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stumbles
Temple beats PSU
for first time since 1941
n Sports, page C1
TM
n $2.00 n LANCASTERONLINE.COM
REAL ESTATE
TRANSPORTATION
FARMED OUT
Bikes, buses,
trains, feet,
but we still
favor autos
A new market:
Squeezed off the
land, more Amish
aiming to make a
living as landlords
SUSAN BALDRIGE
TIM BUCKWALTER
SBALDRIGE@LNPNEWS.COM
TBUCKWALTER@LNPNEWS.COM
COMMUTING, page A4
COMMUTING ALONE.
SBALDRIGE@LNPNEWS.COM
GROUP, page A6
EDUCATION
DRIVING .
UP DEMAND
Average price of .
multi-family units sold .
in Lancaster city
$146,950
n 2013
$168,300
n 2015
TSTUHLDREHER@LNPNEWS.COM
INDEX
CLASSIFIEDS........... CL1
LIVING......................... B1
LOTTERY................... A2
79%
78%
00
10
13
This buggy on the corner of E. King St. and Ranck Ave. displays signs offering cash for
houses. As the number of available farms has shrunk, a surge in real estate investment has
come from the countys Plain communities and prices are being pushed higher.
Changing
the market
79%
RELATED COVERAGE
Millersville University: Jobs are out there in highdemand areas for graduates, page A8
MONEY........................ D1
NATION & WORLD...A13
OBITUARIES............A16
PERSPECTIVE............E1
REAL ESTATE..........RE1
SPORTS....................... C1
TRAVEL.....................B10
TV WEEK..................TV1
VIA EMAIL
Sandra Henry
Willow Street
Warehouse worker
I travel from southern Lancaster County back and forth to work in Denver, via
Route 222. My friend Bonnie and I take
turns driving. It can take anywhere from
45 minutes to two hours, depending on
the traffic and road conditions. We have
been doing this for the last 15 years. We
work at a warehouse.
We have encountered numerous road
constructions, detours, accidents (we
were involved in two minor ones), traffic
jams, many potholes, debris on the road,
dead animals and all kinds of weather
conditions, including snow squalls, fog,
drenching rain, flooding and icy roads.
We have encountered all kinds of drivers who have cut us off, stopped suddenly,
turned without signaling and numerous
other things. We have seen people driving
who were talking on their phones, eating,
reading, texting, putting on makeup and
smoking. Sometimes two at once. How do
they drive?
We pass the time listening to the radio,
waiting for our favorite songs, (especially
at Christmastime), the weather and the
traffic reports. We talk about anything
and everything. On the way home we usually are very tired and grumpy, but we
soon have each other laughing so much
we cry. We take another friend into Lancaster on the way home, and that makes
for more interesting and unusual sights
and experiences.
I am glad that I have my best friend to
STORIES, page A4
n Perspective, page E1
84 58 H
Passing time:
Shared stories
TODAY'S WEATHER
A2
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
PENNSYLVANIA LOTTERY n
SUNDAY,
AUG. 30
Here are the winning Pennsylvania and Powerball lottery numbers for the week starting Aug. 30
MONDAY,
AUG. 31
TUESDAY,
SEPT. 1
WEDNESDAY,
SEPT. 2
THURSDAY,
SEPT. 3
FRIDAY,
SEPT. 4
SATURDAY,
SEPT. 5
DAY PICK 2
8-8
4-1
8-3
3-9
5-9
3-2
4-2
DAY PICK 3
3-8-5
5-5-9
2-0-2
5-9-4
0-5-6
0-6-3
7-0-9
DAY PICK 4
7-1-8-6
4-7-6-2
5-0-6-2
0-9-8-1
0-4-4-2
2-5-8-2
0-2-8-0
DAY PICK 5
4-4-7-9-0
2-1-9-4-7
8-0-4-8-7
4-8-5-9-5
0-6-8-6-9
5-4-9-8-6
3-0-1-0-2
02-03-04-22-26
03-08-17-19-24
10-11-12-24-28
02-03-06-25-27
10-13-19-20-22
06-15-19-21-30
08-15-27-28-29
TREASURE HUNT
NIGHT PICK 2
2-7
8-2
4-0
3-4
8-8
8-4
4-5
NIGHT PICK 3
4-5-6
2-8-6
6-3-3
6-0-9
2-9-0
6-5-6
5-3-4
NIGHT PICK 4
1-1-4-8
6-5-5-8
9-7-9-7
4-8-1-2
3-2-3-0
5-2-0-9
6-5-4-2
NIGHT PICK 5
0-1-0-3-9
8-3-9-5-1
3-7-9-6-8
6-4-6-8-1
5-6-3-2-8
6-3-1-6-3
2-3-6-8-3
11-14-23-24-38
17-20-22-32-41
07-26-33-36-41
14-16-17-18-34
04-09-15-28-40
01-12-18-34-36
04-05-24-29-34
02-05-35-40-54
MEGABALL: 13
MEGAPLIER: 5
17-22-30-46-56
POWERBALL: 16
POWERPLAY: 3
17-21-39-52-57
MEGABALL: 05
MEGAPLIER: 5
10-16-18-29-45
POWERBALL: 19
POWERPLAY: 2
CASH 5
04-11-14-15-37-41
MATCH 6
CASH4LIFE
POWERBALL &
MEGA MILLIONS
CASH4LIFE:
12-15-44-45-47
CASH BALL: 01
22-34-36-38-45-49
CASH4LIFE:
20-33-46-49-51
CASH BALL: 04
CONTACT US
Through the
Viewfinder
SUZETTE WENGER
SWENGER@LNPNEWS.COM
Classified: 291-8711,
class@LNPnews.com
Engagements, weddings
& anniversaries: 291-4957,
celebrations@LNPnews.com
CORRECTIONS
The relationship between
Tony and Clint Gibble was
incorrectly reported in Through
the Viewfinder on Aug. 30.
They are spouses.
Old Leacock Presbyterian
Churchs 275th anniversary
will be held at the church at
the intersection of Route 340
and Old Leacock Road. An
incorrect location was given on
page B1 of Saturdays LNP.
LNP wants to correct
substantive errors of fact.
To request a correction or
clarification, call the news desk
at 291-8622 or email
news@LNPnews.com
LNP MEDIA GROUP, Inc.
THE
METHOD
All images were shot
as color jpegs with
a GoPro Hero 3 and
converted to black
and white in Adobe
Photoshop.
For an online slideshow
of before-and-after
images from this series
in black-and-white and
color, visit bit.ly/lnpvf
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LOCAL
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Catching up
on the news
PARK STABBING
n Police say Cameron
CRIME
FUNDRAISER
Man killed
in shooting
after party
NO ORDINARY AUCTION
FIRM CLOSING
n Hartman Underhill &
BANKS ROBBED
n East Hempfield Township
Above, a bidder raises her bid card in hopes of winning a gift certificate during the annual
Hospice & Community Care Auction at Lampeter Fairgrounds in Lampeter. Below, Katelyn
Miller, 6, of Lancaster, holds up one of three baskets she created for the auction.
ECORNELIUS@LNPNEWS.COM
PLANT DELAY
n Conoy Township Supervisor
Stephen Mohr warned Hellam
Township, York County,
officials and residents to
stop holding up Perdue
AgriBusiness $59 million
soybean processing plant
planned for Conoy, it was
reported Tuesday. Hellam
is challenging Perdues
application to the state for an
air-quality permit, demanding
better air-cleaning equipment
at the proposed plant.
NO HOMELESS
VETS
n The number of homeless
NONPROFITS
TKNAPP@LNPNEWS.COM
LANCASTER YWCA
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Parkesburg
950 Octorara Trail
610.857.6630
A4
FROM PAGE A1
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
A challenging
trend
The increase in the
percentage of commuters driving alone has
slowed since the 1980s
COMMUNITY
& CULTURE
This report is part of LNPs
ongoing commitment
to examining the unique
challenges facing Lancaster
County and the prosperity
of its people. Specifically,
this series of stories
focuses on issues of
community and culture.
Continued from A1
GETTING THERE
79%
Rosa Gallego
Manheim Twp.
Legal assistant
I travel 45 minutes
or more from Lancaster, to Harrisburg. I
work for the Commonwealth (state police).
I am a legal assistant.
I drive on Route 283,
then take Route 83 to
Route 81. I do not carpool. I have not found
anyone to commute
with. I dont really hit
traffic much, unless
there is an accident on
Route 83 South.
Also, I dont really
hit traffic much because of the hours
that I work. However,
it can get hectic and
nerve-wracking in the
winter because I am
an essential employee
and have to drive in
hazardous conditions.
DRIVE ALONE
9% CARPOOL
5% WORK AT HOME
4% WALK
2% OTHER
1% PUBLIC TRANSIT
SOURCE: U.S. CENSUS BUREAU AMERICAN COMMUNITY SURVEY 2013
COMMUTER
SERVICES OF
PENNSYLVANIA
Web: pacommuterservices.
org
Phone: 1-866-579-RIDE
Email: Customer.Service@
PaCommuterServices.org
U.S. Mail: 2951 Whiteford
Road, Suite 201, York,
PA 17402
Dee Strunk
Manheim Twp.
Flight attendant
I commute to Philadelphia International
Airport for work. Luckily, being a flight attendant I am gone for a few
days, so my commute is
only six or seven times
per month. I buy a 10trip pass on Amtrak
that I use 90 percent of
the time, connecting to
the SEPTA airport line.
(I also buy a 10-trip
ticket for a discount.)
My commute is
around two hours
(including
clearing
security), which is the
same as driving without traffic. My commute by car with traffic could take as long
as three hours. The
train is more relaxing
and less stressful.
Mark Schenk
Bird-in-Hand
Manager
I drive from Bird-inHand to Manchester
(York County) for my
job as a manager at a
fulfillment center. I
work an off shift so I
rarely encounter traffic issues. I use Route
COMMUTING, page A5
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Chris Moritzen
Manheim Twp.
Administrator
Talk about a long commute I travel from
Lancaster to Limerick
every day, 54.2 miles
each way. The majority
of my travel route is 222
and 422. Being in education, I travel early in the
a.m., and traffic isnt too
bad except for the ongoing construction on
422 just outside of Pottstown. Travel time isnt
that bad anywhere
from an hour to an hour
and a half.
In the morning I pass
the time mentally planning for the day (meetings etc.). Listen to the
radio (either Sirius or
stream WMMR Preston
and Steve in the morning). In the afternoon its
usually most of the same,
except maybe some
business calls using my
hands-free device.
I get to see some wonderful sunrises, some
interesting road conditions in the winter, and
always the smiles of my
family when I return
home!
VIA FACEBOOK
Jonel Ruiz
I travel from Mountville (Lancaster County)
to downtown Reading
(Berks County) every day
via Route 222 to my office.
Kathleen
Griffey
Harrison
Lancaster City to Capitol Complex in Harrisburg by car on Route
283. Takes an hour both
ways. Congested traffic
with many trucks and
crazy, aggressive drivers.
Jeffrey Podoshen
Wayne
College professor
Commute takes about
70-90 minutes. That
usually consists of driving 15 minutes from
Wayne to the Paoli or
Exton Amtrak stations,
riding the train 40-50
minutes to Lancaster,
and walking 15-20 minutes from the station to
the Franklin & Marshall
College campus.
A major frustration is
limited parking at Paoli
and Exton stations,
which sometimes causes
me to drive all the way to
Lancaster.
Honestly, Im baffled at
the lack of development
of our rail system, stations
and parking in the state.
Both Democrats and Republicans are to blame.
Our rail system is not
nearly what it could be.
Adam Huegel
I drive five miles on
New Holland Pike/Avenue to and from work
and hit 10 traffic lights,
most of which are outside the city. Ive never
made it at any time of
day or night without
stopping at a light.
William Ross
I travel over 50 miles
one way to the Kutztown
area from Lititz/Warwick every day. Traffic on
222 north of Lancaster
County is very heavy and
frustrating. I have few
options on the route to
get to work
Charlotte Knauer
Paradise to Thorndale
... lots of traffic. Route 741
at Route 41 really needs
some improvements, especially going east on 741
over the bridge. Way too
much congestion during
work-traffic hours. People are so inconsiderate
these days.
Samuel J. Baughman
Manheim
Aircraft mechanic
I currently drive two
hours to work, 130 miles
one way from Manheim
to Andrews Air Force
Base, just outside Wash-
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FROM PAGE A4
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
A5
Mins. 17 18 21 22 23
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
80 90 00 10 13
SOURCE: U.S. CENSUS BUREAU, LNP ARCHIVE;
VALUES ROUNDED
Continued from A4
Walking and
biking
One of those green
commuting modes is
walking, and Lancaster
city is a leader for that
method of travel. The
city features the states
second-highest rate of
foot commuters, according to the Census Bureau, and even tops most
major cities, including
New York.
Some 11.6 percent of
Lancaster city residents
walk to work. Thats
a rate that trails only
State College a town
dominated by university
students and employees
among Pennsylvanias
cities and largest boroughs. Lancaster also
is pursuing new strategies for making the city
friendlier for pedestrians and bicyclists.
Countywide, the trend
for walking has not been
so good. In 2013, some
3.7 percent of county
workers walked to their
jobs. That was down
from 5.7 percent in 1990.
Still, walking far outpaces biking, according
to the Census. Only 0.6
percent of Lancaster
County commuters bicycled to work in 2013,
up slightly from 0.5 percent in 1990.
Meanwhile, the portion of the labor force
working at home re-
Transits track
record
Amtraks
passenger
counts have grown substantially in recent years,
and bus ridership on the
Red Rose Transit Authority has made some
modest gains.
That
hasnt
been
enough to show up in
the Census figures: 1.1
percent of county workers commuted by public transit in 1990, and
that figure remained the
same in 2000 and 2013.
During the same 19902013 period, the portion
of commuters who carpooled dropped from 12
percent to 9 percent.
While transit claims
only a tiny fraction of
local commuters, Amtrak has made some significant local ridership
strides in recent years.
And it hopes that continued upgrades to stations
and train speeds will accelerate that trend.
A recent study by the
Brookings Institution
found that combined
ridership more than tripled at the three Amtrak
stations in Lancaster
County over 15 years beginning in 1997. It rose
from 207,000 to 740,000
passengers at the Lancaster, Mount Joy and
Elizabethtown stations.
The Red Rose Transit
Authority, meanwhile,
has seen modest increases in ridership in recent
years. According to its
annual reports, ridership on its fixed-route
buses rose 4.2 percent
from 2010 to 2014, when
the passenger count was
1,887,846.
In an effort to make the
service more appealing
to riders whose home or
job is not directly on a
bus line, RRTA has added
bike racks to the fronts of
its buses in recent years.
Bikes ride for free.
Planning ahead
The Lancaster County
Planning Commission is
preparing to update the
countys comprehensive
plan, which will guide
growth here through
2040.
Reducing traffic congestion and encouraging
alternative methods of
transportation are key
goals.
James Cowhey, the
planning commissions
executive director, said
the time may finally be
ripe for making gains in
pedestrian-friendly city.
The work would include
building bike lanes on
several key streets.
Royer, the countys
transportation planning
director, said carpooling
and transit must also be
kept front and center as
the county plans for the
future.
I think we need to
continue to fund Pennsylvania Commuter Services and their work, and
to work with PennDOT,
Amtrak and RRTA at
making transit a more
viable and attractive option, Royer said.
EXTENDED
9/18/15
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valid on
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A6
FROM PAGE A1
PROPERTY MANAGEMENT
SBALDRIGE@LNPNEWS.COM
Slatehouse Group.
Chad Gallagher is
part owner of the Slatehouse Group, which
manages hundreds of
properties including
those owned by King
and about 10 other
Amish clients.
Gallagher said his
firm offers a key benefit
to Amish investors.
Its technology, Gallagher said. When we
go to advertise a rental,
we use 100 different
websites. The tenants
are able to pay online. If
a tenant has a problem,
he or she can call us at
midnight, and we can
resolve the problem.
Gallagher said one of
the biggest services his
firm provides to Amish
clients are background
and credit checks.
Youre risking your
profit when you have a
tenant that you are not
getting rent from for
a couple months, he
said.
Connect with us
www.rbshap.com
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Group
Amish landlords
Continued from A1
Continued from A1
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Cal Yoder, a broker and
property manager for
Hershey Real Estate Services, recently helped several Amish buy properties
in estate and sheriff sales.
I would say the Lancaster real estate investment market is extremely competitive, and part
of that is from the number of Amish buyers getting into real estate, he
said.
In some instances, Yoder said, high prices here
have caused some Plain
sect buyers to branch out
to other counties where
there is less competition
for real estate.
The Amish popula-
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A8
FROM PAGE A1
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Continued from A1
Fewer majors,
certificates
12,000
2011
2010
2012
2013
MILLERSVILLE UNIVERSITY
1,308
1,400
1,066
(-18.5%)
1,200
1,000
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EDUCATION
of Pennsylvania, has
been tracking the
teacher-shortage narrative for decades.
Its dead wrong, he
said. We actually produce and have always
produced enough qualified teachers in this
country.
Yes, the number
of new teacher candidates is currently
down, he said. But they
account for fewer than
25 percent of schools
hires, he said.
All over the country,
including
Pennsylvania, there are large
reserves of inactive
teachers,
Ingersoll
said: Former teachers
looking to get back in,
those who took different jobs and delayed
entry into the field,
and so on.
Far more hires come
from those reserves,
he said.
There is a concern,
but its not the initial
supply, he said: Its retention. Between 43
percent and 46 percent of new teachers
leave the field within
five years, he said. Too
many are leaving long
before retirement.
Spot shortages
The overall supply
of teachers notwithstanding, individual
schools and school
districts really can
face hiring challenges,
particularly in certain
specialties.
Each year, the U.S.
Department of EducaTEACHERS, page A9
TSTUHLDREHER@LNPNEWS.COM
At Millersville University, associate professor Nanette MarcumDietrich works with students planning to enter
secondary education.
I tell them theyll find
a job if they work hard,
she said. There are jobs
out there.
MU, part of the 14-university State System of
Higher Education, has
seen a drop in education
majors, but it is less than
that of the system as a
whole: 18.5 percent versus 31 percent between
2010 and 2013.
Districts are always
looking for good teachers with a background
in STEM science,
technology, engineering and math and for
bilingual teachers, said
George Drake, dean of
MUs College of Education and Human Services.
Students who take
note of whats in demand tailor their preparation and resumes accordingly will do well,
he said.
Recent talk of teacher
shortages is encouraging to MU junior Skye
Hewish-Schmid and her
fellow education majors, she said.
It bodes well for their
job search, plus I think
it boosts our egos a little
bit, she said.
A few years ago, MU
Handcrafted Furniture
started a professional
development school
program that places students in full-year teaching internships at school
districts.
The program garnered
national awards and was
so successful that MU
expanded it to all secondary-education majors, Marcum-Dietrich
said.
Its graduates are in
high demand and hired
at a faster rate than their
counterparts from conventional programs, she
said.
Another good option
for job seekers, given
the robust growth of cyberschools, is certification in online education,
Marcum-Dietrich said.
Marcia Nell, associate professor of early,
middle and exceptional
education, said gifted
education is becoming
a hot topic, so a certification in that field
would be highly marketable.
With more standardized testing and related
curriculum
changes,
talented kids are not
always challenged the
way they should be, she
said.
Special education
changes
BUY TICKETS
717-397-7425 | THEFULTON.ORG
TODAY!
FROM PAGE A8
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
A9
Continued from A8
20,000
18,590
18,000
16,000
14,000
7,180
12,000
(-61.4%)
10,000
8,000
6,000
2012-13
2013-14
2014-15
operation than IU 13 or
the city school district.
It has about 90 faculty
members at three campuses, said Keith Yohn, assistant executive director.
Some years it has three
or four positions to fill,
while other years it has
none, he said.
The challenge, he said,
is that most instructors are recruited from
jobs in their trade, not
straight out of college.
Theyre starting as new
teachers, leaving their
seniority in their former
job behind, so it generally means a pay cut.
Not only that, they have
to take classes at Penn
State and work toward a
teaching certificate.
Not everyone is willing
to make those sacrifices,
A free fix?
Holman said he loses
teachers to suburban
districts on a regular basis, often because they
live there and want to be
on the same schedule as
their children.
Thats fairly typical,
said Ingersoll, the Penn
professor. Urban districts usually face more
hiring difficulties than
suburban ones, he said.
Historically, Pennsylvania has been a net exporter of teachers, said
Steinour, the IU 13 human
resources director. But if
First-year speech pathologist Matt Keeler works with a student at Price Elementary. He
works with the students in a very motivational way.
Schreiber Pediatric
2015
&
PRESENT
OOZA WEEKEND
DUCKIEPAL
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IE
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Since 1968
+ Schreiberpalooza =
DuckiePalooza Weekend
Heat Pumps
Air Cleaners
Plumbing
Sales, Service, Installation
291-5555
M
U
FE SIC
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Present this
coupon at the
event for
R
LANCASTE
NZ
LIEDERKRA
SATURDAY
SEPT. 12
5 FREE
LANCASTER
CO
CENTRAL PAUNTY
RK
SUNDAY
SEPT. 13
RUBBER
DUCKIE
RACE
TM
& Festival
SEPT.13, 2015
festival SUNDAY,
LANCASTER COUNTY
game tickets!
CENTRAL PARK
(Limit 1 coupon per child)
Education
Medical School: Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine
Residency: Osteopathic Medical Center of Philadelphia
Fellowship: Deborah Heart and Lung Center
5K WALK/RUN
www.walkfordes.org
FROM PAGE A3
Were
working
to do away
with racism.
This county
has some
challenges in
that regard.
Martha Harris, YWCAs
incoming CEO
Fall Sale
September 3-27
Olde
Mill House
Shoppes
Connect with us
Facebook, Twitter
& Instagram at:
LancasterOnline
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
BR BOOKS
LABOR DAY WEEKEND
SIDEWALK SALE
299-0678
www.oldemillhouse.com
IF YOU GO
an increase of $2,500
over last years opening
day.
The event reconvenes
Monday at 8:30 a.m. with
a second Day of Care auction, plus quilts, artwork,
furniture, plants, sports
memorabilia and a sheet
cake to be auctioned off.
The cake traditionally
is purchased, then donated back to the auction to raise more money. Last year, the cake
went through 10 bidders
and brought in a record
$2,775.
COMMUNITY
Sept. 11 remembrance
ceremony planned
STAFF
WEINSTEIN
SUPPLY
341 East Fulton St. Lancaster, PA 17602 717.394.1325
weinsteinlancaster.com
8 Peppers
Suk Shuglie
Original
on Canvas
CRIMINAL DEFENSE
Your rings
dont fit
anymore?
Since 1952
GA L L E R Y
THE
MARINARO
LAW FIRM
TRIAL ATTORNEYS
www.FurmanFuneralHome.com
We can
fix that!
The Jewelry Experts
5 DAYS ONLY!
717.397.7055 marinarolaw.com
LancasterOnline
717-656-6833
FALL SALE
EVENT
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 11
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 12
Free
Soft
Serve
Ice
Cream!
UP TO
300
OFF
SAVINGS
EVENT!
Many
More
Models!
50-75% OFF
HARMAN
PELLET
STOVES &
INSERTS
AH
Huge Selection
S l ti off Items
It
Under
U d the
th Tent,
T t
On the Porch & In the Mansion
Touch
Screen!
LOCAL
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Deaths From
Earlier in the Week
Reading, Sept. 1.
BROWN, Ferne M., 91,
Lititz, Sept. 3.
CHARLES, E. Pearl, 81,
Harrisburg and Lancaster,
Sept. 2.
COELHO, Mary V., 86,
Landisville, Aug. 30.
COLLINS, Louise (Billips)
Manheim, Aug. 31.
CULP, Amos M. Jr., 62,
Lancaster, Sept. 1.
DAVIS, Charles A., 79,
Chambersburg, Aug. 25.
DeMOTT, Kathryn Y., 97,
Lititz, Aug. 29.
DESSEN, Larry G., 64,
Lancaster, Aug. 24.
DIMM, Patricia W., 72,
Jeffersonville, Aug. 21.
DURDOCK, Shirley M., 87,
Manheim, Aug. 30.
FINN, Jennifer, 42, Mount
Joy, Sept. 2.
EAGER, Beverly A., 64,
Lititz, Aug. 27.
FARNETH, George R., 92,
Lancaster, Aug. 13.
GALARZA, Juan B. Sr., 83,
Lancaster, Aug. 30.
CORONERS REPORT
RROBINSON@LNPNEWS.COM
The
Lancaster
County Coroner Dr.
Stephen Diamantoni
ruled this week that H.
Dwight Steller, 49, of
Police log
BURGLARY
n LANCASTER TWP.:
Sometime overnight
Thursday someone entered
a residence in the 600
block of South West End
Avenue and stole two
firearms, police reported.
n WEST EARL TWP.: A
resident of the 200 block
of South State Street
reported that his garage
was entered sometime
overnight Thursday and
a yellow 2003 Suzuki dirt
bike was stolen, police
reported.
n WEST EARL TWP.: A
resident of the 200 block
of West Metzler Road
reported that his home
was forciblly entered on
Thursday and a small
amount of change was
stolen, police reported.
Manheim Township,
died by suicide, jumping from a parking garage in Lancaster city
Aug. 6.
His body was discovered next to the Lan-
DRUG CHARGES
DUI
Kristina J. Luckenbill,
27, of Harrisburg, was
charged Wednesday
with possession of drug
paraphernalia and illegal
possession of a controlled
substance following an
incident in the 200 block of
West Metzler Road.
STORM
WINDOWS
& DOORS
ROOFING
ALUMINUM
GUTTERS
PORCH
ENCLOSURES
SIDING
DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
PA
#962
LancasterOnline
Social Security
Disability & SSI
Tony Hopkins
233 N. Duke St., Lancaster, PA
517-9637
www.rmins.com
DAY
ONLY
Sept. 7, 2015
FREE ESTIMATES
OR
(Materials Only)
MONTH**
HOME CARE
Monday:
A11
Attorney
Hiring Experienced
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A12
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
MarketPulse
HELLO AUTUMN
Summer vacation is great. Summer
travel, not so much. Airplanes have
been stuffed this summer, as they
usually are. At Delta Air Lines, for
example, 5.1 million more
passengers boarded in July than
February. So it would make sense
for summer to be the best period for
airline stocks, right? It hasnt been.
August is the second-worst month
of the year for the Amex Airline
index over the last 20 years, with
an average loss of 3.2 percent.
Instead, the best month seems
to be October. The airline index has
risen an average of 7.7 percent
during the month, and its been up
17 of the last 20 times. In the other
11 months of the year, airline stocks
are down more often than up.
Extra
-114.98 -469.68 293.03
19,000
MON
TUES
June July
2015
WED
THUR
5,400
FRI
Close: 16,102.38
1-week change: -540.63 (-3.2%)
9310.22
7452.70
11254.87
9509.59
NYSE Comp.
61
Using
an ATM
60
Choosing an airline
(baggage fees)
THUR
YTD
-2.8%
week
-6.9%
MO
-4.6%
YTD
-2.3%
week
-5.9%
MO
-5.7%
YTD
FRI
5231.94
4116.60
2134.72
1551.28
Nasdaq composite
4,200
O
Close: 4,683.92
1-week change: -144.40 (-3.0%)
A
A
CLOSE
YTD
1YR
CHG %CHG MO QTR%CHG %CHG
16632.02
15979.95
16102.38
-540.63
-3.3
-114.83
-1.5
-370.21
-3.6
Nasdaq Comp.
4824.61
4614.91
4683.92
-144.41
-3.0
1820.66
S&P 500
1986.73
1903.07
1921.22
-67.65
-3.4
1269.45
S&P MidCap
1427.58
1372.12
1386.27
-39.96
-2.8
22537.15 19160.13
Wilshire 5000
20968.31
20101.64
20304.16
-664.15
-3.2
Russell 2000
1164.89
1124.46
1136.17
-26.75
-2.3
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
-9.7
*%#@9998643| -9.4
-8.9
999972| -10.9
-1.1
((((&@|87543 +2.2
-6.7
((*%#986432| -4.3
-4.6
((*&%97652| -3.7
-6.3
((*9872| -4.5
-5.7
(((^962| -2.9
Market Price
value change Avg. broker rating
hold
buy
(billions) YTD sell
$14.1 -0.6%
Fortinet (FTNT)
7.2
37.5
Proofpoint (PFPT)
2.3
18.2
30 analysts
30 analysts
20 analysts
Annual spending
growth rate
22
12%
est.
30
07-12 13
15
Size of market
(billions)
TICKER
American Funds
AmBalA m
CapIncBuA m
CpWldGrIA m
FnInvA m
GrthAmA m
IncAmerA m
InvCoAmA m
WAMutInvA m
Income
IntlStk
Stock
Contra
500IdxAdvtg
IncomeA m
IntlInstl
TotRetBdI
TotRetIs
GrowStk
500Adml
HltCrAdml
InstIdxI
InstPlus
IntlStkIdxIPls
MuIntAdml
TotBdAdml
TotIntl
TotStIAdm
TotStIIns
TotStIdx
WelltnAdm
ABALX
23.58
CAIBX
55.41
CWGIX 43.25
ANCFX 49.02
AGTHX 42.34
AMECX 19.95
AIVSX
34.32
AWSHX 37.59
DODIX
13.57
DODFX 37.99
DODGX 165.32
FCNTX 97.02
FUSVX 67.97
FKINX
2.13
HAINX
62.12
MWTIX 10.83
PTTRX
10.53
PRGFX 54.00
VFIAX 177.95
VGHAX 93.47
VINIX
176.23
VIIIX
176.24
VTPSX
95.72
VWIUX
14.10
VBTLX
10.77
VGTSX 14.31
VTSAX
48.57
VITSX
48.58
VTSMX 48.55
VWENX 64.09
Fidelity
Metropolitan West
PIMCO
T Rowe Price
Vanguard
NAV
$CHG
1WK
-0.48
-1.47
-1.55
-1.61
-1.37
-0.48
-1.20
-1.20
+0.03
-1.59
-5.27
-3.37
-2.37
-0.06
-2.29
+0.01
-0.04
-1.78
-6.19
-3.46
-6.12
-6.12
-4.44
-0.01
+0.03
-0.66
-1.60
-1.60
-1.60
-1.43
1,004
0.5
985
-1.1
971
-1.5
961
-1.8
959
-0.7
European stocks
Technology stocks
S&P 500
Small-cap stocks
Gold
Financial stocks
Utilities stocks
Emerging-market stocks
Energy stocks
Coffee
$0
500
950
0.2
943
-2.7
895
-4.0
856
-1.4
823
0.7
718
-4.0
1,000
Performance benchmarks: industries - sectors of the Standard & Poors 500 index; international
stocks - MSCI indexes; bond returns - Barclays Capital and BofA Merrill Lynch Indexes.
Source: FactSet Data through Sept. 3
AP
AAC
23.95
+6.5
+34.8 +1907.9
Eagle Pharmaceutical
EGRX
78.82
-5.8
-14.4
EGLE
-0.9
-25.3
EFOI
25.77 +17.1
+82.1
Gen Employ
JOB
Heron Therapeutics
HRTX
BioPharmX Corp
Anacor Pharma
Aoxing Pharmaceut
InVivo Therapeutics
Voltari Corp
BPMX
ANAC
6.45
1.56
NVIV
9.85
VLTC
ABMD
Sucampo Pharm
SCMP
dd
-13.9
BLUE
129.32
LJPC
34.70
24.47
13.60
33.61
-13.6
+27.9
-6.1
-16.8
-10.0
...
...
...
...
...
...
+282.3
dd
...
dd
33
cc
...
79
...
+236.8
dd
+231.4
dd
+217.3
...
...
41
+224.5
...
cc
+252.6
+236.2
-7.1
...
24
+238.3
-0.1
dd
...
+310.2
+261.5
-1.4
+6.3
+315.8
+271.0
-1.9
-16.5
dd
+283.7
+0.1
...
+425.3
+362.1
+2.1
-5.9
-2.3
+480.4
-23.8
-2.8
24.43
+549.7
...
-11.3
-4.5
...
+487.6
+1.3
+4.4
dd
-6.2
+19.3
93.82
CEMP
+2.0
...
dd
+6.3
7.42
104.19
ADXS
-3.7
cc
+853.3
37.68
TREE
Advaxis Inc
-1.8
PE YLD
-20.8
+0.1
101.26
IRMD
+9.0
0.72
ADPT
iRadimed Corp
La Jolla Pharm
132.95
AXN
Abiomed Inc
Adeptus Health
1.45
%RTN
1YR
...
dd
...
...
...
...
...
IndustryRankings
Over the
Over next
last decade vs. three years
PERCENT CHANGE
1WK 1MO 1QTR
INDUSTRY
Telecommunications
Oil & Gas
Consumer Services
Industrials
Technology
Consumer Goods
---------- PERCENT RETURN ---------DJ Total Market index
1WK 1MO 1YR RANK 5YRS* RANK RATING 7.
Basic Material
Utilities
-2.0
-5.6
-1.5 2 +10.6 1 HHHHI 8.
9.
Health Care
-2.6
-6.6
-6.1 2 +7.3 1 HHHII
10.
Financials
-3.5
-8.8
-7.5 3 +8.4 3 HHHII
-3.2
-8.3
-2.9 3 +12.5 3 HHIII
-3.1
-7.3
... 4 +13.8 3 HHHII
-2.3
-6.2
-5.8 5 +9.0 2 HHHII
Construction & Materials
-3.4
-8.0
-4.7 4 +12.4 3 HHIII Patrick Inds
PATK
-3.1
-7.9
-4.9 2 +12.9 1 HHHII TopBuild Corp
BLD
ASPN
+0.2
-0.4
+0.5 4 +4.0 2 HHHHI Aspen Aerogels Inc
-4.0 -11.3 -18.0 5 +5.7 2 HHHHI Aerospace & Defense
PCP
-3.1
-9.1
-6.3 3 +14.3 1 HHHHI Prec Castparts
Breeze Eastern Corp
BZC
-3.4
-7.9
+1.8 3 +14.4 3 HHHHI
Smith & Wesson
SWHC
-3.4
-8.0
-1.9 2 +14.0 2 HHHHI
Support Services
-2.3
-5.3 -11.8 5 +6.7 2 HHHII Mindbody Inc
MB
-3.6 -10.6 -12.0 4 +5.2 2 HHHII Sharps Compliance
SMED
YDLE
+0.1 +0.1
+1.9 2 +4.9 1 HHHHH Yodlee Inc
-0.3
-0.7
+1.3 3 +3.6 2 HHHHI General Industrials
BRSS
-3.2
-7.7
+6.5 1 +17.0 1 HHHHH Global Brass Copper
AEP Indust
AEPI
-3.4
-8.0
-1.9 2 +14.1 1 HHHHI
Luxfer Hldgs PLC
LXFR
-3.6
-8.2 +16.8 3 +22.6 3 HHHII Electronic/Elec. Equipment
-3.4
-8.0
-1.8 2 +14.1 1 HHHHI Energy Focus Inc
EFOI
-3.4
-8.0
-1.8 2 +14.1 1 HHHHI Planar Systms
PLNR
HUB/A
-4.4 -10.5 -15.3 5
NA
HHIII Hubbell A
... +0.2
+2.3 2 +3.6 2 HHHHI Industrial Transportation
USDP
+0.3 +0.3
+2.2 1 +3.1 4 HHHII USD Partners LP
Nordic Amer Offshore
NAO
-4.4 -10.5 -15.4 5 +3.2 5 HHHII
GasLog Ptrs LP
GLOP
-3.2
-7.8
-1.9 2 +14.3 1 HHHHI Industrial Engineering
-3.2
-7.8
-1.9 2 +14.3 1 HHHHI Milacron Holdings
MCRN
-3.2
-7.8
-2.0 2 +14.1 1 HHHHI Hardinge Inc
HDNG
HEES
-2.2
-5.7
-2.0 2 +9.9 1 HHHHH H&E Equipment Svcs
LocalFunds
FUND
-1.0
High-yield bonds
$15
FAMILY
-3.6
1,015
Cempra Inc
$30
-1.1 %
1,024
14
1-week
... today is percent
worth change
15
Commodities
Consumer staples
Bonds
$1,043
(*&^$@99754| -6.0
-14.7
Stocks
LOW
7793.83
1040.47
9871.86
50
AP
-6.7%
Derby
7647.04
64
MO
$1,000
4,400
Shipping
fees online
WED
9821.37
401(k)
investments
TUES
7946.23
Network security
67
MON
10226.17
Choosing a
cellphone plan
-7.5%
SMALL-CAP
Russell 2000
S&P 400
-49.58
HIGH
INDEX
75%
week
4,600
The Players
Choosing a
credit card
YTD
MID-CAP
-3.4%
4,800
15,000
Source: FactSet
FEE FIGHT
Everyone hates fees. Whether its
baggage fees at airlines, shipping
fees for online shopping or ATM fees
to pull out our own money, we all
regret when dollars leak out of our
accounts. But some fees are more
important to minimize than others.
Close to the top of the list is
investing, as keeping fees low can
mean tens of thousands of dollars
after decades of retirement savings.
And it seems like investors know it.
A recent survey from Charles
Schwab found that 64 percent of
401(k) participants said fees are
very important when they make
decisions about their investments.
