Академический Документы
Профессиональный Документы
Культура Документы
TM
n $2.00 n LANCASTERONLINE.COM
COMING HOME?
COMMUNITY
ELECTION 2016
Concerns
rise from
violence
at rally
Boys & Girls Club gets amazing offer for ballpark project,
but it will take community support to bring it to life
Children play kickball Wednesday at the Harrisburg Boys Club, where synthetic turf was installed by the Cal Ripken, Sr. Foundation. The foundation has offered to build a similar ballpark at the site of Roberto Clemente Park along South Duke Street in
Lancasters Southeast end.
JEFF HAWKES
JHAWKES@LNPNEWS.COM
ENTERTAINMENT
RELATED COVERAGE
Ted Cruz wins 9 of 12 available
delegates in Wyoming, page A9
WorleyObetz.com
SPRING TRAINING
Review: Samson
has its strengths
n Cost: Tickets
n Information:
Go to sightsound.com, or
call (800) 3771277.
INDEX
CLASSIFIEDS........... CL1
LIVING......................... B1
LOTTERY................... A2
SAMSON, page A6
MONEY........................ D1
NATION & WORLD...A21
OBITUARIES............A18
PERSPECTIVE............E1
REAL ESTATE..........RE1
SPORTS....................... C1
TRAVEL............ B10, B11
TV WEEK..................TV1
SCHEDULE A
DELIVERY
VIEW COMPETITIVE
ELECTRICITY RATES ONLINE
N NATURAL
THA
G
ER
AS
Samson will
run through
Dec. 31, with
performances 11
times a week.
Propane
Electricity
Ultra-Bioheat
ALSO INSIDE
IL
n When:
JHOLAHAN@LNPNEWS.COM
CL
EAN
IF YOU GO
JANE HOLAHAN
BIO H E TI N G O
A
SCHEDULE A DELIVERY
Propane
Autogas
NOW
AVAILABLE
Service &
Installation
SCHEDULE A
SSERVICE
ERV CALL
PA25919
54 42 N
www.WorleyObetz.com
W l Ob t
800-697-6891
800 69
TODAY'S WEATHER
A2
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
PENNSYLVANIA LOTTERY n
SUNDAY,
MARCH 6
Here are the winning Pennsylvania and Powerball lottery numbers for the week starting March 6.
MONDAY,
MARCH 7
TUESDAY,
MARCH 8
WEDNESDAY,
MARCH 9
THURSDAY,
MARCH 10
FRIDAY,
MARCH 11
SATURDAY,
MARCH 12
DAY PICK 2
2-8
0-0
1-1
4-5
9-8
0-8
4-1
DAY PICK 3
7-0-3
8-3-4
2-4-6
0-3-3
9-1-3
8-8-4
7-6-2
DAY PICK 4
1-2-4-4
2-3-1-6
4-7-0-0
6-3-5-7
7-4-9-3
3-3-8-3
4-4-0-4
DAY PICK 5
3-7-4-8-8
6-7-7-1-0
1-4-7-3-1
4-0-2-2-8
1-6-9-5-6
7-6-5-6-0
6-2-7-0-9
10-11-14-27-30
07-09-10-22-29
01-07-23-27-29
03-06-12-15-29
05-08-14-17-28
05-07-14-20-27
8-7-8-3-1
TREASURE HUNT
NIGHT PICK 2
6-1
4-3
2-1
8-5
4-9
0-0
3-1
NIGHT PICK 3
1-2-5
7-5-6
5-5-1
8-5-7
4-1-0
7-1-3
9-6-0
NIGHT PICK 4
4-6-6-9
9-3-5-2
0-4-9-1
8-9-7-3
5-1-6-2
7-1-7-7
3-9-2-3
NIGHT PICK 5
4-6-2-5-5
0-6-5-1-2
3-3-1-4-3
0-2-3-3-1
9-5-9-2-8
8-7-8-3-1
8-6-9-1-0
05-14-22-38-41
15-18-23-39-42
08-20-23-24-38
01-10-15-18-40
15-21-25-30-31
06-25-30-33-40
01-30-31-36-37
27-37-54-66-69
MEGABALL: 05
MEGAPLIER: 5
14-23-32-34-68
POWERBALL: 03
POWERPLAY: 3
14-18-48-54-71
MEGABALL: 13
MEGAPLIER: 4
SEE NOTE
CASH 5
05-09-16-18-28-37
MATCH 6
CASH4LIFE
POWERBALL &
MEGA MILLIONS
CASH4LIFE:
09-21-24-37-38
CASH BALL: 2
15-22-34-40-43-44
CASH4LIFE:
06-12-21-40-57
CASH BALL: 1
n Because of an early press deadline, Saturday nights Powerball numbers were not available for
publication. Those numbers can be found at LancasterOnline today and will be published in Mondays LNP.
