LNP: Still Keeping Secrets, Feb. 4, 2016
LNP: Still Keeping Secrets, Feb. 4, 2016
LNP: Still Keeping Secrets, Feb. 4, 2016
n 75 CENTS n LANCASTERONLINE.COM
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TWO SH
MULBEROWS AT
RY ART
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
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.
KARA NEWHOUSE
AND SUSAN BALDRIGE
[email protected]
[email protected]
TONIGHTS
PUBLIC
MEETING
SIGNING DAY
ALSO INSIDE
CAMPAIGN, page A5
HEALTH
Obama reaches
out to Muslims,
visits mosque
n Nation & World,
page A10
New screening
guidelines for
adolescents
make sense
SLOW START
INDEX
BUSINESS.................A8
CLASSIFIEDS.......... C10
COMICS..............B8, B9
Rubios momentum
OPINION.................. A18
PUZZLES............B6, B7
SPORTS......................C1
TV............................... B5
Encode: 677490120008 PU
46 28 H
Encode: 677490210006 PU
Encode: 677490310003 PU
TODAY'S WEATHER
6
77490
PAGE C14
12000 FORECAST,
8
77490
21000
LOCALLY OWNED 6
SINCE 1794
77490
A2
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
2.4.16
PA. LOTTERY
WEDNESDAY, FEB. 3
Night
Pick 2: 23
Pick 3: 333
Pick 4: 4984
Pick 5: 01587
Cash 5: 1219213442
Powerball: 262831
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Powerball: 23
Power Play: 3
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Pick 2: 25
Pick 3: 300
Pick 4: 1354
Pick 5: 14642
Treasure Hunt: 0206
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ASSOCIATED PRESS
TODAY IN HISTORY
n 2004: The
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
Whoopi Goldberg
Tonys host
James Corden
FILM FRAME/DISNEY/LUCASFILM VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
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]
Duff divorce
Hilary Duff
BIRTHDAYS
Alice Cooper, 68
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LOCAL
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
COUNTY PRISON
Wages
up for
guards,
workers
ACCIDENT
A3
CRIME
Teen hailed
as a hero is
now wanted
2-year contract
approved 3-0,
avoids arbitration
TOM KNAPP
JEFF HAWKES
A tractor-trailer hauling cattle caught fire on the Pennsylvania Turnpike near the
Kline Road overpass in West Cocalico Township on Wednesday morning.
FIRE
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
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
n Crime
INVESTIGATION
HEROIN CRISIS
TOM KNAPP
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BOGGS
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ORCHARDS
OUTLET
Mon.-Sat. 8-6
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CONTACT
General info: 291-8811,
P.O. Box 1328, Lancaster, PA
17608
Newsroom: Tips, stories and
announcements, 291-8622,
[email protected]
Advertising: 291-8800,
[email protected]
Classifieds: 291-8711,
[email protected]
ONLINE
Engagements, weddings
& anniversaries: 291-4957,
[email protected],
www.lancasteronline.com/
celebrations/create
Home delivery &
subscriptions: 291-8611,
[email protected]
E-Editions free to 7-day subscribers.
Please allow 3-5 business days to
discontinue for vacation.
LEGAL
Web: LancasterOnline.
com, LancasterOnline.
com/mobile
Newspaper Digital
Replica: LNPToday.com
Facebook, Twitter,
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Google+: LancasterOnline
Formerly known as
LNP and LancasterOnline.com are protected by federal
copyright statute. No part of this newspaper may be
broadcast, reproduced or republished in any form or by any
means without prior, written permission. The advertiser agrees
that LNP Media Group, Inc. shall not be liable by reason of any
error, omission and/or failure to insert an ad, or any part of an
ad, beyond liability for the value of the actual space occupied
by the ad or item in which the error, omission and/or failure
to insert occurred LNP Media Group, Inc. reserves the right to
reject or cancel any advertisement at any time.
A4
FROM PAGE A1
CIVIL RIGHTS
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
MU SPEECH:
IF YOU GO
n What: Presentation by
Continued from A1
Follow us on Twitter at
LancasterOnline
Monday:
Trending
Whats hip
around the county
www.yealyeyecare.com
A nurse practitioner at CVS on Lititz Pike administers a flu shot in this 2014 file photo.
