LNP: Still Keeping Secrets, Feb. 4, 2016

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THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2016

n 75 CENTS n LANCASTERONLINE.COM

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CAMPAIGN 2016

WHILE THE MANHEIM TOWNSHIP SCHOOL BOARD PUBLICLY PROMISED MORE TRANSPARENCY,
THE GROUP CONSPIRED TO BYPASS THE SUNSHINE ACT AS IT EMBARKED ON A SUPERINTENDENT SEARCH

Iowa
changes
election
picture

STILL KEEPING
SECRETS

Some candidates drop out in


aftermath of Mondays race
WIRE REPORTS

Fallout from the Iowa caucuses thinned


the GOP field Wednesday, sharpened the
Democrats rhetoric and generally roiled
the 2016 presidential campaign.
As the presidential race moved to New
Hampshire, one week before the states
first-in-the-nation primary, the winners
in Iowa on Monday sought to capitalize
on momentum, while the rest argued that
the race remains an open contest.
Businessman Donald Trump continued to dispute his second-place finish in
Iowas Republican caucuses.
Trump told a crowd of thousands in Little Rock, Arkansas, on Wednesday night,
Actually, I think I came in first.
Trump is taking issue with rumors, allegedly circulated by backers of rival
Ted Cruz on caucus night, that Ben Carson had decided to drop out of the race.
Trump has said the results of the election
should be thrown out as a result of that
and other actions by Cruz.
Trump is taking a break from New
Hampshire to campaign in Arkansas. The
rally in Little Rock provided him a chance
to demonstrate strength after Iowa.
Trump has a wide lead in early polls in
New Hampshire.

SUZETTE WENGER | STAFF PHOTOS

Manheim Township school board members, clockwise from upper left: Bill Murry,
Mark Anderson, Todd Heckman, Tony DeLeo, Lynn Miller, Stephen Grosh, Nathan Geesey
and Michael Lynch and, center, Grace Strittmatter.

Leaked audio recording reveals plan to avoid


public scrutiny in selection of search firm
Tonight we are not going to deliberate the search firms. I want you to go
home and think about it. I will discuss
your particular feelings or which one
you want on an individual basis. One by
one. Part of this is to keep our butts out
of a ringer, Murry is heard on the recording telling board members.
Half a minute later, he said: If we
dont deliberate, the meeting isnt subject to Sunshine. OK? Thats the point.
The private discussions, Murry is
heard to have said on the recording,
were designed to achieve a consensus
among board members on the hiring of
a superintendent search firm without
having to deliberate at a special public
meeting of the board tonight.
He said the board would ratify its

KARA NEWHOUSE
AND SUSAN BALDRIGE
[email protected]
[email protected]

TONIGHTS
PUBLIC
MEETING

he Manheim Township school


board conspired to deliberate privately on its search for
a new superintendent even as
it promised greater transparency in the
wake of earlier violations of the Sunshine Act, an audio recording obtained
by LNP reveals.
Board President Bill Murry arranged a
series of one-on-one telephone conversations with members late last week in a
deliberate attempt to avoid public scrutiny and circumvent the open-meetings
law, the audio recording of a closed-door
meeting held Thursday night, Jan. 28,
reveals.

Who: Manheim Township


school board
What: Special meeting to
hire a firm to search for
the next superintendent
When: 6 p.m.
Where: District office
boardroom, 450A
Candlewyck Road
Why: Superintendent
John Nodecker resigned,
effective Jan. 29

SIGNING DAY

EXECUTIVE SESSION, page A6

ALSO INSIDE

Florida Republican Sen. Marco Rubio


told New Hampshire voters Tuesday that
he would unite this party and the conservative movement.
Rubio says he looks forward to teaming
up with former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick
Santorum, who ended his White House
run and endorsed Rubio on Wednesday.
Earlier in the day, Kentucky Sen. Rand
Paul also suspended his campaign.
On the Democratic side, Hillary Clinton
is hoping to be the familys latest Comeback Kid, like her husband, Bill Clinton,
some 24 years ago.
The former secretary of state, who eked
out the closest win in Iowa in history this
week, finds herself mired in a tighterthan-expected primary battle. She now
lags behind Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders
in every major New Hampshire poll. Some

CAMPAIGN, page A5

HEALTH

Obama reaches
out to Muslims,
visits mosque
n Nation & World,
page A10

New screening
guidelines for
adolescents
make sense

Flu season is light so far,


but dont call victory yet
Confirmed cases and deaths significantly lower this
year; follows deadliest season in the state in a decade
HEATHER STAUFFER
[email protected]

SLOW START

So far, Pennsylvania The 2015-16 u season in Pennsylvania has been much


has fared extraordinarily milder than usual so far, but health officials say the u is
unpredictable and its still too early to declare victory.
well this flu season.
N
O. CASES
While it is still too
Bring a pop of
2008-09
8,000
early to pin down the
spring to winter
2009-10
reasons, experts believe
2010-11
with cut flowers
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DigiCode Datathe
2011-12 at 16:12:42
Created on 11-11-99
n Home & Garden,
a 8275701
more effective
flu shot NEWSPAPERS, INC.
2012-13
by
ACCOUNT
:
LANCASTER
page B1
2013-14 INC.
might have something to 4,000
SYMBOLOGY,
ORDERED BY :do
RORY
MACKISON
2014-15
with it.
Minneapolis, Minnesota,
55414
2015-16
Last year, 221 deaths
612-331-6200
Cocalico senior
P.O. NUMBER : 008508
2,000
the state were at-0%
finds theINVOICE
feelingNO. :across
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726848
tributed to the flu. So far
in Missouri(MAC
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0
there have
OCT. NOV. DEC. JAN. FEB. MAR. APR. MAY JUNE JULY AUG. SEPT.
a taxing search
been four.
SOURCE:
PENNSYLVANIA
DEPT. OF HEALTH
FLU SEASON, page A4
n Sports, page C1
SUNDAY NEWS
INTELLIGENCER JOURNAL
LANCASTER NE

n Opinion, page A18


RICHARD HERTZLER | STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

n Garden Spot High Schools Kaitlyn Zook, center,

poses with her family during Wednesdays National


Signing Day ceremony at the school. Zook is
going to the University of Delaware to play NCAA
Division I field hockey. More than 100 local studentathletes made their college commitments official in
ceremonies at various Lancaster County high schools
on Wednesday. Extensive local coverage of National
Signing Day starts on page C1, and more photos and
coverage can be found on LancasterOnline.com.
Also in Sports: Mike Gross analysis of the Penn State
football nationally ranked recruiting class, along with a
list of the newest Nittany Lions.

INDEX
BUSINESS.................A8
CLASSIFIEDS.......... C10
COMICS..............B8, B9

Rubios momentum

HOME & GARDEN....B1


LOTTERY...................A2
NATION & WORLD...A10
OBITUARIES........... A13

OPINION.................. A18
PUZZLES............B6, B7
SPORTS......................C1
TV............................... B5

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221st Year, No. 232

COPYRIGHT LNP MEDIA GROUP, INC.


ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
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77490

21000

LOCALLY OWNED 6
SINCE 1794
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A2

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2016

2.4.16

GIVE PEACE A CHANCE

n Yoko Ono has brought an

anti-violence message to Mexico


City with the opening of a
participative-performance
exhibit dubbed Tierra de
Esperanza, or Land
of Hope. The 82-yearold Ono told a crowd
Tuesday at the citys
Museum of Memory and
Tolerance that I have come
here to bring world peace.
Visitors to the exhibit can place
stamps calling for peace
on maps of Mexico or
the world. Museumgoers can also try to
put back together
broken plates.

PA. LOTTERY

WEDNESDAY, FEB. 3
Night
Pick 2: 23
Pick 3: 333
Pick 4: 4984
Pick 5: 01587
Cash 5: 1219213442
Powerball: 262831
6067
Powerball: 23
Power Play: 3
Day
Pick 2: 25
Pick 3: 300
Pick 4: 1354
Pick 5: 14642
Treasure Hunt: 0206
141618

ASSOCIATED PRESS

AT THE GRAMMYS: HAMILTON

TODAY IN HISTORY

n Feb. 4, 1789: Electors

chose George Washington


to be the first president of
the United States.

The Gossip Corner


Oscar presenters

n 1997: A civil jury in

Santa Monica, California,


found O.J. Simpson liable
for the deaths of his
ex-wife, Nicole Brown
Simpson, and her friend,
Ronald Goldman.

n 2004: The

Massachusetts high court


declared that gay couples
were entitled to nothing
less than marriage, and
that Vermont-style civil
unions would not suffice.
Also, the social networking
website Facebook had
its beginnings as Harvard
student Mark Zuckerberg
launched Thefacebook.

n 2006: Thousands

ASSOCIATED PRESS

of Syrians enraged
by caricatures of the
prophet Muhammad
torched the Danish and
Norwegian embassies
in Damascus. In Gaza,
Palestinians marched
through the streets,
storming European
buildings and burning
German and Danish flags.

n The Grammy Awards this year will have a little Broadway sparkle: The cast of

Hamilton will perform live via satellite from the Richard Rodgers Theatre. It will be
the first time the Grammys have made room for a Broadway show since American
Idiot in 2010.
Written by Lin-Manuel Miranda, center, Hamilton tells the true story of Alexander
Hamilton, a Founding Father and the nations first treasury secretary. It is told by
a young African-American and Latino cast and has become a sensation like few
Broadway shows. The cast will be part of a huge list of performers in Los Angeles on
Feb. 15, including Adele, James Bay, Andra Day, Ellie Goulding, Sam Hunt, Tori Kelly,
Kendrick Lamar, Lady Gaga, Little Big Town, Carrie Underwood and The Weeknd.

ON LANCASTERONLINE

KIDS CHOICE NOMINEES

n Watch: Fran Hadley, clinical dietitian for WellSpan

Ephrata Community Hospital Wellness Center, prepares


vegetarian chili. bit.ly/LNPHeartHealthyChili
n Livestream: LNP sports reporters discuss
the matchup between the Carolina Panthers
and the Denver Broncos at noon today.
bit.ly/LNPSuperBowlRoundtable
n Poll: Do you agree with the idea of paying someone
not to commit a crime? bit.ly/LNPCrimePoll

Whoopi Goldberg

The Academy Awards


has unveiled a distinctly
diverse slate of presenters and performers for
the Feb. 28 Oscars including Kevin Hart,
Benicio Del Toro and
Whoopi Goldberg. The
Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences
on Thursday announced
the names of 11 people
taking part in the show.
The makeup of presenters this year has been
keenly watched after
a handful of black entertainers vowed they
wouldnt attend the ceremony, including Will
Smith and Spike Lee.
Other presenters are:
Tina Fey and Pharrell Williams. Also
announced were three
performers: Lady Gaga,
the Weeknd and Sam
Smith. All are among the
best song nominees.

Tonys host

FOX43: STEPPING DOWN

n Heather Warner will leave FOX43 after more than a

decade with the television station, according to a press


release. Warner has anchored FOX43 News at 10, FOX43
Morning News and FOX43 News First at 4. She joined
the station in 2003. Her final broadcast will be the March
2 edition of FOX43 News at 10. Warner has accepted
a position as a senior account executive at GRIT
Marketing Group in York. Warner is a
York native who graduated from
Dallastown High School. Viewers
followed along with her second
pregnancy during the segment
Heathers Expecting.
FOX43 encourages its
viewers to visit Heather
Warners Facebook page at
facebook.com/heatherwarner
fox43 to share stories,
memories or well wishes.
Jenelle Janci

James Corden
FILM FRAME/DISNEY/LUCASFILM VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

n Stormtroopers, superheroes, dinosaurs and Cinderella


are among the nominees at this years Nickelodeon Kids
Choice Awards. The cable network announced Tuesday
that Ant-Man, Avengers: Age of Ultron, Cinderella,
Daddys Home, Jurassic World, Pitch Perfect 2,
Star Wars: The Force Awakens, seen above, and
The Hunger Games: Mockingjay Part 2 are up for the
favorite film prize at the 29th annual ceremony.
The slime-filled extravaganza honoring kids popculture picks will be held March 12 at the Forum in
Inglewood, California. Blake Shelton is serving as host
of the viewer-voted honors. Other nominees include
The Big Bang Theory, The Flash, Modern Family,
Once Upon a Time, The Muppets and Marvels
Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. for favorite family TV show.

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

CBS has tapped one of


its own comedic talents
to host one of its most
prestigious awards-show
telecasts. James Corden

will follow in the highkicking footsteps of Hugh


Jackman and Neil Patrick Harris as the new
host of the Tony Awards
ceremony, organizers announced Tuesday. This
years ceremony, set for
June 12, will take place
at the Beacon Theatre in
New York and will air live
on CBS, with a delay for
the West Coast. Corden
is host of CBS The Late
Late Show, and is himself
a past Tony winner for his
performance in the 2012
stage comedy One Man,
Two Guvnors.

Duff divorce

Hilary Duff

A Los Angeles judge has


finalized Hilary Duffs
divorce from former
NHL player Mike Comrie. The judgment, which
was first reported Tuesday by celebrity website
TMZ, was finalized on
Thursday. The 28-yearold singer and actress
starred in the Lizzie McGuire television series
and film and stars on the
TV Land series Younger. Comrie played professional hockey between
2000 and 2011, ending
his career with the Pittsburgh Penguins. Duff and
Comrie were married in
August 2010 and separated in January 2014. They
have a 3-year-old son
together and will share
joint custody.
The Associated Press

BIRTHDAYS

n Actor William Phipps is 94.

Former Argentinian President Isabel


Peron is 85. Movie director George
A. Romero is 76. Former Vice
President Dan Quayle is 69. Rock
singer Alice Cooper is 68. Football
Hall-of-Famer Lawrence Taylor is
57. Country singer Clint Black is 54.
Actor Rob Corddry is 45. Singer
David Garza is 45. Olympic gold
medal boxer Oscar De La Hoya is
43. Singer Natalie Imbruglia is 41.

Alice Cooper, 68

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www.SnyderFuneralHome.com

LOCAL

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

COUNTY PRISON

Wages
up for
guards,
workers

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2016

ACCIDENT

A3

CRIME

Teen hailed
as a hero is
now wanted

FIRE KILLS COW

Boggs helped save 5-year-old girl


from attempted abduction in 2013

2-year contract
approved 3-0,
avoids arbitration

TOM KNAPP

[email protected]

JEFF HAWKES

A local hero credited with helping


save a 5-year-old girl from abduction in July 2013 is now wanted by
police for armed robbery.
Temar Boggs, 18, of the 100 block
of Lemon Street, has been identified
as a suspect in a Dec. 17 robbery at
El Coqui Market, 611 N. Plum St. It
is believed Boggs has fled the Lancaster area.
Boggs was 15 on July 11, 2013,
when he and Chris Garcia, then 13,
trailed a car on bicycles to help find
a girl taken and sexually assaulted
by convicted rapist Harold Leroy
Herr.
According to previous reports,
Boggs and Garcia took action when
they saw the missing girl riding in a
vehicle in the Gable Park neighborhood where Boggs lived.
The girl had been missing for more
than two hours when the boys spotted the vehicle on Betz Farm Drive.
They didnt know the girl, but they
followed the maroon vehicle on
their bikes until the driver stopped
and pushed the girl out of the car.
The driver fled while the girl ran
to Boggs, who carried her several
blocks to her grandmothers nearby
home in the 100 block of Jennings
Drive.
They were able to give solid descriptions of the driver to police,
and Herr was in custody within a
day.

[email protected]

Lancaster County Prison


guards will get raises of 3.4
percent this year and 3.3
percent next year under the
first contract in seven years
that hasnt gone to binding
arbitration.
The average wage goes up
70 cents an hour to $21.29
this year and another 70
cents an hour in 2017 to
$21.99.
Second and third-shift
workers get an extra five
cents an hour shift differential.
AFSCME District Council 89, representing 206 corrections officers and eight
maintenance workers, ratified the two-year contract
Jan. 25. The Lancaster
County commissioners approved it 3-0 Wednesday.
We did not get everything we wanted, and Im
sure the union would say
the same thing, Commissioner Josh Parsons said.
I believe that if we went
to binding arbitration, we
would likely not do better and might, in fact, do
worse.
The agreement this year
is in stark contrast to negotiations in recent years that
led to impasse and were
settled by panels of state arbitrators.
The state Supreme Court
in 2013 refused to hear the
countys appeal of an arbitration award granting
raises in 2010 and 2011. The
county in 2013 dug into reserves to pay nearly $5 milPRISON, page A16

CASEY KREIDER | STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

A tractor-trailer hauling cattle caught fire on the Pennsylvania Turnpike near the
Kline Road overpass in West Cocalico Township on Wednesday morning.

1 dies, 1 flees after cattle truck ignites on turnpike


TOM KNAPP

[email protected]

One cow was killed and another


fled after a fire broke out in a tractor-trailer Wednesday morning on
the Pennsylvania Turnpike.
The fire was reported at 9:44 a.m.
near the Kline Road overpass of the
turnpike in West Cocalico Town-

ship. What caused the fire wasnt


immediately clear.
State police Cpl. Brian Millore
said the tractor-trailer was heading
east with a load of about 34 cattle.
When the fire started, Millore said,
the driver was able to get the truck
to the side of the road.
CATTLE FIRE, page A16

FIRE

2 evacuated as home burns


Cause of E. Petersburg blaze accidental, officials say
TOM KNAPP

[email protected]

Two East Petersburg residents


were evacuated Wednesday morning during a dwelling fire in East Petersburg Borough.
The fire was reported at 7:11 a.m.
at a single-story, ranch-style home
at 6371 Carpenter St., near Jefferson Drive.
When firefighters arrived, they
saw flames and heavy smoke, according to a statement from Lancaster County-Wide Communications.
The fire was under control by

around 7:30 a.m., according to East


Petersburg Fire Chief James Rohrer
Jr.
Most of the fire damage was contained to the bedroom where the
blaze started, he said.
The fire was contained to one
room, but there was heavy smoke
damage throughout the house,
Rohrer said.
Two elderly residents of the home
were taken to a hospital for treatment of possible smoke inhalation,
he said.
The cause of the fire was listed as
accidental, Rohrer said.

BOGGS, page A16

3 Manheim Township teens made


sexually explicit recording and
put it on social media, police say
JENNIFER TODD

[email protected]

Three
Manheim
Township High School
students have been
charged after posting a
sex video online, police
said Wednesday.
The teens, all aged
14, were charged with
transmission of sexually explicit images by
minors.
Police were made
aware of the material
by school officials on
Dec. 4.
Through an investigation, police learned

Heroin seized from Manor Twp. home

LANCASTER COUNTY DRUG TASK FORCE

The Lancaster County Drug Task Force seized some 1,800


bags of heroin, along with other drugs and cash, after
executing a search warrant at a Manor Township home.

The Lancaster County


Drug Task Force said
it seized 1,800 bags of
heroin, along with other
drugs and cash, during
the search of a Manor
Township home.
Jose E. Jossy Gonzalez, 45, and Carlos E.
Colon, 32, were charged
with felony counts of

drug-dealing and related


misdemeanors, the Lancaster County district
attorneys office said
Wednesday.
The heroin 1,800
bags sorted into 128
larger bundles has an
estimated street value of
$11,000, detectives said.
The search warrant, exHEROIN, page A16

17 Varieties

   

  

  


   

   

  
  
 

Stoppers
is offering
a reward
up to
$1,000 for
information
leading to
the arrest
of Boggs,
identified
by police
in a video
of the Dec.
17 robbery
of El Coqui
Market, 611
N. Plum St.
n Anyone
with
information
is asked to
call 7353466.
n Tipsters
also may
call Crime
Stoppers
at 1-800322-1913 or
anonymously
text LANCS
plus a
message to
847411.

Students charged
for sex video post

Police: Men dealing drugs in 3 counties


[email protected]

n Crime

INVESTIGATION

HEROIN CRISIS

TOM KNAPP

TEMAR
BOGGS

that a video of two juveniles engaging in sexual


activity was recorded
by a third student and
distributed on a social
media site, officials
said.
Police said there is no
evidence the incident
occurred on school
property.
Officials
released
no other information
about the incident
Wednesday. Criminal
complaints could not
be obtained because
the persons charged
are juveniles.

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CONTACT
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A4

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2016

FROM PAGE A1

CIVIL RIGHTS

Author, activist to speak


at Millersville University

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

Flu season: Not over yet

Family was center of landmark school segregation case


TIM STUHLDREHER

the familys neighborhood.


The case, combined
with cases from other
states, reached the Supreme Court, where
future Justice Thurgood Marshall argued
for the plaintiffs. The
court ruled unanimously in 1954 that separate
schools for black and
white students were unconstitutional.
Brown
Hendersons
talk will begin at 7:30
p.m. in Clair Hall at the
Winter Center on the
Millersville campus. It
is free, but tickets are
required: They will be
available at the campus
ticket office and at the
door.
Her appearance is part
of the universitys annual Martin Luther King Jr.
celebrations.
In 2014, Brown Henderson told PBS Gwen
Ifill that the Supreme

[email protected]

A woman whose family was at the center of


the landmark case that
ended legal school segregation in the United
States will speak today at
Millersville University.
Cheryl Brown Henderson, 65, is a consultant, author, activist and
founding president of
the Brown Foundation
for Educational Equity,
Excellence and Research.
She is the youngest of
the three daughters of
the Rev. Oliver Brown,
who became lead plaintiff in a class-action suit
filed in 1951 with 12 other parents against the
Board of Education of
Topeka, Kansas.
The Rev. Brown had
unsuccessfully tried to
enroll Brown Hendersons older sister, Linda,
in an all-white school in

MU SPEECH:
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n What: Presentation by

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n When: 7:30 p.m.
Thursday, Feb. 4
n Where: Clair Hall,
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University
n Cost: Free, but tickets
are required. Call (717)
871-7600 between 9 a.m.
and 4:30 p.m. or visit www.
studentservices.com/ticketsales/. Tickets also will be
available at the door.

Continued from A1

Courts decision sparked


an immediate backlash.
It was relentless, and
it hasnt let up, she said.
Nevertheless, shes optimistic.
It was all about opportunity, and it succeeded
when it comes to that,
she said. It opened the
doors for the legal cases
and the legislation that
came after.

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Tuesday:

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news & profiles

Another measure is
confirmed flu cases,
which represent just
a fraction of total flu
cases. Last season,
Lancaster
County
reported 1,484 cases;
so far this season, the
tally stands at 20.
At WellSpan Ephrata Community Hospital, for example, infection prevention and
control manager Peg
Holland said there
has not been a single
confirmed case.
I am stunned, she
said.
However, its too
soon to celebrate, particularly in light of a
national advisory the
U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention issued this
week. It said young to
middle-aged adults
most of them unvaccinated are contracting severe cases of the
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them in intensive care


units and, in some cases,
proving fatal.
During recent flu seasons, between 80 percent and 90 percent of
flu-related deaths were
among people age 65 and
older, according to CDC,
which defines flu season
as beginning as early as
October and lasting as
late as May.
If you have not gotten
vaccinated yet this season, you should get vaccinated now, the CDC
said.
Commonly administered flu vaccines protect against two influenza A viruses (H1N1 and
H3N2) and an influenza
B virus. Flu shots have
included the H1N1 strain
since 2010 after the virus
emerged and caused a
worldwide pandemic.

Surprising
numbers
The current almostno-show flu season is
particularly notable because it is following the
deadliest season (201415) Pennsylvania experienced in a decade.
One thing that is different, according to the
CDC, is that last season
the flu shot wasnt a good
match for the viruses that
ended up circulating.
This season there is a better match between virus
strains and the vaccines.
Wes Culp, spokesman
for the Pennsylvania
Department of Health,
said the weather might
also be a factor; when its
cold, people spend more
time in confined spaces,
where the flu spreads

If you have
not gotten
vaccinated yet
this season,
you should get
vaccinated now.
U.S. Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention

more easily.
But, he said, even during times of warmer
weather, it is not unusual
for flu cases and outbreaks to occur. Influenza
occurs in the tropics, too.
The state tracking system does show a slight
increase in flu cases
in the past few weeks,
and the spokeswoman
for two local hospitals
said they have seen rising numbers of patients
with significant upperrespiratory
illnesses
over the past month.
Flu season may not yet
have hit its peak here,
said Danielle Gilmore,
who represents Lancaster Regional Medical
Center and Heart of Lancaster Regional Medical
Center.
In any case, she said,
the hospitals are urging
people to get vaccinated,
which can be challenging
even when there is significant flu present.
The CDC recommends
that everyone 6 months
of age and older get a flu
vaccine every season,
with rare exceptions.

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LNP | LANCASTER, PA

Campaign: After Iowa


Continued from A1

polls have her back by 30


points, some by 20.

Democratic barbs
Clinton made it clear
Wednesday that shes
in the game, telling an
audience at the Derry
Boys and Girls Club that
shes defying the political pundits who opine
that she should skip New
Hampshire in favor of
states where she enjoys
significant leads.
And she criticized
Sanders for saying she
was a progressive some
days.
She offered an extensive defense of her progressive credentials on
health care and human
rights, accusing Sanders of delivering a low
blow.
Sanders punched back,
questioning
Clintons
embrace of the word
progressive,
telling
CNN that most progressives I know do not
raise millions from Wall
Street or vote for the
Iraq War.
Clinton officials have
sought to temper New
Hampshire expectations
for months, downplaying the significance of a
win here as they look to
states where shes stronger, such as Nevada and
South Carolina.
Clinton and Sanders
both participated in a live
town hall event Wednesday night on CNN. They
are meeting tonight in
a debate at the University of New Hampshire,
their first since former
Maryland Gov. Martin
OMalley dropped out of
the race.
Clinton and Sanders
will face off in four more

debates under an agreement reached by the


campaigns and the national party on Wednesday.
The additional debates
will held in Flint, Michigan on March 6, and two
other cities in April and
May, with details to be
determined later.
Two other Democratic
debates are already on
the calendar: Feb. 11 in
Milwaukee and March 9
in Miami.
The GOP candidates
are next set to debate
Saturday in New Hampshire.

Toomey backs
Rubio
Pennsylvania Sen. Pat
Toomey also endorsed
Rubio for the Republican
presidential nomination
on Wednesday, backing
a candidate who he said
has the best chance to
win in the fall and be a
great president.
Toomey told reporters
on a conference call that
his decision revolved
around Rubios ability to
win an election and do
well in the Oval Office.
Toomey chose Rubio
over another colleague
in the U.S. Senate, Ted
Cruz of Texas, and two
neighboring state governors, Chris Christie

of New Jersey and John


Kasich of Ohio.
Toomey stressed Rubios service on the Senate committees on Intelligence and Foreign
Relations, saying that
Rubio has a strong grasp
of national security matters.
Rubio should do well in
Pennsylvania, Toomey
said, because of his compelling life story, fluency
in Spanish, upbeat outlook on Americas prospects and his ability to
communicate as well as
any Republican Ive ever
met.
I think all of those
things contribute to
Marcos ability to be a
very strong candidate in
Pennsylvania, Toomey
said.
Santorum announced
on Fox News Channel
that he had decided,
The best way to do what
I set out to do when we
announced the run for
president ... (is) by not
furthering our campaign.
He said Rubio shares
his values and is in a
better position to do
well in this race. He described Rubio as a born
leader and praised his
optimistic message.
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generation and someone that can bring this

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Christie, Fiorina
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New Jersey, who garnered less than 2 percent
of the GOP vote in Iowa,
went on offense, ripping
Rubio as a scripted boy
in the bubble.
Christie was quick to
downplay his Iowa finish.
Nothing
really
changed, Christie told
voters in an American Legion hall in Epping, New Hampshire,
though he cited the caucus results to question
Trumps front-runner
status. Earlier in the day,
Christie needled Trump:
The guy who does nothing but win lost.
Carly Fiorina said she
and all GOP candidates
should be allowed on the
same debate stage.
In a letter to the Republican National Committee, the lone woman
in the GOP race complained that the party
is letting the networks

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best TV, in their opinion.
In the last few nationally televised debates,
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stage for candidates failing to garner the polling
numbers required by
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As the Republican
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noticeably,
changed:
Candidates who once
vied to throw the hardest rhetorical punch are
campaigning in gentler
terms, emphasizing their
compassion and human
frailty, and especially
their concern for women
and families.
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A6

FROM PAGE A1

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2016

Excerpts: Manheim Township


school board audio recording
STAFF

Here are key excerpts


of an audio recording of
a Manheim Township
school board executive
session held Jan. 28.
Board President Bill
Murry:
One thing before we
get, we start talking, all
right? I talked to Mr.
Frankhouser and given
the current set of circumstances that we are
faced with, Im going to
read you a few things,
just so that we are all on
the same page.
Tonight we are not
going to deliberate the
search firms. I want you to
go home and think about
it. I will discuss your particular feelings or which
one you want on an individual basis. One by one.
Part of this is to keep our
butts out of a ringer.
Board member Nathan Geesey:
Thank you.
Murry:
Yeah. You got it.
Tonight we are receiving information only. I
will be happy to explain
that to you. The December 10th meeting when
we had budget meetings,
if you recall we did not
deliberate. We received
information about the
budget. And the administration put forth the fact
that we may need to consider, ah, asking for the
exceptions. If we dont deliberate, the meeting isnt
subject to Sunshine.

OK? Thats the point.


If you want to deliberate with me on a one-onone basis tomorrow, I will
be happy [laughs] to have
deliberations. My guess
is that we will all have
a pretty good feeling of
which way we would like
to go once this meeting is
over. But I would like you
to go sleep on it. Go home
and sleep on it.
***
Murry:
After I get the sense of
the board tomorrow, if it
seems to be fairly unanimous, uh, we can enter
in, I can, we can enter in,
I can call up whichever
firm and say OK, go ahead
and get started with your
processes and then well
ratify it at a public meeting ... their contract.
***
Murry:
So were all set up to
meet next Thursday. If
theres a good consensus
when I call everybody
tomorrow about which
way we want to go, it
will be great. If not, if we
want to deliberate, were
going to have to take
next Thursdays meeting
and make it public.
Geesey:
Thats fine.
Murry:
Which is fine. But
I need to have notice,
which is 24 hours.
... My point being, with

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***
Murry:
The special meeting
will be lets just say
theres a consensus on
who the search (firm)
should be. Ill go back to
the naysayers depending upon who picks which
one, Ill say it that way as
another way of saying it
and say, Heres the vote.
We got eight people sitting around this table. It
might be 5-3 for one or the
other. So Ill call the three
who are in the minority
... and see whether they
would be OK with becoming part of the majority.
I dont know until we
make any of these phone
calls tomorrow and have
an 8-0, and if I do, Im gonna send you all an email
and say Im gonna call
them [the firm] up and say
Time to get going, and
then we are gonna ratify it
next Thursday.

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choice tonight.
The boards actions
suggest a clear intention to bypass open
meeting
requirements, a Sunshine Act
expert said.
Youre not supposed to make decisions outside a public meeting. Its that
simple, said Melissa
Melewsky, who serves
as media law counsel
for the Pennsylvania
NewsMedia Association.
The board members
actions came at the
same time they were
preparing a statement
acknowledging earlier violations of the
Sunshine Act. That
statement, made public Monday, called the
earlier violations a
clear oversight and
not intentional.
Contacted by LNP
on Wednesday, Murry refused to answer
questions about last
weeks executive session or his one-onone deliberations.
I dont owe you an
explanation. I dont
owe you anything, he
said.
Board Vice President Mark Anderson
said Wednesday that
the board was following instructions
from district solicitor
Bob Frankhouser, of
Lancaster firm Barley
Snyder. Frankhouser
was not present at the
executive session.
What I heard Bill
say is (that) Bob told
him not to discuss it in
the room, Anderson
said. We talked about
(the search firm) over
the weekend on the
phone. We talked
about a lot of things.

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Executive session

the consensus when I call


everybody tomorrow, if
the same firm comes up,
you know, eight out of
nine voices, then I think
we probably have a pretty
big feeling of which way
were going to go. But then
I would turn next Thursday into a special meeting
of the board to ratify the
contract ...
... Its going to be a very
brief meeting. Theres
going to be one motion
on there, to ratify.
... I would rather, if we
know which way were
going to go, then lets just
make up our mind and
get moving. And for whoever would choose otherwise, I will let them know
what the consensus of the
board is, or the majority
is, and see whether or not
they would give that some
consideration.

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MANHEIM TOWNSHIP SCHOOL


BOARD: THE STORY SO FAR
n Manheim Township school board hired a law firm

to address an undisclosed personnel issue in a


June 2015 work session.
n An electronic copy of the contract with the law
firm suggested district leader John Nodecker could
be the reason for the inquiry.
n LNP reported in December that the board met
in closed-door sessions 11 times between May and
December with little or no explanation provided to
the public.
n The board announced Jan. 21 that Nodecker
would resign effective Jan. 29, last Friday.
n A prepared statement posted to the district
website Jan. 21 cited health reasons for Nodeckers
departure. It also said no wrongdoing was found in
the personnel investigation.
n The district disclosed Jan. 29 that it will pay
Nodecker $160,000, plus one year of medical and
retirement benefits, under the terms of a separation
agreement.
n The board acknowledged Monday that it violated
a Pennsylvania law requiring explanations for
meeting in executive sessions, but called it a clear
oversight and not intentional.
n The Lancaster County district attorneys office,
which initiated a review of the boards use of
executive sessions based on LNPs reporting, said it
would not prosecute the board because it found no
indication of an intent to violate the Sunshine Act.

I dont know that his intention was to avoid anything.


Frankhouser did not
return a phone call seeking comment Wednesday.

Recording of
meeting
The conversation between Murry and seven other school board
members was captured
on an audio recording
of the executive session
held one week ago. The
recording was delivered
to LNP on Wednesday
morning by an undisclosed source.
It is unclear who made
the roughly two-hour recording, or if the board
was aware of it. But LNP
is publishing key portions of the discussion
because they are relevant to what should be
a public deliberation of
how taxpayer money is
being spent.
The board plans to
vote on a contract with
a superintendent search
firm at a special meeting
at 6 p.m. tonight, according to an agenda made
public Monday.
The firm will find and
vet candidates to replace
Superintendent
John
Nodecker, who resigned
last month under circumstances that were
never publicly disclosed.
The agenda does not
name which search firm
will be hired or the cost
of the contract.
The 2014 search that
resulted in Nodeckers
hiring cost $13,750.

Avoiding a
quorum
During last weeks executive session, board
members heard presen-

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WHAT IS THE
SUNSHINE ACT?
The state Sunshine Act
is aimed at creating
transparency in
government.
n The law requires
government agencies,
such as school boards,
to conduct deliberation
or official action, such as
voting, in public meetings.
n What is deliberation?
Discussing agency business
for the purpose of making
a decision.
n What are the exceptions?
Agencies can hold private
meetings, called executive
sessions, to discuss the
following: personnel
matters, collective
bargaining agreements,
litigation, real estate
or information that is
confidential under other
laws.
n Executive sessions
must be announced
either at a public meeting
beforehand or at the
next public meeting. The
announcement should
include the date and topic
of the session, beyond a
one-word explanation.

tations from at least two


superintendent search
firms. Murry is heard on
the audio recording telling board members he
would call each of them
the next day to ask which
firm they wanted to hire.
Thats a good idea,
said board member Todd
Heckman.
If a majority of board
members preferred one
firm, Murry said, he
would call back those
in the minority to see if
they would be OK with
becoming part of the majority.
The Sunshine Act requires school boards
to deliberate in public
when a quorum of board
members is involved.
Making
individual
phone calls to avoid having a quorum is contrary to the letter and
the intention of the law,
said Melewsky, the Sunshine Act expert.
Thats obviously a big
problem not only from
a legal perspective, but
from a public policy
perspective as well. The
Sunshine Act recognizes
the fact that government functions better
and more appropriately
when the public is actively involved, she said.
Also during the executive meeting last week,
Murry is heard on the
audio recording telling
members that if a consensus was reached in
his phone calls, I can
call up whichever firm
and say OK, go ahead
and get started with your
processes, and then well
ratify [their contract] at
a public meeting.
No board members ob-

SESSION, page A7

FROM PAGE A6

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

Session
Continued from A6

jected to the plan. In addition to Murry, Anderson and Heckman, board


members Tony DeLeo,
Mike Lynch, Lynn Miller, Nathan Geesey and
Grace Strittmatter were
present at the meeting.
Board member Stephen Grosh was not
present at the meeting.

Board responses
Anderson,
Geesey,
Heckman and Lynch
confirmed Wednesday
that Murry contacted
them individually after
last Thursdays executive session to see which
search firm they preferred.
Asked about the apparent efforts to avoid the
Sunshine Act, Geesey
said: We are trying to
be more transparent but
obviously we need more
transparency. Thats one
of the reasons I moved
to have the discussion of
the interim superintendent in public at the last
meeting.
Said Lynch: I would
like to see this situation come to an end, the
problems with the whole
school board and Sunshine Act. I want to see
things are on a better
footing with the community than they are now.
Strittmatter,
DeLeo
and Grosh could not
be reached by phone
Wednesday.
Miller hung up on an
LNP reporter.

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2016

ENVIRONMENT

Feds restore $3M to Pa. for Chesapeake cleanup effort


AD CRABLE

reboot of strategies to
keep nutrients from running into the Susquehanna River and eventually
polluting the bay.
The
Susquehanna
provides the bay, the
largest estuary in the
U.S., with more than
half its fresh water. The
64,000-square-mile watershed spans six states
Delaware, Maryland,
New York, Pennsylvania,
Virginia and West Virginia and the District
of Columbia. The bay is
critical to the life span of
more than 250 species of
fish and 300 species of
migratory birds.
Pennsylvanias
new
plan would ensure all

[email protected]

Pennsylvanias
new,
tougher strategy to clean
waters flowing into the
Chesapeake Bay already
has brought results.
The federal Environmental Protection Agency has announced it has
restored $3 million in
federal cleanup funds it
had threatened to hold
back because the agency
felt Pennsylvania was not
living up to its cleanup
commitment.
On Jan. 21, the state
departments of Environmental Protection,
Agriculture and Conservation and Natural
Resources announced a

   

farmers have state-required manure-management and erosion- and


sedimentation-control
plans. It also calls for
more on-the-farm conservation projects, more
tree plantings along
streams and more efforts
to control stormwater
runoff in communities.
In a letter to the state
Department of Environmental Protection,
EPAs regional administrator, Shawn Garvin,
wrote, EPA appreciates
Pennsylvanias
commitment to get back
on track with nutrientreduction
measures
necessary to achieve the
Chesapeake Bay goals.




The
submission,
18-month strategy and
draft implementation
plan contain many actions that can serve as
building blocks to accelerate the pace of implementation.
The $3 million coming
from EPA will be used to
help farmers incorporate
best-management practices and help conservation districts, which have
been given the responsibility of inspecting farms,
said John Quigley, secretary of the state Department of Environmental
Protection.
This restored funding
will be targeted by DEP
to begin implementation




of our rebooted strategy,


Quigley said. It is a start
but only that. We have
a long way to go in our
efforts to assemble additional resources and to do
the work to improve local
water quality in Pennsylvania and that of the
Chesapeake Bay.
Harry Campbell, the
Pennsylvania executive
director of the Chesapeake Bay Foundation,
a private group that advocates for cleanup of
the bay, said, If Pennsylvania is to make real
progress in providing
and protecting cleaner
water, the commonwealth must implement
the new plan.

 



District attorneys
response
Lancaster
County
District Attorney Craig
Stedman, who assigned
a prosecutor to look into
the boards use of executive sessions but did
not file charges, said he
would look into the possible new Sunshine Act
violations.
This is the first we are
hearing of this particular
incident. Well gather all
the information we can
on it, and go from there,
he said Wednesday.
A spokesman for Stedman said earlier in the
week the office would
not prosecute the boards
previous violations because it found no indication of an intent to
violate the Sunshine Act.
But in a letter to the
board, the office put
Manheim
Township
on notice that it would
launch an investigation
and potentially charge
the school board if it
found evidence of such
a violation in the future.
Violating the Sunshine
Act is a summary offense
punishable by a fine of
at least $100 and up to
$1,000 for a first offense,
plus court costs, and
up to $2,000 plus court
costs for subsequent violations.



  


 




 

 







   

   




 



 


 











 
  

















  

  

  


  

 
 








 





 






 



 

 








   


   

 

  

 
 

 

   

 
 

 
 



            
        
 


LancasterOnline

 

 

Connect with us

 


  
  
  

Tonights agenda
Tonights
meeting
agenda, posted on the
district website, includes
an announcement that
the board met Jan. 21 to
review search firm information and again Jan.
28 to interview search
firms.
The board did not engage in any deliberations
and took no action, the
agenda says.
It also notes that the
board last week discussed candidates for
the role of interim superintendent. Personnel
discussions do not have
to be held in public under the Sunshine Act.

A7

   


 



   

 
  
  





  


     

   
 

 

 

  

              


    

   


    
  

A8

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2016

Business
Dividends

DEVELOPMENT

Subaru project moves forward

Dealership would shift a half-mile to Manheim Twp. from East Petersburg


LNP CORRESPONDENT

Ethan Allen
Home
Interiors

MANHEIM
TOWNSHIP
PPL Electric
Utilities
lp
De

aC
r

eek

MercedesBenz of
Lancaster

og

72

est

Co
n

Lancaster County Motors plan


to move its Subaru dealership
a half-mile south on Route 72
cleared a major hurdle Monday
night.
The Manheim Township Zoning
Hearing Board in a 4-0 vote granted five variances and a time extension for the proposed project.
Its a good project, board
chairman David Wood said.
Lancaster County Motors intends to relocate its Subaru store
from 5260 Main St. (Route 72) in
East Petersburg to 651 Delp Road
(at the intersection of Route 72).
Fueling the project is a requirement from Subarus corporate office that the local facility be significantly upgraded, explained Frank
Nolt, of Lancaster County Motors.
To bring the existing store into
compliance with the mandate
would require major renovations and an expansion, Nolt
said Tuesday.
And making extensive changes
to the existing store would disrupt its business. So Lancaster
County Motors intends to try a
different tack.
We just felt it would be better
to start from scratch by developing a new facility nearby, then
moving the store into it, Nolt said.
Lancaster County Motors used
that approach before, when it
developed a new Mercedes-Benz
store at the vacant Yellow Freight

East
Petersburg

Littl

.
Rd

Chelsea
Square
Shop Ctr.

Lausch
Rd.

JOAN KERN

Proposed
4.5-acre site
for Subaru
dealership

283

terminal, moving there in January 2013.


Nolt said the new Subaru site
would be 30,000 to 35,000 square
feet, compared to the existing
store of about 20,000 square feet.
He said its workforce of 30-plus
employees would grow, but its
too early to know how many new
jobs would result.
Nolt declined to disclose the
cost of acquiring the 4.5-acre
parcel now the front yard of
PPL Electric Utilities Lancaster
regional headquarters and developing the facility. Lancaster
County Motors has a sales agreement with PPL to buy the land for
an undisclosed sum.
The current Subaru location
would become the home of another Lancaster County Motors
dealership, but Nolt declined to
specify the future occupant.

Lancaster County Motors


hopes to open the new Subaru
store in about a year, depending on whether and when it secures all necessary approvals.
LNP reported in December
that Lancaster County Motors
wanted to put a dealership on
the corner lot. At that time, the
company declined to name the
dealership.
In January, the townships
commissioners approved the
companys request to switch
the sites zoning from industrial to a business designation,
B-4, that allows car dealerships.
With the rezoning, variances
and time extension in hand,
Lancaster County Motors next
will take a land development
plan to the township planners.
The company could go before
the planners at their April or
May meeting, said Mark Stanley, the attorney representing
Lancaster County Motors.
Among the variances approved, one would allow the
building to exceed 250 feet in
length, to 280 feet for one section and 319 feet in another.
Another would allow Lancaster County Motors to install
sidewalks across the street
from the store, on the south
side of Delp Road, to connect
with existing sidewalks.
Staff writer Tim Mekeel contributed to this report.

RETAIL

Amazon stays quiet on bookstore speculation


NEW YORK (AP)
Amazon is declining
comment on reports
it may be planning to
open more bookstores.
In a call with analysts
on Tuesday, Sandeep
Mathrani, the CEO of

mall operator General


Growth Properties, said
in an offhand comment
related to a question
about holiday traffic
that Amazon had plans
to open 300 or 400
bookstores.

Farm markets
NEW HOLLAND DAIRY
(USDA-PDA) New Holland
Sales Stables - New Holland, PA,
Auction Report for Wednesday,
February 03, 2016
***Next Heifer Special
Wednesday, February 10th @
10:30am***
Receipts: 241, Last Sale: 167, Last
Year: 231.
Compared to last week,
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. Wednesdays
supply included 118 fresh milking
cows, 19 springing cows, 11 bred
cows, 28 springing heifers, 38

bred heifers, 20 open heifers,


and 7 bulls. One hundred
percent of reported supply
Holsteins unless otherwise
noted. All sales sold on a per
head basis.
Fresh Cows: Supreme: 1900.002075.00 individual 2300.00;
Approved: 1600.00-1950.00;
Medium: 1200.00-1650.00;
Common: 825.00-1250.00.
Short Bred Cows: (1-3 months):
Medium: 1150.00-1450.00.
Springing Cows: Supreme:
1950.00-2075.00; Approved:
1600.00-1825.00; Medium:
1200.00-1500.00.
Cull cows: 300.00-1000.00.
Springing Heifers: (7-9 months):
Supreme: 1750.00-1925.00;
Approved: 1500.00-1775.00;
Medium: 1350.00-1450.00;
Common: 1100.00.
Bred Heifers: (4-6 months):
Supreme: 1800.00-1850.00;
Approved: 1625.00-1775.00;

But on Wednesday,
GGP issued a statement
saying that his remarks
were not intended to
represent
Amazons
plans.
A New York Times report, citing one uniden-

tified source Wednesday, said Amazon could


open more bookstores
in the future but at a
more modest pace.
Amazon said it does
not comment on rumors or speculation.

Medium: 1225.00-1350.00;
Common: 1100.00.

Last sale: 241.

Short Bred Heifers: (1-3 months):


Approved: 1375.00-1675.00;
Medium: 1000.00-1250.00.
Open Heifers: 300-600 lbs:
Approved: 900.00- 950.00.
600-900 lbs: Approved:
1050.00-1100.00; Medium:
835.00- 950.00.
Bulls: 300-600 lbs Jersey
575.00. 600-900 lbs 1150.001150.00, Jersey 850.00.
900-1200 lbs 1275.00-1550.00.
1200-1500 lbs 1575.00.
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.

NEW HOLLAND
FEEDER PIGS
(USDA-PDA) New Holland
Sales Stables - New Holland,
PA, Pig Auction for Wednesday,
February 03, 2016 Receipts: 330,

***Next Feeder Pig Sale


Wednesday February 17, 2016 @
1:30pm***
When compared to the most
recent sale two weeks ago,
feeder pigs sold mostly steady
to 20.00 lower. Demand was
moderate. All feeder pigs are
sold per cwt.
US 1-2: 62 Head, Wt. 20-30,
Avg Wt 27, Price 120.00-170.00,
Wt Avg Price 146.77; 33 Head,
Wt. 30-40, Avg Wt 34, Price
150.00-165.00, Wt Avg Price
155.45; 11 Head, Wt. 50-80, Avg
Wt 65, Price 100.00, Wt Avg
Price 100.00.
US 2-:3: 48 Head, Wt. 20-30,
Avg. Wt. 25, Price 80.00-100.00,
Wt Avg Price 89.55; 13 Head, Wt.
30-40, Avg Wt 32, Price 70.00,
Wt Avg Price 70.00; 10 Head,
Wt. 40-50, Avg Wt 44 , Price
90.00, Wt Avg Price 90.00; 14
Head, Wt. 50-60, Avg Wt 57,
Price 105.00-110.00, Wt Avg
Price 107.50; 12 Head, Wt. 60-80,
Avg Wt 66, Price 90.00-110.00,
Wt Avg Price 98.33.

WEDNESDAY DIVIDENDS DECLARED



Stk of

Period Rate record
IRREGULAR
Apollo Global Mgmt..................................Q
.28
2-19
STOCK
DragonWave.............................................. x
x- 1 for 25 reverse split, effective 02-04.
INCREASED
Brookfield Infra..........................................Q
.57
2-12
Comcast Corp Cl A.....................................Q
.275
4-6
Ingersoll Rand............................................Q
.32
3-11
Otter Tail Corp...........................................Q
.3125
2-12
Spectra Energy Ptnr...................................Q
.6388
2-12
INITIAL
REGULAR
Aramark Corp............................................Q
.095
2-15
Atmos Energy Corp....................................Q
.42
2-22
Avery Dennison Corp.................................Q
.37
3-2
Brinker Interl.............................................Q
.32
3-4
Brookfield Infras UN..................................Q
.57
2-29
CA Inc........................................................Q
.25
2-18
Cable One Inc............................................Q
1.50
2-15
Callaway Golf Co........................................Q
.01
2-23
Carlisle Companies....................................Q
.30
2-18
Delta Air Lines...........................................Q
.135
2-16
Diebold Inc................................................Q
.2875
2-0
Earthlink Holdings.....................................Q
.05
3-21
Fidelity & Guaranty...................................Q
.065
2-22
Harvest Cap Credit....................................M
.1125
2-18
Heartland Payment Sy...............................Q
.10
3-1
Kennametal Inc..........................................Q
.20
2-12
Mastercard................................................Q
.19
4-8
Materion Corp...........................................Q
.09
2-15
Omnicom Group........................................Q
.50
3-9
Phillips 66..................................................Q
.56
2-15
Rockwell Automation................................Q
.725
2-15
Suncor Energy Inc......................................Q
.29
3-4
Transact Tech.............................................Q
.08
2-19
Universal Corp...........................................Q
.53
3-9
Validus Holdings........................................Q
.35
3-15
g- Payable in Canadian funds.

Payable
2-29

2-26
4-27
3-31
3-10
2-26
3-7
3-7
3-16
3-26
3-31
3-15
3-4
3-15
3-1
3-9
0-0
4-4
3-7
2-25
3-15
2-26
5-9
3-2
4-7
3-1
3-10
3-25
3-15
4-11
3-31

TRANSACTION

Armstrong spinoff
to pay $5.6M/year
in rent to company
SEC filing details lease agreement
TIM MEKEEL

[email protected]

When
Armstrong
World Industries spins
off its flooring business
next month, Armstrong
World will get back millions of dollars.
Armstrong Flooring
will pay $5.62 million
annually in rent so it can
stay in its current quarters at the Armstrong
World campus.
Armstrong Flooring
also will pay a one-time
dividend of $50 million
to Armstrong World.
The payments were
disclosed Tuesday in an
Armstrong Flooring filing with the Securities
and Exchange Commission.
Armstrong World announced the spinoff plan
in February 2015, a move
that will leave Armstrong World with the
bigger and more profitable ceilings business.
Armstrong World said
at that time that Armstrong Flooring would
lease space at the 2500
Columbia Ave. campus,
but the terms were not
revealed until Tuesdays
filing.
The SEC filing shows

Armstrong Flooring will


sign a five-year lease
with one-year renewal
options. The lease covers
249,500 square feet in
all or part of 10 buildings
on the Manor Township
property.
Armstrong Flooring
also will pay a portion of
the property taxes owed
on the campus.
All furniture, fixtures
and equipment in the
rented space will remain
property of Armstrong
World, the lease says.
In other financial news,
Armstrong World said
Wednesday that it plans
to refinance its credit
agreement as it spins off
Armstrong Flooring.
Armstrong World said
the move will lead to
lower interest expense,
longer maturities and
several minor technical
improvements.
As part of the refinancing, Armstrong World
will pay down its borrowings by using an unspecified amount of cash
on hand plus that $50
million dividend from
Armstrong Flooring.
The new credit agreement will be worth $1.05
billion.

Follow us on Twitter at

LancasterOnline

LNP

Check rates daily at http://lancasteronline.interest.com

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Legend: The rate and annual percentage rate (APR) are effective as of 2/2/16. 2016 Bankrate, Inc. http://www.interest.com. The APR may increase after consummation and may vary. Payments do not include amounts for taxes and insurance. The fees set forth for each advertisement above may be charged to open the plan (A) Mortgage Banker, (B) Mortgage Broker, (C) Bank, (D) S & L, (E) Credit Union, (BA) indicates Licensed Mortgage Banker, NYS Banking
Dept., (BR) indicates Registered Mortgage Broker, NYS Banking Dept., (loans arranged through third parties). Call for Rates means actual rates were not available at press time. All rates are quoted on a minimum FICO score of 740. Conventional loans are based on loan amounts of $165,000. Jumbo loans are based on loan amounts of $435,000. Points quoted include discount and/or or igination. Lock Days: 30-60. Annual percentage rates (APRs) are based on fully
indexed rates for adjustable rate mortgages (ARMs). The APR on your specific loan may differ from the sample used. Fees reflect charges relative to the APR. If your down payment is less than 20% of the homes value, you will be subject to private mortgage insurance, or PMI. FHA Mortgages include both UFMIP and MIP fees based on a loan amount of $165,000 with 5% down payment. VA Mortgages include funding fees based on a loan amount of $165,000
with 5% down payment. Bankrate, Inc. does not guarantee the accuracy of the information appearing above or the availability of rates and fees in this table. All rates, fees and other information are subject to change without notice. Bankrate, Inc. does not own any financial institutions. Some or all of the companies appearing in this table pay a fee to appear in this table. If you are seeking a mortgage in excess of $417,000, recent legislation may enable lenders in
certain locations to provide rates that are different from those shown in the table above. Sample Repayment Terms ex. 360 monthly payments of $5.29 per $1,000 borrowed ex. 180 monthly payments of $7.56 per $1,000 borrowed. We recommend that you contact your lender directly to determine what rates may be available to you. To appear in this table, call 800-509-4636. To report any inaccuracies, call 888-509-4636. http://lancasteronline.interest.com

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

DOW
16,336.66 +183.12

NASDAQ
4,504.24 -12.71

S&P 500
1,912.53 +9.50

Wall Street anticipates that Philip


Morris Internationals earnings and
revenue declined in the fourth
quarter from a year earlier.
The seller of Marlboro and other
cigarette brands outside the U.S.
is due to report its latest financial
results today. Since Philip Morris
does all of its business overseas,
the New York company has to
navigate changes in currency
values. The stronger dollar has cut
into its revenue, hurting overall
earnings.
$100

PM

$89.79

$81.63

60

Operating
EPS

10 DAYS

$1.03

est.
$0.81

4Q 14

4Q 15

17,500

2,080

17,000

2,000

16,500

1,920

Dividend: $4.08 Div yield: 4.5%


Source: FactSet

Appetizing results?
Dunkin Brands serves up its latest
quarterly results today.
The owner of the Dunkin
Donuts and Baskin-Robbins
chains is expected to report that
its fourth-quarter earnings and
revenue improved from a year
earlier. Investors will be listening
for an update on Dunkin Donuts
foray into delivery and on-the-go
ordering, which the chain began
testing in select markets last fall.

