled in

the 90+ Study.


Elsewhere, scientists
in laboratories across
the world work to push
the limits of the life
span and human body.
Rather than seek to
eradicate any particular
disease, their goal is to
prevent chronic conditions caused by growing

older.
We really do need a
revolution to change the
mechanisms by which
we go about trying to
keep people healthy,
says Brian Kennedy,
chief executive of Novato-based Buck Institute
for Research on Aging.
Right now, we wait until people get sick and we
spend a fortune trying to
keep them alive. I view
aging research as trying
to keep people healthy
longer. We want to know
the intrinsic process that
drives these diseases,

RESEARCH, page B4

B2

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2016

2gether

Support Groups

I KNOW A STORY

These typical
camp cabins
are on the
grounds
of Camp
Andrews in
Holtwood.
RICHARD HERTZLER | STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

Boys will be boys,


especially at camp
ED SCHOPF
SPECIAL TO LNP

In the 1950s, the Lancaster YMCA had a summer


youth camp in the Carlisle area. Four or five cabins,
each accommodating 10 or 12 boys and a counselor,
were in a low wooded area near a wide, fairly deep
stream. Higher up was a large grass area that was a
former golf course, and between this and the woods
was the main two-story building. The kitchen help
and other adults leaders stayed on the second floor;
the kitchen, dining room and auditorium were on
the first floor.
First-time campers would early on be identified
by the mercurochrome on their earlobes. They
were told they caught a contagious disease, and
mercurochrome was the treatment. Luckily, I escaped this embarrassment because my lower ears
came directly down to my jaw, so I had no earlobes
to contract the disease.
The Polar Bear Plunge was one of the ways we
could show our bravery. If we dipped in the creek
for a proscribed number of mornings before breakfast, when the water was the coldest, we would get a
special certificate.
We had a night when the members of each cabin
would present a skit. One, I remember, was the old
car. It took seven people. Six would be on hands and
knees representing four wheels, a spare tire and a
motor. The motor guy has a can of stones which he
shook to represent a running motor. Well, the seventh guy, the driver, barely cranked up the motor
when one tire flattened and he had to replace it with
the spare. The skit quickly ended when the motor
conked out and all the tires became flat, much to the
dismay of the driver.
Another skit I remember had four people: two

with a brown blanket over them (one the head and


the other the tail of a donkey), a man leading the
donkey through a desert and the fourth with signs
announcing the scenes. He would hold up a sign and
say scene one. The donkey would say water, water, and the one leading the donkey would say, patience, jackass, patience. This would be repeated in
scenes two and three. Then the announcer would
say scene five and several in the audience would
yell scene four, at which time the sign boy would
address the audience and say, patience, jackass,
patience.
The old golf course was a great expanse in which
to play capture the flag. Each side had a jail between the center dividing line and flags on a short
pole at each end of the field. The object was to get
the opponents flag safely across the dividing line
without being tagged. Anyone tagged would be put
in the jail. If one could safely reach the opposing jail
he could claim one prisoner and they would both
have safe passage back to their side. The idea was to
thin out the opposition to make it easier to get the
flag and take it across the center line and win.
The old golf course also came in handy for another trick on first-time campers the albatrich
hunt. The unsuspecting new campers were told
albatriches came out at night, and if they would
open burlap bags and click stones together the animals would be attracted to them and go in the bags.
The wiser campers would be the ones to go out and
chase the albatriches. Of course, those seasoned
campers would circle around and return to camp
and wait for the discouraged but wiser campers to
abandon the hunt.
There was so much to learn at camp. What great
memories.

If you know an interesting story, please send it to Jon Ferguson, PO Box 1328, Lancaster PA 17608, or email it
to jferguson@lnpnews.com.

Varicose veins,
aching, heaviness,
fatigue, and swelling
of your legs could be
signs of superficial
venous reflux disease.

Today
6:30 p.m. Celebrate
Recovery, a faith-based
12-step program for people
in recovery from any
overwhelming or addictive
behavior, meets at Vision
Columbia Church, 291
S. Fourth St., Columbia.
Information: 200-1362 or
email psp50@yahoo.com.
8 p.m. Al-Anon 12Step Meeting gathers
at Bethany Presbyterian
Church, 25 N. West End
Ave., rear. Ring doorbell.
Sunday
12:15 p.m. Eating
Disorders Anonymous
meets at First Presbyterian
Church, 140 E. Orange
St. Child care available.
Information: 779-3104.
4 p.m. Same Love
Support Group, a safe
haven for members of the
LGBT community, meets at
Chestnut Hill Cafe, 532 W.
Chestnut St. Information:
342-3969 or facebook.
com/samelovelancaster
6 p.m. Adult Children of
Alcoholics/Dysfunctional
Families, a 12-step
program, meets at Friends
Meetinghouse, 110 Tulane
Terrance. Information: 6820324.
6:30 p.m. Alateen, for
children ages 8-18 affected
by alcoholism in a relative
or friend, meets at Zion
Lutheran Church, 18 Quarry
Road, Leola. Information:
877-298-5027.
Monday
10 a.m. The Alzheimers
Association Caregivers
Support Group meets
in the Concord Room
(across from The Harvest
Table) at Garden Spot
Village, 433 S. Kinzer Ave.,
New Holland. Respite
care may be available,
by prior arrangement,
call Garden Spot Village
Adult Day Services,
355-6226. Information:
Joanne Morton, 3556076; email jmorton@
gardenspotvillage.org;
or Marcia Parsons, 3556239; email mparsons@
gardenspotvillage.org.
6:30 p.m. WellSpan
Ephrata Community
Hospital Breast Cancer
Support Group meets at
the Ephrata Health Pavilion,
175 Martin Ave., Ephrata.
Information: 721-5750.
7 p.m. Lancaster Area
Celiacs Support Group
meets in the fellowship
hall at Calvary Church,
1051 Landis Valley Road.
Doors open at 6:15 p.m.
Information: lac-leader@
lancasterareaceliacs.org;
478-8647.
7 p.m. Celebrate
Recovery, for people
in recovery from any
overwhelming or addictive
behavior, meets at LCBC
Church, 2392 Mount
Joy Road, Manheim.
Information: 653-6266.
7 p.m. Bipolar support
Group (peer-led for adults
and families) meets in
Blair room at Community
Services Building, 630
Janet Ave. Information:
Mental Health America of
Lancaster County, 397-7461.
Tuesday
7 p.m. Men Unchained
(formerly Faithful and
True Men), assisting men
who are struggling with
compulsive, obsessive or
addictive sexual behaviors,
meets at Worship Center,

NEW LEBANON LOCATION NOW OPEN!

Lebanon: February 6 at 8:30 am


Lancaster: February 13 at 8:30 am
Call 717-394-5401 today to register!

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SUPPORT GROUPS, page B3

Lancaster Countys
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Information: 656-4271 or
andreah@worshipcenter.
org.
7 p.m. Compassionate
Friends, for parents who
have experienced the
death of a child, at any
age, meets at New Life
Assembly of God Church,
1991 Old Philadelphia Pike.
Information: Linda Lowe,
626-4832.
7:30 p.m. Nar-Anon,
for families and friends
of drug-and alcoholaddicted people, meets
in the basement of First
United Methodist Church,
Duke and Walnut streets.
Information: 285-2909.
Wednesday
12:30 p.m. Teach, for
anyone with any kind of
disability or mental illness,
meets at 941 Wheatland
Ave., Suite 201. Information:
664-2293.
6:30 p.m. Codependents
Anonymous meets at
Hope United Methodist
Church, 3474 Rothsville
Road, Ephrata. Information:
380-4911.
6:30 p.m. Celebrate
Recovery, for people
in recovery from any
overwhelming or addictive
behavior, is held by
Tapestry Church at Grace
EC Church, 22 Kready Ave.,
Millersville. Information:
945-6505.
7 p.m. Step to Freedom,
a 12-step program for
those dealing with drug
and alcohol addictions,
meets at Worship Center,
2384 New Holland Pike.
Information: 656-4271 or
andreah@worshipcenter.
org.
7 p.m. Friends and
Family, for family and
friends of persons
struggling with drug or
alcohol addiction, meets
at the Worship Center,
2384 New Holland Pike.
Information: 656-4271 or
andreah@worshipcenter.
org.
7 p.m. Successful
Returning Citizens
Mentoring Support Group,
for people facing barriers
due to criminal record
or prior incarceration,
meets at Ebenezer Baptist
Church, 701 N. Lime St.
Information: 723-1075 or
lancastercountyreentry.org.
7 p.m. Combat Veterans
Group, meets at AmVets
Post 19, 715 Fairview
Ave. Information: Ryan
McGinnis, 286-6573;
Charles McKiddy, 327-0067.
7:30 p.m. Gam-Anon
group meets at Ephrata
Church of the Brethren,
201 Crescent Ave., rear,
Ephrata. Information: 4136789.
8 p.m. Al-Anon Red
Rose Group meets at
Bethany Presbyterian
Church, 25 N. West End
Ave., rear. Ring doorbell.
Thursday
noon Bipolar Support
Group (group for adults
and families led by MHALC)
meets at Hempfield United
Methodist Church, 3050
Marietta Ave.
6 p.m. ANAD of
Lancaster, for those with
eating disorders, meets in
Room 1 at 2112 Harrisburg
Pike. Information: Kristen
Ebaugh, 891-4352 or
kristen1449@aol.com.

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DRS. OZ & ROIZEN


MEDICAL ADVICE

Water, weight and


windows of opportunity
Once gold-medalist Michael Phelps was in training, he was up to his neck in water and seemed to
leave his self-destructive habits behind. Could it be
that theres something about water thats just plain
health-inducing? Well, making an ample supply of
water available to school kids sure seems to clean up
their bad habits at least when it comes to calorie
consumption from sodas and sweet juices.
In 2009 New York City installed electrically
cooled, clear jugs that dispense water quickly in 39
percent of the 1,227 public elementary and middle
schools across the city. According to a new study, it
tripled kids water consumption, contributed to a 9.5
percent decrease in severe obesity and a 5.5 percent

drop in obesity in grades K-8. Gulp! Heres how


you and your child can stay well-hydrated, and
shed a few pounds.
Rule 1: Check urine. Clear/pale, strawcolored
urine signals good hydration. Darker? Drink
more water.
Rule 2: Active adults need 16-20 ounces of water
one to two hours before activity; 6-12 ounces
for every 15 minutes outside; afterward, 12-24
ounces more. Exercising for more than an hour?
Hydrate with a drink that provides sodium and
potassium.
Rule 3: Eating lots of fruits and vegetables can
supply 20 percent of your hydration needs.
Rule 4: A 2015 study found that 50 percent of
U.S. kids are low on hydration; 25 percent drank
no plain water at all. Kids 4-8 need 5 cups of water
a day; girls 9-13 need 7 cups, boys need 8. Drink
up!

n Dr. Mehmet Oz is host of The Dr. Oz Show and Dr. Mike


Roizen is chief wellness officer and chairman of the Wellness Institute at Cleveland Clinic. To live your healthiest,
visit sharecare.com.

SCOUTING

2 from Lititz troop


earn Eagle awards
Thomas H. Ngo and
Nathan T. Owsinski
from Troop 142 were
awarded the Eagle Scout
badge, the highest honor
in scouting, at St. James
Catholic Chuch in Lititz
on Jan. 3.
They became the 138th
and 139th Scouts from
Troop 142 to earn this
honor.
Ngo is the son of Dzung
and Mai Ngo, of Lititz.
He began his scouting
career as a Tiger of Pack
156 in Brunnerville in
2004. A few years later,
he transferred to Pack
142, where he advanced
through the ranks of Cub
Scouts and earned his
Arrow of Light in 2009.
He joined Boy Scout
Troop 142 in 2009.
During his advancement, he held the positions of assistant patrol
leader, patrol leader,
quartermaster,
Leave
No Trace trainer, chaplains aide, librarian and

troop webmaster. He
has earned a total of 22
merit badges, and the Ad
Altare Dei religious emblem.
His Eagle Scout service
project involved creating
a garden with two benches for Lancaster Catholic
High School, where he is
a senior.
He plans to attend college to pursue a career in
dentistry.
Owsinski is the son of
Thomas and Jacqueline
Owsinski, of Lititz.
He began his Scouting
career in 2006 in Cub
Scout Pack 142 in Lititz.
After receiving his Arrow of Light in 2008, he
crossed over to Troop
142.
While in Troop 142,
he held positions as
quartermaster, patrol
leader, assistant senior
patrol leader, and senior patrol leader. He
attended summer camp
at Camp Mack twice as

Nathan T. Owsinski

Thomas H. Ngo

a Cub Scout, and Camp


Bashore four times as a
Boy Scout. At Bashore,
he earned two Baden
Powell Awards for his
patrol. In addition, he
participated in the Iron
Will Trek at Camp Mack
twice.
He was also a member of a Philmont Scout
Ranch expedition in
2013. This backpacking
trip covered over 100
miles in 10 days in the
high country of Cimarron, New Mexico. He also
attended many High Adventure trips as a member of Troop 142, and is a
Brotherhood member of
the Order of the Arrow,
Wunita Gokhos Lodge
39 of the Pennsylvania

Dutch Council.
His Eagle Scout
project was conducted at United Zion Retirement Community.
He, with the volunteer assistance of fellow scouts and family
members, restored a
shuffleboard
court
that had fallen into
disrepair by repainting the lines, resurfacing the court and
building a bench for
storage.
Owsinski graduated
from Warwick High
School in June. He is a
freshman at Lebanon
Valley College and
majoring in chemistry.

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2016

B3

JEANNE PHILLIPS
DEAR ABBY

Small displays tell larger


tale of late husbands life
DEAR ABBY: My husband passed away recently
and I have some items of his Im unsure how to
tastefully display to honor his memory. They
are his Bible, a U.S. flag in a triangular display
box (he was a veteran), a set of deer antlers,
works he authored, his guitar and family photos. I dont want to build a shrine, but I dont
want to stick these things in a closet, either.
He was passionate about his pursuits, and his
passion was contagious. I want to pay tribute
to him without making others uncomfortable.
I have a small house, so a grouping of the items
takes up significant space. The way I have them
set up now is kind of shrinelike, and its emotionally wrenching both for me and for visiting family. Suggestions, Abby? WIDOW IN
HOUSTON
DEAR WIDOW: I am sorry for the loss of your
husband. Not knowing how many rooms there are
in your home, its impossible to tell you sight unseen
how to display this memorabilia. However, to lessen
the emotional impact, it might be better not to group
these mementos all in one place. Another option
would be to display the items at different times, so
not all of them will be viewed at once.

DEAR ABBY: Theres a guy I go to a church with.
We spent most of the day together with his
family. At first, it felt a little weird, and I was
the one who broke the silence while we were
at dinner. We went to a dance afterward and
he was a gentleman. He helped me into the car,
etc. He also taught me how to dance and we had
a great time. He walked me to my front door at
midnight.
When I got to church the following Sunday, I
thanked him for coming to the dance with me
and told him I had a wonderful time. His family knows I like him a lot. I talked to my mom
about it and told her I was going to ask him out.
She was fine with it, but when I said something
about it to friends, they said it might tarnish
our friendship.
Should I ask him out or wait for him to do it?
I dont want to look dumb. And what do I say to
my friends? TEXAS GIRL WHOS READY
DEAR TEXAS GIRL: When a guy spends most of
the day with a girl, its a good bet that he likes her.
Wait a week or two before making your move, because he may ask you out in the meantime. However,
if he doesnt, then casually ask him to do something
with you, like go to a movie or sporting event or go
hiking. Nothing ventured, nothing gained. And as to
what to say to your friends about it, I vote for keeping your mouth firmly shut.

n Dear Abby is written by Jeanne Phillips and was founded

Births

Community calendar

ALVAREZ SANTOS, Yazmin, and Rafael Luis


Saez, Lancaster, a son, at Women & Babies
Hospital, Monday.

n LUNCHEON SPEAKER:

BEILER, Daniel L. and Linda K. (Stoltzfus),


2312 South View Drive, a son, at home,
Thursday.
EDMISTON, Matthew H. and Adrienne
(Kreitzer), Ephrata, a daughter, at WellSpan
Ephrata Community Hospital, Tuesday.
ENO, Robert Q. and Juliane E. (Martin),
Elizabethtown, a daughter, at Heart of
Lancaster Regional Medical Center, Monday.
ESH, Benuel K. and Elizabeth K. (Esh), Peach
Bottom, a son, at home, Wednesday.
GALLAGHER, Tom and Ruth (Hazel),
Lancaster, a daughter, at Heart of Lancaster
Regional Medical Center, Monday.
LAPP, Berneil and Lisa Marie (Reiff),
Strasburg, a daughter, at Birth Care & Family
Health Services, Wednesday.
LOPEZ, Venecia, and Moszell M. Williams,
Millersville, a son, at Women & Babies
Hospital, Sunday.
RANKIN, Christopher M. and Anne
(Hambrick-Stowe), Landisville, a son, at
Women & Babies Hospital, Jan. 29.
RIEHL, Amos L. and Elizabeth E. (Stoltzfus),
353 Pequea Ave., Honey Brook, a daughter,
at home, Wednesday.
RUIZ COLON, Yeskel E. and Aimee Zoe
Mercado Cortes, Lancaster, a son, at Women
& Babies Hospital, Monday.
STOLTZFUS, Benuel and Emma (Esh),
Landisville, a daughter, at Heart Of Lancaster
Regional Medical Center, Wednesday.
STOLTZFUS, John and Esther (Zook), 394
Chrome Road, Oxford, a daughter, at home,
Wednesday.

The Newcomers and


Neighbors Club of Lancaster
County will meet at 11:30
a.m. Wednesday at The
Inn of Leola, 38 Deborah
Drive, Leola. Stephen
Gunzenhauser, conductor
and musical director of
the Lancaster Symphony
Orchestra, will speak
on Whos Afraid of the
Symphony Orchestra?
Reservations are required;
fee includes lunch. For more
information, email JLscott@
yahoo.com.
n SURVIVING THE WILD:
Lititz Public Library, 651
Kissel Hill Road, Lititz, will
host Surviving the Wild:
Camping, Backpacking
and Books, from 7-8 p.m.
Wednesday. This program
is for ages 10 and up and
will include practical tips as
well as books in the genre.
For more information and
to register, call 626-2255 or
visit lititzlibrary.org.
n CLOISTER VOLUNTEERS:
Historic Ephrata Cloister,
632 W. Main St., Ephrata, will
host volunteer orientation
sessions from 9-11 a.m.
Wednesday and Saturday,
Feb. 13. Volunteers tend
gardens, work in The
Museum Store, perform
music from the past and
assist with special events.
Follow-up sessions are
scheduled for the following

Wednesday and Saturday.


For more information or to
register, contact Michael
Showalter, 733-6600 or
mshowalter@pa.gov.
n CIVIL WAR PROGRAM:
Milanof-Schock Library,
1184 Anderson Ferry Road,
Mount Joy, will host retired
Marine gunnery Sgt. Kenneth
J. Serfass performing as
Gen. Ulysses S Grant in a
free Civil War program at 6
p.m. Wednesday. For more
information or to register,
call 653-1510.
n HAWK TALK: The
Lancaster County Bird
Club will meet at 7:30 p.m.
Thursday at the Farm &
Home Center, 1383 Arcadia
Road. Rebecca McCade will
present The Broad-Winged
Hawk: Conserving a LongDistant Migrant, based on
her research conducted at
Hawk Mountain Sanctuary.
A short business meeting
will precede the program,
which is free to the public.
For more information on the
club, visit lancasterbirdclub.
org; for more information on
this event, call 393-2546 or
984-2738.

n Community Calendar runs

as space is available. Email your


information to news@lnpnews.
com or mail it to LNP, attention
Wanika Hightower, P.O. Box 1328,
Lancaster, PA 17608-1328.

F U R N I S H I N G S & G I F TS

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Weve been building relationships with


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WE HAVE A GREAT
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VALENTINE'S DAY
GIVING & DECORATING!

by her mother, Pauline Phillips, also known as Abigail Van


Buren. Contact the columnist at DearAbby.com or P.O. Box
69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.

Support groups
Continued from B2

7 p.m. Celebrate
Recovery, a Bible-based
12-step program for people
in recovery from any
overwhelming or addictive
behavior, meets at
Elizabethtown First Church
of God, 144 S. Market St.,
Elizabethtown. Information:
367-7060.
7 p.m. Discovery
Recovery, a Christianbased recovery program
that ministers to individuals
struggling with alcohol
and drug addictions,
meets at Grace Baptist
Church, 1899 Marietta Ave.
Information and RSVP, 3946991. Discovery Recovery
also holds Sunday school
classes at 9:30 a.m.
7 p.m. Adult Children of
Alcoholics/Dysfunctional
Families, a 12-step
program, meets at Friends
Meetinghouse, 110 Tulane
Terrace. Information: 6820324.
For a full range of support
groups in Lancaster
County, call Pennsylvania
2-1-1 East at United Way of
Lancaster County 24 hours
a day, seven days a week:
291-5462.

Domestic Violence services


of Lancaster County
hosts weekly confidential
support groups at 6 p.m.
Wednesdays in Lancaster
city for victims of domestic
violence. It also hosts
support groups every
Monday in the Columbia
area. Call 299-1249 for
time, location or more
information (collect calls
accepted). Local 12-step
program information:
Survivors of Incest: 8298072
Adult Children
Anonymous: 682-0324
Alcoholics Anonymous:
394-3238
Al-Anon / Adult Children
of Alcoholics, at Heart of
Lancaster Regional Medical
Center and anywhere
else in the world, call the
Al-Anon hotline: 888-4252666.
Gam-Anon: 888-2133945.
Narcotics Anonymous:
393-4546.
Nar-Anon Family Group:
285-2909.
Overeaters Anonymous:
610-370-9090.

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B4

LOCAL

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2016

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

Research: Stalling the aging process at a cellular level


Continued from B1

and we want to slow that


down.
Since 2003, UCI has
examined the lifestyles
of elderly participants,
with detailed surveys on
everything from vitamin usage to time spent
volunteering. Currently,
the oldest member is 110.
Out of 1,736 to join, 293
have reached or passed
the century mark. Participants undergo one-time
brain imaging followed
by memory tests every
six months to catch any
cognitive decline. Once
they die, their brains are
autopsied to look for evidence of memory loss.
Bugna cant begin to
speculate on why shes
lived so long with only
minor health concerns.
How would I know?
she asks from her apartment along the waterfront. As far as healthy
habits go, mine arent so
good. I absolutely refuse
to eat fruit or vegetables.
I have no use for any of
them. Im a meat-andpasta person. I dont
even like potatoes.

Lifestyle habits
The study has yielded
a number of associations
between certain lifestyle
habits and longer lives,
including moderate coffee/caffeine consumption, 45 minutes of daily
exercise, moderate alcohol use and time spent
on social and cognitive
activities.
Dr. Claudia Kawas, a
geriatric neurologist and
co-principal investigator, said shes driven to
discover how one of her
study participants died
at 108 with really amaz-

ing thinking and a really


amazing-looking brain.
People wouldnt mind
being 100 if they could
walk and talk and think,
Kawas says.
While genetics and
lifestyle certainly play
a role in life span, some
anti-aging researchers
say science could drive
this centurys big longevity booster, serving as
the equivalent of clean
drinking water and vaccination against infectious diseases that prevented premature death.
Researchers at Albert
Einstein College of Medicine in New York are
preparing to begin a clinical trial in humans that
will test whether a Food
and Drug Administration-approved drug used
for diabetes can delay
aging and onset of other
diseases. At a Stanford
lab, researchers have
successfully increased
the length of telomeres
the protective caps
on the ends of chromosomes in human skin
cells. The achievement
has been described as
turning back the internal clock in these cells by
the equivalent of many
years of human life.
Harvard scientists are
studying how to reactivate ovarian stem cells to
extend female fertility.
We spent 20 years or
so showing we could slow
aging in animal models.
Now we can make mutations in yeast, worms and
mice that make them live
longer, Kennedy says.
The field has come to
the realization that its
really time to try these in
humans. The challenge
is how do we do the tests
in a way that doesnt take

People
wouldnt
mind being
100 if they
could walk
and talk and
think.
Dr. Claudia Kawas,
geriatric neurologist
and co-principal
investigator

40 years to see if people


live longer.

Anti-aging
researchers
But anti-aging researchers acknowledge
that most people dont
want to live longer unless they can live better,
making the real goal a
longer health span, or
more years of full functioning without drawing
out end-of-life illness.
Eradicating all types
of cancer, which is the
second-highest
cause
of death among adults
65 and older, would increase life span by only
three or four years, says
Valter Longo, director of
the USC Longevity Institute.
If you look at most of

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the diseases, the major


ones, whether cardiovascular or cancer, aging
is the No. 1 risk factor,
Longo says. If we completely cure cancer, you
live three years because
youre going to die of
cardiovascular disease,
an infectious disease or
neurodegenerative disease.
What is the life span of
the future? Will people
live to 200 or even 500?
Researchers have much
more modest projections.
Longo, whose research
in mice and humans centers on calorie restriction and fasting as ways
to trigger cellular changes including decreased
amounts of the hormone
IGF-I, which leads to aging and possible cancer
growth believes a longevity drug will be on the
market within 20 years.
I think whats possible is about 10 percent,
Longo says. Right now
we get to about 80 years
of age or so on average.
Making that 90 is going
to be a major achievement.

Genetic pathways
Kennedy, who studies drugs that block the
genetic pathways that
cause aging, said interventions have increased
the life span of mice by
15 percent to 20 percent,
which he thinks is an
incremental and attainable goal for humans.
They still die from the
same diseases; its just
later, he says. Theyre
healthy longer.
He envisions a future
where longevity strategies become routine.

What I would love to


see happen is we bring
people into the clinic
at 45 or 50 and we say:
Lets look at your genetics; lets look at your lifestyle, your family history
of disease; and lets look
at some of your blood
markers that are predictive of disease; and
lets try to come up with
a personal strategy for
healthy aging that works
for you, Kennedy says.
Bugna says she never
thought much about her
age until the past year,
when her social life began to diminish. She
hopes her participation
in the UCI study will
prove useful.
I hope they learn
something that will help
other people, she says.
Bugna grew up in San
Francisco, raised by her
mother after her father
died of tuberculosis
when she was 7. She attended UC Berkeley
with an aspiration to
study law. After graduation, she decided to
marry Charles Bugna instead. He worked in his
uncles hardware store
below her familys flat.
Their wedding day is one
of her fondest memories.

Law school
After having four children, Bugna decided to
fulfill her dream of law
school, attending Berkeleys Boalt Hall with the
late California Supreme
Court Chief Justice Rose
Bird.
I said, Im going to go,
even if its only one semester, Bugna recalls.
I was in my 40s. I said,
If I can graduate and
pass the bar by age 50,

I can work for 10 years.


At that time I thought 60
was old. I worked until I
was 90 and did pro bono
until just a short time
ago.
Bugna and her family
moved to Orange County in 1964 after a vacation when they fell in
love with the waterfront
homes being built in Dover Shores. She and her
husband, who had gone
into apartment construction, traveled the
world. Pins on a map in
her bedroom mark destinations including Russia
and India.
She was married 56
years before Charles
died in 1996. She still
sleeps with his pillow
and has turned down
would-be suitors.
I cannot imagine
crawling in bed with another man. He was the
only one, she says.
In 1999, Bugna buried
one of her sons, who died
of esophageal cancer in
his 50s. Outliving multiple loved ones is a pain
shared by super agers.
One of the things that
all of them seem to really
struggle with is everyone
they know dying or in
some other way becoming sick, and its really
very devastating, UCI
researcher Kawas says.
Even with her losses,
Bugna has kept her sense
of humor. She says had
she known she would
live so long, she would
have undergone cosmetic surgery for a more
youthful appearance to
match how she feels.
How can I have fears
about getting older when
Im already there? Im on
the houses money, and I
cant lose.

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TELEVISION

TV HIGHLIGHTS


( WGAL

NBC

8.2 WGAL2

5 WHP

CBS

21.2 WHP2

; WHTM

ABC

27.2 WHTM2

A WITF

PBS
K WPMT

FOX

43.2 WPMT2

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Michael Jackson performs during the halftime show at


Super Bowl XXVII in 1993.

Showtime recalls
the best of Jackson
KEVIN MCDONOUGH
TV COLUMNIST

Music takes center


stage in Spike Lees biography Michael Jacksons Journey From
Motown to Off the
Wall (9 p.m., Showtime, TV-14). Too much
has been made of Jackson as a celebrity, an
oddity, a victim and a
tragedy. As the title implies, Journey focuses
on Jacksons remarkable
growth from the age of 9
to roughly 19, as well as
his outsized talent, thirst
for inspiration and aweinspiring work ethic.
Motown founder Berry
Gordy remembers hours
in the sound studio mixing and producing records with 9-year-old
Jackson beside him,
soaking up knowledge
and experience. In an archival clip, Sammy Davis
Jr. recalls watching the
young performer imitating one of his dance
moves, making it his
own and making it better after seeing it only
once. Elsewhere, Jackson is seen chatting with
dancers Fred Astaire and
Gene Kelly, acting like
a fan but also like a student on the verge of becoming a peer.
Contemporary figures
including Lee Daniels,
The Weeknd, Pharrell
Williams, Kobe Bryant, Misty Copeland,
Mark Ronson, John
Legend, Questlove and
L.A. Reid explain how
they were simply staggered by Jackson and
how his 1979 album Off
the Wall influences pop
music to this day.
The last third of the
film takes a track-bytrack approach to Off
the Wall, a recording
where Jackson presented himself as an adult
artist breaking out of his
child star persona and
transcending the music
industrys racial pigeonholing. A dance record
from the tail end of the
disco era that also features slow ballads, Off
the Wall was produced
by Quincy Jones, best
known for his work in
jazz. It has gone on to
sell more than 30 million
copies and ranks among
the great pop albums of
all time.
This film is rather wise
and affectionate to stop
before Thriller and
the tabloid excesses that
followed. It includes a
wealth of clips and performances from 1969 to
1979, from American
Bandstand and Soul
Train to a great clip of
Omega Man-era Charlton Heston introducing
Jackson at the 1973 Academy Awards, wondering
if the 14-year-old was up
after his bedtime. Jackson was there to sing the
theme song to Ben.
HBO
Fans of precious, if
neurotic, New Yorkers
might check out Animals (11:30 p.m., HBO,
TV-MA), a cartoon about
rats, horses and pigeons
making mumblecorestyle small talk that runs
the emotional gamut
from self-doubt to selfloathing. Since the ani-

Com-Lanc
Blue Ridge
Com-Etown
Com-Coats
Com-Lab

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

mation takes a backseat


to all the nervous chatter, Animals might be
better appreciated as an
audio podcast by those
inclined to enjoy it at all.
CBS
Chris O'Donnell narrates Super Bowls
Greatest
Halftime
Shows (9 p.m., CBS,
TV-PG). In addition to
clips from performances
past, the special presents new interviews with
halftime
performers
Beyonce (2013), Bono
(2002), Bruno Mars
(2014), Paul McCartney
(2005) and Katy Perry
(2015).

OTHER
HIGHLIGHTS
n A CEO seeks off-road

traction on Undercover
Boss (8 p.m., CBS, TVPG).
n Abbie's apparent
sacrifice leaves the team
reeling on Sleepy Hollow
(8 p.m., Fox, TV-14).
n A tourist vanishes
mysteriously on Grimm
(9 p.m., NBC, TV-14).
n An old case proves
informative on Second
Chance (9 p.m., Fox,
TV-14).
n Vets pitch their products
on Shark Tank (9 p.m.,
ABC, TV-PG).
n Live From Lincoln
Center (9 p.m., PBS, TVG) presents From Bocelli
to Barton: Richard Tucker
Opera Gala.
n Vice (11 p.m., HBO,
TV-MA) opens its fourth
season with a look at
efforts to combat the
Nigerian terrorist group
Boko Haram.