-1.1%
MO
16,000
1296.00
HIGH PRICE
When Amplify Snack Brands filed
earlier this summer for its initial
public stock offering, the maker
of SkinnyPop popcorn said that it
expected to sell shares for
between $14 and $16. It ended
up selling them for more, $18,
and the move caused fewer
raised eyebrows than if it had
happened a year ago. Thats
because companies are more
commonly pricing IPOs above
their expected ranges. About 25
percent of IPOs through Aug. 26
did so, up from 17 percent at the
same point last year, according to
Dealogic. Not only that, fewer
companies are pricing their IPOs
below their expected range. The
24 percent rate for this year is
the lowest since 2009.
week
5,000
23.38 -272.38
17,000
14,000
-4.0
-3.0%
-7.1%
YTD
18,000
18351.36 15370.33
-3.2
-9.7%
MO
LARGE-CAP
S&P 500
Nasdaq
5,200
52-WEEK
HIGH
LOW
0.4
-3.3%
week
-7.3%
Dow industrials
StocksRecap
7.7
1.1%
Money&Markets
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
-2.3
-3.1
-2.0
-2.9
-3.2
-2.4
-3.3
-4.1
-5.1
-4.4
-4.0
-3.8
-5.4
-5.8
-6.6
-6.8
-6.9
-7.3
-7.7
-8.0
-8.7
-9.5
%RTN
1YR
-4.4
+18.3
+17.3
+15.7
-5.1
+18.4
+15.1
+10.7
-6.0
+49.5
+27.1
+26.6
-7.0
+14.1
+11.0
+5.6
-7.5
+82.1
+27.9
+21.2
-7.8
+14.1
+8.9
+5.8
-8.1
+27.4
+24.2
+10.5
-5.2
+14.9
+46.9
+17.1
-6.5
+8.8
+23.8
+18.4
-5.8
+33.7
+36.6
+9.3
-11.0
+21.9
+16.0
-8.8
-12.9
+262.4
+36.5
+0.9
-13.4
-12.3
-25.7
-22.2
-15.0
+0.6
+3.3
-17.7
(*&^$|3 0.5
(*&^$|98754 +59.1
(*&^$| 0.0
(%$#!8742| -25.3
(*&^$|5 2.0
(*&@!63| -4.6
(*&^$|876543 +31.5
(*&^$|996521 +70.4
(*&^$|5 2.1
(*&^$| 0.0
(*&^$|99632 +68.8
(*&^$| 0.0
(*&!632| -4.8
(*&^$|96421 +37.4
(*&^$|865431 +23.7
($#@!8754| -27.1
(*%#753| -10.5
(*&^$|9996 +362.1
(*&^$|654 +7.0
(*&%$#!42| -1.3
(&^%#!7652| -14.3
(*&^$| 0.0
98764| -61.0
*&$!95432| -35.8
(&$!85432| -19.8
(*&^$| 0.0
(*$@!7543| -11.6
&#@9861| -52.2
Local Stocks
COMPANY
AT&T Inc
Air Products
Alcatel-Lucent
Alcoa Inc
Applied Indl Tch
Armstrong World Inds
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
52-WK RANGE
FRIDAY $CHG %CHG
%CHG %RTN RANK %RTN
TICKER LOW
HIGH CLOSE 1WK 1WK 1MO 1QTR YTD 1YR 1YR 5YRS* PE Yld COMPANY
T
30.97
APD 118.20
ALU
2.28
AA
7.97
AIT
37.15
AWI 44.00
SAN
5.83
BONT 2.89
CNHI 7.35
CPB 41.15
CRS 34.28
CLC 53.17
COST 117.03
DGICA 13.47
RRD 14.32
EXC 29.75
FTR
4.19
FULT 10.43
GSK 39.27
HOG 50.64
HSIC 109.34
HSY 82.41
IP
40.64
JNJ 81.79
K
58.83
KR
25.42
LLL 101.11
MTB 111.78
3
5
4
2
3
7
1
2
1
8
1
1
6
1
2
1
3
5
1
3
6
3
1
4
8
7
2
3
36.45
158.20
4.96
17.75
50.00
60.70
10.29
10.92
9.72
50.80
55.44
68.72
156.85
16.47
20.22
38.93
8.46
13.66
49.08
70.41
149.95
111.35
57.90
109.49
69.89
39.43
132.92
134.00
32.56
135.90
3.25
9.49
40.20
54.51
5.72
3.98
7.37
47.94
35.58
54.42
138.48
13.47
15.41
29.72
5.39
11.75
39.69
54.78
133.27
89.72
41.70
91.31
66.58
34.07
104.63
117.06
-0.73
-4.77
-0.12
0.08
-1.62
-1.00
-0.48
0.25
-0.67
0.14
-2.71
-1.94
-1.47
-0.80
-0.37
-1.68
0.31
-0.33
-1.56
-1.86
-6.13
-0.48
-2.03
-3.86
-0.46
-0.87
-2.34
-1.96
-2.2
-3.4
-3.6
0.9
-3.9
-1.8
-7.7
6.7
-8.3
0.3
-7.1
-3.4
-1.1
-5.6
-2.3
-5.4
6.1
-2.7
-3.8
-3.3
-4.4
-0.5
-4.6
-4.1
-0.7
-2.5
-2.2
-1.6
t
t
t
s
s
t
t
r
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
s
t
t
t
t
r
t
t
t
t
t
t
t -3.1 1.5
t -5.8 +5.0
t -8.5 3.6
t -39.9 43.8
t -11.8 15.6
t 6.6 8.0
t -31.3 38.2
t -46.3 56.6
t -8.6 12.2
s 9.0 +11.2
t -27.8 33.4
t -18.3 14.1
t -2.3 +15.9
t -15.7 9.2
t -8.3 7.2
t -19.8 7.7
s -19.2 12.7
t -4.9 +4.8
t -7.1 12.5
s -16.9 12.6
t -2.1 +12.3
t -13.7 +2.4
t -22.2 11.4
t -12.7 9.3
s 1.7 +5.6
t 6.1 +32.9
t -17.1 3.4
t -6.8 3.4
2
2
3
4
3
3
4
5
3
1
4
3
1
3
3
3
3
2
3
3
1
2
3
3
2
1
3
3
8.6
13.9
3.0
-1.5
8.8
12.9
-6.0
-8.4
...
8.3
3.4
9.8
21.7
7.2
4.4
-2.1
-0.0
8.6
5.7
16.7
19.4
15.9
16.7
12.0
8.4
28.0
11.2
8.1
33 5.8
27 2.4
... ...
14 1.3
14 2.7
40 ...
... 10.7
... 5.0
25 ...
22 2.6
24 2.0
18 1.5
27 1.2
14 4.0
11 6.7
11 4.2
... 7.8
14 3.1
... 6.3
15 2.3
24 ...
23 2.6
17 3.8
16 3.3
62 3.0
18 1.2
15 2.5
16 2.4
Merck & Co
Natl Penn Bcs
Nwst Bancshares Inc
PNC Financial
PPL Corp
Patterson Cos
Penn Natl Gaming
Penney JC Co Inc
Pfizer Inc
Rite Aid Corp
Sears Holdings Corp
Skyline Cp
Supervalu Inc
TE Connectivity Ltd
Tanger Factory
Tegna Inc
Tyson Foods
UGI Corp
Univrsl Corp
Urban Outfitters
Verizon Comm
WalMart Strs
Weis Mkts
Wells Fargo & Co
Windstream Hldgs
YRC Worldwide Inc
52-WK RANGE
FRIDAY $CHG %CHG
%CHG %RTN RANK %RTN
TICKER LOW
HIGH CLOSE 1WK 1WK 1MO 1QTR YTD 1YR 1YR 5YRS* PE Yld
MRK
NPBC
NWBI
PNC
PPL
PDCO
PENN
JCP
PFE
RAD
SHLD
SKY
SVU
TEL
SKT
TGNA
TSN
UGI
UVV
URBN
VZ
WMT
WMK
WFC
WIN
YRCW
45.69
9.17
11.52
76.69
29.32
39.28
10.50
5.90
27.51
4.42
19.08
2.50
7.26
51.03
30.30
20.75
37.02
31.54
38.30
27.89
38.06
61.50
38.23
46.44
4.42
11.90
4
8
6
5
1
4
8
8
5
8
3
5
3
4
1
2
7
3
6
2
5
1
3
4
3
3
63.62
12.80
13.30
100.52
38.14
53.07
20.23
11.30
36.46
9.47
48.25
4.30
12.00
73.73
40.80
33.40
45.10
39.74
58.89
47.25
51.73
90.97
51.91
58.77
17.77
25.40
51.59
11.77
12.46
87.66
29.67
44.68
18.18
9.68
31.37
8.20
27.20
3.27
8.21
58.23
31.20
22.93
42.13
33.50
48.65
31.10
44.82
63.89
41.79
51.29
7.60
15.54
-3.78
-0.24
-0.31
-3.57
-1.70
-1.71
-0.25
0.74
-1.29
-0.04
-0.10
-0.01
-0.04
-1.01
-1.11
-1.09
-0.49
-0.96
-0.45
0.05
-1.25
-1.05
1.28
-2.25
0.57
-0.96
-6.8
-2.0
-2.4
-3.9
-5.4
-3.7
-1.4
8.3
-3.9
-0.5
-0.4
-0.3
-0.5
-1.7
-3.4
-4.5
-1.1
-2.8
-0.9
0.2
-2.7
-1.6
3.2
-4.2
8.1
-5.8
t
s
t
t
t
t
t
s
t
t
s
r
t
t
t
t
s
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
s
t
t -9.2 11.2
s 11.8 +20.8
s -0.6 +4.3
t -3.9 +5.3
t -12.0 2.5
t -7.1 +13.2
s 32.4 +58.8
s 49.4 13.4
t 0.7 +10.6
t 9.0 +33.3
t -17.5 12.3
t -19.3 +11.2
t -15.4 13.2
t -7.9 5.7
t -15.6 7.5
t -10.2 11.1
s 5.1 +13.7
t -11.8 2.9
t 10.6 2.7
t -11.5 22.4
t -4.2 5.4
t -25.6 14.0
t -12.6 +1.0
t -6.4 +2.3
s -41.0 30.0
s -30.9 29.4
3
1
2
2
2
1
1
3
1
1
3
1
3
3
3
3
1
3
2
4
3
3
2
2
4
4
11.0
16.4
7.2
11.7
7.5
12.6
22.1
-12.5
17.0
54.4
-10.3
-27.8
-3.5
18.9
8.3
18.9
21.8
14.8
9.2
-1.2
12.8
6.9
6.4
16.9
13.6
-62.1
15
16
17
12
10
20
...
...
22
22
...
...
11
12
30
5
13
24
16
18
19
13
20
12
...
68
3.5
3.7
4.5
2.3
5.1
2.0
...
...
3.6
...
...
...
...
2.3
3.7
2.4
0.9
2.7
4.3
...
5.0
3.1
2.9
2.9
7.9
...
Notes on data: Total returns, shown for periods 1-year or greater, include dividend income and change in market price. Three-year and five-year returns annualized. Ellipses indicate data not available. Price-earnings ratio unavailable for closed-end funds and companies with net losses over
prior four quarters. Rank classifies a stocks performance relative to all U.S.-listed shares, from top 20 percent (1) to bottom 20 percent (5).
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
A13
Nation&World
FOR THE LATEST UPDATES, GO TO LANCASTERONLINE.COM
In brief
LAS VEGAS
2 killed, 4 hurt
in crash and fire
Two people are dead and four others
are injured after a fire tore through a
minibus following a collision Saturday
morning in Las Vegas.
Fire officials said a burning minibus
was found lying on its side on the sidewalk and a car was in the middle of the
intersection. Police said two people on
the bus died at the scene. Two other
passengers as well as two from the
car were hospitalized with non-lifethreatening injuries.
WEST POINT, N.Y.
Drunken driving in
trade center crash
A motorist who plowed into a security barrier outside the World Trade
Center has been arrested on drunken
driving charges, police said.
A Port Authority of New York and
New Jersey police spokesman said the
barrier wasnt damaged in the crash at
about 1:30 p.m. Friday at the high-security site in lower Manhattan. Police
charged Paul Cederdahl of Red Bank,
New Jersey, in the crash.
BEIRUT
Violence follows
death of cleric
Anti-government violence erupted
Saturday in a southern Syrian province
that had largely stayed on the sidelines
of the countrys civil war, a day after
the killing of a prominent cleric in rare
explosions that claimed the lives of at
least 25 others, activists and pro-government media said.
Sheik Wahid Balous, a cleric of the
Druze minority sect, was a prominent
critic of President Bashar Assad, calling on youth in the Druze stronghold
of Sweida province to refuse to serve in
the military. He was also a critic of the
Islamic State militants who have taken
over a third of the country.
MADRID
Gender-neutral
pronouns removed
The University of Tennessee says references to the use of gender-neutral
pronouns such as ze are being removed from a school website.
UT President Joe DiPietro sent a
message to university trustees on
Friday saying references to genderneutral pronouns will be removed
from the schools Office for Diversity
and Inclusion website. The office had
asked students and faculty to use the
pronouns to create a more inclusive
campus.
SOURCE: WIRE REPORTS
ASSOCIATED PRESS
A refugee flashes a victory sign and wipes away tears as he arrives Saturday at the main train station in Munich, Germany.
MIGRANTS
Candy and cuddly toys welcome thousands who fled Syria, Iraq, Afghanistan
SHAWN POGATCHNIK
AND FRANK JORDANS
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Im very glad to be in
Germany. I hope that
I find here a much
better life.
Homam Shehade, shopkeeper.
GAY MARRIAGE
After an uneasy calm, refusal to issue licenses shifts focus to religious freedom
SHERYL GAY STOLBERG
NEW YORK TIMES
WASHINGTON Kim
Davis did more than register a protest when she
went to jail last week after defying a federal court
order to issue marriage
licenses to gay couples.
Davis, the clerk in Rowan
County, Kentucky, also
helped unravel an uneasy
dtente in the nations
culture wars that had prevailed since the Supreme
Court declared a constitutional right to same-sex
marriage in June.
Some Republican presidential aspirants rushed
to the defense of Davis,
a Democrat, and other
public employees who
say sanctioning same-sex
marriage
undermines
their religious freedom.
Her resistance seems certain to generate a burst of
new legislation aimed at
carving out exemptions
for such employees, and
it could spur others to
risk jail in states like Alabama, where religious objections are strong.
Davis, 49, who has said
she attends her Apostolic
Christian church whenever the doors are open
and who cited Gods authority in turning away
gay couples who sought
to marry, has emerged as
a heroine to religious conservatives, many of whom
feel deeply aggrieved by
the Supreme Courts 5-4
decision on same-sex
marriage, in Obergefell
v. Hodges. Her lawyer,
Mathew Staver, called her
NATION
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
2016 CAMPAIGN
CLINTON EMAILS
ASSOCIATED PRESS
THOMAS
BEAUMONT
ASSOCIATED PRESS
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Republican presidential candidate Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., right center, poses for a
photo Friday with a supporter at an outdoor restaurant in San Juan, Puerto Rico.
a round-table discussion
focused on the islands
health-care problems.
She took an indirect shot
at Rubio, charging, You
cant fix your economy
through austerity.
Not a single Republican in Washington has
stepped up to support
Puerto Rico, she told an
invitation-only crowd
gathered in the islands
largest hospital.
Some Republicans describe Clintons policy
prescription as a bailout, although others
among them former
Florida Gov. Jeb Bush
share her position.
Rubio said the island
faces multiple challenges, but remained firm
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paid a State Department employee to
maintain the private
email server she used
while secretary of
state and compensated him for a period of
time for his technical
skills.
After picking up the
endorsement of New
Hampshires senior
senator,
Democrat
Jeanne Shaheen, Clinton again was pressed
to answer questions
about an issue from
her time in the Obama
Cabinet that has
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We obviously paid
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Last week, that employee, Bryan Pagliano, told a House committee that he would
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LNP | LANCASTER, PA
BUDGET IMPASSE
Schools credit
ratings at risk
S&P considering downgrade
HARRISBURG (AP)
The Standard & Poors
credit ratings agency
is warning that it could
downgrade some of Pennsylvanias school districts
and community colleges
because of the 2-monthold budget stalemate that
has cut off billions of dollars in aid.
Fridays note from Standard & Poors said the
stalemate creates uncertainty that the state government will be able to
help cash-strapped school
districts or colleges cover
debt service payments.
Meanwhile, credit rating agency Moodys says
the immediate threat
to holders of Pennsylvania bonds is minimal.
Moodys says the state is
expected to make timely
payments on general obligation debt and that it
The stalemate
creates
uncertainty
that the state
government will
be able to help
cash-strapped
school districts
or colleges cover
debt service
payments.
just made on-time installment payments on two
series of lease revenue
bonds.
Still, Moodys says
the state governments
chronically late budgets
reflect poorly on governance.
Pennsylvanias
credit rating is below-average among states.
K-9 OFFICER
A15
ATTORNEY GENERAL
ASSOCIATED PRESS
HARRISBURG
The accelerating effort to dislodge
Attorney
General
Kathleen Kane from
office and her heelsdug-in determination
to keep her hold on it
are drawing in every
branch of Pennsylvania government and
could plow new legal
ground.
Already facing criminal charges, Kane is
making her case to
Pennsylvanias highest court about why
she should keep her
law license.
Meanwhile, Senate
lawyers are searching
for precedent under
a little-known state
constitutional provision that allows twothirds of the chambers members and
the governor to remove certain elected
officials.
The most immediate threat to Kanes
hold on office is the
potential that the Su-
We explore
options when
we see a train
headed our way,
and this train
could be headed
our way.
Kathleen
Kane
agreement. The case involved his failure to report campaign contributions from video poker
operators.
Political
discontent
with Kane snowballed
after she was charged
criminally on Aug. 6,
capping a tumultuous,
18-month stretch for
the former Lackawanna County prosecutor.
Montgomery County authorities accused her of
leaking secret grand jury
information to a newspaper to embarrass a rival former state prosecutor and then lying about
her actions.
Numerous public officials, including fellow
Democrats Gov. Tom
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OBITS
A16 SEPTEMBER
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER
6, 2015
A16
SUNDAY,
6, 2015
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Obituaries
Deaths Reported
Antolick, Gary J. *
56, of Lancaster. September
3,
2015.
DeBord Snyder Funeral Home & Crematory,
Inc., 394-4097
Iski, Marion B. *
90, of Lancaster. September
3,
2015.
Andrew T. Scheid
Funeral Home, 3978298
Johnson, Richard A.
Sr. *
80, husband of Barbara
Dennison Johnson, of
Kennett Square. September
3,
2015.
Charles F. Snyder Jr.
Funeral Home & Crematory, 560-5100
Breault, Bette J.
98, of Columbia. September 2, 2015. Clyde
W. Kraft Funeral
Home, Inc., 684-2370
Burkhart, Dorothy H.
89, of Akron. September 4, 2015. Good
Funeral Home & Cremation Centre, 3364909
Cassebaum, John M.
75, husband of Kathleen (Evans) Cassebaum, of Elizabethtown. September 2,
2015. Miller-Finkenbinder Funeral Home
&Crematory, 367-1543
Ensminger, William
Roger
Husband of Doris Ritter Ensminger. August
26, 2015. Cremation
Society of Pennsylvania, Inc., 800-720-8221
Ferguson, Dorothy A.
84, of Lancaster. September
4,
2015.
Charles F. Snyder, Jr.
Funeral Home & Crematory, 560-5100
Fisher, Harold L.
83, of Lancashire Hall.
September 2, 2015.
Bachman
Funeral
Home, Inc., 687-7644
Forry, Ruth A.
74, wife of Harold
Forry, of Robisonia.
September 4, 2015.
Eckenroth Home for
Funerals, 445-5122
Glasmire, William E.
Jr.
94, husband of Grace
Snavely Glasmire, of
Brethren Village, Lancaster. September 2,
2015. Furman Home
for Funerals, 656-6833
Graeter, Christopher
N.
55, of Fort Collins, Colorado. July 12, 2015.
Harsh, Beth E.
71, of East Earl. August
27, 2015. Groff-High
Funeral Home, 3540444
Haughwout, F. Allan
92, husband of Edith A.
Howell Haughwout, of
Ephrata. September 3,
2015. Spacht-Snyder
Family Funeral Home
& Crematory, 6262317
Services
Today
Farneth, George Roy
Manheim Township
Community
Park,
Pavilion #2, Petersburg Road, 2:30 PM.
Charles F. Snyder Jr.
Funeral Home & Crematory
Herbert, T. Milton
Pearl Street United
MethodistChurch,133
Pearl Street, Lancaster, 2 PM. DeBord Snyder Funeral Home &
Crematory, Inc.
Weiss,
Marlene
(Leapman)
Degel Israel Cemetery,
Charles Road, (Bausman) Lancaster, 11
AM. Andrew T. Scheid
Funeral Home
Addendum:
Chris Graeter
Memorial
Service
A memorial service
for Chris Graeter will be
held at 11 AM Thursday,
September 10, at St.
Jo h n s
Episcopal
Church, 321 West
Chestnut St., Lancaster,
PA 17603. Visitation will
begin at 10 AM.
e
| @ n
nb Q |
@ n Qn@
@
n@
M n @
Donald W.
Moore
Donald W. Moore,
83, of Intercourse, died
at LGH on
T h u r s d a y,
Sep tember
3, 2015, follo wing a
brief illness.
He was the
husband of
Carroll (Astle)
M oore. They
recently celebrated their
60th wedding anniversaryy.
He
graduated
from the former East
Lampeter High School.
Don served in Germany
with the US Army during the Korean Waar.
H e w as a shee t
metal mechanic at the
Novelty Manufacturing
Company, retiring afftter
over 50 years.
Don was a long-time
m e m b e r o f Ca l v a r y
Monument
Bible
Church.
He was a self-taught
computer whiz and enjoyed photography. Don
loved music, art, and
reading, and was a movie buff.
Don and Carroll enjoyed traveling after
his retirement, visiting
many countries around
the world. He especially
enjoyed spending time
with his familyy.
Born in Paradise
To w n s h ip, Do n w a s
the son of the late J.
Walter and Carrie B.
(Eshleman) M oore.
H e is surviv ed b y
three
daughters,
Kimberly married to
H. James Stauffer of
Manheim, Beverly married to Fred Yo
oder of
Shoemak ersville and
Laura Moore of Lutsk,
Ukraine; his grandchildren, Carrie married to
Kerry Kneisley of Lititz,
Joshua Stauffer of Mt.
Joy, Kristin and her anc Ryan Novak of
Baltimore, MD, Alyssa
married to Chris SantoDomingo of Colorado
and Jenna Yoder
o
of
M echanicsburg; two
great-grandchildren,
L an de n a nd N oa h
Kneisley;
a broth er, Jerry married to
J a n i c e (D e n l i n g e r )
Moore of Wineld; and
a sister, Polly Carl of
Wrightsville. Don was
preceded in death by
a grandson, Michael
Timothy Stauffer, and
a sister, Dorothy Burns
Houck.
There will be a
viewing on Thursday,
Sep tember 10, 20 15
from 10 until 11 AM in
the Calvary Monument
Bible Church. The funeral will be at 11 AM in
the church with Pastor
Bryan Sanders offfiici ating. Interment will
follow in the adjoining
cemeteryy.
In lieu of flowers,
please consider sending
a contribution in Dons
memory to Calvary
Monument
Bible
Church Missionary
Fund, 1660 Mine Rd.,
Paradise, PA 17562 or
the Pequea Vaalley Public
Libraryy, 31 Center St.,
Intercourse, PA 17534.
Bachman Funeral
Home, Strasburg
bachmanfuneral.com
Dottttie
Burkhart
Dorothy H. Dottie
Burkhart, 89, Akron,
died Sept.
4, 2015, in
Ephrata
Manor.
Born in W.
Earl Twp., a
daughter of
Ivan and Annie (Haines)
Snader, her husband
of 63 years, Melvin E.
Burkhart, died March
20, 2013. A graduate of
Empire Beautyy School,
Reading, she owned
& operated Do t ties
Beauty Shop, Akron,
for 55 years. A member of Muddy Creek
Lutheran Church, she
taught Sunday school
and served on the altar
guild. Dottie cherished
her family and attending the grandchildrens
activities. Simply mentioning her grandchildren brought a smile to
her face. She enjoyed
trips to the mountains
and beach and was a
long-time member of
Order of Eastern Star.
Surviving: daughter,
Linda (Lee) Gerhart,
Denv er; sons: Kirby
(Sheila
Stricker)
Burkhart, Ephrata;
& Scott (Jan Brandt)
Burkhart, Den v er;
grandchildren: Justin,
Mandyy, Chrystal, Jim,
Josh, Melissa, Ashley,
Travis, Kirsten, Kortni
& Kyle; and greatgrandchildren: Payton,
Jaxon & Weesleyy. A twin
brotherr, Denton Snader,
& sisters, Helen Long &
Kathryn Krafft, predeceased her.
FUNERAL: Tuesday,
Sept. 8, 11 AM, Muddy
Creek Lutheran Church,
11 S. Muddy Creek
Rd., Denver, PA 17517.
BURIAL: Muddy Creek
Cemetery. VIEWING:
Tuesda y 10- 11 AM.
Rather than flowers,
contributions to her
church or Ephrata
Manor Benev olent
Fund, 99 Bethany Road,
Ephrata, PA 17522.
www
w.g
. oodfuneral.com
IN LOVING MEMORY OF
F. GAINES PANNELL
Sept. 6, 1925 June 29, 2007
OTHER OBITUARIES ON
PAGES A17, A18 & A19
Ramon L. Waleski
a
Sept. 22, 1922 - Aug.
u 27
7, 2015
Goshen, NY
Ramon L. Waaleski of
Goshen, NY
Y, died on
T h u r s d a y,
August 27,
20 15 . H e
was 92 years
old when he
passed into
t h e l ov i n g
arms of our Lord Jesus
Christ. His devoted and
loving wife of 69 years,
Valeria M. Waleski
( Val), died last year.
She was 91.
Ray was born in
C h i c a g o,
IL
on
September 22, 1922. He
was the son of the late
Leona and Walter
Waleski.
a
He was raised
on the south side of the
cityy, which made him a
lifelong White Sox fan.
He was thrilled when his
Sox won their only
Wo
orld Series in his lifetime in 2005! Ray is predeceased by his two sisters
(Charlotte
K alino w ski and Lee
Novak), his one brother
( Waalter Waaleski) and his
only daughter, Jane
Unhjem, who was his
middle child. He is survived by his two sons,
Raymond Waleski of
Rochelle Park, NJ
J, and
Thomas Waleski of
Lancaster, PA.
A He is also
survived by fou
o r grandchildren and one greatgrandchild, all of whom
brought him endless joy
and opportunities to
spoil. They are, respectiveelyy, S
Sharon
a o Sta
Stark o
of
Goshen, NY
Y; Ga yle
Unhjem of New Yo
ork,
NY
Y; Mattthew Unhjem of
New Yo
ork, NY
Y; Charles
Waleski of Lancaster,
PA; and Jason Stark of
Goshen, NY
Y.
Ray enrolled in the
University of Chicago in
1 9 4 0. L i k e s o m a ny
young men of his gener-
ation, he volunteered to
defend his country after
the attack on Pearl
Harbor in 1941. He
joined the Navy and became a ghter pilot, attaining the rank of
Ensign. He was assigned
to the Fighting Squadron
VF-36 aboard the aircraft carrier, the U.S.S.
Siboneyy. After World
o
War
a II, he nished his
collegiate studies via the
G.I. Bill and earned a
Bachelor of Science degree in Chemistry in
1947 from the University
of Chicag o . Professionallyy, he worked
his entire career in the
soft drink indus try,
mostly with the Canada
Dry Corporation where
he attained the position
of Vice President of
Manufacturing.
Ray was a devout
Catholic and a tireless
volunteer for his church.
In lieu of flowers, the
family is requesting that
donations be made to
Sacred Heart Church in
Monroe, NY (www.sacredheartchurch.orgg ) or
to
the
Arthritis
Foundation (www.arthritis.org ).
Friends and family
are invited to a viewing
from 5 to 8 PM on Friday,
S e p t e m b er 1 1 t h , a t
Smith, Seaman &
Quack enbush, Inc.
Funeral H ome, 117
Maple Avenue, Monroe,
NY (845) 782-8185
(www.ssqfuneralhome.
com). A Funeral Mass
will be celebrated at 10
AM on Saturda y,
Sep tember 12th, at
Sacred Heart Church, 26
Y.
Still Road, Monroe, NY
Interment will follow in
County
Orange
Ve t e r a n s M e m o r i a l
Y.
Cemeteryy, Goshen, NY
TM
717-394-5300
145 W. Main St., New Holland 717-354-0444 209 E. Main St., Terre Hill 717-445-5122
More than a
funeral service,
its about
sharing a life.
Mark C. DeBord
Obituary notices are provided
as an advertising service by the
Classified Advertising department of LNP Media Group, Inc.
Deaths Reported and Obituaries may be placed by first calling the Obituary Coordinator at
295-7875, then submitting the
written notice either by e-mail
(obits@LNPnews.com) or by fax
(717-399-6523), Monday-Friday,
10 a.m. to 6 p.m.; Saturday, 2 to 6
p.m.; Sunday, 3 to 6 p.m.
Downtown Lititz
127 S. Broad St.
717-626-2317
717-560-5100
SNYDERFUNERALHOME.COM
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Obituaries
Albert C. We
eidman
Armstrong Chemist
Albert
C.
Al
Blackie Weidman,
e
87
7,
of Brethren
Village
Retirement
Community, for merly of
E a s t
P e tersburg
since
1959,
passed away on
September 3,
2015 at LGH.
He was born in Mount
Bethel, PA,
A and was the
son of Howard and Stella
(Hess) Weeidman.
Al was preceded in
d e a t h b y h is w i f e
Theresa H. ( Wierzbicki)
in 1988.
Al graduated from
Albright College in 1953
with a BS in Chemistry.
He was co-captain of the
football team and was
named to the 1952 AllPennsylvania Colleg e
Football Team.
He served his country
in the US Army, post
WWII in Japan.
He retired in 1989 affter a long and dedicated
career as a Chemist for
Armstrong
Wo r l d
Industries.
An avid sportsman,
he
favored
the
Philadelphia Eagles and
Phillies and Penn State
teams. He enjoyed his
annual deer hunting
trips with his brothers,
the outdoors, and frequent family vacations
to the Delaware beaches.
H e cherished mos t
spending time with his
children and 14 grandchildren. He was a member of the Greatest
Generation, always serving and providing for
others.
He is survived by four
children, Thomas A.
Weidman,
e
husband of
Rita of Weest Hartford,
C T,
Stephen
D.
Weidman,
e
husband of
Dorothy, of Freehold,
NJ
J, William A. Weidman,
e
husband of Doreen, of
Weeare, NH, Beth A.
Waatson, of Milford, NJ
J,
fourteen grandchildren,
Gianna,
Monica,
Timo th y, Michael,
Mat thew, Nathaniel,
Ben jamin ,
Dani el,
Emilyy, Sarah, Rachel,
Nicholas, Ethan and
Ryan. The family would
like to say a special
thanks to longtime
friends Ron and Jean
Leib. Preceding him in
death were three brothers, Lloyd, Howard, and
Carl, a sister, Pauline
Messinger and a daughter Donna M. Hersheyy.
Funeral Services will
be held on Saturday,
September 12, 2015 at
10AM in the Chapel at
he Charles F. Snyder, Jr.
the
Funeral H ome &
Crematoryy, 3110 Lititz
Pike, with Pastor Dana
Statler and Als niece the
Reverend
Wa n d a
Weeidman offfiiciating. A
viewing will be held
from 9-10AM prior to
the service. Interment
will be in St. Josephs
New Catholic Cemetery
with Military Honors.
In lieu of owers, memorial contributions
may be made to the Red
Rose Veterans Honor
Guard, P.O
. . Box 8601,
Lancaster, PA 176048601
To send the family
o n l i n e c o n d o l e n c e s,
please visit
Ruth A. Forry
William Roger
Ensminger
(1927-2015)
BUYERS-SELLERS
SnyderF
Fu
uneralHome.com
Charles F. Snyderr, Jr.
Funeral Home &
Crematory
(717) 560-5100
Bill
Ensming er
passed
away
in
Lancaster, PA on August
26, 2015 after a brief
illness. Formerly of
Towson, MD, Fallston,
MD and Lancaster, PA,
Bill is survived by his
wife of 63 years, Doris
Ritter Ensminger;
daughter, Leslie Sipes
Pachol;
grandson,
Andy Sipes; and great
granddaughter, Anna
Grace Sipes. Bill is predeceased by his son,
Roger Ensminger. Bill
is a WWII veteran and
was HR manager at
Bethlehem Steel until
he retired in 1983. For
the next 25 years, he operated antique shops in
Bel Air and Lancaster.
Friends and relatives
are invited to attend Bill
Ensmingers memorial service at 2 p.m. on
Saturday, September
19, 2015 in the Manor
Club at Willow Valley,
Lancaster, PA. In lieu
of owers, friends may
make donations to the
Towson Presbyterian
Church or the charities
of their choosing.
Arrangements by
Cremation Society of
Pennsylvania, Inc.
Offer your condolences through
Facebook or Twitter at
LancasterOnline.com/Obituaries
F. Allan
Haughwout
F. Allan Haughwout,
92, of Ephrata, PA,
p a s s e d
away o n
T h u r s d a y,
Sept. 3, 2015
at Ephrata
Manor. He
w as
the
husband of
Edith A. Howell
Haughwout,
with whom
he shared 65
years of marriage this
past July 1st. Born in
Elizabeth, NJ, he was
the son of the late
John F. and Kate Boote
Haughwout.
Allan had work ed
for LB Smith Inc. for 10
years as the parts manager. Prior to this he had
worked at Cleveland
Brothers / Caterpillar
Equipment Co. for 21
years in sales.
He was a member of
Lititz United Methodist
Church, where he sang
in the church choir and
helped with the tape
ministryy.
A US Navy veteran,
h e s e r v e d d u r i n g b ot h
World
o
Waar II and the
Korean War
a.
Allan was an avid
golfer, enjoyed reading,
and served as a courier
and longtime volunteer
at Ephrata Community
Hospital. He was volu nt ee r co ach fo r
Bedford County Special
Olympics and an active
member of the Bedford
Kiwanis.
In addition to his
wife, Edith, he is survived by his children:
David A. married to
K aren of Frederick,
MD, Carol Jean married to Kenneth Carper
of Naples, FL, Judith
Ann married to David
Ranck of Ephrata and
John F. married to
Peggy of Palmyra; his 8
grandchildren, 2 great
grandchildren and his
bro ther, Douglas of
Alpharetta, GA. He was
preceded in death by his
sister, Jeane Nolan and
his brothers, Nelson and
Richard.
Friends will be received on Tuesday, Sept.
8, 2015 at the SpachtSnyder Family Funeral
Home & Crematoryy, 127
South Broad St., Lititz,
PA from 10-11AM, with
the Funeral Service
to follow at 11AM.
Interment in Memory
Gardens in Ephrata. In
lieu of flowers, please
mak e contributions
in Allans memory to
Lititz United Methodist
Church, 201 Market St.,
Lititz, PA 17543. To send
an online condolence,
please visit
SnyderF
Fu
uneralHome.com
Spacht- Snyder
Family Funeral Home
& Crematory
(717) 626-2317
Harold L.
Fisher
Ruth Fry
Kinsley
SUSQUEHANNA COIN
Willow Valley Square, Lancaster
717-464-4016 www.susquehannacoin.com
3225 Main St., Conestoga, PA 17516 Melanie B. Scheid, Supervisor, Funeral Director 717.872.1779 or 717.393.1776 www.thegundelchapel.com
A17
OTHER OBITUARIES
ON PAGES A18 & A19
Jack M. Cassebaum,
affectionately known as
C o a c h
Cass, 75, of
Elizabetht o w n ,
passed away
peacefully
on Wednesday, September 2,
2015 at Lancaster
General Hospital surrounded by his loving
family.
He was born August
12, 1940 in Scranton to
the late John C. and
Rena
(Steckbeck)
Cassebaum.
At age 12, Jack moved
to Masonic Childrens
Home in Elizabethtown,
where he received guidance and encouragement that changed the
direction of his life. Jack
was a 1958 graduate of
Elizabethtown Area
High School and was a
member of the 1957 undefeated football team.
He went on to receive
his Bachelors Degree
from East Stroudsburg
State College. Cass began his teaching career
at Pottsville and Easton
where he was an assistant football coach and
later became the head
coach at Northern
Lehigh
(formerly
Slatington),
J. P.
Mc C a s k e y,
Punxsutawney and lastly, his
alma
mater,
Elizabethtown. He also
coached track and eld
and cross country
throughout his career.
Additionally, he owned
and operated the Punxsy
School of Gymnastics
and was a licensed insurance agent. He was inducted
into
the
Susquehanna Valley
Sports Hall of Fame and
the
Pe n n sy l v a n i a
Scholastic Football
Coaches Association
Hall of Fame as well as
Elizabethtown Area
School District Athletic
Hall of Fame. Cass was
also a member of St.
Peter Catholic Church,
the Optimist Club, and
the
Abraham
C.
Treichler Lodge No. 682
F. & A . M . ,
all
of
Elizabethtown.
Jack married his high
school sweetheart,
Kathleen
(Evans)
Cassebaum, and remained an adoring and
loving husband for over
53 years. He will be profoundly missed by his
four children: Jennine
(Bill) Volchko of
Elizabethtown; Jackie
(John) Spittal of
Elizabethtown; Jill
(Dave)
Buck
of
Somerset; Bryan E.
Cassebaum,
of
Elizabethtown; five
grandchildren: Tara
(Eric) Zimmerman,
Cory (Jenny) Volchko,
Shane Volchko, Julia
and Johanna Spittal; two
step-grandchildren:
Alyssa and Aaron Buck;
six great grandchildren:
Travis, Casse, Evan and
Livi
Zimmerman;
Jemma and Savannah
Volchko; a sister, Jeanne
Kopek, of West Chicago,
Illinois as well as Jacks
extended family and caring friends. He was predeceased by a brother,
Joseph Cassebaum.
Cass will be fondly remembered for his motivation, inspiration and
unparalleled enthusiasm. He had a remarkable ability to inspire
others to achieve greatness as evidenced by
turning losing teams into winning programs
that not only had an impact on the athletes he
coached, but the entire
school and community.
He loved his life, family,
and friends and his legacy will continue through
the many lives he has
touched.
A Mass of Christian
Burial will be held at 11
AM on Saturday,
September 12, 2015 at St.
Peter Catholic Church,
904
Mill
Road,
Elizabethtown, PA with
Father Steven W. Fauser
as Celebrant. Interment
will be private at Mount
Tunnel Cemetery following the Funeral
Mass. The family will receive guests at a celebration of Coach Casss Life
and memory sharing at
the Freemason Cultural
Center, 77 Freemason
Drive, Elizabethtown
between 2 and 5 PM on
Saturday, September 12.
Arrangements have
been entrusted to the
Miller-Finkenbinder
Funeral Home &
Crematory, 130 North
Market
Street,
Elizabethtown, PA
17022.
In lieu of owers, the
family is establishing a
memorial scholarship
fund in Jacks name.
Donations can be made
to Kathleen Cassebaum
and sent to Atty. Randall
K Miller, 1255 S Market
St.,
Ste.
102,
Elizabethown, PA 17022.
Condolences and memories may be shared at
w w w. m i l l e r f u n e r a l home.com
THE MILLERSVILLE
BOROUGH PARADE
WANTS TO HONOR YOU!
OCTOBER 24 TH, 2015
You will be driven on a warm bus through the main streets
of Millersville to be honored by thousands of residents!
S P O N S O R E D BY
A18
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Obituaries
Zell Peder
Bonsall
~
'~ ` ~
;~~EE~
Doroth
hy A.
Ferguson
Dorothy A. Ferguson,
84, of Lancaster, PA
passed away
Friday,
Sep tember
4, 2015 at
Hospice &
Community Care in
Mt. Joy, PA
A.
She w as the
wife of the late
K enne th D.