Manufacturing bellwether
Economists project that orders to
U.S. factories declined in
December for the second month in
a row.
American manufacturers have
been struggling with the impact of
the strong dollar, which has made
their products pricier and less
competitive overseas. In addition,
economic weakness in many
major export markets, from
Europe to China, has hurt U.S.
sales abroad. The Commerce
Department reports its latest data
on factory orders today.
Factory orders

seasonally adjusted percent change


1.5%
1.3
0.2

est.
-0.2 -2.5

-2.1 -0.8

-1.5

S
O
2015

AP

5,071
4,372
1971
1122
83
225

HIGH
LOW
16381.69 15960.45
6857.30 6655.86
629.28
619.07
9513.22 9276.34
4547.32 4424.47
1918.01 1872.23
1299.83 1269.26
19659.14 19189.84
1016.91
989.24

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

2,396
2,109
1368
1386
21
255

15,500

Facebooks
ad machine

Just 3 years ago, Facebook was in Wall Streets


doghouse. Its stock slumped as investors worried
the company couldnt make money from people
who used smartphones and tablets instead of PCs,
which had larger screens for ads.
These days, Facebook is a mobile-advertising
powerhouse and draws 80 percent of its ad revenue
from mobile users. Thats a huge leap from the third
quarter of 2012, when Facebooks first mobile ads
contributed just 14 percent of its ad revenue.
As CEO Mark Zuckerberg stays focused on
mobile users, analysts say those ads will keep
fueling Facebooks growth, with new video formats
and ads on the Facebook-owned Instagram.
As the consumer continues to shift buying
activity to mobile, so do the ad dollars, wrote
analysts at Credit Suisse, one of several firms to
raise their price targets on Facebook shares after
the company reported earnings last week.
Though still in second
place, Facebook is gainingg
ground on Google, the
world leader in mobile ad
revenue. But research
firm eMarketer warns that
other online giants,
including Chinas Alibaba
and Baidu, are emerging
as new competitors for
mobile advertising dollars..

CLOSE
16336.66
6834.76
626.64
9495.21
4504.24
1912.53
1297.57
19606.93
1010.29

CHG.
+183.12
+70.60
+8.01
+81.44
-12.71
+9.50
+8.46
+82.78
+1.46

%CHG.
+1.13%
+1.04%
+1.29%
+0.87%
-0.28%
+0.50%
+0.66%
+0.42%
+0.14%

Company
Spotlight

2012

80 %

2013

2014

2015 80

Total

T
30.97
APD 114.64
ALU
3.06
AA
6.14
AIT
35.55
AWI 36.48
BBT 30.99
SAN
3.84
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

36.72
133.38
3.44
7.55
38.26
36.90
31.78
3.86
1.64
6.18
56.29
26.72
45.62
146.70
14.63
13.43
31.61
4.60
12.51
42.05
39.85
150.67
88.78
34.17
104.14
72.34
40.18
117.57
106.17
50.05

+.66
+2.57
+.03
+.61
+.68
-.20
+.20
+.01
+.02
+.03
-.02
+.71
+.54
-1.80
-.02
-.06
+1.47
+.25
+.09
+1.15
+.35
-.19
-.72
+.31
+.73
-.04
+.03
+.82
+.61
-.36

+1.8
+2.0
+0.9
+8.8
+1.8
-0.5
+0.6
+0.3
+1.2
+0.5
...
+2.7
+1.2
-1.2
-0.1
-0.4
+4.9
+5.7
+0.7
+2.8
+0.9
-0.1
-0.8
+0.9
+0.7
-0.1
+0.1
+0.7
+0.6
-0.7

75
70
D
52-week range

Mobile users as portion of total users


Monthly active users

Total

1.6

1.5 billion
1.0
0.5

Mobile users

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

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

+6.7
+2.5
-10.2
-23.5
-5.5
-19.3
-15.9
-20.7
-21.9
-9.6
+7.1
-11.7
-8.2
-9.2
+3.9
-8.8
+13.8
-1.5
-3.8
+4.2
-12.2
-4.8
-0.5
-9.4
+1.4
+0.1
-3.9
-1.6
-12.4
-5.2

+13.1
-9.2
-0.9
-55.9
-6.3
-27.5
-9.3
-38.1
-66.6
-16.1
+24.2
-31.1
-27.7
+6.2
-4.9
-12.5
-13.0
-33.3
+12.4
-1.5
-33.9
+8.7
-11.8
-32.7
+5.5
+11.9
+16.4
-4.1
-6.2
-14.2

$98.15

GM

D
52-week range

2014

2015

Interestrates

Price change 1-yr


SVU
-59.5%

ASSETS
TOTAL RETURN/RANK PCT
(Mlns)
NAV 4-WK
1-YR
5-YR LOAD
56,830 47.22 -7.0
-6.6/C +9.7/B
NL
54,845 148.05 -9.0 -11.0/D +8.3/B
NL
52,857 89.88 -7.3 -13.7/D
-0.7/D
NL
52,521 31.80 -4.7
-6.8/C +8.9/C 5.75
49,551 40.49 -6.6 -10.7/D +5.1/B 5.75
48,827 67.29 -6.3
-4.7/B +10.2/A
NL
48,205 23.02 -3.4
-2.1/A +8.4/A 5.75
47,662 36.49 -5.1
-4.9/A +10.2/A 5.75
44,335 10.74 +1.3 +0.1/B +4.9/A
NL
43,644
1.99 -4.3 -12.9/E +3.4/D 4.25
43,125 13.25 -0.3
-1.9/D +3.5/C
NL
42,832 14.43 +1.5 +3.1/A +5.2/B
NL
42,262 47.30 -6.7
-3.9/A +8.9/C 5.75
39,021 47.52 -11.4
-3.3/B +11.1/A
NL
36,605 83.89 -9.7
-0.8/A +18.4/B
NL
36,124 42.72 -7.0
-6.5/C +9.8/B
NL

37047
2940
2880
33571
225
713
6780
8392
98
1577
2098
984
340
2497
50
1220
14961
15643
1169
6039
3466
442
1639
8795
9790
1858
8146
626
1197
19299

LocalStocks

16
21
13
15
27
12
dd
77
27
18
17
27
17
12
14
dd
15
11
26
21
13
17
70
20
17
15
13

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

Becton Dickinson

140

J
$38.99

BDX

$128.87

D
52-week range

J
$157.50

Vol.: 2.3m (2.1x avg.)


PE: 42.1
Mkt. Cap: $29.93 b
Yield: 1.9%

FUELS
CLOSE
Crude Oil (bbl)
32.28
Ethanol (gal)
1.40
Heating Oil (gal)
1.08
Natural Gas (mm btu) 2.04
Unleaded Gas (gal)
1.03
METALS
Gold (oz)
Silver (oz)
Platinum (oz)
Copper (lb)
Palladium (oz)

PVS.
29.88
1.42
1.01
2.03
1.00

%CHG %YTD
+8.03
-12.9
-0.85
+0.4
+6.70
-2.0
+0.64
-12.8
+2.92
-18.7

CLOSE
PVS.
1141.30 1127.30
14.72
14.28
880.10 855.70
2.09
2.05
516.85 490.60

%CHG %YTD
+1.24
+7.6
+3.11
+6.9
+2.85
-1.3
+1.95
-1.6
+5.35
-7.8

AGRICULTURE
CLOSE
Cattle (lb)
1.37
Coffee (lb)
1.22
Corn (bu)
3.71
Cotton (lb)
0.62
Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 251.90
Orange Juice (lb)
1.36
Soybeans (bu)
8.77
Wheat (bu)
4.80
TREASURIES

PVS.
1.36
1.20
3.73
0.62
248.70
1.37
8.86
4.75

YEST PVS

.33
.45
.53
.73
1.27
1.89
2.71

%CHG %YTD
+0.83
+0.8
+1.42
-4.1
-0.40
+3.4
-0.58
-2.1
+1.29
-2.2
-0.66
-3.1
-1.07
+0.6
+1.00
+2.1

NET
CHG

0.33
0.46
0.53
0.74
1.27
1.85
2.66

...
-0.01
...
-0.01
...
+0.04
+0.05

YEST PVS

NET
CHG

2.49
4.03
2.32
9.37
4.01
1.33
3.62

2.47
4.03
2.40
9.24
4.08
1.34
3.68

WK MO QTR

s
s
s
t
t
t
t

+0.02
...
-0.08
+0.13
-0.07
-0.01
-0.06

s
t
t
t
t
t
t

1YR
AGO

s .01
s .07
s .20
t .51
t 1.29
t 1.79
t 2.38

WK MO QTR

1YR
AGO

t
t
t
s
t
t
t

2.26
4.12
1.93
6.45
3.29
1.53
2.80

t
t
t
s
t
t
t

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
1912.53
11121.40
9434.82
5837.14
18991.59
4226.96
43257.54
17191.25
1890.67
2550.74
39588.82
4930.76
12593.02
2739.25

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
82.54
29.18
38.51
13.01
6.00
28.47
5.88
16.27
2.17
3.99
54.32
5.73
30.30
21.30
37.10
31.51
39.96
19.26
38.06
56.30
37.92
46.88
4.42
8.13

J
$78.13

Close: $141.08 -3.97 or -2.7%


The medical device maker reported
revenue that fell short of forecasts.

Bond Buyer Muni Idx


Barclays USAggregate
PRIME FED Barclays US High Yield
RATE FUNDS
Moodys AAA Corp Idx
YEST 3.50 .38
Barclays CompT-BdIdx
6 MO AGO 3.25 .13
Barclays US Corp
1 YR AGO 3.25 .13

Source: FactSet

D
52-week range

Vol.: 17.6m (3.3x avg.)


PE: 21.3
Mkt. Cap: $61.7 b
Yield: 1.7%

The yield on the


10-year Treasury
rose to 1.89 percent on Wednesday. Yields affect
rates on mortBONDS
gages and other
consumer loans. Barclays LongT-BdIdx

3-yr* 5-yr*
1.4 -11.3

$64.22

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

also runs other grocery stores and one of the countrys


largest food-distribution businesses.
Since nearly tripling in 2013 and rising another 60
percent through last March, SuperValus stock has
been steadily dropping. Weak prices for groceries
helped knock the companys revenue lower last quarter.

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

65

150

3Q 4Q 1Q 2Q 3Q 4Q 1Q 2Q 3Q 4Q 1Q 2Q 3Q 4Q

2013

LOW

$160

The price of
crude oil surged
8 percent in one
of its biggest rallies recently.
Crude had fallen
6 percent to near
a 12-year low a
day earlier. The
price of gold and
silver rose.

3Q 4Q 1Q 2Q 3Q 4Q 1Q 2Q 3Q 4Q 1Q 2Q 3Q 4Q

$758.61
PE: 27.6
Yield: ...

$80

70
N

Close: $67.42 -4.45 or -6.2%


The home improvement retailer is
paying $2.3 billion to buy Rona to
expand its footprint in Canada.

80

Commodities

Ad revenue

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

+10.2/A
NL
+9.7/B
NL
+10.2/A
NL
+9.5/B
NL
+10.2/A
NL
-0.8/E
NL
+10.4/B
NL
+7.2/A 5.75
+9.2/C 5.75
+5.9/A 5.75
+7.6/A
NL
+3.6/C
NL
+3.7/B
NL
-0.7/D
NL

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

Lowes Companies

SYT

Close: $80.23 1.66 or 2.1%


Chinese state-owned chemical
maker China National Chemical
Corp. offered to buy the herbicide
and pesticide giant for $43 billion.
$90

$24.62

*annualized

NAME

Syngenta

Vol.: 29.1m (2.1x avg.)


PE: 10.6
Mkt. Cap: $45 b
Yield: 5.0%

$399.14

D
52-week range

Vol.: 3.8m (2.1x avg.)


Mkt. Cap: $14.4 b

25

5.8

(Based on past 12-month results)

TOTAL RETURN/RANK PCT


NAV 4-WK
1-YR
5-YR LOAD

$61.70

Vol.: 19.5m (1.8x avg.)


PE: 13.3
Mkt. Cap: $139.82 b
Yield: 3.7%

30

Price-earnings ratio: 7

$12

400

35

$5 billion

52-WEEK RANGE

52-WK RANGE
TICKER LO
HI CLOSE CHG%CHG

$45.69

D
52-week range

$40

3Q 4Q 1Q 2Q 3Q 4Q 1Q 2Q 3Q 4Q 1Q 2Q 3Q 4Q

Super value?

-4.7/A
-6.6/C
-4.7/A
-6.7/C
-4.7/A
-13.7/D
-1.9/A
-5.6/B
-5.2/C
-6.6/B
-3.9/A
+0.2/B
-0.7/C
-24.3/E

Close: $28.92 -0.73 or -2.5%


The automaker reported revenue
that fell shy of Wall Street forecasts.

Wednesdays close: $4.10

Vanguard 500Adml
146,311 176.64 -6.3
Vanguard TotStIAdm
120,312 47.21 -7.0
Vanguard InstIdxI
100,346 174.89 -6.3
Vanguard TotStIdx
92,592 47.19 -7.1
Vanguard InstPlus
85,157 174.91 -6.3
Vanguard TotIntl
73,995 13.44 -7.2
Fidelity Contra
73,007 91.65 -7.3
American Funds IncAmerA m
68,659 19.61 -3.1
American Funds GrthAmA m
68,248 37.49 -9.2
American Funds CapIncBuA m 66,938 54.88 -1.7
Vanguard WelltnAdm
65,584 61.15 -3.8
Vanguard TotBdAdml
62,206 10.78 +1.6
PIMCO TotRetIs
59,148 10.11 +0.6
Dodge & Cox IntlStk
57,028 31.79 -12.9

500

General Motors

Ad revenue as portion of total revenue

0.0

600

45

CMG

Close: $461.74 -13.93 or -2.9%


The fast-food chain reported continuing sales declines and said the
scope of a federal criminal investigation has widened.
$700

50

Vol.: 5.1m (6.3x avg.)


PE: ...
Mkt. Cap: $37.29 b
Yield: 2.9%

20

Chipotle Mexican Grill

55

$61.61

40

$60

60

60

SuperValu (SVU)

0 36.45
5158.20
3 4.96
2 17.10
3 45.56
1 60.70
1 41.90
1 7.79
1 7.67
2 9.72
0 57.08
2 45.42
1 67.10
6169.73
6 16.25
2 20.22
6 36.99
2 8.46
4 14.59
5 49.08
2 65.20
7161.62
3107.57
1 57.90
0105.49
9 74.14
9 42.75
6132.92
2134.00
3 61.70

YTD
WK MO QTR %CHG.
s t t
-6.25%
s t t
-8.98%
s s s +8.45%
s t t
-6.39%
s t t -10.05%
s t t
-6.43%
s t t
-7.22%
s t t
-7.37%
s t t -11.06%

Percentage of ad revenue that comes from mobile

MRK

Source: Facebook

Grocer SuperValu is bringing in a new chief executive,


one with a history of making deals.
The company named Mark Gross as its president
and CEO Tuesday, replacing Sam Duncan, who is
retiring. For the last decade, Gross ran an investmentadvisory firm that helped grocery companies make
acquisitions and sales. He also consulted with privateequity firms about investments in the food business.
There may be deals to do, if Gross wants to do
them. SuperValu has been considering a spin-off of its
discount chain called Save-A-Lot since last summer. It

$4

Facebook made virtually no money from mobile users


before the third quarter of 2012. Now 80 percent of its
ad sales are mobile.

2012

30 Biggest Mutual Funds


ASSETS
(Mlns)

Facebooks mobile surge

AP

FUND

Brandon Bailey; Jenni Sohn AP

Source: FactSet

Merck & Co.

Close: $50.05 -0.36 or -0.7%


The drug developer reported a drop
in fourth-quarter profit and revenue.

16,000
A

EURO
$1.1089 +.0174

Stocks staged a late comeback Wednesday as investors scooped


up shares of oil drillers and other energy companies. Major indexes
were down sharply early in the day, then jumped as the price of oil
began to climb. That came as a relief to long-suffering investors in
energy companies whose profits have been decimated by a
19-month slide in crude. A drop in the value of the dollar against
major foreign currencies also helped push up stocks. The dollar has
been surging lately. That has made U.S. goods sold abroad more
expensive and hurt corporate sales and profits. Six of 10 industry
sectors of the Standard and Poors 500 index rose, led by energy.

Close: 16,336.66
Change: 183.12 (1.1%)

10 DAYS

GOLD
$1,141.30 +14.00

Closing prices for Wednesday, February 3, 2016

18,000

Vol. (in mil.)


Pvs. Volume
Advanced
Declined
New Highs
New Lows

based on past 12-month results

15,680

CRUDE OIL
$32.28 +2.40

Dow Jones industrials

16,100

2,160

NYSE NASD

15

Price-earnings ratio: 19

-3.0

Close: 1,912.53
Change: 9.50 (0.5%)

1,900

1,840

30-YR T-BOND
2.71% +.05

16,520

S&P 500

StocksRecap

80

1,960

1,840

10-YR T-NOTE
1.89% +.04

Money&Markets

Today
Dollar effect

A9

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2016

5 12.80
3 14.11
1100.52
0 36.74
4 53.07
1 20.23
5 10.09
2 36.46
6 9.47
1 46.23
7 5.00
1 12.00
1 73.73
1 27.00
3 39.87
2 33.40
0 54.59
6 38.60
8 58.89
2 47.25
0 51.02
4 88.00
2 51.91
1 58.77
1 14.05
2 21.37

CHG
+9.50
+46.57
-146.22
-84.87
-455.25
-57.03
+165.05
-559.43
-15.93
-28.49
+992.65
-113.19
+150.76
-10.32

%CHG
+0.50%
+0.42%
-1.53%
-1.43%
-2.34%
-1.33%
+0.38%
-3.15%
-0.84%
-1.10%
+2.57%
-2.24%
+1.21%
-0.38%

YTD

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

1YR

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

QTR
YTD
t
-6.43%
t
-4.74%
t
-12.18%
t
-6.49%
t
-13.34%
t
-9.63%
t
+0.65%
t
-9.68%
t
-3.60%
t
-11.52%
t
-8.68%
t
-7.74%
t
-3.20%
t
-22.60%

Vol

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

DIV

11.07 +.02 +0.2 t t t -10.2 +13.1 1061 14


12.11 +.06 +0.5 t t t -9.6 +6.4
699 19
83.85 +.05 +0.1 t t t -12.0
-0.4 3704 11
36.69 +.32 +0.9 s s s +7.5 +13.7 7770 12
43.08 +.29 +0.7 s t t -4.7 -12.5 1081 19
13.49 +.05 +0.4 t t t -15.8 -12.0 2636 dd
7.73 +.27 +3.6 s s s +16.1 +0.4 12669 dd
29.67 -.17 -0.6 t t t -8.1
-1.2 44146 18
7.85 -.02 -0.3 s t s +0.1 +11.6 11023 36
17.43 +.54 +3.2 s t t -15.2 -47.2
442 dd
4.12 -.46 -10.0 t s s +15.9 +28.6
66 dd
4.10 -.24 -5.5 t t t -39.5 -55.6 3691 7
53.80 -1.01 -1.8 t t t -16.7 -16.1 5035 9
7.26 +.36 +5.2 s s s +16.5
...
800
32.56 +.32 +1.0 s t t -0.4 -14.7
887 26
23.53 +.19 +0.8 t t t -7.8
-4.7 1758 5
52.92 -.08 -0.2 t s t -0.8 +35.1 3999 18
35.34 +1.09 +3.2 s s s +4.7
-6.3 1355 19
54.35 +.25 +0.5 t s t -3.1 +35.0
316 16
23.82 +.12 +0.5 s s s +4.7 -32.6 1953 13
50.62 +.71 +1.4 s s s +9.5 +11.0 19818 11
66.27 -.59 -0.9 t s s +8.1 -19.7 11774 14
40.60 +.48 +1.2 r t t -8.4 -12.1
42 19
47.60 -.85 -1.8 t t t -12.4
-4.7 46754 11
5.38 -.08 -1.5 t t t -16.5 -41.5 1674 dd
9.87 +.02 +0.2 t t t -30.4 -38.7
981 11

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.

A10 THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2016

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

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

In brief
SOMALIA

Bomb suspected in
deadly jet blast
U.S. officials said Wednesday that
an explosion on a Somali jetliner that
punched a 3-foot hole through its fuselage in midair and killed one passenger
was most likely caused by a bomb.
Their
preliminary
assessment
heightened fears that al-Shabab, a militant group in Somalia, which is suspected in the explosion, had figured out
a way to plant the bomb in the plane.
The explosion Tuesday rocked the
Daallo Airlines flight shortly after it
took off from Mogadishu.
WASHINGTON

Computer glitch
halts tax returns
The IRS stopped accepting electronically filed tax returns Wednesday
because of problems with some of its
computer systems. The outage could
affect refunds, but the agency said it
doesnt anticipate major disruptions.
A hardware failure forced the shutdown of several tax processing systems,
including the e-file system, the IRS
said in a statement. The IRS.gov website remains available, but wheres my
refund? and other services were not
working.
CHARLESTON, S.C.

Trial delayed in
church massacre
A federal judge has granted a delay
in the trial for Joey Meek, the friend
of the man charged in the Charleston
church shootings. Attorney Deborah
Barbier had asked that the trial be delayed at least until May so the defense
would have more time to review evidence in the case.
Authorities say that 21-year-old
Meek failed to tell investigators all
he knew about Dylann Roofs plans
to shoot nine black parishioners at
Emanuel AME Church last June.
ANNAPOLIS, MD.

Bill would remove


Taney statue
A bill before the Maryland House
of Delegates would remove from the
Maryland State House grounds a statue of the Supreme Court chief justice
who wrote the 1857 Dred Scott decision affirming slavery.
The Frederick News-Post reports
that the bill regarding the statue of
Roger Brooke Taney was introduced
Monday by Democrat Jill Carter of
Baltimore.

THE NEW YORK TIMES

Audience members listen as President Barack Obama speaks at the Islamic Society of Baltimore on Wednesday.
BALTIMORE

Obama visits mosque, denounces bias


GARDINER HARRIS
NEW YORK TIMES

President Barack Obama reached


out to Muslims in the United States
on Wednesday in an impassioned
speech, embracing them as part of
one American family, implicitly
criticizing the Republican presidential candidates and warning
citizens not to be bystanders to
bigotry.
In a visit to the Islamic Society
of Baltimore, his first to a mosque
in the United States as president,
Obama recited phrases from the
Quran and he praised U.S. Muslims
as a crucial part of Americas history and vital to the nations future.
If were serious about freedom
of religion and Im talking to my
fellow Christians who are the majority in this country we have to
understand that an attack on one
faith is an attack on all faiths, he
said.
Although Obama never mentioned Republican presidential
candidates like Donald Trump and
Ben Carson, the targets of his remarks were clear. We have to reject a politics that seeks to manipulate bigotry, Obama said.
Citing Thomas Jefferson and

New lawyer silences


bad-boy CEO
Bad-boy ex-pharmaceutical company CEO and prolific social media user
Martin Shkreli has been muzzled.
A new lawyer in a federal securities
fraud case against Shkreli told reporters on Wednesday that his client would
stop speaking out in his own defense
until the charges are resolved.
We want to try this case in the courtroom and not in the media, defense
attorney Benjamin Brafman said with
a silent Shkreli at his side.
TUCSON, ARIZ.

Video shows only


known US jaguar
The only known wild jaguar in the
United States is seen roaming around
a creek and other parts of a mountain
range just south of Tucson in the first
publicly released video of the giant cat.
El Jefe Spanish for the boss
has been living in the Santa Rita Mountains 25 miles south of downtown Tucson for over three years, according to
the Center for Biological Diversity.
El Jefe is about 7 years old and is the
only documented wild jaguar in the
country.
SOURCE: WIRE REPORTS

President Obama

John Adams, who he said had had


their own copies of the Quran,
Obama reminded his audience that
Muslims had been a part of the
United States since its founding.
So this is not a new thing, he said.
Generations of Muslim Americans helped to build our nation.
But he said that too many Americans only heard about Islam after
terrorist attacks, and that this must

SOCIAL MEDIA

Kik app scrutinized


after teens killing
RON HARRIS

ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK

Our television shows


should have some
Muslim characters
that are unrelated to
national security.

ATLANTA Kik Messenger, a smartphone


app popular among
younger teens, is on
the defensive following
the stabbing death of a
13-year-old girl in Virginia who told friends
she was using Kik to connect with an 18-year-old
man.
Like Instagram, Snapchat and other messaging rivals, Kik provides
free, easy and instant
connections to other users anywhere. Kik enables people to message
each other one-on-one
or in group chats, and
to share photos, videos
and other content. By
enabling people to identify themselves only by
an invented username, it
provides more anonymity than services such as
WhatsApp, which connect people through
their phone numbers.
Law enforcement officials say the application is dangerous in part
because parents cannot
reliably prevent anonymous strangers from
contacting their children
if they use it.

Kik made an updated


guide for parents available on its website following the arrests of two
Virginia Tech students
in the slaying of Nicole
Lovell, a seventh-grader
who lived two miles from
the campus in Blacksburg, Virginia.
Kik also pushed out an
update to the app, available on Google Play and
Apples iTunes store, and
had Apple raise Kiks ageappropriate rating on
Monday from 9+ to 12+,
closer to its requirement
that no one under 13 use
the service, terms that
are shared by Kiks rivals.
We are trying to educate all users, parents
and teens, company
spokesman Rod McLeod
said Wednesday.
The parents guide
stresses that teens between 13 and 18 need a
parents permission to
use Kik, but theres no
technical way to enforce
that or to prevent a child
from entering a false
birthdate, McLeod acknowledged.
McLeod noted that
many other social media
networks operate the
same way.

change. Our television shows


should have some Muslim characters that are unrelated to national
security, he said. Its not that hard
to do. There was a time when there
was no black people on television.
On Wednesday, Obama urged
Americans to look inward to examine the roots of those divisions, and
to seek ways to transcend the fear
and suspicion.
Concerns about Muslims and
Syrian refugees in the United
States grew after terrorist attacks
in Paris in November claimed the
lives of 130 people and after a mass
shooting by a husband-and-wife
team in San Bernardino, California, in December killed 14 people
and seriously wounded 22.
Since then, attacks on American
Muslims and mosques have spiked,
according to the Council on American-Islamic Relations.
On Wednesday, the president
said, Islam has always been a part
of America.
To young Muslims, he said: You
fit in here, right here. Youre right
where you belong. Youre part of
America, too. You arent Muslim
or American. You are Muslim and
American.

WASHINGTON

Lawmakers decry
Flint water failure
ROLL CALL

WASHINGTON The
Environmental Protection Agency came under
sharp criticism Wednesday for failing to inform
Flint, Mich., residents
for nearly a year that
their drinking water was
contaminated with lead,
and House members
vowed to continue investigating the man-made
crisis.
Its important for the
EPA to tell people that
their water is poisoning their kids, House
Oversight and Government Reform Chairman
Jason Chaffetz, R-Utah,
shouted into his microphone at Wednesdays
hearing. Why didnt
they do that? What good
is the EPA if they cant do
that?
Ranking
Member
Elijah E. Cummings,
D-Md., echoed his outrage, but stressed that
state and local officials
share much of the blame.
I want everyone who is
responsible for this fiasco to be held accountable, he bellowed. Im
not protecting anyone.
Thats not our job. We are
the last line of defense.

As the House held its


hearing, senators acknowledged they have
failed to reach agreement on an effort to secure $600 million in federal funding for Flint a
dispute that could derail
discussion of a bipartisan energy bill. Democratic Rep. Dan Kildee,
who represents Flint,
testified both at the oversight committee and at
the House Budget Committee on Wednesday,
where he sought aid for
his hometown.
Although the state
has the moral responsibility to make this right,
through our budget, the
federal government can
step in and ensure the
citizens of Flint that they
have their back, he told
the budget panel.
Chaffetz said Wednesdays hearing was only
the beginning of the
committees oversight.
He said the committee
had hoped to hear from
the former Flint emergency manager blamed
for the wholesale contamination of the citys
water supply, but Darnell Earley dodged a subpoena.

STATE

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2016

NORRISTOWN

Cosby loses bid to dismiss sex-assault case


LAURA MCCRYSTAL
and JEREMY ROEBUCK
PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Montgomery County District Attorney Kevin Steele, right,


and Assistant DA Kristen Feden, left, leave the courtroom
during lunch break Wednesday in Norristown.

Amendment and ensure


Constand could depose
him for a civil case and
possibly win a large judgment.
But Kevin Steele, the
current district attorney who last summer
helped revive the case,
challenged Castors testimony.
He noted that Castors
account of his decisionmaking changed more
than once, and he questioned why there was no
proof of a non-prosecution deal.
Its not reasonable to
not have this in writing,
Steele told the judge at
one point Wednesday.
A secret agreement that
permits a wealthy defendant to buy his way out
of a criminal case isnt
right.
One of Cosbys attorneys countered that the
oral agreement Castor
described was sufficient.
A promise of a prosecutor even an oral
promise is one that is

absolute, 100 percent


enforceable, said Christopher Tayback.
ONeill also denied a
motion by Cosbys lawyers to disqualify Steele
or his office from prosecuting the case.
The defense contended Steeles decision to
charge Cosby was political, and that he had used
an implied promise of
prosecution to get elected last year.

Defense strategy
But even as he rejected
their arguments, ONeill
offered a glimpse of another strategy Cosbys
lawyers may consider in
an attempt to blunt the
charges.
He said if the case
moves toward a trial,
they could move to suppress Cosbys 2006 deposition, portions of
which were released last
summer and became a
building block in the current case.

Attorney generals
race heating up
ASSOCIATED PRESS

HARRISBURG The
race for Pennsylvania attorney general is becoming very heated between
two leading Democrats
seeking to replace Attorney General Kathleen
Kane, set off by former
Gov. Ed Rendells endorsement in the race
Wednesday.
In a statement released
by Josh Shapiros campaign, Rendell called
Shapiro the only candidate who will restore
integrity to Harrisburg.
In a response two
hours later, the campaign for Stephen Zappala accused Shapiro of
being fundamentally
flawed for the attorney
generals office and a
full-time politician and
a part-time lawyer who
has never tried either a
criminal or civil case in
court.

It was a fast turn of


events for the two as
they collect signatures to
get on the ballot for the
April 26 primary.
Shapiro is a former
state lawmaker and the
commissioners chairman in Montgomery
County, Pennsylvanias
third-most
populous.
Zappala, the son of a
former state Supreme
Court justice, has 17
years under his belt as
the district attorney in
Allegheny County, Pennsylvanias second-most
populous county.
Kane is considering
running for another
term, but she is keeping
a low profile and is not
backed by any visible
campaign organization.
Kane is fighting criminal
charges, the suspension
of her law license and the
potential that the Senate
could vote to remove her
from office.

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Possible cheating
probed at academy
MARK SCOLFORO
ASSOCIATED PRESS

HARRISBURG
Pennsylvanias governor on Wednesday
indirectly confirmed
news reports of an investigation into possible cheating at the
state police academy
in Hershey.
Gov. Tom Wolf told
reporters it was a
personnel matter but
added that if cheating
did occur, its absolutely unacceptable.
Cheating is wrong,
and I dont think it
goes any farther than
you cant tolerate it,
Wolf said. You cant
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of life.
Asked about how
the investigation is
being
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the Democratic governor said the state
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if cheating actually
went on, and if it went
on, people will pay the
price.
State police spokeswoman Maria Finn
had little to say on

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A Montgomery County
judge Wednesday rejected Bill Cosbys motion to
dismiss his sex-assault
case, ruling that a promise from the countys
former district attorney
was not legally binding
and didnt bar prosecutors from ever bringing
charges against the comedian over an alleged
2004 attack.
The ruling by Common Pleas Court Judge
Steven T. ONeill, after a
two-day hearing, means
the first criminal case
filed against Cosby can
now proceed to a preliminary evidentiary hearing March 8.
The 78-year-old comedians lawyers could appeal, but did not immediately say Wednesday if
they would.
The judges decision
capped a widely watched
proceeding
focused
largely on Cosbys claim
that his arrest in December violated a 2005 decision by former Montgomery County District
Attorney Bruce L. Castor
Jr. not to charge him.
At the time, Castor
concluded that the evidence was insufficient
to prove Andrea Constands claims that Cosby
had drugged and sexually assaulted her at his
Cheltenham mansion.
Castor said his public announcement that
he was declining prosecution was meant to
remove Cosbys incentive to plead the Fifth

In it, Cosby acknowledged acquiring Quaaludes with the intent of using them in consensual
sexual encounters with
women.
The hearing was the
first major proceeding
in Cosbys case, the only
prosecution he faces
despite similar claims
by dozens of women nationwide.
Scores of reporters
crammed two courtrooms and heard two
days of testimony not
about the alleged attack, but what happened
when Constand first reported it.
Castor told the judge
inconsistencies in Constands 2005 statements
and the timing of her
complaint she waited
a year and first called a
civil lawyer before contacting police convinced him he couldnt
win a conviction.
He said that when
he first declared he
wouldnt pursue charges
against Cosby, he was declaring none of his successors would, either.
Mr. Cosby was not
getting prosecuted at all
ever as far as I was
concerned, Castor said.
My belief was that I had
the power to make such a
statement.
Constands
lawyers
have denied that they
were aware or agreed to
any such agreement, and
she has filed a defamation suit against Castor
for his remarks.
Now a Toronto resident, she didnt attend
the proceeding.

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A12

NATION/WORLD

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2016

IMMIGRATION CRISIS

Germany tightens
rules on asylum
ALISON SMALE
NEW YORK TIMES

BERLIN The German Cabinet took significant steps Wednesday toward toughening
asylum rules in the wake
of the Cologne assaults,
approving among other
measures a two-year ban
on family reunifications
and excluding three
North African countries
from its asylum list.
The steps came just a
week after the Cabinet
moved to make it easier
to deport migrants who
commit crimes, deepening a new and harsher
line by the government
of Chancellor Angela
Merkel, who has come
under mounting criticism
for her asylum policies.
The measures approved
Wednesday,
which also included a
plan to house asylum
seekers in special facilities to speed their applications, seem certain to
pass Parliament.
The steps were clearly
intended to make Germany less welcoming for
migrants, and to blunt
opponents of Merkels
decision to throw open

the doors to about 1


million asylum seekers last year.
Other measures approved by the Cabinet
included demanding
small contributions
from asylum seekers $11 from their
monthly stipends to
help cover the costs of
integration courses.
In addition, deportees who have previously claimed that
they must stay in
Germany for medical
care will have to leave
if health care in their
home countries is
deemed sufficient.
The Cabinet also
designated Morocco,
Tunisia and Algeria as
safe states, meaning
those who have arrived
from the three North
African countries now
face deportation.
The push against
allowing citizens of
those countries to
stay has gained momentum since the
New Years Eve assaults in Cologne by
men largely described
as Arab or North African.

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PRISON ESCAPE

Hard-luck hero helped nab fugitives


SAN FRANCISCO
CHRONICLE

SAN FRANCISCO
The man credited with
helping San Francisco
police capture a pair of
Orange County jail escapees over the weekend
is an unlikely hero.
Until recently, 55-yearold Matthew Hay-Chapman was living in the botanical garden of Golden
Gate Park homeless,
depressed about a string
of family tragedies and
unable to work because
of severe back pain.
Still, he managed to
stay connected to the
world. Every day, he
would check out online
news sites at the library
or find a newspaper and
read it front to back in
the McDonalds by the
park.
It was his obsession
with current events,
along with his keen eye,
that led him to spot the
fugitives Saturday, hanging out down the block
from a police station.
As a result, Hay-Chapman is in line to collect $140,000 in reward
money.
When they told me
about the benefits, that
didnt matter, Chapman said Tuesday in
front of the McDonalds
at Haight and Stanyan
streets, still proudly
wearing the black hoodie
that San Francisco police
gave him as thanks for
his assistance. I was just
doing the right thing.
Hay-Chapman
had

already escaped living


in the park, having befriended a man who lets
him sleep on his couch.
Now he hopes to use the
reward money not just to
rebuild his own life, but
also to help a troubled
son, disabled daughter
and two young grandchildren who are in foster care in Oregon.
Hay-Chapman
was
raised on military bases
all over the world, one
of 10 children of an Air
Force colonel. Two of his
eight brothers are in law
enforcement.
Before his life fell
apart,
Hay-Chapman
worked as a carpenter,
as a heating and air conditioning installer, as a
vault locksmith and as
a hotel night manager.
Then came the back
pain, brought on by lifting something in 2000.
It got so bad he couldnt
work.
His daughter, now 33,
suffered a brain hemorrhage at birth and is
severely disabled. His
30-year-old son lost custody of his two children
because of struggles with
drug addiction.
His family said HayChapman has trouble
staying on a steady
course, but did not have
a drug or alcohol problem.
Hes had his ups and
downs, said his brother
John
Hay-Chapman,
He is a jack of all trades
he is a good mechanic.
... But he can be irrespon-

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News junkie
He added, ``But here
is the thing about Matt:
He is sharp, he reads the
paper and he is up on everything.
Matthew Hay-Chapman and his friend regularly go to the McDonalds at the entrance of
the park and it was
there, on Saturday, that
Hay-Chapman was at
the right place at the
right time.
He was on his way into
the fast-food restaurant
when when he spotted a
white 2008 GMC Savana
van parked at the side of
the Whole Foods Market
on Haight. It looked like
the one he used to drive
when he worked as a mechanic and then lived
in when times got hard.
Because hes a news
junkie and has what he
calls a photographic
memory, Hay-Chapman
realized that the van
matched one that had
been linked to three men
who had been on the run
since they escaped from
the Orange County jail
Jan. 22.
I noticed the windows were all steamed
up real heavy condensation, Hay-Chapman
said. He figured someone

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Boom, this
guy pops out
of the van.
I had seen
him in the
news. I said,
Thats the
guy thats
the Iranian
escapee!

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fair price for your gold?
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out the
middleman,
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up to
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was living inside.


Suddenly, boom, this
guy pops out of the van.
I had seen him in the
news, Hay-Chapman
said. I said, Thats the
guy thats the Iranian
escapee!
He followed the man,
37-year-old
Hossein
Nayeri, into the McDonalds. Nayeri got in a line
that was six people deep,
while Hay-Chapman sat
down at a table.
I knew I had time,
Hay-Chapman said. I
studied the man ... because I wanted to be 100
percent sure before I go
and alert the authorities.
Once he was sure, he
slipped outside. After a
passerby refused to let
him use a cellphone, he
headed for the nearby
Park police station.
Before he got there, a
patrol car with two officers in it happened by.
Hay-Chapman flagged
them down with his metal cane.
The officers were about
to confront Nayeri when
a man on the street suddenly collapsed into the
arms of one of them. As
the police called for paramedics, Hay-Chapman
kept watch for Nayeri,
who soon emerged from
McDonalds with a cup of
coffee.
With the officers preoccupied with the man
who had collapsed,
Nayeri walked calmly
past me, calmly with his
coffee, Hay-Chapman
said. He watched as the
fugitive walked down the
restaurants steps and
crouched between two
parked vehicles.
Now he pops up and
he starts to walk calmly
across Stanyan, HayChapman said. After a
few feet, he bolts and he
runs into the park.
The officers fanned out
and eventually caught up
with Nayeri in front of
the station. When they
returned to the van, a
second fugitive, 20-yearold Jonathan Tieu, was
still in it.
Would that every
citizen would be paying
that much attention,
said Police Chief Greg
Suhr, who confirmed
Hay-Chapmans pivotal
role in the capture. God
bless him for having
courage and for being
that observant and that
sharp.
Orange County sheriffs officials say they will
work with agencies that
offered separate rewards
to deliver the money
where it belongs.
Hay-Chapman figures
its his time.
When I was down and
out, nobody wanted to
help me out, he said. He
hopes that the money
will lead to a better life
for him and his family.
The friend who finally
did help him said HayChapman deserves every
penny coming to him.
He is really a straightup guy, said the friend,
who asked that his name
not be used. He is a guy
who is into doing good
things for people even
though he is homeless.
He did what he was
supposed to do.

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OBITS
A13 THURSDAY,
FEBRUARY 4, 2016
LNP
| LANCASTER,
PA

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2016

Obituaries

Deaths
Reported
Bacon, Violet Mae *
95, of Quarryville. February 2, 2016. Dewald
Funeral and Cremation Services, Inc., 7863530
Bowles, Jean E.
84. February 2, 2016.
Charles F. Snyder
Funeral Home & Crematory, 393-9661
Brown, James W. *
70, of Peach Bottom.
February 2, 2016.
Dewald Funeral &
Cremation Services,
Inc., 786-3530
Buckwalter, John
Henry Jr.
75, of Conestoga. February 1, 2016. Andrew
T. Scheid Funeral
Home, 397-8298
Lantz, Alvin J.
83, of 6198 Sundra Circle, East Petersburg.
February 3, 2016.
Clyde W. Kraft Funeral
Home, Inc., 898-2240
Martin, Melvin S.
93, husband of Mary Z.
(Nolt) Martin, of Richland. February 2, 2016.
Eckenroth Home for
Funerals, 445-5122
Nguyen, Van Dang
78, husband of Bach
Nguyen, of Lancaster.
February 2, 2016.
Charles F. Snyder, Jr.
Funeral Home & Crematory, 560-5100
Rice, Earl V.
92, of Lititz. February
1, 2016. Stradling
Funeral Homes, Inc.,
859-1230
Schrader, Eugenia
76, wife of Francis C.
Schrader, of Lancaster.
February 2, 2016.
Charles F. Snyder, Jr.
Funeral Home & Crematory, 560-5100
Smith, Mary Jane
83, of 3 Benjamin Circle, Myerstown. February 2, 2016. Kreamer
Funeral Home and
Crematory, 867-4811
Townsley, Dolores E.
84, of Fairmount
Homes. February 2,
2016. Wilde Funeral
Home, 610-857-5551
Uriondo, Elmer F.
81, husband of Phyllis
Uriondo, of Lancaster.
February 2, 2016.
Buch-Heisey Funeral
Home & Cremation
Services, 626-2464
* No Obituary appears

Services
Today
Fisher, Daniel B.
Late home, 5131 Amish
Road, Kinzers, 9 AM.
Furman Home for
Funerals
Montgomery, Irene F.
Harmony
United
Methodist Church,
740 Harmony Rd.,
Morgantown, 11 AM.
The Labs Funeral
Home, Inc.
Robins, Frank J.
Wilde Funeral Home,
434 Main St., Parkesburg, 11 AM
Thomas, Clyde W.
Central
Manor
Church of God, 387
Penn Street, Washington Boro, 11 AM.
Andrew T. Scheid
Funeral Home
Weaver, Carolyn K.
Shivery
Funeral
Home, 3214 Lincoln
Highway East, Paradise, 4 PM

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John Henry
Buck
kwalterr,
Jr.

John
Henry
Buckwalter, Jr., 75, a
retired optician, of
Conestoga,
d i e d
Mo n d a y,
Fe b r u a r y
1, 2016 at
Hospice &
Community
Care, M ount
Joy surrounded by his loving
familyy, friends and his
beloved canine, Sandyy.
Born December 14,
1940 in Lancaster and
raised on Cabbage Hill,
he was the son of the
late John Henry and
Anna M ary (Hueg el)
Buckwalter and was a
member of St. Joseph
Catholic Church. John
wa s 1 9 5 9 g r a d u a t e o f
Lancas ter Catholic
High. In early years,
John enjoyed performing in many local theater productions at the
Fulton Opera House,
the F&M Green Room,
and the former Cricket
Theater.
John was always a
g enerous person who
kept his sense of humor
till the end.
Surviving are his seven children: Jude and
wife JoAnna, of Wilkes
Barre; Shawn and wife
Debra, of Conestoga;
Brian and wife Allison,
of Mount Joy; Leonard
and wife Hasmig, of
M il l e rsv il l e ; A n th o ny
(Tony) and wife Karen,
off Qu arr yvi lle; Er ic
and wife Ro xanne,
of Lancas ter; Maria
Buckw alter W right
and husband David, of
Conestoga; twenty-seven grandchildren and
twelve great-grandchildren. Also surviving are
fo
our siblings: Gertrude
Buckw alter
M ohr ,
of Lancas ter, Anne
( N a n c y ) B u c k w a lt e r
Kirchner and husband
Andrew, of West Willow,
Maria
Buckw alter
Weber and husband
Thomas, of Lancaster
a n d C h ar le s E d wa r d
Buckwalter and wife
Judith, of Strasburg as
w e l l a s m a n y n i e c e s,
nephews and friends.
The
Fu n e r a l
Arra ng eme nts an d
Interment will be pri
private at the request of the
deceased. Kindly omit
flowers. Those desiring may send Memorial
Remembrances to the
Sisters of St. Francis
Fo u n d a t i o n ,
609
C o nv e n t R o a d , A s t o n ,
PA 19014.
To submit an on-line
condolence, visit: www.
scheidfuneralhome.com

Jean E.
Bowles

Jean E. Bowles, 84,


entered into rest on
T u e s d a y,
Fe b r u a r y
2, 2016 at
Hospice &
Community
Care,
Mount Joy.
Born in Mount Joy, she
was the daughter of the
late Paul R. and Mary M.
Fitzkee.
In addition to her
parents, Jean was preceded in death by her
son, Donald C. Fogie, her
sister, Alice (Marian)
Cooter, and brother,
Paul H. Fitzkee.
She is survived
by a brother, Daniel
M. (Floy) Fitzkee, of
Manheim, and her sisterr,
Evelyn J. Beggs, of Sierra
Vista, AZ. She is also survived by her children:
Bonnie S. Alexander,
of Millersville, sons
Aubrey W. Bowles, Jr.,
of Lancaster, and Lee
G. Bowles, of Manheim,
and a grandson, Kyle
Alexander, of Mount
Joy.
J ean work ed at
W ye th, co-manag ed
the Double B Tavern,
Columbia, the Watering
a
Trough, Mount Joy,
and the Colonial Inn,
Marietta. She retired
from Lancaster County
Prison in 1995 after 17
years. She was a Center
Control Officer and rst
female correctional officer to hold a permanent
post. The Lancaster
County Commissioners
honored her as the recipient of the Lancaster
County Prison Lock and
Key Award, presented
to the employee who exempliffied
i the embodiment of the term corrections professional.
Jean was also an avid
reader and gardener.
Funeral Services for
Jean will be private. In
lieu of owers, the family requests that contributions in Jeans memory be made to Hospice
& Community Care, PO
Box 4125, Lancaster,
PA 17604. To leave the
family an online condolence, please visit:
SnydeerrFuneralHo
ome.com

Offer your
condolences through
Facebook or Twitter
at
LancasterOnline.com/
Obituaries

Eugenia
Maru
Schrader

Eug enia Maru


Schrader ,
76 ,
of
L a n c a s t e r,
PA passed
a w a y
T u e s d a y,
February 2,
2 0 1 6. S h e
was the wife
of Francis C. Schrader to
whom she was married
for 34 years.
Born in Puebla,
Mexico she was a daughter of the late Manuel
and Josephina (Ruiz)
Brinseno. Maru worked
for Weeis Markets as a cashier and in the clerical
department for 18 years
prior to her retirement.
She enjoyed shing, crocheting, knitting, hunting with her husband
and was an avid bird
watcher. Eugenia was
a member of St. John
Neumann Catholic
Church.
In addition to her
husband Francis she is
s u r v i v e d by h e r s i st e r
Josephina Brinseno of
Mexico City, Mexico
and numerous nieces
and nephews. She was
preceded in death by
her son Jose Manuel
Brinseno.
Mass of Christian
Burial will be held on
Saturda y, February
6, 2016 at 11AM from
St. J ohn Neumann
Catholic Church, 601 E.
Delp Rd., Lancaster, PA
17601. Interment will be
held privatelyy. Viewings
will be held Friday evening from 6-8PM from
the Charles F. Snyder,
Jr. Funeral Home &
Crematoryy, 3110 Lititz
Pike, Lititz, PA 17543
and from 10-11AM prior
to the Funeral Mass at
Church.
In lieu of owers contributions may be made
to the American Cancer
Societyy, 314 Good Drive,
Lancaster, PA 17603 in
her memoryy.
Share online condolences at
Snyder
erFuneralHo
ome.com

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Food for Thought

A13

OTHER OBITUARIES
ON PAGE A14

Melvin S. Martin

Melvin S. Martin, 93,


formerly of Martindale,
PA, went to be with his
Lord and Savior on
Tuesday, February 2,
2016, surrounded by his
loving family at his home
in Richland, PA. Melvin
was the husband of Mary
Z. (Nolt) Martin, with
whom he would have
celebrated their 17th
wedding anniversary on
March 27th. He was predeceased by his first
wife, Elizabeth Z.
(Burkholder) Martin,
whom he married on
December 14, 1944. She
passed away on June 1,
1997.
Born April 3, 1922 in
East Earl Township,
Melvin was a son of the
late Israel M. and Lydia
M. (Shirk) Martin. He
was a member of
Martins Mennonite
Church, Womelsdorf,
PA, and a former member of Martindale
Mennonite Church,
Martindale, PA. He was
the founder of the
Martindale Machine
Company of Martindale
in 1952. As a machinist,
engineer, and draftsman, he designed and
built specialized machinery. In 1991 the
business transferred to
his son who presently
runs operations.
An avid Bonsai enthusiast and trainer,
Melvin cultured many
trees. He loved astronomy, local and family history, music, and most of
all loved his Savior Jesus
Christ. He was also one
of the Swiss Pioneer
Preservation Association founders.
Surviving in addition
to his wife are three children: Leland Lee
Martin (Marilyn) of East
Earl, Melvin Edward
Martin of Martindale,
and Elizabeth Ann Wise
(Aaron Ray) of Seneca
Falls, NY; four siblings:

Israel S. Martin (Anna


(Zimmerman) of New
Holland, PA, Esther S.
Weaver (Enos Z.) of
Martindale, PA, Eva S.
Oberholtzer (Titus) of
Lancaster, PA, and Anna
Mae Shirk (wife of the
late Edwin Shirk) of
Akron, PA; four stepchildren: Arlene Nolt
(Ervin) of Memphis,
MO, Mary Kathryn
Martin (Ivan) of New
Holland, PA, Lewis Nolt
(RoseAnna) of Richland,
PA, and Betty J. Weaver
(Melvin) of East Earl; 10
grandchildren, 41 greatgrandchildren, 20 stepgrandchildren, 70 stepgreat-grandchildren,
and 2 step-great-greatgrandchildren.
Melvin was predeceased by his parents,
his rst wife, his brother-in-law, his daughter
Mary Etta Martin, his
stepdaughter Verna
Oberholtzer (Abner), his
brothers John S. Martin
and Amos S. Martin
(Martha), and his sisters
Lucy S. Martin (Marcus)
and
Magdalena
Oberholtzer (John).
Funeral services will
be held on Monday,
February 8, at 9:30 AM
at the Martindale
Mennonite Church with
Bishop Mark Ray Sadler,
Wilmer Hurst, James
Oberholtzer, Paul Hurst,
Jr., and Steven Wise ofciating. Interment will
be in the adjoining cemetery. Viewing will be
held
on
Sunday,
February 7, 2016 from
2-4 PM and 6-8 PM at
the
Martindale
Reception Center, 352
Martindale Rd., Ephrata,
PA 17522. Kindly omit
flowers. To send the
family online condolences, visit us at www.
groffeckenroth.com.
Arrangements
by
Eckenroth Home for
Funerals, Terre Hill.

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that you can rely on...


today & tomorrow
Call for an appointment.

121 South Prince Street


Lancasterr, PA 17603
717-397-8298
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
([email protected]) 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.

Join Michele DeRosa, Lisa and


Bob Groff to be our guest for
a complimentary breakfast or
luncheon Pre-Planning Seminar.
Thursday, February 11thLancaster

Breakfast at 8:30 amLancaster Country Club

Well guide you


through the process.

R. Fred Groff III, Supr. - New Holland Loren E. Bender, Supr. - Terre Hill

145 W. Main St., New Holland, PA 17557 717-354-0444


209 E. Main St., Terre Hill, PA 17581 717-445-5122

  
 
 
Breakfast at 8:30 amDoubleTree Resort

More than a
funeral service,
its about
sharing a life.

 
  
Luncheon at 11:30 am551 West Restaurant

 
  

Luncheon at 11:30 amTennis and Yacht Club

Details and directions when you register

717-394-5300

Mark C. DeBord
TM

Formerly Kearney A. Snyder Funeral Home

528 West Orange Street, Lancaster, PA 17603


  
The Groffs Family Funeral & Cremation Services, Inc.,
Elizabeth M. Groff, Licensed Supervisor
Branch: Fred F. Groff, Inc., Thomas S. Buter, Licensed Supervisor

141 East Orange Street


Lancaster, PA 17602
Jeremy R. DeBord, Supv.

2024 Marietta Avenue


Lancaster, PA 17603
Randy L. Stoltzfus, Supv.

(717) 394-4097 | www.DeBordSnyder.com

OBITS
A14 THURSDAY,
FEBRUARY
4, 2016
A14 THURSDAY,
FEBRUARY
4, 2016

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

Obituaries
Earl V. Rice
R

Earl V. Rice, 92, of


Lititz, passed away on
Mo n d ay,
February 1,
2016, at the
Lebanon VA
Hospital.
H e w as
born
in
Lancaster to the late
Thomas and Hallie
(Slabach) Rice and was
the husband of the late
Betty Jane (Haines)
Rice, who died in 2011.
He was a veteran of
WWII serving in the
Army, 11th Airborne
Division. While serving,
he w as wounded in
Luzon, Phillipines and
witnessed
Gen.
MacArthur arriving at
Leyte Island where the
General gave his radio
broadcast declaring to
the Phillipine people, I
have returned.
He attended Grace
Poi n t Chur ch of t he
Nazarene, Ephrata, and
was a member of the
VF W and American
Legion in Lititz, the
Newmanstown Atthletic
Association and the
Ma nhe im His tor ical
Socie ty. H e enjo yed
watching and feeding
the birds and squirrels
in his backyard, playing
billards, was an avid
sports enthusiast, loved
being involved at the
Lititz Senior Center and
his favorite pastime was
playing pinochle. Earl
worked at Penn Dairies
before and after his military service; he then became a truck driver for
numerous trucking
firms,
including
Interstate and ABF, retiring in 1996. From
there, he worked for
Manheim Au
uto Au
uction,
where he cherished his
extended family at MAA
where he was employed
until May 2015.
Earl is survived by
son, Dale, husband of

Bonnie ( Yeeakel) Rice of


Lititz; 3 daughters,
Andrea, wife of Lincoln
Longstaff of Everett,
Tobye, wife of James
Satterwhite of Lititz,
Kelleyy, wife of Brian
Hollow of Lititz; 10
grandchildren and 3
step grandchildren; 13
great grandchildren and
5 step great grandchildren; 2 brothers, Charles
Rice of Lebanon, John
Rice of Lancaster; 3 sist e rs -i n - la w, Th e lm a
Buchter of Lititz,
Marlene Haines of
Lititz, Helen Rettew of
Manheim.
Earl was preceded in
death b y 3 sis ters,
Esther, Reba and Ruth;
and 1 granddaughter.
A viewing will be held
on Friday, February 5,
2016, from 6 to 8 p.m. at
the Stradling Funeral
Home, 30 N. 9th St.,
Akron, and on Saturday,
February 6, 2016, from
10 to 11 a.m., at Grace
Poin t C hurch of the
Nazarene, 110 Durlach
Road, Ephrata, followed
by his funeral service at
11 a.m., with Pastor
Rocky Hambrick officioffici
ating. Interment will
tak e place in the
Brunnerville United
Methodist Cemeteryy.
Kindly omit owers.
Memorial contributions in Earls memory
may be made to Grace
Poi nt Churc h of the
Nazarene, 110 Durlach
Rd., Ephrata, PA 17522,
the Manheim Historical
Societyy, 210 S. Charlotte
St., Manheim, PA 17545
or the Lititz American
Legion, 109 N. Broad St.,
Lititz, PA 17543.
Arrang ements b y
Stradling
F uneral
H o m e s, I n c . , A k r o n /
Ephrata. Online condolences can be given at
stradlingfuneralhome.
com.