CULT CHOICE
n Sigourney Weaver

stars in the 1979 space


thriller Alien (9 p.m.,
BBC America), directed by
Ridley Scott.

SERIES NOTES
n Videos abound on

Caught on Camera With


Nick Cannon (8 p.m.,
NBC).
n Mike extols
homeownership on Last
Man Standing (8 p.m.,
ABC, TV-PG).
n The Phoenix stone takes
full effect on The Vampire
Diaries (8 p.m., CW, TV14).
n Joel McHale and Danny
Pudi guest-star on Dr.
Ken (8:30 p.m., ABC,
TV-PG).
n Elijah makes a discovery
on The Originals (9 p.m.,
CW, TV-14).
n Dateline (10 p.m.,
NBC).
n 20/20 (10 p.m., ABC).

LATE NIGHT
n Jimmy Fallon welcomes

Rebel Wilson, Jack Huston


and Nathaniel Rateliff &
the Night Sweats on The
Tonight Show (11:35 p.m.,
NBC).
n Shaquille O'Neal, Alison
Brie and Banners appear
on Jimmy Kimmel Live
(11:35 p.m., ABC, r).
n Leslie Mann, Joshua
Jackson and Benjamin
Walker visit Late Night
With Seth Meyers (12:35
a.m., NBC).
n Gwendoline Christie,
Bryshere Yazz Gray and
Coldplay appear on The
Late Late Show With
James Corden (12:35 a.m.,
CBS, r).

n Kevin McDonough is a

columnist for United Feature


Syndicate.

^ WMAR
# KYW
& WPVI
* WCAU
+ WBAL
, WHYY
` WJZ
/ WLYH

CW
1 WPHL

MNT
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Q WGCB

IND
Y WPSG

CW
WPPX

ION

FRIDAY EVENING FEBRUARY 5, 2016

Ac. Hollywood PG
MASH
Jeopardy!
9 19 13 - 5
(N) G
19 133 249 - 19 Dr. Phil (N) 14
ABC27
Inside Ed.
7 12 5 - 12 News G PG
246 152 246 - 246 Criminal Minds PG
Sesame Sesame
12 5 16 - 13 Street Y Street Y
Mod Fam Mod Fam
4 2 12 - 4 PG
PG
247 126 244 - 244 Good PG Good PG
- - - - - List PG Insider
Insider
- 3 15 3 3 ET
6 6 6 6 6 Jpardy! Wheel G
3 10 10 10 - Extra PG Hollywood
Hollywood
- - 11 - - Inside
- - - 12 - Business News PG
ET
- - - - - CBS
Laramie Siege at
2 9 4 - 2 Jubilee PG
Big Bang Mod Fam
11 4 7 9 7 PG
PG
23 16 - 11 - Dish Nat. TMZ PG
Raymond Raymond
10 8 9 - 10 PG
PG
Family
Family
- 20 14 13 11 Feud PG Feud PG
Criminal Minds Pro- - - 61 - filer, Profiled PG

A&E

C BR CE CC CL
28 33 26 34 39 Duck Dynasty PG

AMC

36 39 36 138 26

ANPL
BBC
BET
BRV
CMTV
CNBC
CNN
COM
CSN/PH
CSPAN

72
114
45
55
67
39
27
49
35
21

DISN

37 54 46 33 63

DSC
E!
ESPN
ESNP2
ESQTV
FNC
FOOD
FREE
FS1
FX
GOLF
GSN
HALL
HGTV
HIST
LIFE
MASN
MASN2
MSNBC

33
52
25
26
63
48
78
41
77
51
73
64
62
57
56
42
47
65
53
NBCSP 60
NICK
50
OWN
74
PCN
186
SPIKE 38
SYFY 59

34
67
25
26
208
59
60
29
70
62
72
79
74
56
42
30
-
-
63
68
28
55
18
47
40

71
114
62
37
69
44
24
68
49
21
51
58
31
67
61
45
60
28
57
53
52
72
56
48
70
29
78
20
63
64
30
65
186
27
54

14
114
41
55
146
39
31
56
35
99
28
54
37
38
52
51
57
30
78
48
72
179
65
70
50
36
-
-
17
60
32
67
186
29
42

55
114
61
68
27
42
44
38
53
23
60
40
45
70
59
52
56
36
28
57
69
74
48
51
73
37
66
21
62
35
22
64
30
71

TBS

32 52 25 40 24

TCM
TLC

71 57 169 71 72
46 45 41 46 34

TNT

34 36 32 47 46

TRAV
TRUTV
TVL
UNI
USA
WGN-A

54
75
76
44
29
20
C

ENC

61
66
64
-
27
48
BR

47
75
55
-
33
-
CE

26
58
59
16
27
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CC

50
33
54
29
47
CL

Movie

Kids

Sports

News

B5

7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00

Ent.
5 13 2 8 8 Tonight
248 136 248 - 248 MASH
Wheel G

46
209
-
73
44
43
49
51
41
15

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2016

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Caught on Camera
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(:01) Undercover Boss
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Washing- Charlie
ton Week Rose
Sleepy Hollow One
Life (N) 14
Jeffer.
Jeffer.
Last Man Dr. Ken
Undercover PG
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Caught on Camera
Caught on Camera
Wash
Friday G
Undercover PG
Walker, Texas Ranger
PG
Celebrity Celebrity
PG
PG
Sleepy Hollow (N) 14
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PG
Cash G
The Vampire Diaries
(N) 14
Criminal Minds A
prolific serial killer. 14

Grimm A Reptile
Dateline NBC PG News 8 at Tonight Show-J. Fallon
Dysfunction (N) 14
11:00 G 14
Happy G Laverne News G Hogan G Burnt G Perry Mason PG
Super Bowls Greatest Halftime Shows (N)
CBS 21 The Late Show With
PG
News
Stephen Colbert PG
Bones 14
Law Order: CI 14
Crazy 14 Crazy 14 Cleve 14
Shark Tank (N) PG (:01) 20/20 PG
ABC27
(:35) Jimmy Kimmel
(DVS)
News (N) Live 14
Criminal Minds 14
Criminal Minds PG
Saving Hope 14
Hope 14
Live From Lincoln Center Andrea Bocelli, Rene BBC World News G Charlie
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Rose (N)
(:01) Second Chance Fox 43 News at
Two/Half Two/Half Seinfeld
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Men 14 Men 14 PG
Family
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Ties PG Ties PG Johnny Carson PG
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Late-Colbert PG
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Tonight Show 14
Grimm (N) 14
Dateline NBC PG News
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First
Smiley G C. Rose
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Late-Colbert PG
Walker, Texas Ranger Movie Any Which Way You Can (1980, Comedy) Clint
14
Eastwood, Sondra Locke, Ruth Gordon.
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PHL17 (N)
PG
PG
PG
Second Chance 14
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TMZ PG Dish Nat. News
Paid
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Joyce
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Paid
Paid
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Program Program Meyer G Program Program Program Program
The Originals Wild at Eyewit2 Broke Mike &
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Housewives/Atl. 14 Housewives/Atl. 14 Housewives/Atl. 14 Couch 14
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Last Man Last Man Movie Country Strong (2010, Drama) Gwyneth Paltrow.
Steve Austins PG
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Capitol Hill Hearings Campaign 2016 NH Primary Events
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Liv-Mad. Mako G Movie Finding Nemo
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Deadliest Job 14
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CSI: Crime Scene 14 Parks
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Diners G Diners G Diners G Am. Diner Diners G Diners G Vacation Burgers Diners G Diners G Diners G
(6:45) Movie Forrest Gump (1994) Tom Hanks, Gary Sinise.
Shadowhunters 14
The 700 Club G
Recovery
UFC Weigh-In (N)
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Pregame Soccer: International Friendly
Amazing Spdr
Movie Captain America: The First Avenger (2011, Action)
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Golf Central (N) (Live) LPGA Tour Golf
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FamFeud FamFeud Chain
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FamFeud FamFeud The Chase PG
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Last Man Last Man Movie Loves Complicated (2015), Ben Bass Middle
Middle
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Love It or List It G
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Hunters Hunt Intl Dream G Hunters Love G
Pawn PG Pawn PG Restoration PG
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Pawn PG Pawn PG Smartest Smartest American
Bring It! PG
Bring It! (N) PG
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The Rap Game PG
Little Women 14
Bring It!
College Basketball
College Hockey Lake Superior State at Michigan Tech
Ballgame Basketball College Basketball
Monster Jam
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UEFA Highlights
World Poker
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Hardball Matthews
All In With Chris
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Lockup: Holman
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Skiing G
Curling From Eveleth, Minn. (N) G
Curling (N) G
Skiing
Paradise Parents
Harvey
Pig Goat House G House G House G House G Friends
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Neighbor Neighbor Neighbor Neighbor Neighbor Neighbor The Haves, Nots 14 Neighbor Neighbor Neighbor
PCN PM - pcntv.com PCN Primetime - pcntv.com
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Tours
Cops PG Cops PG Cops PG Cops PG Cops 14 Cops 14 Cops PG Cops PG Cops 14 Cops 14 Scarface
Haunting-CT 2
Movie Angels & Demons (2009) Tom Hanks, Ewan McGregor.
Movie The Reaping (2007)
Seinfeld Seinfeld G 2 Broke 2 Broke 2 Broke 2 Broke Movie Rush Hour 3 (2007, Action) Jackie Angie
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Girls 14 Girls 14 Girls 14 Girls 14 Chan, Chris Tucker, Hiroyuki Sanada.
Tribeca 14
Heaven Can Wait
Movie The Love Parade (1929)
Movie The Smiling Lieutenant
It Happened
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Love; Lust Swipe 14 Say Yes
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Bones The Verdict in Movie The Hangover (2009, Comedy) Movie The Hangover Part III (2013)
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the Victims 14
Bradley Cooper, Ed Helms, Zach Galifianakis.
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Five-0 14
Mysteries at PG
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Mysteries- Cas. PG Mysteries at PG
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Mysteries
Funniest Funniest Funniest Funniest Funniest Funniest Funniest Funniest Funniest Funniest Funniest
Griffith G Griffith G Movie Mr. Deeds (2002) Adam Sandler.
Raymond Raymond King 14 King PG King PG
Muchacha italiana
Antes Muerta que
Pasin y poder (N)
El Hotel de los
Impacto Noticiero Deportivo
Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Law-SVU
Person-Interest 14
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Person-Interest PG Mother
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Parks

PAY CHANNELS
Movie The Equalizer (2014, Action)
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HBO

300 300 300 300 300

HBO2

302 301 302 302 302

MAX

320 307 320 320 320

MMAX 321 309 321 321 321


SHOW 340 400 340 340 340
STRZ

370 500 370 370 370

TMC

350 407 350 350 350

(:15) Movie Jaws (1975) Roy Scheider. A man-eating shark terrorizes a New England resort town. PG
(6:30) Movie The (:15) Movie Get Hard (2015, Comedy) Will Real Time With Bill
VICE (N) Animals Real Time
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Million Ways
Movie The Imitation Game (2014)
Michael Jacksons Journey From (:35) Michael Jacksons Journey Billions
Benedict Cumberbatch. PG-13
Motown to Off the Wall (N) 14
From Motown to Off the Wall 14 MA
(6:50) Movie Batman & Robin (1997)
Movie Tomorrowland (2015) George
(:15) Movie Dj Vu (2006)
Arnold Schwarzenegger. iTV. PG-13
Clooney. iTV Premiere. PG
Denzel Washington.
(5:45) Movie Dead Po- Movie Delivery Man (2013, Comedy) Vince Movie Dave Chappelles
(:45) The Life Aquatic
ets Society (1989) Vaughn, Chris Pratt. PG-13
Block Party (2005) R
With Steve Zissou R

HBO

New round of Last Week Tonight returns


Host Oliver still keeping it secret
DAVID BAUDER

AP TELEVISION WRITER

NEW YORK HBOs


John Oliver says he likes
the idea of keeping as
much as possible about
his show a secret until
it airs each week, a philosophy he took to the
extreme last spring when
he traveled to Moscow
to interview Edward
Snowden.
Oliver, who begins a
new round of his Last
Week Tonight comedy
show on Feb. 14, did not
tell his network until he
had returned that he had
spoken to the fugitive,
who leaked NSA documents to journalists in
2013 and faces prison
time if he returns to the
United States.
He pleaded with HBO
not to tell anyone that
he had interviewed
Snowden, in part because
it would spoil a segment
where he makes viewers wonder if Snowden
would even show up. He
even asked the studio
audience at the episodes

taping to keep quiet


about it online.
I really appreciated
the fact that HBO would
let us do it that way,
Oliver said, because we
thought it was the best
way to actually present
it, even though commercially it was the worst way
you could present it.
Oliver said HBO has
kept its promise not
to interfere creatively
in the making of Last
Week Tonight.
Its like your parents
saying, you can do whatever youd like, but dont
touch that cabinet, he
said. I presumed that
HBO was lying the way
other networks often do,
he said.
With his philosophy
in mind, Oliver was
not revealing much on
Wednesday about the
topics Last Week Tonight will be covering
in the upcoming months.
Its difficult to reveal
much because some stories may fall through, he
said. Each weeks show

ASSOCIATED PRESS

John Oliver, on HBOs Last Week Tonight with John Oliver, will begin a new round of his comedy show Feb. 14.

has a centerpiece story


that is discussed in a
mixture of comedy and
reporting.
He will, however, be
ending a moratorium
about discussion of the
presidential campaign.
The show wants to look
almost forensically at
how the process of democracy works, rather
than be caught in daily
stories about what candidates are saying that he
said can be handled better comically elsewhere.
Otherwise, you get
lost in the general campaign ephemera where
nothing really significant

happens of any consequence, he said.


He hopes for more
long-gestating
stories
like his examination or
religious fundraising, after which he and actress
Rachel Dratch posed
as televangelists asking
viewers to send them
one dollar.
Joke or not, Last Week
Tonight received some
$70,000 in single dollar
bills along with five
vials of semen, at least
three of which Oliver
is convinced were fake.
The money was donated
to Doctors Without Borders.

B6

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2016

CROSSWORD

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JUMBLE

SUDOKU

Complete the
grid so every
row, column
and 3 x 3 box
contains every
digit from
1 to 9
inclusively.

Previous puzzle
solution

2016 Knight Features/Distributed by Universal Uclick

CRYPTOQUIP

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

Jacqueline Bigars stars


A baby born today has a Sun in Aquarius and a
Moon in Capricorn.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Friday, Feb. 5, 2016:
This year you have many aspirations. Be careful
with dreams revolving around money and material security. An offer that seems too good to be
true probably is. Trust cynicism. If you are single,
you could change a lot because of a relationship.
This person might be controlling or just not your
type. Somehow, he or she might be withholding
something from you. If you are attached, the two
of you often get into power plays. As a result, you
avoid your sweetie and discussions with him or
her. Don't do that. Be open-minded and nonjudgmental. CAPRICORN can be hard to deal with.
The Stars Show the Kind of Day You'll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult
ARIES
(March 21-April 19)
Your creativity comes from an inner
sense of self. Your imagination creates many
ideas, but you might choose not to share them.
These flights of fancy are important to your sense
of well-being. Take a stronger role in your professional environment. Tonight: Lead others.
TAURUS
(April 20-May 20)
You might have the desire to do something very different. A change in scenery proves to
be beneficial to many people, including you. Take
off, and you will gain a new perspective on whatever ails you; it also will help you to relax. Tonight:
Take off as fast as you can.
GEMINI
(May 21-June 20)
One-on-one relating will reveal a lot of
information about a higher-up. You might want to
check out the facts to gauge how much is really
just gossip. You won't want to work with false information. A loved one wants you to change your
plans. Tonight: Let the party begin.
CANCER
(June 21-July 22)
Bask in the popularity of the moment.
Whether you're making plans or closing a business deal, you have many options. You know that
this kind of diversity does not happen frequently.
Take advantage of the moment. Be careful with
someone who is very controlling. Tonight: Out.
LEO
(July 23-Aug. 22)
You could be left to complete everyone
else's errands. Since you tend to complete a lot
quickly, you'll be out enjoying the next few days
before you know it. Ask yourself how many times
you have left details unfinished for others to complete. Tonight: The party goes on.
VIRGO
(Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Others will lure you into a late lunch or
an early departure from work. Often you are too
responsible to leave work undone, but today is
different. Be careful with a new person you meet
who might be very appealing; he or she could be
controlling. Tonight: Enjoy every moment.
LIBRA
(Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
The best intentions could fall to the wayside. You might feel nervous. Consider working

from home, where you can relax and accomplish


more. You are inspired by an associate who is full
of ideas. Understand what it takes to get past an
obstacle. Tonight: Play it low-key.
SCORPIO
(Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
Your imagination feeds your ability
to draw out others. Be careful if you sense that
someone is becoming very controlling. Perhaps
the person could be you. Others don't appreciate
this kind of behavior. Find out what's motivating
you. Tonight: Wish upon a star.
SAGITTARIUS
(Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
Your finances will play a big role in your
plans. No one wants to accept limitations, especially you, but you probably will have to. Do not
fight city hall; instead, choose to work with the
situation. You'll come up with a reasonable solution. Tonight: Make it your treat.
CAPRICORN
(Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Beam in what you want. Your imagination
will be fed through a conversation with a friend.
When you are talking to this person, you realize
how many diverse opportunities you have. Decide
to break the mold and head in a new direction.
Tonight: Let it happen.
AQUARIUS
(Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
Saying little and listening a lot paves the
way to success. You might feel as if you can't turn
a situation around, no matter what you do. You can
-- you just haven't found the right path yet. Do not
lose hope. Stay centered, and head toward your
goal. Tonight: Not to be found.
PISCES
(Feb. 19-March 20)
You might not be aware of how much
you inspire others. An old friendship could play a
stronger role in your decisions. This person is very
different from you and has chosen a different path
in life. Do not judge him or her for this. Be accepting. Tonight: The life of the party.
BORN TODAY
Singer/songwriter Bobby Brown (1969), baseball
player Hank Aaron (1934), singer/songwriter Sara
Evans (1971)

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE


S
M
U
G

N
O
N
O

G
N
A
W

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A
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A

P
E
P
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S

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S
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C L E
O G L
B L
E T A
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G O N
L I E
A T E
S
S S G
E V E
S U E

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D

R
E
N
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A H
G O
A S
S T
P S

A
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E
A
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E
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G
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P
A
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S

R A M P
E L I E
D E X E
E L
U S D E
S O D
H O R T
T I R
R
N U
A S K E
I N
N I A C
O P O L
U
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T
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ALDER ON BRIDGE Phillip Alder


David Brin, a scientist and award-winning author of science fiction, said, "There's
no doubt that scientific training helps many authors to write better science fiction.
And yet, several of the very best were English majors who could not parse a differential equation to save their lives."
At the bridge table, we love majors and dislike minors up to the game-level,
because in a major we have to win one fewer trick to get the game bonus. However,
when climbing up to a slam, minors are fine because we need 12 or 13 tricks whatever the strain.
When you have game values but do not find a
major-suit fit, you steer toward three no-trump.
Only if you are sure that contract cannot make,
do you -- kicking and screaming! -- play in five
of a minor.
So, at a low level, we try to find a major-suit
fit. Look at the South hand in today's diagram.
After opening one diamond and hearing partner respond one heart, South must rebid one
spade, not two diamonds. If partner does not
raise spades, South can show his long diamond
suit on the next round. Here, of course, North
raises to two spades (promising four-card support), and South jumps to four spades -- when
you smell a game, bid that game.
The defenders start with three rounds of clubs.
After ruffing, how should declarer continue?
South must get his diamond suit established,
and the heart king is a red herring. Declarer
should draw two rounds of trumps, cash the
diamond ace-king, ruff a diamond on the board,
play a heart to his ace, and lead out winning diamonds. He loses only two clubs and one trump.

CROSSWORD

B7

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2016

0101
1

14

10

11

15

17

36

37

19

20

21

22

23
25

31

13

16

18

24

12

26

27

28

29

30

32
33
34

35

38

39

40

41

43

44

49

50

51

52

53

54

55

56

ACROSS
1 Prominent feature
of dubstep music
5 Try to avoid an
accident, maybe
11 Fields of food?
14 Mass observance
15 Lit from above?
16 It sounds like you
17 Boss
19 Big source of coal:
Abbr.
20 Song that Paul
McCartney wrote
at 16
22 Generic
23 Street ___
24 Goddess who
caused the Trojan
women to riot in
the Aeneid
25 Parting chorus
31 Sinners heart?
32 Having a
protective cover, of
a sort
33 One side of the
Mideast

34
35
38
39
40
41
43
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56

45

46

47

42

48

Puzzle by DaviD Steinberg


eDiteD by Will Shortz
Wear for a flower
3 First bishop of
child
Paris
Something you
4 Perceived to be
may need to get
5 Embarrassed
off your chest
Provocative
6 They take place in
performance
theaters
Create an icicle,
7 The Time
say
Machine people
Hearts partner
8 Sauce thickener
Mets division, for
9 Scream ones head
short
off
Stance
10 Start to go down
Bordeaux toasting
the drain
time
11 2009 millionKetchup base
selling Justin
Stretch out
Bieber release
Ave Maria, e.g.
12 Some vaudeville
fare
Sure, Im game
13 Grassy surface
Rocks ___
Soundsystem
18 Edge
Worked (out)
21 Symbol on a
Binding exchange
cello or tuba
composition
DOWN

1 Base for some ice


cream
2 Stadium
noisemaker

29 Famed cabin site


30 Flight figures, for
short
32 Start of a Saturday
night catchphrase
33 Big cheese
wheels?
34 Walk on the Wild
Side singer, 1973
35 Like Swiss steak
36 Creamy, whitish
dish
37 Relevance
38 Beautifully worded
39 Alaskas ___ Park
Road
40 Brief period
42 Edge
44 Texters
Alternatively
45 Gumshoe Charles

26 Slide presentation?

46 Lucky Jim
author

27 Mature

47 Tie securely

28 Historic computer

48 Winnebago relative

B8

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2016

LNP | LANCASTER, PA CLOSE TO HOME

PLUGGERS

BLONDIE

MOTHER GOOSE & GRIMM

ZIGGY

THE WIZARD OF ID

FRAZZ

SALLY FORTH

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE

FRANK & ERNEST

GET FUZZY

MARVIN

DILBERT

THE BORN LOSER

MUTTS

PICKLES

LUANN

ONE BIG HAPPY

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

MARMADUKE

BIZARRO

DENNIS THE MENACE

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

CLASSIC PEANUTS

JUMP START

SPEED BUMP

AMAZING SPIDER-MAN

ZITS

BABY BLUES

TUNDRA

GRAND AVENUE

B.C.

PEARLS BEFORE SWINE

RHYMES WITH ORANGE

FRED BASSET

ROSE IS ROSE

WUMO

GARFIELD

DUSTIN

BOUND & GAGGED

BREVITY

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2016

B9

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT

Wearing Adult Diapers


or Padded Underwear
is No Longer Necessary
According to Dr. Seipel, Leaking, Squirming,
Squeezing, and Embarrassing Odors...Even
Accidents Can Now be a Thing of the Past!
NEW YORK, NEW YORK If life
isnt hard enough, now you have
to worry about making it to the
bathroom in time. The feeling of
your bladder bursting and the down
right panic of not making it in time
can be absolutely over-whelming.
God forbid you have to laugh,
cough or sneeze at the wrong time
and when did you start to become
scared to take a big sip of tea, coffee
or water?
Youre not alone in your battle to
control your bladder. According to
The National Institute of Health, as
many as 33 million Americans are
affected by bladder control issues
described above.

No More Running to the Toilet

Since its introduction in Australia, more


than 25,000 people have successfully used
the Bladder Control formula.
Dr. Seipels formula has made a believer
out of 45-year-old, mother of three, Brandy
W., from Brisbane, Australia.
I had a high bladder frequency as a
child, says Brandy, but my frequency
really worsened after the birth of my first
child.
A friend who was aware of Brandys
condition told her about Dr. Seipels
formula. After two weeks, I had already
noticed changes, smiles Brandy.**
I was finding that although I felt I
needed to urinate, I wasnt desperate to
run to the toilet. Now, when I get up in the
morning, she adds, Im able to make the
coffee and even have a cup before needing
to go, which is a great improvement!

Dr. Tracey Seipel:


Naturopath,
Clinical Nutritionist,
Herbalist &
Diabetes Educator

How Does It Work?

Bladder Control helps aging bladders


feel and function years younger by
revitalizing bladder tone and function, and
by helping improve kidney health, says Dr.
Seipel.
Bladder Control promotes normal
urinary frequency, and reduces urgency,
nocturia and those embarrassing, awayfrom-home bladder accidents, adds Dr.
Seipel.
The compound invigorates the tone of
the bladder wall, restoring a healthy level
of firmness by enhancing the bladders
muscular elasticity. This reduces the
frequent urge to urinate, explains Dr.
Seipel.

Positive Clinical Trial

This natural, drug-free Bladder Control


formula has performed well in a clinical
study.
In one early controlled, randomized trial,
participants saw results in as little as two
weeks. But the best was yet to come.
Two weeks later, participants shocked
study observers by reporting an
astounding 88% improvement in their
quality of life.
Thirty days later, every study participant,
100% of them, reported that their quality
of life had improved markedly.
Results like these are not surprising to
Dr. Seipel who single-handedly pioneered
the bladder care category in the early
2000s, receiving an award from the
prestigious US Nutrition Business Journal
for her work.
Her patent-pending formula consisting
of select, synergistically paired botanicals
like Crateva nurvala, Equisetum arvense
and Lindera aggregata, was 15 years in the
making.
Dr. Seipel searched for an effective,
natural solution as an alternative to current

GRADUATIONS
n Michelle Elaine Feeman

graduated Dec. 19 from


Penn State University with
a masters degree in public
administration.
A 2007 graduate of
Lampeter-Strasburg High
School and 2011 graduate
of Penn State, she is the
daughter of Thomas
Feeman, of Willow Street,
and Barbara Feeman, of
Strasburg.

A 2014 graduate of
Warwick High School, she
is the daughter of Lori
Armstrong, of Lititz.

n Lauren Beckett was

DEANS LIST
n Ashley Royer was

named to the presidents


list and deans list for the
fall semester at Wesley
College in Dover, Delaware,
where she is majoring in
criminal law and justice.

Adios to Adult Diapers

Overactive bladder syndrome and/


or urinary incontinence are widespread
problems, says Dr. Seipel. Many of these
individuals wear adult diapers.
Insiders in the adult diaper industry are
keeping a close eye on Dr. Seipels bladder
support breakthrough because of people
like 78-year-old retired teacher, Glenda B.
from Gold Coast, Australia.
Glenda wore adult diapers every day to
guard against accidents.
My bladder capacity was good but the
leakage and accidents would occur a few
times a day without warning. So, I wore
them every day, confesses Glenda.
Since Glenda discovered Dr. Seipels
Bladder Control formula, you wont find
her shopping in the adult diaper section of
the store anymore.
After only 10 days on Bladder Control,
I stopped wearing my diapers. Now,
I am managing very well, thank you,
says Glenda. According to Euromonitor
International, a respected market research
firm, the size of the adult diaper market in
the U.S. was approximately $1.4 Billion in
2012.

Prostate or Bladder?
Hard to Tell

Many men confuse the symptoms


of overactive bladder syndrome with
prostate woes.
Dr.
Seipel
explains,
Prostate
enlargement restricts urine flow. The
bladder compensates for this by trying
harder and harder to push the urine out.
This causes structural changes to the
bladder, adds Dr. Seipel, Causing bladder
walls to thicken and lose elasticity.
As bladder pressure increases, so does
instances of urinary frequency and
urgency.
Long after a mans prostate woes are
relieved, he may still experience the same
symptoms thanks to his now-overactive
bladder.

His-and-Her Results

Because male and female bladders,


other than size, are identical, says Dr.
Seipel, the formula works equally well for
both men and women.
Its a his-and-her formula, she smiles.
David M., age 46, can attest to this. I was
having to go to the toilet every hour or so
and I had to go to the toilet at least four
times per night.
Four weeks after starting Bladder
Control, David says, My trips to the toilet
have definitely reduced and Im having
much better sleep, getting up maybe once
a night.
If youre ready to put an end to your gonow urination urges, to those frantic trips
to the bathroom, and if you are looking for
the confidence and security that a healthy
bladder can bring to your life, heres your
risk-free opportunity.

A 2015 graduate of
Warwick High School, she
is the daughter of Doug
and Cindy Royer, of Lititz.
named to the deans list
with a 4.0 GPA for the fall
semester at Penn State
University, where he is a
sophomore majoring in
petroleum and natural gas
engineering.
A 2014 graduate of
Manheim Township High
School, he is the son of Ted
and Danae Buczacki, of
Lancaster.

n Aiden Thomas was

named to the deans list


with a 4.0 GPA for the
fall semester at Temple
University, where she is
majoring in geography and
urban studies.
A 2015 graduate of
Donegal High School, she
is the daughter of Erik
and Desiree Thomas, of
Marietta.
named to the deans list for

*THIS PRODUCT IS NOT INTENDED TO DIAGNOSE, TREAT, CURE OR PREVENT ANY DISEASE. THESE STATEMENTS HAVE NOT BEEN EVALUATED BY THE US FDA.
**A TESTIMONIAL REFLECTS THE EXPERIENCE OF ONE PERSON. ACTUAL RESULTS MAY VARY. WE LOOK FORWARD TO HEARING YOUR SUCCESS STORIES

A. Plunkett
Elizabethtown; Olivia
Mauro, of Lititz; Emma
Munyan, of Elizabethtown;
Travis Mumma, of Ephrata;
Abigail Reiter, of Narvon;
Kelsey Staab, of Lititz;
and Alexandra, Wang of
Lancaster.

n Area students were

among those named to


the deans list for the fall
semester at Lycoming
College. They are:
Akron Lydia Jones.
Columbia Isaac Pawling.
Denver Nathan Stewart.

Millersville, was named to


the deans list for the fall
semester at Millersville
University, where she is
a senior studying dual
majors in early childhood
education and special
education.

East Earl Corey Twaddell.


Elizabethtown Daniel
Tierney, Danek Zaleski.
Gap Ashley Schoenstadt.
Lititz Rebecca Forbes,
Erik Homberger.

A 2012 graduate of Penn


Manor High School, she
is the daughter of Paul
B. Rice, of Lancaster,
and Blenda F. Rice, of
Millersville.

Robesonia Angelique
Delgado.

n Area students were

A 2012 graduate of
Conestoga Valley, she is the
daughter of Kim and Dan
Plunkett, of Leola.

n Two area students were

named to the deans list for


the fall semester at Mount
Aloysius College. They are:
Rachel Marie Morley, of
Manheim; and Jordan A.
Morrison, of Oxford.

n Ten area students were

named to the deans list


for the fall semester at
Delaware Valley University.
They are:
Nathan Cummings,
of Ephrata; Amanda
Dietrich, of Elizabethtown;
Taylor Edgington, of
Atglen; Kelly Kinsley, of

among those named


to the Middle Atlantic
Conferences academic
honor roll for the fall
semester at Lebanon Valley
College. The academic
honor roll is comprised
of student-athletes who
compete in a varsity level
sport and registered a
semester GPA of 3.2 (on a
4.0 scale) or higher.
Elizabethtown Taylor
Reinhold.
Ephrata Jeremy Franck,
Tyler Good.
Lancaster Julia Davis,
Samantha Wright.
Lititz Austin Maguire,
Adam Wagaman, Greta
Weidemoyer.
Manheim Kristin
Robeson.
Mount Joy Dustin
Shepler, Mackenzie Lausch.
New Holland Tanner
Reed.
Nottingham Noah Brady.