Tuesday:
Business
Local business
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
flu H1N1, aka swine
flu, that is landing
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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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FROM PAGE A1
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
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
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
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Christie, Fiorina
Gov. Chris Christie of
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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women,
many of them independents or moderate Republicans some supporting abortion rights
have emerged as perhaps the most critical
swing vote in the primary next week.
Tara McCarthy, 49, of
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deluged by overtures
from the campaigns as
she tried to decide between Bush, a Republican, and Clinton, a
Democrat, based on the
issues she sees as most
relevant to women.
I am the unicorn, said
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717-412-7706 www.CommunityAid.net
***
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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Lancaster
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.
Continued from A1
Attorney at Law
Executive session
Daniel K. Taylor
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
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.
SESSION, page A7
FROM PAGE A6
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Session
Continued from A6
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.
ENVIRONMENT
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
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
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
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
Business
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RETAIL
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
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-
Medium: 1225.00-1350.00;
Common: 1100.00.
NEW HOLLAND
FEEDER PIGS
(USDA-PDA) New Holland
Sales Stables - New Holland,
PA, Pig Auction for Wednesday,
February 03, 2016 Receipts: 330,
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
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
Follow us on Twitter at
LancasterOnline
LNP
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Consistent low rate market leader!!!
APR
3.501
2.833
2.725
15 yr fixed
2.750
0.000
$0
20%
2.770
10 yr fixed
2.750
0.000
$0
20%
2.838
20 yr fixed
3.500
0.000
$0
20%
3.520
A+ BBB Rating,Local in all Pa. Mrkts.,Even. & Weekends !
15 yr fixed
3.125
0.000
$787
5%
3.194
30 yr FHA
3.375
0.000
$3675
3.5%
3.556
5/1 jumbo ARM
Call for Rates
Call about our 100% No MI Conventional Financing Program
20 yr fixed
15 yr fixed
3/1 ARM
Sebonic Financial
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20 yr fixed
15 yr fixed
10 yr fixed
5/1 ARM
0.000
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0.000
0.000
$695
$795
$995
$1195
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20%
20%
20%
20%
3.548
3.069
3.001
3.037
NMLS # / License #
NMLS# 141744
www.skyfinancialloans.com
866-223-9998
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LIC# 26143
www.approvalplusmortgage.com
866-503-1366
www.epnb.com
877-378-4413
866-503-8739
Bank
NMLS# 66247
LIC# 20829
http://bankrate.sebonic.com
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
Source: FactSet
D
52-week range
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
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
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
$24.62
*annualized
NAME
Syngenta
$399.14
D
52-week range
25
5.8
$61.70
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
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
0.0
600
45
CMG
50
20
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%
MRK
Source: Facebook
$4
2012
AP
FUND
Source: FactSet
16,000
A
EURO
$1.1089 +.0174
Close: 16,336.66
Change: 183.12 (1.1%)
10 DAYS
GOLD
$1,141.30 +14.00
18,000
15,680
CRUDE OIL
$32.28 +2.40
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
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
DIV
0.44
0.56
2.04
1.51
0.88a
...
...
1.20f
...
...
...
...
1.32
...
1.14a
0.56
0.60f
0.91
2.12f
...
2.26
1.96
1.20
1.50
0.60
...
Dividend Footnotes: a - Extra dividends were paid, but are not included. b - Annual rate plus stock. c - Liquidating dividend. e - Amount declared or paid in
last 12 months. f - Current annual rate, which was increased by most recent dividend announcement. i - Sum of dividends paid after stock split, no regular rate.
j - Sum of dividends paid this year. Most recent dividend was omitted or deferred. k - Declared or paid this year, a cumulative issue with dividends in arrears.
m - Current annual rate, which was decreased by most recent dividend announcement. p - Initial dividend, annual rate not known, yield not shown. r - Declared
or paid in preceding 12 months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximate cash value on ex-distribution date. PE Footnotes: q - Stock is a closed-end
fund - no P/E ratio shown. cc - P/E exceeds 99. dd - Loss in last 12 months.
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.
Audience members listen as President Barack Obama speaks at the Islamic Society of Baltimore on Wednesday.