Elmer F.
Uriondo

Elmer
will
be
greatly missed by his
wife and his daughters, Jeanette Lamson
(Kevin Lamson), Lititz
and Annette Uriondo
(Travis Kingg ),
) Lancaster
and his grandchildren,
Rachael, Chase and
Aidan Lamson.
A Memorial Service
for the family will be
held privatelyy, with
burial at the conve nience of the familyy.
To send the fam ily online condolences,
please visit:
BuchHeiseyy..com

Elmer F. Uriondo,
81, of Lancaster, passed
a w a y at Lancas ter
General Hospital on
Tuesda y, February
2, 20 16.
Born in
Mayaguez, Puerto Rico,
he was the son of the
late Vincente Uriondo
and Quintiliana Veera.
He is the husband of
Phyllis Uriondo and in
May they would have
celebrated their 45th
anniversaryy.
A loving and caring
h us ba n d, fa th e r a nd
grandfather, his greatest
joy in life was the time
he spent with his familyy.
Elmer was an avid salsa
dancer and a huge New
York
o Yaankees fan.

216 S. Broad St.


Lititz, PA
717-626-2464

Browse or leave a condolence from your


smart phone at
LancasterOnline.com/Obituaries

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Mary Jane
Smith

Mary Jane Smith, 83,


of 3 Benjamin Circle,
Myerstown
and
recently
a
resident of
Spang Crest
Nursing
H o m e ,
Lebanon died Tuesday,
February 2, 2016 in the
M. S. Hershey Medical
Center. She was the wife
of the late Joseph H.
Smith who died in 2006.
Born in Back Run
Hill, Rapho Township,
Lancaster County on
No v ember 12, 1932,
she w as the daugh ter of the late Herman
S. and Carrie Barto
Hossler. Mary Jane and
her husband were selfemployed dairy farmers in South Lebanon
Township for 33 years.
After retirement, she
worked part time at
Mama Jeans, Lebanon.
Mary Jane was a 1949
graduate of Hershey
High School and a
member of Zion United
Methodist Church of
Iona.
Through the
years, Mary Jane enjoyed gardening, canning, bowling, winters
in Florida, and w as
dedicated to her Bible
study time with special
friends.
Surviving is a daughter Greta M. wife of
Mi c hae l H ou t z of
Myerstown, four sons
Stev en H. husband
o f C h r i st i n e S m i t h o f
Lebanon, Rev. Edward
H. husband of Laurie
Smith of Rockw all,
TX, David H. Smith of
Grottoes, VA
A, Andrew J.
husband of Kath
hy Smith
of Cuenca, Ecuador,
14 grandchildren, 5
great grandchildren, a
brother-in-law James
Boyer of Reading, and
a s i st e r- i n - l aw N i n a
Smith of Lebanon. She
was preceded in death
by a brother Herman
Hossler and two sisters
H elen Sweigart and
Geraldine Boyer.
Funeral services will
be held on Saturday at
1:00 PM at Mt. Aetna
Bible Church, 11 N.
C h e st n u t S t r e et , M t .
A etna, PA 19544. A
visitation will be held
on Saturday from 121
PM at the Church.
Interment will be at
the convenience of the
family in Indiantown
Gap National Cemeteryy.
Contributions ma y
be made to the HMC
Cancer Care Institute,
P.O
. . Box 852, Hershey,
PA 17033 in her memoryy.
Kreamer Funeral
Home and Crematory,
Annville is in charge of
arrang ements. www.
kreamerfuneralhome.
com

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Alvin J. Lantz

Alvin J. Lantz, 83, of


6198 Sundra Circle, East
Petersburg,
PA died on
Weednesday
at Lancaster General
Hospital.
He was the
husband
of the late
Emily B. Lantz
who preceded
him in death
on August 19, 2007.
Born in Lancaster Co.,
he was the son of the
late Jonas and Fannie
Fisher Lantz. He retired
from Yeellow Freight as a
truck driver. He drove
t ru c k s fo r 3 5 y e ar s.
Alvin was a member of
the Hempffiield United
M e thodis t Church
a n d t h e Wa s h i n g t o n
Lodge #156 F.&A.M.
.
in
Quarryville, PA.
A He was
a loving fatherr, grandfather and great-grandfather. He proudly served
his country in the U.S.
Army during the Korean
War.
Surviving are 2
Sons: Gary husband
of Linda McHenry of
Shickshinny, PA and
Mark husband of Tami
Lantz of Lancas ter,
PA a n d a D a u g h t e r :
Sandra wife of Jerry
Byers of Landisville,
PA. Also surviving are
8 Grandchildren, 9
Great- Grandchildren,
2 Sisters: Anna wife
of Louis Peachey of
Belleville, PA and Elsie
wife of Laurel Richmond
of Indiana and a
Brother: Jonas husband
of Kay Lantz of Willow
St., PA.
A He was predeceased by a Daughter:
Shelly Caputo, a GreatGranddaughter: Alyssa
Goodrich and a Brother:
Samuel Lantz.
A Celebration of
Alvins Life will be held
from the Hempf ield
United
M e thodis t
Church, 3050 Marietta
Ave., Lancaster, PA on
Monday, February 8,
2016 at 2:00PM with
Revv. Edward Barlow off-ciating. There will be a
private family viewing
only; however, the family will receive friends
at the Church from
12:00PM - 2:00PM.
Private Interment
will follo w in the
Hempffiield Church of
the Brethren Cemetery
with full Military
Honors by the Red
Rose Veterans Honor
Guard and the VET 21
Gun Salute. The family requests that owers
be omitted. Memorial
Contributions in Alvins
memoryy may be made to
the Ann B. Barshinger
Cancer Institute, 2102
Harrisburg Pike, Suite
1 0 2 , L a n c a s t e r, P A
17601. Arrang ements
by the Clyde W. Kraft
Funeral Home, Inc., 247
Main St., Landisville,
PA
A, 898-2240.
www
w..cwkraftfh.com

n@ n@n
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BOB ELLIOTT

Dolores E.
Townsley
1931 - 2016

Dolores E. Townsley,
84, of Fairmount
Homes, passed away
on Tuesday, February
2nd, 2016 at Wellspan
Hospital of Ephrata.
She was the widow of
Jesse Townsley Jr., with
whom she shared 65
years of marriage before
his passing in 2015.
Born in Coatesville,
Dolores was the daughter of the late Lena M.
(Thatcher) and Edward
C. Rice.
She was a 55-year
member of Towerville
Christian Church,
where she taught
Sunday School and
served as church pianist for many, many
years. More recently,
after moving, she attended the Swamp
Christian Fellowship of
Reinholds, PA.
She is survived by her
two children: Yvonne
Snow, wife of Rev. M.
Craig, of Stevens, Pa. and
Darlene L. Townsley of
Malvern; two grandchildren, Adam Snow
and Rachel Ruggieri and
great granddaughter,
Eden. Dolores was predeceased by her sister,
Carolyn Sokso.
The
Fu n e r a l
Service will be held on
Wednesday, February
10th, 2016 at 11 AM
at Wilde Funeral
Home, 434 Main St.,
Parkesburg, followed by
interment in Hephzibah
Baptist Cemetery of
East Fallowfield. The
viewing will be held
from 10 until 11 AM.
In lieu of flowers, donations may
be made in Dolores
memory to Fairmount
Homes Retirement
Community, 333 Wheat
Ridge Dr., Ephrata, PA
17522.
Online condolences
can be posted at www.
wildefuneralhome.com

Va
an Dang
Nguyen

Van Dang Nguyen,


78, of Lancaster, died
Tuesda y, February
2, 20 16 at H ospice
& Community Care,
Mount Joy.
Born in Hanoi,
Vietnam, he was the
husband of Bach Nguyen
of Lancaster, and the
son of the late Ha and
Kinh ( Vu
u) Nguyen. He
arrived in the United
States in 1975 after the
Vietnam Waar was over.
Vaan was a loving husband, father, and grandfather.
In addition to his
wife, Vaan is survived by a
son, Tuan Dung Nguyen
and his wife Ha Pham
of Dover, DE; a daughter, Loc- Quy and her
husband Huy Nguyen
of Bos ton; a sister,
Hienmai DiGio vanni
of Frederick, MD; a
brother, Lam Nguyen
of Au
ustralia; 2 nephews:
Joseph Doan and Frank
DiGiovanni; 2 nieces:
Haiyen Do of Texas and
Tina Do of California;
and 4 grandchildren.
A Funeral service
will be held at 10 AM on
Friday, February 5, 2016
at Charles F. Snyder,
Jr. Funeral Home &
Crematoryy, 3110 Lititz
Pike, Lititz with Monks
Hoang Minh and Thanh
Phi offfiiciating. Family
and friends will be received at the funeral
home one hour prior to
the service. Burial will
be private at the convenience of the familyy.
To place a condolence online, please visit
SnydeerrFuneralHo
ome.com

Half of
comic
duo Bob
and Ray
DAVID SHARP
ASSOCIATED PRESS

PORTLAND, Maine
Bob Elliott, half of the
enduring television and
radio comedy team Bob
and Ray, has died, He was
92.
Elliott, father of actor-comedian Chris Elliott, died Tuesday at his
home in Cundys Harbor, Maine, part of the
town of Harpswell, Rick
Gagne, director of the
Brackett Funeral Home,
said Wednesday.
The cause of death
wasnt made public.
For nearly 45 years,
until the death of Elliotts comedy partner
Ray Goulding, Bob and
Ray entertained millions
of radio listeners and
television viewers.
He was the kindest,
most gentle man I knew,
and obviously the funniest. He was a true renaissance man, Chris Elliott
(Groundhog Day, Late
Night with David Letterman) said in a statement on behalf of the
family.
I would be happy if
I could be just half the
man he was, he said.
And since Im speaking
for my siblings, I know
my brother and all my
sisters for that matter
would be happy if they
could be half the man he
was too.
Chris Elliotts daughters are Abby Elliott,
who was a Saturday
Night Live cast member
for four seasons, and actress Bridey Elliott.
RIP Bob Elliott, the
great&funny man who
begat Chris Elliott, who
begat @elliottdotabby
& @brideylee, Jimmy
Kimmel posted on his
Twitter account.
Judd Apatow tweeted,
Go listen to Bob and
Ray! They are the funniest. Timeless, brilliant
comedy.
Bob and Ray practiced
a gentle, quirky brand of
comedy that relied not
on one-liners or boffo
jokes but rather a deadpan delivery that relentlessly skewered pomposity and seriousness.
I guess its the hilarity
of pomposity; that hasnt
gone out of fashion, Elliott said when asked
to explain the enduring
nature of their humor.
Goulding added: We
magnify the insignificant. You know, flourishes and bands accompanying the opening of a
sandwich.
The team won a prestigious Peabody Award in
1956. They deal primarily in satire, that rare and
precious commodity,
the judges wrote. Their
aim is deadly, their level
is high, and their material is fresh, original,
imaginative, and terribly
funny.
Following Gouldings
death in 1990, Elliott
remained active as a
solo performer, appearing regularly throughout the 90s on television and occasionally in
films.
He played Bob Newharts father on the series Newhart and his
own son Chris father
on Get a Life. He also
appeared in the films
Quick Change and
Cabin Boy.
He had also worked
solo occasionally during
the teams long run, appearing in the film Author Author and in a
handful of TV movies.
He and his late partner
were inducted into the
Radio Hall of Fame in
1995.

NATION/WORLD

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

ZIKA OUTBREAK

Brazil re-examining strict abortion laws


SIMON ROMERO
NEW YORK TIMES

RECIFE, Brazil The


surging medical reports
of babies being born with
unusually small heads
during the Zika epidemic in Brazil are igniting
a fierce debate over the
countrys abortion laws,
which make the procedure illegal under most
circumstances.
Prominent legal scholars in Braslia, the capital, are preparing a case
to go before Brazils
highest court, arguing
that pregnant women
should be able to have
abortions when their fetuses are found to have
abnormally small heads,
a condition known as
microcephaly that Brazilian researchers say is
linked to the virus.
The scientific link between Zika and infant
brain damage has not
yet been proven. But the
rising reports of microcephaly in parts of Brazil stricken by Zika have
caused enough alarm
that the World Health
Organization declared
an international public
health emergency Monday.
The push to relax abortion restrictions in Brazil raises difficult issues
on many sides of the
argument. The most severe cases of microceph-

AP TRAVEL EDITOR

Some travelers are


trading in Caribbean
and Latin American vacations for ski trips and
Hawaii as they rethink
destination weddings,
babymoons and other
getaways in light of the
Zika virus.
The mosquito-borne
virus can cause mild illness, but some travelers
are worried about a possible link between the virus and babies born with
smaller-than-normal
heads, mostly in Brazil.
Dr. Brian Levine, a New
York City fertility doctor,
spent the majority of
the last week counseling
patients about (the) Zika
virus. Ive had to have
discussions about canceling babymoons, canceling trips before starting in vitro fertilization
and even having hus-

ASSOCIATED PRESS

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Colombias health minister, Alejandro Gaviria, center, speaks Wednesday during a press
conference after attending the summit to address the Zika virus in Montevideo, Uruguay. Gaviria is flanked by Ecuadors health minister, Margarita Guevara, left, and the
health minister of Paraguay, Antonio Barrios.

aly can usually be detected with ultrasound


scans around the end of
the second trimester, or
roughly 24 weeks. Supporters of Brazils existing abortion laws contend that such late-term
abortions intensify an
already wrenching decision.
With microcephaly,
the child is already very
much formed and the
parents are conscious
of this, said Dr. Lenise
Garcia, a biology professor at the University of
Braslia and the president of Brazil Without

Abortion, an organization against easing the


abortion laws. Getting
an abortion creates guilt
that will stay with the
woman for the rest of her
life.
Judge Jesseir Coelho
de Alcntara, who has
publicly stated that abortion should be allowed in
microcephaly cases, acknowledged that the issue is complex.
I know this is very
difficult because the
subject is new, requires
thorough discussion and
a great deal of religious
influences persists, said

Coelho de Alcntara,
a judge in Gois State.
But my position is that
abortion for microcephaly should be allowed.
Religious leaders are
vowing to resist any effort to ease Brazils abortion laws because of
Zika.
Nothing justifies an
abortion, the Rev. Luciano Brito, a spokesman
for the Roman Catholic
Archdiocese of Olinda
and Recife, told reporters. Just because a fetus
has microcephaly wont
make us favorable to
changing the law.

bands provide a frozen


semen sample because
they plan on traveling
to a Zika-affected region
for work.
New Yorker Mark LoCastro and his pregnant
wife canceled a babymoon the term for
a couples getaway before a baby is born to
St. Lucia. We instead
traveled to Charleston,
South Carolina, he said.
Hes seen friends who
are rescheduling trips
post new destinations
on social media with the
hashtag #zikafreezone.
Laura E. Lynn, who is
five months pregnant,
canceled a vacation
to Playa del Carmen,
Mexico, her parents had
planned with Lynn, her
sister and their husbands. I couldnt imagine being stuck inside in
long sleeves, paranoid
about being bitten and

unable to relax, she said.


Travel agency owner
Sandy Anderson helped
a couple plan a Hawaii
getaway rather than the
Caribbean because they
were uncomfortable
with the risks posed by
Zika.
We also have a destination wedding going
out in about two weeks to
Mexico, and two couples
canceled because both of
the women are expecting
babies, said Anderson,
owner of Travel Leaders Riverdale in Coon
Rapids, Minnesota. Her
agencys website now includes a link to the Centers for Disease Control
advisory on Zika, and
shes making sure that
clients understand the
value of cancel for any
reason travel insurance.
Hung Thai, an engineer who lives in the
Seattle area, is maintain-

ing plans for a December


wedding in Mexicos Riviera Maya. The biggest
point well be making to
our guests is to buy travel insurance, he said.
He and his fiancee, Lina
Jiang, are telling friends
who are starting families
that were absolutely
OK if they cancel. We
would not want them to
travel to our wedding if
they get pregnant. On
the other hand, for most
travelers, the risks appear to be limited, so
theres no need to push
the panic button.
Thais wedding planner, Carla Schipper, who
works at Unique Romance Travel & Destination Weddings, said shes
telling clients if theyre
expecting or trying to get
pregnant, travel should
be to the Hawaiian islands, South Pacific and
Europe.

Report: 3-person embryo testing is ethical


AP MEDICAL WRITER

WASHINGTON Its
ethical to test a provocative new fertility technique that would prevent
mothers from passing on
rare but devastating diseases by creating embryos from the DNA of three
people dad, mom and
an egg donor advisers
to the government said
Wednesday.
But dont expect studies to begin anytime
soon. Its not clear that
such research can overcome political hurdles.
At issue is a kind of
DNA that children can
inherit only from their
mother: genes that are
inside the mitochondria,
the energy factories in
cells. Britain last year
became the first country to approve creation
of embryos that swap a
mothers defective mitochondrial DNA with
healthy genetic material
from a donor egg.
The Food and Drug Administration has been
considering whether to
allow that replacement
technique to be tested in
the U.S. But its controversial, in part because

Freight rails wont


hit safety deadline
JOAN LOWY

MEDICINE

LAURAN NEERGAARD

TRANSPORTATION

Norfolk Southern says by 2020

Zika affects plans for weddings, babymoons


BETH J. HARPAZ

A15

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2016

such alterations could be


passed to future generations.
In a report requested
by the FDA, the Institute of Medicine said
Wednesday that it is ethical to do such research if
initial experiments follow certain strict safety
steps. They must target
women at high risk of
passing on a severe disease, and in the first attempts at pregnancy
researchers should implant only male embryos. Thats because when
they grow up, those men
couldnt pass on mitochondrial alterations to
their own children.
Such research wont
happen this year. While
the FDA said it would be
carefully reviewing the
report and recommendations, it noted that
when Congress passed
the agencys 2016 budget, it prohibited using
any of the money to review applications involving inheritable genetic
modification of embryos.
Jeffrey Kahn, a bioethicist at Johns Hopkins University who led
the Institute of Medicine
panel, said, It is ethical-

ly acceptable to go forward, but go slowly and


with great caution.
Mitochondrial DNA
disease can be extremely
devastating, and for the
women who are at risk
of passing it on to their
children, they have no
other option by which
to pursue having a child
thats genetically related
to them, he said.
The genes that give us
our hair and eye color,
our height and other
family traits and some
common diseases such
as cancer come from
DNA in the nucleus of
cells, the kind we inherit
from both mom and dad.
But only mothers pass
on mitochondrial DNA,
to both daughters and
sons. It encodes a mere

37 genes, but defects


can leave cells without
enough energy and can
lead to blindness, seizures, muscle degeneration, developmental
disorders, even death.
Severity varies widely,
and researchers estimate 1 in 5,000 children
may inherit some degree
of mitochondrial disease.
Its unlikely well find
any cure once the child
is born already with
these mutations, said
Dr. Shoukhrat Mitalipov
of Oregon Health & Sciences University, who
produced five healthy
monkeys using the technique and approached
FDA about starting human studies. The best
way is to prevent it.

Amtrak
Amtrak, the nations
only
long-distance
passenger carrier, began operating a version of the technology
on all tracks that it
owns in its Northeast
Corridor
between
Washington and Boston and in some other
parts of the country
in December. But
most of Amtraks operations outside the

YOU CAN HELP


FIGHT CRIME!
UP
TO

$1,000

REWARD

for information leading to the arrest of these suspects.

ARMED ROBBERY

Wanted: Temar S. Boggs B/M/18


LKA: 100 Blk. E. Lemon St Lancaster
Height: 601 Weight: 155 lbs.
On January 4, 2016, Lancaster City
Police published a video of suspects
from a robbery. The robbery had
taken place on December 17, 2015 at 611 N. Plum St. Lancaster, PA. Through his
investigation, Off. Dommel was able to identify the suspects as Lamel Yelverton
and Temar Boggs. Both were charged with Robbery (F1) and Criminal Conspiracy to
Commit Robbery(F1) before MDJ Jiminez. Yelverton was arrested on January 20, 2016.
Yelverton is 16 years old but was charged as an adult. Yelverton is currently being held
at LCP in lieu of $75,000 bail.
Temar Boggs has not been taken into custody for this offense. It is believed that
Boggs has fled the Lancaster area. Boggs has connections in both Coatesville and
Chambersburg. Authorities in those jurisdictions have been alerted but have not
located Boggs. In the photo of both suspects, Boggs is indicated by the red arrow.

KNOW ANYTHING THAT CAN HELP?

Whats Your
Comfort Level?

Contact Off. Adam Dommel at 717-735-3466 or email


[email protected] or
Lancaster City/County Crime Stoppers at (800) 322-1913.

1-800-322-1913

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WASHINGTON
Three of the biggest
freight railroads operating in the U.S. have
told the government
they wont meet a
2018 deadline to start
using safety technology intended to prevent accidents like
the deadly derailment
of an Amtrak train in
Philadelphia last May.
Canadian National
Railway, CSX Transportation and Norfolk
Southern say they
wont be ready until
2020, according to a
list provided to The
Associated Press by
the Federal Railroad
Administration. Four
commuter railroads
SunRail in Florida, Metra in Illinois,
the
Massachusetts
Bay Transportation
Authority and Trinity Railway Express
in Texas also say
theyll miss the deadline.
The
technology,
called positive train
control or PTC, relies on GPS, wireless
radio and computers to monitor train
positions and automatically slow or
stop trains that are in
danger of colliding,
derailing due to excessive speed or about
to enter track where
crews are working or
that is otherwise off
limits.
The other four Class
I freight railroads that
operate in the U.S.
Union Pacific, BNSF,
Canadian Pacific and
Kansas City Southern
and more than a
dozen commuter railroads have told the
agency they will meet
the 2018 deadline.
Railroads were required to inform the
government of their
plans by last week.

Northeast take place


on tracks belonging to
freight railroads, making
it dependent on them to
install the technology.
Many commuter railroads are in the same position.
After a 2008 collision
between a commuter
train and a freight train
in Chatsworth, California, killed 25 people,
Congress passed a law
requiring railroads to
start using the expensive
technology on all tracks
that carry passenger
trains or that are used
to haul liquids that emit
toxic gas if spilled.
The deadline for the
change was Dec. 31,
2015. But after it became
clear nearly all railroads
would miss the deadline,
Congress passed another
law in October extending it to Dec. 31, 2018.
That law also permits
the government to grant
waivers through Dec. 31,
2020, to railroads that
meet certain criteria.
FRA
Administrator
Sarah Feinberg warned
railroads after the law
passed that she wanted
them to start using the
technology by 2018 at
the latest, and that she
would be very reluctant
to grant waivers. The industrys allies responded
by quietly slipping a provision into a transportation bill in November
that limits her ability to
deny waivers.
We are encouraged
that many railroads
have submitted plans to
meet, some even to beat,
2018, Feinberg told the
AP. But we remain concerned that several other
freight and passenger
railroads are aiming for
2020. The agency plans
to publish quarterly reports beginning later
this year that detail each
railroads progress in
implementing the technology.
Freight railroads have
spent about $6 billion
on the technology so far
and estimate they will
ultimately spend close to
$10 billion, according to
the Association of American Railroads.
The PTC technology
being installed is revolutionary and is a fulltime focus of the nations
freight railroads, their
employees, manufacturers, software designers
and safety experts, said
Ed Greenberg, a spokesman for the association.

2015

PA090575

A16 THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2016

FROM PAGE A3 / LOCAL

Prison
Continued from A3

lion in back pay, plus interest, owed the guards.

End of ill will

CASEY KREIDER | STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

A tractor-trailer hauling cattle caught fire on the Pennsylvania Turnpike in West Cocalico Township on Wednesday morning.

Cattle fire: Truck ignites


Continued from A3

Although there were


some reports indicating
that loose cattle were
scattered on the turnpike, Millore said only
one broke free. He said it
was last seen in a nearby
field, but authorities lost
track of it.

State police Cpl. Richard Dean said one cow


died in the fire, apparently from smoke inhalation. The others, he
said, were able to stay on
the truck during the fire
and are OK.
We were lucky there,
he said. We had 34 head.

We lost one that ran


away. And one died.
We still have 32.
Both
eastbound
lanes of the turnpike
were closed briefly
while the fire was
knocked down and
the cattle transferred
to another trailer.

Heroin: Manor Twp. raid


Continued from A3

ecuted Jan. 11, also netted marijuana, methamphetamine and $6,000


cash.
Officers also found
on the premises body
armor and packaging materials for the
drugs.
The men were dealing
across Lancaster, Leba-

Connect
with us

Jose E.
Jossy
Gonzalez

Carlos E.
Colon

non and York counties,


the district attorney
alleges. They were traf-

ficking the drugs


from Philadelphia,
officials said.
Gonzalez is free
after a bondsman
posted
$200,000
bail, according to the
district attorneys office. Colon is at Lancaster County Prison
in lieu of $250,000
bail.

Wednesday:

LancasterOnline

Food

Local recipes &


area chef profiles

I think that its time


to turn the page on the
ill will that (arbitration
appeals)
engendered
with the prison and to
work together to solve
the issues at Lancaster
County Prison, said
Parsons, who chairs the
prison board. I think its
one step forward in that
process.
Brian Secor, a longtime guard and president of the guards Local 1738, thanked the
commissioners
and
their representatives
for their commonsense approach during
the yearlong negotia-

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

tions.
I am hopeful that this
signifies a better relationship between our local union and county administrators as we move
forward into the future,
Secor said in an email to
LNP.
E. William Peters,
the countys human resources director, said
the contract continues
the guards under the
countys high-deductible health plan, helping to contain county
costs. The contract also
gives the county greater
flexibility in addressing
maintenance and support service needs, Peters said.
Based on an analysis
by our legal team, the
costs associated (under
the new contract) are
significantly better than
what we achieved over
the last seven years, Pe-

ters said.
Secor said the key
to the unions support
for the contract was
the county agreeing to
freeze the health plans
costs to employees. We
also secured significant
longevity bonuses for officers with five or more
years of experience, he
said.
Commissioner Chair
Dennis Stuckey said going to arbitration probably wouldnt have resulted in a more favorable
contract than the compromise reached with
the union.
When you negotiate in good faith, there
has to be compromise
if youre going to get a
final agreement, said
Commissioner
Craig
Lehman, who opposed
the countys costly appeal to the Supreme
Court.

Boggs: Suspect in robbery


Continued from A3

Both heroes were


widely hailed in the aftermath of the rescue.
College funds were set
up in their names. They
received Good Samaritan medals at McCaskey
High School. And U.S.
Rep. Joe Pitts praised
Boggs and Garcia for
their efforts on the floor
of the House of Representatives in Washington, D.C.

The criminal
complaint
City police Lt. Todd
Umstead
confirmed
Wednesday the suspect
is one and the same as
the hero Boggs.
According to a Crime
Stoppers release issued
Wednesday, which offers
a reward of up to $1,000
for information leading
to his arrest, Boggs was

identified in a video of
the Dec. 17 robbery.
Lamel Yelverton, 16,
was also charged in connection with the robbery. He was arrested
Jan. 20 and charged as
an adult, police said;
he is being held at Lancaster County Prison on
$75,000 bail.
Yelverton and Boggs
both face felony charges
of robbery and criminal
conspiracy to commit
robbery.
Lancaster police Sgt.
William Hickey said
Yelverton was charged
as an adult because it
was a felony involving
a weapon. According
to a surveillance video,
which police released
on Jan. 4, Boggs displayed a handgun during the robbery.
According to the criminal complaint, the robbers fled the store with

$200 to $300 in cash


after Boggs pointed a
gun at the store owner.
Yelverton told police he
acted as lookout during
the robbery.
The affidavit says both
Boggs and Yelvertons
mothers positively identified Boggs as the second suspect in the video.
Boggs has connections
in the Coatesville and
Chambersburg
areas,
and police in both jurisdictions have been alerted to be on the lookout
for him.
Anyone with information on the robbery
or Boggs whereabouts
is asked to call Officer
Adam Dommel at 7353466. Tipsters also may
call Lancaster City/
County Crime Stoppers at 1-800-322-1913
or anonymously text
LANCS plus a message
to 847411 (TIP411).

DEVELOPMENT

Warwick Twp. approves rezoning


for 55-plus community expansion
New classification to allow construction of more homes
LAURA KNOWLES
LNP CORESPONDENT

Traditions of America,
a 55-plus community in
Warwick Township, is
looking to expand, and
township
supervisors
Wednesday agreed to rezone a portion of land to
make that possible.
The board agreed to
amend the zoning map
and rezone 24.4 acres to
the north of the existing
development from partly
R-1 Residential and Agricultural to R-2 Residential. The portion is
located on the south side
of West Woods Drive behind Heart of Lancaster
Regional Medical Center.
Traditions of America
has existing plans for
244 units, of which ap-

Police log
THEFT
n LANCASTER: An

employee at CVS, 551


Harrisburg Ave., stopped
a man who had filled a

proximately two-thirds
are already built or under construction. The
proposed plan is for a
higher density development that will add 91
homes.
According to zoning officer Tom Zorbaugh, R-1
zoning allows for about
five units per acre, while
R-2 allows for about 10
units per acre. He noted
that R-1 usually turns out
to be three units per acre
due to lot configurations
and roads. With R-2 zoning, developers would be
able to build single-family
dwellings and duplexes, in
keeping with the existing
Traditions of America development.
Township
Manager
Dan Zimmerman noted

Wednesday that 23 acres


were zoned for residential use and would have
been likely developed
in the future. The infrastructure is already in
place for sewer, stormwater and roads.
Addressing concerns
from residents of West
Woods Drive about increased traffic that were
brought up at the public hearing in January,
Zimmerman said that an
age-restricted community would be less likely
to increase traffic than
another type of development because residents
are mostly retirees.
The expansion of the 55plus community is projected to begin between
fall 2016 and spring 2017.

canvas bag with personal


care products and was
about to leave without
paying shortly after 9 a.m.
Jan. 29. The man gave the
bag to the employee and
fled, city police said. He
was described as being 20
to 30 years old and about

6 feet tall.

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n LANCASTER: A 1999

gold Chrysler Town and


Country minivan was
reported stolen from the
400 block of South Lime
Street shortly after 6:20
p.m. Jan. 29.

THEFT CHARGES
n EAST LAMPETER

TWP.: Police charged


Jacquelyn Rene Bartz, 29,
of Greensburg, with retail
theft, saying she concealed
hair products worth $60.80
then left without paying
Feb. 1 at Wal-Mart, 2034
Lincoln Highway E.

VANDALISM
n EAST LAMPETER:

Graffiti was spray-painted


sometime Jan. 30 on
the east wall of a vacant
building at 1714 Lincoln
Highway E. The estimated
cost of repainting is $300.

OPINION

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2016

A17

National Conversation
CAL THOMAS
SYNDICATED COLUMNIST

Will we get the leadership we


deserve in Donald Trump?
You wonder how these things begin. The Fantasticks

In the short term, Donald Trump was the


biggest loser true of any front-runner but
even truer of a candidate whose campaign
raison detre is that he is a winner.

RUTH MARCUS
THE WASHINGTON POST

Iowa illustrates that both parties


are in for a protracted battle
By the numbers, Ted Cruz and Hillary Clinton, by a millimeter, won the
Iowa caucuses. Still, the race for the
top spot was not the big news of the
night or, in Clintons case, far into
the following day, when The Associated Press finally called the race for
her. The real winners were Marco
Rubio, with his remarkably strong
third-place finish, and Bernie Sanders, with his virtual tie.
In the short term, Donald Trump
was the biggest loser true of any
front-runner but even truer of a
candidate whose campaign raison
detre is that he is a winner. Yet in
the longer term, if the legacy of Iowa
is that it helps propel Rubio to the
nomination and, sure, thats a big if
at this point the even bigger loser
could be Clinton, facing a general
election challenger far more daunting than Trump or Cruz.
On the Republican side, the Iowa
results put Rubio in a strong position to break away from the crowded
middle-of-the-GOP-road pack and
claim the mantle of establishment
alternative to Cruz and Trump. The
best evidence of that new reality?
Chris Christie unloading on Rubio
the morning after, as the boy in the
bubble ... whos constantly scripted
and controlled because he cant answer your questions.
Not to take away credit from Cruz
for being the Trump-slayer, or at
least the Trump-wounder. Cruz upended last-minute polling expectations and demonstrated the power of
dogged organization. The elaborate
network of evangelical support and
intensive voter contact and analytics
he constructed outdid the swaggering hold-a-rally-and-they-will-caucus approach of Donald Trump.
But in addition to the impressive
Cruz ground game, Mondays results
illustrate the limitations of Trumps
appeal. All week long in Iowa, I interviewed undecided Republican voters.
They were torn except when it
came to Trump. He had been crossed
off almost all their lists, as too big
a blowhard, too politically inexperienced, too ideologically untrustworthy. Their choices, for the most
part, came down to Cruz and Rubio.
That Rubio came within a percentage point of passing Trump is
the most significant number of the
night. Rubios over-performance is
bad news for Christie, Jeb Bush and
John Kasich. New Hampshire is not

obviously fertile territory for Cruz; it


is better suited to Rubio.
There, he can dial down the heavyhanded appeals to evangelical voters
and amp up his moving life story. I
left the Rubio events I attended in
Iowa with a revived sense that Clinton should be very nervous about the
prospect of facing him in a general
election campaign. Assuming, as I
continue to do, that she gets there.
Still, dont be fooled by the Clinton
campaign crowing about winning
Iowa. Pause for a caucus reality check
here: Judging the victor by differences of tenths of a percentage point
is ridiculous when counting delegate
numbers, not tens of thousands of
individual votes.
A win is a win when youre talking
about Floridas electoral votes not
when youre measuring state delegate equivalents. Sanders performance offered concrete electoral
proof of the power of his anti-establishment appeal and demonstrated
his capacity to compete on a par
with Clinton, whose organization
had far more time and resources on
the ground there. This isnt the blow
Iowa inflicted on Clinton in 2008,
but its not a victory either.
A functional tie in Iowa and the
likelihood of a Sanders win in New
Hampshire does not augur the end
of Clintons candidacy far from it.
This was not the triumphant start
Clinton once imagined, but the postNew Hampshire calendar is far more
favorable to her demographically
and, despite Sanders efforts to catch
up, organizationally.
Nonetheless, Sanders how
amazing is this? could turn out to
enjoy a huge fundraising advantage.
Clinton has more cash on hand, but
Sanders army of small-dollar donors
is a replenishing well on which he
can repeatedly draw.
It was telling that Clinton campaign officials diverted her, days
before the caucuses, to a fundraising
event in Philadelphia incurring the
predictable criticism from Sanders that she was once again raising
money from financial interests.
In short, Sanders is not disappearing anytime soon. Trump is not
running away with the nomination.
For both parties, the Iowa results
reinforce the likelihood that both
nomination battles will stretch well
into the spring, if not beyond.

n Ruth Marcus is a columnist for The Washington Post; Twitter: @RuthMarcus

In the beginning, there was a


combative media. Dating back to
Colonial America, as Eric Burns has
chronicled in his book, Infamous
Scribblers, politicians and journalists have mostly had a love (for
Democrats)-hate (for Republicans)
relationship. Television and the advent of the celebrity culture from
TMZ to Entertainment Tonight,
to now even broadcast news have
taken the process to new depths.
The first televised presidential
debate in 1960 between Sen. John
F. Kennedy and Vice President
Richard M. Nixon began the shift
from substance to the superficial. As
numerous journalism students have
been taught, people who listened on
the radio thought Nixon had won on
substance, but those who viewed the
debate on TV decided Kennedy was
the winner because he looked better
than the perspiring, uncomfortable,
5-oclock-shadowed Nixon.
There was a celebrity hiatus when
Lyndon Johnson and Barry Goldwater competed in 1964, because neither was telegenic and the Vietnam
War topped all concerns. In 1980,
Ronald Reagan solidified the necessity of looking good on TV against a
mousy Jimmy Carter.
By 1992, when Bill Clinton ran
against President George H.W. Bush,
the celebrity culture had morphed
from prominence to dominance.
Clinton played saxophone on a latenight talk show.
In 2008 came the man with something for everyone. He was hip, he
was cool, he was made for TV, he was
African-American, and he had a multicultural name. For the left, Barack
Obama had it all. And the media
followed him around like a loyal pet,
waiting for him to toss them treats.
Hope and change was all they
needed to hear. The fundamental
transformation of America sounded
good, but lacked specifics. Few
seemed to care, including journalists
who should have.
What we used to refer to as morals have also been transformed in
our celebrity culture into the meaningless word tolerance. Truth

has been sacrificed on the altar of


tolerance. Everyone is now free to
believe anything and everything, as
long as it makes them feel good about
themselves. Who are we to judge
what used to be called sin? Character matters very little, as long as I get
mine.
There was a time when a divorced
man would not think of running for
president, much less believe voters
would support him. Yes, there were
presidents, including Kennedy and
Johnson, who had extramarital affairs, but the press mostly ignored
or covered up for them. And then,
in 1992, a known philanderer was
elected president. He would have
sex with an intern and ultimately be
impeached. No matter, his approval
rating remained high until recently.
Which brings us to 2016 and Donald Trump. If Ronald Reagan was the
Teflon president, Donald Trump is
the man of steel. Is there a substance
equal to kryptonite that could bring
down Trump? If there is, it has yet to
be found. Trumps language, lifestyle, morals, religious vacuum and
viciousness against people he doesnt
like along with numerous other
character flaws might very well
lead to an expansion of the Seven
Deadly Sins.
That his rabid followers especially and curiously evangelical Christians continue to kiss his feet says
more about them than about him.
Electing a celebrity businessman
president would be the final verdict
on what the Scripture that Trump
claims to love, but apparently doesnt
read, calls a wicked and adulterous
generation.
If, as the cliche says, we get the
leadership we deserve, the fault lies
within us, not him.
Trump is right about one thing. The
public is sick of traditional politicians who make promises but dont
deliver, while driving up the debt
and lining their pockets. But whose
fault is that? Ultimately its the voters fault, because they are the ones
who put them in office, demanding
more from government than it can,
or should, deliver and demanding too
little of themselves.
Welcome to the United States of
Trump.

n Cal Thomas is an author and a Tribune Content Agency syndicated columnist.


Twitter: @CalThomas

Electing a celebrity businessman president


would be the final verdict on what the
Scripture that Trump claims to love, but
apparently doesnt read, calls a wicked and
adulterous generation.

A18

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2016

Opinion

LNP | Founded 1794

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

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Chairman Emeritus

Chairman of the Board

Executive Editor

Editor of the Opinion Page

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


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FOR THE LATEST UPDATES, GO TO LANCASTERONLINE.COM

In our words

A recommendation
that makes sense
THE ISSUE
The American Academy of Pediatrics recently joined other medical
organizations in recommending that patients be screened for depression from
age 11, for high blood cholesterol between ages 9 and 11, and for HIV between
ages 16 and 18. Local doctors lauded the new guidelines.
Suicide and depression, HIV infection and
high cholesterol are not issues we want to
think have anything to do with our children.
Wed prefer that their problems if they
must have any at all be smaller, more manageable, less scary.
Unfortunately, the need for such screening
can be seen in statistics.
Suicide is now a top-three cause of death
among adolescents.
A quarter of new HIV infections now occur in
people ages 13 to 24, with about 60 percent of all
youth with HIV unaware that they are infected.
And according to the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention, childhood obesity
has more than doubled in children and quadrupled in adolescents in the past 30 years,
and obese youth are more likely to have risk
factors for cardiovascular disease, such as high
cholesterol.
Facing the reality that ones child may be depressed and contemplating suicide is difficult
for any parent. And the symptoms of depression which include irritability, fatigue and
insomnia are easily and often explained
away as usual teenage behavior.
And so, as Dr. Vinitha Moopen of WellSpan
Family & Pediatric Medicine in Rothsville told
LNP, parents often dont recognize when their
children are struggling.
It may not be just sadness, she said. It may
be they dont care about their appearance anymore, their grades are suffering. They may not
want to be involved in things they were before.
In children, depression can present as a
very anxious child, or a child that people think
is just very shy, Dr. Frances Gross, who leads
the pediatrics division at Lancaster General
Health, told LNP.
As parents, we need to be keen observers of
our childrens behavior; we need to be able to
listen to them without judgment; and we need
to be willing to take any concerns we have to a
doctor or other health care provider, or a suicide prevention or crisis intervention hotline.
When you look at completed suicides, 80
percent of individuals attempted to reach out
to let people know they were having some

FIND MORE ONLINE


bit.ly/LocalDocsReact

struggles, Dr. Fran Sparrow, medical director


at Philhaven, told LNP.
There should be no stigma in seeking a doctors opinion about depression or anxiety. Our
brains occasionally need professional care, just
as our other organs do.
We need to convey to our children that they
can bring their worries to us, no matter how big
or small whether its a bullying issue, for instance, or a friendship issue, or an issue relating
to the childs sexuality. (According to the CDC, a
nationally representative study of adolescents in
grades 712 found that lesbian, gay and bisexual
youth were more than twice as likely to have attempted suicide as their heterosexual peers.)
Which is not to say that the parents of children who have committed suicide are to blame.
Even a loving and attentive parent can miss the
signs, so the new screenings are an excellent
and needed tool.
So, too, is the screening for HIV.
The possibility that a teenager whos 16 or 17
might be sexually active let alone have HIV
is disturbing to contemplate.
But the reality is that the teenage brain isnt
fully developed, and so teens take chances they
shouldnt. They engage in earlier and riskier
sexual behaviors without using condoms,
and experiment with drug use, says Dr. Jeffrey
Kirchner, medical director of Lancaster General Health Physicians Comprehensive Care,
and an expert on HIV/AIDS medical care.
He says screening teenagers for HIV has
been a CDC recommendation since 2006. So
he welcomes the American Academy of Pediatrics recommendation.
The infection is no longer a death sentence.
The earlier its diagnosed, the earlier it can be
treated, and so the better the outcome for the
teenager, and the better the chance of curbing
its transmission.
Likewise, with the cholesterol screenings, if
we know a child has high cholesterol, we can
help the child eat better and, hopefully, reduce
his risks of developing heart disease.
As the saying goes, knowledge is power. It can
also be scary, but its better than the alternative.

If you or someone you know is having suicidal


thoughts, please call Lancaster Countys 24-hour
crisis intervention hotline at 394-2631.

Other opinions: Call for more school funding


Gov. Tom Wolf has reinforced his pro-education message by announcing that he wants to give schools a $200 million
funding increase next year, despite the stalemate over this years state budget. Wolf hopes his proposal on Feb. 9
will be well-received by the Republican-controlled Legislature, which has staunchly rejected the idea of raising taxes.

n I propose no new

taxes. More money


doesnt make for better
education.
Kevin Martin,
of Ephrata/
LancasterOnline.com

n There are many

opportunities to curb
spending on schools
without sacrificing the
quality of education. Wolf
thinks more spending
(equals) better education.
Jim Miller, location
not disclosed/
LancasterOnline.com

n Why is he worried
about next year when
they cant even figure
out this year?!
Adam Werner, of
Manheim/Facebook

n He was elected on

the premise he would


increase spending in
the schools. He is doing
what he said hed do.
Diane Baker, location
not disclosed/
LancasterOnline.com

JONAH GOLDBERG
SYNDICATED COLUMNIST

Neither political party


has any power anymore
The campaigns will
be eager to tell you the
meaning of Ted Cruzs
victory and the virtual
tie between Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders
in Iowa Tuesday night.
But the larger significance of this election has
been clear for months:
The two major parties
are paper tigers.
My old boss, the late
Ben Wattenberg, was a
conservative Democrat
who worked for decades
to keep his party from
drifting leftward. In the
end, he failed. But he
fought a valiant fight. He
helped found the Coalition for a Democratic
Majority, which was a
kind of precursor to the
Democratic Leadership
Council, the New Democrat organization that
helped Bill Clinton burnish his image as a more
conservative, different
kind of Democrat.
I remember asking Ben
on more than one occasion why the Democratic
Party would allow this
or that thing to happen.
Hed always respond
pretty much the same
way. What Democratic
Party? The Democratic
Party is a dozen people
with fax machines.
Bens point was that the
image of the Democratic
Party as some formidable
organization with legions
of political henchmen
and bosses capable of
imposing their will on the
rank and file was a leftover from a bygone era.
I think about my
conversations with Ben
a lot these days. Sen.
Bernie Sanders, a selfdescribed socialist, who
isnt even a member of
the Democratic Party, is
the runaway favorite of
the partys liberal base.
Donald Trump, an ideologically unmoored billionaire who has changed
his party registration five
times since 1987 and donated substantial sums to
Democrats, has been the
Republican front-runner
since this summer.
When the leading
Republican is arguably
a more loyal Democrat
than the Democratic
sweetheart, it certainly
seems silly to talk about
either party as particularly powerful organizations. Does anyone
quake in fear of Democratic National Committee Chair Debbie
Wasserman-Schultz?
How about the Republican National Committees Reince Priebus?
Ted Cruz is reviled by
his fellow Republicans,
and yet they havent
been able to stop his rise.
Jeb Bush is a darling of
the Old Guard, and yet
it hasnt been able to
prevent his fall.
Politics, the saying
goes, is downstream
of culture. Well, our
culture has been losing
faith in large institutions
for a very long time.
In June, Gallup found
that only three major
institutions still cap-

When the
leading
Republican
is arguably
a more loyal
Democrat than
the Democratic
sweetheart, it
certainly seems
silly to talk about
either party as
particularly
powerful
organizations.
tured the confidence of
a majority of Americans.
More than 70 percent
said they had a great deal
or quite a lot of confidence in the military.
Small business and
the police garnered 64
percent and 52 percent,
respectively. Organized
religion, the presidency,
Congress, the courts, the
schools, the medical system, the media and the
rest were all underwater
or simply in the toilet.
Its no wonder the parties are not immune to
such trends. In fact, the
parties were ahead of
the curve.
The primary system,
which took power out of
smoke-filled rooms and
handed it to voters, was
a self-inflicted wound
from which party bosses
have never recovered.
Once upon a time,
earmarks and other perks
encouraged partisan loyalty up and down the food
chain. As party power
has declined, the relative
strength of special interests has grown. Outside
groups often have more
money and flexibility
than the parties.
And yet, news of the
parties demise hasnt
really reached the voters. The ranks of people
describing themselves as
independents have been
swelling for decades, at
least partly on the mistaken belief that breaking from the parties is
a bold act of rebellion,
when in reality theyre
kicking a dead donkey
or elephant.
The real source of
power in politics resides
in personalities, not
parties. It has been hard
to see this until recently
because the personalities of old were career
politicians Bill Clinton, George W. Bush,
Barack Obama hiding
behind the partisan light
show like the man behind the Wizard of Oz.
Whether or not Trump
and Sanders go on to win
the nomination, theyve
already played a historic
role. Theyve exposed the
parties as the weaklings
theyve long been.

n Jonah Goldberg is a fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, a senior editor of National Review and a Tribune Content
Agency syndicated columnist. Twitter: @JonahNRO

OP-ED/LETTERS

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

RUSSELL REDDING
SPECIAL TO LNP

Criticism of Gov. Wolfs


budget actions is off base
Rep. Mindy Fees Jan. 29 op-ed criticizing Gov.
Wolfs budget actions is disappointing and off base
(Wolfs cuts hurt children, threaten the food supply). While there are many points that deserve a
response, I will focus on the inaccuracies.
First, the General Assemblys budget numbers
simply do not add up. That budget would have created a half-billion-dollar deficit this year and a $2
billion hole next year. This sort of fiscal irresponsibility is why the governor was forced to veto many
lines, including some in the Department of Agricultures budget.
Many of our lines have been funded in recent years
by another pool of money. We believe that should
continue, because families simply cannot afford to
carry another $15 million in additional expenses.
Restoring vetoed lines requires a responsible budget

Private enterprise
better in the snow
This is being written three
days after the last snowflake
fell. Im out driving around
because, like everyone else, I
have to. No getting around the
fact that we need to use the
roads to survive.
All the store parking lots are
nicely plowed out. The stores
are all ready for another
storm (a likely event in winter). They took advantage of
the warmer temperatures to
clear their roadways, parking
spaces and intersections for
safe navigation. This is how to
plow snow.
Not so the public streets.
Not one single road, nor the
Manheim Township Library,
was adequately plowed.
Two-lane roads are still not
plowed wide enough for two
lanes of traffic. Intersections have huge piles of snow
blocking views. Red light
sensors are not operating
properly, causing backed-up
traffic.
This is how not to plow snow.
If you were Park City and your
plow guys work looked like
this, you would fire him.
Where are the plows, loaders and dump trucks now?
You would think everyone
and their grandma should be
out clearing our roads. If we
get another snowstorm and a
freeze, our roads will be unplowable.
This is undeniable proof that
private enterprise is better
than government control. Admit truth when you see it. Vote.
Steve Girard
Manheim Township

plan not the one the Legislature hastily passed


late last year before leaving town on holiday break.
Second, although the department will be the first
responder to any outbreak of avian flu, lawmakers
did not appropriate a single additional dollar to
the department. In fact, it was the governor who
found and reserved $3.5 million for the departments avian flu response. Those dollars remain
in place and available to the department, giving us
the needed resources to mount an effective initial
response.
Thus far, we have been able to purchase laboratory supplies and equipment, hire diagnostic staff
for surge capacity, and make technology investments, all with the continued goal of protecting our
poultry farmers and consumers. Those efforts and
our partnerships with industry and local, state and
federal government agencies and academia have
been acknowledged as needed steps to address this
foreign animal disease if it were to impact our commonwealth.
Third, the governors line-item vetoes had no role
in preventing Farm Show premiums from being
paid. Those premiums are paid by the Farm Show
budget, but because the General Assembly has yet
to pass an important piece of companion legislation, the Farm Show still does not have a budget in
place. Once the Legislature passes that bill the
fiscal code we will be able to award the excellence

Letters to the editor


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 [email protected]
Fax 399-6507
Mail to Letters, c/o LNP, P.O. Box 1328,
Lancaster, PA 17608-1328

Dismayed to see
pet memorial here
I was dismayed to find the
article in memory of a canine,
Willow Baker, alongside the
obituaries Jan. 26. I am a longtime pet owner and well understand the heartache caused
by the loss of a beloved pet.
I lay no blame on the Bakers for placing the article, nor
do I intend any disrespect to
them. They certainly have my
condolences over the loss of a
pet so clearly cherished.
The placement of the article
by the newspaper is another
matter entirely. At the very
least, I feel, the LNP staff was
insensitive to the families who
have lost relatives and an apology should be forthcoming.
To equate the loss of a pet
with a human life lost by
placing the article on the same
page as the obituaries is unconscionable. Shame on you.
Donna Cummings
Lebanon
Editors note: LNPs policy is
to publish obituaries and pet

JOHN BAER
PHILADELPHIA DAILY NEWS

State earns mediocre C average


for its assets and opportunities
As Gov. Tom Wolf prepares
to go back to the well (or the
pit) of the Legislature with a
new (?) budget plan, it seems a
good time to take an independent look at the state of our
state.
You know Wolfs view: education crisis, fiscal crisis, need
new taxes to avoid a train
wreck crisis.
You know the GOP Legislatures view: Things arent that
bad, dont need new taxes, and
(for real Republicans) need to
cut government spending.
As in most things with politicians, truth is somewhere
in the middle. As in all things
with politicians, its nearly impossible to get to the middle.
So, for a nonpartisan view,
lets look at a new study by
the D.C.-based Corporation
for Enterprise Development,
a respected research group
specializing in the economies
of families and how government impacts the lives of its
citizens.

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2016

If youre thinking, in Pennsylvania, not all that well,


youre thinking clearly.
The groups annual analysis,
its Assets & Opportunity
Scorecard, puts our state in
the middle of states, ranked
24th with a very average C.
Thats where we flew last year,
too: not crashing, but sure not
soaring.
And its probably no surprise
that the report says, State
policies are doing little to
improve the financial security
of Pennsylvania families.
Id note thats because state
politicians are doing little to
improve anything.
The study examines family
assets, businesses and jobs,
health care and education.
Close to 70 policy measures
are used in rating states
against national averages.
The best state on the scorecard is Vermont. The worst is
Mississippi.
Here are Pennsylvania
highlights:

memorials in separate parts of


the newspaper. Because of the
need for an exceptional amount
of obituary space Jan. 26, both
ran on one of the six obituary
pages. It was an aberration.

Fed up: Still awaiting


Farm Show prize

A19

exhibitors put on display at this years show.