n To find the numbers online go to: lancasteronline.com/news/lottery.
CONTACT US
SWENGER@LNPNEWS.COM
ost of us
look
for
any suggestion that
tells us spring is on the
way. Different flowers
emerging from the cold
earth are among my favorite signs of the coming of warmer days.
I have a number of tips
for someone who wishes
to take pictures of small
details in spring foliage.
First, it helps to have a
micro lens. This enables
you to zoom in very close
to the flower. I would
also encourage budding
photographers to use a
tripod. Its important to
be very still so you can
get the object in focus;
with any little movement, the small stamen
on the flower wont be
sharp. Lastly, Id suggest
either using a kneeling
pad or simply throwing
a tarp on the ground to
get as low as you can and
stay somewhat clean.
I hope you can go enjoy your favorite sign of
spring and create a photo
to remind yourself just
how sweet the last few
days have been.
Advertising: 291-8800,
advertising@LNPnews.com
Classified: 291-8711,
class@LNPnews.com
Engagements, weddings
& anniversaries: 291-4957,
celebrations@LNPnews.com,
www.lancasteronline.com/
celebrations/create
Online: LancasterOnline.com,
LancasterOnline.com/mobile
CORRECTIONS
published on page 10 of
the March 10 Entertainment
Lancaster for the Adam Jacobs
concert at Lancaster Bible
College. Jacobs, who currently
stars as Aladdin in the
Broadway show of the same
name, will appear Monday,
March 21.
LNP MEDIA GROUP, Inc.
HE
T
METHOD
The image was shot with
a Nikon D4S camera
at 1/200th at 400 ISO.
My micro 105mm lens
was set at f.16. Shot in
color and converted
to black and white in
Photoshop. For more
Through the Viewfinder
photos and musings, visit
LancasterOnline.com/TTV
0%
StadelVOLVO.com
A4
FROM PAGE A1
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Boys play kickball Wednesday at the Harrisburg Boys Club, where synthetic turf was
installed by the Cal Ripken Sr. Foundation.
Level playing
field
Since 2010, the Baltimore-based
Ripken
foundation has built
what it calls youth development parks artificial-turf fields usually
with a baseball theme
in 57 low-income
neighborhoods across
America. The closest is
in Harrisburg.
We noticed that there
was a lack of positive
outdoor play spaces for
kids in a lot of urban
places, said Brady, the
foundations vice president of strategic initiatives. We want to give
them a big-league feel,
a cool place where kids
daySale
BerryMania
BUY 1
GET 2
Free
Strawberries,
Blueberries,
Raspberries &
Blackberries
container
Save upto $11.98
with rewards card
Valid 3/13-3/15.
While Supplies Last. No Rain Checks.
BUY 1
GET
1
of equal or
BUY 1
GET
1
of equal or
Free
Free
lesser value
lesser value
Stauffers
Save up
to $6.99 2 lb.
with rewards card
Valid 3/13-3/15.
While Supplies Last. No Rain Checks.
Rohrerstown
www.skh.com
301 Rohrerstown Rd
717-397-4719
Sunday 7am-10 pm
Monday & Tuesday 7 am-11pm
Boneless
Sirloin Steaks
Serving
Suggestion
Save up
to $10.99 2 lb.
with rewards card
Valid 3/13-3/15.
While Supplies Last. No Rain Checks.