BALTIMORE
President Obama
SOCIAL MEDIA
ASSOCIATED PRESS
NEW YORK
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.
STATE
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
NORRISTOWN
ASSOCIATED PRESS
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.
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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
tolerate it in any part
of life.
Asked about how
the investigation is
being
conducted,
the Democratic governor said the state
will work out the
best way to find out
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.
A11
717-625-1004
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William C. Haynes
Call (717) 299-5453 for a FREE consultation!
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A12
NATION/WORLD
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
hug
e se
lection
ce
servi
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
PRISON ESCAPE
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
$18 ea.
Ristenbatt.com
www.ChristmasTreeHill.com
$19.99 $22.99
NEW
SMELL
OF
SPRING!
$17
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
sible too, and his troubles came when he followed the wrong road.
Matthew Hay-Chapman
Boom, this
guy pops out
of the van.
I had seen
him in the
news. I said,
Thats the
guy thats
the Iranian
escapee!
2015
Online
OBITS
A13 THURSDAY,
FEBRUARY 4, 2016
LNP
| LANCASTER,
PA
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
3@Qn
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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
Offer your
condolences through
Facebook or Twitter
at
LancasterOnline.com/
Obituaries
Eugenia
Maru
Schrader
e
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A13
OTHER OBITUARIES
ON PAGE A14
Melvin S. Martin
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R. Fred Groff III, Supr. - New Holland Loren E. Bender, Supr. - Terre Hill
Breakfast at 8:30 amDoubleTree Resort
More than a
funeral service,
its about
sharing a life.
Luncheon at 11:30 am551 West Restaurant
717-394-5300
Mark C. DeBord
TM
OBITS
A14 THURSDAY,
FEBRUARY
4, 2016
A14 THURSDAY,
FEBRUARY
4, 2016
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Obituaries
Earl V. Rice
R
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.
N O E N T R A N C E & N O B U Y- I N F E E S
Millersville | 872-9100 Landisville | 898-4663
OAKLEAFMANOR.COM
Mary Jane
Smith
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Alvin J. Lantz
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Stairlift Sales,
Service & Rentals
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
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
AP TRAVEL EDITOR
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.
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.
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
MEDICINE
LAURAN NEERGAARD
TRANSPORTATION
A15
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
$1,000
REWARD
ARMED ROBBERY
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11
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.
2015
PA090575
Prison
Continued from A3
A tractor-trailer hauling cattle caught fire on the Pennsylvania Turnpike in West Cocalico Township on Wednesday morning.
Connect
with us
Jose E.
Jossy
Gonzalez
Carlos E.
Colon
Wednesday:
LancasterOnline
Food
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.
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
DEVELOPMENT
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
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
6 feet tall.
How is D
Dad???
SCORE A
TOUCHDOWN WITH
n LANCASTER: A 1999
THEFT CHARGES
n EAST LAMPETER
VANDALISM
n EAST LAMPETER:
OPINION
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
A17
National Conversation
CAL THOMAS
SYNDICATED COLUMNIST
RUTH MARCUS
THE WASHINGTON POST
A18
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Opinion
Beverly R. Steinman
Robert M. Krasne
Suzanne Cassidy
Chairman Emeritus
Executive Editor
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
n I propose no new
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
JONAH GOLDBERG
SYNDICATED COLUMNIST
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
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
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
A19
Unfair advantage
at Pa. Farm Show?
Names to consider
for unseen planet
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.
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Home &Garden
n SEND STORY TIPS & INFO TO: JENNIFER KOPF, 291-8644, [email protected]
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
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.
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.
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.
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
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.
B2
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
h&g2
FUNKY FINDS FROM
THE BARGAIN COUNTER
GARDEN CALENDAR
ARCHITECTURE
JENNIFER KOPF
HOUSE HACKS
RENEWED RESOURCES
MORE ONLINE
TO LEARN MORE
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n ColemanChapel.org.
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LNP | LANCASTER, PA
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.
Roizen is chief wellness officer and chairman of the Wellness Institute at Cleveland Clinic. To live your healthiest, visit
sharecare.com.
Quarryville, a son, at
Women & Babies Hospital,
Monday.
a daughter, at home,
Wednesday.
STOLTZFUS, Mahlon L.
and Jessica (Miller), New
Holland, a son, 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.