Ferguson who
died in 1997
7.
Born in McAdoo, PA,
A
she was the daughter of
the late Adam and Mary
( Yadlosky) Shunski.
Dorothy was a cashier
with Sears for 25 years
prior to her retirement.
She loved dancing, was
a kind hearted, loving
mother. Dorothy enjoyed gardening and
spending time with
family and friends especially during birthdays
and holidays. She was
a member of St. John
Neumann Catholic
Church.
She is survived
by her son, Charles
Michael Morris of East
Petersburg, PA
A. Doroth
hy
was preceded in death
by a son, Gary Paul
Morris.
Mass of Christian
Burial will be held on
Friday, September 11,
2 01 5 a t 1 1 A M f r om
St. J ohn Neumann
Catholic Church, 601 E.
Delp Rd., Lancaster, PA
17601. Interment will
be held in St. Anthony s
Catholic Ceme tery,
Lancaster. A viewing
will be held one hour
prior to the funeral mass
at Church.
M emorial contri butions may be made
to St. John Neumann
Catholic Church at the
above address.
Beth E. Harsh
Roy E. Weidler
taking his family on
summer vacations to
White Crystal Beach
and Ocean City, MD.
Roy also enjoyed hunting, fishing, and politics. Being a veteran, he
had a love for America,
the Flag, and those who
served our country. He
also supported disabled veterans.
Surviving Roy are
his wife of 70 years, Esther I. (Ditzler) Weidler
of Fairmount Homes; 4
children: Roy L. Weidler, husband of Linda
of Potter County, Nevin
E. Weidler, husband of
Lori, Brenda K. Mateyak, wife of Stephen,
and Tina M. Weidler
all of Ephrata; 5 grandchildren: Shay Salat,
Toby Sellers, Tanya
Perry, Denise Calhoun
and Daryl Calhoun; 6
great-grandchildren:
Alyssa, Javin and Faith
Perry, Madison Calhoun and Tara and
Kayla Long; and his
brothers Richard Weidler, husband of Barb
of Ephrata, and Russell
Weidler of Lititz. Roy
was preceded in death
by 9 siblings.
A funeral service
will be held at 11:30 AM
Wednesday, September
9, 2015, at the SpachtSnyder Family Funeral
Home & Crematory,
127 S. Broad St., Lititz,
PA 17543, with Pastor
Deryl Hurst officiating.
Roys family will receive friends from 10 to
11:30 AM on Wednesday at the funeral
home. Interment with
Military Honors will be
in Indiantown Gap National Cemetery. In lieu
of flowers, memorial
contributions may be
made to the Disabled
American Veterans,
4219 E. Trindle Rd.,
Camp Hill, PA 17011.
To send the family online condolences,
please visit
Roy
E.
Weidler, 91, a
former longtime Lititz
resident, died
peacefully
surrounded
by his loving
family at Fairmount Homes Retirement Community, on
Wednesday, September
2, 2015. He was born in
Rothsville to the late
Monroe M. and Alice
W. (Ernst) Weidler.
The husband of Esther
I. (Ditzler) Weidler,
Roy sadly passed on
their 70th wedding anniversary.
A US Army veteran
of WWII, Roy served in
the European Theater
of Operations in the
29th Infantry, 116th
Regiment, 3rd Battalion, Company I. During
his time served, he was
wounded 3 times. Roy
was awarded a Purple
Heart with an oak leaf
cluster.
Roy was a foreman
at Wilbur Chocolate
for 46 years. As a man
of God, he loved Jesus
and enjoyed reading
his Bible and praying
daily. Roy attended
Dove Westgate Church.
Psalm 91 was one of
his favorite passages
that he asked people
to read. Roy adored
his beloved wife and
delighted in their time
spent together. Singing with her and kicking up his heels on the
dance floor with her
always brought a smile
to his face. Roy loved
his family and cherished spending time
with them. He enjoyed
SnyderFuneralHome.com
Spacht-Snyder
Family Funeral Home
& Crematory
(717) 626-2317
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OTHER OBITUARIES
ON PAGE A19
LNP
| LANCASTER,
PA SEPTEMBER 6, 2015
OBITS
A19 SUNDAY,
Obituaries
Bette J.
Breault
Bette J. Breault of
Columbia entered into
the pres ence of her
Lord and
Savior with
her loving
daughter at
her side on
Wednesday,
Sep tember
2, 2015 at
the ag e of
98. She was
born
on
M a r c h 2 3,
1917 in Tyrone, one of
seven children born to
the late Roy and Mabel
Hall. Bette worked at
W.T. Grants for many
years before retiring,
and in her early years
she worked at the Penn
Belle in Bellefonte. She
loved doing her puzzle
books and most of all
she loved her Bible with
her Lord Jesus Always
at her side. She was alw a ys sa ying pra yers
for someone in need.
She loved her old cat
Captain Jack because
she said he was old and
needyy, and she loved
her young cat Oscar
Pistorious because he
was blind and needed
help. She will be greatly
missed by us all.
She is survived
b y her daughter
Sus an Smith (Fred)
of Columbia and son
Richard Breault (Janet)
of
Elizabethtown,
Brothers Richard Hall
of Milesburg and Roy
Hall of Bellefonte, 9
grandchildren, 17 greatgrandchildren, and
many nieces and nephews. In addition to her
parents she was preceded in death by her
son William Breault,
Jr., also the love of her
life William Breault, Sr.,
and 2 sisters Jean Rider
and Margorie Weir
e , and
2 brothers John and
Rodman Hall.
Private funeral services for Bette will
be held at the con venience of the family. Arrang ements by:
Clyde W. Kraft Funeral
Home, Inc., Columbia/
Landisville.
www.cwkraftfh.com
Mary Ann
Wa
alker
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SHOOTINGS
Randy G.
Witmyer
Randy G. Witmyer of
Lancaster passed away
Wednesday,
Sep tember
2, 2015 at
home. H e
was the son
of the late
Eugene
and Nanc y
Ann (Leonard)
Witmyer.
Randy
w as
emplo yed b y
Federal Mogul
as a s teel work er and
proudly served
in the US Navy during
Vietnam. He had a great
sense of humor, was wittyy, kind, caring, generous, and fun loving. He
was a wonderful grandfather, loving father and
a loyal friend. Randy enjoyed playing games of
all kinds and was especially fond of Dung
Dungeons
and Dragons. He was an
avid collector of Native
American arrowheads
and artifacts and loved
l e a r n i n g a b o u t N a t i ve
American culture. He
was so knowledgeable
in this area that he was
asked to give several lectures on the subject.
He survived by his
companion of many
years, Cynthia Weeiss
of Lancaster, PA;
A a son,
Benjamin Witm yer
and wife Theresa of
Downingtown, PA; a
daughterr, Rebecca, wife
of Thomas Schlegel of
Lancaster, PA; three
grandchildren, Audreyy,
Conner and E van
Schleg el; three sis ters, Kathy Steff
ffyy, Kim
Farlow and Carla Starks
and a s tepmo ther,
Shirley Witmer, all of
Ephrata, PA. Randy was
preceded in death by a
brotherr, Brian Witmyer.
Funeral services will
be held at the convenience of his familyy.
Memorial contributions may be made to
Compassionate Care
Hospice, 1681 Crown
Ave., Ste. 104, Lancaster,
PA 17601.
William E.
Glasmire, Jr.
William E. Glasmire,
Jr., 94, of Brethren
Village,
L a n c a s t e r,
passed away
Wednesday,
Sep tember
2, 2015 at
Lancaster
General Hospital. Born
in Denmark, he was the
son of the late William
E. and Leah Sheaffer
Glasmire. He was a devoted husband to Grace
Snavely Glasmire. They
celebrated their 70th
anniversary in April.
William serv
served
ed in the
U.S
. . Army during WWII.
He retired in 1992 having worked for 35 years
at First Federal Savings
and Loan as an Officer
and Director.
He was a member of
the Centerville AARP
and the Silver Threads
of Lancaster. He was active
tive in his church where
he sang in the choir for
many years, served on
the building committee
and was active in fellowship groups. He enjoyed
playing golf, traveling,
and ballroom dancing.
In addition to his
wife, he is survived by
two grandchildren,
Todd, husband of Gail
Glasmire, and Tami
Glasmire; a great-granddaughter, Abby; and a
brotherr, David, husband
of Ann Glasmire; two
s is t e rs- in -l a w, Dor is
Hauck and Marie, married to Bill Goulburn.
He was preceded in
death by a son, Michael
Glasmire; two brothers,
Joe, and M. Alexander
Glasmire; and a sister,
Charlotte G. Garman.
A celebration of
life will be held at the
Lancaster Church of
the Brethren, 1601
Sunset Ave., Lancaster,
PA 17601 on Monday,
September 14, 2015 at 3
pm. Family and friends
may visit from 2:15 until the time of the service. Pastor Jeff
ffrrey Rill
will officiate. In lieu of
flowers, contributions
may be made to the
Lancaster Church of the
Brethren.
Furmans Leola
FurmanFuneralHome.
com
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M 3
Days of Grace
rally honors
SC victims
Families, others remember those
killed in two shootings in area
MEG KINNARD
ASSOCIATED PRESS
CHARLESTON, S.C.
The pastor of a Charleston church where nine
African-American worshippers were shot to
death earlier this year
led a march Saturday of
good will, remembrance
and hopes for the triumph of good over evil.
Flanked by relatives of
the slain parishioners,
as well as the father of
a black man killed by a
white law officer, the Rev.
Norvel Goff of Charlestons Emanuel African
Methodist
Episcopal
Church led hundreds
through the streets of the
city during an event that
was part of Days of Grace.
Standing in front of the
church known as Mother
Emanuel, Goff sought to
convey the message that
good will was developing
from the darkest of situations.
He stopped the marchers at his church, leading
the crowd of several hundred in singing We Shall
Overcome, as many
participants black and
We are going to
triumph over
evil.
Rev. Norvel Goff
US GOVERNMENT
Congress returns
to weighty agenda
ANDREW TAYLOR
AND ALAN FRAM
ASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON
Congress returns on
Tuesday with a critical
need for a characteristic
rarely evident through a
contentious spring and
summer cooperation
between
Republicans
and President Barack
Obama.
Lawmakers face a
weighty list of unfinished business and
looming deadlines, including a stopgap spending bill to keep the government open beyond
Sept. 30. The most intractable issues a solution to a yearlong battle
over agency budgets and
a deal on a long-sought
highway bill have been
kicked to the fall.
Its going to take a
sense of give and take
on both sides, said Rep.
Tom Cole, R-Okla. The
big deal will be, Can you
come to a deal on transportation, debt ceiling
and avoiding sequester?
So a large budget deal
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Living
n SEND STORY TIPS & INFO TO: JON FERGUSON, 291-8839, JFERGUSON@LNPNEWS.COM
Lancaster
Scottish skills
n Entertainment, Page B4
ENTERTAINMENT
LABOR OF LOVE
4 whose jobs involve stage, dance, music describe what they do and why they do it
From left: Brian Levine, senior director and head of project management at Tait Towers; Andy Kindig, actor; Jennifer Berlet, artistic director at NetCo Dance Co.
ERIN NEGLEY AND
JENELLE JANCI
ENEGLEY@LNPNEWS.COM
JJANCI@LNPNEWS.COM
Brian Levine
Manheim Township
Andy Kindig
Lancaster
Jennifer Berlet
Lancaster Township
ANIMAL RESCUE
TKNAPP@LNPNEWS.COM
Veterinary
technician
Jordan
Mackey is
raising money to pay for
surgery to
help Abbie
the Labrador puppy
with her
neurological
issues.
B2
LOCAL
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
THEATER REVIEW
JHOLAHAN@LNPNEWS.COM
First-rate cast
The cast is first rate.
Doug Cashell is Nick, who
spends every Sunday with
IF YOU GO
n Over the River &
Nick, played by Doug Cashell, center, has had about enough of his
grandparents, from the left, John DeLancy and Lois Sharrott as
Nunzio and Emma and Sherry Konjura and Joe Winters as Aida and
Frank, from Over the River and Through the Woods at Rainbow
Comedy Playhouse.
Presented in
flashback
We soon discover that Nick
is telling his story in flashback, that these crazy moments with his grandparents
are in the past. He and the
Restaurant inspections
The Pennsylvania
Department of Agriculture,
866-366-3723, uses a
risk-based inspection
reporting process for
restaurants and other food
handlers.
James Street Lancaster
General Hospital, 555
N. Duke St., Aug. 21. No
violations.
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LIVING
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Labor Day
Continued from B1
Vin Fischer
Columbia
following opportunities:
United Way of Lancaster
Countys Volunteer Income
Tax Assistance, or VITA,
program is seeking volunteers
to prepare basic tax returns
for low-income families. By
providing free tax preparation services through VITA,
volunteers help ensure that
Lancaster County families
claim all available credits and
save on expensive tax-preparation fees.
No experience is needed,
just a passion to help others.
Volunteers receive a combination of self-paced IRS online
and local classroom training.
VITA has 19 volunteer sites
throughout Lancaster County
that offer evening, day and
weekend volunteer opportunities.
Contact Ezra Rothman at
Rothman@UWLanc.org or
824-8111.
The Community Cupboard of Elizabethtown is
looking for volunteers to serve
the food pantry by assisting
clients, stocking shelves and
organizing products. Free
training and flexible hours are
available.
Contact The Community Cupboard at 361-8149
or ETownCupboard@gmail.
com.
Lancaster Public Library
is seeking a book tidy-er.
The prospective volunteer
should be a neat freak
someone who really enjoys
making things look neat and
tidy. This volunteer can have
any combination of experience and education; all thats
required is a desire to straighten, neaten and tidy up, with
the ability to work independently.
The volunteer will touch
base with library staff to see
what areas need attention,
keep track of what areas have
been worked on and what still
needs work, walk around and
straighten fallen books, edge
BRANDON ENGLE
VIN FISCHER
UNITED WAY
Give back to
your community
during United
Way Day of
Caring
Calling all volunteers! On Friday and Saturday we kick off our
United Way Campaign with our
24th annual Day of Caring. The
event brings together people
from across Lancaster County,
including nonprofit agencies
that serve those in need, volunteers who donate their time,
and businesses that support the
event.
There are numerous projects
in need of volunteers Friday.
From painting and mulching, to
reading books to children, there
are opportunities for every age
and skill level.
Day of Caring is a great way
to give back to the community
you love. To sign up for a Day of
Caring volunteer project, visit
UWLanc.org/DayOfCaring.
Whether you volunteer Friday
or Saturday, join us for a free
breakfast as we thank you for
your hard work. The Thank You
Breakfast will take place from
6:30-8:30 a.m. Saturday at the
Farm and Home Center, 1383
Arcadia Road. Those attending volunteers and those from
participating nonprofits and
supporting businesses are all
welcome will enjoy a familyfriendly environment with
healthy food options, music and
Zumba.
Partner with United Way, and
together we can make a real difference in our community and
help improve lives!
For other ways to give back to
your community, check out the
ASK AMY
LECHLEITNER, Brad
D. and Katie (Daniels),
Elizabethtown, a son, at
Women & Babies Hospital,
Wednesday.
Aunt concerned
about nieces depression
DEAR AMY: My husbands
brother and his wife are
going through a divorce.
They have a teenage daughter who is anxious and
depressed.
She has always been a
moody child, but she has
been through a lot. Her
mother had two close calls
with cancer, and now her
parents have split, although they are on friendly
terms. Her father wants the
daughter to go to therapy.
His daughter lives with her
mother, and her mother
seems not to believe in
counseling, so nothing is
being done to treat my
nieces depression. She is
deteriorating, and I worry
what might become of her
when she heads to college
next year. Is there any way
AMY DICKINSON
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B4
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Entertainment
SCOTTISH HERITAGE
Highland Games competitor J.T. King practices throwing the heavyweight for distance at Middle Octorara Presbyterian Church on Friday.
JHOLAHAN@LNPNEWS.COM
Quarryvilles Scots
Donald Henderson, one of
the organizers of the festival,
Well be
doing a lot
of grunting,
yelling and
sweating.
Josh Walters,
throwing at left
CLASSICAL CONCERT
zenhauser.
Classical
Inspiration,
set for Saturday and Sunday, Sept. 12 and 13, includes
Mozarts Symphony No.
35 and Prokofievs Classical Symphony. It also offers Tchaikovskys Rococo
Variations, an elegant work
evoking Russia in the age of
the czars.
Written for the cello, the
latter piece features the symphonys principal cellist, Lukasz Szyrner.
He is brilliant, and this
gives us the
opportuPianist
Asiya
Korepanova will
play with
LSO in
May.
2015-16
LSO season
Lancaster Symphony
Orchestras
2015-16
season is billed as Crescendo, and thats the
perfect word to sum up
the orchestras goals,
says conductor Stephen Gunzenhauser.
We are building
up to something new.
Were growing and
changing, he says.
Were looking at the
SEASON, page B5
KEITH SCHWEIGERT
UNSCRIPTED
Everest film
piques his interest
I can't believe we've made it to
September already, and another
summer blockbuster movie season
is behind us.
It seems like only yesterday we
were feverishly waiting for flicks
such as "Avengers: Age of Ultron"
and "Mad Max: Fury Road" to arrive
in theaters.
Now they've long since disappeared from the marquee. Heck,
they're both out on Blu-Ray.
My feelings about the latest summer fare can be summed up with
one word "meh" but there are
still a handful of movies coming out
this year that I'm eager to see.
One of them is "Star Wars Episode
VII: The Force Awakens," which
will arrive in theaters in exactly 103
days.
(Yes, I'm counting down the days.
I've written here before about my
insane level of Star Wars geekery.)
The other will be in theaters much
sooner. And while it's gotten a mere
fraction of the hype that Luke Skywalker and company have received,
I'm still pretty excited about it.
The movie is "Everest," which will
be released Sept. 18.
It is based on the 1996
Mount Everest disaster
chronicled in one of my
all-time-favorite books,
"Into Thin Air," by Jon Krakauer.
Krakauer was one of the climbers
involved in the disaster in which
several people lost their lives after
being trapped near the summit of the
mountain by an unexpected storm.
Krakauer said in recent interviews that he's still haunted by
the tragedy. He calls his decision
to climb Everest one of his biggest
regrets.
His book describes the history of
Everest and the early attempts to
climb it. It also discusses the recent
trend of professional climbing expeditions and how they might have
contributed to the tragedy.
But the real meat of Krakauer's
book is the story of the climb itself,
on which much of the film is based.
Krakauer expertly profiles his
fellow climbers and guides, describing the personality traits that
made them want to spend the time,
money and effort to get to the top of
the mountain.
He also paints a vivid picture of
just how much suffering is required
to climb higher than the cruising
altitude of the average jumbo jet.
Summiting Mount Everest takes
a level of physical exertion and
mental determination most of us
can't fathom.
Krakauer describes how his
complete exhaustion diminished
the sense of accomplishment he expected to feel when he finally stood
at the top of the world's tallest peak.
He was on his way down from
the top of the mountain when the
storm arrived, trapping his guides
and several members of his expedition team at or near the summit.
What unfolded over the next few
hours while Krakauer and other
climbers waited helplessly in their
tents will likely make up the majority of the film's final acts.
A total of eight people died during the storm, including four from
Krakauer's group. One other team
member was left for dead but made
a miraculous recovery, walked back
to camp, and subsequently escaped
the mountain. But he was severely
disfigured by injuries from frostbite.
I've re-read Krakauer's book several times over the last decade or so.
The story never ceases to draw me
in. I've become fascinated by Everest lore, and by its tragic history.
I would never attempt the climb,
but I would love to trek to base
camp someday to see the mountain
with my own eyes.
In all likelihood, that wont happen. Watching "Everest" in IMAX
3D will be as close as I come to seeing the mountain myself.
I'm looking forward to getting the
chance.
ENTERTAINMENT
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
B5
Highland Society of
Harford County, Maryland, and the Scottish
Society of Central PA.
While there will be no
women
participating
this year, Walters hopes
to have women compete
next year. (The items
they toss and throw are
lighter, but they have the
same events.)
The Highland Games,
taking place on the
grounds of the church,
open at 8:30 a.m. as athletes arrive on the field.
Games begin at 9.
Its a nice flat field,
which is what you need,
Walters says.
Tossing and
hurling
Among the nine events
they will be competing in
is the braemar stone toss.
Olympic
overtones
Clearly, the Highland
Games have a direct connection to track and field
and events in the Olympics, such as the discus
and the shot put.
There were games of
skill like this in the ancient world, Henderson says. Pottery from
Greece has been found
in Scotland, so there was
some connection between them.
Henderson says it is
highly likely the games
were based on warfare.
You had to have great
strength for war, Henderson says.
Walters friend, J.T.
King, 6-foot-2 and 295
pounds, started competing recently.
I played football,
and I got into lifting
(weights), he says. And
I participate in strong
man competitions.
Like Walters, King understands that the spin
he puts on a throw is as
important as where he
places his feet before he
lets those 56 pounds fly.
Season
Continued from B4
ny in Lancaster without
having samples of chocolate for the audience?
Not only is this approach unique to a classical concert, he says, but
the composer himself is
unique to the genre.
He is not a traditional
classical composer, Gunzenhauser says, of Goulet.
Hes known for doing
music for videogames.
In fact, Goulet has
Pops Series
n Hollywood Heroes
to a variety of audiences,
giving them something
for the time and money
they invest in the concerts.
When people come to
a concert by Lancaster
Symphony Orchestra, we
want them to leave excited, Gunzenhauser says.
We want them to say to
their friends, If you didnt
hear that concert last
night, you missed out.
tunes.
Special events
n Holiday Brass: Its
Years
25
1990-2015
Celebrating
Window
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www.heritagedesigninteriors.com
B6
MOVIES IN REVIEW
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
DVD RELEASES
(All will be released Tuesday)
n The Age of Adaline (PG-13):
Adaline Bowman (Blake Lively) has
remained 29
years old for
almost eight
decades
and has
lived a
solitary
life, never
getting
close to
anyone who
might discover
her secret.
But then she meets a charismatic
philanthropist (Michiel Huisman) and
her passion for life and romance is
reignited. When a weekend with his
parents (Harrison Ford and Kathy
Baker) threatens to uncover the truth,
Adaline makes a decision that will
change her life forever.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
This photo provided by EuropaCorp/TF1 Films shows Ed Skrein as Frank Martin in The Transporter Refueled.
Pixels
Ricki and the Flash
San Andreas
Shaun the Sheep
Sinister 2
Southpaw
Straight Outta Compton
Ted 2
Terminator Genisys
Trainwreck
Transporter Refueled
Vacation
A Walk in the Woods
War Room
We Are Your Friends
n Transporter Refueled is playing at the Regal, Penn and MoviE-town theaters. Its rated PG13 for sequences of violence and action, sexual material, some language, a drug reference and
thematic elements. Running time is 96 minutes.
Best of Teletubbies
Sept. 9
n Bratz: Friendship Is
n Kicking It (2008)
Sept. 28
Sept. 10
n Undeclared, the
Sept. 29
complete series
season 1-2
(2011)
Sept. 14
n Best of Teletubbies
n Bratz: The Video:
season 2
n Coriolanus (2011)
Sept. 30
n Anchorman 2: The
n Apocalypse Now
(1979)
n The Expendables 3
(2014)
n If I Stay (2014)
n Jack Ryan: Shadow
Recruit (2014)
Sept. 16
Sept. 20
n Reporter (2009)
Sept. 22
n National Geographic:
n National Geographic:
Sept. 27
Sept. 13
Inside Guantanamo
(2009)
Grandpa (2013)
n Nebraska (2013)
n The Prince (2014)
n Saved! (2004)
n The Skeleton Twins
(2014)
n Transformers: Age of
Line (2011)
Unprofessional (2012)
Extinction (2014)
Street (2013)
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
B7
HEALTH
experiments with
Be generous, stay healthy Tennessee
high-tech sleep monitors
STEVE MEGARGEE
AP SPORTS WRITER
Studies have found that generosity, such as volunteering and charitable donations,
benefits young and old physically and psychologically.
STUDY
GOOD HE A LTH.
In life, you cant always plan ahead. Mount Joy Family Medicine
offers same-day and next-day appointments, as well as evening and
weekend hours, so you can stay in control of your health. We care for
the community by taking the time to get to know you and your family.
Our services include:
Preventative care for all ages
Physical examinations
Womens health
Mens health
Pediatric care
Gynecology
Your partners in
KNOXVILLE,
Tenn. About an
hour before a Tennessee football players
scheduled bedtime,
he gets a reminder via
an app on his phone
or a text message.
Thats when he puts
on orange glasses that
block out the glow of
smartphones or computer screens, making it easier to fall
asleep.
All the players have
been given sleeping
masks as well. Some
have sensors above
their mattresses and
under their sheets to
monitor heart rate,
movement and respiration rate to detect their quality and
quantity of sleep.
The idea is that if
they sleep better each
night, theyll work
better the following
day.
Look at any college
student the two
things they struggle
with are time management and sleep,
Tennessee
coach
Butch Jones said. To
be able to perform at
a high level, you need
your sleep, you need
nine hours every day,
you need to sleep in
68-degree room temperatures, all those
things that were constantly stressing with
our players.
B8
FOOD
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Food
DR. JOSEPH MCPHEE
SURGEONS KITCHEN
Skillet ham and cheese quiche is casual enough for every day yet tasty enough for company.
ANN FULTON
n Have questions or comments about Ann Fultons column? Check out her blog at fountainavenuekitchen.com or at
facebook.com/thefountainavenuekitchen. She also welcomes email at ann@fountainavenuekitchen.com
FOOD
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
FOOD EVENT
B9
BEVERAGES
From left,
ranch
dressing,
sweet corn,
Buffalo
wing and
bacon are
four of the
94 flavors
Candyology in Lititz
carries.
MWRIGHT@LNPNEWS.COM
n Course 1: Shoppes
FREEIMAGES.COM
IF YOU GO
n What: Elizabethtown Wine Walk
n Where: Throughout downtown
n When: 4-9 p.m. Friday, Sept. 11
n Tickets: $40, online only at www.marketstreetib.
com/wine-walk.
n www.VisitElizabethtownPA.com or
www.facebook.com/VisitElizabethtownPA.
Unusual sodas
fill new wall at
Lititz candy shop
Soft drinks have flavors from sweet
corn to peanut butter and jelly
ERIN NEGLEY
ENEGLEY@LNPNEWS.COM
Twitter at @Erin_Negley.
MADE EASY!
Always working within your budget, you will
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Encks
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Established in 1974
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Dinner for two
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on Market, 206 S.
Market St., a salad of
organic baby greens,
feta or Parmesan
cheese, walnuts, dried
cherries and balsamic
vinaigrette, paired with
a pinot gris from the
Vineyard at Grandview,
Mount Joy.
n Course 2: Lynden
Gallery, 117 S. Market St.,
crostini, goat cheese
and tapenade with
cheddar and St. Andre
cheeses, mixed fruit
and nuts, with a wine
from Cullari Vineyards,
Hershey.
n Course 3: Pita Pit/
Epic Photography, 28
S. Market St., a creamy
tomato bisque served
with a Parmesancrusted Quespita for
dipping, paired with
a wine from Waltz
Vineyards, Manheim.
n Course 4: Mandis On
Market, 2 N. Market St.,
meatloaf cupcakes,
stuffed with smoked
Gouda cheese and
topped with sour cream,
chive mashed potatoes
and gravy, with a wine
from Waltz Vineyards.
n Course 5: Folklore
Coffee & Co., 1 N. Market
St., a Folklorious
dessert, with a wine
from Cullari Vineyards.
n Course 6: Winters
Heritage House
Museum, 47 E. High
St., confections from
Spences Candy, with
a wine from Nissley
Vineyards, Bainbridge.
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LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Travel
DESTINATION
BEAR IN MIND
Known for its winter sports, Whistler, British
Columbia, also boasts summer fun and bear tours
TRACEY TEO
SYNDICATED WRITER
MICHAEL ALLEN
EXHIBIT
Revving up
the visits
Wrecked cars boosting visitors
to National Corvette Museum
BRUCE SCHREINER
ASSOCIATED PRESS
This file photo shows a sinkhole that opened up swallowing eight classic and historic Corvettes at the National
Corvette Museum in Bowling Green, Ky. Work ended recently to fill in the pit that consumed eight prized
sports cars, and the repaired exhibit area has become a magnet for visitors, with the dirt-caked remains of the
mangled cars being the stars.
Wanda Cohen, of Roswell, Ga., takes a photo of the cars that were swallowed by the sinkhole at the National
Corvette Museum in Bowling Green, Ky. The car-swallowing hole has been fixed but not forgotten at the museum.
Yellow tape now marks the boundaries of the cavity that became a sensation and put the museum on the map.
looks.
Its just horrifying, said Corvette owner Doug Kidd,
of Canton, Ohio. Natures a pretty big thing to deal
with. They look like they went through a tornado.
Seven of the eight cars are back on display in about the
same spot where they plunged to fame. Five were too
beaten up for repairs.
One is fixed, another returned last week after being repaired in Michigan and another will be restored by the
museum. The eight cars carried a total value believed to
exceed $1 million.
The museums Facebook followers now exceed
200,000, compared to about 50,000 before the sinkhole
opened.
On social media, photos showcasing the damaged cars
outpace those of the shiny, sleek models on display, said
museum spokeswoman Katie Frassinelli.
People just really enjoy hearing the story and like seeing the damage, she said. I guess its the rubberneck effect. These cars definitely appeal to a wider audience.
In the gift shop, jars of sinkhole dirt and rocks fetch
$10 apiece. Nearly 2,400 jars had sold through July.
Wanda Cohen of Roswell, Georgia, had just posted a
photo of a wrecked car on her Facebook page.
Its like looking at the worst wrecks youve ever seen,
she said.
For museum officials, the trick is to keep the sites
popularity from going in reverse now that visitors cant
gawk at the sinkhole. The museum cashed in on the gi-
TRAVEL
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
B11
A black
bear and
cub roam
through
the verdant
moutains
during the
summer in
Whisler, British Columbia.
Bears
EXCHANGE RATES
These foreign exchange selling rates, as of the close of
business Sept. 3, 2015, apply only to the purchase of
currency amounting to $1,000 or less. These retail exchange
rates apply only to Fulton Bank and are furnished by the
International Services Department.
CURRENCY
RATE
U.S. $
0.7564
1.32
0.8068
1.24
1.1033
0.91
0.1625
6.15
Euro (EUR)
1.2046
0.83
1.6395
0.61
0.008898
112.38
0.06386
15.66
0.1307
7.65
0.6858
1.46
1.6395
0.61
Swedish Kroner(SEK)
0.1292
7.74
Corvette
Continued from B10
Peak 2 Peak
Gondola
Whistler boasts a diversity of dramatic
scenery: ancient glaciers, alpine lakes, and
coastal rainforests. The
best way to take in these
stunning vistas is to
hop on the Peak 2 Peak
Gondola, the worlds
longest (2.7 miles) and
tallest gondola that
connects Whistler and
Blackcomb Mountains.
I made the trip with
sightseers from the U.S.
and Europe, all of us
marveling at the panoramic view of peaks
engulfed in a swirling,
ethereal mist.
In only 11 minutes, I
was transported from
warm, sunny Whistler
Village to the peak of a
freezing, snow-capped
mountain where wind
pierced through my
jacket like a knife. The
swift and remarkable
change was astounding.
Like virtually all tourists, upon departing
the gondola, I made a
beeline for the Olympic
rings that mark the site
of 2010 Olympic events
and struck a cheesy pose,
emulating an adrenaline-fueled champion
waiting for the medal
to be placed around her
neck.
Those who dont want
to brave the cold for the
sake of a photo can pose
at a second set of Olympic
rings in Whistler Village.
A walk on the
wild side
Im not into long,
sweaty hikes, but Whistlers mild summer
temps and low humidity
had me eager to put on
my walking shoes.
I started with the Lost
Lake Trail, which has 20
miles of trails that wind
around cedar groves,
beaver dams and alpine
meadows blooming with
wildflowers. Its easy and
level, suitable for almost
anyone.
As I made my way
around the lake, I was
amused to find a group
of swimmers soaking up
the sun as though they
were on a Caribbean
beach. Apparently, when
its 68 degrees in Whistler, its time to work on
your tan.
When it comes to
wildlife, black bears are
the stars of the show,
but a hike often introduces a supporting cast
of deer, bald eagles and,
of course, marmots, the
furry, whistling creatures that are the towns
namesake.
Serious hikers looking
for a challenge can sign
up for an arduous excursion in the most rugged part of the mountains, but as for me, I
was quite content with a
pleasant stroll through
a forest echoing with
birdcalls and fragrant
with pine.
In a few months, winter sports enthusiasts
will return to their enchanted, snowy playground.
Ive often wished I
could ski, but, perhaps,
its a good thing I never
got off the bunny slope.
Otherwise, I would be
here when the pristine
lake was frozen, the
wildflowers were not
in bloom and the bears
were sound asleep in
their dens.
Unlock your
dream.
LancasterOnline.com/homes
Fact: There is no such thing as too many ways to perk up the perfect vacation.
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email cathy@trvltime.com
B12
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
NY Times best-sellers
Combined fiction
1. Friction, by Sandra Brown. (Grand Central.)
A Texas Ranger fights for custody of his daughter
amid complications stemming from his attraction
to the judge.
2. The Girl on the Train, by Paula Hawkins.
(Riverhead.) A psychological thriller set in the environs of London is full of complications and betrayals.
3. The Martian, by Andy Weir. (Crown.) Abandoned by his crew, an astronaut embarks on a
dogged quest to stay alive.
4. Go Set a Watchman, by Harper Lee. (Harper.) In the mid-1950s, a grown-up Jean Louise
Finch returns to Maycomb and realizes that her
adored father is a racist.
5. Small Wars, by Lee Child. (Delacorte.) In an
e-book short story set in 1989, Jack Reacher must
solve the murder of a young officer.
6. The Murderers Daughter, by Jonathan
Kellerman. (Ballantine.) A Los Angeles psychotherapist is surprised when a brief hookup shows
up as a patient and even more surprised when
he is murdered.
7. Gray Mountain, by John Grisham. (Doubleday.) A downsized Wall Street lawyer joins a legal
clinic in a small Virginia town, and litigates against
the coal-mining industry.
8. Grey, by E. L. James. (Vintage.) A sequel, told
from Christians point of view, revisits the tortured romance between the controlling billionaire
and the unassuming Ana.
9. Alert, by James Patterson and Michael Ledwidge. (Little, Brown.) Detective Michael Bennett
and the F.B.I.s Emily Parker must save New York
City from a deadly threat.
10. All the Light We Cannot See, by Anthony
Doerr. (Scribner.) The lives of a blind French girl
and a gadget-obsessed German boy before and
during World War II; the winner of the 2015 Pulitzer Prize.
11. Four Week Fiance, by J.S. Cooper. (JMC
Creations.) A sexy millionaire asks a friends sister
to participate in a fake engagement.
12. Who Do You Love, by Jennifer Weiner.
(Atria.) Andy and Rachel meet as children, then
come together and separate repeatedly over the
years.
13. The Nightingale, by Kristin Hannah. (St.
Martins.) Two sisters are separated in World War
II France: one in the countryside, the other in Paris.
14. Love After Dark, by Marie Force. (HTJB.)
Paul Martinez and Hope, the nurse he hired to
help his mother, begin to fall in love; McCarthys of
Gansett Island, Book 13.
15. Circling the Sun, by Paula McLain. (Ballantine.) A novel about Beryl Markham, a horse
trainer and aviatrix raised in Kenya.
Combined nonfiction
1. It Is About Islam, by Glenn Beck. (Threshold Editions/Mercury Radio Arts.) The talk-radio
host looks to Muslim teachings for the roots of Islamic extremism.
2. Plunder and Deceit, by Mark R. Levin.
(Threshold Editions.) The talk-radio host urges
young Americans to resist the statist masterminds
who he says are burdening them with debt, inferior education and illegal immigration.
3. Between the World and Me, by Ta-Nehisi
Coates. (Spiegel & Grau.) A meditation on race in
America as well as a personal story by the national
correspondent of The Atlantic, framed as a letter
to his teenage son.
4. The Boys in the Boat, by Daniel James
Brown. (Penguin.) The University of Washingtons eight-oar crew and their quest for gold at the
1936 Berlin Olympics.
5. The Devil in the White City, by Erik Larson. (Vintage.) How an architect and a serial killer
were linked by the Chicago Worlds Fair of 1893.
6. Dead Wake, by Erik Larson. (Crown.) The
last voyage of the Lusitania, the passenger liner
sunk by a German torpedo in 1915.
7. The Wright Brothers, by David McCullough.
(Simon & Schuster.) The story of the bicycle mechanics from Ohio who ushered in the age of flight.
8. Modern Romance, by Aziz Ansari with Eric
Klinenberg. (Penguin Press.) The comedian enlists a sociologist to help him understand todays
dating scene.
9. A Walk in the Woods, by Bill Bryson. (Broadway.) A journey to rediscover America by trekking
the 2,100 miles of the Appalachian Trail.
10. Etched in Sand, by Regina Calcaterra.
(Morrow/HarperCollins.) Five siblings survive
childhood abuse, foster care and homelessness on
Long Island.
11. Being Mortal, by Atul Gawande. (Metropolitan/Holt.) The surgeon and New Yorker writer
considers how doctors fail patients at the end of
life, and how they can do better.
12. I Am Malala, by Malala Yousafzai with
Christina Lamb. (Little, Brown.) The experience
of the Pakistani girl who advocated for womens
education and was shot by the Taliban.
13. Just Mercy, by Bryan Stevenson. (Spiegel
& Grau.) A law professor and MacArthur grant
recipients memoir of his decades of work to free
innocent people condemned to death.
14. Dean & Me (A Love Story), by Jerry Lewis
and James Kaplan. (Broadway.) The funnier half
of Martin and Lewis remembers his time with the
man he calls my partner; first published in 2005.
15. Auschwitz, by Miklos Nyiszli. (Skyhorse.)
An eyewitness account of the Nazi death camp,
written shortly after the war by a doctor who was
a prisoner there.
Books
FUNDRAISER
Architect building
reputation as author
Belfoure will discuss his House of Thieves
at Bent Creek Country Club
CATHY MOLITORIS
LNP CORRESPONDENT
IF YOU GO
n Who: Author
Charles Belfoure
n When: Sept. 15
at 6:30 p.m.
n Where:
Bent Creek
Country Club,
620 Bent Creek
Drive, Manheim
Township
n Cost: $15
n Info: www.
aaronsbooks.com
Check it out!
Parenting in the modern age brings a whole new set of challenges. Find these helpful books on the new-book shelf of
the Duke Street Library.