Last, it is intriguing that the representative notes
food safety among her criticisms, because the Legislatures budget represents the real threat. When
Pennsylvania families go to the local market or to a
restaurant, they want to have the assurance that the
food they are eating is safe. Yet the General Assembly has for years underfunded the departments food
safety program.
Since 2009, the department has taken on inspection responsibility for more than 1,500 additional facilities as local governments have ended
their programs. We pick up the slack. And with
no additional personnel because of inadequate
funding, our staff is now performing more than
twice the number of recommended inspections.
Not only is that irresponsible, it is a threat
to public safety. The General Assembly should
exhibit the leadership we need and pass a budget
that gives the department much-needed resources, rather than making the problem worse.
With all the important issues we have at the moment, lets stop spreading false accusations. Lets
focus on protecting consumers, protecting our
economy, and fixing problems that have been growing worse for far too long.

n Russell Redding is Pennsylvanias secretary of agriculture.

lic with my frustration over


the budget impasse. I came up
with an idea to donate the winnings to a nonprofit or school
district that has been put in
dire straits by the lack of state
funding. I am well aware that
such a small donation would
make no significant impact. I
just wanted to make a point.
Still without the money,
however, all I can do is ask
more questions:
Are Farm Show winners ever
going to receive ribbons let
alone checks or are they also
being held hostage by the budget?
How has the $15-per-vehicle (up from $10) Farm Show
parking fee money been used?
Why are legislators receiving paychecks albeit not doing
their jobs?
Why should I trust the government if I am taxed to provide essential funding, but the
distribution is withheld?
Whats the real message to the
agricultural community when
even rewards for excellence are
tied in a political knot?
Is this a 100th anniversary to
be proud of?
Norene K. Lahr
Manheim Township

I read with great interest Ad


Crables article, No cash for
winners at Farm Show (Jan.
16). For the first time, I entered the Pennsylvania Farm
Show, mostly because it was
the 100th show. I was hoping
to win at least one ribbon recognizing that landmark event.
As things turned out, I won
three awards in various Family Living categories. According
to the premium list, a total of
$41 will accompany my three
ribbons. Like everyone else
who picked up their entries
at the close of the show, I was
told the ribbons and checks
would be mailed.
While I await my check to
arrive, I have been mulling
over possible ways to go pub-

Unfair advantage
at Pa. Farm Show?

More than a third (36 percent) of state households are


locked in perpetual financial
insecurity.
These are moderate- and
lower-income households
without much savings, if
any; as the groups research
manager, Lebaron Sims, puts
it, One financial shock away
from ruin.
Not enough jobs. Not
enough good-paying jobs.
Theres also a business
problem.
In microenterprise ownership, businesses with five or
fewer employees, which Sims
says tends to be a proxy for
states economies, Pennsylvania ranks 49th.
Kevin Shivers, state director
of the National Federation of
Independent Business, says
these businesses represent
the vast majority, and other
studies show similar results.
Why? The cost and complexity to get up and running,
the states regulatory and tax
burdens, Shivers says, and
the fact that the state puts too
much emphasis on attracting
big companies and too little
on improving the climate for
small ones.
In education, a key area of
contention between Wolf and
the Legislature, theres good
news and bad.
The state scores above
national averages in math and

reading proficiencies and in


high school graduation rates.
This suggests a crisis
thats locally selective in a
state where, according to the
U.S. Education Department,
equity in per-pupil spending
between rich and poor school
districts is the worst in the
nation.
Oh, and Pennsylvania ranks
47th in college-graduate debt,
meaning its among the highest in the country, an average
of $33,264.
Why? Because the state
has lots of great colleges and
universities, but they are
expensive. Costs for in-state
students at four-year public
schools are third-highest in
America, behind only New
Hampshire and Vermont.
And the states tax-advantaged childhood collegesavings plan does not offer the
types of government matches
available in a dozen other
states.
The study does have a
bright spot. Its in health care.
We have a lower percentage
of uninsured residents (10
percent) and a lower percentage of low-income uninsured
children (7.6 percent) than
national averages.
Sims says thats partly due
to the Affordable Care Act and
Wolfs expansion of Medicaid. But he also says health
care is generally affordable in

The Pennsylvania Farm


Show is a showcase for advances in agriculture. It is also
an opportunity for young people 4-H Club members and
Future Farmers of America
and owners of family farms
to show off their accomplishments with pride.

Many of them do so with limited means. Some 4-H Club


members do not even own
their animals, as they have no
place to keep them. They are
amateurs.
But they watch keenly what
occurs around them, such as a
prize shorthorn bull from the
herd owned by Masonic Village of Elizabethtown strutting away as champion of the
breed (LNP, Jan. 12). Here is
an unfair advantage that can
be discouraging to some and
sets a bad precedent.
Money talks! Is that where
the Pennsylvania Farm Show
is going?
Tory Lingg
Narvon

Names to consider
for unseen planet

Scientists have announced


that the solar system may
contain a large, as-yet-unseen planet. When and if it is
located, it will need a name.
Many people assume the
dwarf planet Pluto was
named with a nod to Walt
Disney. But it was named
after the Roman god of the
underworld by an 11-year-old
girl, Venitia Burney, of Oxford, England.
Perhaps we should indeed
give Disney a nod and choose
Mickey or Minnie as the
name of the planet when it is
proved to exist. Or, in the interim, we might give a nod to
Donald Trump and christen
it Goofy.
George Bennett
Cranston, Rhode Island

Its probably no
surprise that the
report says, State
policies are doing
little to improve the
financial security
of Pennsylvania
families. Id note
thats because state
politicians are doing
little to improve
anything.
Pennsylvania, and points
to findings that employeepaid shares of premiums
are among the nations
lowest.
Still, its clear that theres
work to do. And I point to our
overall low ratings, in case
Wolf and lawmakers ever
want to agree to work up from
a mediocre C.

n John Baer is a columnist for the

Philadelphia Daily News; his column


is syndicated by MCT. Email: baerj@
phillynews.com

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Home &Garden

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2016

n SEND STORY TIPS & INFO TO: JENNIFER KOPF, 291-8644, [email protected]

ALSO INSIDE: PUZZLES & COMICS

DECORATING

SURVEY

Blooms to
chase gloom

CATALOGS
SPRING TO MIND
We asked experts and novices to
reveal their favorite gardening
guides. Here are their answers.
ERIN NEGLEY

[email protected]

Almost as exciting as the toy catalog sent in


the mail around Christmastime, garden catalogs give you a perfectly good excuse to forget
snowzilla and think spring.
Most companies allow you to order online,
yet local gardeners pick up these catalogs for
the photographs, illustrations and the stories
about each plant.
Our readers shared their favorite gardening
catalogs and why they believe they are the best.
Our in-house gardeners at LNP and Lancaster
Farming also shared their favorites.

Lancaster Countys favorite is ...

RICHARD HERTZLER | STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER PHOTOS

Mary Beth Shenk, left, owner of Flowers by Paulette, and Wendy Barrett, manager, work on arrangements
at the shop off North Queen Street. They suggest using a larger bouquet and splitting it between several
vases of varying shapes to spread floral color and scent throughout the house.

A cut-flower arrangement brings a little spring to winter


LIS KING

LNP CORRESPONDENT

Territorial Seed Co. is the winner by a landslide. Readers and staff like the variety and the
new products.
Not only do they have a wide variety of seeds,
but they also give you detailed information on
specific conditions for growing and harvesting
the plants, and what diseases and insects affect the plants, Robin Stryker, of Lititz, said. I
keep the catalog as a reference because of the
great information it contains.
Angela Boyle likes the wide range of choice in
vegetables.
It is interesting to me to read about a variety of carrot they offer that tastes good dug up
midwinter, because its a reminder that growing food is a basic survival skill that I personally
wont hand over to a corporation, said Boyle,
who gardens in Columbia. They also offer a
range of seeds that vary in maturity dates. I like
a quick-maturing spinach seed in spring and a
longer one to overwinter. There is no pleasure
like being able to walk out to your garden midwinter and pick fresh vegetables for your SunSEED CATALOGS, page B10

NOTE:
The winner of last weeks giveaway of the
Groundbreaking Food Gardens guide, chosen
at random, was Hilari Hinnant of Millersville.

Notes from the


antiques market
Hubley Manufacturing, the former Lancaster-based metal
caster and toy-making giant, probably poured these bookends
in the 1930s, when the angular art deco design style was at its
peak. The bookends will be part of a two-day general antiques
and advertising auction Saturday and Sunday at Morphy
Auctions in Denver. (Online
bidding currently is
available through
morphyauctions.
com.) The auction
is strong in
Hubley cast iron,
with nearly 100
lots of toys, door
knockers, doorstops,
banks, figurines and
bookends. The 6-inchtall deco pair is signed
and numbered
Hubley 307.
Presale estimate:
$200 to $300.
Michael Long

Got the winter blues? Let flowers help. An


inexpensive bouquet is all it takes to cheer a
room, and if you divvy it up, it can spread loveliness throughout the house.
Take the bouquet apart, cut stems short and
place them, singly or in pairs, in any small vessel that can hold water, says Wendy Barrett,
manager at Flowers by Paulette in Lancaster.
Decanters, mason jars, tea tins, gravy boats,
jugs, coconut shells and mugs are some of the
items that can work as vases.
Barrett likes stock, alstroemeria and lilies
for hopeful springtime looks. All three come
in many delicious colors, she explains. The
fragrance of stock is nice, lilies are so happy,
and alstroemeria excels when it comes to vase
life.
Itll last about two weeks, and I call that a
lot of loveliness for the buck.
Jill Erb, owner of Floral Designs of Mount
Joy, recommends tulips and daffodils this
time of year.
A simple bouquet of either one forecasts
BLOOMS, page B10

3 TIPS FOR LONG-LASTING


ARRANGEMENTS
n Trim leaves off stems before putting them in

water.
n To make flowers last longer, add a crushed
aspirin to the water, or cup soda. Or mix 2
tablespoons white vinegar and 3 tablespoons
sugar in a quart of water. The sugar nourishes
the flowers; the vinegar prohibits bacterial
growth.
n Change the water in the vase every few days.

Smaller arrangements are made for different rooms


of the home.

HOW TO
LAYER FLOWERS
n You will need two glass vases, one smaller than

the other.
n Place the flowers in water in the smaller
container.
n Slide the smaller container into the larger one,
add water to the larger container and float slices of
key limes or lemon around it.
n You also can use other materials for layering,
such as beans, seashells, marbles, grasses or twigs.

DR. LORI
ART AND ANTIQUES

Loving our collections


Love is one of the most common reasons why
we collect or hand down objects. Objects come
with emotions. Most people will not part with
something if it was handed down or amassed
by a loved one, family member or friend. I feel
this way about my fathers nutcracker collection and my mothers canister set. I wouldnt
part with them no matter what!
And when someone stops collecting or is no
longer able to collect, sometimes the collection is handed down.
If you can retain a collection for the long
term, historically, that collection will increase
in value over time. So hold onto the collection

if you can.
Add to the
collection when you
can, and start to familiarize yourself with the
collection by learning about its history and
market value.

DR. LORI, page B3

n A celebrity Ph.D. antiques appraiser, author and

former museum director, Dr. Lori Verderame hosts


antiques and collectibles appraisal events worldwide
and is a star appraiser on the Discovery channel. Visit
DrLoriV.com/Events, Facebook.com/DoctorLori or call
(888) 431-1010.

B2

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2016

h&g2
FUNKY FINDS FROM
THE BARGAIN COUNTER

GARDEN CALENDAR

n Today, 7 p.m.: Lititz Garden Club Heritage

Gardens talk about Pennsylvania German gardening


by Michael B. Emery and Irwin Richman at Lititz
Public Library, 651 Kissel Hill Road, Lititz.

n Monday, 7 p.m.: Lancaster Garden Club

Presentation on The Story of The Delaware River


Keeper by Maya van Rossum at Salem United Church
of Christ, 2312 Marietta Ave., Rohrerstown. Guests are
welcome. $5 donation.

n Wednesday, 7 p.m.: Lancaster Bonsai Society

Presentation on bonsai basics at Conestoga


House and Gardens, 1608 Marietta Ave. Open to
nonmembers.

ARCHITECTURE

19th-century chapel stands as


witness to familys tragic loss

n Pressure canner, 7 quarts, like new:


$45.

n Sewing machine, Singer, portable:


$35.

n Gray mailbox, like new, good


condition: $15.

JENNIFER KOPF

[email protected]

n Cane-seated chairs (4), nice: $15


each.

On a hill just north of Brickerville, a red


sandstone Gothic-style church rises,
overlooking farmland below. For nearly 140
years, Coleman Memorial Chapel has stood in
silent tribute to 14-year-old James Coleman,
killed in an 1874 horseback riding accident.
The prominent Coleman family owned several
iron furnaces in Lancaster and Lebanon
counties, and already had a small stone
building along what is now Furnace Hills Pike
to serve as a meeting place and a Sunday
school for employees and their children.
n Who were the Colemans? G. Dawson and
Debra Brown Coleman, James parents, were
prominent in northern Lancaster County.
He was a third-generation heir to an iron
business and served in both the state House
and Senate. He would die in 1878, just a year
after the chapel was dedicated; she lived
until 1894. In Forest Leaves, an 1890 history
by the American Forestry Association, the
group praised Mrs. Colemans dedication to
forest preservation, saying she possessed
a competence of her own ... (and) she truly
went around doing good for charities serving
Civil War veterans, churches and hospitals.
n Who designed the chapel? The Colemans
hired Harrisburg architect Luther Simon, who
then traveled through Europe looking for
the ideal design. The cornerstone was laid in
1874, and the final chapel dedicated in 1877.
The adjoining parsonage and caretakers
houses were built at the same time. Among
other projects, Simon also designed the state
arsenal and Pine Street Presbyterian Church,
both in Harrisburg.
n What are some highlights? A series
of windows believed to be by the Tiffany
studio, each featuring Christian symbolism; a
stretched-leather backdrop for the altar with
illustrated prayers; and original fixtures such
as kerosene lamps, elaborate hardware and
interior painting.
n What traditions does the
nondenominational chapel have? The
propertys original stone structure, used as
a meeting place for Coleman workers, was
incorporated into the new chapel when it
was built. The leather-covered doors behind
the chapel altar can be opened to reveal
the meeting room stage behind, providing
room for additional seating or a choir. The
pew backs can be flipped, much like train
seats, so that seating faces the doors on the
chapels rear wall instead of the altar. Those
east-facing doors are opened on Easter so the
congregation can watch the sun rise.
n How is history now preserved? The
chapel, led by Pastor Russell E. Hobbs and
his wife, Darla, operates through gifts and
contributions. A chicken barbecue and
auction, held on the second Saturday every
July, is the churchs major fundraiser each
year. The current goal is to raise around
$60,000 needed for repairs to the steeple and
part of the ceiling.

n Kenmore gas dryer: $110.


n Kenmore heavy-duty electric dryer:
$110.

See complete Bargain Counter listings


in Classified

HOUSE HACKS

To help snowboots dry


faster by holding them
open, or to help any tall
boots retain their shape
in storage, cut a piece
of foam pool noodle
as tall as the boot shaft
and stand it up inside
the boot.

RENEWED RESOURCES

INDOOR INSPIRATION: Maybe


youre one of those people who love
outdoor gardens, but are left cold by
houseplants.
But maybe its not the plants maybe
its how youve planted them.
The Sky Planter seems to defy gravity,
suspending plants for unexpected
visual interest (really ... do your friends
have orchids dangling from the ceiling?
Didnt think so).
Its available in two sizes, produced
from recycled plastic and comes with
a float stick to indicate water level as
well as two fixed-length hanging wires,
the ceiling hook, anchor plug and
instructions.
Price: $17.95 for small; medium + $10
Where seen: lbcmodern.com.
Jennifer Kopf

MORE ONLINE

TO LEARN MORE

For a video tour of Coleman Memorial Chapel


images, visit this story at LancasterOnline.

n ColemanMemorial Park.org.
n ColemanChapel.org.

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DRS. OZ & ROIZEN


MEDICAL ADVICE

Getting the most out of


exercise DVDs
You may be a fan of Jillian Michaels BodyShred or
Shaun Ts CIZE Dance Workout, but oversexualized,
bootcamp-style exercise DVDs can backfire big time
if youre new to working out, have body-confidence
issues or are dealing with injuries or physical restrictions.
Researchers at Oregons College of Public Health
and Human Sciences recently examined 10 popular exercise DVDs. They found that the running
commentary often contains demotivating, hopecrushing, emotionally hurtful declarations. Phrases
included everything from You should be dying
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The researchers also found the superbody sexual-

Dr. Lori
Continued from B1

Gift, or burden?
But a collection
sometimes can be a
burden. When a collection comes to you from
a deceased loved one,
the situation may prove
difficult. For instance,
when Frank, a longtime
collector of duck decoys
passed away, his collection became the property and project of his
widow. Irene was happy
that Frank enjoyed the
process of collecting
throughout their marriage but now, with no
children or interested

Births
BARDAXE, Nicole,
Mountville, and Jeremy M.
Smeltzer, Hellam, a son, at
Women & Babies Hospital,
Friday.
BOULTBEE, Josh D. and
Donna (Good), Lancaster,
a daughter, at Women &
Babies Hospital, Friday.
ESH, Amos L. and Lydia
(Stoltzfus), Paradise, a
daughter, at Women &
Babies Hospital, Saturday.
HENAULT, Christopher D.
and Jenna (Hakala), Lititz,
a son, at Women & Babies
Hospital, Sunday.
HIPPEY, Nathan S. and
Heidi (Zibura), Wrightsville,
a daughter, at Women &
Babies Hospital, Friday.
INNES, Catherine, and
Jason A. Boley, New
Holland, a son, at Women &
Babies Hospital, Friday.

relatives to take over the


collection, Irene is left
with a quandary.
She doesnt want the
duck decoys. Reason No.
1 is that she cant bear to
display the duck decoys,
as they prompt heartache and remind her of
Franks passing. Reason
No. 2 is the overwhelming number of duck
decoys now stacked in
the basement. The vast
collection is unfamiliar
to Irene. She cant identify the decoys sculptors
or their regional characteristics, and she is uninformed and at the mercy
of anyone with information about decoys and

JOHNS, Taschi, and


Matthew Lewis III,
Lancaster, a daughter, at
Women & Babies Hospital,
Friday.
KING, Gideon and Rachel
Ann (Zook), 151 Amishtown
Road, New Holland,
a daughter, at home,
Wednesday.
KINSINGER, Peter J.
and Amanda (Weaver),
Myerstown, a daughter, at
Women & Babies Hospital,
Sunday.
KRAJZA, Danielle, and
Douglas E. OConnor,
Lancaster, a daughter, at
Women & Babies Hospital,
Sunday.
LAPP, Henry F. and Katie
(Stoltzfoos), Kinzers, a
daughter, at WellSpan
Ephrata Community
Hospital, Tuesday.

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.

their market value. She


knows these buyers may
take advantage of her.
She realizes that auctions may not be the best
place to sell the collection, because Frank got
many of his best decoy
bargains at auctions. If
a buyer at an auction is
getting a bargain, then
the person selling the
decoy at auction must
have lost money on the
transaction. Since Irene
cant tell one wooden
duck from another, she
begins to worry. She
doesnt like the idea of
having strangers come
into the house to make
her an offer on the decoys. If someone wants
to make a killing on this
collection and buy it for

a song, she is in a vulnerable position.


Tips for this common
collecting problem
include choosing one or
two favorite decoys to
keep as a remembrance
in honor of Franks years
of collecting. Get the rest
valued by an appraiser
who does not have any
financial interest in the
decoys doesnt want
to sell them, doesnt
want to buy them. Be
prepared to pay that
appraiser for his or her
expertise and time, and
ask for the retail value of
the decoy collection, not
an auction or insurance
value. Take some time
to consider the market
information and then
make a decision.

Quarryville, a son, at
Women & Babies Hospital,
Monday.

a daughter, at home,
Wednesday.

MYERS, Marc T. and Joelle


(Mohr), Mount Joy, a
son, at Women & Babies
Hospital, Friday.

STOLTZFUS, Mahlon L.
and Jessica (Miller), New
Holland, a son, at WellSpan
Ephrata Community
Hospital, Tuesday.

POKROP, Patrick A. and


Cortney (Tucci), New
Holland, a son, at Women &
Babies Hospital, Saturday.

VARGAS, Lisette, and Luis


E. Bermudez, Lancaster,
a daughter, at Women &
Babies Hospital, Jan. 27.

ROMAN, Cristina, and


Michael Albino, Lancaster,
a son, at Women & Babies
Hospital, Sunday.

WILKINS, Stephen P. and


Rena (Harmon), Camp Hill,
a daughter, at WellSpan
Ephrata Community
Hospital, Tuesday.

SATTERWHITE, James L.
Jr. and Brittany (Weaver),
Lititz, a daughter, at
Women & Babies Hospital,
Friday.
SEIF ELDIN, Moustafa
Maali and Lindsey Goss,
Lancaster, a son, at Women
& Babies Hospital, Sunday.

LEON, LayTaisha, Lancaster,


a daughter, at Women &
Babies Hospital, Friday.

STEWART, Malissa,
Lancaster, a son, at Women
& Babies Hospital, Sunday.

MYERS, Cynthia, and


Matthew S. Larrabee,

STOLTZFUS, Daniel F. and


Sadie F. (Glick), Kirkwood,

Marriage licenses
The following have applied
for marriage licenses
in Lancaster County
Courthouse:
Micah James Rudy, 27, of
1328 W. Main St., Ephrata,
son of Jerry and Nata
Rudy, and Bryce Whitney
Albright, 27, of 1255 Manor
St., Columbia, daughter of
James Charles and Rose
Marie Rupp Albright.
Jacob P. Zook, 22, of 10770
Osceola Drive, Drumore, son
of Ephraim B. and Annie S.
Zook, and Mary Beiler, 22,
of 323 Black Barren Road,
Peach Bottom, daughter of
Sol K. and Barbara L. Beiler.
Jacob S. Miller, 22, of
1402 Georgetown Road,
Quarryville, son of Moses
and Arie Miller, and Katie S.
Stoltzfus, 21, of 279 Maple
Shade Road, Christiana,
daughter of Samuel and
Bertha Stoltzfus.
Steven R. Wenger, 61, of
1531 Shoemaker Road,
Manheim, son of Norma
Wenger and the late Victor
G. Wenger, and Beth Ellen
Zook, 53, of 817 Gail Place,
daughter of M. Wade
Groff and the late Dorothy
Elizabeth Groff.
Brian T. Wolf, 31, of 105
Jacobs Drive, Coatesville,
son of Raymond Lloyd and
Kathleen Wolf, and Lauren
Elizabeth McManus, 30,
same address, daughter of
John Francis and Donna Lee
McManus.
John Stoltzfus Stoltzfus

ity of instructors implies that the user should and


can look like that, a guaranteed setup for discouragement. And, they point out, theres no scientific
evidence to back up most claims of a routines safety
or effectiveness.
But we dont want you to give up on at-home exercise. So how can you choose a DVD that will suit your
abilities, goals and body type?
Be honest about YOU: Are you a beginner? A nonathletic senior? Do you have sore joints? An injury?
If so, look for DVDs that target your needs, or start
with our free YOU: The Owners Manual Workout at
Sharecare.com.
Know your limits: Dont feel you have to do everything on the DVD exactly as described. If a bend or
jump is too much, do a modified version or skip it.
You may eventually be able to achieve it or not, it
doesnt matter. What matters is enjoying it, doing
it consistently and increasing your endurance and
strength.

Jr.,24, of 47 Cherry Hill


Road, Ronks, son of John
Stoltzfus Sr. and Annie E.
Stoltzfus, and Dorothy K.
Huyard, 24, of 291 Stauffer
Road, New Holland,
daughter of Jesse Bawell
and Sadie S. Huyard.
Allen Lee Stoltzfus, 27, of
1644 Georgetown Road,
Christiana, son of Jacob S.
and Mary A. Stoltzfus, and
Ruth S. Beiler, 22, of 103
Cherry Hill Road, Ronks,
daughter of Amos J. and
Lizzie B. Beiler.

WIRLS, Amanda Hertzog,


Brownstown, a son, at
Women & Babies Hospital,
Sunday.
WORTHY, Jody L.
and Teena (Johnson),
Elizabethtown, a daughter,
at Women & Babies
Hospital, Jan. 27.
ZOOK, Samuel and Marian
(Smucker), New Holland,
a son, at Reading Hospital,
Sunday.

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2016

B3

JEANNE PHILLIPS
DEAR ABBY

Visits to mother-in-law feel


like stepping into a fight ring
DEAR ABBY: I am dreading an upcoming trip
that includes a visit to my husbands mother,
Harriet. She is prone to accidents when
I visit, and I always end up getting hurt. Harriets oops moments usually involve my
toes and feet, although the last time I was
there she managed to strike my face.
I have taken the precaution of looking up
the phone number of the police department
in her city, just in case she hits me again. Is
there a way to keep her at arms length so
she cant get close enough to punch me? In
the 20-plus years I have known Harriet, she
has always been a bully. She strikes out at me
because I stood up to her. APPREHENSIVE
IN LOUISIANA
DEAR APPREHENSIVE: Because this has gone
on for 20 years, Im inclined to agree with your
suspicion that these mishaps havent been
accidental. An effective way to prevent further
injury would be to avoid being in the same town
with Harriet. The next time your husband decides
to visit her, take a detour and let him deal with his
mother. She sounds like a handful.

DEAR ABBY: A 30-year-old relative of mine
has developed a germ phobia. She constantly applies hand sanitizer and avoids anyone
who exhibits any kind of symptoms. She
refused to visit me when I was in the hospital
because she thought she might catch something. She was not always like this.
I love her dearly and have no idea what has
caused the problem. Is there anything I can
do to get her to give up some of the precautions shes taking or does she need professional help? WORRIED RELATIVE IN
TAMPA, FLA.
DEAR WORRIED RELATIVE: Because you
dont know what has caused her health concerns,
I recommend you ASK her. Hand sanitizers are
popular because they claim to kill 99 percent of
germs and decrease bacteria on the skin. Every
time someone opens the door to a public building
or presses an elevator button its as though that
person has shaken hands with everyone who has
been there before, so using hand sanitizer seems
like good sense to me.
As to your relative not visiting you while you
were hospitalized, the reason doctors are reducing the length of hospital stays and are performing so many outpatient procedures is to minimize
the germs that patients are exposed to in the
hospital.
DEAR ABBY: I just think that as a child, I
have too many responsibilities to take care
of. My mother thinks I am stubborn and
not able to take care of myself. What do you
think? HELENA, AGE 9
DEAR HELENA: I think you have a good mother. The way to teach children responsibility is to
place some on their shoulders. If you learn the
lessons of independence your mother is trying
to teach you, with time these chores will become
easier and less overwhelming. And you will thank
her for them later when youre older.

n Dear Abby is written by Jeanne Phillips and was

founded 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.

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B4

LOCAL

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2016

College news

G. Barnett Jr.

D. Westgate

D. Vucovich

GRADUATIONS
n Gregory Barnett

Jr. earned his Ph.D. in


chemical engineering from
the University of Delaware
on Dec. 23.
A 2007 graduate of
Lancaster Catholic High
School, he completed his
undergraduate degree in
chemical engineering at
Lehigh University in 2011.
He is the son of Gregory
and Mary Barnett, of
Lancaster, and is currently
working at Bristol-Myers
Squibb as a scientist in
New Jersey.
n Debra Westgate
received a Bachelor of
Science degree in public
health from West Chester
University last fall. She also
was named to the deans
list for the fall semester.
A graduate of Conestoga
Valley High School, she is
the daughter of Norm and
Vera Joyce Westgate, of
East Lampeter Township.

DEANS LIST
n Andrew Magloughlin

was named to the deans


list for the fall semester

A. Magloughlin

E. Phillips
at American University,
Washington, D.C.
A 2014 graduate of
Hempfield High School,
he is the son of Kevin and
Marie Magloughlin, of
Mountville.
n Daniel Vucovich was
named to the deans list
for the fall semester at the
College of the Holy Cross,
Worcester, Massachusetts,
where he is a sophomore
majoring in economics.
A 2014 graduate of
Manheim Township High
School, he is the son of Dan
and Suzanne Vucovich, of
Lititz.
n Emily Phillips, of
Ephrata, was named to
the deans list with a
GPA of 3.85 for the fall
semester at the University
of Pittsburgh, where she is
majoring in psychology.
A 2015 graduate of
Conestoga Valley High
School, she is the daughter
of Doug and Kathleen
Phillips, of Ephrata.
n Jenna Bush, of
Lancaster, was named to
the deans list for the fall
semester at the Georgia

THROUGH THE NETHERLANDS & BELGIUM

Institute of Technology.
n Colton Zercher, of
Lancaster, was named to
the deans list for the fall
semester at Lyndon State
College.
n Molly K. Stott, of
Conestoga, was named to
the deans list for the fall
semester at the University
of Rhode Island.
n Olivia Vassot, of
Millersville, was named to
the deans list for the fall
semester at Cedar Crest
College.
n Robert W. Conner, of
Lititz, was named to the
deans list with honors for
the fall semester at The
College at Brockport.
A 2009 graduate of
Warwick High School, he is
the son of Jeff Conner and
the late Bonnie Conner.
n Local students were
among those named to
the deans list for the fall
semester at Susquehanna
University. They are:
Maggie Carper, of
Millersville; Jason Dietrich,
of Maytown; Anne
Horting, of Elizabethtown;
John Howland, of Lititz;
Erik Johnston, of New
Holland; Julia Loose, of
Lititz; Morgan MacVaugh,
of Mount Joy; Rachel
Marstellar, of Denver;
Deborah Martin, of Ephrata;
John Matthews, of Honey
Brook; Joshua Miller, of
Strasburg; Sydney Musser,
of Elizabethtown; Margaret
OHearn, of Mountville;
Theodore Slechta, of
Lancaster; Sarah Stine, of
Manheim; Annie Wise, of
Lititz.
n Tyler Minnich, of Lititz,
was named to the deans
list for the fall semester at
the University of Mount
Union, Alliance, Ohio.
n Morgan N. Almodovar,
of Leola, was named to
the deans list for the
fall semester at Wagner
College, Staten Island, New
York, New York.
n Hannah Simpson, of
Lancaster, was named to
the deans list for the fall
semester at Ohio Wesleyan
University.

n Email college news items

Cruise Only Ratess


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starting at $2499pp

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still
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to collegenews@lnpnews.
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News, c/o LNP Media Group,
Inc., P.O. Box 1328, Lancaster
Pa. 17608-1328

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

Municipal briefs
MILLERSVILLE

have a 9 mm handgun.

n What happened: On

n Whats next: Council

Jan. 26, a dozen or so


residents from Quaker
Hills made allegations
about a neighboring
property.

n Background:

Borough officials said


they are aware of
escalating problems at
112 Village Green Lane,
from possible zoning
ordinance violations to
criminal activity. Police
have responded to the
residence 62 times since
November, police Chief
John Rochat said.

n Complaints:

Neighbor Mike Salm


described a Christmas
Day tug-of-war on the
property involving two
cars tethered together,
engines roaring. Salm
said at least one of four
individuals involved
was a juvenile. When
approached, they
made threats and then
assaulted another
neighbor. Neighbors
say the loud cars
and drag racing are a
nightly problem. The
property is scattered
with uninspected and
unregistered vehicles
for sale, including
an ambulance. One
neighbor said junk and
tires in the yard were
a breeding ground
for mosquitos last
summer. The man
claimed the property
owner is running a
trash business that
advertises on Facebook
as Aarons Errands.
Council member Lynn
Miller then pulled up
the Facebook ad on her
phone and confirmed
there are vehicles for
sale.

n Arrests: Rochat said

he couldnt comment
about the juvenile but
confirmed people were
arrested and charges
have been filed. Rochat
said he and a school
resource officer have
been inside the house,
and that the inside
is just as bad as the
outside. He said one
juvenile is known to

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n What happened:

Supervisors voted to
amend the townships
subdivision and land
development ordinance
during a meeting Monday.
Township manager Vicki
Eldridge said the changes
will make it easier for
applicants by making the
new ordinance conform to
the zoning ordinance.

n Parks: Township

staff announced a
$200,000 Department of
Conservation and Natural
Resources grant has been
approved to supplement
an existing $180,000 grant
for the Enola Low Grade
Rail Trail. The funds will go
toward trail design costs.

n Land use: Supervisors

voted to approve a threeyear lease for a 1.65-acre


parcel of land on township
property at 200 Mount Airy
Road. The farmer currently
farming an adjacent plot
will rent the land and
cultivate crops on it.

n Special meeting: The


board is holding a special
session at 7 p.m. Thursday
in the township office
building, for the purpose of
discussing township goals
for 2016. The meeting is
open to the public.
Justin Stoltzfus,
LNP Correspondent

STRASBURG
n What happened:

Council, at its Jan. 12


meeting, clarified a
decision about hiring
engineering firm HRG.
Councilman Bruce Ryder
said the board, in a Jan. 4
meeting, hired HRG only
for engineering matters
regarding a proposed
Rutters Farm Store, along
Route 896, also known as
the Strasburg Bypass.

n What it means:

Answering a borough

n Other happenings: The

board sent an updated


floodplain ordinance to its
own planning commission
and the county planning
commission. Manager
Lisa Boyd said Mindy
Avenue properties were
removed from the Federal
Emergency Management
Agency map, leaving only
a meadow between Mindy
Avenue and Miriam Court in
the floodplain. Also, council
lowered a letter of credit
for the Holiday Inn from
$464,573 to $282,415.
Cindy Hummel,
LNP Correspondent

PENN
n What happened:

Supervisors heard from


local fire companies
about false alarms during
a meeting Jan. 25. Dan
Wagner of Manheim
Fire Company said poor
placement of fire detection
equipment led to 15-20
calls at Kreider Farms over
a four-month period. The
board identified several
properties with false alarm
calls and talked about
false alarm billing. The
townships laws provide
grace for one false alarm
call per property per
calendar year; subsequent
false alarms trigger
ascending fines starting
at $100. Penns police
department handles these
bills until they are 60 days
delinquent; now, for the
first time, the township is
getting reports of bills past
60 days overdue.

n Board action: The board


tabled a vote on how to
collect the overdue bills,
but said supervisors will
talk with police and fire
personnel to figure out
how to proceed.

n Floodplain: Supervisors
voted to amend the
townships floodplain
ordinance in accordance
with federal changes that
add 87 Penn Township
properties to local flood
plains.

n Roads: Supervisors

conditionally approved a
stormwater management
plan for Myers Furniture.
The owners plan to close
one entrance to the store
from Route 72.
Justin Stoltzfus,
LNP Correspondent

School brief
PENN MANOR
n What happened: The

board on Monday approved


hiring a local graphic and
web designer to overhaul
the districts website.

n Why its important:

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president Mike Kirkham


said the zoning officer
would follow up with
possible violations related
to running a business, while
Rochat said the police will
do what they can within
the law. Rochat then met
with the group of residents
outside the meeting room
after public comments.
Elaine J. Jones,
LNP Correspondent

authority question, Ryder


said borough engineer ELA
will continue to handle
other matters. Ryder said
Strasburg hired HRG for
the Rutters project to avoid
any potential conflict of
interest. ELA represented
developers of land along
the bypass during planning
stages.

The website was last


redesigned in 2010, and
technological changes have
left the website behind,
explained technology
director Charlie Reisinger,
who has been leading the

project.

n Background: The

biggest change needed


is to make the website
adaptable to the size of
mobile phones and tablets,
which it currently does not
do. Each of the districts 10
individual school buildings
websites also will be
reformatted to follow a
single template. And the
site will be reorganized
to make content easier to
find and to give the site a
stronger, more professional
look and style.

n The cost: The project

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has been estimated at


between $7,000 and
$10,500; Reisinger expects
that the final cost will be
below the maximum.

n Whats next: The new


website is expected to
launch in the summer.

n Quotable: I told (the

designer) I want the bestlooking website in the


state, Reisinger said. This
is going to be more than
just a fresh coat of paint.

n Other happenings:

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LNP

The board reviewed


the proposed academic
calendar for the 2016-17
school year and placed
it on the agenda for
approval at the Feb. 16
board meeting. Under the
to-be-approved calendar,
students will start on
Wednesday, Aug. 24, and
end on Wednesday, June
7, 2017.
Colleen Dorsey,
LNP Correspondent

TELEVISION

TV HIGHLIGHTS

Night for challenging,


audacious television


( 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

Jenna Fischer, left, and Megan Mullally star in You, Me


and the Apocolypse tonight on NBC.
KEVIN McDONOUGH
TV COLUMNIST

Whether youre a viewer or a reviewer, television comes at you like a


landslide. Theres just so
much of it. Sometimes
you have to stop and appreciate just how much
of it is good and getting
better.
Tonights offerings include an audaciously ambitious dramedy, a cable
comedy that challenges
the very idea of funny
and a miniseries biopic
featuring an Oscar-winning actor at the top of
his game. And thats just
tonight. Two out of these
three appear on network
television. None is on
Netflix or HBO.
NBC
You, Me and the
Apocalypse (8 p.m.,
NBC, TV-PG) defies easy
categorization. A dark
comedy thriller imagining the end of the world
through the actions of
misfits on two continents isnt your usual
fare.
Jenna Fischer shines
as a wrongly imprisoned
librarian mom tethered, both physically
and metaphorically, to
Megan Mullallys white
supremacist prison gang
leader. Its a team made
in heaven. Or perhaps
the other place.
Apocalypse doesnt
always make much
sense. And its end is all
but preordained. But its
quite a ride and unlike
anything else on television.
ABC
Now in its second
night, Madoff (8 p.m.,
ABC, TV-PG) centers on
the revelation of Bernie Madoffs (Richard
Dreyfuss) Ponzi scheme
and his emergence as a
villain to his colleagues,
his investors and, most
tragically, his family.
You really have to admire how much Dreyfuss commits to playing
Madoff, the most hated
man of the 21st century
whos not named Osama
Bin Laden. Not only
does he present one of
the most charming and
seductive
sociopathic
characters in TV history,
Dreyfuss is completely
unafraid of looking terrible. Hes constantly
slouching, patting his
paunchy belly and, to use
a Yiddish word, generally
looking like a $30 billion
schlub. He spends a great
deal of this second night
flat on his back, lying on
the floor and groaning
in pain. And Dreyfuss
makes it all seem compelling!
If four hours with a
fictional Bernie Madoff
are not enough for you,
ABC airs a postscript,
Madoff: After the
Fall (10 p.m.).
FX
Not for every taste,
Baskets (10 p.m., FX,
TV-MA) invites the audience to endure the painful pretenses of Chip
Baskets (Zach Galifianakis), a French-trained
clown devoted to his artistry while forced to work
at a rodeo in Bakersfield,
California.
Baskets
asks us to identify with
our heros hifalutin de-

Com-Lanc
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LNP | LANCASTER, PA

lusions while providing


plenty of lowbrow sight
gags, often in the form of
Baskets getting knocked
over by a steer in front of
a roaring cowboy audience. Fans of the excruciating should not miss
this peculiar gem.

OTHER
HIGHLIGHTS
n The top 24 talents

emerge on American
Idol (8 p.m., Fox, TV-PG).

n Two antagonists scheme


to join forces on The
Blacklist (9 p.m., NBC,
TV-14).

n A winner is announced
on Project Runway:
Junior (9 p.m., Lifetime,
TV-PG).

n A morgue explosion

destroys evidence on
Elementary (10 p.m.,
CBS, TV-14).

n Wozniak is squeezed on
Shades of Blue (10 p.m.,
NBC, TV-14).

n An attack on his home

and family leaves Will


suspicious of everybody
on Colony (10 p.m., USA,
TV-14).

n Danny fears hes being


framed on London Spy
(10 p.m., BBC America,
TV-14).

n Nina Dobrev and Tim

Tebow compete on Lip


Sync Battle (10 p.m.,
Spike).

CULT CHOICE
n The presence of George
Kennedy links two classic
films from 1967, Cool
Hand Luke (8 p.m., TCM)
and The Dirty Dozen
(10:15 p.m., TCM).

SERIES NOTES
n A glimpse at Sheldons

Meemaw on The Big Bang


Theory (8 p.m., CBS,
TV-PG)

n Rip targets Savages

bank account on DCs


Legends of Tomorrow (8
p.m., CW, TV-14)

n An annoying relative

visits on Life in Pieces


(8:30 p.m., CBS, TV-14).

n Bonnie meets an old

friend (Rosie ODonnell)


on Mom (9 p.m., CBS,
TV-14)

n Clarke frets on The

100 (9 p.m., CW, TV-14)

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

CW
1 WPHL

MNT
= WTXF
Q WGCB

IND
Y WPSG

CW
WPPX

ION

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2016

THURSDAY EVENING FEBRUARY 4, 2016

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

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 Blue Bloods 14
Sesame Sesame
12 5 16 - 13 Street Y Street Y
Mod Fam Mod Fam
4 2 12 - 4 PG
PG
247 126 244 - 244 GoodTime 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 Daisy discov2 9 4 - 2 ers a dead body. 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 G
PG
Family
Family
- 20 14 13 11 Feud PG Feud PG
Blue Bloods Protest
- - - 61 - Too Much 14

BROADCAST CHANNELS

You, Me and the


The Blacklist Alistair
Apocalypse (N) PG
Pitt (N) 14
Gilligan
Gilligan
Happy G Laverne
Big Bang Life in 14 (:02) Mom Angel Frm
PG
(N) 14 Hell PG
The Mentalist 14
The Mentalist 14
Madoff The rise of investment adviser Bernie
Madoff and his abrupt demise. (N) PG
Blue Bloods 14
Blue Bloods 14
Father Brown PG Doc Martin Control-AltDelete PG
American Idol The best vocalists perform; 24
semifinalists are revealed. (N) PG
Jeffer.
Jeffer.
Family
Family
Madoff (N) (Part 2 of 2) PG
Theory
Life in
Mom 14 Angel-Hell
Madoff (N) (Part 2 of 2) PG
You, Me and PG
The Blacklist (N) 14
You, Me and PG
The Blacklist (N) 14
This Old House Hr G Mercy Street 14
Theory
Life in
Mom 14 Angel-Hell
Walker, Texas Ranger Walker, Texas Ranger
Tribe PG
14
Celebrity Celebrity The Mentalist 14
PG
PG
American Idol (N) PG
Robison Johnny Relief! PG Paid
PG
Cash G
Program
DCs Legends of
The 100 Ye Who Enter
Tomorrow (N) 14
Here (N) 14
Blue Bloods No
Blue Bloods Loss of
Regrets 14
Faith 14

Shades of Blue (N)


14
News G Hogan G
Elementary (N) 14

News 8 at Tonight Show-J. Fallon


11:00 G 14
Burnt G Perry Mason PG
CBS 21 The Late Show With
News
Stephen Colbert PG
Law Order: CI 14
Crazy 14 Crazy 14 Cleve 14
(:01) Madoff: After the ABC27
(:35) Jimmy Kimmel
Fall (N)
News (N) Live (N) 14
Blue Bloods 14
Blue Bloods 14
Blue
Mercy Street The
World
Tavis
Charlie
Uniform 14
News G Smiley G Rose (N)
Fox 43 News at
Two/Half Two/Half Seinfeld
10:00pm (N)
Men 14 Men 14 PG
Ties PG Ties PG Johnny Carson PG
Miller PG
Madoff: After the Fall News
Jimmy Kimmel 14
Elementary (N) 14
News
Late-Colbert PG
Madoff: After the Fall News
Jimmy Kimmel 14
Shades of Blue 14
News
Tonight Show 14
Shades of Blue 14
News
Tonight Show 14
On Tour
Articulate Newsline Smiley G C. Rose
Elementary (N) 14
News
Late-Colbert PG
Movie True Crime (1999, Crime Drama) Clint Eastwood, Isaiah Washington, Denis Leary.
Action News at Ten on Mod Fam Friends Friends 14
PHL17 (N)
PG
PG
Fox 29 News at 10
TMZ PG Dish Nat. News
Joyce
Paid
Paid
Paid
Paid
Meyer G Program Program Program Program
Eyewit2 Broke Mike &
King PG Mike &
ness
Girls 14 Molly 14
Molly 14
Blue Bloods Ends and Blue Bloods Devils
Blue Blood
Means 14
Breath 14
14

CABLE CHANNELS
C BR CE CC CL
Ringside The First 48 Murder on The First 48 (N) 14 (:01) Nightwatch
28 33 26 34 39 The First 48
Seat PG
Maiden Lane 14
Katrina (N) 14

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

46
209
-
73
44
43
49
51
41
15
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

150 507 150 150 150

61
66
64
-
27
48
BR

47
75
55
-
33
-
CE

26
58
59
16
27
-
CC

50
33
54
29
47
CL

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

Kids
News

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

A&E

Movie
Sports

B5

(:02) The First 48 14 The First


48 14
(5:30) Movie The
Movie Enemy of the State (1998, Suspense) Will Smith, Gene
Movie Terminator 3: Rise of
Bourne Supremacy Hackman, Jon Voight.
the Machines (2003)
Wild-Alaska PG
Wild-Alaska PG
Alaska
Alaska
Wild-Alaska 14
Wild-Alaska PG
Alaska
Movie The Hunt for Red October (1990) Sean Connery.
London Spy (N) 14
(:15) The Hunt for Red October
Mart. PG Mart. PG (7:58) Celebration of Gospel 2016 PG
Zoe Ever Zoe Ever Criminals at Work
Wendy
Top Chef 14
Top Chef 14
Top Chef (N) 14
Recipe 14
Watch
Top Chef 14
Last Man Last Man Last Man Last Man Down South 14
Redneck Island PG Down South 14
Reba PG
The Profit
Shark Tank PG
Shark Tank PG
The Profit
The Profit
The Profit
Erin Burnett OutFront Cooper 360 PG
Cooper 360 PG
CNN Tonight
CNN Tonight
News
South
South
Tosh 14 Tosh 14 Tosh 14 Tosh 14 Work. 14 Idiotsitter Daily 14 Nightly
At Mid.
Flyers Pregame (N)
NHL Hockey Philadelphia Flyers at Nashville Predators
Postgame SportsNet Central (N) SportsNet
Hearings Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches; coverage from around the country.
Hearings
Liv-Mad. Mako G Movie Frenemies (2012)
(:40) Jes- (:05)
Best Fr. G Girl Meets K.C. Under. Jessie
G
Bella Thorne, Zendaya. G
sie G Bunkd
World G Y7
G
Fast N Loud 14
Fast N Loud 14
Diesel Brothers: Trucked Out (N) 14
Diesel Brothers 14
Fast 14
E! News (N) PG
Hollywood M. 14
Hollywood M. 14
Just Jillian 14
E! News (N) PG
College Basketball Ohio State at Wisconsin
30 for 30 (N)
SportsCenter (N)
SportCtr
College Basketball Texas A&M at Vanderbilt
College Basketball Connecticut at Memphis
College Basketball
NCIS: LA 14
Movie Next of Kin (1989) Patrick Swayze.
Movie Next of Kin (1989)
Greta Van Susteren
The OReilly Factor
The Kelly File (N)
Hannity (N)
The OReilly Factor
Kelly File
Chopped G
Kids Baking G
Chopped G
Beat Flay Beat Flay Beat Flay Beat Flay Chop G
(6:45) Movie Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2 (2011)
Recovery Road 14
The 700 Club G
Step Up 3
NFL Films NFL PG UFC 14 UFC 14 College Basketball Colorado at Oregon (N)
FOX Sports Live (N) Sports
Riddick Movie Thor: The Dark World (2013, Action)
Baskets Baskets Baskets (:35) This Means War
Golf Central (N) (Live) PGA Tour Golf Waste Management Phoenix Open, First Round
PGA Golf
FamFeud FamFeud Idiotest
Idiotest
FamFeud FamFeud FamFeud FamFeud FamFeud FamFeud Chain
Last Man Last Man Movie Daters Handbook (2016) G
Middle
Middle
Golden
Golden
Golden
Flip or
Flip or
Flip or
Flip or
Flip or
Flip or
Hunters Hunt Intl Five Day Flip (N) G
Flip or
Forged in Fire PG
Forged in Fire
Forged in Fire PG
Forged in Fire PG
Forged in Fire PG
Forged
Runway: Junior PG Runway: Junior PG Project Runway: Junior (N) PG
Child Genius PG
TBA
Runway
College Basketball
College Basketball
NC State College Basketball
College Basketball Marquette at Seton Hall
UFC Main Event
UFC 14 Game
World Poker Tour
UFC
Hardball Matthews
All In With Chris
Rachel Maddow
The Last Word
All In With Chris
Maddow
NHL Live NHL Hockey New York Islanders at Washington Capitals
NHL Hockey Anaheim Ducks at Los Angeles Kings (N)
Paradise Henry G Movie Monsters vs. Aliens (2009)
House G House G Friends
Friends
Friends
20/20 on OWN 14
20/20 on ID 14
20/20 on OWN 14
20/20 on OWN 14
20/20 on ID 14
20/20 14
PCN PM - pcntv.com PCN Primetime - pcntv.com
PCN Evening - pcntv.com
PCN
(6:30) Movie I, Robot (2004)
Lip Sync Lip Sync Lip Sync Lip Sync Battle PG
Lip Sync Rescue
(6:50) Movie The Devils Advocate (1997) Keanu Reeves.
The Magicians 14
Haunting in Connecticut 2
Seinfeld Seinfeld 2 Broke 2 Broke Big Bang Big Bang 2 Broke 2 Broke Conan (N) 14
2 Broke
PG
PG
Girls 14 Girls 14 14
14
Girls 14 Girls 14
Girls 14
(6:00) East of Eden Movie Cool Hand Luke (1967)
(:15) Movie The Dirty Dozen (1967, War)
My 600-Lb. Life PG
My 600-Lb. Life 14
Extreme Weight Loss Michael PG
Skin Tight (N) 14
My 600
NBA Basketball New York Knicks at Detroit Pistons From the NBA Basketball Los Angeles Lakers at New Orleans Pelicans Inside the
Palace of Auburn Hills in Auburn Hills, Mich. (N)
From Smoothie King Center in New Orleans. (N)
NBA (N)
Mysteries at PG
Mysteries at PG
My.- Monument PG
My.- Monument PG
My.- Monument PG
Monument
Jokers
Jokers
Jokers
Jokers
Jokers
Jokers
Jokers
Jokers
Genius
Genius
Jokers
Griffith G Griffith G Love-Raymond PG
Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond King PG King PG King 14
Muchacha italiana
Antes Muerta que
Pasin y poder (N)
El Hotel de los
Impacto Noticiero Deportivo
Law & Order 14
WWE SmackDown! (N) PG
Colony (N) 14
The Magicians 14
Magicians
Elementary PG
Elementary 14
Elementary 14
Outsiders 14
Mother
Mother
Mother

PAY CHANNELS

(6:15) Movie Moon- Movie Boyz N the Hood (1991, Drama) (9:55) Movie 22 Jump Street (2014,
No Good
struck (1987) Cher.
Larry Fishburne. iTV. R
Comedy) Jonah Hill. iTV. R
Deed
(6:15) Movie
REAL Sports With Bry- Movie What Happens in
(:45) Movie Bad Words (2013, Comedy)
Wimbledon (2004) ant Gumbel PG
Vegas (2008) Cameron Diaz.
Jason Bateman. R
(:15) Movie True Story (2015) R
Movie Entourage (2015) R Furious 7 Rl Sex
Katie MA Horrible 2
(6:45) Movie Shattered
(:20) Movie Vice (2015, Action) Movie Taking Lives (2004) (:45) Movie Weekend
(2007) Pierce Brosnan. R
Bruce Willis. R
Angelina Jolie. R
Sexcapades (2014)
(6:35) Movie Independence Day
Movie RENO 911!: Miami
(:25) Movie Dawn of the Planet of the Apes
(:15) Movie Last Vegas (2013, Comedy) Billions Axe makes an Shameless Fiona
Dark Net Gigolos Dark Net
Michael Douglas. PG-13
activist play. MA
confronts Patrick. MA (N) MA
MA
MA
(:10) Movie Twins (1988, Comedy)
Movie Cinderella (2015, Fantasy) Cate (10:50) Movie Selena (1997)
Arnold Schwarzenegger. iTV. PG
Blanchett, Lily James. iTV. PG
Jennifer Lopez. PG
(5:50) Movie W. Movie The 6th Day (2000) Arnold
(:05) Movie Killing Season
(:35) Movie Hel(2008) Josh Brolin.
Schwarzenegger. Premiere. PG-13
(2013) Robert De Niro. R
lion (2014) R

MOVIES

n Amys meddling has

Berry: Hollywood not honest about people of color

LATE NIGHT

Shes only black


woman to win lead
actress Oscar

unintended consequences
on Angel from Hell (9:30
p.m., CBS, TV-PG).

n Lilly Singh is booked

on The Daily Show With


Trevor Noah (11 p.m.,
Comedy Central)

n Michael Moore and

Andrew Bird appear on


Conan (11 p.m., TBS)

SANDY COHEN

AP ENTERTAINMENT WRITER

and 5 Seconds of Summer


appear on The Late Late
Show With James Corden
(12:35 a.m., CBS).

RANCHO PALOS VERDES, Calif. Halle Berry said Hollywoods


lack of diversity stems from a lack
of honesty. Filmmakers and actors should tell the truth, she said,
and the films, I think, that are
coming out of Hollywood arent
truthful.
The reason theyre not truthful
these days is they arent really depicting the importance and the involvement and the participation
of people of color in our American
culture, Berry said, addressing
the film academys diversity controversy publicly for the first time.
She made the remarks Tuesday
during an onstage conversation
with her agent, Kevin Huvane, at
the Makers Conference, an AOL
womens leadership program.
The Academy of Motion Picture
Arts and Sciences has been facing
a diversity crisis since the nominations announced last month revealed a second consecutive year
of all-white acting nominees.

n Kevin McDonough is a

Tunnel vision

n Paul F. Tompkins is

scheduled on The Nightly


Show With Larry Wilmore
(11:30 p.m., Comedy
Central)

n Michael Strahan,

Samantha Bee and Wilco


are booked on The Late
Show With Stephen
Colbert (11:35 p.m., CBS)

n Jimmy Fallon welcomes


Jonah Hill, Megyn Kelly
and Wiz Khalifa on The
Tonight Show (11:35 p.m.,
NBC)

n Jason Sudeikis, Lionel

Richie and Elton John


appear on Jimmy Kimmel
Live (11:35 p.m., ABC).

n L.A. Reid and JoJo visit


Late Night With Seth
Meyers (12:35 a.m., NBC)

n Eva Longoria, Tom Ellis

columnist for United Feature


Syndicate.

Berry is the only black woman

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Halle Berry speaks at the MAKERS Conference at Terranea Resort on Tuesday.

to win an Oscar for lead actress,


and she said shes heartbroken her
victory for 2001s Monsters Ball
didnt lead to more women of color being cast in leading roles. But
she puts the blame on filmmakers
with tunnel vision.
Our cities are filled with black
and brown people. And many
times, unfortunately we see films
that are set in Chicago, New York,
Atlanta big metropolitan cities
and theyre devoid of people of
color, she said. So I feel like when
we really live up to our responsibility and challenge ourselves to
be truthful, and tell the truth in

our storytelling, then people of


color will be there in a real competitive way, and it wont be about
inclusion or diversity. Because if
were telling the truth, inclusion
and diversity will be a byproduct
of the truth.
She then looked at Huvane and
said: You hit me with a zinger!
The Makers Conference, held
at the seaside Terranea Resort
in Rancho Palos Verdes, California, continued through Wednesday with such speakers as Gloria
Steinem, Sheryl Sandberg and
Caitlyn Jenner.