STEWART, Malissa,
Lancaster, a son, at Women
& Babies Hospital, Sunday.
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
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LOCAL
College news
G. Barnett Jr.
D. Westgate
D. Vucovich
GRADUATIONS
n Gregory Barnett
DEANS LIST
n Andrew Magloughlin
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
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.
Space
still
available!
717.299.8943 www.zeller.travel
ww.zeller.travel
to collegenews@lnpnews.
com or mail them to College
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 Background:
n Complaints:
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
Wood
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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.
STRASBURG
n What happened:
n What it means:
Answering a borough
PENN
n What happened:
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
Family Owned
& Operated Since 1877
PROVIDENCE
n Background:
We are Lancasters
Only Full Service Furniture Store &
Oldest La-Z-Boy Furniture Dealer
project.
n Background: The
n Other happenings:
LNP
TELEVISION
TV HIGHLIGHTS
( WGAL
NBC
8.2 WGAL2
5 WHP
CBS
21.2 WHP2
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PBS
K WPMT
FOX
43.2 WPMT2
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LNP | LANCASTER, PA
OTHER
HIGHLIGHTS
n The top 24 talents
emerge on American
Idol (8 p.m., Fox, TV-PG).
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).
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
n An annoying relative
^ WMAR
# KYW
& WPVI
* WCAU
+ WBAL
, WHYY
` WJZ
/ WLYH
CW
1 WPHL
MNT
= WTXF
Q WGCB
IND
Y WPSG
CW
WPPX
ION
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
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
61
66
64
-
27
48
BR
47
75
55
-
33
-
CE
26
58
59
16
27
-
CC
50
33
54
29
47
CL
HBO
HBO2
MAX
TMC
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
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(6:15) Movie Moon- Movie Boyz N the Hood (1991, Drama) (9:55) Movie 22 Jump Street (2014,
No Good
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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
LATE NIGHT
unintended consequences
on Angel from Hell (9:30
p.m., CBS, TV-PG).
SANDY COHEN
AP ENTERTAINMENT WRITER
n Kevin McDonough is a
Tunnel vision
n Paul F. Tompkins is
n Michael Strahan,
ASSOCIATED PRESS
B6
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
CROSSWORD
717-DENTIST
WONDERWORD
THE SMILE
CARE GROUP
717-DENTIST
FREE
MOVIE TICKETS
* New patients only. Expires 2/7/16. (Restrictions apply)
SE HABLA ESPAOL
Serving Lancaster for Over 10 Years
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
CRYPTOQUIP
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
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)
A
P
I
A
N
M
I
N
U
S
S
I
G
N
A
B
E
L
E
R
R
E
D
A
R S
E A S
V I
O R
Y E
N
E
R
D
T
A
V
I
B
E
A
T
P
O
E
T
S
Y
O
D
A
N
L
E
R
A
M
E
R
I
C
A
N
O
P
E
A
R
S
C
A
N
A C
C E
C L
T
S P
E
E N
R A
A L
T
Y
H E Z
B L E
O S E
B
O
B
A
N
D
W
E
A
V
E
O
N
A
N
D
O
N
X
E
D
S
R
S
R T
E S
V E
CROSSWORD
B7
1231
1
14
15
17
18
21
28
30
34
39
40
43
25
31
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
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
PLUGGERS
BLONDIE
ZIGGY
THE WIZARD OF ID
FRAZZ
SALLY FORTH
GET FUZZY
MARVIN
DILBERT
MUTTS
PICKLES
LUANN
FUNKY WINKERBEAN
MARMADUKE
BIZARRO
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
CLASSIC PEANUTS
JUMP START
SPEED BUMP
AMAZING SPIDER-MAN
ZITS
BABY BLUES
TUNDRA
GRAND AVENUE
B.C.
FRED BASSET
ROSE IS ROSE
WUMO
GARFIELD
DUSTIN
BREVITY
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Blooms
Seed catalogs
Continued from B1
Continued from B1
MORE ONLINE
Pennsylvania
Specialty
Pathology
Readers also
suggest:
R.H. Shumways:
beautiful old-fashioned
illustrations, stunning
artwork on each cover,
said Zell.
rhshumway.com
Saturday:
Faith &
Values
717.393.7771 | www.psppath.com
VALANCES DRAPERIES SHEERS BLINDS SHADES BED ENSEMBLES PILLOWS
We can coordinate
everything for a complete home look including
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or just give you a few ideas.