1. Daddy, Stop Talking! And Other
Things My Kids Want But Wont
Be Getting by Adam Carolla. The
comedian, actor, and television host
draws on his own childhood as a
cautionary tale to demonstrate to
parents what they must do if they
dont want to have to support their
kids forever.
2. The Gift of Failure: How the Best
Parents Learn to Let Go So Their
Children Can Succeed by Jessica
Lahey. Counsels parents of schoolaged children on how to overcome
tendencies toward overprotectiveness
BOOKS/LOCAL HISTORY
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
B13
CHILDRENS BOOK
AP NATIONAL WRITER
NEW YORK A
Swedish psychologists
self-published picture
book about a sleep-deprived rabbit has been
acquired by Penguin
Random House after
becoming a word-ofmouth sensation.
A new edition of CarlJohan Forssn Ehrlins The Rabbit Who
Wants To Fall Asleep
will come out in paper
in the United States and
the United Kingdom on
Oct. 2 and as an e-book
Sept. 8, the publisher
told The Associated
Press last week.
Billed as a groundbreaking story that gives suggestions to the childs unconscious mind to sleep,
Ehrlins book features
such soporific helpers as
Uncle Yawn and Sleepy
Snail and has inspired an
international debate over
its effectiveness.
The Rabbit Who
Wants To Fall Asleep
was illustrated by Irina
Maununen.
Originally released in
2011 and translated into
English by Ehrlin a year
ago, the book this summer
soared into the top 10 on
Amazon.com and Barnes
& Noble.com, at times
outselling such high-profile works as Harper Lees
Go Set a Watchman and
E L James Grey.
It is an absolute joy
for me to see the re-
A photo issued by
Penguin Random House
shows the cover of CarlJohan Forssen Ehrlins
The Rabbit Who Wants
To Fall Asleep.
BOOK AWARD
AP NATIONAL WRITER
ASSOCIATED PRESS
says.
Shirk says he recalls when Ephrata had
at least six corner stores at the same time.
After retiring, Schultz moved back to the
Schoeneck area.
Bill Crouse and his family also operated
a corner grocery store on the square in
Schoeneck, says Shirk, adding that Crouse
later moved to Denver and worked for the
U.S. Post Office. He was a charter member
of the Schoeneck Fire Company.
Edwin Pannebecker, says Shirk, lived
in the community all his life and was, for
many years, a fire chief.
James Eberly was a farmer, and his son,
Harry, was a classmate of Shirks in the old
Schoeneck two-room school house.
Shirk believes Adam Nagle worked for
the Reading Railroad in Ephrata.
All the men lived locally, Shirk notes, as
in those days not everybody had a car.
Send
photos and
information
to: Valerie
Marschka,
LNP, P.O.
Box 1328,
Lancaster, PA
17608-1328,
or by email to
vmarschka@
LNPnews.com.
FLASHBACK LANCASTER
Excerpts and summaries of local news stories from the pages of the Intelligencer Journal, the Lancaster New Era
and the Sunday News appear each Sunday. They focus on events in the countys past that are noteworthy, newsworthy, or just strange. Full versions are available on microfilm at the Lancaster Public Library, 125 N. Duke St.
25 Years Ago: On Sept. 6, 1990, the Intelligencer
Journal told the story of Robert and Gaye Calkins,
of Elizabethtown, who became $2.5 million richer
overnight, thanks to a winning Wild Card Lotto
ticket. The couple said they would use the money to
send their daughter to college, buy a house and take
the honeymoon they never had. Both promptly quit
their jobs.
Also that day in the Intell, a newly constructed
Amish school opened on Eby Chiques Road in West
Hempfield Township. It was to be attended by 28
students.
National Headline: US journalist Terry Anderson
marks 2,000th day as a hostage
50 Years Ago: The Sept. 6, 1965, Lancaster New
Era reported on Miss Mary Hebe Degler, a Lancaster
City anesthetist who taught at a jungle hospital. She
reflected on how two weeks with Dr. Albert Schweitzer inspired her. He was a wonderful man a
marvelous person an example for the whole world
to follow.
Also reported in that edition was the fact that the
U.S. Army Band presented its big finale at Longs
Park Amphitheater, which included the Overture
to 1812. An estimated 30,000 people were in attendance, making it the largest crowd in the three-year
history of the Labor Day Weekend Day of Music.
National Headline: Citizen of the World Dr. Schweitzer dies at 90, buried near jungle hospital
75 Years Ago: The Sept. 6, 1940, New Era noted
that Arthur Killian, a Neffsville fireman, was charged
with violating gambling laws after motor police raided a bingo game at the fire companys festival. Killian
pleaded guilty and was fined $100 plus costs. He was
the second Neffsville fireman to be fined on a bingo
charge.
Also from that edition of the New Era: Young Peo-
Author
Continued from B12
Concertgoers gather in front of the Longs Park Amphitheater in 1962. In 1965, a crowd of 30,000 at the Labor
Day Weekend Day of Music would set an attendance
record for the then 3-year-old park event.
B14
LIVING
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
IN THE SPOTLIGHT
Follow us on Facebook at
LancasterOnline
Erin Good recently spearheaded the Ladies, Technically Speaking meetup in Lancaster.
profession youre interested in, and ask questions. Tweet people; you
would be surprised who
will answer. Ask to shadow some professionals in
the field.
What I would do with
a year-long sabbatical:
Strap on my camera and
Continued from B1
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Pain
travel.
Always in my refrigerator: Not much. Im
guilty of being a terrible
cook.
A cause I support:
The Humane League of
Lancaster is near and
dear to my heart. Its
where I picked up my
Seeking $7,000
Mackey turned to social media for help, setting up a GoFundMe
account (at gofundme.
com/abbiemackey)
to
help cover costs.
She asked for $7,000.
As of Thursday, shed
raised $5,570.
Its kind of a rare surgery, just because its so
expensive, Mackey said.
2015
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LNP | LANCASTER, PA
B15
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Country music
classics honored
Loretta Lynn
Angus is a 5-year-old Great Pyrenees available for adoption at the Lancaster County SPCA.
Follow us on Facebook at
LancasterOnline
OPENING OCTOBER 20
O N E S TO GA
David I. Silbert MD, FAAP
YE
Pediatric Ophthalmology & Eyelid Surgery
SCHEDULE YOUR APPOINTMENT TODAY
Call 717.541.9700
Friday:
Together
Compact mirror
(front and
back shown)
BIRTHDAYS
n Comedian JoAnne
Meet me at Market!
TODAY IN HISTORY
n 1970: Palestinian
B16
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Celebrations
Anniversaries
Lantz
60th
The Rev. W. Franklin and June Lykens
Lantz,
Woodcrest
Villa, celebrated their
60th wedding anniversary. After meeting at Lebanon Valley
College, they married
Smedley 65th
Duke 60th
Ney 60th
Nolt 60th
Jere R. and Evelyn Seifert Duke, Mount Joy, celebrated their 60th wedding
anniversary, entertaining
friends and family at Millers Smorgasbord.
They married Sept.
3, 1955, at St. Matthew
Evangelical
Lutheran
Church and are now active members of Trinity Lutheran Church,
Mount Joy.
He retired from Lancaster Malleable Castings Co., where he was
vice president and secretary. She retired from
Electric Bond and Share
Co., where she was a secretary. They enjoy playing golf, bridge and pinochle.
The are the parents
of Tamara, married to
Daniel Jacobs, Narvon;
and Jeffry, married to
Beth Keffer Duke, Las
Colinas, Texas. They
have four grandchildren:
Joshua, Brittany, Sean
and Robert.
CR Lapps
Catering for All Your Events! Weddings,
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Wilbur Chocolate
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wedding themed chocolate molds
48 N. Broad Street Lititz
717.626.3249
Loercher 50th
Weddings
Shutter-Hess
Lisa Hess, Lancaster, and
Greg Shutter, Cornwall,
were married May 30 by
Dwight Rohrer at Milton
Hershey School, Hershey.
She is the daughter of
John and Sylvia Hess,
Lancaster. A graduate of
Penn Manor High School
and Messiah College, she
Friday:
Together
Exploring matters
of the family
Ream Jewelers
Engaging Lancaster Since 1935
58 N. Queen Street Lancaster
Acorn Farms
More than your average wedding
banquet hall, Acorn Farms strives to
build lasting relationships with our
clients and be there for all special
occasions including showers,
birthdays, and anniversaries.
We even offer self-service catering
and off-site catering.
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Mount Joy
717.653.6182
Country Barn Weddings
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Connect
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LancasterOnline
Rental World
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2662 Columbia Ave. Lancaster
717.397.3663
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Lancaster School
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For more information or to advertise on this page, please contact 717.291.8800 or email advertising@LNPnews.com
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
B17
Celebrations
Engagements
BernardEwell
Kelly Grace Ewell and
Christopher
Michael
Bernard have become
engaged.
The daughter of Calvin
and Diane Ewell, East
Earl, she graduated from
Garden Spot High School
in 2009 and Penn State
Harrisburg in 2013 with
a bachelors degree, having majored in human
development and family
studies and minored in
business administration.
In 2015, she received a
masters degree in social work from Millersville University. She is
employed by Philhaven
Center for Autism and
Developmental Disabili-
FreySchell
HackmanRankin
KahlerLongenecker
Emily
Longenecker
and Raymond Kahler III
have become engaged.
She is the daughter of
Philip and Barbara Longenecker, Lititz. A 2015 graduate of Millersville University, she is employed
at Newport (Maine)
Elementary School as a
fourth-grade teacher.
He is the son of Raymond and Vickie Kahler,
East Earl. A 2014 graduate of the University of
South Carolina, he is
studying for a masters
degree in earth and climate science at the Uni-
Weddings
WitmerCochran
VEIN CENTER
OF LANCASTER
MelchioreScaccia
Catherine Scaccia and
Jeffrey Melchiore, both of
Conshohocken, announce
their engagement.
She is the daughter of
Peter and Mary Scaccia,
Lancaster. A graduate of
Lancaster Catholic High
School, University of
Pittsburgh and Thomas
Jefferson University with
a masters degree in occupational therapy, she is
employed as an occupational therapist at AIM
Academy, Conshohocken.
He is the son of Sallie Melchiore and Steve
Melchiore, both of Philadelphia. A graduate of
St. Josephs Preparatory
School in Philadelphia,
University of Pittsburgh
and Temple University
with a masters degree
in quality assurance/
regulatory affairs, he is
employed at GlaxcoSmithKline as a principal
submissions specialist.
An April 2016 wedding
is planned.
CELEBRATIONS
GUIDELINES
LNP publishes wedding,
engagement and anniversary
announcements as a free
public service on Sundays.
Submit a wedding,
engagement or anniversary
KratzZimmerman
Kelsey
Zimmerman
and Evan Kratz have become engaged.
She is the daughter of
Dale and Rosa Zimmerman, New Holland. A
graduate of Garden Spot
High School in 2010 and
Eastern University in
2014, she is employed by
Twin Valley School District and Kitchen Kettle
Village.
He is the son of Leon
and Sherry Kratz, Harleysville. A graduate of
Christopher Dock Mennonite High School in
2010 and Eastern University in 2014, he is
n Online:
working on a masters
degree in school counseling at Eastern University. He is employed by
Social Enrichment Center, Springfield, and CHL
Systems, Souderton.
They plan to marry in
March 2016.
n By mail:
bit.ly/LNPanniversaries
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bit.ly/LNPengagements
LNP Media Group, Inc.
bit.ly/LNPweddings
P.O. Box 1328
Lancaster, PA
n By fax:
17608
399-6507
Contact Celebrations
n Email: celebrations@LNPnews.com
n Phone: 399-6607
FeisterBritton
Jennifer L. Britton
and Ryan M. Feister
were married July 11 at
Thomas Road Chapel,
Lynchburg, Virginia, by
Dr. Paul Randolph.
She is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. David Britton, Brookneal, Virginia.
A graduate of William
Campbell High School
and Liberty University, she is employed by
Campbell County Public
Schools, Concord, Virginia.
He is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. Craig Feister,
Columbia. A graduate of
Hempfield High School
and Liberty University,
he is employed by TrueLife.org, Lynchburg.
The newlyweds live in
Lynchburg.
Saturday:
Faith &
Values
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Surprise cut
Eagles release
QB Tim Tebow
n Page C7
Lessons
from the
openers
Heres what we learned
from around L-L League
this weekend
STAFF REPORT
SPORTS@LNPNEWS.COM
Above, Penn State quarterback Christian Hackenberg is sacked by a Temple player as offensive lineman Paris Palmer looks on
Saturday at Lincoln Financial Field in Philadelphia. Below, Penn State running back Akeel Lynch is pursued by Temple defensive lineman Matt Ioannidis on a 42-yard touchdown run in the first quarter.
TEMPLE OF DOOM
Penn States season might already be on brink of abyss if it cant start blocking
MORE
COVERAGE
n Mike Gross grades
the Nittany Lions,
Page C4
n PSU-Temple
statistics, Page C4
n Injuries take toll
on Lions defense,
Page C5
n After quick start,
Penn States offense
turns to mush,
Page C5
n National college
football roundup,
Page C6
MIKE GROSS
PENN STATE FOOTBALL
PHILADELPHIA I
can try to talk Nittany Nation down off the ledge, if
thats what you want.
Its entirely possible that
Temple is better than we
think, or even than Temple
thinks.
Its not even Labor Day
yet earlier than early.
Bear in mind that Buffalo
comes to State College
Saturday.
There are tried-and-true
Joe Paterno-isms that
might help:
The biggest improvement
in a football team comes
between game one and
game two.
Youre never as good as
you are when youre winning, or as bad as you are
when youre losing.
LESSONS, page C2
MORE FOOTBALL
n McCaskey has no answers in home loss
to Harrisburg, Page C2
n York County Tech edges Pequea Valley,
Page C2
n From Friday: Manheim Township comes
up short vs. Central Dauphin, Page C2
n Fridays late football boxscores,
Page C12
Harbor.
But with all due respect
to the Owls, who played
with fire and poise after
GROSS, page C4
MILLERSVILLE 3, PACE 2
In many ways, Saturdays 3-2 win over visiting Pace might have been
just what the Millersville
University field hockey
team needed.
The defending national champions dominated
the action most of the afternoon.
They got a pair of goals
from one of the young
players expected to step
up to help fill the void
Millersvilles Courtney Weaver brings the ball up the sideline during the Marauders 3-2
win over Pace University on Saturday in Millersville. Weaver is a Warwick graduate.
C2
SPORTS
SPORTS ON TV
NETWORK
TIME
CBS
4pm
NETWORK
TIME
F1
3pm
ESPN
3:30 pm
GOLF
NETWORK
TIME
GOLF
7am
GOLF
1pm
GOLF
3pm
NBC
3pm
GOLF
7pm
NETWORK
TIME
TBS
1pm
Baltimore at Toronto
MASN2
1pm
Atlanta at Washington
MASN
1:30pm
Philadelphia at Boston
CSN/PH
1:35pm
ESPN
8pm
NETWORK
TIME
NBCSN
7:30am
ESPN
11am
NBC
7:30pm
ESPN2
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SOCCER
NETWORK
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COLLEGE FOOTBALL
MOTOR SPORTS
Formula One, Italian Grand Prix
ANDY BLACKBURN | STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
McCaskeys Gregory Nunez, left, tackles Harrisburgs Jahnoni Hickerson (6) in the
second half Saturday in Lancaster.
Quotable: Monzon,
on moving forward:
We knew this was
going to be one of
our toughest opponents. We know we
have a whole season
ahead of us and we
can play with the
majority of the people we play against.
We can play with
anyone if were able
to execute.
Up next: McCaskey hosts York on
Friday night. The
Tornado beat the
Bearcats a year ago,
28-21.
BOXING
Purdue at Marshall
JOEL SCHREINER
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
TENNIS
SPORTS@LNPNEWS.COM
Connect
with us
LancasterOnline
SPORTS
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
C3
Local digest
CORRECTION
Monday:
Trending
Whats hip
around the county
MENS SOCCER
n A Devon Malfitano penalty kick goal in the opening
WOMENS SOCCER
n Franklin & Marshall took its first defeat of the season in
WOMENS VOLLEYBALL
n Franklin and Marshall won both halves of a double
CROSS COUNTRY
n The Millersville womens cross country team opened its
SOCCER
HARRISON, N.J.
Hulk scored in the 10th
minute after an early
stretch of Brazilian dominance and the five-time
world champion beat
Costa Rica 1-0 on Saturday in a World Cup qualifying tuneup match.
Despite Costa Rica employing five defenders,
Brazil clearly had the better of play throughout,
with the Ticos only occasionally managing to get
forward on counters.
Brazil used a somewhat experimental lineup with Hulk as the lead
striker. Manager Dunga
stayed with his starters
until the middle of the
second half. He used six
substitutes, sending in
Tuesday:
Business
Local business
news & profiles
Above, Millersvilles Arianna Grays (7) charges down the field as Paces Paige Predmore (1) gives chase. Below, Millersvilles Taylor Parker (10) takes a shot on goal
during a penalty corner as Paces Samantha Gray (5) tries to take control of the ball.
Wednesday:
Food
Thursday:
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Before Shellenberger
reached her milestone,
Penn Manor graduate Renee Suter earned
her first victory as a
head coach as Manheim
Township shutout visiting Elizabethtown 3-0.
Emily Kurtz netted
the Blue Streaks first
goal 7:53 into the first
half and Madelyn Holliday and MacKenzie
Fuhrman sealed the
win with second half
goals. Rachel Sweger
had eight saves for Elizabethtown.
In other nonleague action, Brianna Keeney
lifted Cocalico (1-1) past
Ephrata 3-2 with a goal
5:20 into overtime.
Ephrata took an early
1-0 lead thanks to a score
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C4
PENN STATE
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
0
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1027
First Quarter
Above, Penn Sate quarterback Christian Hackenberg speaks with coach James Franklin during the fourth quarter of
Saturdays 27-10 loss to Temple at Lincoln Financial Field in Philadelphia. Below, Penn State receiver Brandon Polk
avoids the tackle from Temple defensive back Will Hays and tiptoes along the sideline after a first-quarter handoff.
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and look for it. Whatever sense that is, Hackenberg seems to lack it.
But, again, thats an issue. Its not THE issue.
Penn State cant block.
The offensive linemen
cant block, and the
running backs cant
block, and the tight ends
(who combined for zero
receptions) cant block.
I honestly cant ever
remember seeing a
worse blocking football
team relative to its level
of competition. Is there
a single Penn State
player youd describe as
a good blocker?
We think (the o-line)
has improved, James
Franklin said afterward.
It did not show today.
But he also said that,
Our best five (OLs) are
playing. Obviously there
are some adjustments
we have to make, but,
obviously, we have some
challenges there.
If you cant block, you
YOUTH MOVEMENT
PHILADELPHIA
Penn State didnt do a lot
of things right on Saturday afternoon.
But one thing the Nittany Lions did well in a
27-10 upset loss to Temple in the season opener
was utilize its young talent.
Penn State doesnt
play many true freshmen, but Saturday it
used four players fresh
out of high school, and
all four of them made
some noise.
I was happy to see
those guys get out
there, Penn State veteran running back Akeel
Lynch said. They work
so hard. Getting (Brandon) Polk and Saquon
(Barkley) out there, and
seeing Mark (Allen) out
there on special teams,
he did really well on the
punt. They were able to
show a couple of sparks,
so it was good to see
that.
Joining that trio was
John Reid, who was
PENN STATE
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
C5
PSU DEFENSE
Defense is
down, not out
JWALK@LNPNEWS.COM
Temple running back Jahad Thomas runs between Penn State defenders Jason Cabinda (40) and Jordan Lucas (9).
Thomas rushed for 135 yards and a touchdown during the game.
PENN STATE OFFENSE
TGROSS@LNPNEWS.COM
PHILADELPHIA
Christian Hackenbergs third-down pass
sailed toward the sideline on his left toward
a streaking DaeSean
Hamilton with about
10 minutes remaining
in the second quarter at
Lincoln Financial Field
on Saturday.
The pass, an attempt
to nudge the Nittany
Lions to a 17-0 lead over
host Temple in a possible early knockout blow,
sailed beyond Hamiltons reach, forcing a
fourth-down punt.
Temple turned the
proverbial tide on its
ensuing possession, as
the late-afternoon shadows crept across the
field and enveloped the
beleaguered Penn State
offense in the Nittany
Lions 27-10 seasonopening setback.
Weve got a lot of work
to do, James Franklin said to the media
through a hoarse voice.
I dont need to tell you
PHILADELPHIA
The focus of Saturdays
Penn State loss will likely
be on the continued woes
along the offensive line
that have seemed to carry over from last season.
And, perhaps, fans
perception of the team
taking a step back rather than a step forward in
the second season under head coach James
Franklin.
Those concerns might
be justified, though, considering theyre something Franklin has control over. Because while
the defense played well,
a series of unfortunate
injuries on that side of
the ball added to an already tough day for the
Nittany Lions (0-1).
It began with a season-ending left leg
injury to senior linebacker Nyeem Wartman-White, who was
expected to lead that
unit in 2015.
By the time the clock
hit zero, junior linebacker Brandon Bell had
also been injured, senior
linebacker Gary Wooten
hobbled and redshirts
had been burned with
Penn State being forced
to play true freshmen
linebackers Jake Cooper
and Manny Bowen.
Oh, and cornerback
Grant Haley also didnt
dress for the game because of injury.
Given all of the setbacks, its a wonder how
the Nittany Lions defense held its own for
most of the afternoon
in Philadelphia. Sure, 27
points dont look good
on the scoreboard.
But consider the facts:
The Penn State defense kept Temple in
check for all but one of
the Owls six offensive
series in the first half,
keeping them to 140
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C6
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Nebraska loses
a heartbreaker
No matter how many
games Tanner Mangum
plays for BYU, it will be
hard for him to top what
he did in his first one.
Playing in the college
football cathedral that
is Nebraskas Memorial Stadium, and having replaced injured
star Taysom Hill early
in the fourth quarter,
Mangum heaved a 42yard touchdown pass to
Mitch Mathews with no
time left for a 33-28 victory Saturday.
The victory came with
a heavy price. Hill sustained a season-ending
injury for the second
straight year.
Maryland 50, Richmond 21: William
Likely returned eight
punts for 233 yards and
a touchdown, Brandon
Ross rushed for a career-high 150 yards and
Maryland rolled to a
season-opening victory.
Perry Hills threw two
touchdown passes for
the Terrapins
Rutgers 63, Norfolk
State 13: Leonte Carroo caught three thirdquarter
touchdown
passes after sitting out
a first-half suspension
and set a school record.
Indiana 48, Southern
Illinois 47: Jordan Howard rushed for 145 yards
and three touchdowns
to help Indiana slip past
Southern Illinois.
Southern
Illinois
marched 75 yards in five
Howard, Joseph
pace Mountaineers
JOHN RABY
AP SPORTS WRITER
M O R G A N T O W N,
W.Va. Skyler Howard
threw two touchdown
passes in his first home
start, Karl Joseph had
three
interceptions
and West Virginia beat
Georgia Southern 44-0
on Saturday night.
The
Mountaineers
outgained
Georgia
Southern 544 yards to
224 in winning their
home opener for the
12th consecutive season.
Howard
completed
16 of 25 passes for 359
yards. Freshman Jovon Durante caught
a 41-yard scoring toss
ASSOCIATED PRESS
UCLA wide receiver Thomas Duarte scores a touchdown during the first half Saturday against Virginia at the Rose
Bowl in Pasadena, Calif.
TOP 25
No. 24 Tigers.
No. 19 Oklahoma 41,
Akron 3: Baker Mayfield
passed for 388 yards and
three touchdowns, and
Joe Mixon had 142 yards
from scrimmage to help
No. 19 Oklahoma.
Mayfield set a school
record for yards passing in a season opener,
surpassing the previous
mark of 363 yards by
Sam Bradford in 2007.
The Sooners held Akron to 226 total yards.
Tennessee 59, Bowling Green 30: Jalen
Hurd had three first-half
touchdown runs, Alvin Kamara ran for two
more scores, and No. 25
Tennessee beat Bowling
Green.
REGIONAL FOOTBALL
PSAC
Shippensburg 64,
Edinboro 14: The
Raiders scored on
eight of their last nine
drives of the game.
Sophomore quarterback Ryan Zapoticky
passed for 244 yards
and four touchdowns
and running back Andrew Smith had 148
all-purpose yard. Colin McDermott led the
Raiders with 80 yards
rushing on 12 carries.
Justin Pyle hauled in
two touchdown passes.
Shippensburg
compiled 536 yards of total
Centennial
ASSOCIATED PRESS
touchdowns.
Slippery Rock 39, New
Haven 13: Shamar Greene
rushed for 116 yards and
a touchdown and Dante
Nania threw for 269 yards
and three scores.
Lincoln University
29, Cheyney 22: The
Lions earned the road
win after going 0-5 away
from home last season.
Mercyhurst
35,
Bentley 20: Mercyhurst used a 14-point
fourth quartet to help
seal the win. Mercyhursts Brendan Boyland completed 20 of 25
passes for 305 yards.
Gannon 26, Southern
Connecticut State 22:
After allowing the first
points of the game, Gannon scored the next 26
points and held on for the
victory. Gannons Liam
Nadler threw for 143
Susquehanna
28,
Lycoming 13: The
Crusaders gained their
first season-opening
victory since 2012 and
the first win against
Lycoming since 2007.
Susquehannas
Nick
Crusco passed for 231
yards and two touchdowns.
Juniata 26, Grove
City 13: Hank Coyne
passed for 186 yards and
Deonte Alston rushed
for 105 yards as Juniata
scored the games opening 19 points.
Hobart 29, Dickinson
7: Hobart ran its regularseason winning streak
to 31 games with 427
yards of total offense.
Dickinson managed just
102 yards of offense, including a fourth-quarter
touchdown.
Johns Hopkins 52,
Randolph-Macon 17:
Jonathan
Germano
threw for 320 yards and
five touchdowns and he
rushed for another in the
opening victory for the
No. 13-ranked Blue Jays.
MAC
FOOTBALL
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
DAN MASSEY
FANTASY SPORTS
These sleepers
could help
you out this
autumn
Labor Day weekend
is the most common
time for fantasy leagues
to hold their drafts, so
some owners may still
have some selecting to
do. Others might be in
need of free agents early
in the season.
Whatever the situation, there are a handful
of players being overlooked in drafts that can
have significant effects
on their NFL teams and
any fantasy owners daring enough to acquire
them.
Duke Johnson, RB,
Cleveland. Under Mike
Pettine, the Browns
have been wont to divvy
the rushing duties to
multiple parties. The
top two rushers from
2014, Isaiah Crowell
and Terrance West,
return to Cleveland, but
neither were impressive enough to keep
the team from drafting
Duke Johnson in the
third round out of Miami this past May.
Johnson had over
2,000 yards from
scrimmage for the
Hurricanes as a junior
and, despite missing
time this preseason
with a hamstring injury
and a concussion, is in
contention to see substantial playing time.
The Browns proclivity for rotating backs
and the sad state of
the Cleveland quarterbacks should mean that
Johnson has a chance
to prove himself to be
the best of the Browns'
bunch in 2015. He is
only on a team in 40
percent of leagues.
Eddie Royal, WR,
Chicago. In 2014, the
Chicago Bears attempted the seventh-most
passes in the entire
NFL. A full 84 percent
of those throws went to
just four men - Alshon
Jeffery, Matt Forte,
Martellus Bennett and
Brandon Marshall, all
of whom had over 100
targets. Jeffery, Forte
and Bennett are back,
whereas Marshall is
not, opening the door
for newly-acquired Eddie Royal.
Royal quietly had
778 yards and seven
touchdowns for San
Diego in 2014 and, aside
from Jeffery, is the lone
receiver on the Bears
to have anything more
than limited experience. Rookie Kevin
White's status for the
second half of the year
is as-yet undetermined,
but he will miss at
least the team's first
six games with a leg
injury. Expect Royal,
available in 40 percent
of leagues and going in
the 10th round or later
in leagues where he
is owned, to improve
upon his 2014 totals.
DeVante Parker,
WR, Miami. Mike Wallace led the 2014 Dolphins with 115 targets
and 862 yards. Both
he and fourth-leading
receiver Brian Hartline
Connect
with us
LancasterOnline
C7
NFL NOTES
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Still cut
Other notable players
whose phones buzzed
with that dreaded call to
turn in their team-issued
tablets were Cincinnati
defensive tackle Devon
Still and Broncos cornerback Tony Carter.
Still tweeted thanks to
the Bengals and the city
after he was released.
Stills 5-year-old daughter, Leah, has overcome
cancer in the past year.
The second-round pick
from 2012 also was released last year, but the
Bengals offered him a
chance to stay on the
practice squad to keep
his medical coverage
for his daughter. He was
eventually added to the
roster and played in 12
games.
Have nothing but love
for the Bengals organization and the city of Cincinnati. Both helped...
he tweeted.
The Bengals also put
linebacker Vontaze Burfict on an injury list. Hell
be eligible to return after
six weeks. Burfict is recovering from two knee
operations.
In Denver, Carter, a
seventh-year cornerback, and fourth-year
linebacker
Steven
Johnson both tweeted
that theyd been cut,
as did Ben Garland,
who was the starting
left guard heading into
training camp. Carter
has been bothered by a
pulled hamstring since
Aug. 17.
In Pittsburgh, Doug
Legurskys return was
short-lived. The Steelers
signed him as a potential
replacement for injured
All-Pro center Maurkice Pouncey. Legursky
C8
SPORTS
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
NASCAR
DARLINGTON,
S.C.
Brad Keselowski won
the pole for the NASCAR
Sprint Cup race tonightat Darlington Raceway,
where hell start up front
Lancaster Scene
If your organization wishes to have an item in the
LANCASTER SCENE column of the LNP Sunday sports
print section, as well as its weekly online listings, send
a note to the LNP sports department, P.O. Box 1328,
Lancaster, PA 17608. Items can run for up to three
consecutive weeks and will not be repeated after that
period. The email address is sports@lnpnews.com. The
fax number is 481-7327. Items must be mailed, faxed or
emailed by Thursday to be included in the column.
ATHLETIC
FIELDS
The Lancaster County
Department of Parks &
Recreation is accepting
athletic field rentals
through October for soccer,
softball and Little League
baseball. Options to renters
are weekday and weekend
rentals, and lit fields.
For more information,
call (717) 299-8215 or
(717) 299-8220, or visit
the Park Office at 1050
Rockford Road, Lancaster;
additional information is
available online at www.
lancastercountyparks.org.
AUCTION
Hospice & Community
Cares Labor Day Auction
opens at 9 a.m. Monday.
Hundreds of autographed
sports memorabilia items
will be on the auction
block at the Lampeter
Fairgrounds, 851 Village
Road, Lampeter. The Sports
Memorabilia Auction
features both live and
silent auctions. Items up
for bid include a football
Autographed by Penn State
coach James Franklin;
tickets and round-trip
transportation to a Yankees
game; a baseball signed by
Hall of Famers Bob Feller,
Early Wynn, Juan Marchial,
Warren Spahn and Bob
Gibson; 18 holes of golf at
Lancaster Country Club
and much more. For a
complete listing, visit www.
hospicecommunity.org. The
auction directly benefits
patients and families of
Hospice & Community
Care. Free parking and
admission.
BANQUET
The Lancaster County
Sports Hall of Fames
annual awards banquet
is slated for Tuesday, Oct.
13 at Lancaster Catholic
High School. Social hour at
5:30 p.m., dinner at 6:30
p.m. Former Hempfield
cross country and track
coach Bill Bowers, former
F&M football coach Tom
Gilburg and former Ephrata
wrestling and football
coach Merv Witmer will
be presented with the J.
Freeland Chryst Sports
Achievement Award.
Tickets for the banquet,
at which the George W.
Kirchner Memorial Award
will be presented, can be
purchased for $22 each by
mailing a check to Kenny
Myers at 2851 Old Tree
Drive, Lancaster, Pa. 17603.
Tickets will then be mailed
to you. Ticket orders must
be received by Oct. 6. No
tickets will be sold at the
door.
BASKETBALL
In the Strictly Skills
Basketball Clinic, boys
and girls will join members
of the Elizabethtown
College basketball teams
for 6 weeks of learning.
Each clinic incorporates
a variety of basketballspecific skill stations,
games and game play in a
3v3 and 5v5 environment.
Sessions will be held
immediately after school at
Bear Creek, 1459 Sheaffer
Road, Elizabethtown. Go
to www.StrictlySkills.com
for more information. Boys
in grades 4-6 will play on
Tuesdays, Sept. 8-Oct. 13
from 3:45 to 4:45 p.m. Girls
will play on Wednesdays,
Sept. 9-Oct. 14 from 3:45
to 4:45 p.m. Fee is $89 for
GEARS members, $96 for
nonmembers. To register,
LancasterOnline
visit GetintoGEARS.org or
call 367-0355.
BIKING
Sierra Club-Lancaster
Group will hold an 11-mile
bike ride on the Enola Low
Grade Rail Trail at 9 a.m.
Sept. 19. Joanne Kilgour,
director of the PA Chapter
of the Sierra Club, will
bike with the group and
briefly discuss the different
energy producers and
environmental concerns
along the adjacent stretch
of the Susquehanna River.
Riders are asked to meet
leaders Merv Stoltzfus
and Brian Vandegrift at
the trailheads information
kiosk to sign a waiver of
liability. The trail parking
lot is located in Manor
Twp., five miles south of
Columbia on River Road
(Route 441) just below the
Turkey Hill wind turbines.
For more details, email
brianv@centurylink.net.
Trail information and
directions to it are available
at http://manortownship.
net/parks/. More info about
the S.C.-Lancaster Group
can be found at www.
lancastersierraclub.org.
COACHING
OPENINGS
Conestoga Valley School
District is accepting
applications for head
boys lacrosse position.
Interested and qualified
persons should send
a resume and letter of
interest via email to Zac
Kraft, Athletic Director,
Conestoga Valley High
School at zac_kraft@
conestogavalley.org.
Elizabethtown Area School
District has an opening
for a head varsity girls
lacrosse coach for the
2015-16 school year. See
www.etownschools.org for
details on how to apply.
Lancaster Mennonite
School has the following
openings: Junior high girls
basketball head coach;
and (Spring) varsity track
and field head coach.
Applicable background
checks required. Contact
Athletic Director Jared
Yoder at 299-0436 ext.
365 or email yoderja@
lancastermennonite.org.
Manheim Township
School District is seeking
a varsity head boys
basketball coach. Send
completed support
services application,
found on our web at
www.mtwp.net, letter
of interest and resume
to Manheim Township
School District, Human
Resources Dept., PO Box
5134, Lancaster, PA 176065134 or email WengerDe@
mtwp.net. Deadline for
applications is Sept. 4, or
until successful candidate
is selected.
Hempfield athletic
department has openings
for two assistant softball
coaches and a freshman
girls basketball coach.
Candidates should contact
the Hempfield athletic
office at hsdathletics@
hempfieldsd.org.
St. Joe is in need of
coaches to teach kids
the fundamentals of
baseball and softball. Age
groups vary from 6 years
old (8U) to 14 years old
(14U). We need coaches
now for Fall League
and Spring League. For
more information call Bill
Souders at 917-3755.
Annville-Cleona School
District has openings
for an assistant baseball
coach, two assistant girls
basketball coaches and an
Xfinity
FIELD HOCKEY
The Junior Streaks Field
Hockey program for girls
in grades 1-6 will be held
Fridays (5:30-6:30 p.m.)
and Sundays (1-2:30 p.m.)
from Sept. 11 to Oct. 25
at Manheim Township
Athletic Complex. Teaches
fundamental skills and
rules. Registration fee is
$60. For more information
and to register, contact the
Recreation Department
office at 290-7180, ext.
3100.
GOLF
The Conestoga Valley
Education Foundation
is holding its 17th annual
Golf Classic on Sept. 15 at
Meadia Heights Golf Club.
A scramble format begins
with registration at 11 a.m.
followed by lunch and golf
at noon. Cocktails, dinner,
raffle and auction to follow
at 5 p.m. Sponsorships
are still available. Cost is
$120. For more information,
contact Bev Breniser at
(717) 445-9529.
The Liberty Youth Baseball
and Softball Tournament
Four-Person Scramble will
be held Oct. 11 at Manor
Golf Course. Registration is
at noon, followed by golf
at 12:30 p.m. Fee is $75
per person, and includes
golf, cart and dinner.
Registration is due Oct.
2. For more information,
email sco71@aolcom.
The Immanuel UCC Golf
Tournament will be
held Sept. 19 at Manor
Golf Course with a 7:45
a.m. shotgun start. The
four-person scramble
includes lunch, beverages
and contests. For more
information, contact Bob
Everly at (610) 775-4098.
The 19th annual
Homefields Fall Classic
Golf Tournament will be
held Sept. 25 at Crossgates
Golf Club in Millersville.
Registration begins at
7 a.m. for an 8:30 a.m.
scramble format start.
Breakfast, lunch, snacks
and drinks are provided as
part of the $80 registration
fee. Prizes will be awarded.
For more information and
registration forms, go to
www.homefields.org and
select Golf Tournament.
LACROSSE
Low and Away Lacrosse
Club is holding a
tournament on to benefit
POLO
Lancaster Polo Club
hosts regional matches
each Sunday through
Oct. 11 at Forney Field
on Church Street in
Rothsville (between Lititz
and Brownstown, two
blocks south off Route
772). This week, Sept. 6,
LPC is scheduled to play
WTR on Local Vineyard
Day, complete with a
winetasting. Gates open at
1 p.m. and matches start at
2:30 p.m. Admission is $5,
and children under 12 are
admitted free. Tailgating
welcomed. For more
information, visit www.
lancasterpolo.org.
RUGBY
The Penn Legacy
Knightmares girls team
is accepting registrations
to play in the Rugby
Pennsylvania 2015 Fall
Olympic (7s) Rugby
Competition. Players must
currently be in middle
school or high school, and
can reside in any school
district. Competition runs
from Mid-September
until late October. All skill
levels. Matches are held
Sundays, practices on
Tuesdays and Thursdays at
Centerville ES from 5 to 7
p.m. Registration is online
at: https://pennlegacy.
org/rugbyfc.html. For
more information, contact
Joseph Capp at (717)
413-8549 or drdaitcapp@
comcast.net.
RUNNING
The Lancaster Road
Runners Club Invites
runners of all ages and
abilities to participate in
its spring fun runs, held
throughout the area every
Tuesday evening at 6:30
p.m. We will be at Stoudts
Black Angus, 2800 N.
Reading Road, Adamstown
this week. For more
information, contact Peter
at 371-0746. Information
about Thursday evening
and Sunday morning trail
runs can also be found on
career victory.