B6

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 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

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2016

Jacqueline Bigars stars


A baby born today has a Sun in Aquarius and a
Moon in Sagittarius if born before 7:44 p.m. (EST).
Afterward, the Moon will be in Capricorn.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Thursday, Feb. 4, 2016:
This year you will take action and manifest a longterm desire. What you want surrounds a friendship or a group of associates. The only obstacle
that is likely to appear will be self-made. If you
are single, you will meet someone of interest by
broadening your circle of friends. This year will
be very romantic, if you so choose. If you are attached, you and your sweetie will have reason for
celebration off and on. The two of you have the
ability to make your dreams a reality. CAPRICORN
can be very conservative and difficult at times.
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)
You could be opening up to new ideas
because of the way an expert has presented his or
her thoughts. You are likely to test these ideas out
on others. You'll want to get feedback before you
say too much. Today, you show the possibility of
success. Tonight: Out late.
TAURUS
(April 20-May 20)
Continue working directly with loved
ones. In some cases, it might involve a personal
matter; however, you will be dealing with experts,
so you can't go wrong. Once you feel as if you're
all on the same page, you can initiate a change.
Tonight: Follow the music.
GEMINI
(May 21-June 20)
You might not be in control right now. Realize that you cannot control anyone but yourself.
A discussion about a money matter or an emotional situation could occur between you and an
adviser of sorts. Take your time with this conversation. Tonight: Listen to a loved one.
CANCER
(June 21-July 22)
You'll accomplish a lion's share of the
work. You could have to redo some of it once you
have a discussion with a partner or an associate.
Understand that what you come up with might not
be the final decision. You are on a path to the final
decision. Tonight: Sort through offers.
LEO
(July 23-Aug. 22)
The Lion roars right now, and you'll
achieve whatever you decide is important. You
need to backtrack and make sure that you have
dotted your i's and crossed your t's. You might
discover that a very important detail has been left
out. Tonight: Get a head start on a project.
VIRGO
(Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
You're a bit like a car being turned over
and suddenly revving its engine. You might want
to take off to do what you must and start your
weekend simultaneously. Handle one matter at a
time, and you're likely to accomplish both goals.
Tonight: Christen the weekend a day early.
LIBRA
(Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
You might want to open up a conversation with someone from whom you feel a cold-

ness. You probably will succeed, but not immediately. Give yourself space to do more of what you
want, and let this person want to join you. Touch
base with a family member. Tonight: At home.
SCORPIO
(Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
You might be experiencing a lot of frustration from dealing with a financial matter. As a
result, you could decide to throw a project in the
air and let it go. Think through your plan of action
before you carry it out. Have an important conversation. Tonight: All smiles.
SAGITTARIUS
(Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
You have what it takes, and you make
a big difference to others. Your ability to cruise
through your day and complete what you want will
be highlighted. Be aware of your finances; check
your accounts to make sure you can afford what
you are thinking of. Tonight: Party time!
CAPRICORN
(Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Zero in on what is important to you.
You'll want to move forward and take action. Hold
off and do some research first. You could discover
a better path. Take your time making a stronger
decision, as it will lead to a more effective action.
Tonight: Feeling your Wheaties.
AQUARIUS
(Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
A friendship will be instrumental in making your choices. A meeting provides you with
some direction for how to proceed. Still, you might
decide to do some hard thinking. Time is your ally
right now, so don't rush into anything. Tonight:
Brainstorm with a friend over a meal.
PISCES
(Feb. 19-March 20)
You are on top of your game. Others turn
to you to get your feedback and tap into your leadership skills. Later in the day, your focus is likely to
change, as a jovial tone marks your interactions.
You might feel as if others really appreciate you.
Tonight: Let the party go on.
BORN TODAY
Singer/songwriter Alice Cooper (1948), singer/
songwriter Clint Black (1962), musician Jeff
Schroeder (1974)

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE


P R O B
J I M I
S A G O
P
V C H I
P R E C
S E A
A L A
A M T S
M E H T
F R Y E
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ALDER ON BRIDGE Phillip Alder


William James, who, inter alia, was the first academician to offer a psychology
course in the United States, said, "To study the abnormal is the best way of understanding the normal."
That is a great guideline for bridge. It is the abnormal that has kept the game alive.
Today, South is in three no-trump. West leads a fourth-highest heart seven. East
wins with his ace and returns the heart nine. How should declarer continue?
You try to avoid rebidding immediately in a five-card suit, but two clubs is South's
best rebid. He cannot bid two hearts, because
that would be a reverse promising some 17-20
points. Instead, one no-trump is possible, but
debatable with two low diamonds. When North
rebids two diamonds, which is forcing for one
round, South continues with two no-trump, and
North raises.
South starts with seven top tricks: one spade,
one heart, three diamonds and two clubs. He
can get two more winners from clubs, but might
first lose four hearts and one club. What is the
solution?
If declarer plays either his heart five or jack on
East's nine, he will win the third or fourth heart
with his king. Then he will have to turn to clubs,
but here West will get in with his queen and
cash the rest of the hearts for down one.
Instead of making the normal holdup play,
South should do the abnormal by winning the
second heart with his king. Then he crosses to
dummy with a diamond and runs the club nine.
Yes, the finesse loses, but West cannot cash his
hearts, because declarer still has the jack-five.

CROSSWORD

B7

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35

13

37

38

60

61

42
45
48

52

49

53

55

56
64

26

36

41

47

46
50

54
57

58

59

65

66

67

68

69

70

71

ACROSS
1 Onetime gig for
Wiig, in brief
4 Keep the sauce
from congealing,
say
8 ___ Simpson
14 Low note?
15 Stash
16 Banks
17 Spider-Mans
surrogate father
19 Commercial
leader?
20 Enjoy the swimsuit
edition of The New
England Journal of
Medicine?
22 Giant Manning
23 Club alternative
24 Organization in
The Da Vinci
Code
27 Actress Gerwig
of Mistress
America
30 Yeah, thats the
spot
32 Put down roots?
33 Oral vote
34 Brief entries in an
auto film festival?
39 Like Scotch
whisky
41 Rib

12

32

44

63

11

22

24

29

33

62

10

19

23

51

16

20

27

42
43
46
47
48
49
51
54
55
56
62

65
66

67
68
69

Puzzle by ben Tausig


ediTed by Will shorTz
Flag
70 Swiftly built home?
Sickly-looking
71 Cable channel that
overlord?
airs Portlandia
Bhikkhuni :
DOWN
Buddhism :: ___ :
1 Like an I told you
Catholicism
so look
Tall one
2
Proscription
Rotational speed
3 Spanish nuts
meas.
4 Wallop
Grilled
Neither improve
5 Terminus of the
nor decline
Qingzang railway
Bank figure, for
6 Known to
short
authorities
Half of us?
7
City near Sparks
People obsessed
8 Clutch
with being online?
9 & 10 Irish draught
Round a corner
in 65-Across
11 Cosmopolitan, e.g.
or what you must
12 Keys longtime
do to answer the
partner in sketch
clues for 20-, 34-,
comedy
43- and 56-Across 13 Computer acronym
Game patented
since the 1960s
December 31,
18 Modern civil rights
1935
initialism
Psychologist
21 They share the air
Pinker who wrote
How the Mind
25 Escort, slangily
Works
26 Some air pollution
Words of rebuke
27 Plague, with at
Understanding
28 1971 documentary
What you may
about Ravi
have with
Shankar
mom, dad or an
29 Bridge sitter?
overbearing boss

30 Relative of a throw
31 Audibly floored
35 Convenience
partly obviated by
banking apps
36 Got me now?
37 Align
38 Texting button
40 Darers cry
44 Born on the
bayou?
45 Cause for a
rescheduling
50 Insignificant
person
51 The choice of a
new generation
sloganeer, once
52 Challenges for
future counsel, in
brief
53 Bajillions of years
54 Fly holder
57 Harbinger
58 Speck
59 Isao in the Golf
Hall of Fame
60 Head of staff?
61 Align
63 Law & Order
spinoff, familiarly
64 Huh, never
wouldve figured

B8 THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2016

LNP | LANCASTER, PA CLOSE TO HOME

PLUGGERS

BLONDIE

MOTHER GOOSE & GRIMM

ZIGGY

THE WIZARD OF ID

FRAZZ

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FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE

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THE BORN LOSER

MUTTS

PICKLES

LUANN

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FUNKY WINKERBEAN

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

MARMADUKE

BIZARRO

DENNIS THE MENACE

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JUMP START

SPEED BUMP

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BREVITY

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2016 B9

HOME & GARDEN

B10 THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2016

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

Blooms

Seed catalogs

Continued from B1

Continued from B1

spring for as little as $5 or $10, she


says. Or how about bird-of-paradise
for a bit of the tropics? One stem is
enough to make a statement.
Flowering branches also are good
harbingers of spring. Some, such
as cherry and pussy willow, can be
found at florists, but if you have forsythia, crabapple or dogwood in your
yard, cut some branches and force
them to bloom inside. Smash the
stems to help them draw up water,
plunk the branches in water and, sitting in a sunny window, theyll soon
burst into bloom.

day meal. But it takes


planning and the right
variety for success.
And Mishon Eberly, of
Ephrata, looks forward
to the catalog and the
emails she receives from
Territorial throughout
the rest of the year.
This catalog never
disappoints! she said.
It is always introducing
new and exciting products each year.
territorialseed.com

What goes where


What do you want to see the minute
you open your eyes in the morning?
Flowers, of course, and Erb and Barrett recommend pretty blooms including stock, sweet pea or anemone
for the nightstand.
In the kitchen and the dining room,
designers warn against too-fragrant
flowers that could muddy food aromas. Cheerful sunflowers for the
kitchen and carnations for the dining room are top suggestions. Olive
branches are a beautiful, neutral alternative for the kitchen or the bath.
Go low for coffee-table flowers. Cut

RICHARD HERTZLER | STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

Wendy Barrett, manager of Flowers by


Paulette, works on smaller arrangements
at the shop on North Queen Street.

the stems and bunch the flowers in


a tight arrangement. Good choices:
roses, hydrangeas, peonies, mums.
Orchids are easier to care for and longer-lasting than you might think, and
designers call them the perfect accessory for any room.
And keep an eye on new varieties appearing at florists. They will surprise
you and your guests. Protea, with huge
blooms, is one such newbie, although
it actually dates back 66 million years.
Other nontraditional plants to get acquainted with: cotton, ginger and heliconia talk about statement makers.

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For a step-by-step video


demonstration, visit this story at
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answer to a wide range


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the first Lancaster-certified Penn State Pollinator Friendly Garden,
Number 28, I think it is
important to select companies that actually use
nontoxic products and
care about the environment.
gardensalive.com
Johnnys Selected
Seeds: excellent seed
selection,
non-GMO,
excellent outcomes, 100
percent satisfaction with
results, Zell said.
The only seed catalog I really need, Diana
Abreu said. Its comprehensive, has really
unique vegetable varieties (some exclusively
from Johnnys) and provides really helpful detailed planting guides.
They also sell the best
seed-starting medium,
Johnnys 512 Mix, which
contains compost in addition to perlite, sphagnum and black peat
mosses. It doesnt dry
out like the all-peat versions you can pick up at
the hardware store, and
the addition of compost
adds nutrients which
keep the seedlings going
for the few weeks that
they are under lights indoors until you get them
in the ground.
johnnyseeds.com

Readers also
suggest:

Baker Creek Heirloom Seed Co.: most


unusual offerings, nonGMO, interesting info
about each seeds origin,
Cindy Zell said.
rareseeds.com
Botanical Interests
Seed Catalog: ... an inspiring selection of vegetable and flower seeds,
as well as a few products,
said Lorna Stoltzfus, of
New Holland. It also
has some sprouting seeds
and microgreens. The illustrations are awesome,
as well as stories and pictures from folks describing why they garden. The
catalog makes me smile
and look forward to
spring, summer and fall
again.
botanicalinterests.
com
Gardens Alive!: I
love this company because they offer environmentally responsible
products that work. We
always order their GrubAway Nematodes, an
effective nonchemical

R.H. Shumways:
beautiful old-fashioned
illustrations, stunning
artwork on each cover,
said Zell.
rhshumway.com

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Staff picks

Burpee Seeds and


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Plus, their seed/plant
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region, so if it does well
for them it should also
do well for Lancaster
gardeners, said Jennifer
Kopf.
And it was one my
mom always got and I
do as well, said Charlene
Shupp Espenshade. It
was like getting a Christmas catalog, only its for
gardening season.
burpee.com

Gardeners Supply
Co.: For all the fun accessories, Kopf said.
gardeners.com

High Mowing Organic Seeds: I love their selection of vegetable, herb


and flower seeds, as well
as their commitment to
organic and sustainable
growing practices, Eric
Hurlock said.
highmowingseeds.com

Renees Garden
Seeds: Lots of flowers,
said Kopf.
reneesgarden.com

Rohrer Seeds: Their


seed is what is sold at the
local farm store. I usually purchase most of my
garden seed from a farm
store or greenhouses,
Espenshade said.
rohrerseeds.com

Seed Savers Exchange: (It) offers


unique heirloom seeds,
although everyone is
jumping on this bandwagon lately, they are
still the king, Abreu
said. Years ago the
members catalog was
about an inch thick with
thousands of varieties
and no photos, but now
the headquarters offers
a color catalog with photos of some of the most
popular varieties. Members offer seeds which
they save from year to
year.
seedsavers.org

Seeds of Change: It
sells high-quality organic seeds, and there is a
lot of information on the
site for amateur gardeners like myself, Amber
DeGrace said.
seedsofchange.com

Van Engelen: It has


bulbs galore that you
dont find locally; good
combo packages, Kopf
said.
vanengelen.com

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Sports

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2016

n SEND STORY TIPS & INFO TO: CHRIS OTTO, 291-8662, [email protected]

Getting
their kicks
Colquitts are NFLs first
family of 4th downs
k Page C14

ALSO INSIDE: CLASSIFIEDS

NATIONAL SIGNING DAY

MIKE GROSS
PENN STATE FOOTBALL

Lions take big


steps, but still
are climbing

RICHARD HERTZLER | STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

After the Signing Day ceremony Wednesday at Garden Spot, the 17 students pose for a group photo.

NOW ITS OFFICIAL


In ceremonies across the county, student-athletes confirmed their future plans
STAFF REPORT

MORE
COVERAGE

[email protected]

Wednesdays National
Signing Day was full of
pomp and circumstance
at several schools across
Lancaster County.
Even though most student-athletes had long
since made their decision about where to continue their educational
and athletic pursuits,
Wednesday was still special in a ceremonial way.
LNP reporters fanned
out and brought back
these scenes from across
the region.

n For additional

coverage of Signing
Day, including photo
galleries and videos, go
to LancasterOnline.com
n Initial school-byschool Signing Day list,
Page C7
n Millersville
Universitys football
class is heavy on L-L
standouts, Page C7
n Our coverage is
ongoing. Share your
Signing Day news
and photos with the
#LNPSigningDay
Twitter hashtag and/
or send an email to
[email protected]

Manheim Central
The focus at Manheim
Central was on field
hockey, as 11 Barons announced their college
plans during the schools
morning event. Six of the
11 were members of the
Section Two championship field hockey team
that advanced to the
PIAA Class AA tournament last season.
Jillian Wolgemuth will
head to Division I Duke,
which has been a national semifinalist twice
in the past three seasons.

DIANA PUGLIESE | STAFF WRITER

Penn Manor swimming coach Cece ODay, second from left, poses with Comet senior
swimmers, from left, Nicolette Mowry, Leah Williamson and Cadi Hershey on Wednesday during the Signing Day ceremony.

Sara Ober will play for


defending Division II
national champion East
Stroudsburg.
But it was the Division III MAC Commonwealth Conference that
was in the spotlight, with
four Barons announcing
plans to continue their
field hockey careers with
three of the top schools

in that perennially tough


league.
Two of them, defender
Kirsten Myer and goalie
Emma Beamesderfer,
will play for Alvernia
College, where they will
join three other Lancaster-Lebanon League
alums on the roster.
The Crusaders have appeared in the Common-

wealth Conference playoffs three times since


2009, twice making the
finals. They have gone on
to win the ECAC tournament twice in the past
three years.
Lebanon Valley, which
has made 16 trips to
the NCAA tournament,
including four appearances in the Division III

Final Four, landed


the services of Barons defender Hannah
Simon. The Dutchmen had six other LL
alums on their roster
last season.
Those three will be
looking to upset Messiah College, and their
high school teammate
Taylor Wiederrecht,
when they meet in
conference play. It
wont be an easy task.
ATHLETES, page C6

TRACK AND FIELD

Getting the feeling


Cocalicos Emily Stauffers exhausting college search
had its happiest moment when she visited Missouri
TIM GROSS

[email protected]

FILE PHOTO

Cocalicos Emily Stauffer, a multiple league, district and


state medalist in the shot put and discus, will continue
her academic and athletic career at the University of
Missouri.

To Cocalico senior and


Missouri-bound thrower Emily Stauffer, the
college recruiting process felt, fittingly, like a
track meet.
I would leave (for a
visit) on a Thursday,
the thrower said, and I
would be so exhausted
by that Monday when I
came back. And that was
five weeks straight.
But beneath the exhaustion and the frustration over missed days in
high school during those

five weeks, Stauffer said


she fell in love with the
college environment.
I loved every school
I visited, she said,
Theyre
all
great
schools.
Of Stauffers final five
Missouri, Nebraska,
Ohio State, Penn State
and South Carolina it
was Missouri that gave
her the feeling, the one
her mother and sister
claimed she would have.
I was like, Oh my
gosh. Im not going to
get that, Stauffer said.
Thats so stupid. Thats

cliche. Everyone says


that. And then I went,
and I told my mom
I wish I could sign
now.
Stauffer examined
her options before
signing with the Tigers in November,
days after racial tension led to protests at
the university, a strike
by the football team,
and the resignation of
the universitys president.
I didnt let it affect
my decision, Stauffer
STAUFFER, page C8

STATE COLLEGE
You will hear a lot of
scoffing about National
Signing Day.
An overrated hypefest
for obsessive nerds. A
star system, as phony
as the one that used
to rule Hollywood. An
utterly, lavishly inexact
science.
Dont buy it.
Recruiting is a nasty
business, and much of
the media downplays it
to justify ignoring it.
Of course its inexact.
What isnt? Science is an
inexact science.
Of course the walk-on
will sometimes out-perform the blue-chipper.
Matt McGloin is an
NFL quarterback. Rob
Bolden, um, is not.
But consider this: The
last 10 national college
football champions had
at least two recruiting
classes ranked in the national top 10 in the three
years before winning the
title.
If you look at the
people who are winning consistently at the
highest level, theyre
putting together five
(elite recruiting classes)
in a row, Penn State
coach James Franklin
said Wednesday. There
are exceptions, but not
many.
Franklin believes hes
delivered his second
straight such class. Its
a claim that comes with
some evidence.
Acknowledging that
the recruiting services
star-rating system is
subjective and can be
nebulous, Penn States
2016 class includes one
consensus five-star
player (Pittsburgh RB
Miles Sanders) and one
four- or five-star (Reading OL Michal Menet).
If you count Menet,
this is the Lions first
multiple-five-star class
since 2006, when Penn
State was coming off a
Big Ten title, Orange
Bowl win and No. 3 final
national rank.
Twelve of the 20 kids
who signed Wednesday
are four stars or better.
Thats 25 four stars or
better over the last two
classes.
There were a total of
10 from 2012 through
2014.
As the dust cleared
Wednesday, 24/7 Sports
composite team rankings had Penn State 19th
nationally and third in
the Big Ten, well behind
No. 4 Ohio State and No.
5 Michigan, and nosing
ahead of No 21 Michigan
State at the 11th hour.
The best thing about
the class is how well it
addresses the glaring

LIONS, page C5

MORE INSIDE
n Complete list of Penn
State recruits

n Pittsburghs class at a
glance

n Nationally: Alabama

lands nations top signing


class for sixth straight year

n Big Ten: Jim Harbaugh


puts on an all-star
spectacle at Michigan
Page C5

sports2
C2

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2016

IN FOCUS

FROM TWITTER
Character gained through sport will help girls be leaders
of the future. Happy National Girls & Women in Sports
Day!
USA Field Hockey (@USAFieldHockey)
Games played with Phillies by first picks in 1998-2002
drafts: 3,450. Games played with Phillies by first picks in
2003-2012 drafts: 47.
Matt Gelb (@MattGelb)
Did you know the souls of the losing team are forever
trapped inside the Lombardi Trophy?
Onion Sports Network (@OnionSports)

SPORTS ON TV
NETWORK

TIME

Ohio State at Wisconsin

ESPN

7pm

Texas A&M at Vanderbilt

ESPN2

7pm

Florida International at Alabama-Birmingham

MASN

7pm

TCN

7pm

Tulsa at Temple

ESPNU

7pm

South Florida at Cincinnati

CBSSN

8pm

ESPNEWS

8pm

BTN

9pm

ESPN2

9pm

FS1

9pm

Southern Mississippi at North Texas

MASN

9pm

Murray State at Southeast Missouri

ESPNU

9pm

Portland at Pepperdine

ESPNU

11pm

Utah at Oregon State

ESPN2

11pm

NETWORK

TIME

Iowa at Indiana

BTN

7pm

Kentucky at South Carolina

SEC

7pm

Mississippi State at Louisiana State

SEC

9pm

NETWORK

TIME

European PGA Tour:


Omega Dubai Desert Classic

GOLF

6:30am

Temple fans cheer from the stands during the Owls 27-10 win over Penn
State on Sept. 5. The university is exploring building a stadium on campus, but as of now, the team will continue to play at Lincoln Financial
Field in Philadelphia, home of the Eagles.

LPGA Tour: Coates Golf Championship

GOLF

11am

PGA Tour: Waste Management Phoenix Open

GOLF

3pm

NBA

NETWORK

TIME

make economic sense for us to


do it, he said, noting it wont
be financed through tuition
dollars.

New York at Detroit

TNT

7pm

Los Angeles Lakers at New Orleans

TNT

9:30pm

NETWORK

TIME

New York Islanders at Washington

NBCSP

7:30pm

Philadelphia at Nashville

CSN/PH

8pm

Anaheim at Los Angeles

NBCSP

10pm

FAR FROM RED ZONE


Temple stadium project
will require city support,
which isnt quite there

COLLEGE MENS BASKETBALL

William & Mary at Northeastern

Central Florida at Tulane

SUSAN SNYDER

THE PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER

Minnesota at Northwestern

Temple University has quite


a bit of work to do if it wants to
build a football stadium on campus, says City Council President
Darrell L. Clarke.
In other words, the Owls
arent in the red zone.
At some point, it probably will
require a significant amount of
city support and at this point,
thats not there, he said.
His comments came one day
after Temple President Neil
D. Theobald told student government leaders he intended
to recommend to the universitys board of trustees that the
school proceed with plans for a
stadium.
For starters, the university
should work on solving existing
noise, trash and parking problems associated with students
living in its North Philadelphia
neighborhood, Clarke said.
And the university must build
major community support for
a stadium, which constitutes
significant development in
the middle of a neighborhood,
he said.

Connecticut at Memphis

Need for support


Temple Chairman Patrick
OConnor said university officials understand the need for
the communitys support and
are working on it.
We want to work with the
community so we have adequate space for the stadium, he
said. Until we get the go ahead,
Temple will pursue the stadium
but not with any substantial
outlay of money.
Trustees at a 3:30 p.m. Monday meeting will consider
whether to give the project
conceptual approval with conditions, OConnor said. Those
conditions include raising
enough money from donors, securing city approvals and a reasonable cost.
Its got to be a benefit and
an add-on to the community
in which we live and it has to

Colorado at Oregon

COLLEGE WOMENS BASKETBALL

GOLF

CASEY KREIDER | STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

More than football


Initial projections called for
a 35,000-seat stadium in the
Northwest corner of campus.
Price tag: $100 million.
The stadium complex, he said,
would be for more than just
football. It could have various
community uses, including rallies, speeches, concerts and other sporting events. Some type of
retail would be included.
Temple also would like to dedicate a space across the street
from the stadium for an alumni
center, he said. Hes hoping that
alumni will step up and donate
to the stadium, he said.
Also under consideration is
some type of health care services for the community, he said.
Clarke wasnt won over.
They should do that anyway,
he said, regardless of a stadium.
Temple began exploring an
stadium on campus because
renting Lincoln Financial Field

has become too expensive. Mayor Kenney also has expressed


frustration over the cost arrangement with the Eagles. He
met with university officials in
December his objections led
the board to delay a vote on proceeding with the project.

NHL

Convincing community
He asked them to include
the community in the decision
making process, said Kenney
spokeswoman Lauren Hitt,
and if they decided to move
ahead with the stadium, to not
just minimize negative impact,
but to include them in any positive economic impact.
A stadium could be a hard sell
for some neighbors, including
Cassandra Knight, who lives on
Arlington Street, near 17th and
Norris, and said she works at
Temple in housekeeping.
It wont be a benefit to us,
she said, asserting that Temple
already crowds the neighborhood. Where are you going
to put a parking lot? And here
come the tail gate parties.
Theyre already taking over every damn thing.

WRESTLING

SIGNING DAY

Dave Byrne (@dbyrneman) will cover


Cocalicos matches in the District Three
Class AAA team tournament tonight at
Spring Grove.

For ongoing information about where local


athletes are heading to college, check out
and contribute to #LNPSigningDay on
Twitter.

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
our delivery notification emails. This way, we can inform you of any
service disruptions, provide you with free access to an online version
of our print newspaper, and give you an estimate of when you can
expect your paper to arrive.
To sign up, please contact Customer Service at 717-291-8611
or [email protected] and a representative will
activate the notifications.
Thank you for being a home delivery subscriber to LNP.

TENNIS

Federer undergoes
surgery on his knee
Will miss events in Rotterdam, Dubai
BASEL,
Switzerland
(AP) Roger Federer has
had knee surgery and will
miss tournaments in Rotterdam and Dubai this
month.
Roger Federer underwent successful arthroscopic knee surgery
today in Switzerland
to repair a torn meniscus, a statement on
his official website said
Wednesday.
It is a rare injury setback
for the 34-year-old Federer, who has had relatively
minor back problems in
2008 and 2013.
The statement did not
specify which knee is injured, though it said it

happened last Friday, one


day after his Australian
Open semifinal loss to Novak Djokovic.
My doctors have (assured) me that the surgery
was a success and with
proper rehabilitation, I
will be able to return to
the Tour soon, Federer
said in the statement.
His next scheduled tournament is in Indian Wells,
California, starting March
7.
I apologize to my
friends in Rotterdam and
Dubai, as I was very much
looking forward to playing those events, Federer
said in a statement on his
Facebook page.

SPORTS

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2016

COLLEGE BASKETBALL ROUNDUP

No. 5 Iowa routs Penn State


Jarrod Uthoff scored 14
points and Adam Woodbury had a career-high
15 rebounds to help No. 5
Iowa roll past Penn State
73-49 on Wednesday
night in Iowa City, Iowa.
Peter Jok scored 12
points and Anthony
Clemmons had 12 points,
six rebounds and four assists for the Hawkeyes
(18-4, 9-1 Big Ten), who
won their 15th straight
home game.
Iowa shot 46 percent
from the field and held
Penn State to 30 percent
shooting.
Brandon Taylor had 15
points and 11 rebounds
for Penn State (11-12,
2-8). Taylor shot 6 of 18
from the field.
Villanova 83, Creighton 58: Kris Jenkins
scored 22 points and
Jalen Brunson had 16 as
No. 3 Villanova (19-3, 9-1
Big East) beat Creighton
(14-9, 5-5).
Josh Hart added 13
points and nine rebounds for the Wildcats,
who have won 11 of 12.
With senior center Daniel Ochefu missing his
second straight game
with a concussion, Villanova relied on its pinpoint outside shooting.
The Wildcats shot 16
for 29 (55 percent) from
3-point range.
Xavier 90, St. Johns
83: Trevon Bluiett had
15 points and 13 rebounds for his fifth double-double of the season,
and No. 6 Xavier (20-2,
8-2 Big East) handed the
Red Storm (7-16, 0-10)
their 13th straight loss.
Virginia 61, Boston
College 47: Malcolm
Brogdon scored 27
points as No. 9 Virginia
(18-4, 7-3 ACC) stretched
its winning streak to five
games and kept Boston
College (7-15, 0-9) winless in the ACC.
Anthony Gill added 10

throw line in the third


overtime as Illinois
(11-12, 3-7 Big Ten)
outlasted Rutgers (617, 0-10), extending
the Scarlet Knights
losing streak to 10
games.
Jalen
ColemanLands had a careerhigh 26 points for Illinois. Corey Sanders
had career highs of 39
points and 12 assists
for Rutgers.

Women

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Iowa guard Anthony Clemmons brings the ball up the


court ahead of Penn State forward Payton Banks.

points and 11 rebounds


for the Cavaliers, who
won their 16th straight
at home and for the
31st time in their last
32 home games against
ACC competition.
Miami 79, Notre
Dame 70: Anthony
Lawrence Jr. scored a
season-high 18 points on
just six shots, Angel Rodriguez added 12 points
and No. 17 Miami (174, 6-3 ACC) beat Notre
Dame (15-7, 6-4).
JaQuan Newton and
Sheldon McClellan had
12 points apiece for the
Hurricanes, who extended their home winning
streak to nine games.
Tonye Jekiri grabbed 12
rebounds and Kamari
Murphy scored 11 points
for Miami.
Bonzie Colson scored
17 points for Notre
Dame.
VCU 88, La Salle 70:
Melvin Johnson scored
30 points and made eight
of 13 3-pointers as VCU
(17-5, 9-0 Atlantic 10)

beat La Salle (5-15, 1-8)


for its 12th straight win.
Jonathan
Williams
scored a career-high 14
points, Justin Tillman
added 13 and the Rams
shot 53 percent from the
floor and made 11 of 27
3-pointers.
Amar Stukes led La
Salle with a career-high
17 points.
St.
Bonaventure
83, Saint Josephs 73:
Jaylen Adams scored a
career-high 31 points as
St. Bonaventure (14-6,
6-3 Atlantic 10) downed
Saint Josephs (18-4, 7-2).
Dion Wright added 18
points and 11 rebounds,
Idris Taqqee had 13
points and Marcus Posley had 11 for the Bonnies.
DeAndre
Bembry
scored 22 points for the
Hawks, who had won
seven straight.
Illinois 110, Rutgers 101 (3 OT): Malcolm Hill, who finished
with 32 points, scored
10 points from the free-

UConn 96, Tulane


38: Breanna Stewart
made her first seven
shots in a 20-point
performance and No.
1 UConn (21-0, 11-0
American Athletic)
remained unbeaten
by routing Tulane (157, 6-4).
Moriah Jefferson
scored 16 points, Gabby Williams 15 and
Katie Lou Samuelson
14 for the Huskies,
who led wire-to-wire
and won by at least
40 points for the 14th
time this season.
The Huskies have
now won 98 straight
vs. unranked opponents and have won
105 of their last 106
games overall.
Michigan
State
85, Michigan 64:
Aerial Powers scored
27 points and No. 17
Michigan State (17-4,
8-2 Big Ten) was perfect on 19 free throws
in defeating Michigan
(12-10, 4-7).
South
Florida
82, Cincinnati 49:
Courtney Williams
had 28 points and 15
rebounds and reached
2,000 career points
to help No. 19 South
Florida (16-5, 9-2
American) beat Cincinnati (7-14, 3-7).
SOURCE: ASSOCIATED PRESS

MILLERSVILLE 61, CHEYNEY 50

Marauders net 1st win since November


JOEL SCHREINER
LNP CORRESPONDENT

After 16 straight setbacks, the skid, at long


last, is over.
The Millersville mens
basketball team snapped
the longest losing streak
in program history
with a 61-50 win over
Cheyney on Wednesday
night at Pucillo Gym.
Its the first victory
for the Marauders (3-13
PSAC, 3-17 overall) since
late November.
Its good for the guys,
MU coach Fred Thompson said afterward. Im
happy for the win.
Playing in only his
fifth game since joining the Marauders, Tom
Townsend came off the

bench and scored a career-high 15 points to


lead the team.
The freshman guard
hit 4-of-8 shots from the
floor, including three
3-pointers.
He can shoot the basketball, said Thompson of Townsend, who
averaged 3.5 points in
his first four games. He
had been struggling, but
he found his rhythm tonight. Hes what this offense is about, a guy who
can make shots. He made
some big shots for us tonight.
Ryan Beck added 10
points for Millersville,
while Tommy Patterson
chipped in seven and
pulled down a game-high

14 rebounds.
Cheyney (1-14, 2-17)
was led by Juwan Mullen, who scored a gamehigh 20 points.
Turning point: Clinging to a 51-50 lead, the
Marauders scored the
games final 10 points,
including seven from
Townsend. The Wolves
did not score in the final
4:50 of the game.
Key statistics: After
hitting their first 3-point
shot of the night, the
Marauders only hit 3 of
20 the remainder of the
opening half. (MU hit 4
of 9 in the second half ).
Despite a 7:40 stretch
without scoring, MU
grabbed a 28-25 halftime
lead.

NHL ROUNDUP

Sabres skate past Canadiens


MONTREAL (AP) Jamie McGinn, Johan Larsson and Brian Gionta all
scored in Buffalos big third
period and the Sabres rallied for a 4-2 comeback
victory over the slumping
Montreal Canadiens on
Wednesday night.
Marcus Foligno also
scored for Buffalo, which
played its first game
since the All-Star break
and led 2-1 heading into
the final period. The Sabres, last in the Atlantic
Division, are 6-4-0 in
their last 10 games.
Dale Weise and Alex
Galchenyuk scored for
Montreal, which has lost
four in a row and is 1-8-1 in
its last 10. The Canadiens
opened the season 19-4-3,

but are 5-20-1 since.


Lightning 3, Red
Wings 1: Ben Bishop
made 24 saves to get

100th win with Tampa


Bay and Nikita Kucherov
scored his 21st goal.
SOURCE: ASSOCIATED PRESS

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Quotable: Thompson, on teams offensive woes: We just


dont have a lot of
offensive power. We
were getting good
shots, we just werent
making them. If
youre not scoring and
you cant rebound,
you have to come up
with all kinds of gimmicks to win a basketball game, which
is something Im not
used to.
Up next: The Marauders are home
again Saturday afternoon at 3 against Lock
Haven. The Eagles
beat the Marauders,
86-70, in their first
meeting on Dec. 19.

C3

Local digest
BASEBALL
n Millersville University will enter the 2016 season as the
favorite to win the PSAC Eastern Division. In the PSAC
preseason poll, released Tuesday, the leagues coaches
picked Millersville first for a fourth consecutive season
with six of eight first-place votes. The Marauders won the
PSAC East and PSAC tournament a season ago and have
won their division five times since 2008.

MENS BASKETBALL
n Sophomore Blayde Reich (Lebanon) led York College

with a career-high 19 points Monday in a 67-45 Capital


Athletic Conference loss at Mary Washington.
n On Wednesday, Rep. Joseph R. Pitts spoke on the
floor of the U.S. House of Representatives in honor of
Franklin & Marshall basketball coach Glenn Robinson.
Robinson improved his career win total to 907 Tuesday
with a 72-43 win over Muhlenberg. He has moved past
Bob Knight (902) this season, putting him alone in third
place for career NCAA wins. He trails only Herb Magee of
Philadelphia University and Dukes Mike Krzyzewski.

MULTISPORT EVENT
n Clipper Magazine Stadium will host the inaugural BA

Athletics Summer Classic on Aug. 6. It is a multisport


event featuring a 5k run, powerlifting and strongman/
strongwoman competitions and a team fitness challenge.

WOMENS SWIMMING
n Paige Spradling (Hempfield) took first in the 200 IM,

400 IM and 200 breaststroke for IUP at this weekends


John A Pidgeon Invitational against Bloomsburg and
Gannon. Spradling also swam in the second-place 200
and 400 medley relays and the third-place 400 free relay.

YOUTH WRESTLING
n The Hempfield Youth Wrestling team traveled to

Cumberland Valley High School last weekend and won


Cumberland Valley Duals. In its pool, Hempfield defeated
Elco (85-10), Central Dauphin (84-10) and Hershey (964). In the final pool match, Hempfield beat a very tough
Burrell team from Pittsburgh (39-35). In the championship
match, Hempfield topped Governor Mifflin (63-24).
The team is 13-0 and has been invited to wrestle a New
York all-star team prior to the No. 9 Cornell versus No. 2
Oklahoma State match Sunday in Ithaca, New York.
LOCAL COLLEGE BASKETBALL

Ville, E-town
women triumph
STAFF REPORT

[email protected]

Alayah Hall and Kendra Bamberger had


season-high scoring efforts to help the Millersville womens basketball
team to a 72-53 win over
PSAC East rival Cheyney
on Wednesday night at
Pucillo Gymnasium.
The Marauders won
for the fifth time in six
games to improve to 13-7
overall and 9-7 in the
PSAC East.
Millersville outscored
Cheyney in all four quarters and scored 20 in
three of them.
Hall totaled 13 points
by knocking down 4-of5 shots and 4-of-4 free
throws.
Bamberger scored 12
after hitting all six of
her shots from the field.
The duo helped Millersvilles bench outscore
Cheyneys 34-0.
Elizabethtown
66, Catholic 61: In
Washington, D.C, Emily Martin exploded for
a game- and career-high
26 points to help the
Elizabethtown College
women earn a pivotal
conference road victory
at Catholic.
Martin finished with
her 10th double-double
of the season as E-town
is now tied with the Cardinals for third in the

Landmark.
Martin was engaged in
the action from the getgo. With Elizabethtown
(11-6, 7-4 Landmark)
down four, the junior
connected on consecutive layups on consecutive possessions to knot
the game at 4-4 in the
first three minutes of the
game.
Martin made a seasonhigh 10 field goals and
finished with a seasonbest shooting percentage (10 for 15; 66.7 percent). She hauled in 10
rebounds and added a
pair of steals, assists, and
one block.
Rachel Forjan contributed 18 points.

Mens basketball

Catholic 73, Elizabethtown 60: Catholic


likely wasnt banking on
an Elizabethtown team
it defeated by 34 points
a month ago to put up
much of a fight in the rematch Wednesday.
But the host Blue Jays
had other ideas, answering almost every bucket
and every run the playoff-bound
Cardinals
threw at them, before
running out of steam late
in a setback at Thompson Gymnasium.
Josh Eden led Elizabethtown with 13 points.

C4

SPORTS

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2016

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

WEST 10, EAST 6

NBA ROUNDUP

PM standouts
spark victory

Hawks
dump
Sixers

Vicari, Finefrock help West win


nights first CPIHL all-star game
KEVIN FREEMAN

[email protected]

HARRISBURG Lindy Vicari had a hat trick


and Penn Manor teammate and goaltender
Owen Finefrock limited
the opposition to two
goals in the second period to help the West
defeat the East, 10-6, in
the first of two Central
Pennsylvania Interscholastic Hockey League
All-Star games played
Wednesday night at
Twin Ponds East.
Vicari, the leading
scorer in the CPIHLs
Tier 3, had a pair of assists to go along with his
three goals. Wednesdays
game marked his third
CPIHL All-Star game
and hes picked up at
least one goal in all three.
The event is great and
its great that the league
puts it on, Vicari said.
You get to play against
guys from all the tiers and
this one was special because its my senior year.
Manheim Townships
Noah Bradley, playing for the East team,
matched Vicaris fivepoint game with a hat
trick and two assists.
The East team narrowed the Wests lead to
7-6 on a goal by Cedar
Crests Reed Hoffman
with 5:47 to play in the
third period.
With 4:04 to play, the
Easts coaches called the
teams timeout and sent
Bradleys line, which included Hersheys Sammy Steele and Lower
Dauphins Riley Dohner,
back on the ice to look
for the tying goal.

But 19 seconds after


the timeout, Elizabethtowns Johnny
Nicholson took a
feed from Vicari and
scored, boosting the
Wests lead to 8-6.
That Bradley line
was a heck of a line,
Vicari said. But our
line (with Nicholson
and Penn Manors
Cory Cummings) was
working pretty good
all game and we happened to go out on
that shift after the
timeout.
Nicholson, the leading scorer in Tier 2,
finished with two
goals and an assist.
Warwicks Zach Young
had a pair of goals and
added an assist on a
goal by Warwick teammate Alec White.
The West also got
goals from two Hempfield players, Thomas
Kissinger and Nicholas Kauffman.
Star of the game:
Vicari, with his fivepoint game, which
included his gamewinning goal.
Key statistic: 0
goals allowed by West
goalie Aaron Dobrolsky (Hershey) in the
first period of the
game.
Quotable:
Manheim
Townships
Bradley who scored
a pair of his goals
against Blue Streaks
teammate Colby Fiel:
I rode to the game
with Colby and he
said that if I score I
would have to walk
home.

NORTH 9, SOUTH 6

Cedar Crest pair


lead North to win
KEVIN FREEMAN

[email protected]

HARRISBURG A
pair of players from Cedar Crest Kyle Harris and Jake Horacek
each recorded hat tricks
and had five points to
lead the North to a 9-6
victory in the nightcap
of two Central Pennsylvania
Interscholastic
Hockey League All-Star
games at Twin Pond East
on Wednesday night.
Harris scored two of
six North goals in the
first and second periods,
while North goalie Liam
Schmidt, from Palmyra,
shut out the South in the
first period.
Hempfields
Griffin
Helm had a pair of assists
for the North.
I knew the game
would be fast-paced because of the skill level

of the players, Helm


said. I knew it would
be up-tempo.
Penn Manors Matt
Reiss, playing in his
second All-Star game,
picked up an assist for
the South in the third
period.
Turning
point:
Horaceks goal early
in the third period,
which extended the
Norths lead to 7-2.
Star of the game:
Harris and Horacek
would share those
honors.
Key
statistic:
Schmidt stopped all
12 shots he faced in
the first period.
Quotable: Helm on
playing in one of the allstar games: Just being
named an All-Star was
great. The two assists
were just a bonus.

LAWSUIT

US Soccer Federation
sues womens team union
CHICAGO (AP) The
U.S. Soccer Federation
has sued the union of
its world championship
womens soccer team,
saying it fears players
may attempt to strike
ahead of this years
Olympics.
The lawsuit was filed
Wednesday in federal
court in Chicago. The
USSF says Richard Nichols, the new executive
director of the U.S. Womens National Soccer
Team Players Association, refuses to acknowledge a Dec. 31 expiration date contained in
a memorandum of un-

derstanding agreed
to by the governing
body and the union
in March 2013. The
memorandum listed
changes agreed to
from the previous
collective bargaining
agreement.
The USSF claims
Nichols informed it
on Dec. 23 that the
deal will end on Feb.
24 and at a meeting
Wednesday refused to
agree that the union
wouldnt strike before
Dec. 31. The USSF
asked the court to determine the CBA exists
and expires Dec. 31.

Atlanta uses a
balanced attack
for 124-86 win

SUZETTE WENGER | STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

Ephratas Caroline Stauffer drives to the basket as Solancos Aleska Burger, right, defends during Tuesdays Section Two title-winning game for the Mountaineers. Stauffer
and her teammates will host Lebanon Catholic at 7 p.m. Monday in the first round of
the L-L League girls basketball playoffs. The boys tournament begins Saturday.
L-L BASKETBALL

Playoff brackets are set


STAFF REPORT

[email protected]

The eight girls teams and eight boys


teams that will participate in the Lancaster-Lebanon League basketball
tournaments are now set, as are the
brackets for first-round games.
On the boys side, action gets underway with the following four quarterfinals on Saturday night:
Elco at McCaskey, 6 p.m.
Conestoga Valley at Lancaster
Catholic, 7 p.m.
Lancaster Mennonite at Lebanon,
7 p.m.
Cedar Crest at Lampeter-Strasburg, 7 p.m.
The boys semifinals will be held on
Tuesday, with the McCaskey/Elco
winner facing the Lancaster Catholic/
Conestoga Valley winner, and the Lebanon/Lancaster Mennonite winner
facing the Lampeter-Strasburg/Cedar
Crest winner.

The boys final will be on Thursday,


Feb. 11, at Manheim Township at 7 p.m.

Girls matchups
On the girls side, action gets underway with the quarterfinals on Monday.
Here are the matchups:
Cocalico at Cedar Crest, 7 p.m.
Elizabethtown at Lancaster Catholic, 7 p.m.
Lebanon Catholic at Ephrata, 7 p.m.
Manheim Township at Northern
Lebanon, 7 p.m.
The semifinals will be played on
Wednesday, Feb. 10, and feature the
Cedar Crest/Cocalico winner vs. the
Lancaster
Catholic/Elizabethtown
winner, and the Ephrata/Lebanon
Catholic winner vs. the Northern Lebanon/Manheim Township winner.
The girls final will be at 7 p.m. on
Friday, Feb. 12, and be played at either
Warwick or Annville-Cleona.

DISTRICT 3 WRESTLING CLASS AA TEAM TOURNAMENT

Vikings return to finals


NL wins twice, faces showdown with Boiling Springs
DAVE BYRNE

[email protected]

FREDERICKSBURG
The Northern Lebanon wrestling team is
returning to the championship match of the
District Three Class AA
team
championships,
and doing it with a slightly different attitude than
last year.
Last year we were
just happy to be there,
said junior Luke Funck,
thinking back on a 52-15
loss to Boiling Springs in
the final. This year, we
want to get farther than
that, no doubt.
We want to beat whoever were going to wrestle. I think its Boiling
(Springs).
It is indeed. The fivetime defending champion Bubblers beat Bermudian Springs, 45-28,
in Wednesdays other
semifinal.
The
Vikings
(161) made a statement
Wednesday night in the
final home dual contests
of the year, demolishing Hamburg 59-9 in the
semifinals, following a
62-4 quarterfinal victory
over Camp Hill.
We beat two pretty
good teams, cautioned
Vikings coach Rusty
Wallace. This time of
year, our tough schedule
is going to show.
Against
Hamburg,
George Thompson (285)
and Kyler Anspach (106)
gave the hosts an early
advantage with a pair of
decisions, an advantage
that quickly tripled on
falls from Dustin Bre-

idegan (113) and Colin


Leonard (120).
After the Hawks (17-3)
got on the scoreboard on
a fall from Jake Johnson
at 126, Trevor Leonard
teched out Mike Madera,
17-1, at 132, scoring on
four tilts before closing
out in 5:16.
Dylan Miller scored
the Hawks last victory of
the night, 4-3 over Zach
Kelly at 138, then the
Vikings rode a tsunami
of pins to Saturdays
10:30 a.m. championship
match.
Blaise Bressler (145),
Steve Herb (152), Luis
Negrerios (16) and
Quinn Blatt (170) took
a collective 6:43 to register the falls, Negrerios
clinching the win.
Hunter Wallace scored
a decision at 182, setting the table for an anticipated match between
two PIAA State tournament qualifiers Hamburgs Ignacio Reynoso
and the Vikings Luke
Funck.
They did not disappoint.
Reynoso (25-5) set
Funck back on his heels
with a pair of takedowns.
Confident in his abilities
from neutral, Reynoso did
not contest Funcks escape
attempts and led 4-3 midway through the match.
Then Funck (28-0)
dropped to all fours
from neutral to counter
Reynosos quick shot,
scoring the go-ahead
takedown on a single leg,
taking a 5-4 lead into the
final two minutes.
Reynoso escaped to

open the third period


and both wrestlers had
throws waved off out of
bounds.
I was thinking, Aw
geez, here we go. I knew
I was in condition, but
there was a point when
I thought, well, end it already, Funck said.
Which he did, in sudden victory overtime,
countering
Reynosos
shot and bulling him to
his back for four points
and the win.
Fittingly, Matt Vines
closed out the night with
a fall at 220.
Northern Lebanon
62, Camp Hill 4: The
Vikings got the night off
to a spectacular start, annihilating the Lions.
Camp Hill (10-4) won
one bout Weston Kembles 13-0 major of Gavin
Scheaffer but even
that was a win, of sorts,
for the Vikings, who had
been giving up six points
there on forfeits while
Scheaffer
recovered
from an injury.
Other than that, it was
all Vikings on falls from
Matt Vines (220), George
Thompson (285), Trevor
Leonard (132), Blaise
Bressler (145), Hunter
Wallace (182) and Luke
Funck (195).
Funck remained unbeaten at 27-0, cradling
Sam Teeter (20-5) midway through the third
period. He led 11-2.
Colin Leonard (120)
added a tech fall. Kyler
Anspach (106), Zach Kelly (138) and Steve Herb
(152) threw in major decisions.

Tim Hardaway Jr.


and Mike Scott led a
balanced attack with
13 points apiece and
the Atlanta Hawks
coasted to a 124-86
victory over the Philadelphia 76ers on
Wednesday night.
All 13 players scored
and eight finished in
double-figures for Atlanta, which swept the
three-game season
series with an average winning margin of
29 points. The Hawks
have won two straight
after snapping their
three-game
losing
streak with Mondays
112-97 home win over
Dallas.
Former McCaskey
player Lamar Patterson had five points
and an assist for Atlanta, which led by as
many as 43 points in
the fourth.
Hornets 106, Cavaliers 97: Jeremy Lin
scored 24 points and
Charlotte rallied in
the second half to beat
Eastern Conferenceleading Cleveland.
Michael Kidd-Gilchrist had 11 points
and 13 rebounds, and
three other players
finished in double figures for the Hornets,
who overcame a ninepoint halftime deficit
to snap a four-game
losing streak against
the Cavaliers.
Pacers 114, Nets
100: C.J. Miles had 27
points, Paul George
scored 17 and Indiana
sent Brooklyn to its
fifth straight loss.
George Hill added 13
for the Pacers. Brook
Lopez had 21 points
and Joe Johnson had
20 points and nine assists for the Nets.
Celtics 102, Pistons
95:
Isaiah
Thomas had 17 points
and seven assists to
help Boston hold off
Detroit.
Avery Bradley added 15 points for Boston, which has won
six straight home
games and seven of
eight overall.
Thunder 117, Magic 114: Russell Westbrook posted his third
straight triple-double
with 24 points, a career-high 19 rebounds
and 14 assists as Oklahoma City edged Olrando.
Kevin Durant hit a
3-pointer with a halfsecond left to cap a
37-point outing for
Oklahoma City, which
has won five straight
and 12 of its last 13.
Warriors
134,
Wizards 121: Stephen Curry scored
36 of his 51 points in
the first half to offset
a monster offensive
game from John Wall
and Golden State
pulled away to beat
Washington for its
eighth straight victory.
Curry made 13 of
his first 14 shots and
finished 19 of 28 from
the field and 11 of 26
from 3-point territory. His 11 3s tied a
career high.
Spurs 110, Pelicans 97: LaMarcus
Aldridge had 36 points,
setting his season high
for the second consecutive game, and
San Antonio beat New
Orleans to remain unbeaten at home.

SOURCE: ASSOCIATED PRESS

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2016

C5

NATIONAL SIGNING DAY

Alabama again
dominates on
recruiting trail
Experts rank Tides class consensus
No. 1 for the 6th consecutive year
STEVE MEGARGEE
AP SPORTS WRITER

Signing day went much


like this past season:
Alabama dominated and
Jim Harbaugh had everybody talking about
Michigan.
For a sixth consecutive
year, Alabama landed
the nations top signing class according to
composite rankings of
recruiting websites compiled by 247Sports. The
reigning national champions soared to the top
of the standings thanks
to Crimson Tide coach
Nick Sabans customary
strong finish.
Saban isnt even recruiting anymore hes
selecting, said Barton
Simmons, the national
scouting director for
247Sports.

Late flurry
Alabama
entered
Wednesday ranked behind LSU and Ole Miss
within its own conference in the 247Sports
Composite
standings,
but the Crimson Tide
closed with a flurry that
featured the addition of
five-star linebackers Ben
Davis and Lyndell Wilson as well as top-100 defensive end Terrell Hall.
Nick Saban is working on a whole different
plane than everybody
else in the country,
Simmons said. Its not
even about recruiting
anymore. Its about figuring out a way to make
the numbers work to get
the guys you want. Thats
become the challenge for
Saban.
The biggest announcement of the day came
when Rashan Gary, a
defensive tackle from
Paramus, New Jersey,
selected Michigan over
Clemson. Gary is the
consensus pick as the
nations top No. 1 overall
recruit.
Garys decision delighted a festive Signing Day celebration on
Michigans campus that
included New England
Patriots
quarterback
Tom Brady and New
York Yankees shortstop
Derek Jeter among others. Brady played for the

Wolverines before going to the NFL and Jeter


grew up in Michigan.
Mike Farrell, the national recruiting director for Rivals, said he
wouldnt be surprised
to see other schools
stage similar signing day
events.
It puts a little pressure
on everybody, Farrell
said. Thats a high bar to
set. Good luck to everybody else who wants to
do a star-studded signing day.
Here were some other
major stories to develop
Wednesday as prospects
across the country made
their college choices official.
Signing day decisions: Seven of the top 15
players in the 247Sports
Composite were uncommitted heading into
signing day. That list
was headlined by Gary.
Other top-15 prospects
to make their announcements Wednesday included the Alabama duo
of Davis and Wilson plus
defensive tackle Derrick
Brown (Auburn), linebacker Mique Juarez
(UCLA) and athlete Mecole Hardman Jr. (Georgia).
Wide receiver Demetris Robertson of Savannah, Georgia, still hasnt
announced his college
choice and has said he
planned to wait a couple
of extra days. Hes the
guy whose home received a visit from Notre
Dames equipment truck
last week as the Fighting
Irish pursued him.
Like father, like
son: Family connections played a role in a
couple of Wednesdays
big commitments. Davis father is Wayne Davis, Alabamas all-time
leading tackler. Davis
announced his commitment to Alabama by
wearing a houndstooth
hat like the one made
famous by former Tide
coach Paul Bear Bryant. Safety Nigel Warrior, a consensus top-100
recruit, announced he
was following his father
to Tennessee. Warrior is
the son of Dale Carter, a
former Tennessee and
NFL defensive back.

A NABIL K. MARK | CENTRE DAILY TIMES, VIA AP

Penn State football head coach James Franklin, center, offensive coordinator Joe Moorhead, left, and coach
Charles Huff, right, as well as coaches Josh Gattis, top center, and Terry Smith, top right, point and celebrate as
they see recruit Miles Sanders on their screen during Wednesdays national signing day.