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19.95

on this very special day...


You opened my heart and
showed me the way.
I love you to bits,
more than words can say.
To my beautiful love:
Happy Valentines Day!
Love, Ross

Special Opportunity
for Our Readers

Dr Seipel has arranged (for a limited


time) to provide our readers a full 60 days
to try Bladder Control at home completely
Risk Free. Thats how confident she is that
it will work for you.
And... if you call today we are offering a
limited number of FREE 30 day bottles as part
of our Fix My Bladder special promotion,
call now for details at 1-800-715-1003.
In as little as four weeks, you could
be sleeping through the night, taking
long trips in the car again, and feeling
confident and self-assured all without
adult diapers or absorbent underwear.
Put those padded underwear and adult
diapers back on the shelf where they belong.
But dont wait. Supplies are very limited.
Call now at 1-800-715-1003.

A 2013 graduate of
Hempfield High School, she
is the daughter of Curt and
Joan Beckett, of Landisville.

n Amanda Plunkett was


named to the deans list for
the fall semester at Temple
University, where she is
a senior political science
major.

n Nicholas Buczacki was

n Jena Armstrong was

named to the deans list for


the fall semester at Temple
University, where she is a
junior majoring in biology.

n Brianna Rice, of

She is a 2012 graduate of


Hempfield High School.

treatments that can cause memory loss


and have a distressing drying effect on the
body, causing blurred vision, constipation,
dry mouth, nausea, and other negative
effects, says Dr. Seipel.

B. Rice

L. Beckett

the fall semester at HACC,


Lancaster.

Mountville, graduated
from Houghton College,
Houghton New York, in
December. She earned a
degree in communications
with a double minor in
history and psychology.

Store shelves are overflowing with adult


diapers and absorbent underwear

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

College news

n Kendra J. Ressler, of

The Family Secret Even


the Family Doesnt Know

Most
people
who
have
overactive bladders choose to keep
their problem a secret, says Dr.
Tracey Seipel, a long-time clinician
who is one of the worlds leading
experts in natural urological health
care.
They dont even tell their spouse or
families about it. It affects their lives in
every way, influencing where they go, and
even what they will wear in case they have
an accident.
Black is the color of choice, says Dr.
Seipel, as it can hide evidence of public
accidents.
A 100% natural, drug-free solution
developed by Dr. Seipel is now available in
a remarkable, fast-acting natural formula
called Bladder Control.
This sophisticated herbal compound has
been shown in clinical studies to improve
bladder control with reductions in bladder
frequency, nocturia (having to urinate at
night), urgency, and bladder discomfort,
sometimes in as little as two weeks.

B10 FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2016

SIZE

2 AD

4 AD

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MEDIA GROUP, Inc.
Attn
Attn:
n: Valentines
PO
O Box 1328
L
Lancaster,
an
PA 17608-1328
Your form and payment
must be received by
Monday, February 8.
Call 291-4952, Mon-Fri
8:30-5:00 for more
information.

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PARTICIPATION DEADLINE: MONDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 2016

Sports

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2016

n SEND STORY TIPS & INFO TO: CHRIS OTTO, 291-8662, COTTO@LNPNEWS.COM

In stride
Millersvilles
baseball team to open
with tough slate
k Page C3

ALSO INSIDE: CLASSIFIEDS

DISTRICT 3
TEAM WRESTLING

L-L BOYS BASKETBALL PLAYOFFS

Rockets
shelve
Eagles
Cocalico has its
chances, but falls
in consolations
DAVE BYRNE

DBYRNE@LNPNEWS.COM

SPRING GROVE
For 11 matches, Cocalico
stayed within hailing
distance of Spring Grove
on Thursday evening in
the consolation quarterfinal of the District
Three Class AAA Team
Wrestling Championships.
But fate, alternately
the Eagles friend and
foe, deserted them one
final time, leaving them
on the short side of a 4331 score.
This is going to sting
a little, a disappointed
Eagles coach Matt Fittery said. Whats frustrating is, it was our
match to lose.
I told the guys we put
ourselves in position
to win, he continued.
We had some guys step
up, we had some great
matches. I think we
showed we can compete
with a team like that.
In the opening match
of the evening, at 138
pounds, Devin Fichthorn (16-11) electrified the Cocalico bench,
wrapping Anthony Hinson (24-13) in a zip-tietight cradle and pinning
him in 1:48.
Devin stepped up big,
Fittery said. It was very
tight. That kid was flat
for a while.
Hinson
desperately
tried to whirlybird
call for injury time out
of the fall, but the match
official was having none
of it and the Eagles (134) had an unexpected
lead, 6-0.
Tanner Sterner (12-

EAGLES, page C3

SUZETTE WENGER | STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

Lampeter-Strasburgs Ben Sandberg, rear, tries to beat Cocalicos Aidan Trynosky to the ball earlier this season. Sandberg leads the Section
Three champion Pioneers with 14.1 points per game.

COLLECTIVE EFFORT

L-S has no players with gaudy stats, but results speak for themselves
JOHN WALK

JWALK@LNPNEWS.COM

For the majority of the


boys basketball season,
Lampeter-Strasburg typically hasnt featured one
individual player in the top20 list of scorers by average
in the Lancaster-Lebanon
League.
Ben Sandbergs 14.1 points
a game average leads the
team, with teammate Matt
Achille sitting just behind at
13.4 a clip. Still, nothing eye-

L-L BOYS BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT

popping.
Sure, theres been the occasional 28 points here
(Achille against Warwick in
December) and 27 points
there (Sandberg at Cocalico
on Tuesday), but most of
the time its been a team effort for the Pioneers offensively, which makes it all the
more impressive that L-S
still found a way to put up a
team average of 62.5 points
a game in the regular season,

QUARTERFINALS

SEMIFINALS

Saturday

Tuesday, Feb. 9 (sites TBD)

n Elco (3-2) at McCaskey (1-1),

n Elco or McCaskey vs.


Conestoga Valley or Lancaster
Catholic, 7 p.m.
n Lancaster Mennonite or
Lebanon vs. Cedar Crest or
Lampeter-Strasburg, 7 p.m.

6 p.m.
n Conestoga Valley (2-2) at
Lancaster Catholic (4-1), 7 p.m.
n Lancaster Mennonite (4-2) at
Lebanon (2-1), 7 p.m.
n Cedar Crest (1-2) at LampeterStrasburg (3-1), 7 p.m.

FINAL
Thursday, Feb. 11

n Semifinal winners, 7 p.m. at


Manheim Township

PIONEERS, page C4

COLLEGE FOOTBALL
In this Nov.
16, 2003,
photo,
Carolina
Panthers
linebackers coach
Sam Mills
leaves the
field after
a game in
Charlotte,
N.C. Mills,
who had
intestinal
cancer,
inspired
the team
by telling them
to keep
pounding.
It has become a way
of life for
the team.
ASSOCIATED PRESS

SUPER BOWL 50

Panthers keep pounding


Inspiring words from late linebackers coach Sam Mills still resonate
STEVE REED

AP SPORTS WRITER

SAN JOSE, Calif.


Keep pounding.
The words have become synonymous with
the NFC champion Carolina Panthers.
Theyre on the walls

of the stadiums weight


room, on the tunnel
leading to the field and
even stitched into the
collar of every Panthers
jersey.
Its a way of life
around here, said Panthers assistant defensive

line coach Sam Mills III.


Mills father Sam, a
Panthers
linebacker
from 1995-97 and then
an assistant coach, uttered the phrase keep
pounding at a downtown Charlotte hotel on

PANTHERS, page C5

ON THE AIR
n Who: Carolina Panthers
vs. Denver Broncos
n When: Sunday, 6:30
p.m.
n Where: Levis Stadium,
Santa Clara, Califorinia
n TV: CBS

Elite 2017 QBs


already decide
Top high school players verbally
commit before start of senior year
STEVE MEGARGEE
AP SPORTS WRITER

Signing day 2016 is in


the books, and the race
for top 2017 quarterback prospects began
long before it ended.
In fact, any programs
that didnt get their
quarterback of the future Wednesday better act soon because
many of the top high
school signal-callers in
the class of 2017 have
already made their college decisions at least
for now.
Nineteen
quarterbacks are included
among the top 250
overall junior prospects, according to the
composite
rankings
of recruiting websites
compiled by 247Sports.
Eleven of them already
have verbally committed, more than 18
months before theyll
actually begin their college careers.
Its pretty standard

now to where almost


all of the elite quarterbacks are committed
well before their senior
seasons, said Barton
Simmons, the national
scouting director for
247Sports.
Quarterback recruiting is similar to one giant game of musical
chairs.
Signal-callers
are
tempted to commit as
soon as they receive an
offer from the school
theyve established as
their first choice because they realize the
possibility that spot
otherwise could get taken by someone else.
Jake Fromm, a junior
at Houston County
High School in Warner
Robins, Georgia, committed to Alabama last
October. He said he
made his decision that
early because he knew
in my heart thats where
I wanted to be and

COMMIT, page C8

sports2
C2

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2016

IN FOCUS

WOMEN ON THE RISE


NFL to implement rule requiring women to be interviewed for positions

FROM TWITTER
1.3 billion chicken wings eaten on Super Bowl Sunday.
So thats at least 650 million chickens right there. For one
day. Just in the U.S.
Chris Otto (@ChrisOttoLNP)
The best part of what we talked about today never made
it on the air like @WWEDanielBryans tenuous family
ties with @MikeGrossLNP.
Keith Schweigert (@KSchweigertLNP)
What to do with the fax machine now that National
Signing Day is over....? #OfficeSpace
Diana Pugliese (@dianapugs)
SPORTS ON TV
COLLEGE ICE HOCKEY

NETWORK

TIME

BTN

8pm

MASN

8pm

NETWORK

TIME

FS1

5pm

MASN

6pm

NETWORK

TIME

FS1

8pm

NETWORK

TIME

BTN

6pm

NETWORK

TIME

European PGA Tour:


Omega Dubai Desert Classic

GOLF

5:30am

Champions Tour: Allianz Championship

GOLF

11am

PGA Tour: Waste Management Phoenix Open

GOLF

3pm

NBA

NETWORK

TIME

CSN/PH

7pm

Penn State at Minnesota


Lake Superior State at Michigan Tech

COLLEGE MENS BASKETBALL


Columbia at Yale
Dartmouth at Pennsylvania

COLLEGE WOMENS BASKETBALL


Providence at Xavier

COLLEGE WRESTLING
Ohio State at Penn State

GOLF

Philadelphia at Washington
Indiana at Atlanta

ESPN

7pm

San Antonio at Dallas

ESPN

9:30pm

NHL

NETWORK

TIME

Pittsburgh at Tampa Bay

NHL, ROOT

7:30pm

NETWORK

TIME

FS1

10:30pm

SOCCER
ASSOCIATED PRESS PHOTOS

Former U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, left, and NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell gesture while
speaking at the NFL Womens Summit on Thursday. In his opening remarks, Goodell announced that the
Rooney Rule will be expanded to require that women be interviewed for executive positions with teams
around the league and in his own office.
JANIE MCCAULEY
AP SPORTS WRITER

SAN FRANCISCO NFL


Commissioner Roger Goodell
will implement a Rooney Rule
requiring that women be interviewed for executive positions
with teams around the league
and in his own office, too.
Goodell made the announcement Thursday in his opening remarks at the first NFL Womens
Summit, part of Super Bowl 50.
We believe in diversity,
Goodell said. We believe were
better as an organization when
we have good people at the table.
We have great people at the table.
Were also seeing it on the field. ...
You can see that progress is
being made and our commitment
is, we have something called the
Rooney Rule, which requires us
to make sure when we have an
opening that on the team or the
league level that we are going to
interview a diverse slate of candidates, Goodell said. Well, were
going to make that commitment
and were going to formalize that
we, as a league, are going to do
that for women as well in all of
our executive positions. Again,
were going to keep making progress here and make a difference.
The Bills hired the NFLs first
full-time female assistant coach
last month, Kathryn Smith, as spe-

cial teams quality control coach.


That move comes after Jen Welter coached the Cardinals inside
linebackers during Arizonas training camp last summer, while Sarah
Thomas became the leagues first
female official this past season.
Sarah was our first female NFL
official on the field this year,
Goodell said. She did a fantastic
job, and were very proud of her.
We also have people breaking
into the coaching ranks. Jen was
the first coach last year. She set a
trend, and we now have a second
coach with the Buffalo Bills.
Goodells announcement immediately drew attention.
The hurdles are there, former
Secretary of State Condoleezza
Rice said. Part of the challenge
of breaking through is to change
traditional patterns of hiring and
advancement. Its not a question
of people dont have merit or they
arent as good. ... I guarantee you
there are plenty of women and
minorities who are qualified for
positions, but unless you actually
go outside to look, outside normal
channels, you wont find them,
which is why the Rooney Rule is
very important. When youre told
you have to diversify your pool,
you will get some remarkable candidates within that pool.
Liz Boardman, a senior client
partner at the recruitment firm

Korn Ferry, believes such a


move by the NFL can only be
a benefit and an example for
other businesses big or small
to diversify and change their
hiring practices.
It shows fantastic progress
and momentum. Its setting a
trend for the rest of the world.
Thats what sports does, thats
what the NFL can do, Boardman said. The NFL has a lot of
high-ranking women and this
just formalizes the effort they
have put forward for several
years. It just continues their
momentum in terms of leading the charge.
Former Oakland CEO Amy
Trask, the NFLs first female
CEO, said on Twitter, I think
this should be the Al Davis
rule, referring to the late Raiders owner who put his faith
in her decades ago when he
wasnt even required to do so.
I am bothered and saddened
that there is a need for a rule
to do what is right and what
is smart, Trask, now a CBS
analyst and working the Super Bowl, told The Associated
Press. I had the privilege and
pleasure of working for a man
who needed no rule to evaluate
people without regard to race,
ethnicity, gender, religion, and
other such characteristics.

LNP SPORTS VIDEO

WERE ON TWITTER

Visit LancasterOnline.com each week for


new editions of the Inside the Circle and
Court Report videos with Keith Schweigert,
Dave Byrne, John Walk and Tim Gross.

Have you joined the more than 5,070


folks who follow @LancasterSports on
Twitter? Only takes one click.

Dear LNP Subscriber,


Its that time of year again, when thoughts turn to snow days,
snow plows and snow shovels.
At LNP, we make every effort to deliver through inclement weather.
But on the rare occasion weather causes us to delay your newspaper,
we want to keep you posted. So were encouraging you to sign up for
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service disruptions, provide you with free access to an online version
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To sign up, please contact Customer Service at 717-291-8611
or customerservice@LNPnews.com and a representative will
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Thank you for being a home delivery subscriber to LNP.

International Friendly:
United States vs. Canada

AHL

Leighton on verge of
breaking shutout record
Former Flyer goaltender on route to
pass mark Johnny Bower set in 1957
STEPHEN WHYNO
AP SPORTS WRITER

Most hockey fans remember Michael Leighton


as the goaltender who gave
up Patrick Kanes Stanley
Cup-winning goal in 2010.
Now hes one shutout away
from a much more favorable place in history.
Leighton is on the verge
of breaking the all-time
American Hockey League
shutout record that Hockey Hall of Famer Johnny
Bower has held since 1957.
The Rockford (Illinois)
IceHogs goalie can pick
up his 46th AHL shutout
as soon as Friday, which
would break the one of
the oldest records on the
books.
Like Kevin Costners
Crash Davis in Bull Durham, Leighton has been
near the pinnacle of his
sport in the show and done
well enough in the minors
to challenge a record. But
the Crash Davis of hockey knows Bowers background from his grandfathers stories and his own
research and appreciates
this achievement, which is
even more significant now

than it was back in the


1950s when goalies played
every game.
Its even more of an
honor because its Bowers
mark. After a stellar AHL
career, Bower won three
Cups with the Toronto
Maple Leafs, two Vezina
Trophies as the NHLs
best goaltender and was
inducted into the Hockey
Hall of Fame in 1976.
Leighton is a journeyman
who has played for the Chicago Blackhawks, Nashville
Predators,
Philadelphia
Flyers and Carolina Hurricanes and spent time in
eight different organizations plus Russias Kontinental Hockey League. He
came two victories away
from the Cup with Philadelphia but has played only
two NHL games since.
The 34-year-old Leighton reached 45 shutouts
in 428 games to Bowers
592. At 91, Bower doesnt
have an acute awareness of
Leightons career, but his
daughter Cynthia told her
father about the record and
relayed a good luck message from him on the AHLs
Facebook page.

SPORTS

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2016

COLLEGE BASEBALL PREVIEW

No taking it easy for MU


Marauders open
season against
Winston-Salem
PAULA WOLF

PWOLF@LNPNEWS.COM

Ranked as high as third


in the country in Division II preseason polls,
Millersville
baseball
opens its 2016 campaign
with a four-game series
starting today against
Winston-Salem State in
North Carolina.
Its a good early test
for us, said Marauders
head coach Jon Shehan.
Millersville, which finished 45-11 last year and
advanced to the NCAA
Atlantic Region final, is
very familiar with Winston-Salem. The Rams
were 42-15 in 2015 and
saw their season end to
the Marauders with a
loss in the Atlantic Region playoffs.
Picked to win the
Pennsylvania State Athletic Conference East
Division for a fourth
consecutive year, MU
returns nearly all of its
lineup and several hurlers, including righthander Brandon Miller,
a pro prospect.
The 6-4 junior, an Ephrata graduate, is a National Baseball Writers
Association preseason
honorable mention selection.
Miller grabbed the attention of scouts with
an outstanding performance this past summer
in the Cape Cod Baseball
League, where he made
the all-star game.
That was huge for him,
Shehan said.
Millers makeup is off
the charts, his coach
said, with a fastball in the

Evincii Prize Fighter


Dixon (6-13-1) says he
wants to start this year
off with a nice win.
Hell get a shot at that
win Saturday, when he
steps into the ring for the
first time in 2016. The
welterweight will face off
against Antonio Chaves
Fernandez (7-24-3), a
37-year-old southpaw
out of Massachusetts.

7) got that back for the


Rockets (12-2) with a
fall at 145 and the score
see-sawed through 182
as Marcus Kehr (25-6)
pinned and Josh Cribbs
(25-11) scored a major
decision for the Rockets,
matched by a major from
Trevor Fichthorn (26-5)
and fall by Abdul Saad (199), pinning Jared Barley
(18-11) in 41 seconds.
Down just five heading into what shouldve
been a strength for the
Eagles Ben Fromm
(220), Brady Maxwell
(285) and Josiah Gehr
(106) Spring Grove
rocketed farther ahead
when Nathan Young (117) reversed Fromm into
a fall, at 7:21, in the first
tiebreak overtime.
With the score tied 2-2
(two Fromm escapes, a
Young reversal) late in
regulation Fromm (156) missed two takedown
opportunities, spinning
behind Young, out of
bounds, with 12 seconds
left and again just after
the buzzer.
Maxwell (20-5) escaped Andrew Lawson
(10-9), a Division I foot-

n LNP will publish an additional list of local student-

athletes college destinations in Sundays edition.


Information can come from schools, coaches, parents
or the students themselves. Information for publication
should be emailed to sports@lnpnews.com no later
than noon Saturday. We are considering this list to
be inclusive of all local student-athletes who plan to
play sports in college. It is not limited to athletes who
have signed a National Letter of Intent or received
an athletic scholarship. It is inclusive of all collegiate
divisions.

Sunday. Inside linebacker Trevor St. Clair (Lancaster


Catholic) was Defensive MVP; outside linebacker Reid
Pavlik (Manheim Central) received the Hammer Hit
Award; Trevor Good (Conestoga Valley) was presented
with the Walter Sheets Memorial Offensive Lineman
Award; and defensive lineman Adam Wagaman
(Warwick) was one of three Service Players of the Year.

MENS BASKETBALL
n Messiahs Jimmy Brackett (Garden Spot) scored
MILLERSVILLE ATHLETIC COMMUNICATIONS

Ephrata graduate Brandon Miller throws a pitch for Millersville last season. The righthander is one of several returning standouts for the Marauders, whove again been
picked to win the Pennsylvania State Athletic Conference East Division.

low 90s and four pitchers he can locate in the


strike zone.
In addition, he has a
very clean delivery, Shehan said.
The 20-year-old, who
went 12-2 last season
with 2.48 ERA for Millersville, is viewed as a
potential starter by the
pros, he said.
Miller said the entire
team has benefited from
working with Maplezone
Sports Institute, the facility thats training potential 2016 No. 1 overall
draft pick Jason Groome,
a high school hurler from
New Jersey.
He also credited Marauders assistant coach
Ryan Forrest for helping
him get better.
His changeup is his
most-improved pitch,
said Miller, who also
throws a fastball, slider
and curveball.
Asked what he usually
relies on in strikeout situations, he said, I like to

use the curve and slider.


In its everyday lineup,
Millersville returns Dan
Neff (Lampeter-Strasburg), who hit .351 last
season, Jeremy Musser
(.303) and Chas McCormick (.351) in the
outfield. Aaron Taylor
(McCaskey), a redshirt
freshman, will be the
fourth outfielder, Shehan said.
Infielder David Summerfield, who batted
.452 last year, will likely
move from second base
to third base; Tyler Orris
(.364) will be at shortstop; Ted Williams will
play second; John Brogan (.313) comes back
as the DH; Pequea Valley alum Dan Stoltzfus
(.396) will man first;
and fellow PV graduate
Mitch Stoltzfus (.306)
will handle the majority
of the catching duties.
Catcher Ben Snyder, a
transfer from Pitt, will
get some playing time as
well, Shehan said.

Orris made NBWA preseason honorable mention, while Dan Stoltzfus


earned preseason first
team recognition after
slugging a team-leading
15 homers and 81 RBIs in
2015.
Among the returning
pitchers are right-hander Jim McDade, who also
competed in the Cape
Cod League, right-hander Reid Anderson and
left-hander Dylan Boisclair.
Miller will open Friday
against Winston-Salem,
to be followed by freshman lefty Cordell Shannon, McDade and Anderson.
Theres no question
we have a good club coming back, Shehan said.
The preseason rankings set the expectations,
but the veteran squad is
good at focusing day by
day and not looking too
far ahead, he said.
It should be a fun
year.

The bout is one of three


boxing matches on the
card at a New England
Fights MMA event, The
Immortals, in Lewistown, Maine.
Taking a fight scheduled in the middle of a
mixed martial arts event,
in the middle of winter,
in Maine is in line with
Dixons self-described
old-school attitude of
taking any fight offered.
But Dixons making a
few changes this year, too.

Hes got a new manager, John Fannin of JLF


Management
Group,
LLC, and plans to be
more businesslike in
2016.
He also seems to be
striving to dispel any
ideas about a less-thanprofessional rivalry with
another Lancaster pro
boxer, Rolando Ironman Chinea.
Last week the two went
eight full rounds of hard
sparring at Finefrock &

Stumpfs Golden Gloves


Center in Lancaster.
Chinea is training for a
fight scheduled for Feb. 16.
The session ended with
both men sweaty, and
slightly out of breath,
and civil, if not overtly
friendly.
In a recent Facebook
update, Dixon posted a
picture of himself and
Chinea, in the ring, with
the comment show
support to both fighters
2016, we working.

Eagles: Fall to Spring Grove, 43-31


Continued from C1

SIGNING NEWS

n Lebanon Valley handed out its postseason awards

Lancasters Dixon fights this weekend


LNP CORRESPONDENT

Local digest

FOOTBALL

BOXING

STEPHANIE
BRADFORD

C3

ball recruit for Old Dominion, in the ultimate


tiebreak for a 3-2 win.
The Rockets bumped
their lightweights and
Gehr cradled cannon
fodder Noah Colehouse
(3-1, with 3 forfeit wins)
to a fall in 1:35, pulling
the Eagles to 27-25.
After Clay Baker (293) pinned Trevor Hale
(7-11) at 113, the Eagles
Adam Miller stepped in
against once-beaten Dakota Rohrbaugh (34-1),
a returning District runner-up.
Miller took Rohrbaugh
down twice in the first 37
seconds and, with less
than 45 seconds in the
first period, spun behind
Rohrbaugh. But did not
complete the takedown.
Rohrbaugh did, with
12 seconds left, tying the
match at 4-4.
Miller escaped in the
second period and was
in deep on a single leg,
taking Rohrbaugh to the
mat. Rohrbaugh, however, stepped over to a
sitting Jonsey, good for
five points and a 9-5 lead
after two.
He reversed to start the
third period, then ran a

Whats
frustrating is, it
was our match
to lose.
Matt Fittery, Cocalico coach

bar-and-wrist combination, pinning Miller in


5:04.
He started out well,
but we didnt get the job
done there, Fittery said.
That put the Rockets
up 14, and the match out
of reach, 39-25, with two
bouts to go.

Nate
Fritz
(21-8)
pinned at 126 for the
Eagles, and Jake Meyer
(21-13) scored a major
decision at 132 for Spring
Grove to close things out.
We had at least
three matches that we
could have won and got
pinned, Fittery said.
Those are nine-point
swings there. Thats the
match.
As young as the Eagles
are, this loss is but another paver on the path
to future successes.
There were a lot of
bright spots and I dont
want to take that away
from the guys who wrestled hard, Fittery said.
We certainly couldve
won that match, but we
didnt.

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14 points, grabbed seven boards and blocked three


shots Wednesday in the Falcons 68-47 upset win over
Lycoming.

n Sam Light (Northern Lebanon) led Lebanon Valley

with 22 points Wednesday in a 75-73 loss to Widener.

n Cairns Julian Collazo (Lancaster Mennonite) scored


a career-high 29 points in the Highlanders 92-89 loss
Wednesday to Rosemont.

n No. 18 Susquehanna got 12 points from Josh Miller


(Lampeter-Strasburg) in a 74-71 win Wednesday over
Juniata.
n Washington & Jeffersons Brian Lindquist (Pequea

Valley) took home ECAC Division III South Player of the


Week honors after averaging 17 points and 17 rebounds
in two games last week.

WOMENS BASKETBALL
n Senior Shanice Smith toppled two big milestones

just minutes apart Thursday night as Lancaster Bible


won its eighth straight game in a 76-59 defeat of host
St. Elizabeth. Smith notched her 1,000th career point
midway through the first quarter, then grabbed the
1,000th rebound of her career early in the second.
Smith finished with 18 points and 15 rebounds.
Senior Aubrey Folger led the Chargers (12-1 North
Eastern Athletic Conference, 15-3 overall) with 24
points and 12 rebounds, and senior Katy Stover added
19 points.

n Saint Josephs Sarah Fairbanks (Elizabethtown

Area) scored 10 points and grabbed eight boards in a


64-55 victory Saturday against La Salle.

n Bloomsburgs Alex Ross (Manheim Township)


scored 12 points and pulled down 10 rebounds
Wednesday in a 78-65 loss to West Chester.
FIELD HOCKEY

Team USA to play


in London in July
DIANA PUGLIESE

DPUGLIESE@LNPNEWS.COM

The United States


womens field hockey team will open
Hockey Champions
Trophy play against
Australia on June
18, it was announced
Wednesday.
The International
Hockey Federation
(FIH) released the official schedule for the
tournament, in which
the U.S., the Netherlands, Argentina, Australia, New Zealand
and Great Britain will
face off June 18-26 at
the Lee Valley Hockey
and Tennis Centre in
Queen Elizabeth Park
in London.
Argentina won the
last Hockey Champions Trophy with a 3-1
shootout victory over
Australia in 2014.
Play this year opens
with seventh-ranked

Team USA meeting No.


3 Argentina at 7 a.m. EST
June 18, followed by No.
2 Argentina against No.
6 Great Britain and the
top-ranked Netherlands
team vs. No. 4 New Zealand.
The U.S. will then take
on Argentina the next
day, the Netherlands on
June 21 and Great Britain on June 23.
The
championship
matches will be held
June 25.
Tickets for the tournament are available for
purchase online.
While Team USA will
host Canada in a fourgame test series Feb.
8-12, the Hockey Champions Trophy marks the
last major international
hockey competition before these teams meet
again in Rio de Janiero,
Brazil for the Olympics.
The Summer Games
open Aug. 5.

Its back! The Eagle


Cam Returns!

One of our most popular features returns! And


as a welcome addition for viewers, this years
cameras have sound! To see what the birds are
up to, visit LancasterOnline.com/EagleCam.
Brought to you by

C4

SPORTS

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2016

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

COLLEGE BASKETBALL ROUNDUP

Temple edges
Tulsa in OT
Owls Enechionyia hits winning
3-pointer with 34 seconds to go
Quenton
DeCosey
scored 21 points with
seven rebounds and four
assists to help Temple
edge Tulsa 83-79 in overtime on Thursday night.
Obi Enechionyia hit a
3-pointer with 34 seconds left in overtime to
put the Owls up by four.
Marquel Curtis trimmed
the deficit to two with a
layup, and when Tulsa
was forced to foul with 12
seconds to go DeCosey
made both free throws.
Tulsas James Woodard
then missed a 3-pointer, and Daniel Dingle
grabbed the rebound to
seal it.
Enechionyia finished
with 17 points for Temple (13-8, 7-3 American). Jaylen Bond had 13
points and 13 rebounds,
while Devin Coleman
added 10 points.
Tulsa (14-8, 6-4) was
led by Pat Birt with 22
points. Shaquille Harrison had 20 points, 11
rebounds and six assists,
while Woodard ended up
with 18 points, 10 boards
and six assists.
Vanderbilt 77, Texas
A&M 60: Jeff Roberson
scored a career-high 20
points to help Vanderbilt
upset No. 8 Texas A&M
for the Commodores
first win over a ranked
team in four years.
Vanderbilt (13-9, 5-4
SEC) had lost its previous 13 games against
ranked opponents, including six this season.
The Commodores last
win over a ranked opponent was in 2012 when it
upset No. 1 Kentucky in
the Southeastern Conference tournament final.
Texas A&M (18-4, 7-2)
lost for the second time
in three games.