JGR driver Kyle Busch
passed Suarez for second,
and Suarez finished third
as the fleet of Toyotas
swept the top three spots.
Kevin Harvick finished
fourth in a Chevrolet .
SOUTHERN 500
SWIMMING
SOCCER
VOLLEYBALL
SOFTBALL
The Force girls softball
travel team is looking for
two girls to complete its
roster for the 2016 travel
season. If interested,
tryouts will be held Aug. 30
and Sept. 6 at 11 a.m. at the
Rheems softball complex in
Elizabethtown. Questions
may be directed to Terry
Seiders at (717) 572-4261 or
t.seiders21@gmail.com.
n Where: Darlington
TENNIS
Tennis Central (formerly
Lancaster Tennis Patrons)
will sponsor the Fred W.
Steinman Patrons Cup at
Racquet Club West, 200
Running Pump Road,
Lancaster, on Oct. 10, 17,
24 and 31. The program
times will be 4:30 to 6
p.m. and 6 to 7:30 p.m.
Junior players between
the ages of 6 and 18 are
invited to attend the four
90-minute instructional
sessions. A Quick Start
court will be offered at
the 4:30 p.m. session for
juniors between the ages
of 6 and 10. Cost is $45.
Registration deadline is
Oct. 1. Register online at
www.tenniscentral.org. For
more information, call Jeff
Kitsock at 519-0570.
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
C9
Outdoors
SUBMITTED PHOTOS
Sunset and setting up camp on a river island in the Susquehanna north of Harrisburg.
AD CRABLE
LNP OUTOORS WRITER
wo years ago, in
a Huck Finn bit
of quixotic inspiration, four
young
Lampeter-Strasburg
High
School grads cobbled
together a raft, eased it
into the Susquehanna
at Sunbury and headed
downriver.
These summer flings
dont usually go off exactly as planned, and this
one didnt either. The
raft, made out of logs
and barrels, frequently
dragged along the shallow bottom.
The weeklong trip had
to be aborted when the
crew arrived on an island
after dark and camped
out on top of a solid carpet
of poison ivy. Two of the
guys lasted two more days
before the agony of constant itching of their en-
On the Susquehanna with their raft, from left, Jacob Mohler, Christian Niemeyer, the
dog Nessie, Dustin Stoltzfus and Paul Stoltzfus.
Reflects Niemeyer, I
felt especially separated
from the real world. Its
not that it was all easy.
There were definitely
some stressful parts of the
trip, certainly, but it was a
different kind of stress.
It was more immediate and more instinctive, and even survivalbased on some of the
rainier days and through
the rapids, as opposed
to being worried about
less significant things.
I found it very calming,
and I could focus much
more clearly.
Adds Dustin, who lives
in Germany as he works
on a masters degree in
translation, As built up
as that whole area is, its
incredibly peaceful out
on the water. You do sort
of feel like youre out in
the middle of nowhere,
even though you know
that there is a city or a
town just a quarter mile
away within sight.
We wanted to slow
down and take life at our
own pace, and it definitely did do that.
GOLF ROUNDUP
After a year of accomplishments, top player reaches benchmark he never wanted to see; doesnt birdie until 18th
In a year of first-ever
feats for Jordan Spieth,
he accomplished another Saturday in the
Deutsche Bank Championship.
Only this one was nothing to celebrate.
Spieth didnt make a
birdie until the 18th hole,
and by then it was too
late. It salvaged a 3-over
74, not nearly enough to
avoid missing the cut in
consecutive events for
the first time in his career.
Ive done a lot of
BASEBALL
NATIONAL LEAGUE
New York.......................................75
Washington...................................70
Miami............................................56
Atlanta...........................................54
Philadelphia...................................53
St. Louis.........................................87
Pittsburgh......................................80
Chicago..........................................77
Milwaukee.....................................59
Cincinnati.......................................55
Los Angeles....................................76
San Francisco.................................69
San Diego.......................................65
Arizona..........................................65
Colorado........................................56
East Division
60 .556 6-4
65 .519
5 71-w 7-3
80 .412 191-w 22 5-5
82 .397 211-w 24 0-10
83 .390 221-w 25 3-7
Central Division
48 .644
54 .597 61-w
57 .575 91-w
75 .440 271-w 18
78 .414 31 211-w
West Division
58
66
70
71
78
7-3
5-5
4-6
6-4
3-7
.567
.511 71-w 81-w
.481 111-w 121-w
.478 12 13
.418 20 21
8-2
3-7
4-6
3-7
6-4
W-1
W-4
L-1
L-11
L-3
45-24
40-26
31-37
33-32
30-35
30-36
30-39
25-43
21-50
23-48
W-1
L-1
W-2
W-5
L-1
49-21
46-21
42-28
33-39
29-36
38-27
34-33
35-29
26-36
26-42
W-1
L-7
L-1
L-3
W-3
47-21
38-27
33-33
31-35
31-38
29-37
31-39
32-37
34-36
25-40
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Toronto..........................................77
New York.......................................75
Tampa Bay.....................................67
Baltimore.......................................65
Boston...........................................63
Kansas City....................................82
Minnesota.....................................70
Cleveland.......................................65
Chicago..........................................64
Detroit...........................................62
Houston.........................................74
Texas..............................................70
Los Angeles....................................68
Seattle...........................................64
Oakland.........................................58
East Division
58 .570
59 .560 11-w
68 .496 10
70 .481 12
72 .467 14
Central Division
4
6
8
53 .607
65 .519 12
1
69 .485 161-w 51-w
70 .478 171-w 61-w
73 .459 20
9
West Division
62
63
66
71
77
Fridays NL Games
Chicago Cubs 14.......................... Arizona 5
Washington 5........................ Atlanta 2 (10)
Miami 6..............................N.Y. Mets 5 (11)
Pittsburgh 9................................ St. Louis 3
Colorado 2......................... San Francisco 1
L.A. Dodgers 8......................... San Diego 4
Milwaukee at Cincinnati.................... (ppd.)
Fridays AL Games
N.Y. Yankees 5......................... Tampa Bay 2
Baltimore 10............................... Toronto 2
Cleveland 8................................... Detroit 1
Chicago White Sox 12............ Kansas City 1
Houston 8............................... Minnesota 0
Seattle 11.................................... Oakland 8
L.A. Angels 5................................... Texas 2
Fridays Interleague Games
Boston 7.............................. Philadelphia 5
7-3
6-4
5-5
3-7
6-4
5-5
6-4
7-3
5-5
3-7
.544
.526 21-w
.507
5 21-w
.474 91-w
7
.430 151-w 13
5-5
6-4
5-5
7-3
4-6
W-1
L-1
W-1
L-1
W-2
46-25
38-27
33-35
38-27
36-34
31-33
37-32
34-33
27-43
27-38
L-2
W-1
L-1
W-3
W-1
47-24
42-26
29-34
33-32
31-36
35-29
28-39
36-35
31-38
31-37
L-1
L-1
W-3
W-3
L-3
47-24
32-32
40-27
29-36
31-39
27-38
38-31
28-39
35-35
27-38
Saturdays NL Games
Milwaukee 8.................... Cincinnati 6 (1st)
Chicago Cubs 2............................ Arizona 0
St. Louis 4............................... Pittsburgh 1
Washington 8.............................. Atlanta 2
N.Y. Mets 7..................................... Miami 0
Milwaukee at Cincinnati (2nd)................ (n)
San Francisco at Colorado...................... (n)
L.A. Dodgers at San Diego...................... (n)
Saturdays AL Games
Tampa Bay 3......................... N.Y. Yankees 2
Toronto 5................................. Baltimore 1
Detroit 6.................................. Cleveland 0
Chicago White Sox 6.............. Kansas City 1
Minnesota 3.............................. Houston 2
Seattle at Oakland.................................. (n)
Texas at L.A. Angels................................ (n)
Saturdays Interleague Games
Boston 9.............................. Philadelphia 2
Sundays NL Games
Milwaukee (Nelson 11-10) at Cincinnati (Lorenzen 3-8), 1:10 p.m.
N.Y. Mets (Matz 2-0) at Miami (Cosart 1-4), 1:10 p.m.
Atlanta (Banuelos 1-3) at Washington (J.Ross 5-5), 1:35 p.m.
Arizona (R.De La Rosa 12-6) at Chicago Cubs (Hendricks 6-6), 2:20 p.m.
L.A. Dodgers (B.Anderson 8-8) at San Diego (Cashner 5-13), 4:10 p.m.
San Francisco (Bumgarner 16-7) at Colorado (Flande 3-1), 4:10 p.m.
Pittsburgh (G.Cole 15-8) at St. Louis (Lackey 11-8), 8:05 p.m.
Sundays AL Games
Tampa Bay (Archer 12-10) at N.Y. Yankees (Nova 5-7), 1:05 p.m.
Baltimore (Tillman 9-10) at Toronto (Estrada 11-8), 1:07 p.m.
Cleveland (Co.Anderson 2-3) at Detroit (Verlander 3-6), 1:08 p.m.
Chicago White Sox (E.Johnson 0-0) at Kansas City (Cueto 2-4), 2:10 p.m.
Minnesota (Duffey 2-1) at Houston (Keuchel 16-6), 2:10 p.m.
Texas (Lewis 14-7) at L.A. Angels (Santiago 7-9), 3:35 p.m.
Seattle (Iwakuma 6-3) at Oakland (Nolin 0-0), 4:05 p.m.
Sundays Interleague Games
Philadelphia (Eickhoff 1-2) at Boston (E.Rodriguez 8-5), 1:35 p.m.
INTERLEAGUE
Red Sox 9, Phillies 2
Philadelphia AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Herrera cf............4 0 1 0 0 3 .298
Hernandez 2b......4 0 1 0 0 0 .269
Altherr rf..............4 0 0 0 0 1 .250
Francoeur dh.......4 1 1 0 0 1 .271
Sweeney lf...........4 1 1 0 0 0 .226
Blanco 3b.............3 0 0 0 0 0 .304
Ruf 1b..................3 0 0 0 0 0 .240
Ruiz c...................3 0 1 2 0 1 .218
Galvis ss...............3 0 0 0 0 2 .263
Totals............... 32 2 5 2 0 8
Boston
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Betts cf.................4 1 3 0 1 0 .281
Holt 3b.................3 1 1 0 2 0 .279
Bogaerts ss..........5 1 1 4 0 0 .320
Ortiz dh................5 2 2 1 0 1 .267
Shaw 1b...............4 0 0 0 0 0 .277
Castillo lf..............4 1 1 0 0 0 .280
Swihart c..............4 1 2 1 0 2 .288
Rutledge 2b.........4 0 2 0 0 0 .341
Bradley Jr. rf.........4 2 2 2 0 0 .293
Totals............... 37 9 14 8 3 3
Philadelphia....... 000 020 000 2 5 1
Boston................ 000 800 01x 9 14 0
EC.Hernandez (8). LOBPhiladelphia
3, Boston 7. 2BO.Herrera (26), Sweeney
(2), Betts (34), B.Holt (22), Bogaerts (27),
Swihart (16), Bradley Jr. (12). HROrtiz
(30), off J.Williams. RBIsRuiz 2 (22), Bogaerts 4 (69), Ortiz (83), Swihart (25), Bradley Jr. 2 (30). SBB.Holt (8).
Runners left in scoring positionPhiladelphia 2 (Francoeur, Sweeney); Boston 6
(Ortiz 4, Bogaerts, Bradley Jr.). RISPPhiladelphia 1 for 7; Boston 6 for 15.
Runners moved upB.Holt, Bogaerts.
GIDPBradley Jr..
DPPhiladelphia 1 (C.Hernandez, Galvis,
Ruf).
Philadelphia IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Asher L, 0-2... 32-e 8 7 7 2 2 83 10.61
Williams.........31-e 4 1 1 0 1 47 5.99
Loewen............1-e 2 1 1 1 0 14 9.53
Giles................ 2-e 0 0 0 0 0 7 1.52
Boston
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Miley W, 11-10.9 5 2 2 0 8 110 4.43
Inherited runners-scoredGiles 3-1.
BalkAsher 2.
T2:24. A36,534 (37,221).
NL BOXES
FIRST GAME
Brewers 8, Reds 6
Milwaukee
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Segura ss..............4 0 2 2 1 0 .270
Lucroy c...............5 0 0 0 0 1 .257
Braun rf...............4 1 2 0 1 0 .282
Davis lf.................3 0 0 0 1 0 .232
Jeffress p..............0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Smith p................0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
e-Peterson ph......1 0 0 0 0 1 .256
Rodriguez p..........0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Rogers 1b.............5 2 3 0 0 1 .248
Santana cf-lf.........3 1 2 2 1 0 .250
Perez 3b...............3 1 1 0 0 1 .282
c-Gennett ph-2b..2 0 1 0 0 0 .267
Herrera 2b-3b......5 2 2 2 0 1 .240
Garza p................2 0 0 0 0 1 .077
Goforth p.............0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
a-Lind ph..............1 1 1 2 0 0 .289
Jimenez p.............0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Schafer cf.............0 0 0 0 0 0 .175
Totals............... 38 8 14 8 4 6
Cincinnati
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Bourgeois cf.........5 0 0 0 0 0 .248
Bruce rf................4 2 1 0 1 1 .229
Votto 1b...............3 2 2 0 2 0 .318
Phillips 2b............4 1 4 1 1 0 .295
Frazier 3b.............4 0 1 1 0 1 .261
Schumaker lf........5 1 1 0 0 1 .219
Suarez ss..............4 0 3 2 0 0 .291
Barnhart c............4 0 0 0 0 1 .266
Jo.Lamb p............2 0 0 0 0 1 .000
LeCure p..............0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
b-Duvall ph..........1 0 0 0 0 1 .500
Badenhop p.........0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Hoover p..............0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
d-DeJesus ph.......1 0 0 0 0 1 .255
Balester p............0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Totals............... 37 6 12 4 4 7
Milwaukee......... 000 015 011 8 14 1
Cincinnati........... 021 020 100 6 12 1
a-doubled for Goforth in the 6th. b-struck
out for LeCure in the 6th. c-grounded out
for H.Perez in the 7th. d-struck out for
Hoover in the 8th. e-struck out for W.Smith
in the 9th.
ESegura (16), Schumaker (3). LOB
Milwaukee 9, Cincinnati 9. 2BBraun
(24), E.Herrera (15), Lind (29), Suarez (16).
3BJ.Rogers (2). HRE.Herrera (6), off
Hoover. RBIsSegura 2 (42), Do.Santana
2 (7), E.Herrera 2 (27), Lind 2 (77), Phillips
(53), Frazier (78), Suarez 2 (41). SBBraun
2 (22), K.Davis (4). SFDo.Santana, Frazier.
Runners left in scoring positionMilwaukee 5 (K.Davis, H.Perez 2, Gennett, Braun);
Cincinnati 5 (Schumaker 2, Bourgeois,
Barnhart, Suarez). RISPMilwaukee 5 for
14; Cincinnati 5 for 17.
Runners moved upE.Herrera. GIDP
Braun, Schumaker.
DPMilwaukee 1 (Gennett, Segura,
J.Rogers); Cincinnati 1 (Frazier, Phillips,
Votto).
Milwaukee IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Garza............ 42-e 7 5 4 4 2 97 5.63
Goforth............1-e 0 0 0 0 1 5 6.30
Jimenez H, 3.... 1 0 0 0 0 2 17 0.00
JeffressW,5-0BS,3-3..1 3 1 1 0 0 14 2.75
Smith H, 17...... 1 0 0 0 0 1 16 2.73
RodriguezS,34-35...1 2 0 0 0 1 14 2.40
Cincinnati
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Lamb............. 52-e 9 6 6 2 4 97 6.11
LeCure.............1-e 1 0 0 0 0 5 2.35
Badenhop........ 1 1 0 0 1 0 26 3.95
Hoover L, 7-1... 1 1 1 1 1 0 19 2.14
Balester........... 1 2 1 1 0 2 12 5.06
Inherited runners-scoredGoforth 2-0,
LeCure 1-1. HBPby Hoover (L.Schafer).
WPGoforth.
T3:27. A28,632 (42,319).
Cardinals 4, Pirates 1
Pittsburgh
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Harrison 2b..........4 0 0 0 1 2 .270
Mercer ss.............4 0 0 0 0 2 .248
f-Polanco ph........1 0 0 0 0 1 .257
McCutchen cf......4 0 1 0 0 1 .304
Kang 3b................3 0 0 0 1 0 .287
Marte lf................3 0 0 0 0 2 .280
Morse 1b.............4 0 0 0 0 2 .235
Rodriguez rf.........4 0 3 0 0 1 .254
Stewart c.............3 0 0 0 0 1 .274
d-Walker ph.........1 1 1 0 0 0 .265
Morton p.............2 0 0 0 0 2 .033
a-Ramirez ph.......0 0 0 0 1 0 .248
1-Florimon pr......0 0 0 0 0 0 .105
Caminero p..........0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Blanton p.............0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
e-Alvarez ph.........1 0 1 1 0 0 .243
Totals............... 34 1 6 1 3 14
St. Louis
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Carpenter 3b.......3 1 2 2 1 1 .261
Piscotty lf.............4 0 1 1 0 0 .342
Heyward rf...........4 0 0 0 0 0 .287
Peralta ss.............4 0 1 0 0 0 .279
Moss 1b...............4 0 1 0 0 1 .275
Molina c...............4 0 0 0 0 0 .277
Wong 2b..............2 1 1 0 2 0 .266
Jay cf....................2 1 0 0 0 2 .218
Siegrist p..............0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
c-Reynolds ph......0 0 0 0 1 0 .240
Rosenthal p..........0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Garcia p...............1 0 0 0 0 0 .094
b-Garcia ph..........0 0 0 0 1 0 .243
2-Bourjos pr-cf.....1 1 0 0 0 0 .208
Totals............... 29 4 6 3 5 4
Pittsburgh........... 000 000 001 1 6 1
St. Louis.............. 020 000 20x 4 6 1
a-walked for Morton in the 7th. b-walked
for Jai.Garcia in the 7th. c-walked for
Siegrist in the 8th. d-singled for Stewart in
the 9th. e-singled for Blanton in the 9th. fstruck out for Mercer in the 9th.
1-ran for Ar.Ramirez in the 7th. 2-ran for
G.Garcia in the 7th.
EJ.Harrison (13), Wong (15). LOB
Pittsburgh 10, St. Louis 8. 2BS.Rodriguez
(9). HRM.Carpenter (21), off Caminero.
RBIsP.Alvarez (68), M.Carpenter 2 (71),
Piscotty (26). SBWong (15). SJai.Garcia.
Runners left in scoring positionPittsburgh
4 (Morton, Kang, J.Harrison, G.Polanco); St.
Louis 3 (Moss, Heyward, Bourjos). RISP
Pittsburgh 1 for 7; St. Louis 1 for 4.
Runners moved upMcCutchen.
Pittsburgh
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Morton L, 8-7.. 6 4 2 1 3 3 89 4.07
Caminero......... 1 1 2 2 1 0 17 3.73
Blanton............ 1 1 0 0 1 1 21 0.84
St. Louis
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Garcia W, 8-4... 7 4 0 0 1 9 108 1.89
Siegrist............. 1 0 0 0 1 2 14 2.19
Rosenthal......... 1 2 1 1 1 3 29 1.61
HBPby Morton (Jay), by Jai.Garcia
(S.Marte). WPBlanton, Jai.Garcia, Rosenthal.
T2:56. A45,139 (45,399).
Mets 7, Marlins 0
New York
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Lagares cf.............5 1 2 2 0 0 .262
Wright 3b.............4 1 2 0 1 0 .316
Cespedes lf..........4 2 1 0 1 0 .295
Uribe 2b...............3 0 0 0 2 1 .249
Tejada ss..............0 0 0 0 0 0 .258
dArnaud c............4 1 2 4 0 0 .295
W.Flores ss-2b.....4 1 1 1 0 0 .263
Campbell 1b........3 0 1 0 0 0 .188
Young Jr. rf...........3 1 0 0 0 0 .160
Colon p................3 0 0 0 0 2 .137
Totals............... 33 7 9 7 4 3
Miami
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Gordon 2b...........4 0 1 0 0 0 .325
Yelich cf................4 0 1 0 0 0 .288
Prado 3b..............4 0 1 0 0 0 .284
Bour 1b................4 0 2 0 0 1 .255
Dietrich lf.............4 0 1 0 0 0 .268
Suzuki rf...............4 0 0 0 0 0 .248
Realmuto c..........3 0 2 0 0 0 .245
Rojas ss................3 0 1 0 0 1 .243
B.Hand p..............0 0 0 0 0 0 .125
Rienzo p...............1 0 0 0 0 0 .000
a-Gillespie ph.......1 0 0 0 0 0 .298
Cordier p..............0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Lazo p..................0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
b-McGehee ph.....1 0 0 0 0 0 .209
Urena p................0 0 0 0 0 0 .077
Totals............... 33 0 9 0 0 2
New York............ 430 000 000 7 9 0
Miami................ 000 000 000 0 9 0
a-grounded into a double play for Rienzo
in the 5th. b-lined out for Lazo in the 8th.
LOBNew York 6, Miami 6. 2BRealmuto
(17). HRdArnaud (10), off B.Hand; W.Flores
(15), off B.Hand; Lagares (6), off B.Hand.
RBIsLagares 2 (39), dArnaud 4 (35),
W.Flores (56). CSCampbell (3). SB.Colon.
Runners left in scoring positionNew
York 3 (W.Flores 2, Lagares); Miami 3
(D.Gordon, I.Suzuki, Rojas). RISPNew
York 2 for 7; Miami 0 for 5.
Runners moved updArnaud, Dietrich,
Rojas. GIDPI.Suzuki, Gillespie.
DPNew York 3 (Campbell, W.Flores), (Uribe,
W.Flores, Campbell), (W.Flores, Campbell).
New York
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Colon W, 13-11...9 9 0 0 0 2 100 4.18
Miami
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Hand L, 4-5... 12-e 6 7 7 2 2 48 5.20
Rienzo............31-e 2 0 0 1 0 54 3.45
Cordier............. 2 1 0 0 1 0 31 3.86
Lazo................. 1 0 0 0 0 1 8 0.00
Urena............... 1 0 0 0 0 0 12 5.01
Inherited runners-scoredRienzo 2-1.
HBPby B.Hand (Young Jr.), by Rienzo
(Campbell).
T2:30. A23,135 (37,442).
Cubs 2, Diamondbacks 0
Arizona
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Inciarte rf.............4 0 1 0 0 0 .294
Pollock cf.............4 0 0 0 0 1 .317
Goldschmidt 1b...4 0 2 0 0 2 .324
Peralta lf..............4 0 1 0 0 0 .306
Saltalamacchia c...3 0 1 0 0 2 .204
Lamb 3b...............3 0 1 0 0 1 .279
Drury 2b..............3 0 0 0 0 0 .182
Owings ss.............3 0 0 0 0 0 .242
Ray p....................1 0 0 0 0 0 .100
a-Tomas ph..........1 0 0 0 0 1 .284
Delgado p............0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Hernandez p........0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
b-Gosselin ph.......1 0 0 0 0 0 .310
Hudson p.............0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Totals............... 31 0 6 0 0 7
Chicago
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Fowler cf..............3 1 1 1 1 0 .254
Jackson rf.............2 0 0 0 1 2 .250
Bryant lf-3b..........4 0 0 0 0 2 .267
Rizzo 1b...............4 1 1 0 0 1 .285
Baez 3b-2b...........3 0 0 0 1 1 .250
St.Castro 2b.........3 0 2 0 0 0 .248
Denorfia lf............0 0 0 0 0 0 .257
Ross c...................2 0 0 1 1 0 .189
Arrieta p..............3 0 0 0 0 3 .143
Rondon p.............0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Russell ss.............3 0 0 0 0 2 .242
Totals............... 27 2 4 2 4 11
Arizona............... 000 000 000 0 6 0
Chicago.............. 000 110 00x 2 4 0
a-struck out for Ray in the 6th. b-grounded out for D.Hernandez in the 8th.
LOBArizona 4, Chicago 6. 2BSaltalamacchia (11). HRFowler (16), off Ray.
RBIsFowler (38), D.Ross (9). SBD.Peralta (6).
Runners left in scoring positionArizona
3 (Saltalamacchia 2, Ja.Lamb); Chicago 3
(A.Russell 3). RISPArizona 0 for 2; Chicago 1 for 6.
Runners moved upD.Ross. GIDPPollock, Drury.
DPArizona 1 (Inciarte, Goldschmidt);
Chicago 2 (Arrieta, A.Russell, Rizzo), (Bryant, J.Baez, Rizzo).
Arizona
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Ray L, 3-11....... 5 4 2 2 3 8 96 3.72
Delgado........... 1 0 0 0 0 0 13 3.30
Hernandez....... 1 0 0 0 1 2 19 4.44
Hudson............ 1 0 0 0 0 1 10 3.92
Chicago
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Arrieta W, 18-6.8 4 0 0 0 7 116 2.03
Rondon S, 26-30.1 2 0 0 0 0 10 1.48
HBPby Ray (A.Jackson).
T2:34. A40,690 (40,929).
Nationals 8, Braves 2
Atlanta
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Markakis rf..........4 1 1 0 1 0 .294
Ciriaco 2b.............4 0 0 0 1 3 .260
Freeman 1b.........3 1 1 0 1 2 .285
Swisher lf.............4 0 2 1 0 0 .267
Maybin cf.............2 0 0 0 0 1 .268
Bourn cf...............0 0 0 1 1 0 .130
Simmons ss..........3 0 0 0 1 0 .256
Olivera 3b............4 0 1 0 0 2 .133
Bethancourt c......4 0 0 0 0 2 .177
Miller p................2 0 0 0 0 1 .063
Burawa p.............0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
b-Castro ph..........1 0 0 0 0 1 .250
Detwiler p............0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Kelly p..................0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
c-Peterson ph......1 0 0 0 0 0 .236
Totals............... 32 2 5 2 5 12
Washington AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Werth rf...............3 1 1 0 1 0 .224
denDekker rf........1 0 0 0 0 1 .211
Rendon 2b-3b......4 2 2 1 0 2 .267
Harper cf..............4 2 3 2 0 1 .337
Zimmerman 1b....4 0 1 2 0 0 .246
Robinson lf...........2 0 0 0 2 1 .267
Escobar 3b...........4 1 0 0 0 0 .312
Turner 2b.............0 0 0 0 0 0 .100
Desmond ss.........4 2 3 0 0 1 .237
Ramos c...............4 0 0 1 0 1 .244
Gonzalez p...........1 0 0 0 0 1 .086
a-Uggla ph...........1 0 0 0 0 0 .186
Janssen p.............0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Grace p................0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Treinen p.............1 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Totals............... 33 8 10 6 3 8
Atlanta............... 000 000 020 2 5 1
Washington........ 004 210 10x 8 10 1
a-flied out for G.Gonzalez in the 6th. bstruck out for Burawa in the 7th. c-flied out
for R.Kelly in the 9th.
EBethancourt (5), T.Turner (1). LOB
Atlanta 9, Washington 5. 2BSwisher (3),
Werth (12), Harper 2 (33), Desmond 2 (25).
HRHarper (33), off S.Miller. RBIsSwisher
(13), Bourn (2), Rendon (17), Harper 2 (82),
Zimmerman 2 (73), W.Ramos (57). SG.Gonzalez. SFBourn.
Runners left in scoring positionAtlanta
6 (Maybin, S.Miller, A.Simmons 3, Ciriaco);
Washington 3 (Rendon, Y.Escobar, den
Dekker). RISPAtlanta 2 for 10; Washington 2 for 12.
Runners
moved
upZimmerman,
W.Ramos.
Atlanta
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Miller L, 5-13.41-e 7 7 7 3 4 94 2.86
Burawa......... 12-e 0 0 0 0 1 23 3.86
Detwiler.......... 2-e 2 1 1 0 1 18 7.36
Kelly...............11-e 1 0 0 0 2 19 6.10
Washington IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
GonzalezW,10-7... 6 2 0 0 4 10 106 3.96
Janssen............ 1 0 0 0 0 1 15 4.76
Grace.............. 2-e 2 2 0 0 0 24 4.97
Treinen..........11-e 1 0 0 1 1 18 3.40
Inherited runners-scoredBurawa 1-0,
R.Kelly 1-0, Treinen 1-0. WPS.Miller 2,
G.Gonzalez. PBW.Ramos.
T3:07. A28,646 (41,341).
FRIDAYS LATE BOX
Pirates 9, Cardinals 3
Pittsburgh
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Polanco rf............5 1 1 0 1 0 .258
Harrison 2b..........5 1 1 0 0 1 .273
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
AL BOXES
Blue Jays 5, Orioles 1
Baltimore
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Machado 3b........3 0 1 0 1 0 .291
Parra rf.................4 0 0 0 0 0 .229
Jones cf................3 0 0 0 1 2 .274
Davis dh...............3 1 1 0 1 2 .255
Pearce 1b.............4 0 0 0 0 1 .221
Schoop 2b............3 0 0 0 1 1 .288
Joseph c...............3 0 1 1 0 1 .249
Lake lf..................3 0 1 0 0 1 .167
Janish ss...............3 0 0 0 0 1 .211
Totals............... 29 1 4 1 4 9
Toronto
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Revere lf..............4 0 1 1 0 0 .308
Donaldson 3b......3 0 0 0 1 0 .300
Bautista rf............4 1 2 2 0 1 .246
Encarnacion dh....3 0 0 0 0 1 .267
Tulowitzki ss........4 1 1 0 0 2 .233
Smoak 1b.............4 1 2 0 0 0 .219
Martin c...............4 0 0 1 0 2 .241
Goins 2b..............4 1 2 1 0 2 .248
Pillar cf.................4 1 2 0 0 1 .266
Totals............... 34 5 10 5 1 9
Baltimore........... 000 000 100 1 4 0
Toronto.............. 101 120 00x 5 10 0
LOBBaltimore 5, Toronto 7. 2BLake
(3), Bautista (24), Smoak 2 (13), Goins
2 (14). HRBautista (32), off M.Wright.
RBIsJoseph (47), Revere (6), Bautista 2
(91), Ru.Martin (57), Goins (38).
Runners left in scoring positionBaltimore 2 (G.Parra, Janish); Toronto 5 (Goins,
Smoak 2, Bautista, Pillar). RISPBaltimore
1 for 5; Toronto 4 for 12.
Runners moved upJanish, Ru.Martin.
GIDPA.Jones, Pearce.
DPToronto 2 (Tulowitzki, Goins,
Smoak), (Tulowitzki, Goins, Smoak).
Baltimore
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Wright L, 2-4.... 4 7 3 3 1 4 80 5.19
Garcia.............. 1 3 2 2 0 2 19 4.81
Rondon............ 2 0 0 0 0 1 19 0.96
McFarland....... 1 0 0 0 0 2 12 4.13
Toronto
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Price W, 14-5... 7 3 1 1 4 8 103 2.43
Sanchez........... 1 1 0 0 0 0 10 3.01
Cecil................. 1 0 0 0 0 1 14 3.09
HBPby
M.Wright
(Encarnacion).
WPM.Wright.
T2:42. A46,373 (49,282).
Rays 3, Yankees 2
Tampa Bay
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Jaso dh.................3 0 2 0 1 0 .281
e-Butler ph-dh.....1 0 0 0 0 0 .274
Nava rf.................4 1 0 0 1 2 .184
Mahtook rf..........0 0 0 0 0 0 .179
Longoria 3b..........1 1 0 0 1 0 .267
Shaffer 3b............0 0 0 0 2 0 .273
Sizemore lf...........2 0 0 0 1 0 .214
a-Guyer ph-lf.......2 0 0 0 0 0 .272
Forsythe 2b..........4 1 1 0 0 3 .290
Cabrera ss............3 0 1 2 1 0 .259
Loney 1b..............4 0 0 0 0 1 .271
Kiermaier cf.........4 0 2 1 0 2 .263
Maile c.................3 0 0 0 0 2 .000
Rivera c................1 0 0 0 0 0 .181
Totals............... 32 3 6 3 7 10
New York
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Gardner cf-lf........5 0 0 1 0 0 .270
Young lf................2 0 0 0 1 0 .245
c-Ellsbury ph-cf....2 0 0 0 0 1 .269
Rodriguez dh.......3 0 0 0 1 2 .255
Beltran rf.............4 0 1 0 0 0 .279
Headley 3b..........4 0 2 0 0 1 .276
Bird 1b.................4 0 1 0 0 1 .257
J.Murphy c...........0 1 0 0 2 0 .276
d-McCann ph-c....0 0 0 0 1 0 .245
Gregorius ss.........4 1 1 1 0 2 .270
Ryan 2b................2 0 0 0 0 0 .208
b-Pirela ph...........1 0 0 0 0 1 .221
Drew 2b...............1 0 0 0 0 0 .208
Totals............... 32 2 5 2 5 8
Tampa Bay.......... 012 000 000 3 6 0
New York............ 000 020 000 2 5 0
a-popped out for Sizemore in the 7th.
b-struck out for B.Ryan in the 7th. c-struck
out for C.Young in the 7th. d-walked for
J.Murphy in the 8th.
LOBTampa Bay 10, New York 9. 2B
Forsythe (28), Gregorius (18). RBIsA.Cabrera 2 (43), Kiermaier (32), Gardner (57),
Gregorius (45).
Runners left in scoring positionTampa
Bay 5 (Maile, Loney, Nava, Forsythe, Rivera); New York 4 (Gregorius 3, Beltran).
RISPTampa Bay 2 for 10; New York 0 for 5.
Runners moved upGardner, B.Ryan.
GIDPLongoria.
DPNew York 1 (Gregorius, B.Ryan,
Bird).
Tampa Bay IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Moore........... 42-e 3 2 2 2 3 79 8.04
Gomes.............1-e 0 0 0 1 0 9 3.54
CedenoW,4-1H,16..12-e 0 0 0 1 4 30 1.86
Colome H, 6...11-e 2 0 0 1 1 30 3.66
BoxbergerS,34-39..1 0 0 0 0 0 11 3.33
New York
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Eovaldi L, 14-3....51-e 5 3 3 4 7 102 4.20
Shreve.............. 1 0 0 0 2 1 25 1.86
Twins 3, Astros 2
Minnesota
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Hicks rf.................4 0 1 0 0 2 .268
Dozier 2b.............4 1 1 0 0 2 .241
Mauer 1b.............3 0 0 0 1 0 .269
Sano dh................4 0 0 0 0 3 .287
Plouffe 3b............2 1 0 0 1 0 .241
Rosario lf..............4 0 2 2 0 1 .271
Escobar ss............4 0 0 0 0 2 .263
Suzuki c................3 0 0 0 0 0 .244
Buxton cf.............3 1 1 0 0 0 .194
Totals............... 31 3 5 2 2 10
Houston
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Springer rf............4 0 0 0 1 4 .261
Altuve 2b.............5 0 0 0 0 1 .312
Correa ss..............4 0 3 0 0 0 .279
Gattis dh..............4 0 1 0 0 2 .241
Lowrie 3b.............3 1 1 1 1 1 .252
Gomez cf.............4 0 0 0 0 1 .213
Gonzalez 1b.........4 1 2 0 0 0 .272
1-Villar pr.............0 0 0 0 0 0 .271
Tucker lf...............3 0 1 1 0 1 .250
Marisnick lf..........0 0 0 0 0 0 .234
a-Rasmus ph........0 0 0 0 1 0 .230
Conger c..............3 0 0 0 1 2 .216
Totals............... 34 2 8 2 4 12
Minnesota.......... 000 001 002 3 5 0
Houston............. 000 010 001 2 8 0
a-walked for Marisnick in the 9th.
1-ran for Ma.Gonzalez in the 9th.
LOBMinnesota 4, Houston 9. 2BE.Rosario (16), Buxton (5), Tucker (18). 3BE.
Rosario (11). HRLowrie (7), off Jepsen.
RBIsE.Rosario 2 (39), Lowrie (20), Tucker
(32). SBVillar (5).
Runners left in scoring positionMinnesota 3 (K.Suzuki, Edu.Escobar 2); Houston
5 (Lowrie, Springer, C.Gomez, Altuve 2).
RISPMinnesota 2 for 8; Houston 0 for 6.
Runners moved upMauer, E.Rosario.
GIDPDozier, Lowrie.
DPMinnesota 1 (Dozier, Edu.Escobar, Mauer); Houston 1 (Correa, Altuve,
Ma.Gonzalez).
Minnesota IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Santana W, 4-4... 8 6 1 1 2 11 119 4.93
Jepsen S, 11-15... 1 2 1 1 2 1 26 2.47
Houston
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
McCullers......... 7 3 1 1 2 8 103 3.07
Harris............... 1 0 0 0 0 1 17 1.34
Gregerson L, 7-3.1 2 2 2 0 1 25 3.06
HBPby Gregerson (Plouffe).
T2:45. A27,643 (41,574).
Tigers 6, Indians 0
Cleveland
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Kipnis 2b..............3 0 0 0 1 2 .311
Lindor ss..............3 0 0 0 1 0 .307
Brantley lf............4 0 1 0 0 0 .321
Santana dh...........2 0 0 0 2 1 .233
Chisenhall rf.........4 0 0 0 0 1 .259
Sands 1b..............4 0 1 0 0 0 .235
Almonte cf...........3 0 0 0 0 1 .258
Perez c.................3 0 0 0 0 1 .213
Urshela 3b...........2 0 0 0 0 1 .226
a-Martinez ph-3b...1 0 1 0 0 0 1.000
Totals............... 29 0 3 0 4 7
Detroit
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Davis cf................5 1 1 1 0 0 .240
Kinsler 2b.............4 0 2 1 0 0 .305
Cabrera 1b...........3 1 0 0 1 0 .357
Martinez rf...........3 1 1 2 0 2 .287
Martinez dh.........4 0 2 0 0 0 .235
Castellanos 3b.....4 1 1 0 0 1 .250
Collins lf...............4 1 2 1 0 0 .272
McCann c.............4 0 2 1 0 1 .261
Romine ss............3 1 0 0 1 0 .236
Totals............... 34 6 11 6 2 4
Cleveland........... 000 000 000 0 3 2
Detroit............... 012 300 00x 6 11 1
a-singled for Urshela in the 8th.
ER.Perez (4), Kipnis (6), Kinsler (11).
LOBCleveland 6, Detroit 7. 2BBrantley
(42). 3BR.Davis (9). HRJ.Martinez (35),
off Salazar; Ty.Collins (3), off Salazar. RBIs
R.Davis (19), Kinsler (66), J.Martinez 2 (89),
Ty.Collins (14), J.McCann (33). SBLindor
(7). CSKinsler (6).
Runners left in scoring positionCleveland 2 (C.Santana, Chisenhall); Detroit
3 (An.Romine, Mi.Cabrera, Castellanos).