Lions: Day of progress for program


Continued from C1

need for offensive


linemen with Menet,
G/C Connor McGovern and T Will Fries.
Everybody wanted
Menet. McGovern
enrolled early, has
already gained nearly
20 pounds and figures
to play positions
where the need for
help is at emergency
level.
A recruiting analyst
told me Wednesday
that Fries, whos
6-foot-7, 285, has as
much physical ability
as Menet or McGovern.
The second best
thing about the class
is the loyalty shown
by the three true
blue-chippers
Sanders, Menet and
DE Shane Simmons
who committed to
Franklin early, were
evidently bombarded
with suitors and
never wavered.
Franklin has been
on Sanders since he
got the Penn State
job. He apparently
won over Mom early
and, you know, drop
the mic.
Just hours after
Penn State defensive
coordinator Bob
Shoop left for Tennessee, Simmons
announced that the
news changed nothing for him.
Franklin said
Wednesday that soon
after offensive line
coach Herb Hand
announced he was
leaving for Auburn,
a Big Ten offensive
line coach contacted

PSU RECRUITING CLASS


n Alex Barbir, K, Cumming, Ga., South Forsyth H.S.
n Cameron Brown, LB, Burtonsville, Md., Bullis School
n Tyrell Chavis, DL, Richmond, Va., Nassau C.C.
n Danny Dalton, TE, Marshfield, Mass., Marshfield H.S.
n Daelun Darien, WR, Baltimore, Md., Dunbar H.S.
n Will Fries, OL, Cranford, N.J., Cranford H.S.
n Alex Gellerstedt, OL, Dublin, Ohio, Dublin Coffman H.S.
n Blake Gillikin, P/K, Smyrna, Ga., The Westminster

Schools
n T.J. Johnson, DB, Cleveland, Ohio, Euclid H.S.
n Ellison Jordan, DL, Upper Marlboro, Md., Gilman School
n Daniel Joseph, DL, Lake Forest, Ill., Lake Forest
Academy
n Connor McGovern, OL, Larksville, Pa., Lake-Lehman H.S.
n Zech McPhearson, DB, Columbia, Md., Riverdale Baptist
School
n Michal Menet, OL, Birdsboro, Pa., Exeter Township
Senior H.S.
n Miles Sanders, RB, Pittsburgh, Pa., Woodland Hills H.S.
n Antonio Shelton, DL, Gahanna, Ohio, Westerville-North
H.S.
n Shane Simmons, DL, Laurel, Md., DeMatha H.S.
n Brenon Thrift, DL, Monroeville, Pa., Lackawanna C.C.
n Shaka Toney, DL, Philadelphia, Imhotep Institute
Charter School
n Jake Zembiec, QB, Rochester, N.Y., Aquinas Institute

Menet.
Michals response
was, well, if you want
me, you better take the
Penn State O-line job,
Franklin said.

Lost a few
As always, though, not
everybody was that onboard.
The day after the 2015
regular season ended,
Lavert Hill, a fourstar DB from Detroit,
decommitted. Michigan
eventually got him.
Philadelphia four-star
DT Karamo Dioubate
decommitted about a
month ago, and as this
is written hasnt signed

with anyone, despite


offers from Michigan,
Michigan State, South
Carolina, Ohio State and
Auburn.
Four-star DB Andrew
Pryts flipped Tuesday
from Penn State to Stanford. The nations No. 1
kicker, Quinn Nordin,
had Jim Harbaugh sleep
over at his house and
flipped from Penn State
to Michigan.
And, in the past week,
Penn State finished
second or third in key
battles for big-time
kids (Ohio LB Brendan
Ferns to West Virginia,
Pittsburgh DB Damar
Hamlin to Pitt).
In every case, Franklin

and his class scrambled


and got another kid
signed. Thats a credit to
the staffs planning and
work ethic, but in each
case the new signee is,
by consensus, a lesser
prospect.
The purpose here is
not to belittle those
players. It is, of course,
entirely possible that the
No. 8 high-school kicker
will be a better college
kicker than No. 1, etc.
But if Penn State
had gotten No. 1, it
wouldnt have offered
No. 8. If it had gotten
the kids Michigan and
Stanford were chasing,
it wouldnt have gone
down the food chain to
the JUCOs and Cincinnati commits.
The big picture, this
day was about a bigger
struggle, a major rebuild
and undeniable progress.
As director of player
personnel Andy Frank
put it Wednesday,
Were probably a class
or two away from thinking were in the power
position, where we can
look at best player available.
Even just looking at
the Class of 2016, no one
can know how itll play
out, as a bunch of teenagers grow and develop.
Here and now, it looks
like Franklin came close
to a game-changing,
foundational class. But it
doesnt look like he quite
got there.

n Mike Gross covers Penn

State football for LNP. Contact him at mgross@lnpnews.


com. Follow him on Twitter
@MikeGrossLNP

PITT FOOTBALL

Hamlin headlines
Harbaugh show attracts the stars
Narduzzis class
PITTSBURGH (AP)
Pat Narduzzi pledged to
keep the best players in
western Pennsylvania
in western Pennsylvania when he took over as
head coach at Pittsburgh
less than 14 months ago.
It appears hes 2 for 2.
A year after keeping
safety Jordan Whitehead
from nearby Aliquippa
in the fold with his first
recruiting class, Narduzzi and the Panthers
made coveted defensive
back Damar Hamlin the
linchpin of his second
class on Wednesday.
Hamlin, who went to
high school at Central
Catholic announced his
decision on live television on Monday and kept
his promise two days
later as Narduzzi added
an athletic and versatile
group of 25 players in
hopes of building off a
solid 8-5 season in 2015.
Super player, very intelligent, not only in the

MICHIGAN FOOTBALL

classroom but on the


field, Narduzzi said.

At a glance
Best in class: Hamlin.
Blazing fast with what
Narduzzi called the
best feet, hips and most
athletic corners you can
recruit.
Best of the rest: DL
Keyshon Camp (Lakeland, Fla.), chose Pitt
after originally committing to USC. RB George
Hill (Youngstown, Ohio).
Late addition: Rashad
Weaver, DL, Cooper City
(Fla.)
One that got away:
RB
Miles
Sanders
(Woodland Hills) signed
with Penn State.
How theyll fit in:
The beauty for Narduzzi is hes not quite
sure. There are plenty of
prospects who could get
a shot double duty, like
Whitehead did last fall,
going forward.

Tom Brady, Derek Jeter and even Ric Flair made appearances in Ann Arbor
LARRY LAGE

AP SPORTS WRITER

ANN ARBOR, Mich.


Jim Harbaugh,
hailed like a rock star,
strolled onto a regally
lit stage in a sharp
suit instead of his
signature khakis and
tucked-in blue pullover.
Maize-and-blue clad
fans rose out of rosecolored, plush seats
and roared to adore
the Michigan coach.
Welcome to Signing
Day, the reboot.
Harbaugh attracted
an array of celebrities
and 3,500-plus fans
to pack a 103-year-old
auditorium
staged
for a dramatic performance
Wednesday
that topped just about
any production schools
have put on to welcome
their newest class of
football recruits.
Even though the

show included visits


from stars such as Tom
Brady, Derek Jeter and
even Ric Flair, Harbaugh
was the real star of the
Wolverines
Signing
With the Stars spectacle.
Teams have been turning signing day into an
event in recent years,
engaging their fans, getting alumni involved and
trying to come up with
flashy ways to welcome
their newest players.
Social media, billboards,
live streaming online
and signing day parties
have become fairly common.
Harbaugh took it to
another level, welcoming the newest class as if
celebrity status was already a given.
Lou Holtz, who was on
stage behind a TV-studio
like desk, predicted the
extravagance would be
copied by other schools

in the future.
I think people will do
something similar or
theyll criticize it, Harbaugh said. What do I
think of that? I probably
wont think much of it.
It worked for us. It
was wonderful for us,
and why not?
The event was meticulously
produced,
including having James
Earl Jones, a Michigan
graduate, touting the
institution as the best
university in the world
in a video montage that
revved up the crowd.
It included in-person
visits from a string of
stars from stage and
screen, but it didnt last
long enough for Harbaugh to announce the
signing of his top recruit.
Toward the end of the
2-plus-hour event, the
top recruit in the country, defensive tackle
Rashan Gary of New

Jersey, announced he
was going to Michigan.
As word spread via social media, a murmur
turned into a buzz and
the crowd cheered when
Harbaugh said they got
good news, backstage.
The school officially confirmed the commitment
later in the day.
Harbaugh said 28 or 29
scholarships would be
given, and seven of those
recipients are already
on campus and will be
joining the Wolverines
for another one of his
push-the-envelope experiments. Entering his
second year at his alma
mater, Harbaugh plans
to take his team to Florida for four practices during the schools spring
break.
Harbaugh has done a
lot differently as a recruiter, including spending the night at the houses future players.

C6

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2016

SPORTS

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

Athletes: Sign their National Letters of Intent


Continued from C1

Messiah fielded a veritable L-L


all-star team last season, with
10 league alums on its roster,
and has won the conference 14
of the last 15 seasons, including the last nine in a row.
It is going to be fun playing
against them and getting to see
them, said Simon. But it will
be different.
It will be weird, but it will be
fun, added Beamesderfer.
It also led to some good-natured trash talk.
Ill have to go up against
them because I am a forward
and they are backs and a goalie, said Wiederrecht, who also
plans to compete in track at
Messiah. Im going to score
against them.
Not gonna happen, shot
back Beamesderfer.

Garden Spot
Seventeen Spartans lined
up across the stage at Garden
Spots auditorium Wednesday
afternoon in New Holland,
an unprecedented number
of student-athletes receiving
recognition during National
Signing Day.
it was a record day for us,
said Todd Reitnouer, the Garden Spot athletic director,
and we wanted to do something special for them.
The seniors, including five
bound for the Division I ranks,
sat at seats in front of poster
board-sized National Letter
of Intent replicas and, one by
one, walked up to the podium
to address students, faculty
and family members in attendance.
Its going to be exciting to
accomplish things at the national level, said Chance Norris, Garden Spots wrestling
captain, who is heading to
Bucknell. I would have loved,
more than anything, to win a
state title in Pennsylvania, but
even becoming an All-American at the Division I level is my
current goal.
Norris remained seated during the ceremony, confined to
a wheelchair after surgery to
repair a torn meniscus, but
looks forward to returning to
the mat as a Bison.
I didnt feel like it was going to be the end of the road,
he said of the injury, because
I knew I still had four more
years.
Along with Norris, 11 of Garden Spots student-athletes
plan to attend schools in
Pennsylvania. That includes
Abigail Good, a volleyball player bound for Millersville.
Im a hometown girl, Good
said. I wanted to stay around
here.
Another volleyball player,
Caroline Beohm, committed to Susquehanna, a school
looking to replace its mascot
after dropping its Crusaders
nickname in the fall.
I think itll be fun, she said,
because Im in the first class
going in thats not a Crusader.
We get to make our own name
under our own moniker.
Colin Norotsky planned to
travel the farthest to extend
his education, committing to
Division II Tusculum College
in Greenville, Tenn., to play
lacrosse.
In all, six Spartan lacrosse
players took to the stage
Wednesday.
Its nice to move on as a
group, Norotsky said. Ive
played with these guys for
years, and we all have our experiences, and theyre all going to great schools.

Penn Manor

The actual ceremony for


Penn Manors National Signing Day wrapped up quickly in
the schools library Wednesday afternoon, but the celebration was just getting underway
for the Comets.
In all, 20 seniors made their
commitments to 16 different
schools, with six student-athletes continuing at Division I
programs, two at Division II
schools and 12 in the Division
III ranks.
Academically, according to
athletic director Jeff Roth, the
group averaged a 3.82 GPA, led
by Emily Robbs 4.48.
While some tried to hold

Manheim Township students who signed their National Letters of Intent on Wednesday gather for a group photo.

back emotions, others weaved


their way through the crowd
to grab photos with teammates, friends and coaches
and reflect back on their athletic achievements over the
past four years.
Its just like, I dont know,
you work so hard for it and it
finally comes and it kind of just
hits you like a brick wall because you think, Oh thats so
in the future, and now youre
here, said Allison Schaefer,
who will play field hockey at
Liberty. Its like all of your
hard work amasses into one
day. It feels good and its great
to have so many of my other
field hockey sisters here supporting us and all of the other athletes here, I think they
all can say, its just awesome.
Four other field hockey players signed Wednesday, including Marisa Batista (LIU Brooklyn), Robb (Lock Haven),
Madison Warfel (Hofstra) and
Peyton Thompson (University
of Mary Washington).
Four Comets also committed to Eastern University,
where Nathan Brown will play
golf, Nate Flexman soccer, Nicole Hege lacrosse and Alexis
Witgenstein will compete in
track and field.
This years class also included three swimmers, with Cadi
Hershey and Leah Williamson
heading to Messiah.
That was the only school
I looked at and I liked it, admitted Hershey. I liked their
swim team because its like a
really big family atmosphere.
They just have a really cool
team and theyre really close
knit, so Im really excited
about that.
Williamson will continue
swimming with her Comet
teammate, but also be reunited with her older sister Joelle,
who is currently in her sophomore season with the Falcons.
For Schaefer, who will travel to Liberty this weekend
to meet her fellow incoming
teammates, the strong sense
of family was also a big draw.
I went there and all of the
girls were so nice and so accepting, said Schaefer. They
answered all of my questions
right away and it just felt like I
was already part of the family.

Manheim Township
Manheim Townships Erik
Benjamin always wanted to
play quarterback in college.
When the senior stood on
the stage in the high schools
Convocation Hall, the reality set in for the Bloomsburgbound signal caller.
Just seeing that come true,
he said of his goal of reaching
the college gridiron, is really
sweet.
Benjamin and 32 other Blue
Streak seniors celebrated National Signing Day Wednesday
with coaches, teachers, administrators and parents.
Its our final stand, said Columbia-bound Carolyn Mann,
one of 15 student-athletes
planning to attend Division I
schools, and one of seven girls
lacrosse players to advance to
the college ranks.
We all have been playing

together since fifth grade,


Mann said of her lacrosse
teammates. When we were
getting recruited, we knew
how to make each other stand
out. We still know how to play
to each others strengths.
Five boys lacrosse players
from Manheim Township also
committed, including Jack
Braswell, who plans to study
engineering at Stevens Institute of Technology in Hoboken, New Jersey.
Its the highest point in
Hoboken, he said of the campus that appealed to him during a visit while he was playing
in a tournament in New Jersey. Its right on the water of
the Hudson. You can see the
Hudson River and the Manhattan skyline. Im really excited.
The excitement carried over
to Meredith Newman, who
committed to Penn for both
swimming and track and field.
I love both the same
amount, she said of the
two sports. Ive done both
throughout high school, and
I figured it would be easier to
transition.
Caitlin Hickey will transition to Lancaster Bible College
as a member of the womens
basketball team.
Its just a strong team environment, she said, where
you not only grow as a player,
but you grow as a person and
in your faith.
While the students looked
ahead to their college experiences, Benjamin joining
the Division II football scene
along with Lock Haven commits Riley MacDonald and
Tanner Evans enjoyed putting an official close to the college decision-making process.
Its kind of nice just to seal
the deal, he said, and not
have to worry about where Im
going or visiting places.

Lancaster Catholic
Ever since he was little, Lancaster Catholic wrestler Joe
Lobeck wanted to go to school
at Lehigh.
Lobecks grandfather, a Lehigh alum, used to take him to
the Bethlehem school to visit
the Philadelphia Eagles training camp. After watching the
football, they would walk the
campus and grab a bite at one
of the local eateries.
I grew up watching Lehigh
wrestling, said Lobeck, who
Wednesday afternoon signed
his letter to wrestle for the No.
14 ranked Mountain Hawks.
It was one of my dream
schools when I was a kid.
It was one of his grandpas
dreams, too, though Lobeck
says his grandfather remained
very low key while he was
making his choice.
He didnt want to feel like he
was influencing my decision,
said Lobeck. But once I committed there, my grandfather
was really excited about it.
Lobeck also visited Brown
and North Carolina State and
had offers from Penn and
Drexel. In the end, it was not a
difficult decision.
When I visited Lehigh, I felt
really comfortable with the

COURTESY OF LANCASTER CATHOLIC

Lancaster Catholics Tyler


Robinson will play baseball for
Frederick Community College in
Maryland.

coaching staff and the team.


That was what ultimately
drove me to commit there,
Lobeck said. I am excited to
be a part of their tradition. Lehigh has such a rich history of
wrestling.
So does Lobeck. The threetime state qualifier takes a
career 160-21 record into the
postseason. Lobeck won his
first Lancaster-Lebanon title
last weekend.
The fact that Lehigh is
ranked among the top schools
in the nation academically was
also a factor for Lobeck, who
carries a 3.9 GPA and plans to
double major in philosophy
and finance before pursuing a
law degree after graduating.

Conestoga Valley
Conestoga Valley senior
swimmer Todd Wilson has
long wanted to attend the U.S.
Naval Academy.
Wednesday afternoon, he officially achieved his goal when
he and five other Buckskin
athletes committed to further
their athletic careers during a
National Signing Day event.
Its something Ive always
wanted to do, said Wilson,
who holds the CV record in
the 100-yard backstroke and
100-yard butterfly. If I didnt
swim, I think I still would have
joined the Navy.
Wilson, who lowered those
record times in both events
earlier this week, is a district
and state medalist and was
named to the 2013-14 National
Interscholastic Swimming Association high swimming AllAmerica team.
Meanwhile, Mikayla Cheney
will play field hockey at Shippensburg University.
Its relieving because I no
longer have the stress about
what school to go to, said
Cheney, a two-time L-L Second Team defender. Its really
exciting for me.
Erin Grucelski will join East
Stroudsburg
Universitys
track and field team.
It was a little stressful,
said Grucelski, who specializes in the 100 and 200-meter
runs. I came into high school
planning on going to college
for soccer, so to see where my
track career has gone has been
incredible.
Seth Hower is going to play
lacrosse at Ohio Valley University in West Virginia.
This means a lot to me,
said Hower, a midfielder. Its

DAN MARSCHKA | STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

a newer program, so theres a


lot of growth there and Im excited.
Daulton Martin signed to
play baseball at Tusculum College in Tennessee.
I went to visit and I loved
it, said Martin, a middle infielder who was Team MVP as
a freshman, sophomore and
junior. Its a great feeling, all
the work and sacrifice to finally pay off.
And Zoe Shelly is headed to
Lock Haven to play soccer.
It was a difficult decision to
make, said Shelly, who helped
guide the Buckskins to the district and state playoffs. When
I finally made the decision I
just felt like a huge rock was
lifted off my shoulders.

Hempfield

Hempfield seniors Schyler


Ackerman and Marah Foltz
have been best friends since
they were 4.
I probably had a toothbrush
at her (Marahs) house from
the time I was 6 years old,
Ackerman said Wednesday.
The pair also developed a
bond on the soccer field, helping the Black Knights girls
soccer team capture the Lancaster-Lebanon League championship in 2014, with both
named team captains the following year as seniors.
That friendship will soon be
tested, however, as Ackerman
and Foltz have committed to
play soccer collegiately at rival
universities. Ackerman will go
on to play at Kutztown, with
Foltz headed to Lock Haven.
Both are NCAA Division II
programs that compete in the
PSAC.
They were among 26 Hempfield
seniors
recognized
Wednesday as part of the
schools Signing Day festivities.
Ackerman said she is frustrated and sad that she and
Foltz will play for different
teams for the first time in their
lives the duo even played
on the same recreational club.
But they are anxious for the
first meeting as opponents.
And we know our strengths
and weakness, too, so we know
how to go up against each other, Foltz said.
Among the other signees
at Hempfield were Brandon
Loperfido and Hollyn Barr.
Loperfido, a grappler who recently won the 120-pound L-L
League title and is a perfect
22-0 this season, has committed to Division I Lock Haven,
while Barr, a two-time Section
One All-Star goalie in field
hockey, will be headed to Division I Louisville.
Currently they have two
goalies, Barr said of Louisville. One girl is a redshirt
sophomore and the other girl
is a freshman who is on the
Olympic Ireland team. ... But
the head coach has assured me
she has no doubt I can rise to
the occasion and play.

n Staff writers Tim Gross, Diana

Pugliese and John Walk and correspondents Chris A. Courogen and


Joel Schreiner contributed to this
story.

SPORTS

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2016

C7

National Signing Day 2016


The following is a schoolby-school list, as reported
to LNP, of where some
local student-athletes are
planning to attend college
and participate in college
athletics. In some cases,
it includes athletes who
signed their letters or
announced their decisions
at other points during the
2015-16 school year.
This list is not complete.
LNP will publish a second
list in Sundays edition.
Information for inclusion
in Sundays list should
be emailed to sports@
lnpnews.com no later than
noon Saturday. Additional
Signing Day photos
will also be included in
Sundays edition.

CEDAR CREST
n Evan Horn, New

Hampshire (football)
n Raymie Ferreira,
Delaware State (football)

COCALICO
n DJ Fabiani, Millersville

(football)
n Morgan Glassey,
Shippensburg (soccer )
n Chloe Lucky, La Salle
(field hockey)
n Adam Miller, Kutztown
(wrestling)
n Emily Stauffer, Missouri
(track and field)
n Stephanie Wahl, West
Chester (track and field)
n Emily Zwiercan,
Kutztown (soccer)

CONESTOGA
VALLEY
n Mikayla Cheney,

Shippensburg (field
hockey)
n Erin Grucelski, East
Stroudsburg (track and
field)
n Seth Hower, Ohio Valley
(lacrosse)
n Daulton Martin,
Tusculum (baseball)
n Zoe Shelly, Lock Haven
(soccer)
n Todd Wilson, U.S. Naval
Academy (swimming)

DONEGAL
n Kayla Walker, St.

Josephs (field hockey)


n Alyssa Kohler, Hofstra
(field hockey)
n Gabby Hess, Kutztown
(field hockey)
n Ethan Hess, Messiah
(baseball)
n Shade Foreman, Arcadia
(soccer)
n Rhianna Miles, Lancaster
Bible (soccer)
n Chris Green, Ferrum
(soccer)

(soccer)
n Alison Ludwig,
Richmond (field hockey)
n Alexa Potts, Morehead
State (rifle)
n Karly Potts, Morehead
State (rifle)
n Grace Sensenig, Indiana
(field hockey)
n Andrea Zimmerman,
Alvernia (field hockey)

GARDEN SPOT
n Kaitlyn Zook, Delaware

(field hockey)
n Brittany Willwerth,
Bucknell (field hockey)
n Claire Brier, George
Washington (soccer)
n Chance Norris, Bucknell
(wrestling)
n Autumn Shaffer, Lehigh
(swimming)
n Jacob Mast, Robert
Morris (lacrosse)
n Bryn Nelson, IUP (field
hockey)
n Abigail Good, Millersville
(volleyball)
n Kelsey Thoensen,
Slippery Rock (lacrosse)
n Logan Eby, Cedarville
(baseball)
n Colin Norotsky,
Tusculum (lacrosse)
n Cory Hurst, Messiah
(lacrosse)
n Shelby Wright, Virginia
Wesleyan (lacrose)
n Caroline Beohm,
Susquehanna (volleyball)
n Mason McKinley, Cairn
(baseball)
n Alexis Horst, Penn State
Berks (volleyball)
n Jared Rider, Messiah
(lacrosse)

HEMPFIELD
n Schyler Ackerman,

Kutztown (soccer)
n Hollyn Barr, Louisville
(field hockey)
n Breica Beck,
Pennsylvania College of
Technology (soccer)
n Kyra Brakefield,
Millersville (field hockey)
n Molly Conrad, Dickinson
(cross country/track)
n Aryn Dubosky, IUP
(volleyball)

n Tre Fissella, Seton Hall


(swimming)

n Marah Foltz, Lock Haven


(soccer)

n Tim Gailor, Scranton


(baseball)

n Preston Greener,
Alvernia (lacrosse)

n Sarah Klag, East

Stroudsburg (track & field)

n Megan Santiago,

Millersville (lacrosse)
n Paige Schoelkopf,
Bucknell (diving)
n Natalie Smith, Lock
Haven (soccer)
n Noelle Smith, Millersville
(lacrosse)
n Victoria Wang, UMBC
(swimming)
n Brandon Witmer,
Messiah (lacrosse)
n Reilly Workman, College
of Brockport (baseball)
n Jessica Zellers, Messiah
(volleyball)

LAMPETERSTRASBURG
n Arianna Baughman,

Bucknell (rowing)
n Jordan Weaver, Mount
St. Marys (softball)
n Chase Pirozzi, Mount St.
Marys (lacrosse)
n Nate Patterson, St.
Josephs (lacrosse)
n Madison Lawhead, St.
Bonaventure (lacrosse)
n Brianna Garber, West
Chester (softball)
n Joanna King, Wingate
(lacrosse)
n Collin Shank, Millersville
(football)
n Darren Metz, Millersville
(football)
n Kyle Metz, Millersville
(football)
n Jordan Boynton,
Millersville (football)
n Marco Peticca, Wooster
(lacrosse)
n Jake Groff, Coast Guard
Academy (lacrosse)

COURTESY OF CONESTOGA VALLEY

Students participating in Signing Day ceremonies at Conestoga Valley High School on


Wednesday were, from left, Mikayla Cheney (Shippensburg, field hockey), Erin Grucelski (East Stroudsburg, track and field), Seth Hower (Ohio Valley, lacrosse), Daulton
Martin (Tusculum College, baseball), Zoe Shelly (Lock Haven, soccer) and Todd Wilson
(U.S. Naval Academy, swimming).

n Matthew Daniel, Cornell

(swimming)
n Sara Ober, East
Stroudsburg (field hockey)
n Jared Siegrist, Lock
Haven (wrestling)
n Jillian Wolgemuth, Duke
(field hockey)
n Emma Beamesderfer,
Alvernia (field hockey)
n Charis Dinger, High Point
(cross country, track)
n Anna Middleton,
Shippensburg (soccer)
n Kirsten Myer, Alvernia
(field hockey)
n Hannah Simon, Lebanon
Valley (field hockey)
n Taylor Wiederrecht,
Messiah (field hockey, track)

COURTESY OF LANCASTER MENNONITE

Students participating in the Signing Day ceremony at


Lancaster Mennonite High School on Wednesday were,
from left, Kyle Richards (soccer, California University of
Pennsylvania), Kaden Kieffer (track, Belmont University),
Madison Peck (field hockey, Slippery Rock) and Kate
Phillips (soccer, Millersville University).

MANHEIM
TOWNSHIP

n Mackenzie Fuhrman,

Bible (basketball)

n Maryn Bernhardt, Lehigh

LANCASTER
CATHOLIC

(lacrosse)

n Trevor Clemens, Marshall

California University of Pa.


(baseball)

n William Amidon, Kings

n Jordan Crispeno, Lock

n Luke Beers, Lancaster

College (football)
n Alexis Driendl, Widener
(lacrosse)
n Shawn Henry, Point Park
(baseball)
n Bayley Jamanis, Seton
Hill (baseball)
n Michael Jarvie Jr.,
Misericordia (soccer)
n Joseph Lobeck, Lehigh
(wrestling)
n Christopher Myers,
Elizabethtown (cross
country and track and
field)
n Tyler Robinson,
Frederick Community
College (baseball)
n Annaliese Schreder,
Hobart and William Smith
Colleges (basketball)

n Madison Warfel, Hofstra

Kutztown (field hockey)

(soccer)

Haven (field hockey)

n Megan Donohue, Old

Dominion (field hockey)

n Reilly Gearhart, La Salle


(softball)

n Tate Hutchinson, St.


Josephs (lacrosse)

n Victor Kenderdine, Lock


Haven (wrestling)

n Braden Kline, Providence


(soccer)

n Carolyn Mann, Columbia


(lacrosse)

n Meredith Newman, Penn


(swimming and track &
field)

n Elizabeth Petrosky,
Duquesne (lacrosse)

n Matt Shatto, UMBC


(baseball)

n Justin Kilpatrick,

n Riley MacDonald, Lock


Haven (football)

n Olivia Rider,

Shippensburg (soccer)

n Jack Braswell, Stevens


Institute of Technology
(lacrosse)

n Mimi Curtis, Mount


Union (lacrosse)

n Caitlin Hickey, Lancaster


Bible College (basketball)

n Sam Hixson,

Waynesburg (baseball)

n Reagan Ketchum,
Ursinus (lacrosse)

n Colleen Maillie,

Rochester (lacrosse)

n Ryan McDowell,

Immaculata (soccer)

n Haley Sturia, Ursinus


(swimming)

n Nathan Vucovich,

Haverford (baseball)

(field hockey)
n Jacob Herr, California
University of PA (baseball)
n Carter Kinser, Millersville
(football)
n Nathan Brown, Eastern
(golf)
n Samantha Duplissey,
Susquehanna (softball)
n Nate Flexman, Eastern
(soccer)
n Ryan Gaukler, Stevenson
(soccer)
n Nicole Hege, Eastern
(lacrosse)
n Cadi Hershey, Messiah
(swimming)
n Abigail Julian, Geneva
(cross country)
n Nicholas Lord,
Gettysburg (basketball)
n Nicolette Mowry,
Widener (swimming)
n Peyton Thompson, Mary
Washington (field hockey)
n Leah Williamson,
Messiah (swimming)
n Alexis Witgenstein,
Eastern (track and field)

(swimming)

LANCASTER
MENNONITE

n Dylan Speitel, Hartford

EPHRATA

n Lauren Lichtenwalner,

n Kaden Kieffer, Belmont

(lacrosse)

PENN MANOR

n Nate Becker, Lafayette

n Brandon Loperfido, Lock

n Hannah Wetz, La Salle

n Marisa Batista, LIU

(lacrosse)

Brooklyn (field hockey)

n Brett Alaimo,

n Sam Greenslade, George

Stroudsburg (basketball)
n Beau Heagy, Lancaster
Bible (baseball)

n Erik Benjamin,

n Emily Heckman,

WARWICK

(cross country, track)


n Jordan Carvell, Eastern
(cross country, track)
n Nathaniel Fassnacht,
George Washington
(baseball)
n Amanda Hauser, Penn
State Berks (cross country,
track)
n Kay Liebl, Millersville

n Casey Lear, Ursinus


Bucknell (softball)
Haven (wrestling)

n Alec Miller,

Elizabethtown (baseball)

n Victoria Mollitor, Arcadia


(lacrosse)

n Sonia Musso, Lafayette


(volleyball)

n Taylor Nolan, Princeton


(field hockey)

(track and field)


n Madison Peck, Slippery
Rock (field hockey)
n Kate Phillips, Millersville
(soccer)
n Kyle Richards, California
University of PA (soccer)

MANHEIM
CENTRAL
n Derek Adams, Kent
State (football)

(lacrosse)

n Sadye Walker, La Salle

Bloomsburg (baseball)
Bloomsburg (football)

n Brian Delany,

n Parker Wolf, Ursinus


(lacrosse)

PEQUEA VALLEY
n Alyssa Hershey, East

Mason (volleyball)

New Jersey Institute of


Technology (soccer)

n Kate Martin, Kutztown

Shippensburg (track &


field)

n Emily Robb, Lock Haven

n Tanner Evans, Lock

n Allison Schaefer, Liberty

Haven (football)

(field hockey)
(field hockey)

(soccer)
n Lucy Reed, Temple (field
hockey)
n Hannah Weidman, Kent
State (field hockey)

MILLERSVILLE FOOTBALL

Marauders mine their backyard for talent


MU is returning to doing things the way Coach Carpenter did in terms of recruiting, Greg Breitbach says
ED GRUVER

[email protected]

Greg Breitbach went into


this recruiting season in
search of what he calls Millersville guys guys with
high character; team leaders
who have been through adversity and stayed the course;
student-athletes who excel in
the classroom as well as on the
football field.
The Marauder boss believes hes found his guys in
Lampeter-Strasburgs Collin
Shank, Darren Metz and Kyle
Metz; Cocalicos DJ Fabiani;
Penn Manors Carter Kinser;
Wilsons Jake Gehman and
Nick Kline; Annville-Cleonas
Lucas Bush and the 20-plus
other recruits he and his staff
officially landed Wednesday
on National Signing Day.
Youre starting to see a
trend of our program returning to doing things the way
Coach (Gene) Carpenter did in

terms of recruiting, Breitbach


said, invoking Millersvilles
legendary football coach. We
want to keep the local talent at
home.
Breitbach and his coaching
staff have done that. Eight of
the Marauders recruits are
Lancaster-Lebanon League
players; and 17 are within
roughly an hours drive of their
hometown.
It was a recipe for success
that Carpenter employed for
decades, and Breitbach is determined to do the same.
Along with being from the
area Millersvilles class of 2016
boasts enormous credentials.
Among their members are 18
team captains, five all-state
stars and 28 all-conference
players.
A lot of leaders, Breitbach
said.
Indeed. And together this
class boasts a collective gradepoint average above 3.0.

In short, MU has potentially


hit the mother lode in local recruiting, and it all started with
Penn Manors Logan and Carter Kinser.
Carter was the first to commit, Breitbach said of the
Comets linebacker/running
back. He really wanted to
play (college) football with
his brother (Logan, a former
Comet LB/RB who is now
a defensive lineman at the
Ville).
To get Logan to want to
come 400 yards across the
fence (from Penn Manor to
Millersville) was like a rock
hitting a pond, you had a ripple
effect.
Tyler Spangler, another former Comet, also committed to
Millersville, and last year Breitbach and Co. mined the MidPenn Conference, bringing in
11 players from the Harrisburg
area.
The ripple effect continued

this recruiting season, Carter


Kinser committing along with
seven other L-L players thus
far.
Were showing the L-L players were building something
special here and they have a
chance to make an impact,
Breitbach said. A lot of them
decided to stay near home and
play together. Millersville has
a lot to offer academically and
athletically.
Breitbach said the camaraderie shared by the Mid-Penn
players last year and the L-L
group this year led to them
recruiting one another to join
forces at MU.
Good players recruit good
players, Breitbach said. They
stay in communication with
each other and have high respect for one another. Theyve
all been successful on the
field.
Now, theyre looking to
translate that success to the

next level. To become, as


Breitbach says, Millersville
guys.
Together with the aforementioned L-L players, the
Marauders list of commits
includes Demetrius Anderson (CB, Tuscarora), Cameron Boykin (LB, Our Lady of
Good Council), Zach Brucher
(TE, Lake-Lehman), Prestyn
Crawford (DT, Palmyra), Dermetrius Louis (RB, Lackawanna JUCO), Deyon Doctor
(WR, Pottsgrove), Jon Ege
(OL, Blue Mountain), Lawrence Garnett (WR, Boyertown), Tommy Klock (QB,
Lower Dauphin), Connor
McAdams (OL, Truman),
Dylan Niedbalski (LB, Southern Lehigh), Clint Ramage
(DL, Lower Dauphin), Jaleel
Robinson (OLB, Broad Run),
KJ Snerr (RB, Marian Catholic), Mike Stock (LB, Council
Rock South), John West (OL,
Downingtown West).

C8

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2016

NFL

Researchers say
Stabler had CTE
Ex-Raiders QB anticipated his diagnosis
JIMMY GOLEN
AP SPORTS WRITER

BOSTON Former Oakland


Raiders quarterback Ken Stabler, the late NFL MVP and
Super Bowl winner who is a finalist for the Pro Football Hall
of Fame, has been diagnosed
with the brain disease CTE,
Boston University researchers
said Wednesday.
Stabler, who died of colon
cancer at 69 in July, had Stage
3 chronic traumatic encephalopathy, Dr. Ann McKee told
The Associated Press. McKee
said the disease was widespread throughout his brain,
with quite severe damage to
the regions involving learning, memory and regulation of
emotion.
Weve now found CTE
in former NFL players who
played every position except
kicker, said McKee, a professor of neurology at Boston University. While we
know on average that certain
positions experience more
repetitive head impacts and
are more likely at greater
risk for CTE, no position is
immune.
The diagnosis was first reported by The New York
Times.
The disease, which can be
diagnosed only after death,
is linked to repeated brain

trauma and associated with


symptoms such as memory
loss, depression and progressive dementia. CTE has been
found in the brains of dozens
of former football players.
According to Chris Nowinski, the founder of the Concussion Legacy Foundation, Stabler told his family he wanted
to have his brain studied after
learning that former NFL linebacker Junior Seau had been
diagnosed with the disease. In
2012, Seau shot himself in the
chest at the age of 43.
What is interesting about
Ken Stabler is that he anticipated his diagnosis years in
advance, Nowinski wrote in
an email to the AP. And even
though hes a football icon, he
began actively distancing himself from (the) game in his final
years, expressing hope that his
grandsons would choose not
to play.
McKee said the extent of
the damage to Stablers brain
was surprising because he
was relatively young when
he died and because he was a
quarterback and thought to be
less exposed to repeated head
trauma.
There was no evidence of
any other brain disorder to
explain the difficulties he experienced during life, McKee
said.

Stauffer: Missouri
Continued from C1

said, citing positive messages


she received from Missouri
track and field athletes.
Missouris head coach, Brett
Halter, also serves as the primary coach for the throwing
events and shares a coaching
style with Scott Krall, Cocalicos throwing guru.
I like his coaching style,
Stuffer said. Its sort of like
Coach Krall. Hes quiet, and he
says the stuff that he needs to
say. Hes not very in your face
about it, but if youre not doing
it, hes going to say, Listen. I
like how youre landing on your
left foot here, but I want you to
turn your right hip in to throw
more. I respond well to that.
Halter coached then-seniors
Kearsten Peoples and Jill
Rushin to first- and third-place
finishes, respectively, in shot
put at the SEC outdoor championships and First Team AllAmerica honors last season.
Before taking her first collegiate strides, Stauffer feels
driven to close out her high
school career with high marks.
After a back injury hindered
her toward the end of her junior outdoor season, Stauffer

hit the indoor season healthy.


I like indoor, she said, because I like the shots that you
have better. I like the grip you
can get on them.
Stauffer hit a high mark of
45-11 at at the Lebanon Valley
College High School Invitational on Jan. 16, the top throw
in the state this year, according
to the Pennsylvania Track and
Field Coaches Association.
Her indoor itinerary also
includes meets at Perkiomen
Valley (today), the coaches
associations indoor carnival
(Feb. 13) and the indoor state
meet (Feb. 28).
Indoor states is everyone
for throwing, she said. Its
not split up with triple-A, double-A, any of that. So, in a way,
its more challenging.
But instead of chasing numbers or sizing up the competition, Stauffer said she wants
to focus on her technique and,
with her future set in front of
her, to maximize the rest of
her high school career.
Its good to just train, she
said, because I can make sure
that I can be ready and at my
highest ability for the spring
season.

SOCCER

Santos striker Gabigol is


touted as Brazils next star
SAO PAULO (AP) Although Santos striker Gabriel
Barbosa doesnt like the comparison, Brazilians see him as
the next Neymar.
Hows that for pressure?
Known as Gabigol, the
19-year-old Santos forward is
ranked as Brazils most promising player.
I can only be myself, Barbosa told The Associated
Press. I am not Neymar. I
have to do well at Santos first.
European football has to come
naturally.
That is almost guaranteed.
The website Transfermarkt
ranked him as Brazils No. 1
young player with a worth of
about 12 million euros ($13
million). That is probably too
low.
Italian club Fiorentina is already reported to have offered
20 million euros ($22 million),
and Santos says it wants more
than twice that much.
It might be three times
that number if Neymar, now
playing for Barcelona, is the

benchmark.
Neymar is now embroiled in
a court case in Spain in which
Barcelona is accused of hiding
the cost of his transfer from
Santos in 2013. Barcelona says
the deal cost about $74 million, though investigations in
Spain say it was closer to $90
million.
Barbosa scored 18 goals last
season in Brazils two most
important competitions and,
although hes compared to
Neymar, many see him more
like Uruguay striker Luis Suarez, Neymars teammate at
Barcelona.
Barbosa and Neymar have
played only 20 minutes together, and that was when
Neymar was still at Santos.
But they will be united on
Brazils Olympic team in Rio
de Janeiro as the country
tries to win its first soccer
gold medal.
Barbosas stock has risen
recently as he has learned
to become more of a team
player.

SPORTS

HORSE RACING

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

TRANSACTIONS

TUESDAYS LATE BOX


NONLEAGUE

McCaskey 102, Conestoga Valley 63

PENN NATIONAL RESULTS

1st$12,400,6f
6-Fast Victory (Worrie A.)..... 4.40,3.40,2.10
1-Remanso (Guzman P.)............... 6.00,3.20
4-Cuddle Bunny (Garcia W.).................. 2.40
Also Ran: Grandpas King, OShaughnessy.
Late Scratches: Grafico, Rabane, Akula.
Race Time: 1:13.54. Exacta (6-1) Paid $9.60;
Trifecta (6-1-4) Paid $14.10.
2nd$14,300,1 1/16m
8-Prospector Alley (Wlfsnt)...... 6.20,3.00,2.10
4-Knutsford Park (Vargas, Jr. J.)..... 3.00,2.10
6-Back Scatter (Rodriguez A.)............... 2.20
Also Ran: Sunny Weather, Notion in Motion, One Helluva Ride. Late Scratches:
Whattodo Whattodo, Surfing U S A. Race
Time: n/a. Daily Double (6-8) Paid $21.80;
Exacta (8-4) Paid $6.40; Superfecta (8-4-61) Paid $1.61; Trifecta (8-4-6) Paid $3.60.
3rd$14,800,6f
7-Johnny Whitebird (Cnnr)...... 6.00,3.80,3.00
4-Roar of Rohan (Oro E.).............. 7.20,3.80
2-Rocket Rumors (Vargas, Jr. J.) ........... 5.20
Also Ran: Reeves Hill, Condo Closing,
Warrens Cliff S., Gottcha Blessin. Late
Scratches: Haldor. Race Time: 1:12.04. Daily
Double (8-7) Paid $24.20; Exacta (7-4) Paid
$29.40; Superfecta (7-4-2-3) Paid $105.04;
Trifecta (7-4-2) Paid $71.20; Pic 3 (5/6-8-7)
Paid $24.95.
4th$10,500,1m
2-I Feel Luckie (Guzman)......52.60,13.80,8.00
1-Perfect Wind (Conner T.)........... 3.00,2.60
9-Runyon Humor (Whitney D.)............. 7.00
Also Ran: Try Running, Roque Bluff,
Spiked, Chicsdigtheshark, Tulley. Late
Scratches: Cherokee Road, Medallicious.
Race Time: 1:41.48. Daily Double (7-2) Paid
$141.60; Exacta (2-1) Paid $59.20; Superfecta (2-1-9-5) Paid $226.48; Trifecta (2-19) Paid $247.80; Pic 3 (8-7-2) Paid $206.85;
Pic 4 (2/5/6-8-5/7-2) Paid $811.20.
5th$33,300,6f
2B-H Ks Merida (Conner)...... 11.40,5.60,3.40
1A-Honeydukes (Wolfsont A.)...... 2.20,2.10
5-Queen Francis (Rodriguez A.)............ 2.60
Also Ran: Honest Report, Main Track
Only, Nub, Khabeesa. Late Scratches: Kittys Right, V Js Irish Rose, Her Divineness.
Race Time: 1:13.05. Daily Double (2-2) Paid
$261.60; Exacta (2-1) Paid $17.90; Superfecta (2-1-5-7) Paid $14.22; Trifecta (2-1-5)
Paid $13.15; Pic 3 (7-2-2) Paid $257.55.
6th$30,400,1m
6-A. P. Cino (Whitney)........ 10.40,5.20,2.60
3-The Morning Guys (Salgado)..... 7.00,3.80
5-J Cs Diamond (Otero W.).................. 2.60
Also Ran: Snuggley Bear, Presiding Justice, Mr Brioni, So Scott, Fiendfyre. Late
Scratches: Rum Tum Tugger, Holy Snip,
Judge Carr, Silent Ruler. Race Time: 1:39.36.
Daily Double (2-6) Paid $72.60; Exacta (63) Paid $20.00; Superfecta (6-3-5-9) Paid
$20.92; Trifecta (6-3-5) Paid $40.65; Pic 3
(2-2-6) Paid $379.60.
7th$14,800,6f
6-Duke of Flatbush (Potts)..... 12.80,6.80,5.60
1-Forbidden Story (Whitney)...... 14.20,8.40
5-Royal Flash (Nguyen J.)...................... 4.20
Also Ran: It Doesnt End Well, Money
Machine, Bayott, Heavenly Warrior, Im
On Fire. Late Scratches: Badstormrising.
Race Time: 1:12.54. Daily Double (6-6) Paid
$91.20; Exacta (6-1) Paid $62.70; Superfecta (6-1-5-9) Paid $57.75; Trifecta (6-1-5)
Paid $92.65; Pic 3 (2-6-6) Paid $167.65.

PENN NATIONAL ENTRIES


POST TIME: 6 P.M.
1st$14,300,Clm,$7,500,4YO&UP,6f
01 Evil Lad (Guzman P) 112.................. 20-1
02 Well Played (Whitney D) 119............. 5-1
03 Charons Obol (Wolfsont A) 119........ 5-2
04 Top Odds (Gonzalez E) 123................ 2-1
05 Tapesprit (Garcia W) 119................. 10-1
06 Kool Kat Strut (Ramirez J) 119........... 7-2
07 War of Honor (Oro E) 119.................. 8-1
2nd$15,200,Clm,$5,000,4YO&UP,
F&M,1m70yds
01 Approval (Sone J) 119...................... 12-1
02 Benanti (Worrie A) 119.................... 15-1
03 Parrakeet (Flores E) 119..................... 5-1
04 Built in a Day (Guzman P) 112......... 15-1
05 Missdixieactivist (Salgado A) 119...... 6-1
06 Empress Hatshepsut (Whtny) 119..... 4-1
07 Kid Rollins (Oro E) 119....................... 8-1
08 Kingdoms Crown (Baker C) 119........ 3-1
09 Summer Cocktail (Sanchez M) 119.... 8-1
10 Connors Gold (Garcia F) 119............. 6-1
3rd$13,800,Clm,$6,250-$6,000,
4YO&UP,6f
01 Isolation Road (Salgado A) 121.......... 9-2
02 Open Ice Hit (Whitney D) 121......... 10-1
03 Kohl (Flores E) 121............................. 4-1
04 Angelofdistinction (Rodriguez) 121.......6-1
05 Estrickator (Vargas, Jr. J) 121.............. 5-1
06 Va Banque (Rodriguez G) 121............ 7-2
07 Two Term Leader (Wolfsont) 121...... 3-1
4th$19,000,Clm,$15,000-$13,000,
4YO&UP,F&M,5 1/2f
01 Alice Roadtrain (Berrios J) 119........ 12-1
02 Fit for a Ball (Salgado A) 119.............. 6-1
03 Mama Zee (Lopez C) 121................... 5-1
04 Star Magnolia (Hernandez J) 119...... 8-1
05 Bazinga B (Toledo J) 121.................... 9-2
06 La Grey Zuliana (Vergara R) 121......... 7-2
07 Honor Achieved (Whitney D) 121.... 10-1
08 Blue Hen Madness (Castillo A) 121.... 4-1
09 Silver Tresor (Corujo W) 121............ 10-1
5th$33,300,Allw,4YO&UP,6f
01 Shiny Finish (Rodriguez A) 119.......... 2-1
02 A Lil More A J (Potts C) 119................ 8-1
03 Finishing a Dream (Cedeno) 119..... 10-1
04 Special Flyer (Cora D) 119................ 12-1
05 Cherokee Cowboy (Garcia F) 119.... 15-1
06 Extrasexxyeurodude (Salgado) 123.......5-1
07 No More Strippers (Worrie A) 119.... 9-2
08 Seferlis (Gonzalez E) 121................... 3-1
6th$19,000,Clm,$8,000-$7,000,
4YO&UP,6f
01 O K Lefty (Berrios J) 117.................. 15-1
02 Nebikon (Whitney D) 119................ 12-1
03 Chicharito (Rosado R) 119............... 10-1
04 The Camden Comet (Worrie) 119.... 12-1
05 Lightly Wound (Gonzalez E) 119........ 7-2
06 Lees South (Garcia W) 119................ 6-1
07 Mail Order Groom (Conner T) 119.... 6-1
08 Cruise Director (Rodriguez A) 119..... 6-1
09 Black Patch (Cora D) 119................... 4-1
10 Wise Guide (Sone J) 119.................. 12-1
11 Student Union (Wolfsont A) 119..... 10-1
7th$11,400,Clm,$4,000,4YO&UP,1m
01 Now Were Talkin (Wolfsont) 121.... 12-1
02 Arc Above (Tunon J) 121.................. 20-1
03 Strong Appeal (Hernandez J) 121...... 8-1
04 Demographic Trend (Corujo) 121...... 4-1
05 Danny Ocean (Gonzalez E) 123.......... 2-1
06 Corundum (Guzman P) 114............... 8-1
07 Rent a Friend (Rosa E) 121................. 5-2
08 Theregoestheblonde (Whtny)121.........8-1
8th$11,400,Clm,$4,000,4YO&UP,1m
01 Speeding Train (Otero W) 121........... 6-1
02 I Love It (Remedio M) 121................. 8-1
03 Notalotatrouble (Gonzalez E) 121..... 9-2
04 Cry From the Heart (Toledo J) 121..... 4-1
05 Mane Meal (Worrie A) 121.............. 15-1
06 King Touch (Munar L) 123.................. 6-1
07 Teddy P. (Rodriguez A) 123................ 5-1
08 Modest Mouse (Castillo A) 121......... 3-1

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-Towcester............................. 8:10 a.m.
IR1-Clonmel.................................. 8:25 a.m.
GB3-Wincanton............................ 8:30 a.m.
GB2-Southwell.............................. 8:50 a.m.
GB4-ChelmsfordCity................... 12:10 p.m.
Monticello.................................. 12:25 p.m.
Freehold..................................... 12:35 p.m.
Gulfstream.................................. 12:35 p.m.
Aqueduct.................................... 12:50 p.m.
Oaklawn Park................................ 2:30 p.m.
Golden Gate................................. 3:45 p.m.
Santa Anita........................................ 4 p.m.
Dover Downs................................ 4:30 p.m.
Penn National.................................... 6 p.m.
Turfway Park................................. 6:15 p.m.
Delta Downs T.............................. 6:40 p.m.
Charles Town..................................... 7 p.m.
Woodbine H................................. 7:30 p.m.
Hawthorne H................................ 8:20 p.m.
Australia A.................................... 9:08 p.m.
Australia B.................................... 9:15 p.m.
Australia C.................................... 9:25 p.m.

BASEBALL
American League
LOS ANGELES ANGELS Agreed to terms
with OF Andrew Brown on a minor league
contract.
SEATTLE MARINERS Agreed to terms
with 1B Dae-Ho Lee and C Steve Lerud on
minor league contracts.
National League
PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES Traded LHP
Jesse Biddle to Pittsburgh for RHP Yoervis
Medina.
American Association
FARGO-MOORHEAD REDHAWKS
Signed INF Richard Lucas and RHP Richie
Mirowski.
KANSAS CITY T-BONES Signed C Alejandro Segovia.
LINCOLN SALTDOGS Signed OF Alexi
Colon.
SIOUX FALLS CANARIES Signed INF
Ozney Guillen.
TEXAS AIR HOGS Signed RHP Sam Martin.
WINNIPEG GOLDEYES Signed LHPs
Trevor Lubking and Steven Gruver.
BASKETBALL
National Basketball Association
CHICAGO BULLS Recalled F Mike Dunleavy from Santa Cruz (NBADL).
HOUSTON ROCKETS Assigned F/C
Donatas Motiejunas to Rio Grande Valley
(NBADL).
MEMPHIS GRIZZLIES Recalled Fs James
Ennis and Jarell Martin from Iowa (NBADL).
Womens National Basketball Association
ATLANTA DREAM Re-signed G Tiffany
Hayes to a multi-year contract.
FOOTBALL
National Football League
BUFFALO BILLS Signed CB Javier Arenas to a reserve/future contract.
CINCINNATI BENGALS Signed TE John
Peters to a reserve/future contract.
NEW YORK JETS Named Brant Boyer
special teams coordinator.
WASHINGTON REDSKINS Signed DL
Ziggy Hood to a reserve/future contract.
Canadian Football League
WINNIPEG BLUE BOMBERS Reassigned
running backs coach Buck Pierce to quarterbacks coach.
HOCKEY
National Hockey League
NHL Suspended Calgary D Dennis
Wideman 20 games for physical abuse of
an official.
ARIZONA COYOTES Recalled F Steve
Downie from Springfield (AHL).
CALGARY FLAMES Assigned F Mason
Raymond to Stockton (AHL). Recalled D
Jakub Nakladal from Stockton.
MONTREAL CANADIENS Recalled F
Tim Bozon and D Dalton Thrower from
Brampton (ECHL) to St. Johns (AHL).
NEW YORK RANGERS Recalled F Jayson
Megna from Hartford (AHL).
ST. LOUIS BLUES Reassigned F Ryan
Tesink from Quad City (AHL) to Alaska
(ECHL).
American Hockey League
HARTFORD WOLF PACK Returned D
Kodie Curran to Greenville (ECHL).
ST. JOHNS ICECAPS Recalled Fs Brandon McNally and Angelo Miceli from
Brampton (ECHL).
ECHL
ELMIRA JACKALS Released F Blake Hietala. Traded D Zach Tolkinen to Missouri to
complete an earlier trade.
INDY FUEL Sent F Kyle Stroh to Elmira.
MISSOURI MAVERICKS Sent F Zach Cohen to Elmira.
NORFOLK ADMIRALS Loaned F Alexandre Ranger to St. Johns (AHL).
READING ROYALS Released G Nick Niedert.
UTAH GRIZZLIES Loaned G Mark
Owuya to Lake Erie (AHL).
SOCCER
Major League Soccer
COLUMBUS CREW Acquired D Amro
Tarek on loan from Real Betis (Liga BBVASpain).
LA GALAXY Signed M Nigel de Jong.
United Soccer League
SAN ANTONIO Signed D Stephen McCarthy.
COLLEGE
BERRY Announced the resignation of
volleyball coach Mika Robinson to take the
same position at Rollins. Named Caitlyn
Jansen volleyball coach.
MISSOURI Named Jackie Shipp defensive line coach.
OREGON QB Morgan Mahalak announced he will transfer.
ST. SCHOLASTICA Announced the
retirement of mens and womens cross
country coach Steve Pfingsten, effective
March 1.
TEXAS-RIO GRANDE VALLEY Named
Lee Williams assistant soccer coach.

200 Medley Relay M (S. Hershey, R. Olsen, C. Abraham, J. Boben), 2:05.71.


200 Freestyle C. Abraham, M, 2:18.73.
200 IM J. Boben, M, 2:51.69.
50 Freestyle S. Hershey, M, 0:26.94.
100 Butterfly C. Abraham, M, 1:11.94.
100 Freestyle T. Tardibuono, CV, 1:04.14.
500 Freestyle R. Olsen, M, 5:46.71.
200 Freestyle Relay CV (L. Nedrow,
McCombs, T. Raasch, A. Heisey), 2:01.09.
100 Backstroke S. Hershey, M, 1:05.88.
100 Breaststroke R. Olsen, M, 1:14.67.
400 Freestyle Relay M (C. Abraham, M.
Lilley, S. Hershey, R. Olsen), 4:14.04.