Women
Ohio State 87, Wisconsin 61: Ameryst
Alston scored 21
points as No. 7 Ohio
State cruised to victory over Wisconsin.
The Buckeyes (18-4,
10-1) took control late
in the first quarter and
never looked back as
five players scored in
double figures for coach
Kevin McGuffs team.
Shayla
Cooper
scored 16 points off
the bench while Alexa
Hart had 12 and Asia
Doss had 11. Kelsey
Mitchell, the Big Tens
leading scorer, overcame a slow start to
finish with 16 points.
Notre Dame 82,
North Carolina State
46: Madison Cable
matched her careerhigh with 25 points
and grabbed seven
rebounds to lead No.
3 Notre Dame over
North Carolina State.
The Wolfpack (167, 7-3 Atlantic Coast
Conference) couldnt
stop Cable early as
she scored 13 of Notre
Dames first 19 points
and the Irish (22-1,
10-0) jumped to a
19-12 lead. Cable hit
shots from the outside, scored on fastbreak layups and was
7-of-7 from the freethrow line.
South Carolina 78,
Kentucky 68: Alaina
Coates had 27 points
and 13 rebounds as
No. 2 South Carolina
overcame an injury to
star Tiffany Mitchell to
defeat No. 18 Kentucky
and head to its showdown with top-ranked
Connecticut at 22-0.
SOURCE: ASSOCIATED PRESS

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Flyers right wing Matt Read (24) scores against Nashville Predators goalie Pekka Rinne (35), of Finland, in the first
period Thursday night.
NHL ROUNDUP

FLYERS CLIP PREDATORS

Jagr hits 1,100th assist in regular-season play in Floridas win over Detroit
Wayne Simmonds had
two goals and an assist, Claude Giroux also
scored twice to lead the
Philadelphia Flyers to
a 6-3 victory over the
Nashville Predators on
Thursday night.
Matt Read and Brayden
Schenn also scored for
Philadelphia, which has
won three straight. Scott
Laughton and Jakub Voracek each had a pair of
assists for the Flyers.
Ryan Johansen, Calle
Jarnkrok and Shea Weber had the goals for
Nashville, which has lost
consecutive games.
Read scored the games
first goal at 13:51 of the
opening period. As Read
carried the puck across
Nashvilles blue line,
Predators defensemen
Ryan Ellis and Barret
Jackman collided with
Flyers forward Michael
Raffl, giving Read room
to skate into the slot and
beat Pekka Rinne with a
wrist shot between the
pads.
The Flyers have scored
first in 10 of their last 12
games.
Schenn made it 2-0 at
15:49 of the first. Standing just to the left of the
Nashville net, Schenn
deflected Sean Couturiers shot from the lower
part of the right circle
past Rinne, who made 13
saves. Rinne stopped just
three of five Philadelphia
shots in the first.
The Flyers have carried a lead into the first
intermission in three

consecutive games.
Johansen made it 2-1
at 4:23 of the second. Roman Josi had the puck
in the right circle and
found Johansen cutting through the slot.
Johansen made a quick
move in tight traffic before beating Steve Mason high to the stick side
with a wrist shot. Mason
made 37 saves.
The Flyers regained a
two-goal lead at 8:10 of
the second.
Webers stick broke
at Philadelphias blue
line and, as he went to
the bench to retrieve
a new one, Laughton
sent a long pass to Simmonds, sending him
in on a breakaway on
Rinne. Simmonds initial
shot was kicked away by
Rinne, but Simmonds
was able to slide the rebound by the prone goaltender.
Giroux made it 4-1 at
16:15 with a one-timer
from the slot off of a
nice pass from Voracek.
Jarnkrok made it 4-2 just
25 seconds later after
converting the rebound
of James Neals shot.
Weber cut the Flyers
lead to 4-3 at 10:03 of the
third. With Nashville on
a power play, Josi sent a
pass to Weber above the
left circle where he beat
Mason with a one-timer.
Weber won the Hardest Shot Competition at
last weekends All-Star
Game Skills Competition with a shot of 108.1
mph.

Simmonds scored on
the power play at 12:01
of the third to put the
Flyers back in front by
two goals. Giroux added
his second of the night at
13:11.
Panthers 6, Red
Wings 3: Vincent Trocheck scored twice and
added an assist, Jaromir
Jagr had a goal and two
assists and Florida beat
Detroit.
Roberto
Luongo
stopped 35 shots for his
ninth consecutive win
on home ice for Florida, which has won five
straight. Brandon Pirri
had a goal and an assist
for the Panthers, who
have scored at least five
goals in a franchise-record four consecutive
games.
Jagrs first assist of the
night was his 1,100th in
regular-season play, a
milestone reached by
only five other players
Wayne Gretzky, Ron
Francis, Mark Messier,
Ray Bourque and Paul
Coffey.
Bruins 3, Sabres 2:
Ryan Spooner scored
in regulation and the
shootout to lead Boston
over Buffalo.
Brad Marchand helped
Boston erase a two-goal
deficit, and Tuukka Rask
made 31 saves in the win.
Rangers 4, Wild 2:
Derick Brassard set up
the tying goal and scored
the game-winner early
in the third period as
New York rallied from a
two-goal deficit to beat a

struggling Minnesota.
Capitals 3, Islanders
2: Alex Ovechkin scored
the winning goal in his
return from a one-game
suspension for skipping
the All-Star Game, and
Washington avoided a
third straight loss by
beating New York .
Ovechkin scored off a
pass from Nicklas Backstrom with 2:40 left to
help Washington end
a rare two-game skid.
The Capitals hadnt lost
three games in a row all
season.
Oilers 7, Senators 2:
Jordan Eberle scored
twice and added an assist for Edmonton, who
started its four-game
road trip by beating Ottawa.
Sharks 3, Blues 1:
Joonas Donskoi and Joe
Thornton scored in the
second period, Martin
Jones made 26 saves and
San Jose beat St. Louis.
Maple Leafs 3, Devils
2 (OT): P.A. Parenteaus
shootout goal lifted Toronto over New Jersey,
giving coach Mike Babcock a reason to celebrate his 1,000th NHL
game.
James
Reimer
stopped Reid Boucher,
Jacob Josefson and
Lee Stempniak in the
shootout. Peter Holland and Tyler Bozak
missed for the Leafs.
David Schlemkos disputed third-period goal
seemed destined to give
the Devils a 2-1 win.

SOURCE: ASSOCIATED PRESS

Pioneers: Well-rounded team leads


Continued from C1

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Temples Josh Brown, top, goes over Tulsas Shaquille


Harrison as he goes to the basket during the first half
on Thursday.
NBA

Close call for Detroit


Pistons blow 27-point lead,
recover to beat Knicks 111-105
Anthony Tolliver and
Reggie Jackson made a
trio of big 3-pointers late
in the fourth quarter,
and the Detroit Pistons
avoided a colossal collapse, beating the New
York Knicks 111-105 on
Thursday night.
The Knicks rallied
from a 27-point secondquarter deficit, finally
taking a 97-95 lead on a
layup by Robin Lopez.
Tollivers 3-pointer put
the Pistons back ahead,
and Jackson added another to make it 101-97.

After a dunk by Lopez cut the margin


back to two, Jackson added another
3-pointer, and the
Pistons were able to
hold on.
Jackson
finished
with 21 points, and
Stanley
Johnson
added 22 and nine rebounds. Andre Drummond had 17 points
and 13 rebounds for
Detroit.
Lopez had 26 points
and 16 rebounds.
SOURCE: ASSOCIATED PRESS

the fourth-best mark in


the league.
Thats whats been
cool with this team,
head coach John Achille
said after Tuesdays win
at Cocalico. Different
guys are stepping up. We
dont need Ben to score
25. We dont need Matt
to score 25. Our top five
or six guys can put the
ball in the basket. Thats
tough to guard against.
Couple this with L-S
holding opponents to
a league-leading 46.2
points a game, and it becomes a bit more clear as
to how the Pioneers (211) won the Section Three
crown and lost just once
all year.
However, this part of
the year has always been
unkind to L-S, which is
2-10 all-time in the L-L
tournament, has only
made it out of the first
round twice, and has yet
to ever reach the L-L title
game. And up first in this
years tournament for
the Pioneers will be twotime defending league
tournament champ Ce-

dar Crest, this years Section One runner-up.


Heres
a
preview
of each of Saturdays
matchups:
Elco (19-3) at McCaskey (16-5), 6 p.m.:
A matchup of the top
two offenses in the L-L,
with Elco putting up 67.7
points a game and McCaskey tallying a 67.6 average. Elco hasnt been
in the L-L tournament
since 2003, and is 0-8
all-time. But the Section
Three runner-up Raiders are led by two of the
top-seven scorers in the
L-L with 6-foot, 3-inch
senior guard Colton
Lawrence (20.6 ppg) and
6-0 junior guard Mason
Bossert (17.3 ppg). McCaskey counters with
6-4 senior guard Kobe
Gantz (18.9 ppg), 5-7
senior guard Randolph
Speller (14.4 ppg) and 6-1
junior guard Ricky Cruz
(14.3 ppg). Lawrence,
Gantz and Speller have
each scored more than
1,000 points in their careers.
Conestoga Valley (157) at Lancaster Catho-

lic (14-8), 7 p.m.: The


Section Two runner-up
Buckskins have struggled to find any consistent scoring this season,
as 6-4 senior forward
Jovan Marrero leads the
team at 13 ppg. And CV
will go up against a Lancaster Catholic defense
holding opponents to
48.2 points a game, the
fourth-best average in
the league. Then again,
the Section Four champion Crusaders dont
have many top-scoring
threats, either, as 6-4
senior forward Thomas
Gonzales (10.9 ppg) and
Sean Landis (9.7 ppg)
paces an offense averaging 51.5 points, the lowest average among the
eight L-L tournament
teams.
Lancaster Mennonite (11-11) at Lebanon (15-6), 7 p.m.: The
Section Four runner-up
Blazers put up a ton of
points (66.5 ppg), but
also give up a bunch
(63.6), while Section
Two champ Lebanon
(stats through Feb. 3) is
in the top-third of the

league in offense (58.5


ppg) and defense (50.3
ppg). Richie Rosas (14.1
ppg), Kyle Kerr (11.7
ppg), Carter Hurst (9.6
ppg) and Cody Hurst
(9.4 ppg) pace Lancaster
Mennonite, while Lebanon is also balanced by
Allan Escoto (12.2 ppg),
Shaquell Ortiz (11.1 ppg)
and Felix Kortright (7.9
ppg).
Cedar Crest (17-5) at
Lampeter-Strasburg
(21-1), 7 p.m.: The L-S
defense likely will key on
senior point guard Evan
Horn (20.5 ppg), who
has a supporting cast
that includes 6-3 senior
center Raymie Ferreira
(8.7 ppg) and 5-9 senior
guard Iziah Trimble
(8.5 ppg). It wasnt long
ago when Cedar Crest
was the leagues hottest team, as the Falcons
were sporting a 10-game
win-streak before falling to McCaskey on Jan.
19 and following that up
with two more losses (at
Hempfield, at Manheim
Township) before finishing the regular season
with three wins.

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

NFL

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2016

Panthers: Pounding a way of life

NFL ROUNDUP

Dez says Murray


should come home

Continued from C1

Jan. 2, 2004, the night


before the Panthers
started a run to their
first Super Bowl. It has
been become the teams
rallying call.
Mills, the teams linebacker coach at the time,
was dying of intestinal
cancer when he gathered players together in
a meeting room before
they would beat the Dallas Cowboys in a wildcard playoff game.
There, Mills delivered
an emotional message
akin to Jim Valvanos
Dont Give Up speech,
say those in attendance.
There were no microphones on hand to record the words, no TV
cameras to capture the
moment. But the message was clear: No matter how hard things get,
no matter how bleak
things look keep
pounding.
Mills talked about how
he could have given up
on fighting in the face
of terminal cancer, but
refused.
Ricky Proehl, a Panthers wide receiver at
the time, said the speech
was so powerful that
grown men were weeping.
Just keep pounding
thats where it all started, Proehl said. Keep
pounding, dont quit. No
matter what the situation or the odds are just
keep pounding.
Said former Panthers
quarterback Jake Delhomme:
Everybody
had goose bumps. It gave
you chills. The speech, it
was much bigger than
football it was about
life. It was like something out of a Hollywood
movie.

ASSOCIATED PRESS

time chasing a dream.


Eventually he got a
tryout with the USFLs
Baltimore/Philadelphia
Stars and quickly became one of the teams
best players under coach
Jim Mora. When Mora
joined the New Orleans
Saints in 1986, he took
Mills with him. Mills became the teams rock at
middle linebacker and
would become a fourtime All-Pro.
The Panthers continue to keep Mills legacy
alive.
There is a statue of him
outside of the teams
downtown
Charlotte
stadium.
Before every home
game, someone is selected to bang a giant black
drum on the field with
the words keep pounding on it.
Stephen Curry has
hit it. So has 8-year-old
cancer survivor Braylon

SUPER BOWL

Some of NFLs biggest stars


never played in big game
DENNIS WASZAK JR.
AP SPORTS WRITER

Some of the NFLs biggest all-time stars have


a gaping hole on their
playing resumes.
Sure, theyve got Pro
Bowl selections, All-Pro
honors and even bronze
busts in the Pro Football
Hall of Fame. But they
never got a chance to
play in the Super Bowl.
The first game, of
course, was played in
1967, when it was known
as the AFL-NFL World
Championship Game
until getting its current
name in 1969. So players in the middle of Hall
of Fame careers, such as
Deacon Jones, Gale Sayers and Dick Butkus, had
fewer chances to hoist
the Lombardi Trophy.
Bad timing for some.
Bad teams for others.
And, for many, simply
missed opportunities.
Heres a look at some
other of the games
greats who retired without playing on footballs
biggest stage:
Barry Sanders (Detroit, 1989-98)
The
third-leading
rusher in NFL history
walked away from the
game after 10 seasons
of juking defenders and
15,269 yards rushing
just 1,457 short of thenNo. 1 Walter Payton at
30 years old. He spent
his entire career with
Detroit and, just like any
other player who has
worn only a Lions jersey,
never made it to the Super Bowl. Sanders came
tantalizingly close in the
1991 season, his third in
the league, when Detroit
lost to Washington in
the NFC championship
game. Current Lions receiver Calvin Johnson is
reportedly considering

Running back DeMarco Murrays future with


the Philadelphia Eagles
is unclear following a
disappointing season
and a coaching change.
Leave it to Dallas
Cowboys receiver Dez
Bryant to use this opportunity to lobby
Murray to return Dallas via Twitter. Byrant
included quarterback
Tony Romo and tight
end Jason Witten in the
missive: come on home
D.Moe #cowboys.
Murray
capitalized
on a record-breaking,
1,845-yard season with
the Cowboys in 2014 to
sign a five-year, $40 million contract with the
Eagles in 2015.
Murray rushed for just
702 yards and six touchdowns in Philadelphia.
The Eagles have a new
coach in Doug Pederson, but are still not sure
Murray will be the starter going forward. He is
set to count $35 million
against the cap over the
next four years, including $8 million in 2016.
It would cost the Eagles $13 million to cut
Murray before June 1.
Ravens going back
to grass: The Baltimore
Ravens began a threemonth process of returning M&T Bank Stadium
to a natural grass playing
surface for the first time
since 2002 on Thursday..
Head
groundskeeper Don Follett said the
new grass would come
from Carolina Green
out of North Carolina,
which has supplied the
Philadelphia Eagles and
Kansas City Chiefs recently.
Manziel not charged:
Despite disturbing allegations that he struck his

Carolina Panthers quarterback Cam Newton throws during practice on Thursday in


San Jose, Calif., in preparation for Super Bowl 50 on Sunday.

Added Proehl: Unbelievable. The hair on the


back of your neck stood
up.
Mills was one of Carolinas toughest players.
When Mills revealed
he had intestinal cancer in the summer of
2003, it sent shockwaves
throughout the organization. Mills continued to
coach the Panthers and
far exceeded the three
months doctors had given him to live. He died on
April 18, 2005, at 45.
The speech, his son
said, was years in the
making.
His father never gave
up.
An undrafted rookie
out of Montclair State,
Mills tried time and time
again to make a career
out of football but nobody would sign him. He
went to work as a high
school teacher, but kept
working out in his free

retirement hes 30,


like Sanders was and
could soon join this list.
Dan Fouts (San Diego, 1973-87)
One of the most prolific passers of his era
set the leagues singleseason mark for yards
passing in three straight
seasons (1979-81) and
finished with 43,040
over his 15-year career,
all with the Chargers.
He thrived in Don Coryells Air Coryell passhappy offense, but Fouts
couldnt get San Diego
to the Super Bowl. The
Chargers played in the
AFC title game twice
with Fouts, but lost to
Oakland (1980 season)
and Cincinnati (1981).
Eric Dickerson (L.A.
Rams, 1983-87; Indianapolis, 1987-91; L.A.
Raiders, 1992; Atlanta,
1993)
One of the most dominant and dynamic running backs of all time
is seventh in career
rushing and still holds
the single-season NFL
mark with 2,105 yards
in 1984. He got his career off to a good start
by setting league rookie
records for yards rushing (1,808), TD runs
(18) and attempts (390).
Dickerson got to the
NFC
championship
game in his third season,
but the Rams were shut
out by Chicago 24-0.
Tony Gonzalez (Kansas City, 1997-2008; Atlanta, 2009-13)
Arguably the best
pass-catching tight end
in NFL history holds
the league records at
his position for catches
(1,325), yards receiving
(15,127) and TD receptions (111). Gonzalez
was a 14-time Pro Bowl
selection, which ties the

NFL mark, and a firstteam All-Pro pick six


times. His best chance
to get to the Super Bowl
came in his second-tolast season, when Atlanta fell to San Francisco
in the NFC title game.
Warren Moon (Houston, 1984-93; Minnesota, 1994-96; Seattle,
1997-98; Kansas City,
1999-2000)
Moon
won
five
straight championships
in the Canadian Football League and earned
two Grey Cup MVP
awards with the Edmonton Eskimos. That
big-game success didnt
quite translate south of
the border in the NFL,
where Moon is the
seventh-leading passer
in league history with
49,325 yards but he
never got close to a Super Bowl. He was 3-7 in
the NFL playoffs, failing
to get past the divisional
round.
Honorable Mention:
Earl Campbell
(Houston, 1978-84; New
Orleans, 1984-85)
Cris Carter (Philadelphia, 1987-89; Minnesota, 1990-2001; Miami, 2002)
Dan Dierdorf (St.
Louis Cardinals, 197183)
Cortez Kennedy
(Seattle, 1990-2000)
Steve Largent (Seattle, 1976-89)
Willie Roaf (New
Orleans,
1993-2001;
Kansas City, 2002-05)
Lee Roy Selmon
(Tampa Bay, 1976-84)
O.J. Simpson (Buffalo, 1969-77; San Francisco, 1978-79)
Derrick Thomas
(Kansas City, 1989-99)
LaDainian Tomlinson (San Diego, 200109; N.Y. Jets, 2010-11).

C5

Beam.
Nobody on the current roster played with
or was coached by Mills.
Yet, rookies and new
free agents all know his
story. Theyre told of his
legacy by longtime employees like equipment
manager Jackie Miles,
head athletic trainer
Ryan Vermillion or Proehl, now the teams wide
receivers coach.
Ask anyone, they know
the story.
Regardless of the
things that are going
on in your life on the
football field or off, you
never give up you just
keep pounding, fullback Mike Tolbert said.
Defensive end Charles
Johnson: It means you
never quit never.
The message has been
carried over to the fan
base as well.
I can walk through
the streets and people
yell Keep Pounding,
said safety Kurt Coleman.

SCORE A
TOUCHDOWN WITH

ex-girlfriend, troubled
Browns
quarterback
Johnny Manziel has
not been charged with
a crime and two Texas
police departments have
closed their cases.
Manziel, who will be
released by Cleveland
next month, ending two
turbulent NFL seasons,
was being investigated
for allegedly striking
Colleen Crowley last
weekend. She told police
in Fort Worth that Manziel struck her several
times and that the 2012
Heisman Trophy winner
acted as if he were on
some kind of drugs, but
she maintained he was
not intoxicated.
A police report released Thursday provided the first details of
the altercation that took
place between Manziel
and Crowley, first at a
hotel in Dallas and then
as the couple drove back
to her Fort Worth apartment. Both police departments investigated
the incident but didnt
charge Manziel.
It was determined
that no reported criminal offense occurred
within Fort Worths jurisdiction, Sgt. Steve
Enright said in an email
to The Associated Press.
Dallas police issued a
statement Thursday saying they conducted the
appropriate investigative
follow-up to the report
forwarded to us by the
Ft. Worth Police Department regarding an alleged incident involving
Johnny Manziel. Investigative efforts to date have
not resulted in the filing
of a criminal complaint
and the incident is determined to be closed.

SOURCE: ASSOCIATED PRESS

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C6

SPORTS

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2016

STEEL-HIGH 63, LINDEN HALL 52

Rollers have
Lions number
Scoreless 2nd quarter stretch hampers effort
RYAN DIXON

LNP CORRESPONDENT

Coming into the season, the


Linden Hall girls basketball
team wanted to challenge itself a bit more with its schedule.
Enter Steel-High.
As the Lions rolled through
this season, collecting win after win, the Rollers stopped
Linden Halls perfect season
Jan. 7. On Thursday night,
with the close of the regular
season, the Lions were out for
revenge, but came up short in
a 63-52 loss to the Rollers.
We have some strong inside players, but they have
too many (strong inside players), Lions head coach Bob
Kauffman said. We havent
had anybody rebound the ball
against us all year, but tonight
and the first time we played
them, they were able to get to
the offensive glass.
In just their second season
in Class AA, the Lions (182) knew they had to prepare
against more physical teams
in order to improve for the
postseason.
With a long history in Class
A, the Lions have taken the
challenge of Class AA head
on. Last year, Linden Hall was
the No. 10 seed in the District
Three tournament. This year,
it will be seeded higher than
that.
We want to be a great
team, Kauffman said. Last
year, we were a good team and
the girls have worked tirelessly at being a Double-A team.

Turning point: The second


quarter. Linden Hall went
nearly five minutes without a
point in the period as a 16-16
tie turned into a 26-19 halftime lead for the Rollers (714).
We were still in the game,
but we needed to ratchet up
the pressure, Kauffman said.
We were trying to instruct
the inside girls on the position they were giving up.
The first quarter saw the
Lions jump out to a 7-0 lead,
only to see Steel-High battle
back to make it 13-13 after the
first eight minutes.
Stars of the game: Turnovers and foul shots dominated the game. The Rollers finished with 21 turnovers and
went 23 for 34 from the foul
line. The Lions countered
with 28 turnovers and were
13 for 25 at the line.
The Rollers had just two
scorers in double figures in
Ayana Flowers, who finished
with 25 points, including an
11-of-14 showing from the
line. Xaria Isom added 16
points.
For the Lions, Fey Makinde
scored 13 points and Desiree
McCloud added 10.
Quotable: Its a costly
loss as far as positioning is
concerned. We would have
preferred to have been the
three seed, but you have to go
out on the court and earn it,
said Kauffman, whose team
entered the night as the No.
3 seed in the District Three
Class AA power rankings.

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Rickie Fowler tees off on the fifth hole during the first round of the
Phoenix Open on Thursday in Scottsdale, Ariz.

GOLF ROUNDUP

Fowler shares lead


at Phoenix Open

Rickie Fowler overcame


some bad shots for a share of
the lead Thursday in the Waste
Management Phoenix Open.
Phil Mickelson compounded
his mistakes and fell back.
After an hour-long frost delay at chilly TPC Scottsdale,
Fowler played the first six
holes in 5 under. A group behind, Mickelson took the lead
at 5 under with a birdie on his
eighth hole.
While Fowler finished with
a 6-under 65 to tie Shane Lowry and Hideki Matsuyama for
the lead in the suspended first
round, Mickelson had a 69 after dropping four strokes in a
two-hole stretch.
Mickelson bogeyed the par3 fourth after hitting short
and right and failing to reach
the green with his second, and
unraveled with a triple bogey
on the par-4 fifth.
Indias Anirban Lahiri was
a stroke back at 66, and Bryce
Molder also was 5 under with
two holes left. He was one of
33 players who failed to finish. Bubba Watson opened
with a 69.

Dubai Desert Classic

Rory McIlroy started the


defense of his Dubai Desert
Classic title with a bogey but
battled back to post a 4-under
68 on Thursday, leaving him
two shots off the lead.
McIlroy bogeyed two of the

easiest holes on the course


the par-5 10th, which was his
first hole, and the driveable
par-4 second but also had six
birdies to put him close behind
leader Alex Noren of Sweden.
Four players were tied at
5-under 67 Swedens Peter
Hanson, Spains Rafael Cabrera-Bello, Australias Brett
Rumford and South African
Trevor Fisher Jr.

LPGA Tour
Lydia Ko played enough
golf Thursday to catch up to
the lead. She just didnt play
enough to finish the raindelayed second round of the
Coates Golf Championship in
Ocala, Florida.
Ko, the No. 1 player in golf
making her 2016 debut, was
4-under par for her round
and had a 15-foot birdie putt
on her final hole at the par-4
ninth hole at Golden Ocala
when the horn sounded to
stop play because of thunderstorms in the area.
Ko was 7 under for the tournament, tied with Ha Na Jang.
Jang, who opened with a 65,
didnt hit a shot Thursday. She
was to tee off in the afternoon,
but within an hour of play being
stopped, several greens already
were flooded. Play was suspended for the rest of the day.
The 72-hole tournament is
scheduled to end Saturday.
SOURCE: ASSOCIATED PRESS

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

BOYS
BASKETBALL
L-L LEAGUE
Section One

League

W L
McCaskey....................14 2
Cedar Crest..................12 4
Hempfield....................11 5
Manheim Township.....10 6
Penn Manor...................4 12
Warwick.........................2 14
Section Two

League

W L
Lebanon.......................12 4
Conestoga Valley.........10 6
Solanco..........................7 9
Garden Spot..................6 10
Elizabethtown................6 10
Ephrata..........................2 14
Section Three

League

W L
Lamp.-Strasburg..........15 1
Elco..............................13 3
Cocalico.......................12 4
Manheim Central.........10 6
Donegal.........................5 11
N. Lebanon....................3 13
Section Four

League

W L
Lanc. Catholic..............11 4
Lanc. Mennonite.........10 6
Columbia.......................6 10
Pequea Valley................6 10
Ann.-Cleona...................4 11
Leb. Catholic..................0 16

Overall
W L
16 5
17 5
14 7
13 9
7 15
4 18
Overall
W L
15 6
16 7
11 11
9 12
8 14
3 19
Overall
W L
21 1
19 3
17 5
14 8
7 15
7 15
Overall
W L
14 8
11 11
9 13
8 14
6 16
2 18

SCORING LEADERS
Through Feb. 3

P G P/G
Taylor Funk (MC) .............. 477 22 21.7
Colton Lawrence (Elco)...... 454 22 20.6
Evan Horn (CC)................... 431 21 20.5
Tucker Lescoe(Coc)............ 385 20 19.3
Kobe Gantz (McC).............. 398 21 18.9
Joey Lonardi (E-town)........ 379 20 18.9
Mason Bossert (Elco)......... 380 22 17.3
Dylan Hastings (Sol)........... 347 21 16.5
Matt McGillan (Eph).......... 323 20 16.1
Connor Moffat (H)............. 250 16 15.6
Isaac Bicher (N. Leb.)......... 324 21 15.4
Davian Perez (Leb. Cath.)... 287 19 15.1
Nick Lord (PM)................... 330 22 15.0
Randolph Speller (McC)..... 302 21 14.4
Ricky Cruz (McC)................ 300 21 14.3
Ryan Moffatt (H)................ 241 17 14.2
Richie Rosas (LM).............. 281 20 14.1
Ben Sandberg (L-S)............ 311 22 14.1
Bryan Karl (H).................... 279 20 13.9
Josh Stoltzfus (PV)............. 271 20 13.6
TEAM OFFENSE

G P P/G
Elco...................................... 22 1489 67.7
McCaskey............................ 21 1419 67.6
Lancaster Mennonite.......... 22 1462 66.5
Lampeter-Strasburg............. 22 1376 62.5
Cedar Crest.......................... 22 1316 59.8
Columbia............................. 22 1310 59.5
Conestoga Valley................. 22 1287 58.5
Lebanon............................... 21 1228 58.5
Cocalico............................... 22 1281 58.2
Hempfield............................ 21 1179 56.1
Penn Manor......................... 22 1218 55.4
Solanco................................ 22 1216 55.3
Elizabethtown...................... 22 1203 54.7
Manheim Township............. 22 1203 54.3
Manheim Central................. 22 1171 53.2
Garden Spot........................ 21 1097 52.2
Warwick............................... 22 1142 51.9
Lancaster Catholic............... 22 1134 51.5
Donegal............................... 22 1116 50.7
N. Lebanon.......................... 22 1104 50.2
Pequea Valley...................... 22 1062 48.3
Lebanon Catholic................. 19 888 46.7
Ephrata................................ 22 1013 46.0
Annville-Cleona................... 22 985 44.8
TEAM DEFENSE

G PA PA/G
Lampeter-Strasburg............. 18 821 45.6
Annville-Cleona................... 18 899 49.9
Manheim Central................. 18 852 47.3
Lancaster Catholic............... 18 848 47.1
Cocalico............................... 17 845 49.7
Lebanon............................... 18 898 49.9
Manheim Township............. 18 921 51.2
Elco...................................... 19 983 51.7
Conestoga Valley................. 19 1018 53.6
Cedar Crest.......................... 18 935 51.9
Hempfield............................ 18 962 53.4
Garden Spot........................ 17 957 56.3
Pequea Valley...................... 17 982 57.8
Ephrata................................ 17 900 52.9
Solanco................................ 18 1083 60.2
Donegal............................... 18 1009 56.1
Lebanon Catholic................. 16 938 58.6
Columbia............................. 18 1084 60.2
Penn Manor......................... 18 1052 58.4
Elizabethtown...................... 18 1074 59.7
Warwick............................... 18 1110 61.7
McCaskey............................ 16 1012 63.3
Lancaster Mennonite.......... 18 1145 63.6
Northern Lebanon............... 18 964 53.6
NONLEAGUE

Hershey 65, Lebanon 62

LEBANON (62)
L. Blouch 4 0-0 12, M. Lopez 4 0-1 9, S.
Ortiz 4 1-1 9, K. Washington 4 0-0 8, J. Baker
3 0-2 8, A. Escoto 3 1-2 7, D. Vargas 3 0-0 7,
D. Caricabeur 1 0-0 2, L. Aquino-Rios 0 0-0
0. Totals 26 2-6 62.
HERSHEY (65)
D. Painter 8 7-10 24, M. Brier 8 1-1 17,
L. Blackburn 3 2-2 10, J. Wilson 2 4-4 9, C.
Gurt 1 0-0 2, H. Blackall 1 0-0 2, L. Hedrick 0
1-2 1, J. Shochan 0 0-0 0, S. Coller 0 0-0 0, C.
Wallace 0 0-0 0. Totals 23 15-19 65.
Lebanon.................... 8 21 10 23 62
Hershey................... 11 22 16 16 65
3-Point Goals L. Blouch 4, J. Baker 2,
M. Lopez 1, D. Vargas 1; L. Blackburn 2, D.
Painter 1, J. Wilson 1. Fouled Out None.

Millersburg 57, Mount Calvary 49

MILLERSBURG (57)
P. Warfel 6 0-1 17, C. Keiter 4 8-9 16, C.
Wingard 4 3-3 12, M. Snyder 4 0-0 8, C.
Schomper 1 0-0 2, M. Prime 1 0-0 2, T. Hesen 0 0-1 0. Totals 20 11-13 57.
MOUNT CALVARY (49)
B. Taylor 4 2-2 13, J. Lechance 5 2-4 12,
J. Landis 3 0-0 9, A. Toth 2 0-0 6, B. Sheard
2 0-0 5, N. Esbenshade 2 0-0 4. Totals 18
4-6 49.
Millersburg.............. 12 14 18 13 57
Home...................... 12 11 12 14 49
3-Point Goals P. Warfel 5, C. Wingard;
B. Taylor 3, J. Landis 3, A. Toth 2, B. Sheard.
Fouled Out J. Lechance.
JV Score: Millersburg 33, MC 25
WEDNESDAYS LATE BOX

Eastern York 67, Ephrata 54

EPHRATA (54)
M. McGillan 11 5-12 27, Z. McGillan 3
0-0 8, N. Fasnacht 2 0-0 4, S. Cable 1 0-0 3,
D. Becker 1 0-0 3, B. Holbritter 1 0-0 3, M.
Krauter 1 0-2 2, B. DaBella 1 0-0 2, X. Rodriguez 1 0-0 2. Totals 22 5-14 54.
EASTERN YORK (67)
B. Nicholas 9 2-2 21, E. Springer 4 0-0 11,
J. Achtenberg 4 0-0 8, C. Shimmel 1 5-8 7, J.
Woods 2 3-4 7, E. Lowe 3 0-0 6, R. Kalke 2
0-0 5, S. Bernstein 1 0-0 2, D. Particelli 0 0-0
0, J. Kurnik 0 0-0 0, S. Wisler 0 0-0 0. Totals
26 10-16 67.
Ephrata................... 15 13 12 14 54
Eastern York............ 18 22 14 13 67
3-Point Goals Z. McGillan 2, S. Cable 1,
D. Becker 1, B. Holbritter 1; E. Springer 3, R.
Kalke 1, B. Nicholas 1. Fouled Out None.