Ask us about the latest styles for:
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Wall Coverings Accent Furniture
Lamps
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Accessories
Area Rugs
Custom
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Bedding
A new year...
LANCASTER HYPNOTHERAPY
FREE CONSULTATION
Staff picks
Gardeners Supply
Co.: For all the fun accessories, Kopf said.
gardeners.com
Renees Garden
Seeds: Lots of flowers,
said Kopf.
reneesgarden.com
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
717-354-2233
Hours:
Mon-Fri 10-5 Sat 10-2
1064 East Main St. (Rt. 23) New Holland, PA
3012 Willow Street Pike North, Willow Street, PA 17584 717-464-9446 Groffs.com
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Since 1949
Sports
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
MIKE GROSS
PENN STATE FOOTBALL
After the Signing Day ceremony Wednesday at Garden Spot, the 17 students pose for a group photo.
MORE
COVERAGE
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.
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.
FILE PHOTO
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
sports2
C2
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
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
ESPN
7pm
ESPN2
7pm
MASN
7pm
TCN
7pm
Tulsa at Temple
ESPNU
7pm
CBSSN
8pm
ESPNEWS
8pm
BTN
9pm
ESPN2
9pm
FS1
9pm
MASN
9pm
ESPNU
9pm
Portland at Pepperdine
ESPNU
11pm
ESPN2
11pm
NETWORK
TIME
Iowa at Indiana
BTN
7pm
SEC
7pm
SEC
9pm
NETWORK
TIME
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.
GOLF
11am
GOLF
3pm
NBA
NETWORK
TIME
TNT
7pm
TNT
9:30pm
NETWORK
TIME
NBCSP
7:30pm
Philadelphia at Nashville
CSN/PH
8pm
NBCSP
10pm
SUSAN SNYDER
Minnesota at Northwestern
Connecticut at Memphis
Colorado at Oregon
GOLF
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
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
SPORTS
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Women
ASSOCIATED PRESS
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
GOT GUNS?
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
MULTISPORT EVENT
n Clipper Magazine Stadium will host the inaugural BA
WOMENS SWIMMING
n Paige Spradling (Hempfield) took first in the 200 IM,
YOUTH WRESTLING
n The Hempfield Youth Wrestling team traveled to
Ville, E-town
women triumph
STAFF REPORT
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
C4
SPORTS
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
NBA ROUNDUP
PM standouts
spark victory
Hawks
dump
Sixers
NORTH 9, SOUTH 6
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
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
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
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.
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-
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
C5
Alabama again
dominates on
recruiting trail
Experts rank Tides class consensus
No. 1 for the 6th consecutive year
STEVE MEGARGEE
AP SPORTS WRITER
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
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.
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
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
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
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
SPORTS
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
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
Manheim Township students who signed their National Letters of Intent on Wednesday gather for a group photo.
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
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
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
Hempfield
SPORTS
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
C7
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.
(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 Preston Greener,
Alvernia (lacrosse)
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)
(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)
MANHEIM
TOWNSHIP
n Mackenzie Fuhrman,
Bible (basketball)
LANCASTER
CATHOLIC
(lacrosse)
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)
(soccer)
n Elizabeth Petrosky,
Duquesne (lacrosse)
n Justin Kilpatrick,
n Olivia Rider,
Shippensburg (soccer)
n Sam Hixson,
Waynesburg (baseball)
n Reagan Ketchum,
Ursinus (lacrosse)
n Colleen Maillie,
Rochester (lacrosse)
n Ryan McDowell,
Immaculata (soccer)
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
EPHRATA
n Lauren Lichtenwalner,
(lacrosse)
PENN MANOR
(lacrosse)
n Brett Alaimo,
Stroudsburg (basketball)
n Beau Heagy, Lancaster
Bible (baseball)
n Erik Benjamin,
n Emily Heckman,
WARWICK
n Alec Miller,
Elizabethtown (baseball)
MANHEIM
CENTRAL
n Derek Adams, Kent
State (football)
(lacrosse)
Bloomsburg (baseball)
Bloomsburg (football)
n Brian Delany,
PEQUEA VALLEY
n Alyssa Hershey, East
Mason (volleyball)
Haven (football)
(field hockey)
(field hockey)
(soccer)
n Lucy Reed, Temple (field
hockey)
n Hannah Weidman, Kent
State (field hockey)
MILLERSVILLE FOOTBALL
C8
NFL
Researchers say
Stabler had CTE
Ex-Raiders QB anticipated his diagnosis
JIMMY GOLEN
AP SPORTS WRITER
Stauffer: Missouri
Continued from C1
SOCCER
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
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.