RISPCleveland 0 for 3; Detroit 2 for 5.
GIDPR.Perez, Mi.Cabrera.
DPCleveland 1 (Lindor, Kipnis, Sands);
Detroit 2 (Castellanos, Kinsler, Mi.Cabrera),
(Mi.Cabrera, An.Romine).
Cleveland
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Salazar L, 12-8...32-e 8 6 6 1 1 76 3.54
Manship........... 1 2 0 0 0 2 26 1.27
Soto.................1-e 0 0 0 0 0 1 0.00
Armstrong....... 1 0 0 0 0 1 6 0.00
Floyd................ 2 1 0 0 1 0 34 0.00
Detroit
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Simon W, 12-9....7 2 0 0 4 5 112 4.86
Wilson............. 1 1 0 0 0 1 7 2.27
Rondon............ 1 0 0 0 0 1 14 6.29
Inherited runners-scoredManship 1-1,
Gi.Soto 1-0. HBPby Floyd (J.Martinez).
T2:53. A28,949 (41,574).
LancasterSports
SPORTS
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
C11
US OPEN
Sneak attack!
Federer must decide whether to use
new return tactic against Isner
HOWARD FENDRICH
AP TENNIS WRITER
PAULA WOLF
WHEELCHAIR QUARTERBACK
Phillies rotation is
showing some promise
Several days ago,
Philadelphia Inquirer
columnist Bob Brookover looked at the gap
between the Mets and
Phillies starting rotations and saw a cavernous gulf.
I dont dispute that.
But New York boasts
the best young starting
staff in baseball, and Im
not sure the Phils have
to reach that point before they contend again.
Plus, I really do believe
Aaron Nola can be a
very good major league
pitcher, notwithstanding that last game in
New York, in which he
was let down repeatedly
by his defense.
Yes, the team does
have a very long way to
go, but remember where
they were at the beginning of the season.
Nola was at Double-A
Reading; Adam Morgan
was only just coming
back after missing quite
a bit of time because of
shoulder surgery; and
Jerad Eickhoff and Alec
Asher werent even part
of the organization.
The only quality
Above, Phillies Darnell Sweeney (24) scores on a two-run single by Carlos Ruiz as Bostons Blake Swihart, left,
waits for the throw during the fifth inning Saturday. Below, Pirates starting pitcher Charlie Morton throws during
the fifth inning of Pittsburghs loss to St. Louis.
MLB ROUNDUP
American League
an eight-run fourth inning.
Xander Bogaerts hit a
three-run double during
Bostons big burst, scoring himself on the play
after an error.
The Red Sox beat the
Phillies for the second
straight day, capturing
the three-game series.
Theyre 11-1-2 in their
last 14 series against
Philadelphia.
Carlos Ruiz had a tworun single for the Phillies, who lost for the
ninth time in 12 games.
Wade Miley (11-10) allowed five hits in posting
his first career complete
game. He retired the first
12 batters in his 130th career start.
Jackie Bradley Jr. added
a two-run double in Bostons big fourth. Bogaerts
finished with four RBIs.
Blake Swiharts RBI
single pushed Boston
ahead 1-0 in the fourth,
and then Bradley and Bogaerts hit their doubles.
Bogaerts hit turned into
a Little League home
run, as he advanced to
National League
Cardinals 4, Pirates 1:
Jaime Garcia pitched seven scoreless innings, Matt
Carpenter homered and
St. Louis beat Pittsburgh.
Garcia (8-4) struck
out a season-high nine,
walked one and allowed
four hits for his 50th career win. Kevin Siegrist
followed with a scoreless eighth before Trevor
Rosenthal gave up a twoout run in the ninth.
Brewers 8, Reds 6:
Elian Herrera hit a tiebreaking home run on
reliever J.J. Hoovers
first pitch of the eighth
inning, sending Milwaukee over Cincinnati in
the first game of a daynight doubleheader.
Cubs 2, Diamond-
LANCASTER 5, CAMDEN 4
Lancaster used the long ball in eighth inning to rally past the Riversharks
JOEL SCHREINER
LNP CORRESPONDENT
C12
SCOREBOARD
SPORTS SLATE
FIELD HOCKEY
COLLEGIATE
Lindenwood at Millersville, 12 p.m.
SOCCER
COLLEGIATE MEN
Millersville at West Virginia Wesleyan, 1 p.m.
Desales at Elizabethtown, 2 p.m.
COLLEGIATE WOMEN
Elizabethtown at Roanoke, 5 p.m.
Rosemont at Franklin & Marshall, 1 p.m.
GOLF
PGA
RUSSIAN OPEN
Saturday
At Skolkovo Golf Club
Moscow
Purse: $1.13 million
Yardage: 7,025; Par: 71
Third Round
Lee Slattery.......................... 66-67-67200
Craig Lee.............................. 67-69-66202
Estanislao Goya................... 68-67-67202
David Horsey....................... 67-70-66203
Oskar Henningsson.............. 69-68-67204
Bradley Dredge.................... 66-66-72204
Pablo Martin Benavides...... 68-67-70205
Danie Van Tonder................ 69-69-68206
Matthew Southgate............. 68-69-69206
David Drysdale..................... 68-69-69206
Jason Schrivener.................. 70-66-70206
Ben Evans............................ 67-68-71206
Andrea Pavan...................... 70-69-68207
Lasse Jensen........................ 70-69-68207
Keith Horne......................... 67-70-70207
Daniel Vancsik..................... 69-68-70207
James Heath........................ 70-66-71207
Scott Jamieson..................... 65-71-71207
CHAPEL HILL
LANCASTER
TANGLEWOOD
SCHOLASTIC
FOOTBALL
Harrisburg 40, McCaskey 6
Harrisburg........................6 14 6 14 40
McCaskey.........................0 0 6 0 6
Scoring
HS. Anderson 38 pass from Wilkerson
(kick failed)
HJ. Anderson 7 pass from Wilkerson (J.
Davis kick)
HWilkerson 7 run (J. Davis kick)
HJ. Anderson 10 pass from Wilkerson
(kick failed)
MJ. Gonzalez 18 run (kick failed)
HJ. Anderson 34 pass from Wilkerson
(J. Davis kick)
HSawyers 5 run (J. Davis kick)
Statistics
H
McC
First downs................................ 15
10
Rushes-Yds..........................29-143
29-0
Passing yards........................... 245
139
Passes................................13-15-0
11-26-2
Punts-Avg...............................3-29
4-33
Fumbles-Lost............................0-0
5-1
Penalties-Yards...................15-130
5-25
Pequea Valley............. 14 0 7 0 0 21
York Tech...................... 0 14 7 0 6 27
Scoring
PVC. Mullen 15 pass from J. Lapp (W.
Doutrich kick)
PVG. Allgyer 1 run (W. Doutrich kick)
YTB. Montouth 60 punt return (J. Orielas kick)
YTB. Montouth 2 run (J. Orielas kick)
PVJ. Lapp 1 run (W. Doutrich kick)
YTI. Colon 75 kickoff return (J. Orielas
kick)
YTJ. Smallwood 1 run (kick failed)
Statistics
PV
YT
First downs................................ 16
9
Rushes-Yds..........................40-174
39-161
Passing yards............................. 90
11
Passes................................11-18-1
2-9-1
Punts-Avg.................................0-0
0-0
Fumbles-Lost............................3-3
4-0
Penalties-Yards.......................3-20
2-20
FRIDAYS LATE BOXES
Wilson..............................0 7 0 7 14
Governor Mifflin..............0 3 0 0 3
Scoring
WS. Dantzler 1 run (N. Hart kick)
GMFG, Myers 35
WB. McElroy 2 run (N. Hart kick)
Statistics
Wil
GM
First downs................................ 15
14
Rushes-Yds..........................29-199
42-211
Passing yards........................... 112
31
Passes................................12-19-0
6-12-2
Punts-Avg...............................3-24
1-64
Fumbles-Lost............................3-1
1-1
Penalties-Yards.......................5-41
5-40
Manheim Township.........0 6 0 6 12
Central Dauphin.............21 0 0 21 42
Scoring
CDR. Sirb 24 run (H. Rowe kick)
CDR. Sirb 62 run (H. Rowe kick)
CDR. Albright 27 run (H. Rowe kick)
MTK. Kubicki 14 pass from E. Benjamin
(kick failed)
CDD. Payton 41 pass from (H. Rowe
kick)
CDM. Burgwin 52 run (H. Rowe kick)
MTK. Kubicki 8 pass from E. Benjamin
(pass failed)
CDD. Shepherd 67 run (H. Rowe kick)
Statistics
MT
CD
First downs................................ 16
15
Rushes-Yds............................26-41
33-417
Passing yards........................... 181
99
Passes................................17-32-1
8-12-0
Punts-Avg...............................4-28
3-40.67
Fumbles-Lost............................1-1
1-0
Penalties-Yards.......................5-44
8-64
Annville-Cleona.... 15 0 7 7 7 3 39
Biglervillle............... 7 7 0 15 7 0 36
Scoring
A-CA. Fox 81 run (W. Langan run)
BT. Weaver 9 run (C. Sentz kick)
A-CA. Fox 45 run (M. Light kick)
BD. Showers 1 run (C. Sentz kick)
A-CA. Fox 15 interception return (M.
Light kick)
BB. Hurda 8 run (K. Bell pass from
Hurda)
BD. Showers 13 run (C. Sentz kick)
A-CA. Fox 1 run (M. Light kick)
A-CW. Langan 7 run (M. Light kick)
BD. Showers 4 run (C. Sentz kick)
A-CFG, Light 24
Statistics
A-C
Big
First downs.................................. 8
17
Rushes-Yds..........................39-270
57-218
Passing yards............................... 4
135
Passes..................................2-10-1
9-18-2
Punts-Avg...............................4-41
2-36.5
Fumbles-Lost............................2-0
0-0
Penalties-Yards.......................3-25
3-26
Lebanon...........................0 0 0 7 7
Cedar Crest.....................19 7 15 0 41
Scoring
CCJ. Belleman 5 run (kick blocked)
CCJ. Kalbach 65 fumble recovery (kick
failed)
CCJ. Belleman 21 run (Z. Sharifi kick)
CCS. Roda 3 run (Z. Sharifi kick)
CCK. Bolanos 85 kickoff return (I. Trimble run)
CCI. Trimble 20 pass from S. Roda (Z.
Sharifi kick)
LC. Camacho 33 run (H. Cortes Cruz
kick)
Statistics
Leb
CC
First downs................................ 15
15
Rushes-Yds............................25-78
40-198
Passing yards........................... 205
60
Passes................................18-37-0
2-4-0
Punts-Avg............................2-23.5
2-35.5
Fumbles-Lost............................3-2
1-1
Penalties-Yards.........................1-5
4-42
Elco...................................0 0 0 8 8
Hamburg..........................7 13 3 7 30
Scoring
HI. Reynoso 36 run (A. Nelson kick)
HI. Reynoso 1 run (kick blocked)
HI. Reynoso 1 run (A. Nelson kick)
HFG, Nelson 23
HI. Reynoso 8 run (A. Nelson kick)
ET. Horst 4 run (T. Horst pass from
Knight)
Statistics
Elco
Ham
First downs.................................. 8
12
Rushes-Yds............................52-95
86-175
Passing yards............................. 91
163
Passes................................12-23-0
5-7-0
Punts-Avg..........................7-11.29
3-25
Fumbles-Lost............................0-0
1-0
Penalties-Yards.......................5-30
3-23
Pine Grove........................0 0 0 0 0
Northern Lebanon.........20 19 6 7 52
Scoring
NLN. Smith 27 pass from I. Wengert (
run)
NLC. Teasdale 35 pass from I. Wengert
(kick failed)
NLT. Mengel 18 fumble recovery (kick
failed)
NLD. Weaver 23 run (kick blocked)
NLL. Funck 1 run (run failed)
NLD. Weaver 82 run (kick failed)
NLI. Davilla 84 fumble recovery (C.
Herb kick)
Statistics
PG
NL
First downs.................................. 6
11
Rushes-Yds............................40-60
20-66
Passing yards............................... 4
89
Passes....................................1-7-1
Punts-Avg............................5-31.2
Fumbles-Lost............................6-4
Penalties-Yards.......................4-33
5-8-1
4-26.25
3-0
6-52
AUTO RACING
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
TRANSACTIONS
XFINITY
BASEBALL
American League
BOSTON RED SOX Placed OF Hanley
Ramirez on the 15-day DL, retroactive to
Aug. 27. Recalled INF Deven Marrero from
Pawtucket (IL).
TAMPA BAY RAYS Announced SS Hak-Ju
Lee cleared waivers and was sent outright
to Durham (IL).
American Association
AMARILLO THUNDERHEADS Traded
INF Juan Martinez to Bridgeport (Atlantic)
for a player to be named. Released RHP
Freddy Flores.
WINNIPEG GOLDEYES Released OF Nic
Jackson.
FOOTBALL
National Football League
PHILADELPHIA EAGLES Released QB
Tim Tebow, WR Rasheed Bailey, G Brett
Boyko, G Malcolm Bunche, CB Randall Evans, TE Andrew Gleichert, LB Najee Goode,
WR Jeff Maehl, WR Freddie Martino, DE
Brian Mihalik, G John Moffitt, RB Raheem
Mostert, WR Quron Pratt, S Chris Prosinski,
DE Travis Raciti, S Ed Reynolds, LB Deonte
Skinner, P Kip Smith, TE Eric Tomlinson, C-G
Julian Vandervelde, LB Diaheem Watkins
and CB Jaylen Watkins.
PITTSBURGH STEELERS Signed CB Ross
Cockrell to a one-year contract. Waived-injured OL Kelvin Palmer and OL Mitchell Van
Dyk. Released RB Jawon Chisholm, RB Josh
Harris, DL Matt Conrath, DL Ethan Hemer,
DL Mike Thornton, S Jordan Dangerfield, S
Alden Darby, S Gerod Holliman, OL Reese
Dismukes, OL B.J. Finney, OL Doug Legursky, CB Kevin Fogg, CB B.W. Webb, LB L.J.
Fort, LB Shayon Green, LB Howard Jones,
WR Shakim Phillips and WR Jarrod West.
SAN DIEGO CHARGERS Waivedinjured LB Chi Chi Ariguzo and LB Colton
Underwood. waived CB Richard Crawford,
CB Greg Ducre, WR Javontee Herndon, G
Michael Huey, S Johnny Lowdermilk, CB
Jordan Mabin, LB Ryan Mueller, TE Brian
Parker, S Adrian Phillips, CB Lowell Rose,
RB Dreamius Smith, QB Brad Sorensen, DT
Damion Square and G Kenny Wiggins. Released PK Nick Novak, WR Austin Pettis and
TE John Phillips. Traded G Jeremiah Sirles
to Minnesota for a 2016 sixth-round draft
pick. Placed TE Antonio Gates and G Craig
Watts on the reserve-suspended list.
SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS Acquired C
Nick Easton from Baltimore for an undisclosed draft pick. Released WR DiAndre
Campbell, CB Marcus Cromartie, G-C Dillon Farrell, RB Kendall Gaskins, TE Xavier
Grimble, CB Leon McFadden, LB Nick
Moody, DT Kaleb Ramsey, OL Justin Renfrow, DL Marcus Rush, NT Garrison Smith,
QB Dylan Thompson, G Andrew Tiller and
S Jermaine Whitehead. Placed TE Busta
Anderson and RB Kendall Hunter on injured
reserve. Placed WR Jerome Simpsonhas on
the reserve-suspended List.
SEATTLE SEAHAWKS Terminated the
contracts of CB Will Blackmon and TE Anthony McCoy. Waived LB Tyrell Adams, TE
RaShaun Allen, QB R.J. Archer, DE Obum
Gwacham, S Keenan Lambert, DT T.Y. McGill, CB Douglas McNeil III, S Ronald Martin,
Jr., G KeaVon Milton, S Ryan Murphy, G/C
Will Pericak, LB Eric Pinkins, T Terry Poole,
LB Alex Singleton, WR Kevin Smith, RB Rod
Smith, DE Julius Warmsley and WR Kasen
Williams. Placed CB Mohammed Seisay and
RB Robert Turbin on injured reserve. Placed
DT Jesse Williams on the reserve/non-football illness list.
TENNESSEE TITANS Waived WR Hakeem Nicks, OT Byron Stingily, G Josue
Matias, OT-G Will Poehls, WR Tre McBride,
WR Rico Richardson, RB David Fluellen, QB
Alex Tanney and WR Jacoby Ford. Placed LB
Zaviar Gooden, LB J.R. Tavai and LB Yawin
Smallwood on injured reserve.
WASHINGTON REDSKINS Waived LB
Houston Bates, WR Reggie Bell, RB Mack
Brown, OT Takoby Cofield, DE Corey Crawford, WR-CB Quinton Dunbar, TE JeRon
Hamm, LB Sage Harold, C-G Tyler Larsen,
WR Colin Lockett, LB Terrance Plummer,
C Austin Reiter, DL Travian Robertson,
DL Robert Thomas and RB Trey Williams
Waived-injured FB Jordan Campbell, DB
DaMon Cromartie-Smith, S Akeem Davis,
WR Evan Spencer and TE D.J. Williams. Terminated the contract of NT Jerrell Powe.
Canadian Football League
MONTREAL ALOUETTES Fired offensive coordinator Turk Schonert. Named
Anthony Calvillo and Ryan Dinwiddie cooffensive coordinators.
HOCKEY
National Hockey League
ARIZONA COYOTES Signed G Louis
Domingue to a one-year contract.
American Hockey League
HAMILTON BULLDOGS Released F Jordan Crocker, F Matt McJannet, D Derek Di
Iorio, D Aidan Girduckis and G Cole Ceci.
Agreed to terms with F Joseph Mizzi.
COLLEGE
CLEMSON Announced TE Jay Jay McCullough is on academic suspension.
RUTGERS Dismissed DBs Nadir Barnwell, Dre Boggs, Ruhann Peele and Delon
Stephenson and FB Razohnn Grossfive from
the football team following their arrests on
Sept. 3.
TENNESSEE Suspended assistant head
coach and defensive backs coach Willie
Martinez for one game for impermissible
contact with a recruit.
TEXAS A&M Suspended sophomore
DT Zaycoven Henderson and junior LB A.J.
Hilliard for the first two games of the season for violating athletic department rules.
TEXAS TECH Suspended senior DE Pete
Robertson one game.
NFL
Thursday, Sept. 10
Pittsburgh at New England.......... 8:30 p.m.
Sunday, Sept. 13
Green Bay at Chicago....................... 1 p.m.
Kansas City at Houston..................... 1 p.m.
Seattle at St. Louis............................ 1 p.m.
Cleveland at N.Y. Jets........................ 1 p.m.
Indianapolis at Buffalo...................... 1 p.m.
Miami at Washington....................... 1 p.m.
Carolina at Jacksonville..................... 1 p.m.
New Orleans at Arizona............... 4:05 p.m.
Detroit at San Diego.................... 4:05 p.m.
Cincinnati at Oakland.................. 4:25 p.m.
Baltimore at Denver.................... 4:25 p.m.
Tennessee at Tampa Bay............. 4:25 p.m.
N.Y. Giants at Dallas..................... 8:30 p.m.
Monday, Sept. 14
Philadelphia at Atlanta................ 7:10 p.m.
Minnesota at San Francisco....... 10:20 p.m.
HORSE RACING
PENN NATIONAL RESULTS
1st$29,500,5f
7-Alpha Slew (Garcia L.)........ 9.60,7.00,3.60
6-Red Pond (Rodriguez E.)............ 9.80,4.60
2-Benny Time (Corujo W.).................... 2.60
Also Ran: Beau Who, George Jet, Vicksburg Bluffs. Late Scratches: Sunday Brunch.
Race Time: :55.89. Exacta (7-6) Paid $22.10;
Superfecta (7-6-2-4) Paid $18.95; Trifecta
(7-6-2) Paid $39.15.
2nd$13,300,6f
2-Street Time (Potts C.)........ 6.40,3.60,3.00
3-Buzzing by Them (Munar L.).... 10.20,7.60
1-Pureappeal (Kaufman C.).................. 5.60
Also Ran: Scully, Big Bad Bubba, Aisle
One, Captain Jeff. Late Scratches: Northern
Merit. Race Time: 1:14.22. Daily Double
(7-2) Paid $58.80; Exacta (2-3) Paid $50.30;
Superfecta (2-3-1-7) Paid $31.48; Trifecta
(2-3-1) Paid $73.45.
3rd$30,400,5f
5-Racy (GB) (Corujo W.)........ 6.20,3.60,3.20
3-Oklahoma Crude (Flores E.)...... 8.20,4.40
6-Majestic Pride (Pedroza B.)............... 3.20
Also Ran: Hymns Sylvia, Smoking for
Free, Merrys Honor, Northern Label. Late
Scratches: Moorestown Jackie. Race Time:
:56.20. Daily Double (2-5) Paid $39.60; Exacta (5-3) Paid $21.70; Superfecta (5-3-6-7)
Paid $51.18; Trifecta (5-3-6) Paid $65.40;
Pic 3 (7-2-5) Paid $40.10.
4th$20,900,1m
8-Spenny B. (Rodriguez E.)... 6.40,3.60,2.80
10-Long Cove (Potts C.)................ 5.80,4.20
7-Echoes of Thunder (Oro E.)............... 3.00
Also Ran: Rubys Love, Nail of Honor, Opportunistically, C Em Smile, Denali Pass, Hay
Seeker, Tahoe Bay. Late Scratches: Finishing a Dream, The High Priest. Race Time:
1:36.65. Daily Double (5-8) Paid $23.00;
Exacta (8-10) Paid $15.90; Superfecta (810-7-2) Paid $32.25; Trifecta (8-10-7) Paid
$23.30; Pic 3 (2-5-8) Paid $47.35; Pic 4 (7-22/5-8/11) Paid $170.80.
5th$12,400,1m
3-Benanti (Gonzalez E.)...... 10.60,4.00,2.20
1-Breaking the City (Wolfsont A.).... 5.20,2.80
2-Emily Grace (Oro E.).......................... 2.80
Also Ran: Built in a Day, Watch Dora,
Fuego Del Sol. Race Time: 1:43.77. Daily
Double (8-3) Paid $45.60; Exacta (3-1) Paid
$18.80; Superfecta (3-1-2-5) Paid $23.15;
Trifecta (3-1-2) Paid $25.40; Pic 3 (5-8-3)
Paid $36.75.
6th$14,800,6f
2-Pat the Pilot (Gonzalez E.).... 21.20,8.00,4.20
8-Mane Meal (Flores E.)............. 10.40,4.60
9-Partners in Gold (Otero W.)............... 3.60
Also Ran: May Day Cash, Antares, Shining
Son, Money Machine, Bayott, Net Profit,
Chicanery. Late Scratches: Justins Tapit.
Race Time: 1:12.56. Daily Double (3-2) Paid
$126.80; Exacta (2-8) Paid $93.70; Superfecta (2-8-9-1) Paid $1,110.49; Trifecta (2-89) Paid $315.00; Pic 3 (8-3-2) Paid $185.70.
7th$10,500,1m
5-My Blake (Rodriguez A.).... 4.00,2.20,2.10
2-Fictionalcharacter (Corujo W.)... 2.40,2.10
6-Hope Francis (Cora D.)....................... 2.20
Also Ran: Slew Strikes Again, Mega
Smoke, Queens Indian. Race Time: 1:44.44.
Daily Double (2-5) Paid $33.60; Exacta (5-2)
Paid $2.80; Superfecta (5-2-6-3) Paid $.99;
Trifecta (5-2-6) Paid $1.85; Pic 3 (3-2-5) Paid
$37.10.
OFF-TRACK WAGERING
MLS
EASTERN CONFERENCE
W L T Pts GF GA
D.C. United...........13 10 5 44 35 34
New York..............12 7 6 42 43 28
Columbus.............11 8 8 41 45 44
New England........11 9 7 40 38 36
Toronto FC............11 10 4 37 44 42
Orlando City...........7 13 8 29 33 50
Montreal.................8 11 4 28 30 34
New York City FC.....7 13 7 28 38 46
Chicago...................7 13 6 27 31 38
Philadelphia............7 14 6 27 33 44
WESTERN CONFERENCE
W L T Pts GF GA
Los Angeles...........13 8 7 46 49 33
Vancouver.............14 10 3 45 38 28
FC Dallas...............12 8 5 41 35 30
Sporting KC...........11 7 7 40 40 35
Portland................11 9 7 40 29 32
Seattle..................12 13 2 38 32 30
San Jose................11 10 5 38 32 29
Houston..................9 10 8 35 35 34
Colorado.................8 9 9 33 25 27
Real Salt Lake..........8 11 8 32 29 40
NOTE: Three points for victory, one point
for tie.
Saturdays Games
New England 3..................... Orlando City 0
Chicago at Montreal............................... (n)
Toronto FC at Seattle.............................. (n)
Philadelphia at San Jose......................... (n)
Sundays Game
FC Dallas at Columbus...................... 7 p.m.
Wednesday, Sept. 9
Colorado at Vancouver................... 10 p.m.
Sporting KC at Portland............. 10:30 p.m.
Friday, Sept. 11
Chicago at New York......................... 7 p.m.
Saturday, Sept. 12
Columbus at Philadelphia................. 7 p.m.
New York City FC at FC Dallas...... 8:30 p.m.
Real Salt Lake at Houston............ 8:30 p.m.
D.C. United at Colorado.................... 9 p.m.
Seattle at San Jose..................... 10:30 p.m.
Montreal at Los Angeles............ 10:30 p.m.
NWSL
W L T Pts GF GA
Seattle..................13 3 4 43 41 21
Chicago...................8 3 8 32 30 21
FC Kansas City.........9 6 5 32 32 20
Washington............8 6 6 30 31 28
Houston..................6 8 5 23 20 25
Portland..................6 9 5 23 27 29
Western NY.............6 9 5 23 24 34
Sky Blue FC.............5 8 7 22 22 28
Boston....................4 13 3 15 22 43
NOTE: Three points for victory, one point
for tie.
Wednesdays Game
FC Kansas City 3..................... Sky Blue FC 2
Fridays Game
Western New York 3................... Portland 2
Saturdays Game
Seattle 2................................ Washington 1
Sundays Game
Houston at Chicago.......................... 5 p.m.
SCOREBOARD
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
COLLEGE
FOOTBALL
SATURDAYS SCORES
EAST
Alderson-Broaddus 22....Central St. (Ohio) 14
Alfred 39..................................... Husson 25
Assumption 41......................... Kutztown 37
Boston College 24........................... Maine 3
Bowie St. 35...........................Merrimack 32
Bryant 27............. American International 3
Bucknell 17..................................... Marist 0
Buffalo 51.............................Albany (NY) 14
Castleton 21.......................Plymouth St. 10
Cortland St. 26.......................Heidelberg 24
Dayton 27.........................Robert Morris 24
Delaware Valley 27.............Montclair St. 24
Duquesne 47...............Kentucky Christian 7
Framingham St. 42...................... Endicott 6
Gannon 26....................... S. Connecticut 22
Harding 20.......... Oklahoma Baptist 19 (OT)
Hartwick 34.................... W. Connecticut 23
Hobart 29..................................Dickinson 7
Holy Cross 27.................Monmouth (NJ) 19
Ithaca 38................................Union (NY) 23
John Carroll 26......................... St. Vincent 3
Juniata 26...............................Grove City 13
Lincoln (Pa.) 29..........................Cheyney 22
Mercyhurst 35............................ Bentley 20
Moravian 21..........................Kings (Pa.) 17
Muhlenberg 35...............................Wilkes 7
NY Maritime 30.............. Maine Maritime 0
Navy 48....................................... Colgate 10
Pace 36................................... Ave Maria 23
Pittsburgh 45..................Youngstown St. 37
RPI 37..........................................Norwich 0
Rowan 24.................................. Widener 10
Rutgers 63............................. Norfolk St. 13
Sacred Heart 43..................... St. Anselm 19
Salve Regina 41..................Worcester St. 28
Shepherd 43....................... WV Wesleyan 0
Shippensburg 64...................... Seton Hill 14
Slippery Rock 39................... New Haven 13
St. Francis (Pa.) 48.............. Georgetown 20
Stonehill 27.......................... Bloomsburg 10
Susquehanna 28...................... Lycoming 13
Temple 27.................................. Penn St. 10
Thiel 37....................................Allegheny 21
Thomas More 48............... St. John Fisher 0
Utica 42.............................. Misericordia 28
W. New England 34............... Springfield 14
West Liberty 29.........................Concord 28
William & Mary 34.....................Lafayette 7
SOUTH
Appalachian St. 49........................Howard 0
Auburn 31.................................Louisville 24
Birmingham-Southern 29........ LaGrange 28
California (Pa.) 35.................. Virginia St. 16
Chowan 41....................... Fayetteville St. 31
Christopher Newport 31.....College of NJ 21
Clemson 49................................ Wofford 10
Cumberland (Tenn.) 33.....Georgetown (Ky.) 26
East Carolina 28.......................... Towson 20
Elizabeth City St. 71............ Va. Lynchburg 0
Emory & Henry 55.........................Ferrum 7
Georgia 51................. Louisiana-Monroe 14
Hampton 35.........................Kentucky St. 20
Huntingdon 56.............Louisiana College 35
Jacksonville St. 23............... Chattanooga 20
James Madison 56.............. Morehead St. 7
Johns Hopkins 52.........Randolph-Macon 17
Lane 17..........................Concordia (Ala.) 14
Livingstone 49............................ Benedict 6
Maryland 50........................... Richmond 21
Maryville (Tenn.) 43........................Berry 17
Mercer 28...............................Austin Peay 7
Mississippi 76........................... UT Martin 3
NC A&T 61........................................Shaw 7
NC Central 72....................St. Augustines 0
NC State 49...................................... Troy 21
Point (Ga.) 50..................Bluefield South 27
Rhodes 65............................... S. Virginia 10
Sewanee 31................................ Kenyon 21
Shenandoah 51..........................Gallaudet 6
Shorter 38...................... College of Faith 12
Tennessee 59...................Bowling Green 30
The Citadel 69.............................Davidson 0
Tuskegee 26..........................Clark Atlanta 0
Virginia Union 35........................Brevard 21
Wabash 35.................... Hampden-Sydney 3
Warner 42.............................Union (Ky.) 21
West Georgia 44....................... Catawba 13
Wingate 14....................Johnson C. Smith 0
MIDWEST
Adrian 31.................................. Defiance 13
BYU 33..................................... Nebraska 28
Baker 58...........................Culver-Stockton 0
Benedictine (Kan.) 44......................Avila 28
Brockport 44................................. Oberlin 7
Buffalo St. 29.............................Otterbein 0
Carleton 27........................... Macalester 12
Centre 63.....................................Hanover 7
Chicago 31......................... Case Reserve 30
Concordia (Ill.) 51.......................... Beloit 50
Concordia (Moor.) 41............ Jamestown 17
Dakota St. 28................................. Dordt 24
Dakota Wesleyan 23...........Ottawa, Kan. 22
Elmhurst 31....................................Loras 17
Eureka 32........................................ Knox 21
Glenville St. 49.............................. Urbana 0
Grand View 27................ Cent. Methodist 8
Hamline 40.......................... Minn.-Morris 7
Illinois 52...................................... Kent St. 3
Illinois College 53......................... Aurora 20
Illinois Wesleyan 34....................Franklin 24
Incarnate Word 18..... Texas A&M-Kingsville 16
Indiana 48................................. S. Illinois 47
Indiana St. 52................................ Butler 17
Iowa 31.................................... Illinois St. 14
Martin Luther 35.........Maranatha Baptist 0
Miami (Ohio) 26................... Presbyterian 7
Missouri 34.............................SE Missouri 3
Missouri Valley 35......... Graceland (Iowa) 0
Monmouth (Ill.) 31.........................Hope 19
Morningside 77.......................... Sterling 17
Mount Union 47................. Bethany (WV) 0
North Park 23...............Concordia (Wis.) 16
Northwestern 16.........................Stanford 6
Northwood (Mich.) 20........... N. Michigan 7
Old Dominion 38..................E. Michigan 34
Olivet 74.................................... Earlham 13
Ripon 17...........................St. Scholastica 16
Rockford 52............................. Lawrence 17
S. Dakota St. 41............................ Kansas 38
Siena Heights 45.......... Lindenwood (Ill.) 20
Simpson (Iowa) 28.......... Wis.-River Falls 21
Sioux Falls 55....................................Mary 7
St. Ambrose 25...........Concordia (Mich.) 21
St. Johns (Minn.) 45.................. Dubuque 9
St. Norbert 35.............................Carthage 6
St. Olaf 16............ Northwestern (Minn.) 13
St. Xavier 34..................... St. Francis (Ill.) 28
Upper Iowa 17...............Northern St. (SD) 6
Valley City St. 55.....................Mayville St. 6
Washington & Jefferson 56........Wooster 10
Washington (Mo.) 45....Carnegie-Mellon 24
Wayne (Neb.) 58...........Minn.-Crookston 16
Waynesburg 35.................... Muskingum 10
Wheaton (Ill.) 52............................... Coe 14
Wilmington (Ohio) 14................ Bluffton 10
Wis. Lutheran 38........ Lake Forest 37 (2OT)
Wis.-Platteville 49................ Buena Vista 13
Wittenberg 38............................. Capital 27
SOUTHWEST
Arkansas 48....................................UTEP 13
Austin 55....................................Hendrix 41
Hardin-Simmons 77....Southwestern (Texas) 6
Lincoln (Mo.) 35.......................Langston 32
Rice 56........................................Wagner 16
SW Assemblies of God 30......Westminster (Mo.) 17
Texas Tech 59................Sam Houston St. 45
Tulsa 47.................................... FAU 44 (OT)
FAR WEST
Air Force 63.............................Morgan St. 7
California 73......................Grambling St. 14
Carroll (Mont.) 26....................S. Oregon 20
Colorado Mines 63.......... S. Dakota Tech 28
Colorado St. 65...................Savannah St. 13
Idaho St. 55......................... Black Hills St. 0
La Verne 27........................... George Fox 23
Montana Tech 58....Montana St.-Northern 14
N. Colorado 42............ Western St. (Col.) 34
North Dakota 24...................... Wyoming 13
Pacific (Ore.) 32................. Coll. of Idaho 31
Portland St. 24................ Washington St. 17
Puget Sound 22..... Claremont-Mudd 19 (OT)
UCLA 34...................................... Virginia 16
W. Montana 49............... Rocky Mountain 6
W. New Mexico 70....... Arizona Christian 14
Louisville........................ 0 0 10 1424
Auburn........................... 7 10 7 731
First Quarter
AubJe.Johnson 1 run (Carlson kick),
12:49.
Second Quarter
AubGarrett 82 fumble return (Carlson
kick), 6:54.
AubFG Carlson 56, :34.
Third Quarter
AubLouis 33 pass from Je.Johnson
(Carlson kick), 11:21.
LouFG Wallace 43, 7:07.
LouJackson 10 run (Wallace kick), 1:21.
Fourth Quarter
AubLouis 8 run (Carlson kick), 10:04.
LouRadcliff 2 run (Wallace kick), 6:21.
LouRadcliff 2 run (Wallace kick), 2:59.
A73,927.
Lou
Aub
First downs................................ 27
21
Rushes-yards......................48-238
41-190
Passing..................................... 167
137
Comp-Att-Int......................17-33-1
11-21-3
Return Yards.............................. 20
33
Punts-Avg............................3-39.3
2-47.0
Fumbles-Lost............................3-1
0-0
Penalties-Yards.......................5-35
8-80
Time of Possession............... 30:50
29:10
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
RUSHINGLouisville, Jackson 16-106,
Radcliff 17-76, Samuel 1-21, Je.Smith 5-20,
Bonnafon 8-14, Scott 1-1. Auburn, Barber
24-115, R.Thomas 6-27, Louis 4-21, Robinson 2-16, Je.Johnson 5-11.
PASSINGLouisville, Jackson 9-20-1-100,
Bonnafon 8-13-0-67. Auburn, Je.Johnson
11-21-3-137.
RECEIVINGLouisville, Quick 4-28, Peete
3-60, Ja.Smith 3-34, Samuel 2-22, Crum
2-19, Standberry 1-6, Savage 1-2, Radcliff
1-(minus 4). Auburn, Louis 3-54, D.Williams
3-40, Ray 2-19, Barber 1-15, J.Smith 1-7,
M.Davis 1-2.
Stanford......................... 3 0 0 36
Northwestern................. 3 7 0 616
First Quarter
StanFG Ukropina 29, 8:33.
NUFG Mitchell 31, :52.
Second Quarter
NUThorson 42 run (Mitchell kick), 6:18.
Fourth Quarter
NUFG Mitchell 19, 12:21.
StanFG Ukropina 37, 7:26.
NUFG Mitchell 49, 3:38.
A36,024.
Stan
NU
First downs................................ 17
17
Rushes-yards........................27-85
54-225
Passing..................................... 155
105
Comp-Att-Int......................20-35-1
12-25-0
Return Yards............................ (-8)
24
Punts-Avg............................7-46.0
5-38.8
Fumbles-Lost............................2-1
2-0
Penalties-Yards.......................5-25
5-57
Time of Possession............... 28:08
31:52
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
RUSHINGStanford, McCaffrey 12-66,
Wright 5-20, Sanders 2-9, Owusu 1-1, Love
1-(minus 2), Hogan 6-(minus 9). Northwestern, Jackson 28-134, Thorson 8-68, Vault
6-25, Long 7-21, Je.Roberts 2-(minus 11),
Team 3-(minus 12).
PASSINGStanford, Hogan 20-35-1-155.
Northwestern, Thorson 12-24-0-105, Scanlan 0-1-0-0.
RECEIVINGStanford, Hooper 5-45,
McCaffrey 5-23, Cajuste 4-39, Stallworth
2-17, Rector 1-10, Wright 1-10, Schultz 1-6,
Owusu 1-5. Northwestern, C.Jones 5-52,
Shuler 2-33, Jackson 2-12, G.Dickerson 1-5,
D.Vitale 1-2, McHugh 1-1.
Washington.................... 0 0 10 313
Boise St.......................... 6 10 0 016
First Quarter
BoiMcNichols 7 run (kick blocked),
3:12.
Second Quarter
BoiMcNichols 1 run (Rausa kick), 10:26.
BoiFG Rausa 24, :02.
Third Quarter
WashFG Van Winkle 40, 3:10.
WashPettis 76 punt return (Van Winkle
kick), 1:37.
Fourth Quarter
WashFG Van Winkle 28, 7:29.
A36,836.