WOMENS
BASKETBALL
Lancaster Bible 76, St. Elizabeth 59

LANCASTER BIBLE (15-3, 12-1 NEAC)


A. Folger 11-14 2-3 24, K. Stover 7-11 0-1
19, S. Smith 7-12 4-4 18, K. Pennell 2-5 3-5
7, K. Webster 2-5 0-0 4, A. Bowen 1-2 0-0 2,
M. Finkbeiner 1-2 0-0 2, M.J. Abts 0-2 0-0 0,
M. Arnold 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 31-54 9-13 76.

ST. ELIZABETH (7-12, 7-7 NEAC)


A. Pledger 9-16 4-6 23, A. Rogers 3-6 1-2
8, L. Robinson 2-7 1-2 6, S. Sanders 3-8 0-0
6, D. Triplett 2-6 1-3 5, D. Poole 2-11 1-2
5, D. Ingram 2-6 0-0 4, D. King 1-3 0-0 2, P.
Dennis 0-2 0-0 0. Totals 24-65 8-15 59.
Lancaster Bible........ 25 13 22 16 76
St. Elizabeth.............. 6 17 13 23 59
3-point goalsLancaster Bible 5-10 (K.
Stover 5-9, K. Pennell 0-1), St. Elizabeth
3-11 (A. Rogers 1-2, L. Robinson 1-1, A.
Pledger 1-1, J. Poole 0-4, D. King 0-1, S.
Sanders 0-2). ReboundsLancaster Bible
40 (S. Smith 15), St. Elizabeth 35 (A. Rogers 4, J. Poole 4). AssistsLancaster Bible
23 (K. Pennell 11), St. Elizabeth 17 (A. Rogers 6). Fouled outNone. Total foulsLancaster Bible 15, St. Elizabeth 11.

WRESTLING
SCHOLASTIC

DISTRICT THREE TEAM


TOURNAMENT
Class AAA
At Spring Grove
Consolation Quarterfinals

Spring Grove 43, Cocalico 31

138D. Fichthorn, C, p. A. Hinson, 1:48.


145T. Sterner, SG, p. W. Gehman, 3:26.
152T. Fichthorn, C, m.d. T. Baker, 11-3.
160M. Kehr, SG, p. B. Sola, :41.
170R. Daugherty, SG, t.f. M. Martin,
18-3, 4:23.
182A. Saad, C, p. J. Barley, :41.
195J. Cribbs, SG, m.d. J. Bearinger, 123.
220N. Young, SG, p. B. Fromm, 7:21.
285B. Maxwell, C, d. A. Lawson, 3-2 OT.
106J. Gehr, C, p. N. Colehouse, 1:35.
113C. Baker, SG, p. T. Hale, 1:44.
120D. Rohrbaugh, SG, p. A. Miller, 1:06.
126N. Fritz, C, p. C. Jackson, 1:06.
132J. Meyer, SG, m.d. S. Stull, 15-1.
OTHER SCORES
Semifinals
Central Dauphin 44....... Exeter Township 18
Cumberland Valley 51............Cedar Cliff 18
Section One

Penn Manor 65, Cedar Crest 13

182J. Howard-Griffin, CC, d. M. Loiseau, 7-1.


195N. Rachor, PM, by forfeit.
220J. Kann, PM, p. A. Olan-Torres, :56.
285R. Fisher, CC, p. C. Kniesley, :48.
106N. Fafel, PM, by forfeit.
113B. Miller, PM, by forfeit.
120A. Sikora, PM, by forfeit.
126A. Laughlin, PM, by forfeit.
132Z. Gager, PM, by forfeit.
138J. Rupp, PM, by forfeit.
145D. Horn, PM, p. P. Weidman, 1:40.
152B. Breidegan, CC, m.d. E. Phelan,
16-5.
160J. Barley, PM, t.f. J. McEnnis, 15-0,
3:24.
170J. Zimmerman, PM, by forfeit.
Section Two

Ephrata 38, Lebanon 36

145K. Cruz, E, by forfeit.


152T. Mentzer, E, t.f. T. Sumlin, 17-2,
4:17.
160J. Zahm, E, p. B. Kutz, 5:04.
170B. Rohrbaugh, E, p. N. Bradley, :59.
182A. Hartman, L, by forfeit.
195B. Smith, L, by forfeit.
220T. Armpriester, L, by forfeit.
285J. Imm, L, by forfeit.
106A. Jones, E, d. J. Barrios, 5-2.
113C. Carey, E, t.f. T. Spangler, 15-0,
6:00.
120T. Hart, E, d. J. Gomez, 8-4.
126J. Gathara, L, by forfeit.
132J. Harple, E, m.d. T. Blair, 12-2.
138J. Hartman, L, p. T. Pfeiffer, 4:38.
NONLEAGUE

Eastern Lebanon 53,


Manheim Township 24

138P. Spietel, MT, d. C. Krow, 6-4.


145V. Kenderdine, MT, p. C. Romero,
1:07.
152J. Lao-Cooper, MT, p. C. Habowski,
1:56.
160E. Anspach, EL, by forfeit.
170M. Desha, MT, d. J. Althouse, 4-2.
182Q. Weaver, EL, by forfeit.
195B. Burkhart, EL, by forfeit.
220T. Rodriguez, EL, by forfeit.
285R. Rolon, EL, p. J. Dougherty, :53.
106J. Krewson, MT, p. L. Brooks, 1:11.
113A. Puglio, EL, t.f. D. Over, 18-2, 3:53.
120T. Donmoyer, EL, p. K. Dang, 2:40.
126S. Price, EL, p. J. Perez, 2:43.
132O. Nell, EL, by forfeit.

Manheim Central 39, Warwick 27

132C. Enck, MC, m.d. B. Lieberman,


13-1.
138B. Hershey, W, p. A. Studenroth,
3:45.
145L. Hirtzel, W, d. K. Zeamer, 8-7.
152C. Pavlik, MC, p. I. Butzer, :55.
160A. Siegrist, MC, by forfeit.
170I. Mejias, MC, d. S. Seepaul, 4-3.
182J. Siegrist, MC, by injury default
over E. Garner, .
195S. Martin, MC, d. J. Miller, 8-6.
220E. Clark, W, by forfeit.
285R. Stewart, W, d. E. Martin, 4-3.
106M. Chacon, W, d. C. Zeamer, 3-2.
113D. Schnupp, W, p. R. Kreider, 1:10.
120R. McKee, MC, t.f. C. Esbenshade,
17-2, 5:55.
126Z. Zeamer, MC, p. T. Esbenshade,
:44.

GIRLS
BASKETBALL
NONLEAGUE

Steel-High 63, Linden Hall 52

LINDEN HALL (52)


F. Makinde 6 1-3 13, D. McCloud 3 2-5 10,
Chhodon 2 4-5 8, Miller 2 2-6 7, Adewole 2
3-4 7, Parker 1 1-2 3, Phillips 2 0-0 4, Graybill 0 0-0 0. Totals 18 13-25 52.
STEEL-HIGH (63)
A. Flowers 7 11-14 25, X. Isom 6 4-6 16,
Chisholm 4 0-0 8, Borreli 2 2-4 6, Brown 1
2-2 4, K. Flowers 0 2-2 2, Tate-DeFreitas 0
1-2 1, Pennington 0 1-4 1, Vidor 0 0-0 0,
Randolph 0 0-0 0. Totals 20 23-34 63.
Linden Hall.............. 13 6 18 15 52
Steel-High................ 13 13 14 23 63
3-Point Goals D. McCloud 2, Miller.
Fouled Out None.
CCAC

W. Shore Christian 37,


Lititz Christian 36 (OT)

WEST SHORE CHRISTIAN (37)


W. Verna 8 2-4 19, E. Rynard 2 6-12 10, M.
Eichelberger 2 1-2 5, A. Horton 1 0-0 3, T.
Miller 0 0-2 0, H. Hile 0 0-0 0, M. Strausser
0 0-0 0, V. Godoy 0 0-0 0, N. Boltz 0 0-0 0.
Totals 13 9-20 37.
LITITZ CHRISTIAN (36)
E. Echternach 5 3-5 13, J. Coomer 3 0-3 6,
K. Parker 1 3-6 5, A. Miklas 2 0-2 4, A. Vance
2 0-2 4, J. Gehman 1 2-4 4, G. Stewart 0 0-0
0, K. Bert 0 0-0 0, S. Sakakibara 0 0-0 0, Y.
Koike 0 0-0 0. Totals 12 8-22 36.
W. Shore Christian.... 4 7 8 11 7 37
Lititz Christian....... 8 9 9 4 6 36
3-Point Goals W. Verna, A. Horton.
Fouled Out M. Eichelberger; A. Vance.
WEDNESDAYS LATE BOX

Mt. Calvary 37, Chr. Sch. of York 35

CHRISTIAN SCHOOL OF YORK (35)


M. Smith 7 0-1 16, K. Butler 3 2-6 10, K.
Hess 2 2-4 6, B. Stauffer 1 1-2 3, A. Landis 0
0-0 0, K. Larson 0 0-0 0, H. Martin 0 0-0 0, N.
Shelton 0 0-0 0. Totals 17 5-13 35.
MOUNT CALVARY (35)
A. Rutt 11 7-11 25, L. Ewing 1 3-4 5, B.
Taylor 2 0-2 4, H. Ogilvy 1 0-0 3, M. Allebach
0 0-0 0, S. Makito 0 0-0 0, J. Maulfair 0 0-0
0. Totals 16 10-17 37.
Chr. Sch. of York......... 9 12 7 7 35
W. Shore Christian..... 5 8 11 13 37
3-Point Goals K. Butler 2, M. Smith 2;
A. Rutt 4, H. Ogilvy 1. Fouled Out None.

HORSE RACING
PENN NATIONAL RESULTS

1st$14,300,6f
4-Top Odds (Gonzalez E.)...... 6.40 3.40 2.80
3-Charons Obol (Wolfsont A.)...... 3.80 3.00
5-Tapesprit (Garcia W.)......................... 5.80
Also Ran: Kool Kat Strut, Well Played, Evil
Lad, War of Honor; Race Time: 1:12.33; Exacta (4-3) Paid 12.10; Superfecta (4-3-5-6)
Paid 40.11; Trifecta (4-3-5) Paid 70.40.
2nd15,200,1m70y
4-Built in a Day (Guzman)... 13.00 6.60 4.00
6-Empress Hatshepsut (Whitney)..... 4.80 3.60
9-Summer Cocktail (Sanchez M.).......... 3.40
Also Ran: Kid Rollins, Missdixieactivist,
Parrakeet, Connors Gold, Approval, Benanti, Kingdoms Crown; Race Time: 1:44.70;
Daily Double (4-4) Paid 58.60; Exacta (46) Paid 63.30; Superfecta (4-6-9-7) Paid
176.07; Trifecta (4-6-9) Paid 115.65.
3rd13,800,6f
1-Isolation Road (Salgado).... 7.60 4.20 4.40
3-Kohl (Flores E.).......................... 6.00 4.20
2-Open Ice Hit (Whitney D.)................. 6.40
Also Ran: Two Term Leader, Angelofdistinction, Va Banque, Estrickator; Race Time:
1:11.86; Daily Double (4-1) Paid 74.80; Exacta (1-3) Paid 22.70; Superfecta (1-3-2-7)
Paid 86.63; Trifecta (1-3-2) Paid 93.70; Pic 3
(4-4-1) Paid 84.60.
4th19,000,5 1/2f
8-Blue Hen Madness (Castillo).... 5.40 2.60 2.10
6-La Grey Zuliana (Vergara R.)...... 3.20 2.20
4-Star Magnolia (Hernandez J.)............ 3.20
Also Ran: Honor Achieved, Mama Zee, Alice Roadtrain, Silver Tresor; Late Scratches:
Fit for a Ball, Bazinga B; Race Time: 1:05.69;
Daily Double (1-8) Paid 33.40; Exacta (8-6)
Paid 10.70; Superfecta (8-6-4-7) Paid 9.84;
Trifecta (8-6-4) Paid 16.40; Pic 3 (4-1-8) Paid
60.80; Pic 4 (4-4-1-2/5/8) Paid 225.25.
5th33,300,6f
2-A Lil More A J (Potts C.)..... 22.20 6.60 3.40
1-Shiny Finish (Rodriguez A.)........ 2.60 2.20
8-Seferlis (Gonzalez E.)......................... 3.80
Also Ran: Special Flyer, Finishing a Dream,
No More Strippers, Cherokee Cowboy,
Extrasexxyeurodude; Race Time: 1:11.77;
Daily Double (8-2) Paid 134.40; Exacta (2-1)
Paid 22.60; Superfecta (2-1-8-4) Paid 71.35;
Trifecta (2-1-8) Paid 68.75; Pic 3 (1-5/8-2)
Paid 149.50.
6th19,000,6f
10-Wise Guide (Sone)..... 86.20 44.40 17.60
4-The Camden Comet (Worrie).... 14.40 7.60
6-Lees South (Garcia W.)...................... 8.40
Also Ran: Student Union, Cruise Director,
Lightly Wound, Mail Order Groom, Chicharito, Nebikon; Late Scratches: O K Lefty,
Black Patch; Race Time: 1:11.76; Daily
Double (2-10) Paid 255.40; Exacta (10-4)
Paid 353.60; Superfecta (10-4-6-11) Paid
2,720.86; Trifecta (10-4-6) Paid 1,463.05;
Pic 3 (8-2-10) Paid 886.25.
7th11,400,1m
1-Now Were Talkin (Wlfsnt)... 23.80 13.20 5.80
6-Corundum (Guzman P.)........... 12.40 5.40
4-Demographic Trend (Corujo W.)........ 3.40
Also Ran: Danny Ocean, Theregoestheblonde, Strong Appeal, Rent a Friend, Arc
Above; Race Time: 1:40.20; Daily Double
(10-1) Paid 2,489.00; Exacta (1-6) Paid
123.80; Superfecta (1-6-4-5) Paid 83.66;
Trifecta (1-6-4) Paid 147.45; Pic 3 (2-10-1)
Paid 765.20.

PENN NATIONAL ENTRIES

POST TIME: 6 P.M.


1st$20,900,MdnClm,$15,000$13,000,3YO,5 1/2f
01 Revival Plus (Garcia F) 120................. 8-1
01a Celoso (Guzman P) 113.................... 8-1
02 Shars Dancer (Corujo W) 122......... 12-1
03 Youreoutoforder (Castillo A) 122....... 9-5
04 Dandelion Wine (Flores E) 122.......... 2-1
05 Brockadoodle (Garcia W) 120............ 5-1
06 Tocatchathief (Cora D) 120................ 4-1
2nd$20,000,Clm,$16,000$14,000,4YO&UP,F&M,5 1/2f
01 Sunshine Heart (Toledo J) 119........... 7-2
01a Woodland Babe (Cora D) 119.......... 7-2
02 Imwiththeblonde (Rodriguez A) 121.... 2-1
03 Lil Miss Sassy (Hernandez J) 117........ 6-1
04 Little Juliann (Potts C) 119................. 6-1
05 House Red (Oro E) 119...................... 8-1
06 Fit for a Ball (Salgado A) 119.............. 5-1
07 Green Bay (Whitney D) 119............... 6-1
3rd$28,500,Mdnspclwght,3YO,F,6f
01 H Ks Merida (Rodriguez A) 122......... 3-1
01a V Js Irish Rose (Rodriguez A) 122.... 3-1
02 Talkaholic (Potts C) 122...................... 5-2
02b Desert Jewel (Wolfsont A) 122........ 5-2
03 Her Divineness (Pinero F) 122........... 6-1
04 Eye Contact (Berrios J) 122.............. 10-1
05 Distinzione (Corujo W) 122............. 12-1
06 Atlantis Romance (Sanchez M) 122... 2-1
07 Kittys Right (Conner T) 122............. 10-1
4th$11,400,Clm,$5,000,4YO&UP,F&M
,1m70y
01 Sweet Rock (Rodriguez A) 123........... 9-2
02 Shez So Groovy (Oro E) 121.............. 5-1
03 Ski Bare (Glaser L) 114....................... 8-1
04 Saturday Brat (Whitney D) 121.......... 4-1
05 Change My Pick (Albright K) 123..... 10-1
06 Golden Steel (Hernandez J) 121...... 30-1
07 Ms. Scariecarrie (Potts C) 121............ 3-1
08 Sunspot Baby (Flores E) 121.............. 7-2
5th$20,900,Clm,$15,000$13,000,4YO&UP,5 1/2f
01 Buffalo (BRZ) (Rodriguez A) 119........ 6-1
02 Backwater Blues (Gomez K) 114...... 10-1
03 Magical Fire (Oro E) 119.................... 6-1
04 Trouble With Girls (Gonzalez E) 121... 10-1
05 King Henry (Flores E) 121.................. 2-1
06 Tell Tale Friend (Cora D) 123.............. 5-2
07 Powerful Sun (Corujo W) 121............ 9-2
6th$15,200,Clm,$5,000,4YO&UP,1m70y
01 Captured (Francois K) 114................. 9-2
02 Canal Street (Ramirez J) 119............ 15-1
03 Key to a Cure (Whitney D) 119.......... 5-1
04 Majestic Hope (Wolfsont A) 119........ 6-1
05 Gold Man (Cora D) 119.................... 12-1
06 Loveshackled (Garcia W) 119.......... 50-1
07 Gansett Bay (Oro E) 119.................... 8-1
08 Prince Leroi (Castillo A) 119............... 8-1
09 Mizzen the Action (Rodriguez) 119....... 12-1
10 Autumn Purge (Pinero L) 109.......... 50-1
11 Cosmic Coincidence (Vargas, Jr. J) 119..... 2-1
7th$17,100,MdnClm,$16,000$14,000,3YO,1 1/16m
01 Theyallcomehome (Sanchez M) 122....... 5-2
02 Quinlan (Garcia F) 122..................... 12-1
03 Arson Andy (Rodriguez A) 120......... 10-1
04 Former Graduate (Vargas, Jr. J) 122...... 4-1
05 Sterlings Bailero (Hernandez J) 122....... 10-1
06 Yes Its Souperman (Whitney D) 122........ 9-2
07 Shazam (Cora D) 122......................... 2-1
8th$11,400,Clm,$5,000,4YO&UP,F&
M,6f
01 Senorita Siete (Munar L) 121........... 30-1
02 Close Connection (Flores E) 121........ 5-1
03 Jelise (Worrie A) 121........................ 30-1
04 Look What I Can Do (Cora D) 121...... 8-5
05 Its a Trend (Rodriguez A) 121............ 2-1
06 Isle of Palma (Castro S) 116............. 30-1
07 Baal Perazim (Castillo D) 121........... 20-1
08 Mi Nieta Ale (Guzman P) 114.......... 20-1
09 Talkin Hailey Jo (Albright K) 123....... 4-1

OFF-TRACK WAGERING

Following is a list of tracks and post times


for todays off-track wagering at Penn Nationals Lancaster Off-Track site:
GB1-CatterickBridg....................... 8:20 a.m.
GB3-Chepstow.............................. 8:40 a.m.
GB2-Lingfield Park............................. 9 a.m.
GB4-Wolverhampton.................. 12:05 p.m.
Laurel Park.................................. 12:25 p.m.
Freehold..................................... 12:35 p.m.
Gulfstream.................................. 12:35 p.m.
Tampa Bay.................................. 12:35 p.m.
Aqueduct.................................... 12:50 p.m.
IR1-Dundalk....................................... 1 p.m.
Fair Grounds................................. 2:25 p.m.
Oaklawn Park................................ 2:30 p.m.
Golden Gate................................. 3:45 p.m.
Santa Anita........................................ 4 p.m.
Buffalo............................................... 5 p.m.
Penn National.................................... 6 p.m.
Miami Valley................................. 6:05 p.m.
Turfway Park................................. 6:15 p.m.
Meadowlands H........................... 6:35 p.m.
Delta Downs T.............................. 6:40 p.m.
Charles Town..................................... 7 p.m.
Yonkers......................................... 7:10 p.m.
Woodbine H................................. 7:30 p.m.
Sam Houston T............................. 8:10 p.m.
Hawthorne H................................ 8:20 p.m.
Australia A.................................... 8:40 p.m.
Australia B.................................... 9:30 p.m.
Australia C.................................... 9:30 p.m.
Cal Expo........................................ 9:40 p.m.

SCOREBOARD

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

SPORTS SLATE
BASEBALL
COLLEGIATE
Millersville at Winston-Salem State, 4 p.m.

BASKETBALL
SCHOLASTIC BOYS
NONLEAGUE
New Covenant Christian at Lincoln Leadership, 5:30 p.m.
Covenant Christian vs. Gillingham Charter at The Simon Kramer Institute, 6 p.m.
Lebanon Catholic at West Shore Christian, 6 p.m.
Lancaster Country Christian at Kutztown
Area, 7:15 p.m.
SCHOLASTIC GIRLS
NONLEAGUE
New Covenant Christian at Lincoln Leadership, 4 p.m.
Lebanon Catholic at West Shore Christian, 4:30 p.m.

BOWLING
SCHOLASTIC
L-L LEAGUE
Section One
Garden Spot vs. Penn Manor at Leisure
Lanes, 3:30 p.m.
Section Two
Manheim Township at Ephrata, 3:30 p.m.
Section Three
Northern Lebanon vs. Elizabethtown at
Clearview Lanes, 3:30 p.m.
Manheim Central vs. Cocalico at Dutch
Lanes, 3:30 p.m.
Section Four
Lancaster Mennonite vs. Lancaster Catholic at Rocky Springs Lanes, 3:30 p.m.

ICE HOCKEY
SCHOLASTIC
CPIHL
Tier One
Cumberland Valley vs. Palmyra at Klick
Lewis Arena, 7 p.m.
Lower Dauphin vs. Hershey at Klick Lewis
Arena, 8:45 p.m.
Tier Two
Warwick vs. Hempfield at Lancaster Ice
Rink, 7 p.m.
Tier Three
Penn Manor vs. Middletown at Twin
Ponds East, 8:15 p.m.

SQUASH
COLLEGIATE MEN AND WOMEN
Franklin & Marshall at Dickinson, 6:30 p.m.

SWIMMING
COLLEGIATE MEN AND WOMEN
Ursinus at Franklin & Marshall, 6 p.m.

WRESTLING
COLLEGIATE
Millersville at Pitt-Johnstown, 7 p.m.
Kings at Elizabethtown, 7 p.m.

GOLF
PGA

PHOENIX OPEN
Thursday
At TPC Scottsdale, Stadium Course
Scottsdale, Ariz.
Purse: $6.5 million
Yardage: 7,266; Par: 71 (35-36)
Partial First Round
Play suspended by darkness with 33
golfers still to finish.
Rickie Fowler.............................. 33-3265
Shane Lowry............................... 34-3165
Hideki Matsuyama...................... 33-3265
Anirban Lahiri............................. 34-3266
Danny Lee................................... 34-3367
James Hahn................................ 34-3367
Greg Owen................................. 32-3567
Brooks Koepka............................ 34-3367
Brandt Snedeker......................... 32-3567
Tyrone Van Aswegen.................. 33-3568
Blayne Barber............................. 33-3568
Daniel Berger.............................. 35-3368
Ryan Moore................................ 33-3568
Webb Simpson........................... 34-3468
Keegan Bradley........................... 33-3568
Ben Crane................................... 34-3468
Harris English.............................. 34-3468
Will Wilcox.................................. 35-3368
Daniel Summerhays.................... 35-3368
Kevin Na..................................... 33-3568
Chad Campbell........................... 36-3268
Bo Van Pelt................................. 34-3468
Kevin Chappell............................ 34-3468
Brett Stegmaier.......................... 33-3568
Aaron Baddeley.......................... 36-3268
Martin Laird................................ 34-3569
Jon Curran.................................. 36-3369
Colt Knost................................... 37-3269
Charlie Beljan............................. 33-3669
Phil Mickelson............................ 38-3169
Chesson Hadley.......................... 33-3669
Matt Jones.................................. 34-3569
John Huh.................................... 34-3569
Patton Kizzire.............................. 34-3569
William McGirt........................... 34-3569
Steve Wheatcroft........................ 34-3569
Scott Brown................................ 34-3569
Kyle Stanley................................ 34-3569
Bubba Watson............................ 34-3569
Steve Stricker.............................. 35-3469
Charles Howell III........................ 34-3670
Si Woo Kim................................. 34-3670
Harold Varner III......................... 34-3670
Ryan Palmer................................ 35-3570
Matt Every.................................. 35-3570
Robert Streb............................... 34-3670
Camilo Villegas........................... 35-3570
Alex Cejka................................... 34-3670
Ben Martin................................. 37-3370
Michael Kim................................ 34-3670
Mark Hubbard............................ 34-3670
Chez Reavie................................ 35-3570
Scott Stallings............................. 35-3570
Tony Finau.................................. 35-3671
Kevin Kisner................................ 37-3471
Jason Dufner............................... 35-3671
Geoff Ogilvy................................ 33-3871
Patrick Rodgers........................... 36-3571
Whee Kim................................... 35-3671
Brendon de Jonge....................... 34-3771
Jeff Overton................................ 36-3571
Peter Malnati.............................. 34-3771
Hunter Mahan............................ 35-3671
Retief Goosen............................. 36-3571
Jason Bohn................................. 35-3772
Shawn Stefani............................. 37-3572
Charley Hoffman........................ 37-3572
Jim Herman................................ 36-3672
Pat Perez..................................... 37-3572
Carl Pettersson........................... 36-3672
Brendan Steele........................... 36-3672
Graham DeLaet........................... 36-3672
Morgan Hoffmann...................... 35-3772
Jason Kokrak............................... 35-3772
Justin Thomas............................. 35-3772
K.J. Choi...................................... 36-3672
Spencer Levin............................. 37-3673
J.J. Henry.................................... 38-3573
Zach Johnson.............................. 37-3673
Nick Taylor.................................. 35-3873
Russell Henley............................ 37-3673
John Senden............................... 36-3773
Scott Pinckney............................ 34-3973
Chris Stroud................................ 38-3573
Adam Hadwin............................. 36-3773
Angel Cabrera............................. 37-3673
Billy Horschel.............................. 38-3573
David Hearn................................ 35-3974
Smylie Kaufman.......................... 36-3874
Zac Blair...................................... 37-3774
Brendon Todd............................. 35-3974
Padraig Harrington..................... 37-3774
Andres Gonzales......................... 39-3675
Ken Duke.................................... 39-3675
Tyler Aldridge............................. 38-3876
Justin Leonard............................ 38-3876
Kyle Reifers................................. 38-3876
Troy Merritt................................ 35-4277
Erik Compton......................................... WD

Leaderboard

SCORE THRU
1. Rickie Fowler........................... -6
F
1. Shane Lowry............................ -6
F
1. Hideki Matsuyama................... -6
F
4. Anirban Lahiri.......................... -5
F
4. Bryce Molder........................... -5
16
6. Danny Lee................................ -4
F
6. James Hahn............................. -4
F
6. Greg Owen............................... -4
F
6. Brooks Koepka......................... -4
F
6. Brandt Snedeker...................... -4
17
11. Tyrone Van Aswegen.............. -3
F
11. Blayne Barber......................... -3
F
11. Daniel Berger.......................... -3
F
11. Ryan Moore............................ -3
F
11. Webb Simpson........................ -3
F
11. Keegan Bradley....................... -3
F
11. Ben Crane............................... -3
F
11. Harris English.......................... -3
F
11. Will Wilcox.............................. -3
F
11. Daniel Summerhays................ -3
F
11. Kevin Na.................................. -3
F
11. Chad Campbell....................... -3
F
11. Bo Van Pelt............................. -3
F
11. Kevin Chappell........................ -3
F
11. Brett Stegmaier...................... -3
F
11. Aaron Baddeley...................... -3
F
11. Brian Gay................................ -3
16
11. Jamie Lovemark...................... -3
16
11. Ryo Ishikawa........................... -3
14
11. Gary Woodland....................... -3
14
EUROPEAN PGA

OMEGA DUBAI DESERT CLASSIC


Thursday
At Emirates Golf Club (Majlis Course)
Dubai, United Arab Emirates
Purse: $2.65 million
Yardage: 7,327; Par: 72 (35-37)
First Round
a-amateur
Alex Noren, Sweden................... 31-3566
Brett Rumsford, Australia........... 34-3367
Trevor Fisher Jnr, S. Africa.......... 35-3267
Rafa Cabrera-Bello, Spain........... 34-3367
Peter Hanson, Sweden............... 35-3267
David Lipsky, U.S.A...................... 34-3468
Rory McIlroy, N. Ireland.............. 33-3568
Simon Dyson, England................ 33-3568
Alvaro Quiros, Spain................... 34-3468
Bernd Wiesberger, Austria......... 35-3368
Ernie Els, S. Africa....................... 33-3568
Chris Wood, England.................. 36-3268
Graeme Storm, England............. 33-3568
James Morrison, England........... 35-3469
Nathan Holman, Australia.......... 34-3569
a-James Allan, England............... 33-3669
Julien Quesne, France................ 31-3869
Graeme McDowell, N. Ireland.... 35-3469
Henrik Stenson, Sweden............. 34-3569
Oliver Fisher, England................. 34-3569
Benjamin Hebert, France............ 34-3569
Ben Evans, England..................... 33-3669
Daniel Brooks, England............... 36-3369
Richard Bland, England............... 35-3469
Matteo Manassero, Italy............ 35-3469
Joost Luiten, Netherlands........... 32-3769
Raphael Jacquelin, France.......... 34-3569
Scott Jamieson, Scotland............ 34-3569
Also
Soren Kjeldsen, Denmark........... 36-3470
Thongchai Jaidee, Thailand........ 35-3570
Andy Sullivan, England............... 34-3670
Kiradech Aphibarnrat, Thailand...... 35-3570
Danny Willett, England............... 36-3470
a-Bryson Dechambeau, U.S.A..... 35-3570
Martin Kaymer, Germany........... 35-3671
Byeong-An Hun, S. Korea............ 33-3871
Louis Oosthuizen, S. Africa......... 37-3673
Matthew Fitzpatrick, England..... 35-3873
Jamie Donaldson, Wales............. 36-3874
Lee Westwood, England............. 38-3775
Peter Uihlein, U.S.A............................... WD
LPGA

Connor Hofmann and INF Jalen Harris.