OFF-TRACK WAGERING
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.
BOWLING
SCHOLASTIC
L-L LEAGUE
SECTION THREE
Elizabethtown 7, Lamp.-Strasburg 0
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
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
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.
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
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.
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.
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)
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.
GIRLS
BASKETBALL
NONLEAGUE
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)
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.
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
LNP III LANCASTER, PA.
BASEBALL
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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
RONALD BLUM
INFORMATION
LEGAL NOTICES
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
Classieds
C11
Lancaster
CL
n Stuff ...........................C11
n Financial .................C13
n Automotive ............C11
n Services ...................C13
n Rentals ....................C13
n Recreation ..............C11
n Employment ..........C13
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-
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?
BARGAIN COUNTER
2 lines + 3 days = $12.00
Now available 7 days a week!
Sound good?
Email
[email protected]
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Prepared by
the Classied Department
AUTOMOTIVE
Cars for sale
Vehicle Financing/
Leasing
Classic/Specialty
Vehicles
Parts/Access.
Auto Services
Pick-Ups
SUVs/Crossovers
Vans
Utility Trailers
Trucks/Trailers/
Construction
Cars/Trucks Wanted
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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of text with photo!
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HOUSEHOLD
GOODS/APPLIANCES
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
$50-$2000 paid for junk
autos free removal
24 hrs cell 989-6980
LNP
III
LANCASTER, PA.
BARGAIN COUNTER
New items added daily!
BARGAIN COUNTER
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UNDER $150
BARGAIN COUNTER
UNDER $150
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UNDER $150
BARGAIN COUNTER
291-8711
FREE ITEMS
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
MEDICAL MERCHANDISE
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
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
LANCASTER, PA.
PROFESSIONAL
PROFESSIONAL
RESTAURANTS/
FOOD SERVICE
SERVER
No sched. restrictions
Apply at Chanceys E. Pete
GENERAL HELP
GENERAL HELP
Newspaper Motor
Routes Available
TOWN
New Providence
STREET
RT. # EST. $
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.
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
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!
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
NURSING/ELDERLY CARE
NEW!
HOME IMPROVEMENTS
HAULING
MOVING/STORAGE
GENERAL HAULING
Clean up
Buildings, Basements
Yards.
392-7855
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
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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
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.
_________________________________________________________________________________________________
ADD ART ELEMENTS (LIMIT 2):
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
PHONE _______________________________
ADDRESS ____________________________________________________
OR CHARGE:
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
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/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
FIND
YOUR
DREAM
HOME
IN THE
CLASSIFIED
REAL
ESTATE
C14
NFL
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
SUPER BOWL 50
SECURITY
Officials: No
credible threat
to Super Bowl
Broncos punter wants a Super Bowl ring to add to the Colquitt collection
ARNIE STAPLETON
JANIE MCCAULEY
AND PAUL ELIAS
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
Lancaster Weather
TODAY
FRIDAY
46
28
41
24
SATURDAY
43
25
POP: 5%
POP: 5%
SUNDAY
POP: 15%
Partly sunny
Partly sunny
REGION
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
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.
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
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
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
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
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
38
23
DELAWAREMARYLAND
Mainly cloudy today. A passing
shower at the Delaware coast;
cooler in the south and Maryland
panhandle. High 35 to 56.
38
26
POP: 10%
Sunshine
ALMANAC
44
22
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
110s
HARRISBURG
High:
Low:
88 at Brooksville, FL
-20 at Bryce Canyon, UT
MANHEIM
E-TOWN
MT. JOY
LANCASTER