BOWLING
SCHOLASTIC
L-L LEAGUE
SECTION THREE

Elizabethtown 7, Lamp.-Strasburg 0

O. Farwell, E-town......... 247-256-219722


B. Young, E-town........... 202-196-238636
B. Ritzman, E-town........ 193-239-193625
M. Hoffmaster, E-town.... 236-209-179624
E. Byers, L-S................... 163-208-205576
SECTION FOUR

Lebanon Catholic 7, Columbia 0

B. Hains, LC.................... 116-189-199504


S. Kinser, Columbia........ 167-155-148470

Lancaster Catholic 7, N. Lebanon 0

J. Pleger, LC.................... 192-235-227654


B. Wolgemuth, LC.......... 216-214-204634
M. Snyder, NL................ 178-199-182559
NONLEAGUE

Warwick 4, Cedar Crest 3

A. Hresko, CC................. 246-200-255701


B. White, Warwick......... 194-251-222667
A. Brandt, CC................. 201-201-256658
A. Barilar, Warwick........ 215-215-210640
S. Garrett, CC................. 214-207-215636
J. Haller, CC.................... 200-188-235623

McCaskey 5, Conestoga Valley 2

R. Graham, CV............... 277-257-239773


D. Smith, McCaskey....... 257-242-175674
D. Bouman, CV............... 184-168-267619
TUESDAYS BOX
SECTION FOUR

Elco 7, Lebanon Catholic 0

A. Dietz, Elco.................. 166-226-230622


B. Hains, LC.................... 191-196-180567

CAINS
TRAVEL
Dave Gerhart................. 229-268-234731

CLEARVIEW
AMERICAN LEAGUE JUNIORS
Brittany Ritzman............ 279-204-299782
Kayla Halbleib................ 235-189-157581
Alexis Lee....................... 169-150-213532
KRAFT SENIORS
Steve Rettew.................. 258-217-173648

DUTCH
YOUNG AT HEART
Ken Olson...................... 192-278-278748
Ed Ronald....................... 182-214-183579
Tom Sullivan.................. 169-177-232578
LANCASTER COUNTY TRAVEL
Andy Pannebecker......... 268-246-247761
Marc Johns.................... 224-279-237740
Terry Martin................... 238-248-248734
Scott Kennedy................ 258-235-228721
Chuck Winkler............... 246-227-237710
Todd Sigeti..................... 227-225-255707
Mike Lewis..................... 255-243-205703
INDOOR WORLD
Terrance Murray............ 259-247-239745
WEDNESDAY NIGHT MIXED
Deb Hatfield.................. 149-257-220626
Michelle Schutter.......... 224-214-170608

ROCKY SPRINGS
RETAIL LADIES
Linda Goodling.............. 234-223-202659
Cindy McLaughlin.......... 210-204-211625
GARDEN SPOT MEN
Eric Hiller....................... 246-255-215716
Scott Crandall................ 194-225-277696
Dennis Hagel................. 265-234-184683
Sam Taggart................... 246-189-243678
Jason Little..................... 204-257-216677
Jim Hannah.................... 212-214-236662
Pat Brandt, Sr................. 191-223-245659
Damar Been................... 174-246-238658
Bob Leberfinger............. 206-192-258656
WEDNESDAY TRAVEL
Randy Hogg................... 237-231-246714
Jon Rodgers................... 214-268-225707
Ray Stafford................... 268-200-235703
HOLTWOOD 10 PIN
Rod Miller...................... 253-208-197658
Lester Clark.................... 287-183-184654

AHL

SWIMMING
SCHOLASTIC BOYS
L-L LEAGUE
Section One

League
Overall

W L T W L T
a-Hempfield.............. 5 0 0 10 0 0
Warwick.................... 4 1 0 7 1 0
Manheim Twp.......... 3 2 0 7 2 0
Cedar Crest............... 2 3 0 5 4 0
Penn Manor.............. 1 4 0 3 5 0
McCaskey................. 0 5 0 2 6 0
Section Two

W L T W L T
a-Conestoga Valley..... 6 0 0 8 1 0
Cocalico.................... 5 1 0 6 4 0
Lanc. Catholic........... 3 2 0 3 5 0
Elizabethtown........... 3 3 0 3 7 0
Lamp.-Strasburg....... 2 4 0 2 8 0
Ephrata..................... 1 5 0 1 8 0
Manheim Central...... 0 5 0 0 8 0
a-Won section title
TUESDAYS LATE BOX
NONLEAGUE

Conestoga Valley 105, McCaskey 65

200 Medley Relay CV (N. Lynam, T. Wilson, N. Pham, L. Frey), 1:43.53.


200 Freestyle M. Jacome, M, 1:53.34.
200 IM N. Lynam, CV, 2:03.31.
50 Freestyle L. Frey, CV, 0:24.19.
100 Butterfly T. Wilson, CV, 0:50.29
(League Record).
100 Freestyle J. Fulton, M, 0:53.72.
500 Freestyle M. Jacome, M, 4:45.04.
200 Freestyle Relay CV (T. Wilson, L.
Frey, N. Pham, N. Lynam), 1:36.22.
100 Backstroke T. Wilson, CV, 0:49.78
(League Record).
100 Breaststroke R. Perot, M, 1:06.37.
400 Freestyle Relay M (J. Fulton, E.
Feeman, R. Perot, M. Jacome), 3:38.33.
SCHOLASTIC GIRLS
L-L LEAGUE
Section One

League
Overall

W L T W L T
a-Manheim Twp....... 5 0 0 9 0 0
Warwick.................... 4 1 0 7 1 0
Hempfield................. 3 2 0 7 3 0
Cedar Crest............... 2 3 0 6 3 0
Penn Manor.............. 1 4 0 4 4 0
McCaskey................. 0 5 0 2 6 0
Section Two

W L T W L T
a-Cocalico................. 6 0 0 7 3 0
Ephrata..................... 5 1 0 5 4 0
Lanc. Catholic........... 3 2 0 3 5 0
Elizabethtown........... 3 3 0 3 7 0
Lamp.-Strasburg....... 2 4 0 3 7 0
Conestoga Valley...... 1 5 0 1 8 0
Manheim Central...... 0 5 0 0 8 0
a-Won section title

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......... 36 8 3 0 .798 75 187 115
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 25 3 4 .337 29 85 146
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.
Tuesdays Games
No games scheduled
Wednesdays Games
No games scheduled
Thursdays Games
Toronto at Manitoba........................ 8 p.m.
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.

SCOREBOARD

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

SPORTS SLATE

MENS
BASKETBALL

BASKETBALL

WEDNESDAYS SCORES

COLLEGIATE WOMEN
Lancaster Bible at St. Elizabeth, 7 p.m.
SCHOLASTIC BOYS
NONLEAGUE
Lebanon at Hershey, 7:30 p.m.
CCAC
Millersburg at Mount Calvary, 7 p.m.
West Shore Christian at Lititz Christian,
7:30 p.m.
SCHOLASTIC GIRLS
NONLEAGUE
Hershey at Lebanon, 7:30 p.m.
Elco at Conrad Weiser, 7:30 p.m.
CCAC
West Shore Christian at Lititz Christian,
6 p.m.

EAST
Albany (NY) 79.............................. UMBC 73
American U. 69..........................Bucknell 55
Army 84............................ Lafayette 81 (OT)
Boston U. 83................................... Navy 72
Chestnut Hill 65..............Georgian Court 64
George Washington 79.............Davidson 69
Illinois 110...................... Rutgers 101 (3OT)
Lehigh 71............................ Loyola (Md.) 66
Mass.-Lowell 85.........................Hartford 83
Post (Conn.) 70........................... Felician 59
Seton Hall 79......................... Marquette 62
St. Bonaventure 83........... Saint Josephs 73
St. Rose 79............................... LeMoyne 66
Stockton 71..................Rutgers-Camden 50
Stony Brook 76....................Binghamton 51
Susquehanna 74.......................... Juniata 71
VCU 88........................................ La Salle 70
Vermont 85................................... Maine 68
SOUTH
Barton 96.....................Mount Olive 92 (OT)
Bethany (WV) 95.... Thomas More 89 (2OT)
Bridgewater (Va.) 76....Randolph-Macon 73
Charlotte 92................................NC A&T 72
Coastal Carolina 69............. Presbyterian 66
Columbus St. 88.................... Clayton St. 86
E. Mennonite 74................. Shenandoah 73
Erskine 68..................... Emmanuel (Ga.) 67
Florida 87.................................. Arkansas 83
Gardner-Webb 79...................High Point 74
George Mason 78................... Richmond 74
King (Tenn.) 87.....................Lees-McRae 62
Limestone 64................North Greenville 52
Lincoln Memorial 88...................Brevard 55
Livingstone 108......Virginia Union 103 (OT)
Longwood 80........................... Campbell 79
Lynchburg 79.............. Hampden-Sydney 72
Miami 79.............................Notre Dame 70
Milligan 63................................ Bluefield 57
Roanoke 64................................ Guilford 62
Tenn. Wesleyan 90................. Point (Ga.) 79
UNC Asheville 63... Charleston Southern 55
Virginia 61...................... Boston College 47
MIDWEST
Albion 67.......................................Calvin 66
Alma 68........................................Adrian 63
Aquinas 72.......................Lawrence Tech 71
Augsburg 83.............................. Hamline 73
Beloit 86.......................... Illinois College 71
Cardinal Stritch 66...................Roosevelt 63
Concordia (Moor.) 60.................Carleton 45
Concordia (Wis.) 73.......... Marian (Wis.) 72
Cornerstone 94..................Siena Heights 53
Davenport 97........... Michigan-Dearborn 55
Hope 94.........................................Olivet 58
Illinois St. 78............... Loyola of Chicago 70
Indiana Tech 95.....................Marygrove 82
Iowa 73...................................... Penn St. 49
Madonna 78............ Northwestern Ohio 68
Maryland 70............................ Nebraska 65
N. Iowa 57...............................Evansville 54
Xavier 90.................................. St. Johns 83

BOWLING
SCHOLASTIC
L-L LEAGUE
Section Two
Hempfield vs. Lebanon at Cedar Lanes,
3:30 p.m.
Section Three
Lebanon Catholic vs. Manheim Central at
Cains Lanes, 3:30 p.m.
Section Four
Lampeter-Strasburg vs. Columbia at East
Lincoln Lanes, 3:30 p.m.
Cocalico vs. Elco at Cedar Lanes,
3:30 p.m.

RIFLE
SCHOLASTIC
L-L LEAGUE
Section One
Wilson at Conestoga Valley, 4 p.m.
Garden Spot at Manheim Township,
4 p.m.
Elizabethtown at Ephrata, 4 p.m.

WRESTLING
COLLEGIATE
East Stroudsburg vs. Millersville, 7 p.m.
SCHOLASTIC
DISTRICT THREE TEAM TOURNAMENT
Class AAA
At Spring Grove
Semifinals
Central Dauphin vs. Exeter Township,
5:30 p.m.
Cumberland Valley vs. Cedar Cliff,
5:30 p.m.
Consolation Quarterfinals
Cocalico vs. Spring Grove, 5:30 p.m.
Big Spring vs. Wilson, 5:30 p.m.
Semifinals to follow at 6:30 p.m.
L-L LEAGUE
Section One
Cedar Crest at Penn Manor, 7 p.m.
NONLEAGUE
Conestoga Valley at Reading, 6:30 p.m.
Pequea Valley at Oley Valley, 6:30 p.m.
Manheim Central at Warwick, 7 p.m.
Eastern York at Columbia, 7 p.m.

WRESTLING
SCHOLASTIC

DISTRICT THREE TEAM


CHAMPIONSHIPS
CLASS AA
QUARTERFINALS

N. Lebanon 62, Camp Hill 4

220 M. Vines, NL, p. B. Tomeo, 2:22.


285 G. Thompson, NL, p. S. Eboch,
0:44.
106 K. Anspach, NL, m.d. R. Foerster,
14-6.
113 D. Breidegan, NL, d. J. Coniglio,
7-2.
120 C. Leonard, NL, t.f. N. Doss, 4:45
(18-3).
126 W. Kemble, CH, m.d. G. Scheaffer,
13-0.
132 T. Leonard, NL, p. G. Latorre, 2:51.
138 Z. Kelly, NL, m.d. A. Rini, 10-0.
145 B. Bressler, NL, p. C. Brezanilla,
1:35.
152 S. Herb, NL, m.d. J. Shuster, 15-2.
160 L. Negrerios, NL, d. L. Colestock,
2-1.
170 Q. Blatt, NL, d. T. Nyambi, 7-0.
182 H. Wallace, NL, p. N. Teeter, 2:22.
195 L. Funck, NL, p. S. Teeter, 4:51.

Boiling Springs 59, Annville-Cleona 14

106 D. Fiebig, AC, p. J. Haulman, 2:24.


113 K. Myers, BS, p. H. Funck, 1:40.
120 J. Hankerson, BS, m.d. Z. Renninger, 11-1
126 T. Hanshaw, BS, p. C. Myers, 5:25.
132 C. Palmer, BS, p. T. Speraw, 1:29.
138 J. Renninger, AC, m.d. Z. Martin,
16-2.
145 N. Kostyak, BS, p. K. Reigle, 3:21.
152 A. Kostyak, BS, m.d. T. Schrader,
16-1.
160 K. Karper, BS, m.d. B. Turner, 18-3.
170 M. Wagner, AC, m.d. C. Calaman,
14-3.
182 T. Wickard, BS, by forfeit.
195 A. Taylor, BS, p. A. Wilson, 1:03.
220 R. Ott, BS, p. Z. Long, 0:12.
285 D. James, BS, d. M. Jimenez, 5-1.
Other Scores
Bermudian Springs 39.............. Newport 30
Hamburg 41.............................Biglerville 19
SEMIFINALS

N. Lebanon 59, Hamburg 9

285 G. Thompson, NL, d. D. Grumlich,


5-1.
106 K. Anspach, NL, d. S. Strausser, 8-4.
113 D. Breidegan, NL, p. O. DeTurk,
1:59.
120 C. Leonard, NL, p. L. DeTurk, 2:50.
126 J. Johnson, H, p. G. Scheaffer, 1:27.
132 T. Leonard, NL, t.f. M. Madera,
5:16 (17-1).
138 D. Miller, H, d. Z. Kelly, 4-3.
145 B. Bressler, NL, p. B. Hamilton,
1:45.
152 S. Herb, NL, p. R. Mason, 1:05.
160 L. Negrerios, NL, p. Z. Sheffler,
3:29.
170 Q. Blatt, NL, p.A. Galarza, 1:24.
182 H. Wallace, NL, d. T. Herber, 6-2.
195 L. Funck, NL, d. I. Reynoso, 9-5 sv.
220 M. Vines, NL, p. M. Kline, 0:48.
Other Score
Boiling Springs 45..... Bermudian Springs 28
NONLEAGUE

McCaskey 63, Lancaster Catholic 6

160 M. Davis, M, d. T. Jimenez, 14-9.


170 A. Gainer, M, p. N. Costello, 2:13.
182 C. Lugo, M, by forfeit.
195 Z. Hollingsworth, M, by forfeit.
220 H. Soriano, M, by forfeit.
285 No contest.
106 No contest.
113 T. Boi, M, p. N. Card, :58.
120 M. Canfijn, M, by forfeit.
126 J. Lobeck, LC, p. J. Pacheco, 1:25.
132 J. Battle, M, by forfeit.
138 J. Holland, M, p. A. Joseph, 1:35.
145 A. Martin, M, by forfeit.
152 K. Major, M, by forfeit.

Lebanon 42, Cedar Crest 24

160 J. McEnnis, CC, d. B. Kutz, 8-4.


170 N. Bradley, L, by forfeit.
182 J. Howard-Griffin, CC, p. A. Hartman, 2:20.
195 T. Bruckart, CC, p. B. Smith, 2:19.
220 T. Armpriester, L, p. A. Torres, 5:11.
285 R. Fisher, CC, d. L. Imm, 4-2.
106 J. Barrios, L, p. M. Rodriguez, :13.
113 No contest.
120 J. Gomez, L, by forfeit.
126 J. Gothara, L, by forfeit.
132 T. Blair, L, by forfeit.
138 J. Hartman, L, by forfeit.
145 No contest.
152 B. Breidegan, CC, p. T. Sumlin,
2:23.

Iowa 73, Penn St. 49

PENN ST. (11-12)


Banks 1-7 0-1 2, Foster 1-6 0-0 2, Taylor
7-20 1-2 15, Garner 4-12 0-0 8, Moore 3-6
2-2 8, Zemgulis 2-6 1-1 6, Jack 2-3 0-0 4,
Washington 0-6 1-4 1, Dickerson 1-3 1-2 3.
Totals 21-69 6-12 49.
IOWA (18-4)
Clemmons 4-8 4-4 12, Gesell 0-5 2-2 2,
Jok 5-9 0-0 12, Uthoff 5-12 3-4 14, Woodbury 1-2 3-6 5, Wagner 2-2 4-5 8, Fleming
0-1 0-0 0, M. Soukup 0-0 0-0 0, Williams 2-2
0-0 4, S. Soukup 0-0 0-0 0, Ukah 0-0 0-0 0,
Ellingson 0-1 0-0 0, Uhl 3-8 1-4 8, Baer 3-4
0-1 8. Totals 25-54 17-26 73.
HalftimeIowa 45-26. 3-Point Goals
Penn St. 1-20 (Zemgulis 1-3, Taylor 0-2,
Foster 0-2, Washington 0-4, Banks 0-4,
Garner 0-5), Iowa 6-17 (Baer 2-3, Jok 2-4,
Uhl 1-2, Uthoff 1-3, Gesell 0-1, Ellingson
0-1, Clemmons 0-3). Fouled OutWagner. ReboundsPenn St. 40 (Taylor 11),
Iowa 45 (Woodbury 15). AssistsPenn St.
8 (Banks, Foster, Garner 2), Iowa 12 (Clemmons 4). Total FoulsPenn St. 23, Iowa 16.
A12,596.

Villanova 83, Creighton 58

CREIGHTON (14-9)
Hegner 2-4 1-4 7, Hanson 2-4 2-2 6,
Thomas 2-5 0-0 5, Watson Jr. 5-13 3-5 16,
Zierden 1-5 0-0 3, Stewart 0-0 0-0 0, Harrell Jr. 1-5 0-0 2, Clement 1-1 0-0 2, Albert
1-2 0-0 2, Huff 3-7 0-0 7, Milliken 1-4 0-2
2, Groselle 3-5 0-0 6. Totals 22-55 6-13 58.
VILLANOVA (19-3)
Jenkins 7-11 4-4 22, Reynolds 2-5 0-0 4,
Brunson 6-9 0-1 16, Hart 4-9 2-2 13, Arcidiacono 2-6 3-3 9, Lowe 0-0 0-0 0, Booth
3-9 2-2 10, Farrell 0-0 0-0 0, Bridges 2-5 4-5
9, Rafferty 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 26-54 15-17 83.
HalftimeVillanova
45-32.
3-Point
GoalsCreighton 8-25 (Watson Jr. 3-6,
Hegner 2-4, Zierden 1-4, Huff 1-4, Thomas
1-4, Harrell Jr. 0-1, Milliken 0-2), Villanova
16-29 (Brunson 4-6, Jenkins 4-6, Hart 3-6,
Booth 2-4, Arcidiacono 2-4, Bridges 1-3).
Fouled OutNone. ReboundsCreighton
27 (Zierden 6), Villanova 38 (Reynolds 13).
AssistsCreighton 13 (Watson Jr. 5), Villanova 19 (Booth 6). Total FoulsCreighton
15, Villanova 13. A6,500.

Catholic 73, Elizabethtown 60

CATHOLIC (15-5, 8-3 LC)


J. Howard 7-9 6-11 20, B. Fonville 6-10
2-4 14, C. Stanford 4-15 5-6 13, K. Phanord
3-7 0-0 9, L. Khouri 3-5 0-0 9, A. Mitchell 0-1
2-4 2, A. Calling 1-2 0-0 2, J. Holland 0-0 2-3
2, J. Golaszewski 1-1 0-0 2, K. Phanord 0-0
0-0 0. Totals 25-50 17-28 73.
ELIZABETHTOWN (3-16, 1-10 LC)
J. Eden 6-13 1-2 13, T. James 5-7 0-2 10,
M. Ziegler 4-5 1-1 10, M. Lapkowicz 3-6 1-2
10, P. Harding 3-9 0-0 8, D. Krieger 3-8 1-1
7, J. Sweger 1-1 0-0 2, M. Lane 0-2 0-1 0, J.
Pines-Elliot 0-1 0-1 0. Totals 25-52 4-9 60.
HalftimeCatholic
31-22.
3-Point
GoalsCatholic 6-19 (K. Phanord 3-6, L.
Khouri 3-5, C. Stanford 0-6, B. Fonville 0-1,
A. Mitchell 0-1), E-town 6-15 (M. Lapkowicz
3-5, P. Harding 2-7, M. Ziegler 1-1, M. Lane
0-2). ReboundsCatholic 33 (C. Stanford
13), E-town 26 (T. James 7). AssistsCatholic 11 (B. Fonville 8), E-town 19 (M. Lane 7).
Fouled OutCatholic, None; E-town, M.
Ziegler. Total FoulsCatholic 19, E-town.
19

Millersville 61, Cheyney 50

CHEYNEY (2-17, 1-14 PSAC)


J. Mullen 6-15 5-5 20, K. Carter 3-10 0-1
9, R. Marshall 3-11 0-0 6, I. Bailey 3-10 0-0
6, M. Oyefusi 0-2 4-6 4, E. Lett 1-6 0-0 2, B.
Fulmore 1-1 0-2 2, C. McGlond 0-1 1-2 1,
L. Duncan 0-4 0-4 0, D. Amugo 0-0 0-0 0.
Totals 17-60 10-16 50.
MILLERSVILLE (3-17, 3-13 PSAC)
T. Townsend 4-8 4-4 15, R. Beck 3-5 2-2
10, T. Patterson 1-10 4-4 7, S. Williams 2-10
2-4 7, J. Ball 3-7 1-2 7, R. Mosley 2-7 1-4 6,
M. Mont 2-3 0-0 4, J. Lott 1-1 1-5 3, S. Slade
1-4 0-0 2, B. Rivera 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 19-56
15-25 61.
HalftimeMU 28-25. 3-Point Goals
Cheyney 6-22 (J. Mullen 3-8, K. Carter 3-6,
R. Marshall 0-4, E. Lett 0-1, L. Duncan 0-3),
MU 8-30 (T. Townsend 3-6, R. Beck 2-4, T.
Patterson 1-5, S. Williams 1-6, R. Mosley
1-5, J. Ball 0-3, B. Rivera 0-1). Rebounds
Cheyney 21 (I. Bailey 12), MU 43 (T. Patterson 14). AssistsCheyney 8 (R. Marshall 6),
MU 5 (S. Williams 3). Fouled OutCheyney,
None; MU, None. Total FoulsCheyney 21,
MU 16.

WOMENS
BASKETBALL
WEDNESDAYS SCORES
EAST
Albany (NY) 63.............................. UMBC 39
Army 84....................................Lafayette 57
Binghamton 54.................... Stony Brook 47
Bucknell 60..................American U. 54 (OT)
Buffalo 51........................................Ohio 43
Caldwell 80....................................Nyack 62
Duquesne 73........................UMass 64 (OT)
Fordham 76.............George Washington 69
Hartford 75.................Mass.-Lowell 70 (OT)
Holy Cross 70.............................. Colgate 61

Lehigh 76............................ Loyola (Md.) 68


Maine 63.................................. Vermont 51
Old Westbury 77............. St. Josephs (LI) 43
Rhode Island 62.......................... La Salle 52
Temple 55........................................SMU 35
SOUTH
Barton 69............................ Mount Olive 64
Belmont 99....................... Morehead St. 71
Bryan 70...........................Columbia (SC) 50
Columbus St. 73.................... Clayton St. 64
Davidson 68.....................George Mason 63
E. Kentucky 70...................Tennessee St. 66
Emmanuel (Ga.) 78......................Erskine 68
Incarnate Word 63.................Nicholls St. 61
King (Tenn.) 75.....................Lees-McRae 49
Limestone 59................North Greenville 39
Lincoln Memorial 81...................Brevard 44
Milligan 69................................ Bluefield 59
Shaw 75................................. Virginia St. 48
South Florida 82..................... Cincinnati 49
Tenn. Wesleyan 70................. Point (Ga.) 57
Thomas More 104............ Bethany (WV) 43
Transylvania 89..........................Hanover 84
Tulsa 55..............................East Carolina 54
UConn 96......................................Tulane 38
UT Martin 75........................Austin Peay 51
VCU 52...........................St. Bonaventure 47
Virginia Union 90.................. Livingstone 81
MIDWEST
Ball St. 78.......................................Akron 71
Calvin 58....................................... Albion 53
Cardinal Stritch 67...................Roosevelt 45
Cent. Michigan 66.................E. Michigan 65
Davenport 96........... Michigan-Dearborn 44
Finlandia 66........................ Mount Mary 39
Hope 62.......................................... Alma 45
Lawrence Tech 71...................... Aquinas 53
Madonna 70............ Northwestern Ohio 47
Miami (Ohio) 55......................... Kent St. 52
Michigan St. 85.........................Michigan 64
Olivet 67................................Kalamazoo 50
SE Missouri 96....................... Murray St. 59
Saint Louis 73......................... Richmond 48
Siena Heights 72................. Cornerstone 40
Taylor 74............................. Spring Arbor 61
Toledo 80.............................W. Michigan 68
William Penn 77...................Grand View 66
SOUTHWEST
Baylor 87................................ Kansas St. 52
Cent. Arkansas 80................SE Louisiana 58
Houston 64.......................................UCF 55
Houston Baptist 73.......... Texas A&M-CC 59
Oklahoma St. 71.....................Oklahoma 69

Millersville 72, Cheyney 53

CHEYNEY (2-17, 0-15 PSAC)


K. Hines-Allen 6-16 6-7 18, A. Genwright
4-12 4-6 12, A. deJesus 4-9 2-5 10, S.
Stamper 4-9 1-1 9, A. Small 2-7 0-0 4, B.
Hedgepeth 0-2 0-0 0, M. Herring 0-3 0-0
0, D. West 0-1 0-0 0, C. Beaden 0-0 0-2 0.
Totals 20-59 13-21 53.
MILLERSVILLE (13-7, 9-7 PSAC)
A. Hall 4-5 5-5 13, K. Bamberger 6-6 0-4
12, C. Robinson 4-6 2-2 11, T. White 3-8 2-2
8, A. Van Brakle 3-8 1-1 8, C. Hinnant 2-4
2-2 6, A. Stam 2-9 0-0 6, S. Reimer 2-7 0-0
5, J. Robinson 1-5 0-0 2, J. Farquhar 0-1 1-2
1, K. Mellinger 0-0 0-2 0. Totals 27-59 1320 72.
Cheyney............................ 16 11 10 16 53
Millersville........................ 20 20 12 20 72
3-Point GoalsCheyney 0-10 (A. Genwright 0-4, A. DeJesus 0-4, S. Stamper 0-1,
A. Small 0-1), MU 5-17 (A. Stam 2-7, S. Reimer 1-5, C. Robinson 1-2, A. Van Brakle
1-2). ReboundsCheyney 32 (K. HinesAllen 8), MU 45 (S. Reimer 7, A. Van Brakle
7). AssistsCheyney 5 (A. deJesus 2), MU
15 (C. Robinson 6). Fouled OutCheyney,
None; MU, None. Total FoulsCheyney 18,
MU 20.

Elizabethtown 66, Catholic 61

ELIZABETHTOWN (11-6, 7-4 LC)


E. Martin 10-15 6-10 26, R. Forjan 5-13
5-5 18, A. Beyer 3-9 0-0 6, E. Hoesman 0-1
5-8 5, A. Aichele 2-7 0-1 4, M. Gingrich 1-4
0-0 3, M. Holley 1-1 0-0 2, R. Liszkiewicz 1-1
0-0 2. Totals 23-51 16-24 66.
CATHOLIC (12-8, 7-4 LC)
M. DeSantis 7-11 1-2 16, M. Errico 5-7 1-1
11, S. Cowan 3-3 0-0 7, J. Webster 2-8 3-6
7, K. Walheim 3-7 1-1 7, P. Smith 3-7 0-0 6,
J. Migash 2-5 0-2 4, M. Gardner 1-3 1-3 3,
B. Power 0-7 0-0 0, R. Hamilton 0-0 0-0 0.
Totals 26-58 7-15 61.
Elizabethtown................... 20 18 15 13 66
Catholic............................. 16 15 11 19 61
3-Point GoalsE-town 4-16 (R. Forjan 3-9, M. Gingrich 1-3, A. Beyer 0-3, E.
Hoesman 0-1), Catholic 2-11 (M. DeSantis
1-3, S. Cowan 1-1, P. Smith 0-2, K. Walheim
0-2, J. Webster 0-3). ReboundsE-town 39
(E. Martin 10), Catholic 30 (J. Webster 6).
AssistsE-town 17 (A. Aichele 6), Catholic 15 (M. Errico 6, M. deSantis 6). Fouled
OutE-town, None; Catholic, None. Total
FoulsE-town 14, Catholic 21.

NHL
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division

GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Florida..........50 30 15 5 65 140 110
Tampa Bay....50 28 18 4 60 133 118
Detroit..........50 25 17 8 58 123 127
Boston..........50 26 18 6 58 150 135
Ottawa..........51 23 22 6 52 144 161
Montreal.......52 24 24 4 52 140 142
Buffalo..........51 21 26 4 46 118 138
Toronto.........49 18 22 9 45 118 137
Metropolitan Division

GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Washington....48 35 9 4 74 160 109
N.Y. Rangers....50 27 18 5 59 144 132
N.Y. Islanders.....48 26 16 6 58 135 121
Pittsburgh.....49 25 17 7 57 127 125
New Jersey....51 26 20 5 57 117 120
Carolina........51 23 20 8 54 123 135
Philadelphia....48 22 18 8 52 113 129
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........53 29 16 8 66 130 128
Colorado.......53 27 23 3 57 144 144
Nashville.......51 24 19 8 56 129 132
Minnesota....50 23 18 9 55 124 120
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........49 26 19 4 56 144 132
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..........48 21 24 3 45 126 146
Edmonton.....51 20 26 5 45 127 150
NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for
overtime loss.
Tuesdays Games
Toronto 4.............................. Boston 3 (OT)
New Jersey 3......................... N.Y. Rangers 2
N.Y. Islanders 5........................ Minnesota 3
Philadelphia 4........................... Montreal 2
Pittsburgh 6.................................. Ottawa 5
Florida 5................................ Washington 2
St. Louis 1.................................. Nashville 0
Dallas 5..................................... Winnipeg 3
Chicago 2................................... Colorado 1
Edmonton 5............................. Columbus 1
Los Angeles 6............................... Arizona 2
Anaheim 3.................................. San Jose 2
Wednesdays Games
Buffalo 4................................... Montreal 2
Tampa Bay 3................................. Detroit 1
Carolina at Calgary...................................(n)
Thursdays Games
Boston at Buffalo.............................. 7 p.m.
Minnesota at N.Y. Rangers................ 7 p.m.
N.Y. Islanders at Washington....... 7:30 p.m.
New Jersey at Toronto................. 7:30 p.m.
Edmonton at Ottawa................... 7:30 p.m.
Detroit at Florida......................... 7:30 p.m.
San Jose at St. Louis.......................... 8 p.m.
Philadelphia at Nashville.................. 8 p.m.
Dallas at Colorado............................ 9 p.m.
Chicago at Arizona............................ 9 p.m.
Columbus at Vancouver.................. 10 p.m.
Anaheim at Los Angeles................. 10 p.m.
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.

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2016

NBA
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division

W
L Pct GB
Toronto.......................33 16 .673
Boston........................29 22 .569
5
New York....................23 28 .451 11
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.......................26 21 .553 81-w
Indiana........................26 23 .531 91-w
Detroit........................26 24 .520 10
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............................22 25 .468 14
Denver........................19 30 .388 18
Minnesota..................14 36 .280 231-w
Pacific Division

W
L Pct GB
Golden State...............45
4 .918
L.A. Clippers................32 16 .667 121-w
Sacramento................21 27 .438 231-w
Phoenix.......................14 36 .280 311-w
L.A. Lakers...................10 41 .196 36
Tuesdays Games
Boston 97............................... New York 89
Houston 115.............................. Miami 102
Toronto 104............................... Phoenix 97
Portland 107......................... Milwaukee 95
L.A. Lakers 119.................... Minnesota 115
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
Denver at Utah........................................(n)
Chicago at Sacramento............................(n)
Minnesota at L.A. Clippers......................(n)
Thursdays Games
New York at Detroit.......................... 7 p.m.
Houston at Phoenix.......................... 9 p.m.
L.A. Lakers at New Orleans.......... 9:30 p.m.
Toronto at Portland........................ 10 p.m.
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.

Hawks 124, 76ers 86


ATLANTA (124)
Bazemore 4-7 2-2 12, Millsap 3-11 3-4 10,
Horford 3-4 1-2 7, Teague 4-12 0-0 10, Korver
2-3 0-0 5, Muscala 4-5 4-7 12, Sefolosha 5-7
1-2 12, Schroder 4-10 4-5 12, Hardaway Jr. 5-8
2-2 13, Scott 6-10 0-0 13, Patterson 2-4 0-0 5,
Mack 4-8 1-1 9, Tavares 2-3 0-0 4. Totals 48-92
18-25 124.
PHILADELPHIA (86)
Covington 3-9 0-1 6, Noel 5-5 0-1 10, Okafor 5-10 0-0 10, Smith 3-9 1-2 7, Stauskas 5-7
5-5 17, Grant 0-4 0-0 0, Canaan 4-10 0-0 11,
Thompson 2-7 2-2 7, McConnell 1-5 0-0 2,
Landry 3-7 0-0 6, Marshall 0-3 0-0 0, Sampson
2-4 1-1 5, Holmes 2-4 1-2 5. Totals 35-84 1014 86.
Atlanta.................... 27 31 30 36 124
Philadelphia............ 17 25 20 24 86
3-Point GoalsAtlanta 10-20 (Teague 2-4,
Bazemore 2-4, Sefolosha 1-1, Scott 1-1, Patterson 1-2, Millsap 1-2, Korver 1-2, Hardaway
Jr. 1-3, Mack 0-1), Philadelphia 6-27 (Canaan
3-6, Stauskas 2-3, Thompson 1-4, Landry 0-1,
McConnell 0-1, Holmes 0-1, Sampson 0-1,
Smith 0-2, Marshall 0-2, Grant 0-2, Covington
0-4). Fouled OutNone. ReboundsAtlanta
61 (Scott 9), Philadelphia 43 (Noel 7). AssistsAtlanta 28 (Hardaway Jr., Horford 4),
Philadelphia 27 (Smith 7). Total FoulsAtlanta 12, Philadelphia 20. TechnicalsAtlanta
defensive three second. A10,429 (20,318).

Hornets 106, Cavaliers 97


CLEVELAND (97)
James 10-21 3-5 23, Love 4-12 2-2 12,
Thompson 2-4 0-0 4, Irving 10-17 5-5 26,
Smith 5-14 0-0 14, Mozgov 2-2 0-0 4, M.
Williams 2-7 0-0 5, Shumpert 1-4 1-2 4,
R.Jefferson 1-1 0-0 3, Varejao 1-1 0-0 2. Totals
38-83 11-14 97.
CHARLOTTE (106)
Kidd-Gilchrist 5-14 1-2 11, Ma.Williams 5-7
3-3 16, Zeller 3-7 0-0 6, Lin 7-13 8-11 24, Batum 3-8 3-3 10, Lamb 3-10 0-0 7, Kaminsky
7-8 0-0 15, Roberts 2-4 4-4 8, Hairston 1-3 0-0
3, Hawes 3-5 0-0 6. Totals 39-79 19-23 106.
Cleveland................ 23 35 17 22 97
Charlotte................. 23 26 33 24 106
3-Point GoalsCleveland 10-28 (Smith 4-9,
Love 2-7, R.Jefferson 1-1, M. Williams 1-2,
Shumpert 1-2, Irving 1-4, James 0-3), Charlotte 9-27 (Ma.Williams 3-5, Lin 2-4, Kaminsky
1-2, Lamb 1-3, Hairston 1-3, Batum 1-6, KiddGilchrist 0-1, Roberts 0-1, Hawes 0-2). Fouled
OutNone. ReboundsCleveland 36 (Love
12), Charlotte 56 (Kidd-Gilchrist 13). Assists
Cleveland 16 (James 6), Charlotte 26 (Lin 8).
Total FoulsCleveland 19, Charlotte 14. TechnicalsSmith, Hawes. A19,189 (19,077).

Pacers 114, Nets 100


INDIANA (114)
George 6-18 3-4 17, J.Hill 3-3 0-0 6, Turner
4-11 1-2 9, G.Hill 4-8 3-3 13, Ellis 5-7 0-0 11,
J.Young 3-6 0-0 8, Allen 6-12 0-1 12, Miles 1015 3-3 27, S.Hill 2-4 2-2 7, Robinson III 1-3 2-2
4, Whittington 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 44-88 14-17
114.
BROOKLYN (100)
Johnson 7-12 2-2 20, T.Young 6-12 4-6 16,
Lopez 6-13 9-14 21, Sloan 4-12 3-4 11, Ellington 6-12 2-2 16, Bargnani 1-2 0-0 2, Larkin 1-4
1-2 3, Bogdanovic 3-9 0-1 7, Brown 1-3 0-0 2,
Robinson 1-3 0-0 2, Karasev 0-0 0-0 0. Totals
36-82 21-31 100.
Indiana.................... 26 36 25 27 114
Brooklyn.................. 23 20 34 23 100
3-Point GoalsIndiana 12-24 (Miles 4-7,
G.Hill 2-2, George 2-4, J.Young 2-5, S.Hill 1-2,
Ellis 1-3, Robinson III 0-1), Brooklyn 7-23
(Johnson 4-5, Ellington 2-8, Bogdanovic 1-3,
Lopez 0-1, Larkin 0-1, Brown 0-1, Sloan 0-4).
Fouled OutNone. ReboundsIndiana 48
(Allen 8), Brooklyn 55 (T.Young 14). Assists
Indiana 23 (George 6), Brooklyn 25 (Johnson
9). Total FoulsIndiana 20, Brooklyn 20.
TechnicalsBrooklyn defensive three second.
A13,311 (17,732).

Celtics 102, Pistons 95


DETROIT (95)
Morris 4-17 5-6 15, Ilyasova 6-11 2-4 16,
Drummond 6-11 4-6 16, Jackson 5-9 4-4 17,
Caldwell-Pope 2-6 0-0 4, S.Johnson 4-13
0-0 11, Jennings 2-8 1-2 5, Tolliver 1-4 0-0 3,
Baynes 0-3 4-6 4, Hilliard 2-3 0-0 4. Totals 3285 20-28 95.
BOSTON (102)
Crowder 5-12 2-3 12, A.Johnson 2-4 0-0 4,
Sullinger 6-11 0-0 12, Thomas 7-17 1-2 17,
Bradley 7-15 0-0 15, Smart 4-10 0-0 12, Turner 4-8 6-6 14, Olynyk 3-10 0-0 6, Jerebko 2-5
0-0 4, Zeller 2-4 2-2 6. Totals 42-96 11-13 102.
Detroit.................... 16 20 24 35 95
Boston..................... 27 29 22 24 102
3-Point GoalsDetroit 11-34 (Jackson 3-6,

C9

S.Johnson 3-10, Ilyasova 2-3, Morris 2-6, Tolliver 1-4, Hilliard 0-1, Caldwell-Pope 0-1, Jennings 0-3), Boston 7-21 (Smart 4-7, Thomas
2-4, Bradley 1-2, Jerebko 0-1, Crowder 0-3,
Olynyk 0-4). Fouled OutNone. Rebounds
Detroit 62 (Drummond 13), Boston 55
(Olynyk 7). AssistsDetroit 18 (Jackson 7),
Boston 28 (Thomas 7). Total FoulsDetroit
18, Boston 24. A17,297 (18,624).

BOYS
BASKETBALL
NONLEAGUE

Cocalico 76, Muhlenberg 34

COCALICO (76)
I. Arcudi 7 0-0 18, T. Lescoe 6 2-2 18,
M. Ulysse 4 3-4 12, D. Haines 4 0-1 11, A.
Trynosky 3 0-0 7, B. Heck 3 0-0 6, B. Paiano
1 0-0 2, N. Monteleone 0 2-2 2, D. Whitsett
0 0-0 0, T. Keppley 0 0-0 0, A. Harven 0 0-0
0, J. Landis 0 0-0 0, J. Fester 0 0-0 0, D. Fabiani 0 0-0 0. Totals 28 7-9 76.
MUHLENBERG (34)
A. Jenkins 5 0-0 13, C. Fidler 2 0-0 5, J.
Prieto 2 1-2 5, M. Aguilerra 1 0-0 3, D. Kipp
1 0-0 2, J. Kuczawa 1 0-0 2, B. Heerl 1 0-0 2,
A. Wenrick 1 0-0 2. Totals 14 1-2 34.
Cocalico............................. 25 14 20 17 76
Muhlenberg........................ 6 12 11 5 34
3-Point Goals I. Arcudi 4, T. Lescoe 4,
D. Haines 3, M. Ulysse 1, A. Trynosky 1; A.
Jenkins 3, C. Fidler 1, M. Aguilerra 1. Fouled
Out None.

Governor Mifflin 49, Garden Spot 45

GOVERNOR MIFFLIN (49)


J. Peters 6 2-3 14, I. Tisdale 5 0-2 13, Z.
Smith 5 1-2 11, D. Diaz-Cruz 2 2-3 7, B.
Walmer 2 0-2 4. Totals 19 5-12 49.
GARDEN SPOT (45)
B. Cataudella 4 0-0 8, B. Bradley 3 1-2
8, C. Sensenig 3 2-2 8, J. Craver 1 2-2 5, J.
Shewbridge 1 2-2 5, K. Gordon 2 1-1 5, B.
Mellinger 2 0-0 4, D. Young 1 0-0 2. Totals
17 8-9 45.
Governor Mifflin................ 12 16 12 9 49
Garden Spot...................... 19 8 12 6 45
3-Point Goals I. Tisdale 3, D. Diaz-Cruz
1; B. Bradley 1, J. Craver 1, J. Shewbridge 1.
Fouled Out None.
JV Score: GS 47, GM 35

Dover 66, Penn Manor 51

PENN MANOR (51)


R. Atkinson 5 4-4 15, N. Brown 6 0-0 14,
N. Lord 5 1-2 13, M. Hreben 1 1-2 3, E. Snyder 1 0-0 2, S. Borden 1 0-0 2, A. Krahulik
0 2-2 2, Tulli 0 0-0 0, M. Benning 0 0-0 0,
C. Lovett 0 0-0 0, G. Ventura 0 0-0 0. Totals
19 8-10 51.
DOVER (66)
N. Fink 11 9-9 31, K. Davis 5 4-4 16, B. DeShong 4 0-0 9, J. ONeal 2 2-2 6, B. Bowman
1 1-2 4, Mummert 0 0-0 0, J. Sayres 0 0-0 0,
J. Sterner 0 0-0 0. Totals 23 17-19 66.
Penn Manor...................... 16 12 8 15 51
Dover................................ 17 10 17 22 66
3-Point Goals N. Brown 2, N. Lord 2,
R. Atkinson 1; K. Davis 2, B. DeShong 1, B.
Bowman 1. Fouled Out None.
TRI-VALLEY

York Co. Day 64, Lanc. Co. Day 51

YORK COUNTRY DAY (64)


D. Brown 9 3-3 21, D. Hamilton 5 4-4 16,
J. Ray 3 1-2 7, T. Wymard 3 1-2 7, L. Gertz 3
0-0 6, G. Gladfelter 2 0-0 5, L. Greiser 0 2-2
2, J. Goodstein 0 0-0 0, C. Sanders 0 0-0 0.
Totals 25 11-13 64.
LANCASTER COUNTRY DAY (51)
T. Eynon 6 4-4 17, S. Maley 4 4-4 12, A.
Burke 4 0-0 10, S. Frick 2 1-4 5, A. Williams
1 1-2 4, L Walling 1 0-0 2, J. Kubineo 0 0-0
0, W. Lisk 0 0-0 0, J. Starzyk 0 0-0 0, D. Izzo
0 0-0 0, F. Rangel 0 0-0 0, J. Adler 0 0-0 0, B.
Fry 0 0-0 0, K. Lojewski 0 0-0 0, T. Cody 0 0-0
0. Totals 18 10-14 51.
York Country Day............... 14 13 18 19 64
Lanc. Country Day............. 10 14 13 14 51
3-Point Goals D. Hamilton 2, G. Gladfelter 1; A. Burke 3, A. Williams 1. Fouled
Out S. Frick.
CCAC

Mount Calvary 75, CSY 31

CHRISTIAN SCHOOL OF YORK (31)


J. Freeman 4 0-0 11, S. Graybill 4 1-2 9, H.
Luo 2 0-0 4, N. Taylor 1 2-2 4, J. Brittell 0 1-2
1, K. Stump 0 0-0 0, S. Thomson 0 0-0 0, C.
Vo 1 0-0 2. Totals 12 4-6 31.
MOUNT CALVARY (75)
J. LaChance 10 2-3 22, J. Landis 5 0-0 10,
T. Masters 5 0-1 10, W. Hawthorne 3 2-2 8,
J. Moose 1 4-4 7, B. Taylor 3 0-0 6, A. Toth
3 0-0 6, B. Sheard 2 0-0 4, Ellis 1 0-0 2, N.
Esbenshade 0 0-0 0. Totals 33 8-10 75.
CSY.................................... 11 5 8 7 31
Mount Calvary................... 13 19 20 23 75
3-Point Goals J. Freeman 3; J. Moose 1.
Fouled Out none.

GIRLS
BASKETBALL
NONLEAGUE

Cocalico 37, Muhlenberg 33

MUHLENBERG (33)
S. Sudler 5 0-0 10, C. Colon 3 1-4 7, G. Rojas 1 2-2 5, M. Rojas 2 1-6 5, Mitchell 2 0-0
4, R. Fisher 1 0-0 2. Totals 14 4-12 33.
COCALICO (37)
J. Lorah 4 0-1 8, E. White 2 2-5 7, E. Fassnacht 3 0-0 7, L. Engle 0 6-8 6, S. Klumpp 2
1-2 5, M. Gingrich 0 2-4 2, M. Bock 1 0-0 2,
S. Benson 0 0-0 0. Totals 12 11-20 37.
Muhlenberg........................ 8 11 10 4 33
Cocalico............................. 13 10 8 6 37
3-Point Goals G. Rojas 1; E. White 1, E.
Fassnacht 1. Fouled Out None.

Hershey 35, Elizabethtown 32

HERSHEY (35)
C. Zugay 4 4-7 14, S. Gaston 3 0-1 6, E.
Winter 2 1-1 5, R. Groves 2 0-0 5, M. Miller
1 0-2 3, C. Cotton 1 0-2 2, D. Price 0 0-2 0,
M. Awde 0 0-0 0. Totals 13 5-15 35.
ELIZABETHTOWN (32)
A. Orban 4 2-4 10, M. Lonardi 2 2-2 7, E.
Forry 1 4-6 6, S. Pierson 3 0-1 6, R. Sweger
1 1-2 3, S. Arnold 0 0-0 0, B. Polites 0 0-2 0,
S. Ortiz-Kreiner 0 0-0 0. Totals 11 9-17 32.
Hershey............................... 9 5 12 9 35
Elizabethtown..................... 7 13 7 5 32
3-Point Goals C. Zugay 2, M. Miller 1,
R. Groves 1; M. Lonardi 1. Fouled Out
None.

Lanc. Catholic 65, Penn Manor 43

LANCASTER CATHOLIC (65)


K. Jefferson 10 5-6 25, L. Mills 7 2-4 16, C.
Scarff 3 4-6 10, A. Schreder 3 0-0 7, J. Breit
2 0-2 4, C. Rivera 1 1-2 3, C. Ricci 0 0-0 0, P.
Jacquis 0 0-0 0, L. Fritz 0 0-0 0, M. Hackman
0 0-0 0, H. Jones 0 0-0 0. Totals 27 10-20 65.
PENN MANOR (43)
A. Schriver 6 3-5 16, K. Levato 3 1-3 7, A.
Rowe 2 1-2 6, N. Greggs 2 1-3 5, S. Stackhouse 2 0-0 4, D. Heisey 1 1-1 3, E. Barley
1 0-0 2, M. Carroll 0 0-0 0, S. Wiker 0 0-0 0,
L. Wissler 0 0-0 0, A. Cannon 0 0-0 0. Totals
17 7-14 43.
Lancaster Catholic............. 21 21 15 8 65
Penn Manor........................ 4 11 9 19 43
3-Point Goals A. Schreder 1; A. Rowe 1,
A. Schriver 1. Fouled Out None.
JV Score: LC 32, PM 17
TRI-VALLEY

Juniata 63, Lanc. Country Day 21

LANCASTER COUNTRY DAY (21)


M. Ernst 5 2-4 12, E. Quan 2 0-0 4, S.
Schlageter 1 1-2 2, M. McDougall 1 0-0 2, S.
Eynon 0 0-0 0, M. Forman 0 0-0 0, V. Gardner 0 0-0 0, A. Ingram 0 0-0 0, M. Wynne 0
0-0 0, G. Zechman 0 0-0 0. Totals 9 3-6 21.
JUNIATA (63)
R. Duck 9 2-3 23, Jo. Swartz 7 3-4 20, Ju.
Swartz 4 1-1 9, G. Brosius 3 1-4 7, K. Lowrey
1 0-0 2, A. Myers 0 2-4 2, E. Shepps 0 0-0 0,
E. Clark 0 0-0 0, L. Dowling 0 0-0, H. Welfley
0 0-0 0, C. Zendt 0 0-0 0. Totals 24 9-16 63.
Lanc. Co. Day....................... 7 7 4 3 21
Juniata................................ 7 21 23 12 63
3-Point Goals R. Duck 3, Jo. Swartz 3.
Fouled Out none.

C10 THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2016


C10 THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2016

LNP | LANCASTER, PA
LNP III LANCASTER, PA.

BASEBALL

HAPPY IN NY

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Cespedes says staying with Mets always his preference


AP BASEBALL WRITER

NEW YORK Yoenis Cespdes says


he chose happiness over more dollars.
Of course, the lower offer was a $75
million, three-year contract that kept
him with the New York Mets.
Its not always about the amount of
money being offered, he said through
a translator Wednesday in his first
public comments about his Jan. 22
decision. Its about wanting to be in a
place you want to play in, that youre
happy in. And as you can see, this is just
what happened in that case.
Still, the slugging outfielder has the
right to terminate his contract after
one season and $27.5 million, then become a free agent once again.
Acquired from Detroit on July 31,
Cespedes had 17 homers and 44 RBIs
for the Mets, helping the team reach its
first World Series since 2000. Fans at
Citi Field likely expect him to keep up
that pace.
From my first day when I came last
season after the trade, that very first
day ... the fans showed incredible support, my teammates were so welcoming, as well as the full Mets organization, Cespedes, 30, said. And I think
that was what encouraged me to make
the decision to come back.
New York treated Cespedes as a newly signed player, showing video highlights of his performance last season
after he entered the news conference.
Chief operating officer Jeff Wilpon
and general manager Sandy Alderson

presented Cespedes with his No.


52 jersey, which fit snugly over his
street clothes. The Mets gave him
his own hashtag: GotYoBack.
Since starting his big league career
in 2012, the Cuban star played for
Oakland, Boston and Detroit before
landing with the Mets.
Washington was among the clubs
that pursued Cespedes and was said
to have offered a $110 million, fiveyear deal that included deferred
money.
There were several teams that
wanted to give me five years, Cespedes said.
Cespedes was driving in his Florida farm when his agent told him the
deal with the Mets had been agreed
to.
It was a big relief for me, he said.
Cespedes is expected to see time
in center as well as left, relegating
Juan Lagares to mostly a backup
and late-game defensive role. With
Cespedes return, Alderson said
Michael Conforto could be used in
right field during spring training.
Playing time could be limited for
outfielder Alejandro de Aza, signed
as a free agent. While the Mets
havent pursued a possible trade,
Alderson said interest from other
teams during spring training was
conceivable.
Were happy to have another lefthanded hitter that hits well against
right-handed pitching, and well figure it out, Alderson said.

Pirates get Phils Biddle

Left-handed pitcher was 1st-round draft pick in 2010


STEPHEN J. NESBITT
PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE

The Pittsburgh Pirates, a haven for


rebuilding pitchers, added to their roster another reclamation project today
by acquiring rehabbing left-hander
Jesse Biddle from the Philadelphia
Phillies in return for right-handed
starter Yoervis Medina, who was outrighted off the 40-man roster last week.
Biddle, 24, is a former first-round
draft pick whose his career was stalled
by various injuries, the latest of which
required Tommy John ligament-replacement surgery in October. Given
a typical recovery time of 12 to 18
months, Biddle will not be ready to
pitch during the 2016 season.
This wasnt a move made to benefit
the 2016 club, Pirates general manager Neal Huntington said. This is a
move made to benefit us three years
down the road.
The Pirates designated right-hander
A.J. Schugel for assignment to make
room for Biddle on the 40-man roster.
Biddle was drafted 27th overall in
2010 after starring at Germantown
Friends High School in Philadelphia.
The hometown boys dreams of playing
for the Phillies were dealt a final blow
last week when he was designated for
assignment, and now hes been traded
away.
Huntington called the move an upside play that could pay off down the

road should Biddle return to form.


The Pirates, like many teams, saw
Biddles potential as a young prospect. Their aim now is to help him
realize that potential to become a
quality major-league starter.
Biddle, who has worked exclusively as a starter, long looked to be on
a sure path to the big leagues. From
2012 to 2014, he jumped up the
MLB.com prospect rankings from
No. 78 to No. 61 to No. 53 before he
was derailed by the whooping cough
and a hailstorm, among other mishaps and maladies.
In May 2014, Biddle was driving
through Reading when a hailstorm
swept overhead. He suffered a concussion after his back windshield
shattered and, while he stepped out
of the car to run for cover, he was
hit in the back of the head by a hailstone. His next five starts at Class
AA Reading: 0-5 with a 9.82 ERA.
Biddle was sent to extended spring
training, and he finished the year
with a 4.60 ERA in 19 starts between
rookie ball and Class AA. That was
after hed spent the full previous
season at Class AA Reading, where
he posted a 3.64 ERA at age 21.
Last year, Biddle opened the year
with Class AA Reading, where he
went 7-2 with a 5.13 ERA, then made
nine starts for Class AAA Lehigh
Valley, going 2-4 with a 6.25 ERA.

GOLF

Ko is 4 back after her 1st round of year


OCALA, Fla. (AP) Top-ranked Lydia Ko shot a 3-under 69 on Wednesday
in the Coates Golf Championship in
her first round of the season, leaving
her four strokes behind leader Ha Na
Jang.
Ko, 18, closed with a birdie on the par5 18th, her fourth birdie on the back
nine on the Golden Ocala course that

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

features some tributes to holes at


Augusta National, St. Andrews and
others.
Ko tied for second last year in Ocala to reach No. 1 in the world ranking, and went on to win five times
and take the Race to the CME Globe
and LPGA Tours points-based player of the year award.