Wash
Boi
First downs................................ 12
21
Rushes-yards........................22-29
53-185
Passing..................................... 150
152
Comp-Att-Int......................20-35-1
17-27-1
Return Yards.............................. 94
9
Punts-Avg............................8-40.6
7-36.3
Fumbles-Lost............................1-0
2-1
Penalties-Yards.......................5-32
7-71
Time of Possession............... 25:38
34:22
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
RUSHINGWashington,
Washington
8-14, McClatcher 2-6, Mickens 1-5, Gaskin 5-5, Browning 4-3, Coleman 1-(minus
2), Team 1-(minus 2). Boise St., McNichols
24-89, K.Young 13-48, Finley 11-30, Demas
4-20, Team 1-(minus 2).
PASSINGWashington, Browning 20-351-150. Boise St., Finley 16-26-1-129, Sperbeck 1-1-0-23.
RECEIVINGWashington, Washington
7-53, Lenius 3-37, McClatcher 3-3, Pettis 2-24, Perkins 2-18, Mickens 2-16, Gaskin 1-(minus 1). Boise St., Sperbeck 3-28,
K.Young 3-26, McNichols 3-24, Roh 3-23,
Huff 2-28, Williams-Rhodes 2-16, Anderson
1-7.
ATLANTIC
LEAGUE
Freedom Division
W L Pct. GB
Lancaster........................35 20 .636
York.................................30 24 .556 41-w
Sugar Land......................23 32 .418 12
x-South. Maryland..........21 33 .389 131-w
Liberty Division
W L Pct. GB
x-Somerset......................31 24 .564
Long Island.....................29 26 .527 2
Bridgeport......................27 28 .491 4
Camden..........................23 32 .418 8
x-clinched first half
Saturdays Games
York 2...................................... Bridgeport 1
Long Island 4................. South. Maryland 2
Lancaster 5................................. Camden 4
Somerset 4............................. Sugar Land 1
Sundays Games
Camden at Lancaster........................ 1 p.m.
South. Maryland at Long Island... 1:35 p.m.
Bridgeport at York............................ 5 p.m.
Somerset at Sugar Land............... 6:05 p.m.
Mondays Games
South. Maryland at Long Island... 1:35 p.m.
Bridgeport at York............................ 5 p.m.
Camden at Lancaster........................ 7 p.m.
Somerset at Sugar Land............... 8:05 p.m.
CAMDEN
LANCASTER
ab r h bi
ab r h bi
Chaves, ss
3 0 1 1 Kajimoto, 2b 4 1 3 0
M.Rockett,3b 4 0 1 0 Collier,cf
4 1 2 2
C.Guzman,rf 3 0 0 0 Matthes, lf 3 0 2 1
J.Guzman,1b 4 1 1 0 Cvzs-Glvs, rf 4 0 0 0
Gamel, dh 4 1 1 2 Zawadzki,ss 4 1 1 1
Matera, 2b 4 0 0 0 Hughes,1b 4 1 1 1
D. Rockett, cf 3 1 0 0 Pyles,dh
4 0 0 0
Kerns,c
3 0 1 1 Apodaca,c 3 0 1 0
Frain, ph
1 0 0 0 Feliz,3b
3 1 1 0
MacPhee,lf 1 1 0 0
Totals
30 4 5 4 Totals
33 5 11 0
Camden............021 100 000 4 5 0
Lancaster..........210 000 020 5 11 1
2BChaves, J. Guzman, Kerns; Collier.
HRGamel, Zawadzki, Hughes. LOBCamden 4; Lancaster 5.
IP H R ER BB SO
Camden
Herrera.......................... 6.0 8 3 3 1 6
Blewett.......................... 1.0 0 0 0 0 1
Bryson (L,1-1)................ 1.0 3 2 2 0 1
Lancaster
Beck............................... 5.0 4 4 3 2 6
Andrelczyk..................... 2.0 0 0 0 2 2
Yevoli (W, 1-0)................ 1.0 1 0 0 1 1
Patterson (S, 5).............. 1.0 0 0 0 0 1
SOChaves, M. Rockett 2, J. Guzman,
Gamel 2, D. Rockett 2, Kerns; Collier 2,
Cavazos-Galvez, Zawadzki, Hughes 2, Pyles,
Feliz. BBChavez, C. Guzman, D. Rockett,
McPhee; Matthes.
T2:29. A5,101.
TENNIS
U.S. OPEN
Saturday
At The USTA Billie Jean King National
Tennis Center
New York
Purse: $42.3 million
Surface: Hard-Outdoor
Singles
Men
Third Round
Richard Gasquet (12), France, def. Bernard Tomic (24), Australia, 6-4, 6-3, 6-1; Tomas Berdych (6), Czech Republic, def. Guillermo Garcia-Lopez (31), Spain, 6-7 (2), 7-6
(7), 6-3, 6-3; Roger Federer (2), Switzerland,
def. Philipp Kohlschreiber (29), Germany,
6-3, 6-4, 6-4; John Isner (13), United States,
def. Jiri Vesely, Czech Republic, 6-3, 6-4,
retired; Donald Young, United States, def.
Viktor Troicki (22), Serbia, 4-6, 0-6, 7-6 (3),
6-2, 6-4; Stan Wawrinka (5), Switzerland,
def. Ruben Bemelmans, Belgium, 6-3, 7-6
(5), 6-4; Kevin Anderson (15), South Africa,
def. Dominic Thiem (20), Austria, 6-3, 7-6
(3), 7-6 (3).
Women
Third Round
Petra Kvitova (5), Czech Republic, def.
Anna Karolina Schmiedlova (32), Slovakia, 6-2, 6-1; Johanna Konta, Britain, def.
Andrea Petkovic (18), Germany, 7-6 (2),
6-3; Sam Stosur (22), Australia, def. Sara
Errani (16), Italy, 7-5, 2-6, 6-1; Flavia Pennetta (26), Italy, def. Petra Cetkovska, Czech
Republic, 1-6, 6-1, 6-4; Varvara Lepchenko,
United States, def. Mona Barthel, Germany,
1-6, 6-3, 6-4; Victoria Azarenka (20), Belarus, def. Angelique Kerber (11), Germany,
7-5, 2-6, 6-4; Simona Halep (2), Romania,
def. Shelby Rogers, United States, 6-2, 6-3.
Doubles
Men
Second Round
Eric Butorac and Scott Lipsky, United
States, def. Gilles Muller, Luxembourg,
and Aisam-ul-Haq Qureshi, Pakistan, 6-4,
6-4; Marcel Granollers and Marc Lopez (7),
Spain, def. Lucas Pouille, France, and Sergiy
Stakhovsky, Ukraine, 6-4, 4-6, 6-2; Marcin
Matkowski, Poland, and Nenad Zimonjic
(4), Serbia, def. Marco Cecchinato and Andreas Seppi, Italy, 7-6 (5), 7-5; Colin Fleming, Britain, and Treat Huey, Philippines,
def. Sam Groth and Lleyton Hewitt, Australia, 6-3, 6-4; Dominic Inglot, Britain, and
Robert Lindstedt, Sweden, def. Aliaksandr
Bury, Belarus, and Denis Istomin, Uzbekistan, 7-6 (5), 7-6 (3).
Rohan Bopanna, India, and Florin Mergea (6), Romania, def. Mariusz Fyrstenberg,
Poland, and Santiago Gonzalez, Mexico,
6-3, 7-6 (4); Daniel Nestor, Canada, and
Edouard Roger-Vasselin (9), France, def.
Jeremy Chardy, France, and Lukasz Kubot,
Poland, 6-2, 7-5; Raven Klaasen, South Africa, and Rajeev Ram (15), United States,
def. Adrian Mannarino and Fabrice Martin,
France, 4-6, 7-6 (4), 6-1; Leonardo Mayer,
Argentina, and Joao Sousa, Portugal, def.
Federico Delbonis and Diego Schwartzman,
Argentina, 6-4, 6-4; Jean-Julien Rojer, Netherlands, and Horia Tecau (3), Romania, def.
Frantisek Cermak and Jiri Vesely, Czech Republic, walkover.
Women
Second Round
Martina Hingis, Switzerland, and Sania
Mirza (1), India, def. Timea Bacsinszky,
Switzerland, and Chuang Chia-jung, Taiwan, 6-1, 6-1; Raquel Kops-Jones and Abigail Spears (6), United States, def. Eugenie
Bouchard, Canada, and Elena Vesnina, Russia, walkover; Karin Knapp and Roberta
Vinci (17), Italy, def. Margarita Gasparyan
and Alexandra Panova, Russia, 7-5, 5-7, 6-3;
Timea Babos, Hungary, and Kristina Mladenovic (3), France, def. Dominika Cibulkova
and Magdalena Rybarikova, Slovakia, 6-4,
6-4; Sara Errani and Flavia Pennetta (11),
Italy, def. Asia Muhammad and Maria Sanchez, United States, 7-6 (5), 6-1.
EASTERN
LEAGUE
Eastern Division
W L Pct. GB
z-Reading (Phillies).........80 59 .576
z-Binghamton (Mets)......76 63 .547 4
Trenton (Yankees)...........71 69 .507 91-w
New Britain (Rockies).....69 69 .500 101-w
New Hampshire (Jays)....67 71 .486 121-w
Portland (Red Sox)..........51 89 .364 291-w
Western Division
W L Pct. GB
z-Bowie (Orioles)............78 62 .557
Altoona (Pirates).............73 67 .521 5
Akron (Indians)...............71 69 .507 7
Richmond (Giants)..........70 68 .507 7
Harrisburg (Nationals)....67 73 .479 11
Erie (Tigers).....................63 77 .450 15
z-clinched playoff spot
Saturdays Games
Erie 3..................................... Bowie 2 (1st)
Trenton 2................ New Hampshire 1 (1st)
Akron 3................................... Harrisburg 1
New Britain 11............................ Portland 9
Reading 2................................. Richmond 0
Binghamton 3.............................. Altoona 2
Erie 4.................................... Bowie 1 (2nd)
New Hampshire 1.............. Trenton 0 (2nd)
Sundays Games
New Britain at Portland.................... 1 p.m.
Akron at Harrisburg..................... 1:30 p.m.
Bowie at Erie............................... 1:35 p.m.
Reading at Richmond.................. 1:35 p.m.
Altoona at Binghamton............... 6:35 p.m.
New Hampshire at Trenton.............. 7 p.m.
Mondays Games
Reading at Richmond................ 12:05 p.m.
New Britain at Portland.................... 1 p.m.
New Hampshire at Trenton.............. 1 p.m.
Altoona at Binghamton............... 1:05 p.m.
Akron at Harrisburg..................... 1:30 p.m.
Bowie at Erie............................... 1:35 p.m.
SOCCER
COLLEGIATE MEN
Dickinson............................0 1 1
Elizabethtown.....................1 1 2
Dickinson Scoring: TEAM (61:05).
Elizabethtown Scoring: G. Waso (9:24), C.
Graziano (73:58).
Elizabethtown Assists: C. Graziano, S.
Votto.
Corners-Shots: D 1-4; E 2-13.
Saves: DJ. Palcan 4; EB. Rodrigo 0.
Alvernia................................. 0 0 0 0
Franklin & Marshall............... 0 0 1 1
Home Scoring: D. Malitano (92:18).
Corners-Shots: A 0-2; F&M 4-16.
Saves: AZ. Rider 3; F&MT. Britton 2.
COLLEGIATE WOMEN
Franklin & Marshall.............0 0 0
Lebanon Valley....................0 2 2
Lebanon Valley Scoring: S. Bost (49:01), J.
Garbrick (68:11).
Corners-Shots: F&M 3-3; LV 5-11.
Saves: F&MC. Letner 1; LVE. Angelini
1.
Bloomsburg..................... 1 1 0 1 3
MIllersville...................... 0 2 0 0 2
Bloomsburg Scoring: A. Sanchez 2 (18:20,
89:26), J. Fisher (107:59).
Millersville Scoring: H. Parker (68:18), V.
Kramer (73:13).
Bloomsburg Assists: J. Fisher.
Millersville Assists: M. Newmister, K. Lepley.
Corners-Shots: B 10-22; M 3-17.
Saves: BD. Haviland 7; MS. Wolfe 10.
Houghton............................0 2 2
Lancaster Bible....................0 0 0
Houghton Scoring: S. Gabriele (59:38), D.
Eckhardt (84:34).
Houghton Assists: J. Zacchigna.
Corners-Shots: H 6-27; LB 1-4.
Saves: HS. Sprout 4; LBK. Scheuing 9.
Elizabethtown.....................0 0 0
Lynchburg............................1 0 1
Lynchburg Scoring: M. Clark (22:30).
Corners-Shots: E 0-2; L 5-10.
Saves: ED. Robidoux 3; LT. Frelick 1.
SCHOLASTIC BOYS
NONLEAGUE
Ephrata...............................2 2 4
Cedar Crest..........................2 0 2
Ephrata Scoring: A. Cummings 2 (50:00,
69:00), A. Patrushev (19:00), A. Morales
(27:00).
Ephrata Assists: C. Hershberger, N. Patrushev.
CC Scoring: M. Wolf (18:00), C. Wenzler
(14:00).
CC Assists: M. Wolf.
Corners-Shots: E 5-26; CC 3-16.
Saves: EJ. Hickey 11; CCJ. Wildonger
10.
JV Score: Ephrata 2, CC 1
HERSHEY TOURNAMENT
Lewisburg............................1 4 5
Manheim Township.............0 1 1
Lewisburg Scoring: Information not provided.
MT Scoring: R. Mugisha (n/a).
Corners-Shots: L 1-8; MT 0-2.
Saves: Ln/a; MTC. Beatty 3.
Manheim Township.............0 1 1
St. Augustine Prep...............0 0 0
MT Scoring: R. Fladeland (n/a).
Corners-Shots: MT 0-3; SA 4-4.
Saves: MTC. Beatty 4; SAn/a.
YORK SUBURBAN TOURNAMENT
First Round
Lancaster Catholic...............1 1 2
York Suburban.....................1 1 2
Lancaster Catholic won on penalty kicks,
4-3
LC Scoring: C. Engle (22:05), P. Campagna
(7:01).
YS Scoring: C. Kowalewski (8:37), M.
Lehman (5:18).
YS Assists: C. Kowalewski, M. Lehman.
Spring Grove 1......................York Catholic 0
Consolation
York Suburban 2...................York Catholic 0
Championship
Lancaster Catholic...............0 0 0
Spring Grove........................0 1 1
Spring Grove Scoring: J. Morton (n/a).
Spring Grove Assists: D. Gordon.
SCHOLASTIC GIRLS
NONLEAGUE
Manheim Central.................0 0 0
Cedar Crest..........................0 0 0
Corners-Shots: MC 8-5; CC 6-11.
Saves: MCK. Kreider 11; CCE. Peeler
5.
JV Score: CC 2, MC 1
Conrad Weiser.....................0 0 0
Elco.....................................0 2 2
Elco Scoring: R. Shuey (45:00), T. Bossert
(67:00).
Elco Assists: E. Peiffer.
Corners-Shots: CW 9-10; E 2-15.
Saves: CWC. Evans 13; EE. Strickler
10.
JV Score: Elco 4, CW 0
Exeter..................................0 0 0
Ephrata...............................3 0 3
Ephrata Scoring: T. Moore (4:00), K. Umana (14:00), K. Liebl (31:00).
Ephrata Assists: K. Liebl 2.
Corners-Shots: E 2-4; E 5-13.
Saves: EA. Mengel 10; EB. Gehman 4.
JV Score: Ephrata 2, Exeter 0
Lebanon Catholic.................1 3 4
Lanc. Country Day...............0 1 1
LC Scoring: N. Pierre 2 (42:00, 45:00), K.
Murray (32:00), J. Clarke (53:00).
LC Assists: N. Pierre, A. Zeisloft, J. Meck.
LCD Scoring: M. Prouix (67:00).
Corners-Shots: LC 4-10; LCD 4-3.
Saves: LCA. Kline 1, A. Warner 1; LCD
J. Alexandra 6.
INTERNATIONAL
LEAGUE
North Division
W L Pct. GB
z-Scran./W-B (Yanks)......80 62 .563
Rochester (Twins)...........75 67 .528 5
Buffalo (Blue Jays)..........67 75 .472 13
Syracuse (Nationals).......65 77 .458 15
Lehigh Valley (Phillies)....63 79 .444 17
Pawtucket (Red Sox).......58 84 .408 22
South Division
W L Pct. GB
Norfolk (Orioles).............77 65 .542
Gwinnett (Braves)...........75 67 .528 2
Charlotte (White Sox).....74 68 .521 3
Durham (Rays)................73 69 .514 4
West Division
W L Pct. GB
z-Columbus (Indians)......82 60 .577
z-Indianapolis (Pirates)...82 60 .577
Louisville (Reds)..............63 79 .444 19
Toledo (Tigers)................60 82 .423 22
z-clinched playoff spot
Saturdays Games
Indianapolis 9................................ Toledo 2
Columbus 7................................ Louisville 4
Pawtucket 6.................................. Buffalo 2
Durham 2..................................... Norfolk 0
Rochester 13....................... Lehigh Valley 1
Charlotte 4................................. Gwinnett 2
Syracuse 6................... Scranton/W-B 5 (10)
Sundays Games
Rochester at Lehigh Valley........... 1:35 p.m.
Charlotte at Gwinnett.................. 2:05 p.m.
Norfolk at Durham....................... 5:05 p.m.
Toledo at Columbus..................... 6:05 p.m.
Indianapolis at Louisville............. 6:05 p.m.
Buffalo at Pawtucket................... 6:05 p.m.
Scranton/W-B at Syracuse........... 7:05 p.m.
Mondays Games
Charlotte at Gwinnett................ 12:05 p.m.
Scranton/W-B at Syracuse........... 1:05 p.m.
Norfolk at Durham....................... 1:05 p.m.
Indianapolis at Louisville............. 1:05 p.m.
Buffalo at Pawtucket................... 1:05 p.m.
Rochester at Lehigh Valley........... 1:35 p.m.
Toledo at Columbus..................... 3:05 p.m.
C13
FIELD HOCKEY
COLLEGIATE
Pace..........................................1 1 2
Millersville................................3 0 3
Pace Scoring: S. Gray (17:25), Halley Rose
(50:28).
Millersville Scoring: K. Bishop (15:04,
32:23), M. Donlan (29:28).
Pace Assists: Q. Meijs, J. Sanossian.
Millersville Assists: C. Weaver, K. DeLuca,
A. Mizak.
Corners-Shots: P 1-1; M 22-13.
Saves: PC. Nocera 10; MK. Bair 0.
Muhlenberg..............................2 2 4
Elizabethtown...........................2 1 3
Muhlenberg Scoring: A. DeAngelo (5:09),
T. Smith (15:04), R. Strow (51:48), L. Holdman (62:11).
Elizabethtown Scoring: A. Aichele (9:08),
E. Christman (15:18), J. Hikes (42:02).
Muhlenberg Assists: T. Smith, A. DeAngelo.
Elizabethtown Assists: J. Hikes, A. Aichele.
Corners-Shots: M 11-9; E 5-7.
Saves: MC. Notarianni 3; EH. Mack 3.
Franklin & Marshall...................2 3 5
Rowan.......................................2 2 4
F&M Scoring: M. Guarisco 2 (31:13,
33:03), C. Wirth 2 (48:19, 68:41), A. Buckman (60:34).
Rowan Scoring: S. Browne (15:42), J. Rosati (25:57), C. Aquino (50:22), E. Faraone
(63:38).
F&M Assists: A. Horsley.
Rowan Assists: J. James 2, J. Rosati, M.
Marini.
Corners-Shots: F&M 13-19; R 11-7.
Saves: F&MA. Gubernick 1; RC. Demarco 10.
SCHOLASTIC
NONLEAGUE
Donegal.....................................6 4 10
Mifflinburg................................0 0 0
Donegal Scoring: K. Walker 3 (10:48,
1st; 13:25, 1st; 23:10, 2nd), L. Saunders
2 (22:46, 1st; 20:33, 2nd), R. Robinson 2
(25:40, 1st; 13:28, 2nd), M. Allessie (0:18,
1st), C. Homsher (6:45, 2nd), G. Miller
(23:28, 2nd).
Donegal Assists: M. Allessie 3, G. Hess, R.
Hartley, A. Bohan.
Corners-Shots: D 14-13; MA 2-4.
Saves: DK. Jean 4; MAK. Delp 3.
JV Score: Donegal 5, M 0
Cocalico.................................... 2 0 1 3
Ephrata.................................... 1 1 0 2
Cocalico Scoring: B. Keeney 2 (19:17, 1st;
5:20 OT), H. Palm (26:49, 1st).
Cocalico Assists: C. Wickenheiser, T. Keeney.
Ephrata Scoring: M. Zimmerman (15:54,
1st), J. Tresky (21:02, 2nd).
Ephrata Assists: G. Sensenig.
Corners-Shots: C 6-9; E 16-18.
Saves: CE. Stauffer 16; En/a 4.
JV Score: Cocalico 0, Ephrata 0
Elizabethtown...........................0 0 0
Manheim Township...................1 2 3
MT Scoring: E. Kurtz (7:53, 1st), M. Holliday (5:59, 2nd), M. Fuhrman (9:35, 2nd).
MT Assists: M. Fuhrman, C. Maillie.
Corners-Shots: E 3-5; MT 13-11.
Saves: ER. Sweger 8; MTJ. Crispeno
5.
JV Score: MT 1, E-town 0
Governor Mifflin........................0 0 0
Manheim Central.......................5 5 10
MC Scoring: B. Brubaker 3 (13:30, 1st;
23:13, 1st; 10:00, 2nd), T. Wiederrecht 2
(24:32, 2nd; 28:20, 2nd), J. Wolgemuth
(17:50, 1st), K. Myer (19:13, 1st), M. Hosler
(24:40, 1st), H. Barbush (1:48, 2nd), C. Bollinger (4:00, 2nd).
MC Assists: J. Wolgemuth 3, L. Hoffman.
Corners-Shots: GM 1-1; MC 15-25.
Saves: GMn/a 14, L. Diggan 1; MCE.
Beamesderfer 1.
FRIDAYS BOXES
Reading.................................... 0 0 0 0
Lebanon................................... 0 0 1 1
Lebanon Scoring: J. Reeves (11:23, OT).
Lebanon Assists: A. Kropf.
Corners-Shots: R 4-2; L 16-14.
Saves: RS. Randall 13; LE. Fake 2.
Oley Valley................................3 1 4
Warwick....................................1 0 1
OV Scoring: S. Lackey (19:44, 1st), H.
Beers (25:05, 1st), A. Hinkle (24:58, 1st), B.
Heffner (17:33, 2nd).
OV Assists: S. Lackey, H. Beers, B. Heffner.
Warwick Scoring: L. Reed (12:35, 1st).
Warwick Assists: L. Sammet.
Corners-Shots: OV 9-8; W 9-7.
Saves: OVC. Drobek 6; WM. Bomba
4.
VOLLEYBALL
COLLEGIATE WOMEN
Millersville 3, USciences 0
WNBA
EASTERN CONFERENCE
W L Pct GB
x-New York...................21 9 .700
C14
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Lancaster Weather
TODAY
MONDAY
84
58
TUESDAY
87
62
91
67
POP: 10%
POP: 0%
REGION
LANCASTER
Fog in the morning; otherwise,
mostly sunny today. High 82 to
86. Winds south 3-6 mph. Clear
to partly cloudy tonight. Low 56
to 60.
80
60
12 AM 3
9 NOON 3
9 12 AM
TEMPERATURE
Lancaster
83/67
Ephrata
87/66
New Holland
86/68
Lancaster (last year)
85/67
Normals for the day
80/59
Year to date high
93 on Sept. 3
Year to date low
-2 on Feb. 20
PRECIPITATION
24 hours ending 7 p.m.
0.00
Month to date
0.00
Normal month to date
0.65
Month to date departure
-0.65
Year to date
25.76
Normal year to date
28.96
Year to date departure
-3.20
Greatest Sep. total 11.51 (1975)
Least Sep. total
0.18 (1943)
Source: www.atmos.millersville.edu/~wic
PRECIPITATION
Brownstown
Columbia
County Park
Ephrata
Flory Mill
Manheim
Mount Joy
Smoketown
Truce
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
RIVER STAGES
Levels as of 7:00 a.m. yesterday
Susquehanna
at Harrisburg
at Marietta
Conestoga
at Lancaster
at Conestoga
Feet
Below
Flood
3.19
33.02
13.81
15.98
2.98
1.22
300
500
Yesterdays readings
Main Pollutant
Particulates
Ozone
Ozone
20
49
NATION
San Francisco
79/57
Detroit
88/70
Chicago
91/72
Denver
85/56
New York
84/68
Kansas City
93/75
Los Angeles
85/64
MON
6:38 a.m.
7:28 p.m.
1:25 a.m.
3:59 p.m.
Last
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.
Montreal
86/70
Toronto
85/69
Minneapolis
85/64
TODAY
Winnipeg
73/51
Billings
70/44
Absent
Absent
High
Moderate
NATION
Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
POLLEN
Grasses
Trees
Weeds
Mold
Scranton
85/61
Seattle
64/54
Washington
86/68
Atlanta
84/70
El Paso
94/71
Houston
92/75
Chihuahua
93/64
T-storms
Rain
-10s
Showers
-0s
0s
Snow
10s
Flurries
20s
Ice
30s
Cold Front
40s
50s
60s
Warm Front
70s
80s
Hi/Lo/W
62/49/r
84/70/t
80/64/s
83/62/s
82/65/s
86/70/s
87/68/s
91/72/pc
84/67/sh
96/80/s
85/56/t
85/60/s
90/77/sh
96/74/s
85/64/s
91/71/t
89/76/t
84/68/s
88/73/t
86/66/s
100/81/t
87/65/s
77/57/s
79/57/s
86/68/pc
62/50/pc
85/70/t
83/70/s
87/65/s
88/70/s
86/71/s
89/69/s
86/70/t
88/68/sh
96/78/pc
85/54/s
88/65/s
88/77/r
98/75/s
86/64/s
90/71/pc
88/75/t
89/72/s
88/73/t
90/70/s
102/81/s
88/67/s
80/56/s
81/58/s
89/71/pc
High:
Low:
Stationary Front
90s
MON
Hi/Lo/W
SATURDAY EXTREMES
Miami
90/76
Monterrey
97/69
Todays forecast
Mostly cloudy
BEACH REPORT
Harrisburg
85/60
AIR QUALITY
POP: 25%
Williamsport
Punxsutawney
86/61
Wilkes-Barre
85/61
86/58
State College
82/58
Butler
86/62
80
58
POP: 60%
Bradford
83/58
Oil City
86/63
POCONOS
Plenty of sun today. High 77 to 81.
Patchy clouds tonight. Low 53 to
57. Sunshine tomorrow.
8.02
POP: 30%
An afternoon
thunderstorm possible
Wind: SSW 6-12 mph
Erie
85/70
82
64
DELAWAREMARYLAND
Partly sunny today. Humid in
central parts; patchy morning fog
in the Maryland panhandle. High
78 to 88.
87
66
POP: 30%
ALMANAC
100
91
68
POP: 10%
WEDNESDAY
100s
104 at Laredo, TX
18 at Boca Reservoir, CA
110s
HONDRUAUTO.COM
arrisburg
MANHEIM
E-TOWN
MSRP .................................$23,855
HONDRU Discount...............-$1,360
Factory Rebate....................-$1,000
Ford Credit Bonus ..................-$500
Competitive Lease Rebate .....-$750
Lease for
$159 MO
YOUR PRICE
STK#IN TRANSIT
Lease for
$159 MO
$20,245
37 ESCAPES
AVAILABLE
MSRP .......................................$25,105
HONDRU DISC ...........................-$1,710
FACTORY REBATE ......................-$1,000
Competitive Lease Conquest ..........-$750
YOUR PRICE
MSRP .......................................$38,365
HONDRU DISC ...........................-$2,370
FACTORY REBATE .........................-$500
FORD CREDIT BONUS ...................-$500
COMPETITIVE LEASE REBATE ......... -$750
XLT 4X4
STK# 16F052
YOUR PRICE
**24 mo
$0 Security Deposit
$3500 due at signing
Stk#15F854
Lease for
2015 FORD
MSRP .......................................$19,090
HONDRU DISC ...........................-$1,195
FACTORY REBATE ......................-$1,000
FORD CREDIT REBATE ..................-$750
Focus Owner Loyalty Retail Direct Offer -$1,500
$109 MO
EDGE
STK#15F760
MSRP ......................................37,155
HONDRU DISC ....................... -$2,660
FACTORY REBATE .................. -$3,000
FORD CREDIT BONUS ............... -$750
COMPETITIVE LEASE CONQUEST ........ -$750
STK#15F876
YOUR PRICE
$14,645
**24 mo
$0 Security Deposit
$2899 due at signing
**24 mo
$0 Security Deposit
$3000 due at signing
$239 MO
STK# 15F896
$27,245
Lease for
72 F-SERIES
AVAILABLE
YOUR PRICE
$29,995
Lease for
**24 mo
$0 Security Deposit
$2899 due at signing
YOUR PRICE
$26,245
YOUR PRICE
27
AVAILABLE
MSRP .......................................$29,615
HONDRU DISC ...........................-$1,620
FACTORY REBATE ......................-$1,000
COMPETITIVE LEASE REBATE .......-$750
$289 MO
717-665-3551
Lease for
**24 mo
$0 Security Deposit
$4500 due at signing
Lancas
$34,245
$21,645
19 FUSIONS
AVAILABLE
**24 mo
$0 Security Deposit
$3500 due at signing
Mt. Jo
Lease for
**24 mo
$0 Security Deposit
$3000 due at signing
$229 MO
$289 MO
Tax, tags, lic, $134 Doc Fee extra. All lease payments include all red carpet lease rebates. Lease payments also include competitive lease conquest rebate which is when customers that currently lease a non-ford/lincoln/mercury motor company car, suv or light duty truck will receive conquest cash towards the purchase or lease of an eligible new vehicle. Not all buyers will qualify. Availability includes in stock, transit, and scheduled production units. Available units include in stock, in transit, and balance to schedule units. *0% AVAILABLE IN LEIU OF OTHER REBATES. All prices good until 09/08/2015. (Not responsible for typos)
2015 CHEVY
SONIC
20 SONICS
AVAILABLE
Stk# 15H142
MSRP ...................................$18,885
HONDRU DISC ..........................-$890
GM Consumer Cash .................-$500
GM Bonus Cash ........................-$500
GM Credit Union Member Cash ...-$750 Stk # 15H216
GM SELECT MODEL BONUS CASH -$1,000
2015 CHEVY
CRUZE
2015 CHEVY
MALIBU
YOUR PRICE
$15,245
MSRP................................... $26,170
HONDRU Disc .......................-$1,175
GM Consumer Cash .............-$1,500
GM Competitive Lease Cash -$1,500
GM Select Model Bonus Cash -$1,000
GM Bonus Cash .......................-$500
Stk# 15C297
YOUR PRICE
$20,495
MSRP ....................................$21,485
HONDRU Disc............................-$618
GM Competitive Lease Cash ..-$1,500
GM Consumer Cash ...............-$1,000
GM Bonus Cash......................-$1,000
GM Overage Cash .....................-$500
Lease for
$169 MO
12 CRUZES
AVAILABL
24 mo
$0 security deposit
$650 due at signing
Tax, Tags, License, & $134 doc fee extra.
Includes Competitive Lease Cash
11 CAMAROS
AVAILABLE
ALL
2015
CAMARO'S
YOUR PRICE
X 72 MO.
$20,995
14 AVAILABLE!!!
YOUR PRICE
$16,867
UP TO
42 MPG
24 mo
$0 security deposit
$300 due at signing
Taax, Tags, License, & $134 doc fee extra.
Includes Competitive Lease Cash
YOUR PRICE
2015
COMMEMORATIVE
CAMARO / COLORADO
IN STOCK!!
2 YR/24,000 MI.
FREE MAINTENANCE
ON 2015 MODELS
MSRP ...................................$21,010
HONDRU Disc ...........................-$415
GM Competitive Lease Cash ..-$1,500
GM Select Model Bonus Cash.-$1,000
GM Bonus Cash ........................-$750
159
MO
2 GREAT
LOCATIONS!
MSRP.................................$26,305
HONDRU Disc..................... -$1,310
GM Consumer Cash.............-$1,500
GM Select Model Bonus Cash -$1,000
GM Bonus Cash..................... -$750
GM Credit Union Member Cash -$750
Stk# 15C261
LEASE FOR
269
MO
$17,345
2015 CHEVY
EQUINOX LT
665-2466 OR 877-597-3551
MANHEIM
RT. 72
STK#15H280
LEASE FOR
36 mo
$0 security deposit
$600 due at signing
Tax, tags, license, & $134 doc fee extra
Includes GM Credit Union Member Cash
189
MO
MSRP ................................$27,180
HONDRU Disc .................... -$1,280
GM Consumer Cash .......... -$1,750
GM Competitive Lease Cash -$1,500
GM Bonus Cash ................. -$1,250
GM Overage Cash ................. -$500
36 mo
$0 security deposit
$1100 due at signing
Tax, Tags, License, &
$134 doc fee extra.
Includes Competitive Lease Cash
YOUR PRICE
367-6644 OR 1-877-924-6644
$27,245
YOUR PRICE
$20,900
8 EQUINOXS
AVAILABLE
All leases are 10000 mi/yr. All Lease payments are plus tax Tax, tags, license & $134 doc fee not included. All leases require first payment at delivery. GM Competitive Lease Cash, must be leasing a 1999 or newer non GM vehicle to qualify. GM Lease Loyalty, must be leasing a 1999 or newer GM vehicle. Must have approved credit through GM Financial to qualify. Prices are subject to change weekly. Trade Assist
must be a 1999 or newer passenger car, truck or suv. Available units includes in stock, in transit and balance to schedule units. Down Payment Assist requires financing through Ally, GM Financial, or WFDS. GM Credit Union Member Cash is for qualifying credit union members. All incentives are good through 9/30/2015
MSRP ................................$42,765
Rebate .............................. -$4,250
Chrysler Capital Bonus ........ -$500
MO Hondru Disc ...................... -$3,381
LEASE FOR
329
CREW CAB
$
EXPRESS STK#15D323 X 36 MO
2015 DODGE
DART SXT Stk#15D198
MSRP........................$21,730
Rebate .......................-$2,500
Hondru Disc ..................-$917
YOUR PRICE
2014 CHRYSLER
300 UPTOWN EDITION
STK # 14D796
MSRP ...........................$38,080
Hondru Discount .........- $8,244
YOUR PRICE
$29,836
$0 Due at Signing
3 CHRYSLER 300'S
AVAILABLE
MSRP........................ $24,735
Rebate ......................- $2,500
Chrysler Capital Bonus -$500
Hondru Disc ..................-$736
YOUR PRICE
LEASE FOR
273
MO
X 36 MO
$20,909
$0 Due at Signing
2015 CHRYSLER
200 LIMITED
MSRP.....................$31,445
Hondru Discount .....-$1,086
LEASE FOR
LEASE FOR
345
MO
X 36 MO
with $0 due
at signing!
367-6644 OR 1-877-924-6644
RT. 230 ELIZABETHTOWN
Open LABOR DAY Monday 9am to 3pm
30 Grand
Caravans, and Town
& Countrys available
10 DARTS
AVAILABLE
12 PATRIOT
LATITUDES
AVAILABLE
$22,915
$18,313
$0 Due at Signing
MSRP.............................. $27,290
Rebate ............................- $2,750
Chrysler Capital Bonus .......-$500
Hondru Disc .....................-$1,125
YOUR PRICE
YOUR PRICE
$34,634
77 RAMS
AVAILABLE
YOUR PRICE
$30,359
30 WRANGLERS
AVAILABLE
$0 Due at Signing
235
MO
X 36 MO
Stk#15D015
9 200's
AVAILABLE
MSRP................................$25,105
HONDRU Rebate ............... -$3,500
Chrysler Cap Bonus ............. -$500
HONDRU Discount ............ -$1,116
YOUR PRICE
$0 Due at Signing
$19,989
*** tax, tags, lic, doc of $134 extra. Available units include in stock and production units. + Ram lease = 36 mo, 10k mi yr. includes lease loyalty/conquest rebate ++ Wrangler lease = 36 mo, 10k mi yr. includes lease loyalty/conquest rebate +++ Chrysler 200 lease = 36 mo, 10k
mi yr. includes lease loyalty/conquest rebate ++++ Patriot lease = 36 mo, 10k mi yr. inc lease loyalty/conquest rebate/lease payments do not include tax, tags, lic, doc fees. Available units include in stock, in transit, and balance to schedule units.*Prices good until 09/30/2015.
Money
n SEND STORY TIPS & INFO TO: TIM MEKEEL, 481-6030, TMEKEEL@LNPNEWS.COM
MARKETING
MICHELLE SINGLETARY
THE COLOR OF MONEY
No place like
home for
young adults
WASHINGTON I
got the reaction I expected from my daughter when I suggested
that for graduate school,
to save money, she live at
home.
She shuddered.
I understand her
reservation. But for her
greater good, my recommendation makes more
financial sense.
My husband and I have
enough saved to pay
for her undergraduate
studies at the University
of Maryland, including
room and board. And
because we saved, we
were OK with her living
on campus even though
we live only about a halfhour away.
Thanks to an academic scholarship she
received, there will be
money left over in her
529 college savings
plan to pay for graduate
school. But we will only
have enough to cover
tuition for an in-state
masters program. Her
career choice requires
further education. She
wants to work with children in some counseling
position. We are encouraging her to finish
her education full-time
while shes unencumbered by other obligations.
With a ban on debt
for her or us she has a
choice. Live at home or
find more scholarship
money. We also dont
want her to become
overburdened by working too many hours
while attending graduate school to just pay for
room and board.
With the high cost
of housing and all the
expenses that go along
with independent living,
we need to rethink the
conventional wisdom
that young adults need
to be shoved out on their
own. The welcome
to the real world rite
of passage for many of
these young folks can be
financially too much, too
soon.
Fewer young adults are
living apart from their
families than before the
Great Recession, according to new data that the
Pew Research Center
mined from the Census
Bureau.
In fact, the nations
18- to 34-year-olds are
less likely to be living
independently of their
families and establishing
their own households
today than they were
in the depths of the
Great Recession, wrote
Richard Fry, a senior
researcher at Pew.
Given the economic
severity of the Great
Recession, one might
expect that millennials
would need to live at
home. In 2007, before
the recession began,
about 42.7 million 18- to
34-year-olds lived independently. Since then,
the number of young
adults has increased by
3 million. Yet in the first
third of 2015, nearly the
same number 42.2
million lived on their
own despite gradually
improving job opportunities and earnings.