TROIS-RIVIERES AIGLES Released RHP
Carlos Mirabal.
BASKETBALL
National Basketball Association
HOUSTON ROCKETS Recalled F/C Donatas Motiejunas from Rio Grande Valley
(NBADL).
Womens National Basketball Association
ATLANTA DREAM Signed G Carla Cortijo.
FOOTBALL
National Football League
DETROIT LIONS Named Josh Schuler
assistant strength and conditioning coach.
PITTSBURGH STEELERS Signed WRs Issac Blakeney and Tobais Palkmer and CBs
Montell Garner and CB Al-hajj Shabazz to
reserve/future contracts.
HOCKEY
National Hockey League
NHL Fined Winnipeg F Alexander Burmistrov $2,000 for diving/embellishment.
DALLAS STARS Recalled F Branden
Troock from Idaho (ECHL) to Texas (AHL).
DETROIT RED WINGS Recalled D Jakub
Kindl from Grand Rapids (AHL).
EDMONTON OILERS Assigned LW Luke
Gazdic to Bakersfield (AHL).
MINNESOTA WILD Recalled G Steve
Michalek from Quad City (ECHL) to Iowa
(AHL).
NEW JERSEY DEVILS Activated D John
Moore from injured reserve.
WASHINGTON CAPITALS Recalled D
Aaron Ness from Hershey (AHL).
American Hockey League
AHL Suspended Lake Erie D Jaime Sifers two game.
LEHIGH VALLEY PHANTOMS Recalled G
Martin Ouellette from Reading (ECHL).
SAN ANTONIO RAMPAGE Reassigned F
Alex Belzile and Troy Bourke to Fort Wayne
(ECHL).
SAN DIEGO GULLS Returned F Zac Larraza to Manchester (ECHL).
TORONTO MARLIES Assigned F Eric
Faille to Orlando (ECHL).
ECHL
ECHL Suspended Alaska LW Collin Valcourt two games.
BRAMPTON BEAST Signed F Tyler
Henry.
SOCCER
Major League Soccer
COLORADO RAPIDS Signed D Mekeil
Williams.
COLUMBUS CREW Signed M Rodrigo
Saravia and F Ola Kamara.
NEW YORK CITY FC Extended their affiliation agreement with Wilmington (USL).
National Womens Soccer League
SKY BLUE FC Named Paul Greig and Jill
Loyden assistant coaches.
United Soccer League
LOUISVILLE CITY FC Agreed to terms
with F Matt Fondy.
SAN ANTONIO FC Signed MFs Rafael
Castillo and Victor Araujo, G Matt Cardone
and D Max Gunderson.
COLLEGE
FAIRLEIGH DICKINSON Named David
Janezic mens assistant soccer coach.
PURDUE Named Darrell Funk offensive
line coach.
SYRACUSE Dismissed DEs Qaadir Sheppard and Amir Ealey from the football program.
WISCONSIN Named Chris McIntosh
associate athletic director for business development.

NHL

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2016

Nashville 10-11-1940.
Power-play opportunitiesPhiladelphia
1 of 3; Nashville 1 of 7.
GoaliesPhiladelphia, Mason 12-12-6
(40 shots-37 saves). Nashville, Rinne 19-177 (19-13).

Capitals 3, Islanders 2

N.Y. Islanders......................... 1 0 1 2
Washington........................... 1 1 1 3
First Period1, N.Y. Islanders, Grabovski
9 (Bailey, Hamonic), 1:55. 2, Washington,
Oshie 16 (Backstrom), 7:28.
Second Period3, Washington, Burakovsky 9 (Chimera, Orlov), 18:42.
Third Period4, N.Y. Islanders, Bailey
8 (Zidlicky, Nelson), 5:38. 5, Washington,
Ovechkin 29 (Backstrom, Oshie), 17:20.
Shots on GoalN.Y. Islanders 9-5-12
26. Washington 7-7-923.
Power-play opportunitiesN.Y. Islanders
0 of 2; Washington 0 of 2.
GoaliesN.Y. Islanders, Halak 12-10-4
(23 shots-20 saves). Washington, Holtby
31-5-3 (26-24).

Rangers 4, Wild 2

Minnesota............................. 2 0 0 2
N.Y. Rangers........................... 0 2 2 4
First Period1, Minnesota, Carter 5,
2:09. 2, Minnesota, Dumba 6 (Granlund,
Suter), 7:57 (pp).
Second Period3, N.Y. Rangers, McDonagh 7 (Zuccarello, Stepan), 3:15. 4, N.Y.
Rangers, Miller 16 (Brassard, Girardi), 4:35.
Third Period5, N.Y. Rangers, Brassard
18 (Miller, McDonagh), 5:46. 6, N.Y. Rangers, Kreider 10 (Zuccarello), 18:12 (en).
Shots on GoalMinnesota 7-4-718.
N.Y. Rangers 7-17-630.
GoaliesMinnesota,
Dubnyk.
N.Y.
Rangers, Lundqvist. A18,006 (18,006).
T2:25.

Bruins 3, Sabres 2

Boston....................... 0 1 1 0 3
Buffalo...................... 1 1 0 0 2
Boston won shootout 1-0
First Period1, Buffalo, Kane 12 (Gionta),
11:35.
Second Period2, Buffalo, Reinhart 13
(Pysyk, R.OReilly), :47. 3, Boston, Spooner
11 (Krug, K.Miller), 1:45.
Third Period4, Boston, Marchand 23
(Bergeron), 2:44.
OvertimeNone.
ShootoutBoston 1 (Spooner G, Marchand NG), Buffalo 0 (Gionta NG, Kane NG,
R.OReilly NG).
Shots on GoalBoston 6-13-11-333.
Buffalo 5-8-10-528.
GoaliesBoston, Rask. Buffalo, Johnson.
A18,845 (19,070). T2:39.

Panthers 6, Red Wings 3

Detroit.................................. 1 1 1 3
Florida................................... 3 1 2 6
First Period1, Florida, Pirri 10 (Petrovic,
Jagr), 8:30. 2, Florida, Barkov 15 (R.Smith,
Ekblad), 10:41 (pp). 3, Florida, Trocheck 16
(Jagr), 11:06. 4, Detroit, Larkin 16 (Zetterberg, Abdelkader), 19:53 (pp).
Second Period5, Detroit, Larkin 17,
1:01. 6, Florida, MacKenzie 5 (Pirri, Knight),
16:13.
Third Period7, Florida, Jagr 16 (Trocheck, Jokinen), 3:45 (pp). 8, Detroit, Green
3 (Abdelkader, Tatar), 12:36 (pp). 9, Florida,
Trocheck 17 (R.Smith, Jokinen), 14:19 (en).
Shots on GoalDetroit 18-9-1138.
Florida 13-10-1033.
GoaliesDetroit, Howard. Florida, Luongo. A16,991 (19,250). T2:32.

NBA

COATES CHAMPIONSHIP
Friday
At Golden Ocala Golf Club
Ocala, Fla.
Purse: $1.5 million
Yardage: 6,541; Par: 72
Partial Second Round
Play was suspended by bad weather
Haru Nomura............................ 72-66138
Austin Ernst.............................. 73-68141
Julie Yang.................................. 71-70141
Amy Yang.................................. 70-71141
Brianna Do................................ 70-72142
Charley Hull.............................. 70-73143
Caroline Masson....................... 70-73143
Tiffany Joh................................ 73-71144
Daniela Iacobelli....................... 72-72144
Min Lee..................................... 71-73144
Ai Miyazato............................... 77-68145
Catriona Matthew.................... 75-70145
Katie Burnett............................ 73-72145
Hee Young Park......................... 72-74146
Christina Kim............................ 75-72147
Sarah Kemp.............................. 74-74148
Jacqui Concolino....................... 73-75148
Marina Alex.............................. 77-72149
Julieta Granada......................... 73-78151
Laetitia Beck............................. 75-77152
Giulia Sergas............................. 74-78152
Alison Walshe........................... 77-77154
Leaderboard

SCORE THRU
Lydia Ko........................................ -7
17
Ha Na Jang.................................... -7
Haru Nomura................................ -6
18
Kelly Tan....................................... -6
3
Xiyu Lin......................................... -5
16
Lizette Salas.................................. -5
16
Suzann Pettersen.......................... -4
17
Jessica Korda................................ -4
15
Hyo-Joo Kim.................................. -4
15
Sakura Yokomine.......................... -4
15
Michelle Wie................................ -4
14
Brooke Henderson........................ -4
15
Juli Inkster.................................... -4
1
Chella Choi.................................... -4
2
Lexi Thompson............................. -4
15
Candie Kung.................................. -4
2
In Gee Chun.................................. -4
16
Sei-Young Kim............................... -4
Kim Kaufman................................ -4
Jodi Ewart Shadoff........................ -4
-

TRANSACTIONS
BASEBALL
COMMISSIONERS OFFICE Suspended
San Diego RHP Ryan Butler (Lake ElsinoreCal) and Oakland RHP Sean Murphy (Midland-TL) 50 games for violations of the Minor League Drug Prevention and Treatment
Program.
American League
BALTIMORE ORIOLES Designated LHP
C.J. Riefenhauser for assignment. Agreed to
terms with LHP Brian Matusz on a one-year
contract.
KANSAS CITY ROYALS Released RHP
Louis Coleman.
National League
ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS Agreed
to terms with RHP Miller Diaz on a minor
league contract.
LOS ANGELES DODGERS Agreed to
terms with INF Howie Kendrick on a twoyear contract.
MIAMI MARLINS Agreed to terms with
3B Don Kelly on a minor league contract.
PITTSBURGH PIRATES Designated RHP
A.J. Schugel for assignment.
SAN DIEGO PADRES Agreed to terms
with RHP Fernando Rodney on a one-year
contract. Traded RHP Odrisamer Despaigne
to Baltimore for RHP Jean Cosme. Named
Mark Rogow trainer, Casey Myers staff
coordinator and Matt Klotsche director of
baseball information services. Promoted
Pete DeYoung to director of professional
scouting, Ben Sestanovich to assistant director of player development and Brian
McBurney to director of baseball research
and development.
American Association
KANSAS CITY T-BONES Signed INFs
Starlin Rodriguez and Vladimir Frias.
Can-Am League
SUSSEX COUNTY MINERS Signed OF

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division

GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Florida..........51 31 15 5 67 146 113
Tampa Bay....50 28 18 4 60 133 118
Boston..........51 27 18 6 60 153 137
Detroit..........51 25 18 8 58 126 133
Montreal.......52 24 24 4 52 140 142
Ottawa..........52 23 23 6 52 146 168
Toronto.........50 19 22 9 47 121 139
Buffalo..........52 21 26 5 47 120 141
Metropolitan Division

GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Washington..49 36 9 4 76 163 111
N.Y. Rangers..51 28 18 5 61 148 134
N.Y. Islanders.49 26 17 6 58 137 124
New Jersey...52 26 20 6 58 119 123
Pittsburgh.....49 25 17 7 57 127 125
Philadelphia.. 49 23 18 8 54 119 132
Carolina........52 23 21 8 54 124 139
Columbus.....52 19 28 5 43 134 168
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Central Division

GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Chicago.........54 34 16 4 72 149 123
Dallas............51 32 14 5 69 167 136
St. Louis........54 29 17 8 66 131 131
Colorado.......53 27 23 3 57 144 144
Nashville.......52 24 20 8 56 132 138
Minnesota....51 23 19 9 55 126 124
Winnipeg......50 22 25 3 47 129 145
Pacific Division

GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Los Angeles...50 31 16 3 65 135 115
San Jose........50 27 19 4 58 147 133
Anaheim.......48 23 18 7 53 104 113
Arizona.........50 24 21 5 53 133 152
Vancouver.....50 20 19 11 51 122 139
Calgary..........49 22 24 3 47 130 147
Edmonton.....52 21 26 5 47 134 152
NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for
overtime loss.
Wednesdays Games
Buffalo 4............................... Montreal 2
Tampa Bay 3............................ Detroit 1
Calgary 4................................ Carolina 1
Thursdays Games
Boston 3........................... Buffalo 2 (SO)
Toronto 3................... New Jersey 2 (SO)
N.Y. Rangers 4.................... Minnesota 2
Washington 3................. N.Y. Islanders 2
Edmonton 7............................. Ottawa 2
Florida 6................................... Detroit 3
San Jose 3.............................. St. Louis 1
Philadelphia 6....................... Nashville 3
Dallas at Colorado............................. (n)
Chicago at Arizona............................. (n)
Columbus at Vancouver..................... (n)
Anaheim at Los Angeles.................... (n)
Fridays Games
Pittsburgh at Tampa Bay......... 7:30 p.m.
Carolina at Winnipeg................... 8 p.m.
Columbus at Calgary.................... 9 p.m.
Arizona at Anaheim................... 10 p.m.
Saturdays Games
Washington at New Jersey.......... 1 p.m.
N.Y. Rangers at Philadelphia........ 1 p.m.
Edmonton at Montreal................ 2 p.m.
N.Y. Islanders at Detroit............... 2 p.m.
Buffalo at Boston......................... 7 p.m.
Toronto at Ottawa....................... 7 p.m.
Pittsburgh at Florida.................... 7 p.m.
Minnesota at St. Louis................. 8 p.m.
San Jose at Nashville................... 8 p.m.
Chicago at Dallas......................... 8 p.m.
Winnipeg at Colorado................ 10 p.m.
Calgary at Vancouver................. 10 p.m.

Flyers 6, Predators 3

Philadelphia.......................... 2 2 2 6
Nashville............................... 0 2 1 3
First Period1, Philadelphia, Read 9
(Laughton, Schultz), 13:51. 2, Philadelphia,
Schenn 14 (Couturier, Gagner), 15:49. PenaltiesGudas, Phi, double minor (highsticking), 7:01; Gostisbehere, Phi (hooking),
17:39; C.Smith, Nas, double minor (highsticking), 19:16.
Second Period3, Nashville, Johansen
10 (Josi, Weber), 4:23. 4, Philadelphia, Simmonds 17 (Laughton), 8:10. 5, Philadelphia,
Giroux 15 (Voracek), 16:15. 6, Nashville,
Jarnkrok 8 (Neal, Johansen), 16:40. PenaltiesGagner, Phi (tripping), 5:46; Medvedev, Phi (holding), 10:49.
Third Period7, Nashville, Weber 13
(Josi, Ribeiro), 10:03 (pp). 8, Philadelphia,
Simmonds 18 (Gostisbehere, Giroux), 12:01
(pp). 9, Philadelphia, Giroux 16 (Voracek,
Simmonds), 13:11. PenaltiesSimmonds,
Phi (tripping), 5:30; Gudas, Phi (high-sticking), 9:51; Gaustad, Nas (tripping), 11:27.
Shots on GoalPhiladelphia 5-8-619.

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division

W
L Pct GB
Toronto.......................33 16 .673
Boston........................29 22 .569
5
New York....................23 29 .442 111-w
Brooklyn.....................12 38 .240 211-w
Philadelphia..................7 42 .143 26
Southeast Division

W
L Pct GB
Atlanta........................29 22 .569
Miami.........................28 22 .560
1-w
Charlotte.....................24 25 .490
4
Washington................21 26 .447
6
Orlando......................21 27 .438 61-w
Central Division

W
L Pct GB
Cleveland....................35 13 .729
Chicago.......................27 21 .563
8
Indiana........................26 23 .531 91-w
Detroit........................27 24 .529 91-w
Milwaukee..................20 31 .392 161-w
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Southwest Division

W
L Pct GB
San Antonio................41
8 .837
Memphis....................29 20 .592 12
Dallas..........................28 24 .538 141-w
Houston......................26 25 .510 16
New Orleans...............18 30 .375 221-w
Northwest Division

W
L Pct GB
Oklahoma City............38 13 .745
Portland......................24 26 .480 131-w
Utah............................23 25 .479 131-w
Denver........................19 31 .380 181-w
Minnesota..................15 36 .294 23
Pacific Division

W
L Pct GB
Golden State...............45
4 .918
L.A. Clippers................32 17 .653 13
Sacramento................21 28 .429 24
Phoenix.......................14 36 .280 311-w
L.A. Lakers...................10 41 .196 36
Wednesdays Games
Atlanta 124......................... Philadelphia 86
Charlotte 106.......................... Cleveland 97
Indiana 114............................ Brooklyn 100
Boston 102................................. Detroit 95
Oklahoma City 117................. Orlando 114
Golden State 134.............. Washington 121
San Antonio 110................ New Orleans 97
Miami 93...................................... Dallas 90
Utah 85....................................... Denver 81
Chicago 107...................... Sacramento 102
Minnesota 108................. L.A. Clippers 102
Thursdays Games
Detroit 111........................... New York 105
Houston at Phoenix................................ (n)
L.A. Lakers at New Orleans..................... (n)
Toronto at Portland................................ (n)
Fridays Games
L.A. Clippers at Orlando.................... 7 p.m.
Philadelphia at Washington.............. 7 p.m.
Miami at Charlotte........................... 7 p.m.
Indiana at Atlanta............................. 7 p.m.
Boston at Cleveland..................... 7:30 p.m.
Sacramento at Brooklyn.............. 7:30 p.m.
Memphis at New York................. 7:30 p.m.
Chicago at Denver............................ 9 p.m.
Milwaukee at Utah........................... 9 p.m.
San Antonio at Dallas.................. 9:30 p.m.
Saturdays Games
Portland at Houston......................... 5 p.m.
Detroit at Indiana............................. 7 p.m.
Washington at Charlotte.................. 7 p.m.
New Orleans at Cleveland........... 7:30 p.m.
Brooklyn at Philadelphia.............. 7:30 p.m.
Chicago at Minnesota....................... 8 p.m.
Dallas at Memphis............................ 8 p.m.
L.A. Lakers at San Antonio........... 8:30 p.m.
Oklahoma City at Golden State........ 9 p.m.
Utah at Phoenix................................ 9 p.m.

Pistons 111, Knicks 105

NEW YORK (105)


C.Anthony 4-18 10-14 19, Porzingis 2-9
0-0 5, Lopez 11-14 4-4 26, Calderon 0-3
0-0 0, Afflalo 8-15 7-8 24, Thomas 2-6 4-4
9, Galloway 7-9 1-2 17, Vujacic 1-6 0-0 2,
Williams 1-3 1-2 3, OQuinn 0-1 0-0 0, Grant
0-0 0-0 0. Totals 36-84 27-34 105.
DETROIT (111)
Morris 5-12 2-2 13, Ilyasova 4-9 2-2 12,
Drummond 7-12 3-9 17, Jackson 6-16 6-10
21, Johnson 7-12 7-8 22, Hilliard 3-4 0-0
6, Jennings 4-6 2-2 11, Tolliver 1-1 0-0 3,
Baynes 3-7 0-0 6. Totals 40-79 22-33 111.
New York................. 15 21 35 34 105
Detroit.................... 27 33 18 33 111

C7

3-Point GoalsNew York 6-22 (Galloway


2-2, Thomas 1-2, Porzingis 1-4, C.Anthony
1-5, Afflalo 1-5, Williams 0-1, Calderon
0-1, Vujacic 0-2), Detroit 9-17 (Jackson
3-5, Ilyasova 2-5, Tolliver 1-1, Johnson 1-2,
Morris 1-2, Jennings 1-2). Fouled OutGalloway. ReboundsNew York 54 (Lopez 16),
Detroit 51 (Drummond 13). AssistsNew
York 20 (C.Anthony 8), Detroit 17 (Johnson, Jackson 5). Total FoulsNew York 25,
Detroit 22. TechnicalsMorris. Flagrant
FoulsThomas. A17,095 (22,076).

AHL

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division

W L OL SL Pct Pts GF GA
W-B/Scran..... 29 13 1 1 .682 60 144 102
Hershey........ 24 13 3 6 .620 57 147 139
Portland........ 26 16 1 0 .616 53 132 113
Providence.... 20 15 8 1 .557 49 133 126
Bridgeport.... 23 19 2 1 .544 49 114 117
Hartford........ 23 20 2 0 .533 48 111 123
Lehigh Val..... 22 21 2 1 .511 47 135 129
Springfield.... 17 22 2 3 .443 39 109 143
North Division

W L OL SL Pct Pts GF GA
Toronto......... 37 8 3 0 .802 77 193 117
Albany........... 24 12 7 0 .640 55 119 100
Utica............. 20 17 3 3 .535 46 123 125
St. Johns....... 19 17 6 3 .522 47 129 148
Syracuse....... 19 17 8 1 .522 47 119 134
Rochester..... 21 21 2 1 .500 45 112 144
Binghamton.... 17 23 3 0 .430 37 125 143
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Central Division

W L OL SL Pct Pts GF GA
Rockford....... 27 10 3 4 .693 61 129 107
Milwaukee.... 27 13 3 0 .663 57 125 112
Charlotte....... 25 14 2 2 .628 54 135 129
Gr. Rapids..... 24 17 1 1 .581 50 126 114
Lake Erie....... 22 16 4 3 .567 51 114 118
Chicago......... 21 19 1 2 .523 45 126 127
Iowa.............. 13 27 3 3 .348 32 101 142
Manitoba...... 11 26 3 4 .330 29 87 152
Pacific Division

W L OL SL Pct Pts GF GA
Ontario......... 26 10 3 1 .700 56 106 76
Texas............. 25 17 3 3 .583 56 180 154
San Jose........ 19 14 5 3 .561 46 112 119
Stockton....... 18 16 1 2 .527 39 109 111
San Diego...... 19 18 1 1 .513 40 99 116
Bakersfield.... 18 17 2 2 .513 40 117 119
San Antonio... 19 20 7 0 .489 45 131 143
NOTE: Two points are awarded for a win,
one point for an overtime or shootout loss.
Thursdays Game
Toronto 6.................................. Manitoba 2
Fridays Games
Utica at St. Johns............................. 6 p.m.
Lehigh Valley at Bridgeport.............. 7 p.m.
Lake Erie at Charlotte....................... 7 p.m.
Hartford at Portland......................... 7 p.m.
W-B/Scranton at Springfield............. 7 p.m.
Rochester at Syracuse...................... 7 p.m.
Hershey at Binghamton............... 7:05 p.m.
Albany at Providence................... 7:05 p.m.
Chicago at Iowa................................ 8 p.m.
Grand Rapids at Rockford................. 8 p.m.
Texas at San Antonio................... 8:30 p.m.
Milwaukee at Bakersfield............... 10 p.m.
San Jose at Ontario......................... 10 p.m.
Stockton at San Diego............... 10:05 p.m.
Saturdays Games
Toronto at Manitoba........................ 3 p.m.
Hartford at Albany............................ 5 p.m.
Utica at St. Johns............................. 6 p.m.
Lake Erie at Charlotte....................... 7 p.m.
Rockford at Grand Rapids................. 7 p.m.
Lehigh Valley at Hershey.................. 7 p.m.
Providence at Portland..................... 7 p.m.
Springfield at Syracuse..................... 7 p.m.
Rochester at Binghamton............ 7:05 p.m.
Bridgeport at W-B/Scranton........ 7:05 p.m.
Iowa at Chicago................................ 8 p.m.
San Antonio at Texas........................ 8 p.m.
San Jose at Ontario........................... 9 p.m.
Stockton at Bakersfield................... 10 p.m.
Milwaukee at San Diego............ 10:05 p.m.
Sundays Game
Binghamton at Hershey.................... 2 p.m.

BOWLING
SCHOLASTIC
Section Two

Hempfield 7, Lebanon 0

M. Brooks, Hempfield.... 171-224-257652


A. Allison, Hempfield..... 198-192-234624
J. Lassalle, Lebanon....... 116-210-116442
Section Three

Manheim Central 7,
Lebanon Catholic 0

T. Michael, MC............... 214-200-267681


A. Bradley, MC............... 226-221-190637
A. Witmer, Leb. Cath..... 171-162-146479
Section Four

Lampeter-Strasburg 7, Columbia 0

A. Lee, L-S...................... 187-186-150523


S. Kinser, Columbia........ 140-181-194515

Cocalico 5, Elco 2

R. Stone, Elco................. 206-277-236719


E. Buckwalter, Cocalico...... 203-257-221681
C. Muraco, Cocalico....... 193-248-178619

DUTCH
THURSDAY AFTERNOON SENIORS
Steve McGraw............... 238-227-173638
Shaun Chubb................. 204-246-167617
NEW HOLLAND MEN
Sandy Snook.................. 220-249-238707
COMMERCIAL
Jason Weaver................ 289-247-226762
Eric Montgomery........... 238-256-247741
Kevin Horst.................... 226-243-256725
John Hart....................... 245-216-256717
Brian Hess...................... 299-244-171714
Jeff Waller...................... 268-239-202709
Shawn Whitmyer........... 288-213-207708
Terry Martin . ................ 247-208-248703
Scott Canfield................ 278-234-188700
Cara Weidman............... 236-214-183633

LEISURE
THURSDAY SENIORS
Bob Kilheffer.................. 242-204-235681
Tom Bair........................ 234-243-163640
Jack Huber..................... 266-149-213628
Dave Nieman................. 249-231-144624
Tom Weaver.................. 180-217-226623
Richard Kleckner............ 248-182-192622
William Good................. 184-193-243620
Charlie Heinaman.......... 246-202-155603
Glenda Carper............... 198-168-181537
Gerri Skiles..................... 172-169-159500
ROSES AND THORNS
Keith Myers................... 246-211-244701
MYERS AUTOBODY LADIES
Lynda Johnson............... 200-238-203641
Dennett Rittenhouse..... 235-196-209640
Robym Graham.............. 191-181-256628
Annemarie Craft............ 190-215-223628
Wendi Simet.................. 220-204-195619
CONESTOGA IND.
Brian Kennedy............... 278-205-267750
Scott Kennedy................ 225-237-278740
Mike Bracero................. 225-244-245714
Chris James.................... 279-204-230713
Bruce Pauser................. 229-242-235706
THURSDAY NIGHT MIXED
Kevin Kurtz..................... 219-257-240716
Zach Baldwin................. 250-232-223705
Donna Kurtz................... 225-204-199628

ROCKY SPRINGS
THURSDAY SENIORS
Linda Goodling.............. 215-201-225641
Ron Summers................ 191-201-221613
Ron Thomas................... 218-138-249605
Bob Heisse..................... 203-180-212595
Dave Simmons............... 174-190-212576
Ken Corey...................... 159-247-172578
Cy Hoover...................... 195-185-175555

C8 FRIDAY,
FRIDAY,FEBRUARY
FEBRUARY5,5,2016
2016

LNP
LNPIII |LANCASTER,
LANCASTER, PA.
PA
LEGAL NOTICES

NASCAR

Surgery delays opening

Tony Stewart, who is retiring at end of season, injures back in ATV crash
JENNA FRYER

AP AUTO RACING WRITER

CHARLOTTE, N.C.
Tony Stewart will miss
the start of his final
NASCAR season after
fracturing his back in
an accident on an allterrain vehicle, StewartHaas Racing said Thursday.
The three-time NASCAR champion sustained a burst fracture
of the L1 vertebra when
he crashed on an ATV
Sunday and he had surgery Wednesday, the
team said. A timetable
for Stewarts return has
not been determined,
but SHR said he is expected to make a full recovery and race this year.
Drivers report to Daytona next week to begin
preparations for the
season-opening
Daytona 500 on Feb. 21. An
interim driver for the
No. 14 Chevrolet was not
named Thursday.
Denny Hamlin in 2013
suffered a compression
fracture to the same L1
vertebra and missed
four races. But even after his return, he struggled with back pain the
rest of the season.
Stewart will miss what
was expected to be his
final Daytona 500. He
is 0-17 in the prestigious race and spoke
last month about how

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Stewart Haas Racing co-owner and driver Tony Stewart


talks during the NASCAR Charlotte Motor Speedway
Media Tour in Charlotte, N.C., on Jan. 21. The three-time
NASCAR champion had surgery on his back Wednesday
after a ATV accident on Sunday. Stewart will miss the
Daytona 500 on Feb 21.

its one of the few glaring holes on his resume.


Stewart, who turns 45 in
May, plans to retire from
NASCAR competition at
the end of this year.
Stewart was with Greg
Biffle and other NASCAR personalities on
the ATV outing in the
Southern
California
desert when he crashed.
The team said he was
awake and alert as he
was taken to a hospital
and he was able to move
all of his extremities.
Stewart flew to North
Carolina late Tuesday
and remained hospitalized Thursday following
his surgery.

Biffle was not present


when Stewart crashed
but told SiriusXMs
NASCAR channel that
we started kind of hearing bits and pieces that
he hurt his back.
I do know the people
that helped him ... (said)
he was walking and moving all of his extremities,
but he was in a lot of
pain, Biffle said.
This is yet another setback in the final stages
of one of the most storied careers in racing.
Stewart has slumped
since breaking his leg
in a 2013 sprint car accident. A year later, he
missed three races while

in seclusion after his car


struck and killed a fellow
driver at a dirt track in
New York. Stewart was
cleared of any criminal
wrongdoing, but faces a
civil suit from the family
of Kevin Ward Jr.
He has not won a race
since 2013, before he
broke his leg, and was
28th in the final Sprint
Cup standings last year.
He had just three top10 finishes and 24 laps
led, both career lows,
and readily admitted his
confidence was shot.
A crew chief change
was made for this season the fourth different team leader Stewart
will have since he won
the 2011 title and he
hoped a new NASCAR
rules package would better fit his driving style
and make him competitive in this final hurrah.
No matter what happened this year, Stewart
insisted last month this
will be his final NASCAR
season.
If its a terrible year,
Im not going to sit there
and go, Wow, that defined my career, because the stats will show
what we did over 18
years, Stewart said. I
think no matter how the
season goes, Im going to
be able to say I had a successful run in the Sprint
Cup Series.

Commit: Elite 2017 quarterbacks


Continued from C1

didnt want to risk passing up the opportunity


to play there.
Most of the time only
one quarterback (gets
signed by) one school,
Fromm said, Its a lot
different from receivers, DBs or linebackers, where you can have
three or four in a class.
That feeling can go
both ways.
Many elite quarterbacks often dont want
to sign someplace where
another highly-ranked
quarterback in his class
has already committed.
They understand that
when a school does sign
multiple quarterbacks
in the same class, one of
them frequently ends up
transferring.
No two top-20 quarterbacks want to go
to the same school if
they can avoid it, said
Emanuel Powell, who
coaches
Mississippi
State junior commitment Keytaon Thompson at Landry Walker
High School in New
Orleans. Its not that
theyre avoiding competition. They just feel
like if both of them go
there, odds are someones going to get left
out, whoever it may
be.
That type of situation
creates a domino effect
with many quarterbacks
committing in a short
time span. If a colleges
No. 1 quarterback target in a particular class
chooses another program, that school tries
to make sure it gets a
commitment from its
second choice as soon
as possible. And if a
quarterback sees his top
school has already filled
its quarterback needs,
he also starts seeking
out his next option.
Thats why many quarterback prospects follow
the recruiting updates of
their peers.
Tyler Hales, who
coaches Braxton Burmeister at La Jolla
Country Day School
in La Jolla, California,

Brownsburgs
Hunter
Johnson
warms up
for a high
school
football
game at
Avon High
School
in Avon,
Ind., in
this photo
taken on
Sept. 11.
Johnson,
the nations
top-rated
junior quarterback,
committed
to Clemson
in December, less
than four
months
after saying
he planned
to attend
Tennessee.