LEGAL NOTICES

such forty (40) days.


LCSWMA hereby reserves
the right, which is understood
and agreed to by all Bidders,
to reject any and all Bids and
to waive any omissions, errors, mistakes, defects, or irregularities in any Bid at its
sole discretion.

iPhone 5 and a blue 8GB


iPod touch from Richard Martin Quinn and Allison G. Don
on August 26, 2015 at 437
North Queen Street, Apartment #3, Lancaster, Lancaster County, Pennsylvania.
Any claimants to the
$275.00 U.S. currency, silver
LG Verizon cell phone, red
LG Verizon cell phone, black
LG Verizon cell phone, green
iPhone 5 and a blue 8GB
iPod touch are hereby directed to file a claim with the
Lancaster County Court of
Common Pleas under Docket
No. CI-15-09645 and send a
copy of said claim to the Office of Attorney General, 106
Lowther Street, Lemoyne,
Pennsylvania 17043, Attn:
Jason A. Lambrino, Deputy
Attorney General.
If no claim is filed on or before 30 days from the date of
the second publication of this
notice, the $275.00 U.S. currency, silver LG Verizon cell
phone, red LG Verizon cell
phone, black LG Verizon cell
phone, green iPhone 5 and a
blue 8GB iPod touch shall be
summarily forfeited to the
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, Office of Attorney General.
This notice is published in
accordance with the Controlled Substances Forfeitures Act, an Act of June 30,
1988, Act No. 1988-79, 42
Pa. C.S.A. Section 6801 et
seq.

CASTING OF LOTS FOR


BALLOT POSITION
GENERAL PRIMARY
April 26, 2016
Please be advised that the
casting of lots for positions
on the ballot for the April 26,
2016 General Primary, will be
conducted by the Lancaster
County Board of Elections located in the Lancaster
County Government Center,
150 North Queen Street, Lancaster, PA in the Voter Registration and Elections Office,
Suite 117, 1st floor on
Wednesday, February 24,
2016 at 3:00 P.M. All individuals involved in the drawing
will be mailed a notification
prior to the drawing.
For failure to pay rent, the
following property will be sold
at Public Sale by competitive
bidding starting on February
2, 2016, and ending February
16, 2016, at 10:00AM.
By LancoMini-Storage Center at
www.storagetreasures.com.
Items sold as is:
Randall Chapman
739
Caprice Gray
773
Thomas Rayburn
538
Maria Mercado
377
Stephanie Jenkins
535
Jose Rodriguez
810
Jose Rodriguez
811
Jeanette Medina
736
Miguel Torres
929
Nathalie Tejada
913
INVITATION TO BID
LANCASTER COUNTY
SOLID WASTE
MANAGEMENT
AUTHORITY
FREY FARM LANDFILL
TRUCK SCALE
REPLACEMENT PROJECT
The Lancaster County Solid
Waste Management Authority will receive sealed bids online for the Frey Farm Landfill Truck Scale Replacement
Project. Sealed bids shall be
submitted online via the
PennBid Program until
Thursday, March 3rd at 2:00
PM.
The Project generally includes: Removal of the existing outbound truck scale and
scale furnishings; supply and
install a new full bridge truck
scale in accordance with the
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania standards for commercial use truck scales, including concrete scale deck, load
cells and all furnishings and
appurtenances; and modifications to existing concrete
approach ramps.
All bid documents and project details are available at no
cost
at
PennBid
www.PennBid.net
Each Bid must be accompanied by a certified check,
bank cashiers check, or bid
bond in the amount of 10% of
the Bid total. No Bid may be
withdrawn within ninety (90)
days after Bid opening, and
the Owner shall award a contract or reject all Bids on or
before such ninety (90) day
period. It is the Owners intent to begin construction at
the earliest possible date after award of a contract.
The Owner reserves the
right, which is understood
and agreed to by all Bidders,
to reject any and all Bids and
to waive any omissions, errors, mistakes, defects, or irregularities in any Bid at its
sole discretion.
INVITATION TO BID
LANCASTER COUNTY
SOLID WASTE
MANAGEMENT
AUTHORITY
PURCHASE OF A
USED BACKHOE/LOADER
Sealed bids will be received
by the Lancaster County
Solid Waste Management
Authority (LCSWMA) until,
and will be publicly opened
and read, on Thursday,
March 3, 2016, at 10:30 A.M.
in LCSWMAs Office at 1299
Harrisburg Pike, Lancaster,
PA 17603 for the purchase of
a Used Backhoe/Loader.
Procurement Documents
may be obtained free of
charge from LCSWMAs Office, 1299 Harrisburg Pike,
Lancaster, PA, or at
www.lcswma.org/bids
Each Bid must be accompanied by a certified check,
bank cashiers check, trust
company treasurers check or
bid bond for 10% of the Bid
total. No Bid may be withdrawn until forty (40) days after Bid opening, and LCSWMA shall award the
Procurement Agreement or
reject all Bids on or before

KeepSafe Storage
145 Marble Drive
Lancaster, PA 17601
Pursuant to the laws of
Pennsylvania the property of
the party listed below for default of rental payment will be
sold, to satisfy owners lien,
on 02/18/16 starting at 11:00
AM. The contents will be sold
in their entirety.
James R Cravens Jr.
F10
Cristina Crippen
C01
Ed Cropper
A010
Nancy Darlington
D07
Tiffany A Fickes
B58
Michelle Ford
D26
Rose Gray
B29
Kimberly Herr
B12
Janice Kinard
I22
Harold Knight
B28
Keith N Pitt
K23
Douglas Robinson
F39
Nathan M Wallis
F22
NOTICE
IN THE COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS
LANCASTER COUNTY,
PENNSYLVANIA
No. CI-15-10365
COMMONWEALTH OF
PENNSYLVANIA V. $820.00
U.S. CURRENCY
PUBLIC NOTICE
The Commonwealth of
Pennsylvania did seize
$820.00 U.S. currency from
Jose Ernesto Vargas-Negron
on November 18, 2010 at the
Pennsylvania State Police
Barracks, 2099 Lincoln Highway East, Lancaster, Lancaster County, Pennsylvania.
Any claimants to the
$820.00 U.S. currency are
hereby directed to file a claim
with the Lancaster County
Court of Common Pleas under Docket No. CI-15-10365
and send a copy of said claim
to the Office of Attorney General, 106 Lowther Street,
Lemoyne,
Pennsylvania
17043, Attn: Jason A. Lambrino, Deputy Attorney General.
If no claim is filed on or before 30 days from the date of
the second publication of this
notice, the $820.00 U.S. currency shall be summarily forfeited to the Commonwealth
of Pennsylvania, Office of Attorney General.
This notice is published in
accordance with the Controlled Substances Forfeitures Act, an Act of June 30,
1988, Act No. 1988-79, 42
Pa. C.S.A. Section 6801 et
seq.
NOTICE
IN THE COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS
LANCASTER COUNTY,
PENNSYLVANIA
No. CI-15-05353
COMMONWEALTH OF
PENNSYLVANIA V. $632.00
U.S. CURRENCY
PUBLIC NOTICE
The Commonwealth of
Pennsylvania did seize
$632.00 U.S. currency from
Tyler Alan Fry and Steven
Tyler Roth on Thursday, January 8, 2015 at 17 Cypress
Drive, Lititz, Lancaster
County, Pennsylvania.
Any claimants to the
$632.00 U.S. currency are
hereby directed to file a claim
with the Lancaster County
Court of Common Pleas under Docket No. CI-15-05353
and send a copy of said claim
to the Office of Attorney General, 106 Lowther Street,
Lemoyne,
Pennsylvania
17043, Attn: Jason A. Lambrino, Deputy Attorney General.
If no claim is filed on or before 30 days from the date of
the second publication of this
notice, the $632.00 U.S. currency shall be summarily forfeited to the Commonwealth
of Pennsylvania, Office of Attorney General.
This notice is published in
accordance with the Controlled Substances Forfeitures Act, an Act of June 30,
1988, Act No. 1988-79, 42
Pa. C.S.A. Section 6801 et
seq.
Notice is hereby given that
My Sisters Keeper Collective
filed articles of incorporation
on December 1, 2014. The
corporation is incorporated
under the Pennsylvania Nonprofit Corporation Law of
1988 to ensure that at-risk
girls have access to a highquality secondary school experience.
NOTICE
IN THE COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS
LANCASTER COUNTY,
PENNSYLVANIA
No. CI-15-09645
COMMONWEALTH OF
PENNSYLVANIA V. $275.00
U.S. CURRENCY, SILVER
LG VERIZON CELL
PHONE, RED LG VERIZON
CELL PHONE, BLACK LG
VERIZON CELL PHONE,
GREEN IPHONE 5 AND
BLUE 8GB IPOD TOUCH
PUBLIC NOTICE
The Commonwealth of
Pennsylvania did seize
$275.00 U.S. currency, silver
LG Verizon cell phone, red
LG Verizon cell phone, black
LG Verizon cell phone, green

Continued
Next Column

Continued
Next Column

LEGAL NOTICES

Reporters surround Mets outfielder Yoenis Cespedes on Wednesday at CitiField.


Cespedes agreed to a $75 million, three-year deal with the Mets last month.

RONALD BLUM

INFORMATION

LEGAL NOTICES

READ YOUR AD THE


FIRST DAY IT APPEARS

This newspaper will not be


responsible for more than one
incorrect insertion of any
advertisement.

NOTICE
IN THE COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS
LANCASTER COUNTY,
PENNSYLVANIA
No. CI-15-07583
COMMONWEALTH OF
PENNSYLVANIA V. $492.00
U.S. CURRENCY AND
LG FLAT SCREEN
TELEVISION
PUBLIC NOTICE
The Commonwealth of
Pennsylvania did seize
$492.00 U.S. currency and
LG flat screen television from
Michael Lemons and Kerr
Graham on December 17,
2013 at 120 North Market
Street, Apartment #2, Elizabethtown, Lancaster County,
Pennsylvania.
Any claimants to the
$492.00 U.S. currency and
LG flat screen television are
hereby directed to file a claim
with the Lancaster County
Court of Common Pleas under Docket No. CI-15-07583
and send a copy of said claim
to the Office of Attorney General, 106 Lowther Street,
Lemoyne,
Pennsylvania
17043, Attn: Jason A. Lambrino, Deputy Attorney General.
If no claim is filed on or before 30 days from the date of
the second publication of this
notice, the $492.00 U.S. currency and LG flat screen television shall be summarily
forfeited to the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, Office of Attorney General.
This notice is published in
accordance with the Controlled Substances Forfeitures Act, an Act of June 30,
1988, Act No. 1988-79, 42
Pa. C.S.A. Section 6801 et
seq.
Notice is given that the
Manheim Township School
District intends to seek approval of the Pennsylvania
Department of Education
(PDE) specific referendum
exceptions under Section
333 of the Taxpayer Relief
Act as amended by Act 25 of
2011.
Under the Act, the School
District may not increase its
millage rate for the 2016-17
fiscal year by more than 2.4%
unless the proposed increase
is approved pursuant to a
voter referendum, or the
School District qualifies for
an exception to the voter referendum. To provide a quality education program as reflected in the School Districts
2016-17 Preliminary, an increase greater than 2.4%
may be required to balance
the School Districts 2016-17
Final Budget.
In order to retain the ability
to enact the above increase
in the millage rate, the School
District intends to seek approval from PDE for the following referendum exceptions: Special Education 333
(f) (2) (v) Retirement Contributions 333 (n) The School
District will make use of these
referendum exceptions, in
whole or part, only if required
to balance the School Districts 2016-17 Final Budget.
A copy of the referendum
exception applications are
available for public inspection applications are available
for public inspection by any
resident at our District Office
located at 450 A Candlewyck
Road, Lancaster, PA on any
week between the hours of
9:00 a.m. and 3:30 p.m.
MANHEIM TOWNSHIP
SCHOOL DISTRICT
Board of School Directors
Jennifer Davidson
Board Secretary

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The worst year of the 1950 decade

COLLECTOR CAR CORNER


BY GREG ZYLA

: Greg, Ive read your


columns now for years
and enjoy all the stories
of you being a youngster in the
1950s. Being that you have said
many cars from the 1950 decade
were beautiful designs, you did
mention once that you thought the
1958 model year was the worst.
Can you explain further? Keep up
the fun columns. Sincerely, Gene
L., Illinois.

: John, what a story. JuA:


Gene, Ill sure try my best.
For
whatever
reason,
and following a wonderful year
of car design in 1957, most every
manufacturer in my opinion added
bulk, chrome, and even more weight
and then ushered in the beginning
of a n era that would quickly
get out offhand by 1960. So, yes,
1958 was indeed the worst design
year of the 1950 decade. From the
beautiful 1957 Chevy, 1957 Ford,
1956 Plymouth, 1953 Corvette, 1953
Buick Skylark, 1956 Continental,
1956 Studebaker Hawk, 1956
Mercury, 1956 Packard Caribbean
(and on and on), there were many
great designs that to this day are
highly sought collector cars.
These pre-1958 brilliant designs
led all car enthusiasts to really look
forward to 1958 model year with
much gusto.
Boy were we in for major
disappointment.
When the new 1958 models
arrived in late 1957 to much media
ballyhoo, low and behold some
of the most overgrown, chrome
boxes appeared at the new car
showings. Of the big three, (GM,
Ford, Chrysler) I feel General
Motors led the way with the poorest
of designs. The 1958 Pontiac and
Oldsmobile were not much to look
at, and the usually good looking
Buick wasnt too far behind but a

little better. Even the 1958 Chevy,


which was probably the best of the
GM bunch, looked nothing like its
predecessor beauty 1957 Chevy.
Ford, too, lost its way, but not
as much as GM. The 1958 Ford was
at least acceptable in looks, but
still nowhere near the 1957 models
in aesthetic approval. A major
downer was the Mercury, which
had already gained weight and
some odd appearances in 1957 as it
completely deviated from what Ive
always said was one of the best car
designs ever with the 1955 and 1956
Mercurys. For whatever reason,
everything seemed to say lets add
more weight and chrome to the
Mercury, box it off and even add a
backward window that opens and
some really weird tail lamps.
To this day, Im still puzzled by
the car designs f of 1958 and how
far they deviated from auto design
in 55, 56 and 57. Perhaps the
biggest eyesore was the new 1958
Lincoln, which grew to immense
proportions in all manners. As for
the all-new Edsel, its unique new
design wasnt nearly as bad since
there was nothing to compare it to.
Even the Thunderbird, which
made great impressions as a twoseater sports car from 55 through
57, fell to the 1958 design aw.
And, even though I do like the looks
of the 1958 Thunderbird, it was a
180-degree switch from a sporty
two-seater to a big, heavy fourseater. Ford marketing didnt seem
concerned.
Over at Chrysler, the n wars
began in earnest actually in 1957,
and then took off. By 1958 some
of the big wings ala Plymouth and
DeSoto were sitting in the dealer
showrooms and looking way
different than before. However,
of the big three manufacturers,
Id have to say the 1958 MOPARS
were the best looking, including the
Plymouth Belvedere that made it to
Hollywood fame as Christine and
those beautiful Chrysler 300s.

Studebaker and Packard, trying


to unite the two companies did just
the opposite, ruining both along the
way. Packard put out its nal model
in 1958 while Studebaker was
another story. Its 1958 models were
horribly dull and ugly, especially
the 1958 Studebaker Scotsman,
a feeble looking stripped down
car that ran zero to 60-mph in 21
seconds! Sales were atrocious,
and the Studebaker/Packard
nameplates were brought to their
knees. So, what did Studebaker do?
They stopped making Packards,
and took the horrible looking and
selling Scotsman, added all new
sheet metal and unique design
and prestothe 1959 Studebaker
Lark! The Lark went on to save the
company and put off bankruptcy
for a few more years! Packard?
Take a close look at that 1958
Packard Station Wagon and youll
easily understand how this once
prestigious mark came to an abrupt
end.
Rambler, meanwhile, wasnt
as bad. Since its previous
designs never won any awards
for ingenuity to begin with, the
1958 year was actually pretty
good. In a year when big and
ugly seemed to be the fashion
statement, Rambler motored along
with some decent designs and
today those 1958 Ramblers and
Ambassadors actually look pretty
good (especially compared to that
gargantuan 58 Lincoln).
Cant end without mentioning
a few more 1958 gems. The
1958 Corvette went from great
to excellent; the 1958 Cadillac
Eldorado Biarritz is another huge
winner, as is the 1958 Dodge D-500,
1958 Buick Limited long or short
wheelbase, and the 1958 Desoto
Adventurer.
Did I miss a gem or another
horrible design year of the 1950s?
Let me know your feelings and well
share with our readers.

This ad for the five 1958 General Motors vehicles featured the new Chevy,
Pontiac, Cadillac, Oldsmobile and Buick. None will ever win any special awards
for overall design, although the Cadillac and Buick, when properly equipped, do
attract collector attention. (Complements General Motors)

The two worst examples of design went to Studebaker with its 1958 Scotsman
and Lincoln, where the new 1958 model dropped jaws for the wrong reasons.
As for the Rambler, they werent anywhere near as bad for 1958. (Complements
former Studebaker Company, AMC and Ford Motor Company).
Greg Zyla is a
syndicated auto columnist

LEGAL NOTICES

LEGAL NOTICES

LEGAL NOTICES

LEGAL NOTICES

NOTICE OF PUBLIC
HEARING
Notice is hereby given that
the Penn Industrial Development Authority (the Authority) will hold a public hearing
on Tuesday, February 23,
2016, at the offices of the Authority located at 97 North
Penryn Road, Manheim PA
17545, at 9:00 a.m., prevailing time, to discuss providing
financing for the project in the
amount and on behalf of the
Applicant:
Applicant:Samuel S. & Marian F. Stoltzfus
Project Cost: $506,000
Maximum Principal
Amount of Tax Exempt Obligations to be Issued with
Respect to the Project:
$350,000
Location of Project: The
applicant will acquire 18.9
acres of agricultural land
and/or buildings for the purpose of operating a crop
farm to grow corn and soybeans at 3330 West Pequea Lane Gordonville,
Leacock Township, Lancaster County, Pennsylvania
Date, Time and Place of
Public Hearing: February
23, 2016 at 9:00 a.m., prevailing time at Penn Industrial Development Authority,
97 North Penryn Road,
Manheim PA 17545
Any and all persons in attendance will be afforded an
opportunity to comment on
the proposed loan of tax exempt rate proceeds. The
public hearing is held by and
on behalf of the Authority as
the Issuer of the financing,
and on behalf of the County
of Lancaster, Pennsylvania,
as the governmental unit on
behalf of which the Issuer
acts and as the governmental
unit in which the facilities to
be financed by the loan are
located, all as required by the
Internal Revenue Code of
1986, as amended.
This Notice is published in
accordance with the require-

ments of Section 147(f) of the


Internal Revenue code, as
amended.
PENN INDUSTRIAL
DEVELOPMENT
AUTHORITY
OFFICES OPEN FOR
NOMINATION
GENERAL PRIMARY
ELECTION
APRIL 26, 2016
The Lancaster County
Board of Elections
announces the following
offices open for nomination
for the General Primary to
be held April 26, 2016
President of the United
States 4 year term Vote
for One
United States Senator 6
year term Vote for One
Attorney General 4 year
term Vote for One
Auditor General 4 year
term Vote for One
State Treasurer 4 year
term Vote for One
Representative in Congress
Districts 7 & 16 2 year
term Vote for One
Senator in the General Assembly District 13 4 year
term Vote for One
Representative in the General Assembly Districts 13,
37, 41, 43, 96, 97, 98, 99,
100, 128, 129 2 year term
Vote for One
Delegate to the Democratic
National Convention 7th
District Vote for Eight (Four
Male and Four Female)
Delegate to the Democratic
National Convention 16th
District Vote for Five (Two
Male and Three Female)
Alternate Delegate to the
Democratic National Convention 7th District only Vote for One (Male)
Delegate to the Republican
National Convention 7th
District Vote for Three
Delegate to the Republican
National Convention 16th
District Vote for Three
Alternate Delegate to the
Republican National Convention 7th District Vote
for Three

Alternate Delegate to the


Republican National Convention 16th District Vote
for Three
Republican Committeeman
- All voting precincts - 2 year
term Vote for One
Republican
Committeewoman All voting precincts 2 year term
Vote for One
County Committee Nomination Petitions are available
from the Lancaster County
Board of Elections, 150 North
Queen Street, Suite 117,
Lancaster, PA. Please call
717-299-8293 for information. Nomination Petitions for
all other offices are available
from the Pennsylvania Department of State Bureau of
Elections, 210 North Office
Building, Harrisburg, PA. Petitions may be circulated and
filed January 26, 2016
through 5:00 P.M. February
16, 2016.

covered by an Act 1 referendum exception, a tax rate of


3.5% increase above the index might be required to balance the School District
budget for the next fiscal
year. The tax to be levied is
required to provide a quality
educational program as reflected in the School District
Preliminary Budget.
The School District intends
to seek approval from the
Pennsylvania Department of
Education as required by Act
1 for an exception(s) allowing
increase of the real estate tax
as reflected in the School
District Preliminary Budget
that is available for public inspection at the School District offices, 251 South Prince
Street, 3rd Floor, Lancaster,
Pennsylvania, and on the district website
(www.lancaster.k12.pa.us).
On written request by any
School District resident or
taxpayer, the School District
will provide a copy of the referendum exception application.
Mary Cunningham
Board Secretary

Continued
Next Column

Continued
Next Column

SCHOOL DISTRICT OF
LANCASTER
Preliminary Budget Notice
Act 1 Referendum
Exception Notice
Notice is given that the Proposed Preliminary Budget for
the General Fund of the
School District of Lancaster
for the 2016-2017 fiscal year
is available for public inspection at the School District offices, 251 South Prince
Street, 3rd Floor, Lancaster,
Pennsylvania, and has been
adopted at a regular school
board meeting on Tuesday,
January 19, 2016.
Pursuant to Act 1, the
Pennsylvania Department of
Education publishes an index
percentage applicable to the
School District. The school
district real estate tax increase for the next fiscal year
is limited to the index of 3.5%
unless the proposed tax rate
is approved by voters pursuant to a referendum or the
School District qualifies for
an Act 1 exception. As a result of special circumstances
Continued
Next Column

MOVING?

Make some cash in the process.


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use as you're cleaning could
make you some $$$.
Sell them in the

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Sound good?
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[email protected]

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Prepared by
the Classied Department

AUTOMOTIVE
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Vehicle Financing/
Leasing
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Vehicles
Parts/Access.
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Construction
Cars/Trucks Wanted

CARS FOR SALE

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

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

STUFF
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HOUSEHOLD
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NEW!

CLASSIC/SPECIALTY
VEHICLES
Need to move fast, make
space, or get rid of junk? We
do it for you, for free. Foreclosure's estate's anything
we got it and we gut it. Call
717-799-4998 EXCLUSIVE
FREE JUNK PICKUP

RECREATION

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

CARS/TRUCKS WANTED
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Swap your stuff for FREE


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

C12 THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2016

LNP

III

LANCASTER, PA.

BARGAIN COUNTER
New items added daily!

BARGAIN COUNTER

1 mobility scooter, good batteries $385 333-2209


Maytag wash/dry $350 4190933
Desk chair black print like
new $20 285-3620
Mobility wheelchair, good
batteries $385 333-2209
GE fridge $200 419-0933
Storage shed 12x12 $385
333-2209
Glasstop stove $250 4190933
IKEA Full, bed with mattress
& box spring. $300.00 717682-6065

BARGAIN COUNTER
UNDER $150

Cosco 17 alum ladder $50


394-4544
Iron hook for outside with
lantern nice 442-5340
Amish year book 1954 $85
656-0457
Nice dress coat Mens/Lg
$25 615-4235
Love seat & recliner, tan gd
cond $149 278-2584
Upright player piano $50
285-5489
Bissell rug shampooer used
1X $45 299-1566
GE microwave $50 419-0933
Brass oval carved table 31.5
x 21.5 $100 892-7325
Rubbermaid garden tractor
cart $125 717-475-7631
Storm door commercial 80
x36x1 brown $50 572-9159
Toyota Tacoma 2011 front
rear schocks $70 723-0485
CIVIL WAR original ART Antietum $149 717-293-8141
Ice skates mens size 9&11
$5/$10 872-2246
Ford grill fits 90s F150 $30
687-0942
Craftsman 6x48 belt sander
$50 917-3068
Wooden childs large toy box
$40 725-7536
S1m 115A hand grinder $20
653-4385
King quilt, Bl/Whi, 4 matching
pillows. $60. (717) 355-0674
Marshall 2X12 speaker cabinet $149 397-4607
2 rockers $75ea 209-0081
Tobacco scale with 8lb
weight old $30 537-5196
7 metal toy tractors wagons
trucks $50 336-3211
Blk 2 pc faux leather w/ ottoman $75 (717) 299-9382
Oakley thump sunglasses.
128mlb. $100. 717-418-0095
Amana Refrig full size Bisque
ex $100.00 717-442-5001
WWII German Armor print
$145 717-293-8141
1/4 pint R.R. milk bottle $25
553-2980
Good old Craftsman tablesaw $50 466-1601
Orange and black hunting
coat sz 44 $40 653-4385

BARGAIN COUNTER
UNDER $150

BARGAIN COUNTER
UNDER $150

BARGAIN COUNTER
UNDER $150

BARGAIN COUNTER
UNDER $150

BARGAIN COUNTER
UNDER $150

True Love Lasts dating book,


never read, $7, 560-8736
Computer desk 4 wide 5
high $25 553-2980
Futon sofa bed (metal) w/ 3
covers $25 (717) 299-9382
4 cherry wooden table chairs
great cond $120 442-3301
Extension table oak $145
687-7659
Cast iron hog trough 5ft long
$75 786-0779
Bow back chair thick pine
wood/stain $10 464-3864
81 donruss set w/ raines
rookie $35 341-0796
Self-cleaning lint brush $5
799-6391
Eagles football tree carving
$60 203-1375
25 Various Vintage Post
Cards $25 717-314-8575
Pull out sofa bed $100 8080675
Burpee Seed packets $1
872-6945
Paper shredder $25 4661601
15 cast iron bell with 7ft post
$200 656-0457
Penske Racing Fleetwood
lght switch plate $5 823-1715
Ladies green leather stadium
coat large $39 484-4687
3 wooden walnut frames
8x10 NIB $25 392-2211
Raleigh bicycle like new
Mens $80 468-3020
Whirlpool Refrigerator, works
well. $135. (717) 327-9939
Homedics Infrared heat hand
massager $15 799-6391
Community silverware plated
12 pl setting $10 615-6287
Clipper Ship Original art oil
$135 717-293-8141
lightweight 15x18x29 metal
file cab $5 299-1566
3 storage racks with lots
hardware $40 336-3211
George brett louisville wood
bat $25 725-7536
Vera Bradley purse $25 309-0228
Tree branch trimmer (L/H).
$30 OBO. (717) 808-5385
Disneys Treasury Childrens
Classics books $5 464-3864
Bemis humidifier excellent
condition $35 951-3406
Bumper pool table 5 Q stks
3x4 $105 426-2820
Kenmore gas dryer. $110.
(717) 418-0095.
Longboard 42 inch good condition $30 560-8736
1907 Indian head penny excel cond $25 553-2980
2 maple swivel chairs 24 $45
572-4444
1988BB topps complete set
still wrapped $45 406-9031
Amflyr electric switches 2pr
works $79 426-2820
Target brand corner nook din.
set $149 3428671

Oak corner TV cabinet NIB


glass doors $65 394-9606
Homedics thera selct kneading massager $30 799-6391
2 T605 trojan battery 6volt lk
new $100ea 687-6185
Solid wood bookshelf. great
condition. 54 W x 48 H.
$90. 717-201-5780
Realistic receiver STA-80 lrg
speakers $75 203-1375
17pieces off-white parchment
11x17 NIB $25 392-2211
Town & Streets play table $35
687-6185
Mens Blk leather coat. Sz 42,
$39 OBO. (717) 299-0550
7 hallmark deluxe photo albums NIB $4e 394-9606
Hummel bookends 30s 717823-8652 $50
Vera Bradley purse - small
$20 717-309-0228
Player piano rolls $50 2855489
Antique grn nursery rocker
$75 (717) 687-7987
Two 6 plastic folding tables
$20ea 466-1601
Antique small student desk
$60 808-0675
1991 wax andy griffith show
unopen 36pk $15 330-7660
Gray mailbox, like new, gd.
cond. $15. (717) 4455405
Mens Totes thermo winter
boots size 9 $10 284-2306
Dark blue umpire shirts xl
$10ea 367-6384
Roller skates ladies rink $20
872-2246
Great grey fur coat 16 shoulder 44 long $90 461-1848
Ben hogan golf cart bag
w/cover $20 413-4158
Antique wooden cigar mold
4 3/4x22 $25 656-0457
Toyota Tacoma wheel locks
never used $10 598-5002
5 gallon food grade buckets
$3ea 786-8711
Lay-z-boy rocker recliner
brown $100 464-1696
Sewing mach cabinet cherry
4 drawer $50 336-7949
VNTG Cattiva velvet paisley
coat $25 394-4544
Crib mattress $15 464-2537
Iron Covered Wagon old 717823-8652 $50.00
Concertmte kybrd 100 sonds
adptr stnd $25 898-7043
Cabinet, 2 drawers with top
drawer. $65. (717) 327-9939
Daybed, twin, metal frame
$40 314-7699
8 ft flourescent light. $50.
(717) 335-3717.
Cowwbian vice 4.5 $25 6254601
Maytag side by side fridge
ice/water $125 653-0077
Cub cadet snow plow 42
3000 series $149 917-3068
1963 Dec. 8, 9 Intel papers
Oswald $5 569-2519

Full & queen size box spring


& matts $120 442-3301
Heater large room very nice
oak $100 firm 537-5196
Reading railroad history book
go pages 1958 $10 715-7339
8 hallmark deluxe photo albums all $30 394-9606
Nursing pillow Boppie $10
872-6945
Tire all weather 17 $80 717808-4527
Mounted 1,000 piece puzzles
var scenes $10ea 397-4506
Cane seated chairs.(4). Nice,
$15ea. (717) 681-3340
Electric crockpot, lifts out,
clean $8 336-4229
Womens long black leather
coat xl $50 892-7325
1961 chevrolet catalog all
models $35 484-706-2175
Faux fur coats med, lg. never
used $30 872-6236
NIB Epson Stylus NX110
printer $75.00 333-3982
Ski boots exc. condition $35
687-7659
Rookie cards favre aikmen
iverson $5-15pc 406-9031
1903-S Morgan silver $1 key
date. $90. (717) 299-0550.
Various Disney Framed Pin
Sets $25/each 314-7699
19 different pez dispensers
$20 725-7536
White wooden baby dry sink
2 shlvs $50 442-3301
Topps single packs 84-89 35
ct. with gum $65 406-9031
Lasko tower heater $20 5724444
Straight Talk About Teen Dating book, nv re, $7, 560-8736
Kitchen chair, green, good
shape. $20 (717) 4455-405
Boy scout brass bugle rexcraft old $50 7157339
1977 Star Wars stickers/card
lot. 717-823-8652 $50
Mounted 1,000 piece puzzles
var scenes $10ea 397-4506
Craftzman, 2.3cu in 2 cycle
chainsaw. NIB. 445-5405
Pressure canner, 7qts, like
new. $45. (717) 681-3340
Hoosier sugar bin w/brackets
$140 872-6236
1963 JFK death 5 Lanc. papers $10 569-2519
Ford car wrenches 4 old $25
715-7339
Baseball, Football, Basketball cards var $40 615-6287
1927 New Holland Fair prize
ribbon $15 397-4506
Grey umpire pants 38x32
$5ea 367-6384
Medium size acoustic guitar
jay nice $35 397-4607
2 good 5gal. kerosene cans
$7 336-4229
All in one color laser printer
$50 808-0675
Mens H&H cycle boots used
size 10 $10 284-2306

Ladies full length cashmere


coat beige $50 293-1765
TV 11-inch screen. Works
well $10 733-0229.
Chevy ramhorn exst. momifolds. $50 484-706-2175
Large yard flag Valentines
Day $3 464-3864
Like new Bello TV stand
$25 314-7699
Girls toddler bed w/ mattress.
$30 OBO. (717) 808-5385.
Hush Puppy Mens shoes
size 8W $30 872-2246
Tires studs 17 $80 717-8084527
Blue toile drapes, valance,
topper $39 484-4687
Stainless pots & pans, with
lids. $7ea. (717) 355-0674
Floor lamp for sewing/needle
work $70 615-4235
x2 PT Cruiser wheels $75
824-9342
Beautiful jewlery all kinds
$3ea 442-5340
Handheld washboard mfg. by
columbus $12 786-0779
Fire HD6 kidss edition tablet
like new $80 687-6185
Sewing machine. Singer.
Portable. $35. 717. 681-3340
Coach messenger purse - blk
$40 309-0228
3 ceramic head 15-19 dolls
$25 299-1566
M/F NIB Pampers L size 25
in pack $5 442-5340
Snowmobile helmet circus
brand large $50 572-9159
Amflyr billboard whistle loud
works $42 426-2820
Sled, Flexible Flyer III, 55in,
old but good. $39 826-7587
Toyota Camry wheel locks
$10 598-5002
Trailer 4ftx6ft with title. $60
OBO. (717) 808-5385
PT Cruiser dash panel $75
824-9342
Valentines teddy bear, extra
large $10 464-2537
American flag coffin cover
exc. $29 484-4687
AndyJohns Lg reversible
capecoat $15 394-4544
1987 set w/ bonds palmiero
rookie $15 330-7660
Kenmore heavy duty elec.
dryer $110. (717) 418-0095
Galvanized tubs no.3 with
drop handles $10 786-0779
Quilt rack maple wood NIB
$25 615-4235
Wooden cabinet. $100. (717)
3279939.
Brown/WH alum trim coil
40x14 $35 687-0942
400k cp Hi-beam spotlight
12V $10 397-4506
Infant carrier Baby Bjorn $10
872-6945
Small tv with antenna $45
984-9632
10 Hess trucks $145 6265774

Rug loom $80 354-9422


Math textbooks 1988 Gr. 3-6
$5 569-2519
PIAA umpire jacket like new
xl $20 367-6384
1997 U.S. Mint Prestige Set
$125 717-314-8575
1937, 33 PA Hunting Lic. $45.
each 717-314-8575
Ladies L/XL sweatshirts &
sweaters $1ea 733-0229
GE stove $100 419-0933
Tire chains 67L small truck
size like new $30 537-5196
Kennedy model S20 machinist chest $50 572-9159
Sofa. $125. (717) 984-9632
6ft artificial figus tree & lights.
$10. (717) 355-0674
Keyboard stands var. types
singl/multi $10 898-7043
Hoover round w/joystick
$149 717-984-9632
1990 B Basketball factory set
w/Roenick rk $20 330-7668
Good 4qt. elec. icecream
freezer $10 336-4229
craftsman 12 wood bandsaw
stand $125 917-3068
26 neckties $1 each 4611848
1957 cadillac color catalog
$35 484-706-2175
Samsung VCR w/rem silver
$25 572-4444
2000sb mini autogrph helmet
kearse $35 341-0796
1964 JFK Silver 50c HiGrade $14. (717) 299-0550
King, Queen, and Twin comforters $15ea 461-1848
Soft small dog bed like new
$10 733-0229
Table/2Chairs 31x48 obl.
white $25 342-8671
Glass/wood/metal oblong tbl
48x18w $15 342-8671
Aluminum platform shop cart
5L $75 203-1375
NIBRichard Petty 1984 STP
car $40 615-6287
Pull out sofa bed $100 8080675
Sim 115A hand sander 1/5
hrs $53 653-4385

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Price and phone number
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291-8711

Music stands metal lightweight portable $3 898-7043


New goodyear wrangler mt/r
lt245/75R16 $60 687-0942
9 wooden walnut frames
11x14 NIB $25 392-2211

FREE ITEMS

Health Rider Exercise Machine Like New 917-0206


Pro Form Exercise Machine
Like New 917-0206

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.

Price

Name _______________________________________________
Address _____________________________________________
City ______________________________ Zip ______________
Phone ______________________________________________

Phone

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

PAYMENT ENCLOSED

YOUR AD WILL BEGIN THE NEXT AVAILABLE DAY

MEDICAL MERCHANDISE

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
[email protected]
for more information.
If you are a non-prot and
interested in listing your
volunteer opportunities in
the LNP Volunteer Corner
Please Contact Alexandra:
[email protected]

GOLDEN LIFT CHAIR:


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

MISC. FOR SALE


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

READ YOUR
AD THE
FIRST DAY IT
APPEARS
This newspaper will not be
responsible for more than
one incorrect insertion of
any advertisement.

WANTED TO BUY
Volunteer Corps

lending a hand

Wanted:Abner Zook or
Aaron Zook 3-D ART.
Fair price paid in cash
215-257-9286

PET PLACE
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

DOGS

DOGS

German Shorthair Pointer


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

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.

Maltipoo pups, shots and


wormed. Red/Tan w/ white
markings. Very cute, family
raised $925 610-273-7362
Redish Mini Labradoodles:
Shots, wormed, very cute &
adorable! Vet checked. $875
cash only. 717-529-0894

Take Advantage Of Our


Low-Low Rates
in Bargain Counter
Call Us With Your Ad Today!
Email
[email protected]

CATS
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

Persian Kittens
cfa reg,shots.
717-569-6226
Selling a pet?
New lower priced pet ads
available, 4 lines of
text with photo!
7 days $35, 14 days $50
Call 291-8711

MISCELLANEOUS PETS
Miniature potbelly piglets
cute and energetic looking
for a loving home asking
$200 Omar 548-4235 x1

LNP

III

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2016 C13

LANCASTER, PA.

PROFESSIONAL

PROFESSIONAL

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

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

GENERAL HELP

GENERAL HELP

Newspaper Motor
Routes Available
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

V922

$1,150

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

Call For More Info

291-8611

MEDICAL/ DENTAL
Family needs L.P.N. or R.N.
to join a team caring for
a physically disabled,
vent-dependent person

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
[email protected]
READ TODAYS
AUTOMOTIVE SECTION
OF THE NEWSPAPER
TO FIND GREAT BUYS
ON NEW & USED CARS

Pleasant Suburban Home


Flexible Hours
Excellent pay - paid weekly

MECHANICAL/
TRADES
AUTO TECHNICIAN FT.
Must have PA inspection,
emissions license & tools.
Please apply at
Lancaster Fleet & Auto,
1209 Marshall Ave. Lanc., PA
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
[email protected]
NEW IN TOWN?
GET ACQUAINTED
FIRST WITH THE
CLASSIFIED PAGES
OF THIS NEWSPAPER!

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
[email protected].

Looking for a NEW job?


NEW positions added daily
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

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

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
Expd Apartment
Maintenance Tech.
Carpentry, Light
plumbing/electrical
Email resume:
[email protected]
Or call (717) 299-1318
EXP
HELP:
Plowing,
snowthrowing, shoveling.
Excellent pay. 717-293-5094

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

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
/INVESTMENTS
Manheim 2 Bldgs 1960SF. 1
Sty. Rapho Twp. Nr Bypass.
$9,600/yr. Rltr: 717-808-1942

OFFICE/BUSINESS
PROPERTY
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

SERVICES
LEGAL SERVICES

ASPHALT PAVING

HOME IMPROVEMENTS

DIVORCE $219 Total


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

Allied Asphalt Paving,


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

Home Improvement Specialist. All types, Basement finishing/Flooring. 30yrs exp.


Quality is our goal!
PA 044021 610-842-0921
Lancaster Online
www.lancasteronline.com
Your Local Connection

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 IMPROVEMENTS

HAULING

MOVING/STORAGE

Need a quality built


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

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

For Residential & Commercial Hauling & Waterproofing.


Contact: 717-587-4981

39.95
Write special love notes for your
loved ones and well publish them in
n Sund
Su
brua 14, 2016!
bruary
LNP on
Sunday, February

#1

Your note(s)
note(
te(s)
(s) will
wi also
allso
lso
so be displayed
displaye
yed on
Lanc
c
casterOnl
Online
e whe
where
e vi
visitors wi
willl
LancasterOnline
vot
ote
te
e for their ffavo
vorites in 3 categories
ca
s:
vote
favorites
categories:

#2

ROMANTIC

#3

#4

#8

ADD A PHOTO!
Only $1.50/day private party or $5.00/day commercial
291.8711 or email [email protected]

HUMOROUS
H
S
* Written
n

#6 #7

#5

#9

CHILD-LIKE
CHILD-LIK
D-LIKE*

to or from a chi
child
hil

One
ne lucky
lu ky note writer
wri r will be
rand
dom
omllly sselected
electe
el
ted
d tto
ow
in a
randomly
win
$
50 gift certifi
ficate
cate to the newly
remodeled Pressroom Restaurant!
Order your love note(s) now!
Online voting opens soon and the
contest runs through February 10.

#10

Submit you
your
ur love note one of three ways:
1)
to our office at
1) Bring your
you
ur form
f
8 West King
Kin Street, Lancaster.
2 note 2) Email yo
your
ou information to
$
Rachel,
[email protected].
happy@
@
This love note is for you
3)
3) Mail yyour
o form and payment to:

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

SIZE

2 AD

4 AD

LNP M
MEDIA GROUP, Inc.
n: Valentines
Attn:
Attn
PO
O Box 1328
Lancaster,
Lan
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.

BRIEF MESSAGE ________________________________________________________

_________________________________________________________________________________________________
ADD ART ELEMENTS (LIMIT 2):

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

YOUR NAME __________________________________________________

PHONE _______________________________

ADDRESS ____________________________________________________

CITY / STATE / ZIP _____________________

CHECK (payable to LNP MEDIA GROUP, Inc.) OR MONEY ORDER

OR CHARGE:

MC VISA DISCOVER AMEX

CREDIT CARD # ________________________________________________ EXP. DATE _______ SECURITY CODE ______


SIGNATURE ___________________________________________________ TODAYS DATE _______________________

PARTICIPATION DEADLINE: MONDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 2016

RENTALS

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

4 note

TRANSPORTATION

Current PA License and


experience with trach/vent
Must be able to perform ADLs
Please Send Resume to
[email protected]
or
P.O. Box #9057
Lancaster, PA 17604

l
a
i
c
e
p
s
a
Publish
!
e
t
o
n
e
v
lo

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
24 S. PRINCE ST. 1 & 2
BDRS. $595-675., incl. H,
H/W, WST.+ SD 394-0362

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

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/CITY

n S. ANN ST - 5BR home


in Lancaster, new windows,
new paint, excellent condition. $49,700 ML244156
n RODNEY ST - Beautiful
large det. home completely
redone, only 6 homes on the
block, Rodney Park, new
kitchen w/granite & SS appliances, refinished softwood
flrs, new windows, lrg yard,
gas heat/hot water. $129,900
ML244905
n N MARKET ST - Nice opportunity in the LGH District.
4BR semi with gas heat, only
a short walk to all the city has
to offer! Great investment or
owner occupied opportunity!
$74,900 ML244566

HOMES/CITY
736 E. Marion St-3Br-$759
341 S. Broad St-3Br-$779
3Br-417 Fairview-3Br-$899
Gearhart RE 509-1444
West End (2nd st)well cared
for 3 BR, Hdwd floors-CAC:
$900 LancRE 399-8010
PLACE YOUR BARGAIN
WHERE THE BUYERS
ARE. ADVERTISE IT
IN THE CLASSIFIED
ADS! 291-8711

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

PUT A PRICE IN YOUR


AD AND WATCH THE
RESULTS.
PLACE YOUR CLASSIFIED
AD NOW!
CALL 291-8711

HOMES FOR SALE/


SUBURBS
Penn Manor
Century Old 2.5 Story
Approx. 2,100 sq. ft. 3 bdrms,
1.5 baths, recent updated
kitchen, formal DR, LR &
Fam Rm. Pocket doors, natural woodwork, gas heat &
mature shade. $187,900.
Chris S. Habecker
Real Estate. 872-5407

REAL ESTATE WANTED


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

FIND
YOUR
DREAM
HOME
IN THE
CLASSIFIED

REAL
ESTATE

C14

NFL

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2016

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

SUPER BOWL 50

SECURITY

Its a family tradition

Officials: No
credible threat
to Super Bowl

Broncos punter wants a Super Bowl ring to add to the Colquitt collection
ARNIE STAPLETON

AP PRO FOOTBALL WRITER

SANTA CLARA, Calif. Broncos punter


Britton Colquitt always
knew that he would get
a Super Bowl ring someday. The only question
is whether itll be bequeathed to him or bestowed upon him.
Britton, brother Dustin
of the Chiefs and their
father two-time Super
Bowl champion with the
Steelers Craig Colquitt
are the NFLs first family
of fourth downs.
Craig once sat the boys
down and told them
theyd each inherit one
of his Super Bowl rings.
Crickets. Of course,
they were watching cartoons.
Disappointed in their
lack of enthusiasm,
Craig retreated upstairs
to make lunch. Soon, his
youngest boy was tugging at his shirt.
So, Dad, Britton wondered, when are you going to die?
He really wanted that
ring.
Yeah, turns out he
could relate to the gold
and diamonds after all,
Craig said.
Dustin, 33, is in line to
inherit his fathers ring
from Pittsburghs win
over Dallas in 1979.
Britton, 30, will get his
fathers ring from Pittsburghs victory over the
Los Angeles Rams the
following year.
If the Denver Broncos
beat the Carolina Panthers in Super Bowl 50,
baby brother will be getting his hands on his own

JANIE MCCAULEY
AND PAUL ELIAS

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITERS

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Broncos punter Britton Colquitt speaks to reporters Wednesday in Santa Clara, Calif.

gaudy jewelry.
That would be pretty
nice, Britton said. It
would be worth a lot
more than my dads old
rings, too.
Britton figures his AFC
championship ring, the
consolation prize he
keeps in its case after
losing the Super Bowl
to Seattle two years ago,
is probably bigger and
more expensive than the
Super Bowl rings his dad
won, though certainly
not as valuable.
And just where does
dad keep his kids heirlooms?
With him, Britton
shot back incredulously.
The most braggadocios human being youll
ever meet. Hes walking
around: Hey, are you a

Steelers fan? You want


to see something?
When we went to
Pittsburgh in December,
oh, my gosh, I mean, he
was showing homeless
people on the street.
Flashing the first ring
on his left hand, the second on the right, a 1-2
punch that sends Steelers Nation into a tizzy.
Its gotten him in
trouble, though, Britton said. I think a year
ago, he actually lost it in
a restaurant. He was letting this group of guys
check it out and just kind
of forgot about it and
realized it was gone. So,
I think hes a little safer
with it now but he still
shows everybody.
Craig said he found it a
week later, jammed into

his luggage hed rolled


into the restaurant on
a business trip.
It was just like losing a child, Craig
said.
He doesnt play favorites with his kids
but he sure does when
it comes to his rings.
Thirteen is gaudy
and we beat the Dallas
Cowboys and I love to
show that off, he said.
Fourteen looks like a
very expensive class
ring, thats all. Super
Bowl XIII looks like a
Super Bowl ring. I like
the ring because Dallas was going to draft
me in the fifth round
and Pittsburgh took
me in the third round.
We never lost to the
Cowboys.

Lancaster Weather
TODAY

FRIDAY

46
28

41
24

SATURDAY

43
25

POP: 5%

POP: 5%

SUNDAY

POP: 15%
Partly sunny

Partly sunny

Wind: NW 8-16 mph

Wind: NW 7-14 mph

Wind: SSW 6-12 mph

Wind: NNW 6-12 mph

REGION

24HOUR TEMPERATURE RECORD

LANCASTER
Clouds and sunshine today. High
44 to 48. Winds northwest 8-16
mph. Becoming clear tonight. Low
26 to 30. Winds northwest 6-12
mph.

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
53/37
Ephrata
51/38
New Holland
53/39
Lancaster (last year)
27/15
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.
1.06
Month to date
1.11
Normal month to date
0.27
Month to date departure
+0.84
Year to date
4.50
Normal year to date
3.28
Year to date departure
+1.22
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

1.26
0.91
0.91
1.14
1.10
0.75
0.91
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

4.23
39.36

12.77
9.64

3.99
2.30

7.01

POCONOS
Clouds and sun today. High 41
to 45. Mostly cloudy and colder
tonight. Low 22 to 26. Colder
tomorrow.

AIR QUALITY
Todays forecast
300

500

Yesterdays readings
Main Pollutant
Particulates
Ozone

Ozone
9
39

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


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

Erie
35/26

POP: 20%
Intervals of clouds and
sunshine
Wind: E 6-12 mph

Bradford
34/20

Oil City
37/23

Scranton
45/27

New York City


Allentown
54/36
Pittsburgh
49/30
39/22
Philadelphia
Lancaster
52/35
Hagerstown
46/28
York
Morgantown
46/28
47/29 Wilmington
39/25
Martinsburg
Baltimore 51/32
Atlantic City
47/27
50/32
51/36
Washington
Cape
May
Forecasts and
51/34
48/35
graphics provided by
Rehoboth Beach
Shown is todays weather. Temperatures
AccuWeather, Inc.
are todays highs and tonights lows.
2016
51/36
Harrisburg
48/29

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

Seattle
51/43

Winnipeg
12/-3

HISTORY

Billings
41/29

Pacific winds usually regulate


San Franciscos climate. On Feb. 4,
1887, however, 4 inches of snow
accumulated.

Feb 8 Feb 15 Feb 22 Mar 1

LancasterOnline.com AccuWeather Forecast

Toronto
35/25
New York
54/36

Washington
51/34

Kansas City
43/22

Los Angeles
69/48

FRI
7:11 a.m.
5:28 p.m.
4:31 a.m.
2:44 p.m.
Last

Detroit
37/25

Chicago
32/22

SUN AND MOON


TODAY
Sunrise
7:12 a.m.
Sunset
5:27 p.m.
Moonrise
3:37 a.m.
Moonset
1:50 p.m.
New
First
Full

Montreal
39/17

Minneapolis
28/12

Denver
36/19

San Francisco
58/45

Atlanta
52/30
El Paso
51/27
Houston
59/33

Chihuahua
57/25

-10s

Rain
-0s

Showers
0s

10s

Snow
20s

SKI REPORT
New Trails
Base Snow Open

Flurries
30s

Ice
40s

Cold Front
50s

60s

Warm Front
70s

HONDRUAUTO.COM

80s

90s

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

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

0-0
29-49
36-36
35-35
36-60
24-48
24-36
0-0
30-50
36-36
30-40
42-42
28-48
36-48
40-40
40-60
6-12
40-44
30-30

0
23
16
22
36
34
21
2
25
20
16
20
33
23
54
22
6
25
26

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.

FRI

Hi/Lo/W

Hi/Lo/W

31/24/sf
52/30/pc
51/36/c
50/32/c
54/34/c
35/25/c
36/23/sf
32/22/pc
57/32/c
55/34/s
36/19/s
48/29/pc
82/69/s
54/37/s
69/48/s
43/25/s
57/39/s
54/36/c
80/49/t
52/35/c
64/41/s
39/22/sf
34/23/sf
58/45/pc
51/34/c

34/24/c
51/29/s
44/31/sn
46/26/s
36/30/sn
35/26/pc
39/24/s
32/25/pc
51/25/s
58/37/pc
36/18/pc
43/26/s
83/69/s
59/37/s
74/50/s
49/28/s
56/41/s
43/32/sn
63/54/s
46/29/sn
69/41/s
38/26/s
37/20/pc
60/48/pc
45/31/s

WEDNESDAY EXTREMES

Miami
80/65

Monterrey
66/37

T-storms

POP: 30%
Some sun with snow
showers possible
Wind: W 8-16 mph

Resort

Altoona
40/25

NATION

35
18

POP: 35%
Cloudy with a chance for
snow
Wind: NE 7-14 mph

Williamsport
Punxsutawney
46/28
Wilkes-Barre
37/22
47/28
State College
41/27

Butler
37/22

Source: Pennsylvania Department of


Environmental Protection

For up-to-the-minute weather, visit

38
23

POP: Probability of Precipitation

DELAWAREMARYLAND
Mainly cloudy today. A passing
shower at the Delaware coast;
cooler in the south and Maryland
panhandle. High 35 to 56.

0 50 100 150 200

38
26

POP: 10%

Sunshine

ALMANAC

Todays weather brought to you by: HONDRUAUTO.COM


MONDAY
TUESDAY
WEDNESDAY

44
22

Clouds and sunshine

60

SAN FRANCISCO
NFL security leaders
and top law enforcement
officials say there is no
credible threat to Super
Bowl 50.
Jeffrey Miller, NFL
senior vice president of
security, planned to walk
the perimeter of Levis
Stadium again Wednesday and he estimates
its approximately 3 to 4
miles around the facility in Santa Clara where
Sundays Super Bowl will
be played between Carolina and Denver.
Miller said he is satisfied with the collaborative effort between local, state and federal law
enforcement agencies
to handle any possible
issues, including terrorism of any kind.
It gives the NFL a
great deal of confidence
in the safety of our premiere event, our teams
and our fans, Miller said
at a news conference
Wednesday. I can speak
for Commissioner (Roger) Goodell in saying that
we are deeply appreciative of the leadership,
resources and attention
to detail put forth by our
public safety partners.
Officials have learned
from recent attacks in
Paris and San Bernardino, California.
Every year is different. The world situation,
the threat picture is different every February,
said Homeland Security

Secretary Jeh Johnson.


We are, with the NFL,
with our federal partners, and state and local law enforcement,
focused on layered security, seen and unseen.
We learned from events
of the past but we have
to protect against events
of the future. So, we try
to anticipate things that
can happen from multiple different directions.
But were always informed by recent events
and what we see in the
world situation.
Johnson said intelligence has picked up no
troubling signals so far.
At this time we know
of no credible threat directed at Super Bowl 50,
Johnson said.
Miller said drones are
banned in the vicinity of
the $1.3 billion, 2-yearold Levis Stadium and
there are overall flight
restrictions.
Theyre
prohibited
even to possess one in
the parking area, for a
regular game, then secondly we have a temporary flight restriction in
place at all NFL stadiums for all of our games,
Miller said. So, thats an
aircraft.
The FBI opened a
multi-agency command
post last week about six
miles from Levis Stadium that will be continuously staffed through
Sunday. Still, authorities
are calling on the public
to notify officials if they
see anything out of the
ordinary or suspicious.

For the 48 contiguous states


Stationary Front
100s

110s

HARRISBURG

High:
Low:

88 at Brooksville, FL
-20 at Bryce Canyon, UT

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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