In the first third of
SINGLETARY, page D2
Tech exec:
Lancaster
beats Silicon
Valley
Quality of life, and
of tech firms, seen as
spurring growth here
K. SCOTT KREIDER
LNP CORRESPONDENT
Wylei CEO Mike Monteiro at the firms office at Aspire Ventures in downtown Lancaster.
In this age of big data, digital marketers use ever more sophisticated
approaches to reach consumers on a
personal level.
Click ads that know what weve
been searching for follow us around
the Internet. Marketing emails send
us offers tailored to our interests.
Sponsored Facebook posts seem to
know exactly what we like.
Now one local technology company,
Wylei a startup under the umbrella
of Lancaster city-based Aspire Ventures has plans to take personalized digital marketing to a new level.
Its developing a way for advertising videos to automatically change
content, customizing themselves for
individual viewers.
Wylei an acronym for When You
Least Expect It specializes in using machine learning and artificial
intelligence to automatically create
personalized content in marketing
emails, websites and now videos.
Wylei is the first of Aspires companies to secure significant outside investment, with a first round of investment totaling $3.5 million, including
Aspires share.
Predictive video
Imagine a 30-second video spot
for, lets say, a coffee shop, Wylei
CEO Mike Monteiro says.
This hypothetical video, he says,
shows a customers morning trip to
the coffee shop.
Thats sort of a very basic storyline for the ad, but there are lots of
little microelements of that story that
could be tweaked, Monteiro says.
What kind of device is the person
looking at? Is it light outside, or is it
so early that its still dark? Is the protagonist male or female? When they
We
dont see
anyone
else
working
on a video
product
that
assembles
itself in
real-time
with
machine
learning.
Mike Monteiro,
Wylei CEO
TECH, page D2
CHAD UMBLE
WHATS IN STORE
The main bar area at Aroogas Grille House & Sports Bar, which opened last week.
D2
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
million.
Monteiro says a large
chunk of that comes
from outside investors, but he declined to
give a percentage. He
also declined to name
other investors because
terms have not yet been
finalized.
Monteiro
believes
Wyleis predictive video
technology could have
wide appeal, not only
for marketers but for
anyone seeking to better engage viewers.
And although Wylei
is primarily a software
company, it is open to
getting involved with
video production if clients request it, Monteiro says.
According to Grimm,
Aspire has a wealth of
talent at its disposal, including people skilled in
video production.
For now, it is preparing for beta release and
hoping to receive valuable feedback from users.
Thats the thing
about startups: You really cant plan out more
than a few months,
Monteiro says.
I can give you lots of
opinions right now, but
... the most important
thing to do is to get it
out there and see how it
works.
Singletary
Continued from D1
Continued from D1
LancasterOnline
2015
AND THE
WINNER IS...
DID YOUR LANCASTER
FAVORITES MAKE THE CUT?
VISIT US ONLINE TO VIEW
THE COMPLETE 2015 LIST!
LancasterOnline.com/winners
Marc
Alaimo
Jeffrey
Case
Scott
MacNair
Andrea
Glass
Kevin
Martin
Diane
Kauffman
What to expect
Tech
bear, Monteiro says.
Cities are really
expensive, for the
employee and for the
company.
Monteiro says he
sees a trend among
his friends and colleagues: Enabled with
tools like remote collaboration technology, theyre moving out
of big cities to places
like Lancaster for the
attractive cost of living.
But according to Aspire Marketing Director Marcus Grimm, a
lot of Aspires talent is
homegrown.
If you would have
told me 10 years ago
that you could assemble these people who
grew up here, I dont
know if I would have
believed it, Grimm
says.
I maybe personally underestimated
the local talent. Weve
got some very bright
homegrown
talent
here.
Whos News
for college
If you are using
loans to help pay
for room and board,
either as an undergraduate or graduate student, youre
borrowing for rent
and food. In the real
world you would get
criticized for using debt to pay your
rent or purchase
groceries. At least if
youre using loans for
tuition theres a payback. But is it essential to live on campus
or rent an apartment? Commuters
have access to the
same on-campus programs and amenities.
They can interact
with fellow students.
And they probably
get better meals at
home. Will this limit
their college choices?
Perhaps. It will also
teach them to do
what they can afford.
Need to pay
back student loans
Without the expense of independent
living, an indebted
college graduate can
make tremendous
headway in paying
off loans early, saving
interest costs.
Need time to
save
Imagine how many
more young adults
could become homeowners a lot sooner
and with greater
financial stability if
they spend their 20s
or even early 30s
living at home, using
that financial breathing room to save
rather than paying
rent.
If were living well
into our 80s and 90s,
that means millennials have decades of
independent living.
Give them time at
home saving money
or paying off debt or
both, and youll release an adult ready
for her financial
responsibilities.
n michelle.singletary@
washpost.com
Bob
Quick
Rick
Hammer
Doug
Shand
Dr. Adam T.
Griska
n Teraverde Management
n The American
Subcontractors
Association of Central
Pennsylvania has named
Diane Kauffman president
for a two-year term.
Kauffman, of Lititz, is
controller for Durex
Coverings. The Lebanon
Valley College graduate has
been on the ASACP board
since 2013.
n Benchmark
Angela R.
Gehman
n Orthopedic Associates
n Angela R. Gehman
WHO TO EMAIL
Bankruptcies
Here is a list of Lancaster
County bankruptcies
recorded in U.S.
Bankruptcy Court, Eastern
District of Pennsylvania,
Reading, Aug. 25-31.
Nathan James Dippner
Jr., 500 block of Dauphin
Street. Chapter 7.
Chapter 7.
Calendar
Thursday, Sept. 10
n Free informational session on Goldman
Sachs 10,000 Small Businesses program,
at Community First Fund, 30 W. Orange
St., at 4:30 p.m. Subject: Introduction to
the program, which offers small business
loans, training and one-on-one counseling.
Registration and information at www.
commfirstfund.org/goldman-sachs-10000small-businesses/.
Friday, Sept. 18
n Lancaster Chamber business research
Monday, Sept. 21
n Lancaster Chamber executive forum
for aging services providers, at RLPS
Architects, 250 Valleybrook Drive,
11:30 a.m. Speaker: Geoffrey Eddowes
Sr. of Lancaster General Health, on its
relationship with Penn Medicine and
the impact on senior service providers
Tuesday, Sept. 22
n Lancaster Chamber Women in
Wednesday, Sept. 23
n Business Group on Health 16th
Thursday, Sept. 24
n Lancaster County Coalition for Smart
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
D3
Technology
ASHLEY MADISON
KIM KOMANDO
CYBER SPEAK
5 details you
shouldnt give
Facebook
The whole point of
Facebook is to share
your life with other
people. You probably
have more than a few
friends who fall into the
over-sharing category.
Before you snicker, you
may be one too and not
even know it.
Here are five personal
tidbits Facebook asks
you to share that youre
much better off keeping
to yourself.
Your phone
number
Its a really bad idea
to add your home or
cellphone number to
your Facebook page.
Prank callers, stalkers,
scammers and identity
thieves would love to use
this information against
you.
Not only that, but
theres a Facebook trick
that works pretty much
most of the time. Anyone can use your phone
number to search and
find your Facebook page.
One security researcher, Reza Moaiandin,
took it a step further
and found he didnt
even need to know a
specific phone number.
He wrote a program to
generate every possible
number in the U.S., U.K.
and Canada. Then he
submitted the numbers
to Facebook and got
back information from
millions of profiles that
had poor privacy settings. If he had wanted
to, he could have turned
around and sold the
information on the black
market to hackers who
build and sell fullz
or packages of identity
information.
If you do give your
phone number to Facebook, be sure to hide it
in your profile.
Go to Facebook and
click on your name
at the top of the page.
When your profile page
loads, click the Update
Info button in the
lower-right corner of
your cover image. Go to
Your home
address
Post a picture of your
recent vacation or
major new purchase
and this puts you at risk.
Think for a moment of
all the terrible things
that might happen if
some nefarious person
knew your home address. Remove it from
your Facebook profile.
Follow the directions
in the last section to get
into the Contact and
Basic Info section of
your profile information. Look for Neighborhood, and if theres
an address there click
the Edit link next
to it and wipe out the
information. Then click
Save Changes.
One other place you
might not think about
your address being is
under events. If you
create an event, it will
likely have your address
so people know where
to go. If that accidentally gets set to Public,
then anyone can see it.
Either delete the
event right after it happens, or tell people attending to message you
for the address. Be sure
to check back through
your history to get rid of
any old events or posts
that have your address
in them.
Anything
work-related
Try not to leave any
information on your
Facebook that reveals
where you work. If
someone from your
workplace tries to
search for employees on
Facebook, they might
find a post or photo that
they dont like.
Similarly, if a hacker
wanted to figure out
whom to target if they
wanted to break into
your workplaces computers, social media
would be their first stop.
Of course, theyre more
likely to hit LinkedIn
first.
Again, you can use
Facebooks timeline
tools to do a scan of your
past posts. Remove any
information about your
current job, especially
if its of a complaining
nature. If you have posts
about previous jobs, you
might want to remove
those as well. A current
co-worker or supervisor you decide to friend
might see them and it
could color their opinion
of you.
Your relationship
status
Including your
relationship status on
your Facebook page
just invites awkwardness. The number of
likes that you might
Amid judgment, a
chance to learn
There are several steps
to take to minimize fu-
Your payment
information
Facebook is free, but
it still wants your credit
card number. Adding
your financial information lets you buy gift
cards and other products straight through the
website. How convenient!
Of course, one of the
best ways to accidentally get your credit card
charged for something
could be to leave your
Facebook profile open
on your home computer.
A small family member or joking friend
at your home could
use it to spend money
on something straight
HACKING, page D6
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LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Talking Points
JOSHUA LOTT/REUTERS
EKO
to a conventional
DEVICES
stethoscope and allows it
to record, amplify and wirelessly
send audio and sound wave images to an iPhone application. The
start-ups founders say the device
can transmit its heart sounds
and waveforms to the electronic
health records used in hospitals
and clinics. Eko Core, which goes
on sale Wednesday, is priced at
$199; a stethoscope with the same
capabilities will sell for $299.
SPECIAL DELIVERIES Robert Madden and Korrina Ede of OwlCrate started a subscription box for young adult books. Below, a Barkbox with dog treats.
STACY COWLEY
Setting up a delivery
business is cheap, but
sustaining it is difficult.
Need a monthly delivery of
doomsday prepping supplies?
How about treats for your pet
rabbit, or Japanese snacks like
Umashi Oasi Cheetos? Then
you might be a candidate for the
latest consumer craze: the subscription box. Eager shoppers
seeking both the convenience
and surprise that every regular
delivery brings are flocking to the
concept, paving the way for ever-more-eclectic and specialized
offerings. Priced at $10 to $30, the
boxes are stuffed with goodies
built around a theme.
I get close to 100 boxes a
month, and I still get excited when
I see them at the front door, said
Liz Cadman, the founder of My
Subscription Addiction, a website
of reviews.
Investors are betting on subscription box start-ups like Blue
Apron, which mails its subscribers weekly deliveries of recipes
and the ingredients to make
them. The three-year-old company recently raised $135 million in
a deal that values it at $2 billion.
Blue Apron says it is delivering
more than three million meals a
month, three times the number it
shipped nine months ago.
Companies like NatureBox
(snacks), Club W (wine), BarkBox (treats for dogs), Faithbox
(socially responsible goods) and
Birchbox (beauty products) have
taken in money from venture
capitalists.
There are also a growing number of mom-and-pop operators.
Korrina Ede, 26, and Robert
Madden, 32, had long fantasized
about leaving their retail jobs
and starting their own business.
They decided to create OwlCrate,
STRATEGIES
PAUL SULLIVAN
Anthony Hitt, chief executive of
Engel & Vlkers North America, a luxury property company,
spends at least one week each
quarter at his home in Maui, Hawaii. Three years into the top job,
he said he talks to his top lieutenants only 15 minutes a day when
hes there. The rest of the time he
reads, practices yoga, rides his
bicycle to disconnect from the responsibilities of his job.
I try not to think, What about
this or what is the solution to
that? he said.
People in the United States
are taking less time off than at
any point in the last 40 years. Responses to one online questionnaire indicated that most Amer-
Anastasia
Garvey, an
actress and
model, uses
a regimen of
three-minute
cryotherapy
sessions three
times a week to
stay relaxed and
focused.
EMILY ANDREWS FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
D5
PAUL SULLIVAN
Ellen Remmer had wanted to
align her investments with her
values for years. For her, this
meant investing in organizations
that improved the lot of women
and girls or helped the environment.
Her money was held in a trust,
and she said it wasnt easy to
persuade the trusts advisers to
change their investment policies.
They were doing the classic,
We invest for the highest financial return, she said. They
subscribed to what I think of as a
myth, that youre going to have a
lower return if you do impact investing.
Three years ago, she invested a
third of her money as she wanted.
Ms. Remmers experience typifies the struggle of many wealthy
people who want to make impact investments, but fear their
money will not earn as much
as traditional investments. After all, impact investments are
complicated. They fall under the
Partners, with clients Carrie Norton, left, and Betsy McKinney. Ms. FarrarRivas said gender lens investing was the most popular impact strategy.
is accomplishing.
Opponents of impact investing
say these investments require
people to sacrifice returns. That
can be the case.
Proponents say comparable returns to traditional investments
can be achieved, and when they
are and even when theyre
missed there is the added benefit of helping an organization
trying to achieve a goal beyond
maximizing profit. Ms. Farrar-Rivas said she had a client who had
invested nearly $20 million in
impact investments. Some of the
clients investments are expected
to return 6 percent over 7 to 10
years, while others may be closer to 1 or 2 percent and require
much more time to manage.
Ms. Remmer said the third of
her money designated for impact
investments is now with various
wealth managers. And it has had
the comparable market return
she hoped for.
I wanted the investments to
be all market based, she said.
I wanted to convince my family and my husband, too, even
though its my trust.
ANN CARRNS
Q&A
Is it a good time to apply
for a loan?
It depends on your specific
financial situation and your
individual credit score, Mr.
Dornhelm said. If you do intend to apply for credit, check
your score ahead of time.
How can I improve my
credit score?
Good practices to build positive credit include paying
your bills on time, said Barry
Paperno, the author of the
Speaking of Credit blog. Most
people with very high FICO
scores 785 or above have
no late payments at all, he
said. You should aim to keep
your your balance relative to
the amount of credit available
to you below 10 percent.
What if my credit score
has been marred by past
problems?
You may want to apply for
a secured card, which allows you to put up cash and
then draw on it as you would
a credit card. Mr. Dornhelm
said to make sure the card is
reporting results to the major credit bureaus.
KATHRYN REAM COOK AND, BELOW, CRAIG DILGER FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES
HARRIET EDLESON
When Marie Koski of Springfield,
Mass., was in Tuscany, cleaning
pottery and bronze items that
were more than 2,000 years old,
she knew she was on the right
trip for the right price.
Ms. Koski, 61, a retired teacher,
and her husband, John, 62, spent
seven days at what once was an
Etruscan fort, helping an archaeologist excavate the site in the
seaside city of Populonia.
They arranged their trip
through Earthwatch Institute, an
international environmental organization that allows travelers
to assist scientific researchers.
Participants pay to be part of an
expedition, but the contribution is
tax-deductible. They spent $1,600
each, and airfare, and stayed in
a three-bedroom apartment in a
gated community, sharing a bathroom with another couple.
I was never into archaeology
or history, but it just left me with
my breath taken away, she said.
I like getting my hands dirty,
and I dont mind hard work.
Americans 50 and older spend
more than $120 billion a year on
leisure travel, according to an
AARP report. And many are finding creative ways to travel economically. These include home
CARL RICHARDS
The CrossFit Park City gym is
near my office. I used to love going there to get my daily dose of
intensity and to spend time with
other people dedicated to the
same thing. But a few years ago,
instead of staying focused on my
goals, I got a little too focused on
beating other people, and I injured my shoulder.
After a few years of wandering
in the wilderness of unstructured
exercise, I wondered if it was
time to go back to CrossFit. My
shoulder felt fine, and I knew that
if I paid for my exercise, Id most
CARL RICHARDS
D6
BUSINESS
Hacking
Continued from D3
tabase.
That brings us to Step
2 in the plan for better
privacy: When youre
online, act as if everything you do is public.
If youre engaging in
anything that may one
day come back to haunt
you, take precautions:
Create a fake name, fake
email address, perhaps
use a different device,
and try to separate your
underground identity
from your true identity.
This is easier than it
sounds. A person who
goes by the handle
thegrugq, the author
of a blog called Hacker
OPSEC (and whose real
identity is, of course, a
secret), has published
several practical guides
that explain how to protect your information
online.
Still, thegrugq counseled in an email, these
precautions are not
foolproof. Security is
a trade-off against efficiency, and that can be
very painful, thegrugq
said.
But maybe the dangers will prompt us
all to remain vigilant.
True online security
is not just defending
against compromise,
its operating under the
assumption that compromise will happen,
SwiftOnSecurity, a security expert who assumes the online persona of a security-minded
version of the pop star
Taylor Swift as a kind of
Twitter-based performance art, told me in a
private chat. She added:
Your online life will extend across 60+ years.
Imagine the changes.
Imagine the disasters.
Imagine what the world
shouldnt know about
you that someday it
will.
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Whats in Store
Continued from D1
AROOGAS
GRILLE HOUSE &
SPORTS BAR
n Address: 125 S.
Centerville Road.
n Hours: 11 a.m. to 2 a.m.
daily, kitchen open until
midnight.
n Phone: 635-9464.
n Online: aroogas.com,
facebook.com/Aroogas462.
Ephrata
McDonalds
reopens
A McDonalds restaurant in Ephrata, damaged by a fire in June
2014, reopened last
week.
The restaurant in the
Cloister Shopping Center at 140 N. Reading
Road was torn down after the fire and rebuilt.
To keep it on the same
footprint, the new restaurant required a customized building plan
that delayed reopening,
said Kristen Fraser, who
owns the restaurant
with her parents, Bill
and Joanne Brown.
The new building has
a second floor for storage as well as a drivethrough lane opposite
of where it would be at a
typical McDonalds, Fraser said.
The 90-seat restaurant only has one drivethrough lane, but Fraser
said employees will use
hand-held devices to
take orders at customers vehicles during busy
times.
MCDONALDS
n Address: 140 N. Reading
Road, Ephrata.
n Hours: Drive-thru open
24 hours, lobby until
midnight.
n Phone: 733-1660.
n Online: mcdonalds.com.
Extinctions now
Retro Rocks
Extinctions, a gemand-rock store that
opened in Lancaster just
over two years ago, has
added records and vintage items and is now
called Retro Rocks.
The 2,000-square-foot
store, at 1809 Columbia
Ave. in the Wheatland
Shopping Center, still
carries gems, fossils and
minerals but now also
has records, posters,
clothing and memorabilia from the 1960s and
1970s.
The store is owned by
Steve Hess and his wife,
Erin, who worked on
fossil digs in Colorado
RETRO ROCKS
GENEVA BAKERY
CAFE
n Address: 6020 Lemon
Geneva opens in
East Petersburg
Geneva Bakery Cafe,
offering baked goods and
savory treats, has opened
in East Petersburg.
The cafe is part of the
East Petersburg Area
Civic Center, which
will open in the Real
Life Church of God at
the northwest corner
of State and Lemon
streets.
Geneva Bakery Cafe
is owned by Linda Rannels, who has been selling baked goods for more
than 22 years. She was
recently turning out
made-to-order
cakes,
pies, cookies and pastries from a kitchen in
a converted garage on
Geneva Drive in East Petersburg.
Rannels has moved
her baking operation
to the new shop where
there is cafe seating for
nearly 50 customers at
cafe tables and some
soft chairs.
Among the offerings
are frittatas, quiche, oatmeal, brownies, pies and
cheesecake, as well as
coffee and tea.
Rannels said she plans
to add soups and eventually more specialty coffee drinks. She has eight
employees.
Creekside
Deli opens in
Manheim
CREEKSIDE DELI
n Address: 345 S. Main St.,
Manheim.
n Hours: 5 a.m. to 8 p.m.
Monday through Friday, 5
a.m. to 11 p.m. Saturday.
n Phone: 665-4376.
n Online: creeksidedeli.
com.
(LNP Correspondent
Rochelle A. Shenk contributed to this report.)
COUPON REWARDS
September 3 - October 22
In this section:
Fall home design trends & colors
Plants to add color to your fall landscape
Adding a fire pit to your yard
Ways to organize your home
...and much more!
Get To Know Us
Happy Labor Day!
Contact Liz Martin today to
be sure you are fully insured
at a reasonable cost.
Perspective
KATHY CONNORS
SPECIAL TO LNP
Changes downtown
have been for the good
STEPHEN WETTIG
SPECIAL TO LNP
CULBRETH, page E4
CONNORS, page E4
EDITORIAL | The LNP Editorial Board weighs in on page E2; Please also see letters, page E3.
E2
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Opinion
Beverly R. Steinman
Robert M. Krasne
Suzanne Cassidy
Chairman Emeritus
Executive Editor
In our words
Two Lancasters,
and the way ahead
THE ISSUE
Last month, Lancaster Mayor Rick Gray announced that he would
appoint a commission to combat the citys poverty rate, which stands at
about 30 percent (roughly three times that of the county) and at a shocking
40 percent south of King Street. He said hed be appointing poverty
commission members after Labor Day.
As todays Perspective section shows, Lancaster County residents not just those who
dwell within the citys boundaries care deeply about Lancaster city.
And nearly everyone recognizes the citys
economic divide between those who live in
high-priced condos and run thriving downtown businesses, and those who reside in the
citys older, declining neighborhoods such as
Cabbage Hill.
But not everyone agrees on the reasons for
that divide.
A recent report, Lancaster Prospers? issued by the Floyd Institute for Public Policy at
Franklin & Marshall College asserted that
economic development of Lancasters downtown and James Street corridor had widened
the economic chasm.
The researchers said the commercial development strategy of the last decade had contributed to rising inequalities and to the fraying of
the community fabric. They also said city officials had outsourced economic development
to commercial interests.
City resident Kathy Connors takes issue
today with the F&M report for belittling the
improvements wrought in the city in recent
years. She maintains that the citys concentration of the poor is not due to the citys bad
policies, but to the countys grave lack of affordable housing.
Stephen Wettig, who grew up on Cabbage
Hill and whose mother still lives there, says
the blight in that neighborhood is owing
to how the residents, some of whom rent,
treat their properties and the neighborhood.
Lifelong city resident Roger Culbreth
Sr. blames City Hall for its lack of responsiveness to the parts of the city that are
literally falling apart. He writes that it is
galling that city officials want to spend
$5 million to make the city more pedestrian- and bicycle-friendly when his wifes
n Large numbers of
bit.ly/LNP2Lancasters | bit.ly/LancasterProspersReport
Email letters and op-eds to: LancasterLetters@LNPnews.com. Mail:
Letters, c/o LNP, P.O. Box 1328, Lancaster, PA 17608-1328.
n (It) is an agreement
CHARLES KRAUTHAMMER
THE WASHINGTON POST
OP-ED/LETTERS
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
E3
Putting Lancasters
poverty in context
The recently published report
Lancaster prospers? by the Floyd
Institute at Franklin & Marshall
College, in my opinion, is flawed by
the fact that the City of Lancaster
was compared to the county instead of a comparison with other
cities of comparable size and demographics.
Ignored as contributing factors
to the high poverty rate in the city
is the location of the only homeless shelters in the county. There
are six shelters, with Water Street
Rescue Mission being the largest. There are four high rises, with
subsidized rental apartments for
the elderly. In the city there are
565 public housing units, again
with subsidized rent for low-income families or individuals. In
addition, the city has 870 housing
vouchers (Section 8). In the rest of
the county, there are 733 housing
vouchers (Section 8). Into this mix
of providing affordable housing for
the poor, we also have the Housing
Development Corp., Community
Basics and the Spanish American
Civic Association, numerous group
homes and rooming houses.
The city is providing affordable
housing for a large portion of the
poor in Lancaster County and any
comparison of city and county is
completely flawed if these numbers are ignored.
Mayor Rick Gray has been successful in leading the city forward
to the point that we are envied by
other cities in Pennsylvania, but
he has had to do it in high heels and
dancing backward.
Janice C. Stork
Lancaster
The writer served as mayor of Lancaster from 1990-98.
Planned Parenthood
provides vital help
Kudos to Dr. Daniel Wert for his
excellent column (Attack on nonprofit Planned Parenthood is attack
on women, Perspective, Aug. 30),
enlightening the LNP readership
on the mission and focus of Planned
Parenthood.
I have become extremely discouraged by the recent negative press
about this excellent organization,
which makes help available to women, not only here in Lancaster, but
statewide. What a breath of fresh air
to have factual information about
the organization from a physician
and volunteer.
I hope the next 100 years will see
Planned Parenthood continue to uphold solid practices and policies as
well as high standards.
M. Virginia Musser
Lititz
Solutions to poverty
difficult but worthy
English language
a key to prosperity
APRIL KELLY-WOESSNER
ELIZABETHTOWN COLLEGE
E4
PERSPECTIVE
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
ALLAN F. WOLFE
MATTERS OF FAITH
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Sign painters recently worked on a portrait of Pope Francis on the side of a New York City office building as some
surveillance cameras operated by the New York City Police Department can be seen on lampposts at either side.
Wettig
Connors
Continued from E1
Continued from E1
n The Rev. Allan Wolfe is pastor of St. Joseph and San Juan
Bautista Catholic churches in Lancaster.
Culbreth
Continued from E1
OPINION
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
E5
Sunday Conversation
JONAH GOLDBERG
TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES
LEONARD PITTS
THE MIAMI HERALD
a congresswoman and her constituents at a supermarket, a mass murder at a movie theater, the Christmas
season butchery of schoolchildren
in Newtown. But, he said, sounding like nothing so much as a father
who very much loved his daughter,
I think people recognizing who the
victim was and what she represented
and how kind and sweet and innocent she was, I think this time its
going to be different.
Its always going to be different. But
it never is.
With all due deference to a fathers
incalculable sorrow, the likeliest
outcome here is that the murder
of Alison Parker and her colleague
Adam Ward and the wounding of local official Vicki Gardner will join the
long line of tipping points that didnt
tip and turning points that didnt
turn. Which is why Parkers words
inspire no great hope, but only break
your heart.
The sad thing is, there is no
repeat: no inherent or insoluble
conflict between the desire of some
of us to have access to guns for sport
and self-defense and the desire of
others of us to keep dangerous people from possessing those weapons.
Decent, moderate people, working
from both sides of the question,
could probably hammer out ideas
to safeguard both imperatives in an
afternoon.
Problem is, gun owners interests are represented not by decent,
moderate people, but by the National
Rifle Association, an extremist gang
for whom even the most modest
regulation is a brick in the road to
tyranny. As long as the NRA has such
an outsized voice in this debate, as
long as politicians, unencumbered by
conscience or vertebrae, tremble to
its call, and as long as many of us are
silent and supine in the face of that
obscenity, Hodges is correct. And
we are doomed to a future of frequent, predictable and preventable
tragedies some of us will mistake for
freedom.
It makes you wonder. If that kind of
thing is really bearable, then what,
pray tell, is not?
n Leonard Pitts Jr. is a columnist for the Miami Herald. Twitter: @LeonardPittsJr1
n Jonah Goldberg is a fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, a senior editor of National Review and a Tribune Media syndicated columnist. Twitter: @JonahNRO
E6
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
generation
BY,
FOR
AND
ABOUT
TEENS
FRESH TAKES
HAPPENINGS
Sand,
sun and
Instagram:
@mariotestino
n Few photographers
saving
lives
10-SECOND
MOVIE REVIEWS
Zack Bennett, son of Jeff and Jen Bennett of Landisville, communicates with fellow lifeguards on the beach by using the flag system
of semaphore.
Ant-Man
THE LIST
READ
'The Maze
Runner'
By James Dashner
n The Maze Runner is
similar to The Hunger
Games and Divergent
because its set in a
dystopian society. The
main character, Thomas,
is one of 50 boys who
are stuck living on a farm
in the center of a maze.
Their memories have been
eliminated, and they must
solve the maze to escape.
Connor Whitacre, 17
LISTEN
WATCH
WEAR
Alex Armstrong
13, of Lancaster
Honeymoon
Justice League
Ethan Sterenfeld, 17
Shawshank
Redemption
PUZZLES/BRIDGE
Bridge Results
The following results are from
Friday, Aug. 21 through Thursday,
Aug. 27.
nThe Friday Morning Duplicate Bridge
Club meets at 11 a.m.
Section A: 1. Bruce Silverstein
and Carole Silverstein; 2/3. Sara
Buckwalter and Vernon Hester; 2/3.
Deborah Klinger and Kay Crawford;
4/5. Dian Wise and Gwen Landis; 4/5.
Kathy Myers and Justine Rogevich; 6.
Barbara Marsh and Robert Marsh
Section C North/South: 1. Jill Greiner
and Jean Pryzbylkowski; 2. Dick
Glidden and Tim Sumner; 3. Joe and
Susan Hurlburt; 4. Sharon Sherban
and Herbert Karlip; 1C. Suzanne
Campbell and Jenny Krause
East/West: 1. Karen Davis and Karen
Zimmerman; 2. Joyce Franz and Sally
Patterson; 3. Patricia Latshaw and
Rosa Eshelman; 4. Georgia McCune
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
X MARKS
THE SPOT
Puzzle No. 1
Puzzle No. 2
su l do l ku
@ Puzzles by Pappocorn
7 2
1
6
8
1
8
1 4 3
8
4
6
3
8
7
9
5 9 8
3
1
5 9
PUZZLES/HOROSCOPE
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
ACROSS
111 You cant judge a
56 To the point
book by its cover,
1 Fake blood, e.g.
57 Empty-stomach sound
but
4 Many establishments 59 ____ limit (sign at the
114
____ no idea
on Pariss Boulevard
edge of town)
115
Blazing stars
Saint-Germain
60 Sound
116 Pairs are seen in it
9 Enjoy thoroughly
62 Crumbly cheeses
117 Emulate Isocrates
14 Ex-Mrs. Trump
64 Arctic lights
118 Birth-certificate
19 Person behind a
66 Regimented resort
datum
strike?
68 See 73-Across
119 Paradises
20 Cause of a 2014
69 Locale of the 15epidemic
120 Chemical ____
Down Eyjafjallajkull 121 Trig functions
21 Word with light or
70 Decked out
horse
122 Boom source
22 Figure in Jewish
71 Like pop-ups
DOWN
folklore
73 Check for 68-Across
1 [Um, this cant be
23 One time around
good]
74 2006 Pixar film
24 He who hesitates is 75 Heavy drinker, in
2 All-Star second
lost, but
baseman Infante
slang
27 Beat around the bush? 77 Out of the barn, say
3 Birds of a feather
29 Mathematician
flock together, but
79 ESPNU covers it
Fibonacci
4 Solo features of six
82 Celestial altar
30 N.B.A. team once
Bach suites
coached by Larry Bird 83 Gladly, old-style
5 Blood-type system
84 Steer closer to the
31 DVR lineup
6 Great minds think
wind
alike, but
33 Rich cake
85 It borders the
7 Actress Sommer
34 Brown who
wrote The Diana
N. Atl.
8 Clog
Chronicles
86 Prison escape path,
9 Till now
35 Handles
maybe
10 Left at sea
37 Silliness
88 A sharp equivalent
11 Like some salsa
41 Half-and-half, maybe 89 Sing the praises of
12 Stackable dessert
42 Park place
item
91 Unused
46 ____ game
13
2004
musical biopic
92 Give the right
for which the star won
49 Kind of arch
94 Second chances for
Best Actor
50 Frequent subject of
students
14
Pet in the comic strip
fibbing
96 Head of an inn?
FoxTrot
51 ____ Soetoro,
15 See 69-Across
stepfather of Barack 97 Caliban in The
Tempest, e.g.
Obama
16 Helm ____!
(captains cry)
52 Longest river entirely 102 Pooh-bah
103 Get into
within Switzerland
17 Within view
53 Group of Coyotes, for 106 Part of a dominatrixs 18 Ratchets (up)
outfit
short
25 Ambient music
innovator Brian
54 Name on a toy truck 108 Babe in the woods
THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
26
28
32
34
35
36
38
39
40
43
44
45
46
47
48
55
56
58
59
61
63
65
66
67
71
72
76
78
80
81
87
Put forward
Huh?
Its a trap
Slow and steady
wins the race, but
Shanghai nursemaid
Winter Olympics sport
Knowledge is power,
but
1943 conference site
Checked online
reviews of, modernstyle
Here/there connector
One on staff?
Sphere of civilian
activity during war
Trifle
Cousin of Sven
Michael Sheens
character in Twilight
Mystical Muslims
Broadcast
Ill-gotten gains
Port on the Panama
Canal
D.C.s ____
Constitution Hall
Personal quirk
Born to Die singer
Lana Del ____
Pretense
Galloping
Part of SEATO
Billet-____
Gal ____
More than once in a
while
You may have a great
one in your family
Part of M.F.A.
Like some mountain
guides
19
20
23
24
27
28
10
11
12
14
15
33
43
44
45
46
47
48
62
67
58
63
64
68
70
82
72
76
77
83
86
87
109
110
73
78
79
85
89
90
93
94
96
97
105
81
65
84
88
92
80
59
69
71
75
40
53
57
61
74
39
49
52
56
60
38
34
51
55
18
26
37
54
17
30
32
42
16
22
36
104
13
29
50
103
25
41
66
21
31
35
98
99
100
101
106
91
95
102
107
108
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
Oh-so-bored
Glee star ____ Michele
It may mean Pet me!
Comedian Daniel and
musician Peter
95 Broadsides, informally
97 Rooting interest
98 Compare
99 Not nodding
100 Nov. 11 honoree
101 Community spirit
103 Red in the face?
104 Lummox
105 Inlet
H A S P S
J A C K
O V A R Y
A X L E
C E L I N E D I O N
K
M O D E L S
E P D A D S
L E N
Y H A T
L A C Y
M I L E Y C Y R U S
SEPTEMBER
6, 2015
A L Y
O O C Y T E
S S
M U T E
K
L O T
U S S
A E R O S M I T H
I N T P O T
B A A
M O T H
P O E T S
A R E
A R I A
C A R O L E K I N G
K O R E A
A G O
D
P O T T S
O B E
O C T O P I
G U N S N R O S E S
I S E E
O N T A P
T Y R A
W E E K S
The Answers
NO. 0823
ARIES
TAURUS
Curb spending
once more. You tend to
find unproductive ways of
dealing with intense feelings
that you might not be
acknowledging. Investigate
GEMINI
VIRGO
CANCER
LEO
LIBRA
SCORPIO
One-on-one
relating will take you in a
new direction. How you
want to handle a certain
person seems to be
unknown. Ask yourself what
you want, and then respond
accordingly. Make or return
calls. Avoid getting caught
up in gossip.
Tonight: Make sure music
surrounds you.
This Week: Honor a change
between you and someone
else.
SAGITTARIUS
Ask yourself
what you want and need
Puzzle No. 2
Puzzle No. 1
7
6
3
5
9
2
8
4
1
2
9
1
8
7
4
5
6
3
4
8
5
1
3
6
9
7
2
6
5
2
4
1
7
3
9
8
9
4
7
3
8
5
1
2
6
1
3
8
6
2
9
7
5
4
5
1
9
2
4
8
6
3
7
3
7
4
9
6
1
2
8
5
CAPRICORN
(Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
8
2
6
7
5
3
4
1
9
AQUARIUS
(Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
PISCES
Understand that
others miss you. Make an
effort to attend at least one
holiday celebration. Your
ability to create more of
what you desire becomes
predominant. Allow a loved
one to tease you without
copping an attitude.
Tonight: Laughter surrounds
you.
This Week: Defer to another
person, and understand
what needs to happen.
BORN TODAY
Musician Roger Waters
(1943), comedian Jeff
Foxworthy (1958), actor Idris
Elba (1972)
Answer :
FLAMEE
CLUMES
FEMALE
AUTUMN ROCKET
MUSCLE
ENOUGH DISOWN
The retired clockmaker showed
his family the clock hed made
WINDOS
SEPTEMBER 6, 2015
TOCREK
NO. 0830
1
FOR OLD
TIMES SAKE
GUHENO
CONFLICTING ADVICE
NUTUMA
2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
All Rights Reserved.
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
36 (15)
Next Week:
Good
citizens
Be a math spy
Mini Fact:
Math
Fun
Weather
forecasters
use math to
predict what
the day will
be like.
image courtesy NOAA
Shopping math
Fraction fun
Fractions are a
way to talk about a
part of something.
For example, say
you have a birthday
cake. Your mom has
divided it into four
equal pieces. Since it is your birthday, your
mom gives you two pieces.
You could say that you got two pieces
of cake. Or you could say that you got 2/4
(two-fourths) of the cake. This means you
got two of the four pieces. This is the same
thing as saying you got 1/2 of the cake.
If your brother got 1/4 of the cake, how
many pieces did he get?
Resources
2/4 = 1/2
On the Web:
to.pbs.org/1O4v0Gb
coolmath4kids.com
At the library:
Try n Find
Mini Jokes
T
E
Q
U
A
L
G
P
X
S
N
T
N
N
U
F
A
T
W
H
U
A
F
F
O
R
D
G
S
O
O
M
Z
M
T
N
V
L
R
P
C
I
A
S
S
U
E
C
E
P
W
T
R
I
Y
B
L
E
B
I
H
S
Z
T
F
P
A
D
M
N
I
E
C
M
R
Q
S
I
U
G
V
I
E
O
A
P
G
V
N
W
D
A
B
J
C
T
B
I
C
E
S
L
F
Y
T
S
K
D
R
U
E
R
M
L
I
O
L
P
R
M
V
K
O
H
O
C
K
E
E
L
O
H
W
C
N
Eco Note
In a grocery store, find
the soda aisle. Count
58 six-packs. Now do the math: How
many cans are there? Thats how many
the average person in the U.S. uses
every year! Start recycling aluminum
cans at home and at school!
What to do:
1. In a large bowl, combine the pie filling, cream cheese, confectioners sugar and
vanilla. Mix well.
2. Spoon the mixture into eight ice-pop molds. Freeze until firm, about 1 hour. Makes
8 pops.
Adapted from The Robin Takes 5 Cookbook for Busy Families with permission from Andrews McMeel Publishing (andrewsmcmeel.com).
Puzzling
Unscramble the words below that remind us of math fun.
riaftcon
bnremu
lehow
tmsetiae
For Later:
The Mini Page 2015 Universal Uclick
Youll need:
1 (16-ounce) can cherry pie filling
8 ounces light cream cheese, softened
2 tablespoons confectioners sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
Cooks Corner
Teachers:
For standards-based activities to
accompany this feature, visit:
bbs.amuniversal.com/teaching_guides.html