DOUT MCSCHOOLER | INDIAPAPOLIS STAR

said his quarterback did


plenty of research while
deciding on Arizona.
They do their homework,
Hales
said.
They want to find a
home where they know
they can compete and
do well at and that will
fit their skill set. Braxton, he knows everyone
whos been offered, how
many quarterbacks each
school has offered, whos
committed where.
With quarterbacks deciding early, theyre able
to recruit other prospects to join them.
Coaches often see
quarterbacks as potential leaders of a class
who can recruit players at other positions.
Fromm mentioned that
as one of the reasons he
believes quarterbacks
are committing so soon.
For whatever reason, (quarterbacks) are
more renowned and
have more clout, I guess,
going into social media, said Mike Bellotti,
an ESPN football ana-

lyst and former Oregon


coach. They can help
you recruit especially
receivers, running backs
and offensive linemen.
Mike Farrell, the national recruiting analyst
for Rivals, cited Tate
Martell of Bishop Gorman High in Las Vegas
as someone whose personality could make him
an effective salesman to
other prospects. Martell,
the nations No. 2 junior
quarterback according to
the 247Sports Composite, has verbally committed to Texas A&M.
Hes a charismatic kid
who is right now recruiting the heck out of anybody and everybody,
Farrell said. Youre not
going to help with the
(seniors) that much because hes a younger kid,
but hell help with the
( juniors) and (sophomores) for sure.
Of course, he can only
help Texas A&Ms recruiting class if he stays
committed to the Aggies. Martell already

has changed
his mind once. So has
Hunter Johnson, the
nations top-rated junior quarterback.
Johnson committed to
Clemson in December,
less than four months after saying he planned to
attend Tennessee. Martell committed to Washington before entering
eighth grade, back when
Steve Sarkisian was still
coaching the Huskies.
Martell reopened his
recruitment in January
2015 and committed to
Texas A&M last summer.
Even though many
junior
quarterbacks
say they already know
where they plan to play
college football, they
still have plenty of time
to rethink their decisions.
The earlier the commitment, obviously the
better chance for a decommitment, Farrell
said. Youll see some of
these (committed) quarterbacks end up at different places.

INFORMATION
Lost
Legal Notices
Estate Notices
Found
Public Auctions
Estate Sales
Announcements
Legal Services
Please see the
Obituaries in the
A section for the
following:
Obits & Service
Information
Cemeteries/Lots
Cards of Thanks
In Memoriams

LEGAL NOTICES
BIDREQUEST
Solanco School District will
receive sealed bids until February 25, 2016 at 2:00 p.m.
for:
Stockroom and Art Supplies
Specifications and conditions of this bid may be obtained from the Business Office. The District reserves the
right to reject any or all bids in
item and in total, to waive informalities that may occur,
and to make the award that is
determined to be in the best
interest of the District.
Solanco School District
121 South Hess Street
Quarryville, PA 17566
by: Timothy J. Shrom, Ph.D.
Business Manager
COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS OF LANCASTER
COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA
ORPHANS COURT
DIVISION
NO. 2709 OF 2015
INRE: JAI-LYN
ALEXANDERA MOLINA
NOTICE
TO: UNKNOWN FATHER
Notice is hereby given that
the Lancaster County Children & Youth Social Service
Agency has presented to Orphans Court Division, Court
of Common Pleas of Lancaster County, PA, a Petition
for termination of any rights
you have or might have concerning the child known as
JAI-LYN
ALEXANDERA
MOLINA, born on December
28, 2014. The Court has set
a hearing to consider ending
your rights to your child. That
hearing will be held in Courtroom No. 11, Fourth Floor of
the Lancaster County Courthouse, 50 North Duke Street,
Lancaster, PA, on February
22, 2016 at 9:00 a.m. prevailing time. You are warned
that even if you fail to appear
at the scheduled hearing, the
hearing will go on without you
and your rights to your child
may be ended by the court
without your being present.
You have a right to be represented at the hearing by a
lawyer. YOU SHOULD TAKE
THIS PAPER TO YOUR
LAWYER AT ONCE. IF YOU
DO NOT HAVE A LAWYER
OR CANNOT AFFORD
ONE, GO TO OR TELEPHONE THE OFFICE SET
FORTH BELOW TO FIND
OUT WHERE YOU CAN
GET LEGAL HELP.
Lancaster Bar Association,
Lawyer Referral Service
28 East Orange Street
Lancaster, PA 17602
(717) 393-0737
LANCASTER COUNTY
CHILDREN & YOUTH SOCIAL SERVICE AGENCY
150 NORTH QUEEN
STREET, SUITE 111
LANCASTER, PA 17603
(717) 299-7925
FICTITIOUS NAME NOTICE
Murad LLC, 189 Greenland
Dr., Lancaster, PA 17602, did
file in the Office of the Secretary of the Commonwealth of
Pennsylvania, on or about
January 25, 2016, registration of the fictitious name:
Murad Logistics
under which it intends to do
business at 189 Greenland
Dr., Lancaster, PA 17602,
pursuant to the provisions of
the Pennsylvania Fictitious
Name Act.
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INVITATION FOR BIDS
The Borough of New Holland will accept sealed bids
until 1:15 p.m., Wed., February 24, 2016, at the New Holland Borough Office, 436 E.
Main St., New Holland, for
street reconstruction work
and materials, including
milling, fabric supply and
placement,
bituminous
paving, sealing and sweeping. A bid bond or certified
check in an amount not less
than 10 percent of the bid
shall be included. All bids
must be sealed and marked:
New Holland Streets Bid on
the outside of the bid envelope. All work and requirements are subject to Penn
DOT specifications and requirements. Bid detail information is available from the
Borough office 8 a.m. to 4:30
p.m. weekdays. The Borough reserves the right to accept and/or reject any and/or
all bids.
J. Richard Fulcher, Secretary

LEGAL NOTICE
Notice is hereby given that
both the East Earl Township
Supervisors and Terre Hill
Borough Council will hold
separate public hearings on
Tuesday, March 8, 2016, beginning at 7:00 p.m., with the
Borough Council hearing at
the Terre Hill Borough Hall,
300 Broad Street, Terre Hill,
Pennsylvania, and the Township Supervisors hearing at
the East Earl Township Office, 4610 Division Highway,
East Earl, Pennsylvania; and
the municipalities will consider, and at their respective
hearings or at subsequent
public hearings held within 60
days thereafter, vote upon
enacting or take other action
regarding reciprocal ordinances substantially with the
same provisions, a title and
brief summary of which ordinances are as follows:
AN ORDINANCE AUTHORIZING THE CREATION OF A JOINT AUTHORITY BY EAST EARL
TOWNSHIP AND TERRE
HILL BOROUGH TO BE
KNOWN AS THE WEAVERLAND VALLEY AUTHORITY, UNDER PENNSYLVANIAS
MUNICIPALITY
AUTHORITIES ACT, 53
Pa.C.S. 5601 et seq., AS
AMENDED, FOR THE PURPOSES OF EXERCISING
ANY AND ALL POWERS
CONFERRED ON AUTHORITIES BY SAID ACT INCLUDING, WITHOUT LIMITATION, THE PROJECTS
SPECIFIED IN THIS ORDINANCE; THE EXECUTION
AND FILING OF ARTICLES
OF INCORPORATION FOR
THE AUTHORITY; THE
TRANSFER OF ASSETS
AND LIABILITIES TO THE
AUTHORITY; AND THE DISSOLUTION OF THE TOWNSHIPS AND BOROUGHS
EXISTING MUNICIPAL AUTHORITIES AFTER THEIR
OPERATIONS HAVE BEEN
TRANSFERRED TO AND
ASSUMED BY THE JOINT
AUTHORITY
Ordinance Section 1 declares the Boroughs and
Townships intention to create a new joint municipal authority.
Section 2 states that the
name of the new joint Authority will be the Weaverland Valley Authority.
Section 3 states the proposed Articles of Incorporation for the Authority, which
provide the proposed Authority name and address; the
Authority is to be formed under Pennsylvanias Municipality Authorities Act, 53
Pa.C.S. 5601 et seq., as
amended; the names of all
current municipal authorities
in existence for both municipalities; the names of the incorporating municipalities
and their current officers and
members; the names and
terms of the initial Board of
the new Authority; and provisions that the Articles supersede any conflicts with any
future Bylaws or governing
documents of the Authority.
Section 4 authorizes the
municipalities officers to execute and file the Articles of
Incorporation and to establish the Authority.
Section 5 lists the municipalities appointments to the
initial Authority Board.
Section 6 provides that the
Authority may exercise any
and all powers conferred on
authorities by the Municipality
Authorities Act including,
without limitation, assuming
and providing the sewer and
water services currently provided by the municipalities
and their existing authorities.
Section 7 provides that after
the new Authority notifies the
municipalities and their existing authorities that it is prepared to assume and provide
each of the sewer and water
services, operations, and
projects of each of the municipalities and their existing
authorities, they will commence actions to transfer or
lease all of the rights, titles,
and interests in their respective sewer and water assets
and liabilities to the Authority,
and will thereafter dissolve
the existing old authorities.
Said Section also appoints
the new Authority as the exclusive authority to provide
water and sewer services to
the municipalities; authorizes
the Authority to use the public street and right-of-way
subsurfaces for its pipes and
facilities; provides for joint cooperation in obtaining grants
and governmental approvals;
and provides that the municipalities and the Authority will
hold semiannual meetings to
review the Authoritys operations.
Section 8 provides that the
adoption of the ordinances
are necessary for the benefit
of the citizens of the municipalities.
Section 9 is a severability
clause providing for the continued validity of the ordinances in the event any provision or part thereof is
declared unconstitutional, illegal, or invalid.
Section 10 provides that except as specifically described
in the ordinances, all relevant
codes, ordinances, regulations, and policies of the muContinued
Next Column

Classieds
C9

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2016 n CONTACT: 291-8711, CLASS@LNPNEWS.COM

Lancaster

CL

FIND WHAT YOURE LOOKING FOR!


n Information .............C8

n Stuff .........................C10

n Financial ..................C11

n Automotive .............C9

n Services ...................C11

n Rentals .....................C11

n Recreation ...............C9

n Employment ..........C11

n Real Estate ..............C11

LEGAL NOTICES

nicipalities shall remain in full


force and effect as previously
enacted and amended.
Section 11 a repealer
clause providing that all
statutes, ordinances, rules,
regulations, or policies that
are inconsistent with the ordinances are repealed.
Section 12 provides that the
ordinances shall become effective upon enactment.
The full text of the proposed
ordinances may be examined
at the above municipalities
office addresses and at the
offices of Lancaster Newspapers, Inc., 8 West King
Street, Lancaster, Pennsylvania, during their respective
normal business hours.
EAST EARL TOWNSHIP
BOARD OF SUPERVISORS
and TERRE HILL
BOROUGH COUNCIL

MEETINGNOTICE
The Lancaster-Lebanon Intermediate Unit 13 Board of
School Directors will hold a
Budget Work Session at 5:45
p.m. on Wednesday, February 10, 2016. Committee
meetings will be held beginning at 6:45 p.m. prior to the
regularly scheduled Board
Meeting at 7:30 p.m. The
meetings will be held at the
IU 13s Conference and
Training Center located in the
Burle Business Park, 1020
New Holland Avenue, Lancaster, PA.
Gina Brillhart
Board Secretary
NOTICE OF
SHERIFFS SALE
IN THE COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS
OF LANCASTER COUNTY,
PENNSYLVANIA
NO. 15-00325
WILMINGTON
TRUST
COMPANY, AS SUCCESSOR
TRUSTEE
TO
CITIBANK,
N.A.,
AS
TRUSTEE FOR STRUCTURED ASSET SECURITIES
CORPORATION,
MORTGAGE
PASSTHROUGH CERTIFICATES,
SERIES 2005-11H
Vs.
MATT GRUBE
NOTICE TO: MATT GRUBE
NOTICE OF SHERIFFS
SALE OF REAL PROPERTY
Being Premises:
508
FAIRVIEW AVENUE, LANCASTER, PA 17603-5716
Being in City of Lancaster,
County of LANCASTER,
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, 338-06323-0-0000
Improvements consist of
residential property.
Sold as the property of MATT
GRUBE
Your house (real estate) at
508 FAIRVIEW AVENUE,
LANCASTER, PA 176035716 is scheduled to be sold
at the Sheriffs Sale on
03/30/2016 at 01:30 PM, at
the LANCASTER County
Courthouse, 50 North Duke
Street, Lancaster, PA 176022805, to enforce the Court
Judgment of $67,983.35 obtained by, WILMINGTON
TRUST COMPANY, AS SUCCESSOR TRUSTEE TO
CITIBANK,
N.A.,
AS
TRUSTEE FOR STRUCTURED ASSET SECURITIES
CORPORATION,
MORTGAGE
PASSTHROUGH CERTIFICATES,
SERIES 2005-11H (the mortgagee), against the above
premises.
PHELAN HALLINAN
DIAMOND & JONES, LLP
Attorney for Plaintiff
NOTICE TO CONDEMNEES
OF CONDEMNATION
TO: The unknown heirs,
successors, assigns, and all
persons, firms, or associations claiming right, title or interest from or under LLOYD
S. ASHBY, hereinafter called
the Condemnees:
You are hereby notified that:
1. A Declaration of Taking
was filed by the Redevelopment Authority of the City of
Lancaster
(Authority)
against the property located
at 442 New Dorwart St., Lancaster, PA, (the Property) in
the Court of Common Pleas
of Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, on January 29,
2016, which Declaration is indexed to CI-16-00794.
2. The Condemnees are
unknown heirs, successors,
assigns, and all persons,
firms, or associations claiming right, title or interest from
Continued
Next Column

LEGAL NOTICES

Classieds are fast,


easy and affordable. Go
online to LancClassied.
com and click on PLACE
YOUR AD. Or call 291-8711
to speak to a Classied ad
representative.

LEGAL NOTICES

BART TOWNSHIP

BOARD OF SUPERVISORS

STATEMENT OF RECEIPTS AND EXPENDITURES


FOR THE CALENDAR YEAR 2015
CASH BALANCE JANUARY 1, 2015
REVENUES & OTHER FINANCING SOURCES
TAXES
LICENSES & PERMITS
FINES & FORFEITS
INTEREST, RENTS & ROYALTIES
INTERGOVERNMENTAL REVENUES
CHARGES FOR SERVICES
OPERATING GRANT
OTHER FINANCING SERVICES
TOTAL REVENUES & OTHER FINANCING SOURCES
EXPENDITURES & OTHER FINANCING USES
GENERAL GOVERNMENT
PUBLIC SAFETY
PUBLIC WORKS - SANITATION
PUBLIC WORKS - HIGHWAYS
CULTURE AND RECREATION
EMPLOYER PAID BENEFITS & WITHHOLDING ITEMS
INSURANCE
TOTAL EXPENDITURES & OTHER FINANCING USES
CASH BALANCE DECEMBER 31, 2015

$ 390,557
$ 13,032
$ 850
$ 2,162
$ 169,359
$ 40,924
$ 7,500
$ 22
$ 624,406
$ 79,177
$ 71,071
$ 7,103
$ 474,581
$ 6,400
$ 81,494
$ 11,815
$ 731,641
$ 438,643

VALERIA L. KEENE, TREASURER - BART TOWNSHIP BOARD OF SUPERVISORS


CHAIRMAN
BOARD OF AUDITORS: LEONARD BROWN
SECRETARY
ANN SMOKER
AUDITOR
ANGIE FRITZ

LEGAL NOTICES

LEGAL NOTICES

or under Lloyd S. Ashby, the


former owner of the Property.
3. The Condemnor is the
Authority, a public body, corporate and politic, exercising
the public powers of the
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania as an agency thereof,
organized and existing under
the laws of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, having its principal office at 120
N. Duke Street, Lancaster,
PA 17602.
4. This condemnation is authorized by the Urban Redevelopment Law of Pennsylvania, 35 P.S. 1701 et seq.
and the Eminent Domain
Code, 26 Pa. C.S.A. 101 et
seq., as amended.
5. Resolutions authorizing
the condemnation of the
Property and authorizing the
filing of the Declaration of
Taking were duly enacted by
the Authority on November
17, 2015 and December 15,
2015, respectively.
The
record of the proceedings
and certified copies of said
Resolutions may be examined at the aforementioned
office of the Authority.
6. The public purpose of the
condemnation is the elimination of blight by residential rehabilitation and related reuse
of the Property hereby condemned.
7. The Property condemned by the Authority is
identified as Lancaster
County Tax Parcel Account
No. 338-62067-0-0000.
8. Title to the Property acquired by Condemnor is fee
simple absolute.
9. A Property (Tax) Map
showing the Property may be
examined at the aforementioned office of the Condemnor or at the County Assessment Office, Lancaster
County Courthouse, 150 N.
Queen St. Lancaster, PA.
10. Just compensation for
the taking the Property is secured by a bond in an unspecified amount, without
surety, which bond was filed
pursuant to Section 303 of
the Eminent Domain Code.
11. If the Condemnees wish
to challenge the power or the
right of the Condemnor to appropriate the Property, the
sufficiency of the security, the
procedure followed by the
Condemnor or the Declaration of Taking, the Condemnees shall file Preliminary
Objections within thirty (30)
days after publication of this
notice.
Frank P. Mincarelli, Esquire
Attorney I.D. #19506
Blakinger Thomas, PC
28 Penn Square
Lancaster, PA 17603
Attorneys for the
Redevelopment
Authority of the City of
Lancaster

The monthly meeting of the


Salisbury Township Zoning
Hearing Board will be held on
Tuesday, February 23, 2016
at 7:00 P.M. in the Township
Municipal Building at 5581
Old Philadelphia Pike, Gap,
Pa. The following public hearings will be held:
Abram M. Stoltzfus of 574
Spring Garden Road, Gap,
PA 17527 is requesting modification of a prior decision
and any Special Exceptions
and or Variances under/from
Chapter 27 of the Salisbury
Township Code of Ordinances, Part 2, Section 201
to be permitted to subdivide a
portion of a residential lot to
add it back to the parent farm
property and at a later date
resubdivide this same portion
of land and add it back to the
subject residential lot, a Variance from Section 201.12 to
allow subdivision of a property with no subdividable
rights as well as to not include the subdivisions as part
of this case as the final remaining subdividable right for
the farm property and a Variance from Section 201.5 to
allow the remaining residential property to be greater
than maximum permissible
lot size as well as any other
Special Exceptions or Variances needed. The subject
properties are located at 725
White Horse Road and 705
White Horse Road, Gap, PA
17527 and are within the AAgricultural district.
Vernon J. Beiler of 5265
Hammond Road, New Holland, PA 17557 is requesting
a Special Exception under
Chapter 27 of the Salisbury
Township Code of Ordinances, Part 2, Section
202.3.G to construct additional residential accessory
space, subject to Sections
302.9 and 469 and a Variance from Section 202.4 to
be allowed to exceed lot
maximum lot coverage requirements. The subject
property is located within the
R-Rural Residential district.
Jana Leigh McWhorter and
Douglas Sheaffer of 46 E. 7th
Street, Landsdale, PA 19446
are requesting a Variance
from Chapter 27 of the Salisbury Township Code of Ordinances, Part 2, Section 203.2
to be permitted to establish a
day spa within an existing
structure currently used as a
dwelling. The subject property located at 5349 Strasburg Rd, Kinzer, PA 17535
and is within the R-1-Residential district.
Salisbury Township

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PUBLIC NOTICE
The Lancaster Area Sewer
Authority will hold its regular
monthly board meetings
on the 4th Thursday of each
month in 2016 and January
2017, except November
and December 2016 when it
will be held on the 3rd Thursday of the month.
The meetings will begin at
7:30 a.m. at 130 Centerville
Road, Lancaster, PA.
Michael A. Kyle
Executive Director

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PUBLIC AUCTIONS

CATALOGUED ANTIQUE
SALE
Friday, Feb 12, 2016 at
2:00 pm
Saturday, Feb 13, 2016 at
9:00 am
Sale to be at Horst Auction
Center, 50 Durlach Rd,
Ephrata, PA 17522
Preview: Fri, Feb 12, 8:00 am
to 9:00 pm and Sat, Feb 13,
7:00 am throughout the sale
Contemporary PA Folk Art,
Modern Artwork, Duck Decoys, Lighting, Toys, Books
& Paper, Glassware, Decorated Stoneware, Redware,
Majolica, Yelloware, Folk Art
incl. John Long Betty Lamp,
Peter Derr Betty Lamp &
Dough Scraper, Handdrawn Fraktur, Lehnware,
Artwork incl. David Brumbach Original Watercolor,
Eastern Artwork; Early
China & Glassware, Primitives, Hardware, Woodenware, Copper, Textiles incl.
PA Quilts, Coverlets & Samplers, Period, Antique & Reproduction Furniture.
Full Color Catalogues may
be picked up at Horst Auction Center, 50 Durlach Rd,
Ephrata, PA for $15. Catalogue is also available on
our website:
www.horstauction.com
Live On-Line Bidding
Available.
No Buyers Premium
Accepted Payments - Cash
& PAcheck. Visa, Mastercard &Debit Card with 3%
fee. No out of state checks
without prior approval.
Auctioneers:AU1767L
Horst Auctioneers
Phone 717-738-3080
Fax 717-738-2132

Cars for sale


Vehicle Financing/
Leasing
Classic/Specialty
Vehicles
Parts/Access.
Auto Services
Pick-Ups
SUVs/Crossovers
Vans
Utility Trailers
Trucks/Trailers/
Construction
Cars/Trucks Wanted

PUBLIC AUCTIONS

AUCTION
Hoffman Building
Quarryville
SAT., FEB. 27 at 9 a.m.
Furniture-Antiques
Framed Pieces-Jewelry
Antique Holiday Postcards
Lawn-Garden-Tools
HHGoods-Box Lots
Auctioneer AU3414L
Jessica Shaub Meyer
(717) 464-3541
shaubservices.com
MORPHY AUCTIONS
Sat. & Sun.
February 6 & 7 at 9am
General Antiques Auction
Over 1,300 lots of general
antiques. Auction includes
advertising, fine & decorative art, dolls, figural cast
iron, marbles, pottery, silver,
toys, and much more.
Bid live, by phone, or online.
2000 N. Reading Rd
Denver, PA 17517
717-335-3435
www.morphyauctions.com
AH001884

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Sip your coffee...

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aAutomotive
aReal Estate
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CLASSIC/SPECIALTY
VEHICLES

CARSWANTED;Classic,
Muscle, Sports & Antique.
Jeff Gast 717-575-4561

CARS/TRUCKS WANTED
$50-$2000 paid for junk
autos free removal
24 hrs cell 989-6980

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291-8711

PUBLICSALE
ANTIQUES,
COLLECTIBLES,
HOUSEHOLD GOODS,
TOOLS
ENCLOSED POWER
WASH TRAILER
Wednesday, February 10
2016 at 2:00 P.M.

Photos representing the entire auction will be posted


on our website
www.horstauction.com on
Tuesday, February 9.
Sale to be held at the Horst
Auction Center, 50 Durlach
Rd, Ephrata, PA 17522
Accepted Payments - Cash
& PAcheck. Visa, Mastercard &Debit Card with 3%
fee. No out of state checks
without prior approval.
Auctioneers:AU1767L
Horst Auctioneers
Phone 717-738-3080
Fax 717-738-2132
CLASSIFIED ADS DO THE
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291-8711

MON FEB 8 9AM


QUALITY ANTIQUES
COUNTRY
COLLECTIBLES
LONGABERGER
COINS, JEWELRY
TOYS, ART, TOOLS
NEXT SALE FEB 22
boltzauctions.com
Boltz Auction Center
3601 Columbia Ave
Lancaster PA 17603
717-392-4257
AU002953L

RECREATION

Public Auction

Coins, Carnival,
Dep. Glass,
C.X. Carlson
Watercolor &
Bird, Jewelry, Violin,
Banjo, Star War Cards,
Batman Music Boxes

Bikes/Motorcycles
Misc. RVs
Travel Trailers/
Campers
Boats/Aviation
Sports/Exercise
Equipment
Swim Pools/Spas

SAT. FEB. 6 9 am

Al Starr Bldg, Willow Street

SPORTS/
EXERCISE EQUIPMENT
300 Win. mag w/3-9 scope
12 ga. slug gun w/scope call
Call 293-9805

The Lancaster County Youth Aid Panel


Program is seeking volunteers to serve on
various community panels. The Youth Aid
Panel, comprised of citizens of various ages
and professions, has 2 important goals: to
prevent youths from becoming more deeply
involved in delinquent activities, and to make
youths responsible for their actions through
service to the victim and community. Panel
candidates must complete 8 weeks of training,
1 evening per week for 8 weeks. Training is
scheduled to begin in late March.
Contact Cheryl Ludwig at
717-626-6432 or
cludwig@co.lancaster.pa.us
for more information.
If you are a non-prot and
interested in listing your
volunteer opportunities in
the LNP Volunteer Corner
Please Contact Alexandra:
ahenry@lnpnews.com

Volunteer Corps

lending a hand

C10 FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2016

LNP

III

LANCASTER, PA.

BARGAIN COUNTER
New items added daily!

STUFF
HOUSEHOLD
GOODS/APPLIANCES

Cleaning house and


have items to sell?
New lower priced
Merchandise ads available,
4 lines of text with photo!
7 days $35, 14 days $50
Call 291-8711
Thermador 5 burner LP cooktop in excellent condition. All
parts and paper work included.
$225
Call
717.354.3000
GE Freezer. 2 1/2w, 3ft long.
$350, cash only. Microwave
$20. (717) 719-2844

MEDICAL MERCHANDISE

GOLDEN LIFT CHAIR:


Excellent! Paid $2300,now
asking $1500. ALSO
Pronto M91 Wheelchair,
exc cond $300. 492-4527

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MISC. FOR SALE

Moving Sale! Riding mower


$550, self propelled mower
$200, Assort yard equip. sofa
bed $150 obo. Call 687-5638

WANTED TO BUY
Wanted:Abner Zook or
Aaron Zook 3-D ART.
Fair price paid in cash
215-257-9286
A top price paid for almost
anything old. 413-2927
GARAGE
SALE

*$5$*(
6$/(6

CONESTOGA VALLEY
Conestoga Valley indoor
Flea Market Sat. Feb. 6th,
7-1 War Mem. bldg. 54
West Main Leola

EYE
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BARGAIN COUNTER
IKEA Full, bed with mattress
& box spring. $300.00 717682-6065
46 in Samsung LED TV $250
Excellent cond 381-1377
Desk chair black print like
new $20 285-3620
Bunkie Board $20 466-9422

BARGAIN COUNTER
UNDER $150
Used 2x4s Plywood Boards.
$1ea. (717) 355-0367.
Amflyr electric switches 2pr
works $79 426-2820
Storm door commercial 80
x36x1 brown $50 572-9159
Brown/WH alum trim coil
40x14 $35 687-0942
Leafblwr Shindaiwa EB240S
$140. 717-951-3239
Chevy ramhorn exst. momifolds. $50 484-706-2175
Community silverware plated
12 pl setting $10 615-6287

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lancasteronline.com/
classifieds

MAIL

Your ad to us at
8 West King Street
PO Box 1328
Lancaster, PA 17603

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Dont delay!
1937, 33 PA Hunting Lic. $45.
each 717-314-8575
Adult skis 2 pair excellent
condition $35ea 393-5975
400k cp Hi-beam spotlight
12V $10 397-4506
2000sb mini autogrph helmet
kearse $35 341-0796
Pull out sofa bed $100 8080675
Panasonic cordless phone w/
ftrs nv usd $20 333-6431
Metal tie downs fit Nissan
Frontier pair $75 917-0200
Snowmobile helmet circus
brand large $50 572-9159
Sell Those Appliances With
An Ad in Classified.
US silver dollars 14, 15, 16,
$27. (717) 291-0434
WWII German Armor print
$145 717-293-8141

BARGAIN COUNTER
UNDER $150

BARGAIN COUNTER
UNDER $150

BARGAIN COUNTER
UNDER $150

BARGAIN COUNTER
UNDER $150

Whirlpool Refrigerator, works


well. $135. (717) 327-9939
Kindle Fire HD book for dummies lk new $5 397-4590
Realistic receiver STA-80 lrg
speakers $75 203-1375
5 gallon food grade buckets
$3ea 786-8711
Tire all weather 17 $80 717808-4527
Ladies L/XL sweatshirts &
sweaters $1ea 733-0229
Reading railroad history book
go pages 1958 $10 715-7339
Gray mailbox, like new, gd.
cond. $15. (717) 4455405
Daybed, twin, metal frame
$40 314-7699
1964 JFK Silver 50c HiGrade $14. (717) 299-0550
Galvanized tubs no.3 with
drop handles $10 786-0779
42 Rear Projection TV $60
333-6431
Vintage silver offering plate.
$30. (717) 283-9720
Wood futon w/cushions/mattress ex cond $75 615-5515
Della Robbia teaset, 8
pieces. $20. (717) 367-5225
Penske Racing Fleetwood
lght switch plate $5 823-1715
Crystal
table
lamps
w/shades. $30. 413-9334
Sewing machine. Singer.
Portable. $35. 717. 681-3340
Nuwave induction CK top
NIB $75 917-0200
Sofa. $125. (717) 984-9632
Dress winter coat. Mens/Lg
$25. (717) 615-4235
Dark blue umpire shirts xl
$10ea 367-6384
Cabinet, 2 drawers with top
drawer. $65. (717) 327-9939
Cosco 17 alum ladder $50
394-4544
Baseball, Football, Basketball cards var $40 615-6287
Infant carrier Baby Bjorn $10
872-6945
Hoover round w/joystick
$149 717-984-9632
Engine hoist heavy duty 3 ton
$149 203-1313
Love seat & recliner, tan gd
cond $149 278-2584
Maytag side by side fridge
ice/water $125 653-0077
Old steamer trunk $40 OBO.
(717) 625-2134
S1m 115A hand grinder $20
653-4385
Rubbermaid garden tractor
cart $125 717-475-7631
Bow back chair thick pine
wood/stain $10 464-3864
Collection of knives from $29
up. (717) 615-4235.
Bumper pool table 5 Q stks
3x4 $105 426-2820
Musser chip can good condition $15 397-4590
Kitchen chair, green, good
shape. $20 (717) 4455-405
Cast iron hog trough 5ft long
$75 786-0779
1/4 pint R.R. milk bottle $25
553-2980
Beer tap system $140 2842710
3 pampered chef stone bakeware. $15. (717) 666-9692.
3 black skirts, knee length,
Sz12. $5ea. (717) 299-9769
Oakley thump sunglasses.
128mlb. $100. 717-418-0095
Tire chains 67L small truck
size like new $30 537-5196

Womens long black leather


coat xl $50 892-7325
Tomato press. $15. (717)
355-0367.
Floor lamp for sewing/needle
wk. $70. (717) 615-4235.
TV 11-inch screen. Works
well $10 733-0229.
JFK 50th memorial silver dollars, $99. (717) 291-0434
CIVIL WAR original ART Antietum $149 717-293-8141
1993 Oldsmobile 88/98 shop
manual $50 285-5846
All kinds of Phillies cards 25
each 610-273-3742
20 Kat Martin paperbacks.
$5. (717) 666-9692.
Tree branch trimmer (L/H).
$30 OBO. (717) 808-5385
Table/2Chairs 31x48 obl.
white $25 342-8671
Like new 3 vivitar camera
flashes $60 397-9227
Great grey fur coat 16 shoulder 44 long $90 461-1848
High Fashion Knee high
boots, Lge, $35. 283-9720
Ladies Sweatshirts and
sweaters L/xl $1ea 733-0229
Trailer 4ftx6ft with title. $60
OBO. (717) 808-5385
81 donruss set w/ raines
rookie $35 341-0796
Leather boots & gloves. Sz
91/2, good. $50. 283-9720.
Round table, 46 plus 2
boards. $20. (717) 471-4829
White wooden baby dry sink
2 shlvs $50 442-3301
Heater large room very nice
oak $100 firm 537-5196
1993 Sears catalog like new
$15 397-4590
Boy scout brass bugle rexcraft old $50 7157339
Ben hogan golf cart bag
w/cover $20 413-4158
Two 6 plastic folding tables
$20ea 466-1601
Raleigh bicycle like new
Mens $80 468-3020
Wooden cabinet. $100. (717)
3279939.
Keyboard stands var. types
singl/multi $10 898-7043
Box of cassettes $60 3979227
1957 cadillac color catalog
$35 484-706-2175
AndyJohns Lg reversible
capecoat $15 394-4544
Mounted 1,000 piece puzzles
var scenes $10ea 397-4506
25 Various Vintage Post
Cards $25 717-314-8575
1927 New Holland Fair prize
ribbon $15 397-4506
26 neckties $1 each 4611848
Glass/wood/metal oblong tbl
48x18w $15 342-8671
Topps single packs 84-89 35
ct. with gum $65 406-9031
Ladies full length cashmere
coat beige $50 293-1765
Nursing pillow Boppie $10
872-6945
King, Queen, and Twin comforters $15ea 461-1848
Shop vacumn, $19. (717)
355-0367.
Vera Bradley purse $25 309-0228
1903-S Morgan silver $1 key
date. $90. (717) 299-0550.
Coffee table, 48 long. $20.
(717) 413-9334
Burpee Seed packets $1
872-6945

Pair 13 studed tires like new


$100 284-2710
Buddy-L dump truck steel red
very good $50 656-6869
PIAA umpire jacket like new
xl $20 367-6384
6ft artificial figus tree & lights.
$10. (717) 355-0674
Medium size acoustic guitar
jay nice $35 397-4607
Music box with cats all
around it $10 733-0229
Tobacco scale with 8lb
weight old $30 537-5196
Coach messenger purse - blk
$40 309-0228
Orange and black hunting
coat sz 44 $40 653-4385
Soft small dog bed like new
$10 733-0229
Tires studs 17 $80 717-8084527
Futon sofa bed (metal) w/ 3
covers $25 (717) 299-9382
Pull out sofa bed $100 8080675
4 cherry wooden table chairs
great cond $120 442-3301
Kenmore gas dryer. $110.
(717) 418-0095.
Mounted 1,000 piece puzzles
var scenes $10ea 397-4506
Concertmte kybrd 100 sonds
adptr stnd $25 898-7043
Antique small student desk
$60 808-0675
Disneys Treasury Childrens
Classics books $5 464-3864
Rookie cards favre aikmen
iverson $5-15pc 406-9031
Kenmore heavy duty elec.
dryer $110. (717) 418-0095
lightweight 15x18x29 metal
file cab $5 299-1566
Ford car wrenches 4 old $25
715-7339
Winter coat, black, Sz 12,
NIB. $25. (717) 299-7369
Crib mattress $15 464-2537
8 ft flourescent light. $50.
(717) 335-3717.
Blk 2 pc faux leather w/ ottoman $75 (717) 299-9382
Cowwbian vice 4.5 $25 6254601
Jaclyn Smith dishes, 16 service. NIB. $60. 717-367-5225
Talbots red coat, Sz 12, nice.
$25. (717) 299-7369.
Full & queen size box spring
& matts $120 442-3301
Girls toddler bed w/ mattress.
$30 OBO. (717) 808-5385.
4 kitchen chairs, metal
frames. $15. 717-413-9334
Grey umpire pants 38x32
$5ea 367-6384
King quilt, Bl/Whi, 4 matching
pillows. $60. (717) 355-0674
Nortic track ski machine excellent $25 285-5846
Large yard flag Valentines
Day $3 464-3864
Cane seated chairs.(4). Nice,
$15ea. (717) 681-3340
Aluminum platform shop cart
5L $75 203-1375
Ladies steel toe shoes size
6.5 $10 733-0229
Various Disney Framed Pin
Sets $25/each 314-7699
Eagles football tree carving
$60 203-1375
Brass oval carved table 31.5
x 21.5 $100 892-7325
Buddy-L pick-up steel green
good $50 656-6869
Clipper Ship Original art oil
$135 717-293-8141

Vera Bradley purse - small


$20 717-309-0228
Goodyear Snow tires (2), NIB
14, $100. (717) 383-7870.
Computer desk 4 wide 5
high $25 553-2980
Toyota Tacoma 2011 front
rear schocks $70 723-0485
NIBRichard Petty 1984 STP
car $40 615-6287
Car cover simonize like new
$15 917-0200
Chefs choice electric knife
sharpener. $20. 666-9692
Paper shredder $25 4661601
Sim 115A hand sander 1/5
hrs $53 653-4385
Kennedy model S20 machinist chest $50 572-9159
1997 U.S. Mint Prestige Set
$125 717-314-8575
Mens Blk leather coat. Sz 42,
$39 OBO. (717) 299-0550
1907 Indian head penny excel cond $25 553-2980
Handheld washboard mfg. by
columbus $12 786-0779
All in one color laser printer
$50 808-0675
Amflyr billboard whistle loud
works $42 426-2820
Sewing mach cabinet cherry
4 drawer $50 336-7949
Like new Bello TV stand
$25 314-7699
Craftzman, 2.3cu in 2 cycle
chainsaw. NIB. 445-5405
Ron Howard bobble head
never used $50 397-9227
Barrels, steel & plastic. $8ea.
(717) 471-4829.
1988BB topps complete set
still wrapped $45 406-9031
Bissell rug shampooer used
1X $45 299-1566
Queen size mattress and box
spring $45 615-5515
Lexmark printer carts black
#23 3 for $10 285-5846
60 older Corvette mags
1980-2000 $18 656-6869
Lazy Boy swivel rocker chair
ivory $50 615-5515
VNTG Cattiva velvet paisley
coat $25 394-4544
Ford grill fits 90s F150 $30
687-0942
3 ceramic head 15-19 dolls
$25 299-1566
Cable tire chains for
truck/pickup $15pr. 471-4829
Valentines teddy bear, extra
large $10 464-2537
Sled, Flexible Flyer III, 55in,
old but good. $39 826-7587
Target brand corner nook din.
set $149 3428671
Stainless pots & pans, with
lids. $7ea. (717) 355-0674
Good old Craftsman tablesaw $50 466-1601
Pennies 59-09. Uncirculated
Lincoln. $30 (717) 291-0434
Small tv with antenna $45
984-9632
1961 chevrolet catalog all
models $35 484-706-2175
Pressure canner, 7qts, like
new. $45. (717) 681-3340
Music stands metal lightweight portable $3 898-7043
New goodyear wrangler mt/r
lt245/75R16 $60 687-0942

FREE ITEMS

Health Rider Exercise Machine Like New 917-0206


Pro Form Exercise Machine
Like New 917-0206

BARGAIN
COUNTER
NEW ITEMS ADDED DAILY
Limit 3 ads per week
Private individuals only
Price and phone number must be in ad
One item per ad
No gun-related items
All Bargain Counter ads must be prepaid
Deadline is at 3:00 on the business day before publication
NO pet ads (except FREE pets)

FREE for items $149 or less, or Swap ads.

12 / 2 lines for 3 consecutive days or


21 / 2 lines for 7 consecutive days for items $150+.
$

FREE Bargain Counter ads will ONLY be accepted


when entered online at
LancasterOnline.com/classifieds,
by emailing bargaincounter@LNPnews.com,
or by mailing the form below.

YOUR AD WILL BEGIN THE NEXT AVAILABLE DAY

Create your Bargain Counter ad below by writing one word per box.
Your ad can include up to 6 short words, plus a price and phone number.

LOADED
 
REDUCED

Price

Name ________________________________________________________
Address ______________________________________________________
City ______________________________ Zip _______________________
Phone _______________________________________________________

PAYMENT ENCLOSED

Phone

Mail to:
LNP MEDIA GROUP, Inc.
Bargain Counter
PO Box 1328
Lancaster, PA 17608

LNP

III

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2016 C11

LANCASTER, PA.

PET
PLACE
DOGS

DOGS

8 Beautiful Italian mastiffs. 10


wks. 4 males, 4 females.
Some black, some grey. Vet
checked and ready for new
homes! registered with ICCF.
Contact Trent Musser 717679-9920. $1000 obo.
AKC Golden Retriever Puppy
Female, 13 weeks old, shots,
dewormed, w/health certificate. $600 - 717-203-7803

Redish Mini Labradoodles:


Shots, wormed, very cute &
adorable! Vet checked. $875
cash only. 717-529-0894

Selling a pet?
New lower priced pet ads
available, 4 lines of
text with photo!
7 days $35, 14 days $50
Call 291-8711
Vizsla puppies for sale.
Order yours, now ready.
3/3/16 F-$1,400, M-$1,200
(717) 445-5680
Yorkshire Terrier, Female, 5
months old, up to date on
shots. (717) 394-4674.

Cute special very family like


South African Boerboel pups.
shots & wormed call to
discuss price 529-3588 ext 0
Foxhound, M, 7yrs. Spotty
flunked fox hunting, great
companion, sweet natured
and obedient Mt Gt 575-0948

CATS
Persian Kittens
cfa reg,shots.
717-569-6226

German Shorthair Pointer


Puppies & Beagle Puppies
AKC, wc bloodline, housepet/hunters 383-1762

New In Town? Watch These Columns


For All Your Household Items.

291-8711

Sell Those Appliances


With An Ad
in Classified.

MISCELLANEOUS PETS

Maltipoo pups, shots and


wormed. Red/Tan w/ white
markings. Very cute, family
raised $925 610-273-7362

Miniature potbelly piglets


cute and energetic looking
for a loving home asking
$200 Omar 548-4235 x1

SERVICES
LEGAL SERVICES

HOME IMPROVEMENTS

DIVORCE $219 Total


Davis Divorce Law, Pgh. No
Travel. Uncontested. 24/7
Free info 1-800-486-4070

Need a quality built


deck or garage?
Call: AARON FISHER
FULLYINSURED
717-205-6675

NURSING/ELDERLY CARE

NEW!

CAREGIVER: I am a Christian woman w/15 years exp.


Insured. Lanc. vicinity. For
details call 717-368-7369

Swap your stuff for FREE


291-8711
Home Improvement Specialist. All types, Basement finishing/Flooring. 30yrs exp.
Quality is our goal!
PA 044021 610-842-0921

MOVING/STORAGE

For Residential & Commercial Hauling & Waterproofing.


Contact: 717-587-4981

HAULING

ASPHALT PAVING

GENERAL HAULING
Clean up
Buildings, Basements
Yards.
392-7855

Allied Asphalt Paving,


seal coating, patching,+
more! WINTER SPECIALS
FREE ESTIMATES! 867-8456

BARGAIN COUNTER
7 DAYS
A WEEK!
email your ad to bargaincounter@LNPnews.com today!

PROFESSIONAL

PROFESSIONAL

EMPLOYMENT
Schools / Instruction
Career Services
Employment
Agencies
Medical Dental
Office / Clerical
Stores / Retailing
Restaurants / Food
Service
Mechanical / Trades
Technical
Sales
Management
Education
Professional
Transportation
General Help
Volunteer
Domestic Help
Situations Wanted
Child Care
Nursing/Elderly Care

MEDICAL/ DENTAL
Dermatology Physicians
Seeking RN/LPN for PartTime staff nurse position.
Send resume to Dermatology
Physicians, Inc., 203 N. Lime
St., Lancaster, PA 17602 or
dpinurses@dejazzd.com
PARTTIMETriage Nurse Wed,
Thurs, and Fri 8:30-5:00 must
be flexible to fill in for vacations.
Must have knowledge of EMR
and Insurance Verification &
Authorization. Paid vacation
available.
Send resume to:
Office Manager
1869 Charter Ln
Suite 101
Lancaster PA 17601

FINANCIAL
FINANCIAL

DIGITAL FILE SPECIALIST


(EVENING SHIFT 5PM TO 1AM)
(VARIES WITH ROTATING WEEKENDS)
PRE-PRESS DEPARTMENT

Were seeking a dedicated and organized individual


who will be responsible for processing and editing
supplied digital les to meet press specications for
various LNP Media Group, Inc publications. Great
position for a graphic arts graduate who has
some experience in digital le manipulation and
is hungry to build their skill set to reach the next
level. The right individual will also be responsible
for efciently converting both digital photos and
scanned photographs into quality black & white and
color halftones for LNP Media Group, Inc., Lancaster
Farming, Lancaster County Weeklies, and their
customers.
Qualications:
Degree in graphic arts or signicant related
experience
Understanding of both Mac and PC operating
systems.
Computer literate and procient in Photoshop,
InDesign and Acrobat, plus some familiarity with
Illustrator
Good working knowledge of color theory and be
able to convert that theory into practice
Good color vision as demonstrated by successful
passing of color acuity test
We offer a competitive wage and great benets.
Apply today at steinmancommunications.com/jobs
EOE

OFFICE/ CLERICAL

GENERAL HELP

Alarm Dispatcher
Seeking motivated, career
minded person FT, 4-12 2nd
Shift
Accurate data entry
Phone skills
Customer relations
Weekend work as
scheduled
Apply within Yarnell Security
Systems, 131 Elmwood Rd,
Lanc.

MECHANICAL/
TRADES
PROJECT
ESTIMATOR
needed for lumber and building material retailer. Excellent
starting salary & benefits,
401k & management status.
Saturdays a must. Computer
knowledge necessary, please
e-mail
resumes
to
jud@greenhillslumber.com

Reach The HOT


Real Estate
Prospects

Place your Real Estate For Sale


Display ad in this newspaper.
Call

291-8711

Trago Mechanical Inc.


is seeking an experienced
HVAC Lead Installer.
Position requires at least
5 years experience, good
leadership skills and
quality workmanship.
Resumes can be faxed to
717-464-6441 or emailed to
Tmoss@tragomech.com.

OFFICE/BUSINESS
PROPERTY

n E MAIN ST NEW HOLLAND - Prime downtown


New Holland commercial
space. Great for office, medical/doctor, chiropractor or
shared office spaces. Ten private rooms. 30 parking
spaces. $449,900 ML239289

Ind./Comm. Realtors
717-293-4477
View More Than 300
Properties Online at:
highassociates.com/
propertysearch
Rental-Office
200 sq ft office space
$215/mo incl util
Stowaway 569-8229
Auto repair shop. 3280 SF.
& 7 gar. $425,000. Rltr
Spencer Speros 808-1942

GENERAL HELP

RENTALS

Newspaper Motor
Routes Available

RESTAURANTS/
FOOD SERVICE
SERVER
No sched. restrictions
Apply at Chanceys E. Pete

Business
Business
Opportunities //
Opportunities
Investment
Investment
Office/Business
Office/Business
Property
Property
Investment Property
Property
Investment
Loans // Mortgages
Mortgages
Loans

TOWN
New Providence

STREET

RT. # EST. $

Main St., Pennsy Rd., Weiser Mobile Home Park

Marietta/Maytown Rt. 441, 772 & 743k


Lancaster

Check
For New
Routes
Daily!

X939

$1,025

District F $800-$955

Valleybrook Estates

U972

$1,150

7 DAY DELIVERY
*Must be 18+ years. Have a Valid Driver's License. Dependable vehicle required.

Call For More Info


TRANSPORTATION
FULL TIME
DOCK LOADER/DRIVER
MUST HAVE CDL CLASS
A LICENSE
2nd SHIFT
Sunday thru Thursday
.Competitive starting
Salary
.Full Benefit Package
.Paid Vacation & Holidays
.Company Match 401K
Get application
www.esbenshadefarmmill.
com
Send resume to
Fax: 717-653-6922 or
Apply in person at:
Esbenshade Farms
220 Eby Chiques Road
Mount Joy PA 17552

291-8611
GENERAL HELP

Deliver Phone Books


Work Your Own Hours,
Have Insured Vehicle, Must
be at Least 18 yrs old, Valid DL.
No Experience Necessary.
1-800-518-1333 x 224
www.deliverthephonebook.com
ADVERTISE YOUR SERVICE WHERE THE
READERS ARE!
IN THE
SERVICES COLUMN
MONTHLY RATES
AVAILABLE
Call Today!!
291-8711
EXP
HELP:
Plowing,
snowthrowing, shoveling.
Excellent pay. 717-293-5094

The

Classified

C O N N E C T I O N

Furnished Apts./City
Furn. Apts./Suburbs
Unfurn. Apts./City
Unfurn. Apts./
Suburb
Homes / City
Homes / Suburbs
Mobile Home Rentals
Misc. Rental Property
Shared Living
Rooms for Rent
Garages / Storage
Farms / Land
Vacation Rentals
Misc. Rentals
Wanted to Rent
Rental Services

UNFURNISHED
APARTMENTS/CITY
AVAILABLE! 1 BDRM Units
N Queen & Columbia Ave.
$550/mo App Fee, Sec Dep,
Ref, No Pets. Investors
Choice RE 717-468-9505

UNFURNISHED
APARTMENTS/SUBURBS
CEDAR ACRES EAST APTS
All gas community, cable
TV, all utils. but elec. incl.
CV Schools. 397-4968.

Monterey (Leola), efficiency


2nd fl. incl. heat & most util.
$600 plus sec. 278-6847
Wellington Chase 1-2-3 BR
Apts. ALSO 2 & 3BR Townhomes. Mt Joy 717-653-2328

HOMES/CITY
S. Arch Comfy 2BR brick row
close to city-front&rear yards.
$785/mo+ LancRE 399-8010

HOMES/SUBURBS

E-town - Brand new lux townhomes 3br, 1st flr master, 2


car garage avail 3/1, $1900
+utl call 717-208-6100
WARWICK, 4BR, 2BA, 2-car
gar., fully remod. $1500/mo +
utils. Eric, 717-626-1778

SHARED LIVING
Wheatland Hills,1BR, shared
common area, access to
laundry $550 incls. utils.
Steve 717-380-9420

Heres what our customers have to say:


Your local connection between local buyers and sellers. LNP Classifieds make it easy to
buy & sell, rent and advertise your services locally. LNP Classifieds is the premier hub
for local buyers looking for reliable options for local purchases.

LNP Classifieds

WORK!

REAL ESTATE
Homes for Sale / City
Homes for Sale /
Suburbs
Open Houses
Manufactured
Housing
Misc. Real Estate
Lots / Acreage
Farms / Farmland
Out of Area Property
Real Estate Wanted
Real Estate Services

HOMES FOR SALE/


SUBURBS

Ford 500 SEL


The car sold on the first day...WOW!! Mark S. of Mount Joy
had great results advertising in the LNP Classifieds.

Dodge Neon
J. Elslager of Columbia sold her Dodge Neon in 2 hours with
her ad in the LNP Classifieds.

Ford Excursion LTD


One call!!! Sold 1st day in the paper! Larry G. of Salunga.
Thats the POWER of LNP Classifieds.

Harley Street Glide


Excellent results. Sold very quickly!
said Tina L. of LNP.

House for Rent


So overwhelmed with a huge response!
said Jill McK. of LNP.

MGB 80 Convertible
Received 10 calls and sold the car to the first person!
Robert M. of LNP. Thanks to advertising in the
LNP Classifieds.

Magnificent Victorian
3 story, 2 Acres & Barn
11 BR, grand foyer, fireplace,
towering ceilings, wrap
around porch, 2-story barn,
B&B possibilities. $429,900.
Chris S. Habecker
Real Estate. 872-5407
4BR, 3 full bath condo, finished lower level $295,000
Charles & Assoc.
R.E. Inc. 299-2100

REAL ESTATE WANTED


I Buy Properties in any
condition. Lancaster Co.
Mike Rohrbach 299-5266

C12

SPORTS

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2016

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

COLLEGE ATHLETICS

Rutgers new AD looks to dig out program


Athletic director Hobbs inherits position at low point for the university, polluted with scandals on and off the field
DAVID PORTER

The first rule is,


when youre digging
yourself into a hole,
stop digging.

ASSOCIATED PRESS

PISCATAWAY, N.J.
Rutgers new athletic director is unsparing when
asked how he plans to
turn around a program
after a series of embarrassing developments on
and off the field.
The first rule is, when
youre digging yourself
into a hole, stop digging,
Patrick Hobbs said. We
have to at a minimum
stop digging the hole,
and thats what Im going
to be about.
The hole seems more
like a crater at times.
Since 2009, questionable
behavior or oversight
has prompted the resignations or firings of two
mens basketball coaches, a football coach and
two athletic directors.
Last fall, several current and former football players were arrested and charged with
armed robbery and
other crimes. In its second year in the Big Ten
conference, Rutgers lost
seven of eight conference games and gave up
more than 40 points per
game. The mens basketball team, which hasnt
qualified for the NCAA
Tournament since 1991,
has lost 25 consecutive
Big Ten games.
The financial picture
isnt much more promising. In 2013-14, the athletic department had a
$36 million deficit that
had to be subsidized by
university discretionary funds and student
fees. That was the highest subsidy among 230
schools surveyed by USA
Today.

Patrick Hobbs, Rutgers athletic director

ASSOCIATED PRESS

In this Nov. 30, 2015, file photo, Rutgers new athletic director, Patrick Hobbs, reacts to
the crowd as he stands on the court during an NCAA college basketball game against
Wake Forest in Piscataway, N.J. Hobbs is inheriting a program awash in red ink and
reeling from several scandals over the last few years.

There was some cause


for optimism in a financial report released this
week that showed the
subsidy fell to about $24
million in the last fiscal
year, owing to a roughly
50 percent drop in direct
university support. Student fees remained the
same.
Still, the cumulative
deficit from 2013-14 to
2021-22 could exceed
$183 million, the Rutgers Senate Budget and
Finance Committee has
estimated.
By then, Rutgers will
be a full-fledged member of the powerful Big
Ten and stands to reap

a financial windfall by
sharing in bowl and
television rights money.
While that will have a
significant impact on the
bottom line as much
as $40 million per year,
by some estimates not
everyone sees it as a cure
for the departments financial problems.
Even then we wont
get out of the red unless we maintain serious control of spending,
which we havent shown
we can do, said economics professor Mark
Killingsworth, a budget
committee member.
The committee has
recommended eliminat-

ing the student fee, currently more than $300,


and not building or expanding any athletic
facilities until the department eliminates its
deficit.
Neither recommendation jibes with current
plans. Hobbs has made
it a primary mission to
improve facilities that
are generally considered
subpar compared to the
rest of the Big Ten. The
school plans to raise
$100 million to pay for
facility improvements,
an effort that will be aided by a new law that will
let Rutgers finance construction with up to $25

Lancaster Weather
TODAY

SATURDAY

41
23

44
24

SUNDAY

POP: 5%

Partly sunny

Partly sunny

Wind: SW 6-12 mph

Wind: WNW 3-6 mph

ALMANAC

REGION

24HOUR TEMPERATURE RECORD

LANCASTER
Breezy today with clouds giving
way to sun. High 39 to 43. Winds
northwest 10-20 mph. Partly
cloudy tonight. Low 21 to 25.
Winds light and variable.

60
50
40
30
12 AM 3

9 NOON 3

9 12 AM

Lancaster statistics through 7 p.m. at


Millersville University Weather Station

TEMPERATURE
Lancaster
54/40
Ephrata
48/41
New Holland
53/41
Lancaster (last year)
41/17
Normals for the day
39/22
Year to date high
60 on Jan. 10
Year to date low
5 on Jan. 25
PRECIPITATION
24 hours ending 7 p.m.
0.04
Month to date
1.15
Normal month to date
0.36
Month to date departure
+0.79
Year to date
4.54
Normal year to date
3.37
Year to date departure
+1.17
Greatest Feb. total
5.15 (1971)
Least Feb. total
0.23 (1968)
Source: www.atmos.millersville.edu/~wic

PRECIPITATION
Total precipitation for the 24-hour
period ending 7 p.m. yesterday

Brownstown
Columbia
County Park
Ephrata
Flory Mill
Manheim
Mount Joy
Smoketown
Truce

0.04
0.04
0.04
0.08
0.04
0.08
0.04
N.A.
N.A.

Source: Lancaster County Emergency


Management Agency

RIVER STAGES
Levels as of 7:00 a.m. yesterday

Susquehanna
at Harrisburg
at Marietta
Conestoga
at Lancaster
at Conestoga

Feet

Below
Flood

4.72
39.04

12.28
9.96

5.41
4.66

5.59

39
27

38
23

POP: 55%

POCONOS
Turning sunny, breezy and colder
today. High 31 to 35. Clear to
partly cloudy tonight. Low 18 to
22.

AIR QUALITY
Todays forecast
300

500

Yesterdays readings
Main Pollutant
Particulates
Ozone

Ozone
21
35

0-50: Good. 51-100: Moderate. 101-150: Unhealthy


for sensitive groups. 151-200: Unhealthy. 201-300:
Very unhealthy. 301-500: Hazardous.

Mostly cloudy with a


chance for snow
Wind: SW 7-14 mph

Bradford
32/21

Oil City
35/22

POP: 25%

Wind: WNW 8-16 mph

Wind: WNW 8-16 mph

Scranton
37/23

New York City


Allentown
42/30
Pittsburgh
42/22
38/27
Philadelphia
Lancaster
47/29
Hagerstown
41/23
York
Morgantown
41/26
41/22 Wilmington
38/25
Martinsburg
Baltimore 45/25
Atlantic City
42/23
44/26
42/28
Washington
Cape
May
Forecasts and
45/31
41/27
graphics provided by
Rehoboth Beach
Shown is todays weather. Temperatures
AccuWeather, Inc.
are todays highs and tonights lows.
2016
43/27
Harrisburg
43/26

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
17/8

Seattle
52/43
Billings
46/33

HISTORY

SUN AND MOON


TODAY
Sunrise
7:11 a.m.
Sunset
5:28 p.m.
Moonrise
4:31 a.m.
Moonset
2:44 p.m.
New
First
Full

Chicago
33/25

Feb 8 Feb 15 Feb 22 Mar 1

LancasterOnline.com AccuWeather Forecast

Denver
37/17

Toronto
36/27

Washington
45/31

Atlanta
51/29

El Paso
53/26
Houston
60/41

Chihuahua
61/22

-10s

Rain
-0s

Showers
0s

10s

Snow
20s

SKI REPORT
New Trails
Base Snow Open

Flurries
30s

Ice
40s

0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0

0-0
20-40
36-36
35-35
24-48
24-48
24-36
0-0
30-50
36-36
30-40
38-38
28-48
32-44
40-40
28-40
6-12
40-44
20-24

0
23
16
22
34
33
19
2
25
20
16
20
33
23
54
22
6
25
25

Source: OnTheSnow.com

NATION
TODAY

Anchorage
Atlanta
Atlantic City
Baltimore
Boston
Buffalo
Cleveland
Chicago
Charlotte
Dallas
Denver
Harrisburg
Honolulu
Las Vegas
Los Angeles
Nashville
New Orleans
New York
Orlando
Philadelphia
Phoenix
Pittsburgh
Salt Lake City
San Francisco
Wash., D.C.

SAT

Hi/Lo/W

Hi/Lo/W

35/23/c
51/29/s
42/28/sn
44/26/pc
37/23/sn
35/28/c
39/27/pc
33/25/c
49/25/pc
58/37/pc
37/17/pc
43/26/pc
83/69/s
59/38/s
74/49/s
50/30/s
55/39/s
42/30/sn
60/48/s
47/29/sn
69/43/s
38/27/pc
37/22/pc
61/47/pc
45/31/pc

32/21/c
53/33/pc
43/32/pc
47/27/pc
39/31/pc
38/27/c
42/29/c
39/28/pc
52/30/s
59/36/s
48/21/pc
45/27/pc
82/65/pc
62/41/pc
78/51/s
54/31/pc
59/40/pc
44/33/pc
67/43/sh
48/31/pc
74/46/s
44/28/pc
38/24/pc
62/49/pc
47/33/pc

THURSDAY EXTREMES

Cold Front
50s

Alpine Mtn.
Bear Creek Mtn.
Big Boulder
Blue Knob
Blue Mountain
Camelback Mtn.
Canaan Valley
Eagle Rock
Hidden Valley
Jack Frost
Liberty
Roundtop Mtn.
Seven Springs
Shawnee Mtn.
Snowshoe Mtn.
Timberline
Tussey Mtn.
Whitetail
Wisp

For the 48 contiguous states

Miami
67/63

Monterrey
66/41

T-storms

New York
42/30

Detroit
40/25

Kansas City
43/26

Los Angeles
74/49

SAT
7:10 a.m.
5:30 p.m.
5:22 a.m.
3:43 p.m.
Last

Montreal
28/18

Minneapolis
27/21

On Feb. 5, 1961, more than 22.5


inches of snow fell in Newark, N.J.
San Francisco
61/47

POP: 20%
Partly sunny

Resort

Altoona
37/24

NATION

34
22

Mostly cloudy

Williamsport
Punxsutawney
42/25
Wilkes-Barre
34/21
38/19
State College
40/26

Butler
37/26

Source: Pennsylvania Department of


Environmental Protection

For up-to-the-minute weather, visit

35
17

POP: 35%

Colder with clouds and


sun
Wind: E 7-14 mph

Erie
34/28

in Newark, where Seton


Hall and the NHLs New
Jersey Devils play their
home games.
He served on the State
Commission on Investigation, a New Jersey
watchdog agency, from
2004 until he was named
to the newly created position of state ombudsman by Gov. Chris Christie in 2014, in the wake
of the George Washington Bridge lane-closing
scandal.
Killingsworth, a frequent critic of the athletic program, said Hobbs
has the skill set to do
a great deal of good for
Rutgers athletics and the
university.
Craig McGovern, head
of the Rutgers Touchdown Club, a booster
organization for the
football team, said it was
important to hire someone who understands
the local terrain, and particularly the paradox that
Rutgers often seems to
be more highly regarded
by outsiders than by residents of its own state.
A lot of the stuff thats
happened at Rutgers has
happened at a lot of other universities, but a lot
of times its kept under
wraps, McGovern said.
You cant hide from it,
you just have to try and
learn from the mistakes
and get better from it.

Todays weather brought to you by: HONDRUAUTO.COM


TUESDAY
WEDNESDAY
THURSDAY

POP: Probability of Precipitation

DELAWAREMARYLAND
Cooler today; cloudy followed by
clearing. Snow at the Delaware
coast; a flurry in the Maryland
panhandle. High 31 to 47.

0 50 100 150 200

MONDAY

47
25

POP: 10%

POP: 10%
Breezy with clouds giving
way to sun
Wind: NW 10-20 mph

million in tax credits.


Hobbs said he would
review student fees
as the athletic departments financial picture
improved, but didnt
sound optimistic they
would be reduced.
Hobbs acknowledged
that changing the perception of Rutgers athletic program wont happen overnight.
Particularly over the
last five years, the headlines havent been something you can take pride
in, he said. But what
Im hearing from people
is hope that this is our
moment to get beyond
that, and to start renewing a pride in the university and what we are accomplishing.
Hobbs hiring in late
November may have
seemed unconventional
to traditionalists. He had
never coached or played
a major college sport and
his most recent full-time
position was dean of the
law school at Seton Hall
University, a small Catholic school with no football team.
But Hobbs isnt new to
sports. At Seton Hall, he
was deeply involved in
overseeing the athletic
program, and also led a
commission that examined the project to build
the $300 million-plus
Prudential Center arena

60s

Warm Front
70s

HONDRUAUTO.COM

80s

90s

Stationary Front
100s

110s

HARRISBURG

High:
Low:

85 at Vero Beach, FL
-30 at Angel Fire, NM

Weather (W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy,


c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms,
r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.

MANHEIM
E-TOWN



NOBODY BEATS OUR DEAL!

MT. JOY

LANCASTER

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