Lititz
1050 Lititz Pk
717-627-7654
Sunday 7am-10 pm
Monday & Tuesday 7 am-11pm
Lancaster
1850 Oregon Pk
717-569-2688
Sunday 7am-6 pm
Monday & Tuesday 7 am-9pm
Lim
eS
t
Ro
c
kla
Du
ke
St
St
Roberto
Clemente
Park
es
te
r
St
rth
nd
St
Martin Luther King
Elementary School
St
n
Phoenix
Academy
Da
up
hin
St
Gr
ee
Ollies
connection
Wednesday:
Food
100
Gift CVaisa
rd!
Today thru
March 20th
Queen
.
No purcha
se
necessar y.
Mattrress Set
$
Reserve
Serving
Suggestion
Stauffers
Reserve
Beef Eye
Round Roast
Ch
FIELD OF DREAMS
us
tS
t
No
A view of the former Boys Club of Lancaster headquarters on Pershing Avenue from 1962.
St
Funds needed
We want to
give them a
big-league feel,
a cool place
where kids want
to be. When
we get them
there, we can
start creating
mentoring
relationships.
Av
e
Lo
c
New clubhouse
Ch
ur
ch
Ho
wa
rd
Continued from A1
CE!
Largest Adjustable Bed YOUR CHOIC
FREE BED
Galllery in Lancaster!!
FRAME OR
$250 off a set of
adjustable bases
SHEET SET
A6
FROM PAGE A1
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Its big
So how epic is Samson?
Well, the stage is so
Sight to see
The tweaking continued almost to the debut.
Kerry Ashton, the production stage manager
who oversees the cast
and the stage managers,
said, Mostly we were
(tweaking) the lighting,
staging and set changes
in order to draw focus
(on the right things).
Considering just how
2-5
YEARS
at 3 years
18-40
YEARS
Every
2 to 3
years
Schedule your
eye exam today!
Primary Eye Care | Routine Vision Services
Medical & Surgical Eye Care
41-60
YEARS
Every 2 years
OVER 61 OR
ALREADY WEAR
GLASSES
Annually
DONT BE SHOCKED!
Call A Trusted Electrician
25OFF
Above, Julie Marie Sturycz plays Delilah, the woman who will betray Samson. Below,
Michael Niederer plays strong man Samson, who thinks nothing of throwing boulders
around. The family-friendly production at Sight & Sound Theatre features a cast of 54
actors, 34 live animals and a huge set requiring three stage managers.
www.CampusEyeCtr.com
ore
m
Retirement
HOME
COMFORT
T
TEAM
W HO DO Y OU WANT
TO SELL YOUR HOUSE?
RICK HALLGREN
Associate Broker,
CRS, GRI, CSP
Office 717-653-2646
Cell 717-940-0995
rhallgren@homesale.com
www.RickHallgren.com
virtual
Village
Jus
t ask us
SPOILER
ALERT the destruction of the temple at the
end suffers from insufficient sound effects
(you hear thuds instead
of crashes when the columns come down) and
a lack of overwhelming
terror.
But then, Sight &
Sound wants this to be
a family show. The violence in the story, as well
as the sex, are underplayed. Adults will figure
things out while children
understand on a different level kind of the
way Disney films work at
their best.
If all you knew about
the story of Samson is
that his long hair gives
him great strength and
a temptress named Delilah cuts it off, the show
will fill in plenty of details.
Follow us
on Facebook at
LancasterOnline
for breaking news
2015
A8
FROM PAGE A1
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Past campaigns
Presidential
campaigns have long flirted
with the lexicon of violence, as candidates vow
to take the country back
from the opposing party
in the White House and
reclaim an endangered
vision of America. But
this years campaign
has distinguished itself
by the sheer volume of
heated words, led primarily by Trump, and by
actual scenes of physical
confrontation.
Now both Republican
and Democratic leaders are predicting a long,
grim and pugnacious
phase of the presidential
race.
Ive got to believe its
only going to get worse,
said William M. Daley,
the son of Chicagos
famed mayor, Richard
Daley, who presided over
ASSOCIATED PRESS
A protester yells out as he is escorted out of the building Saturday at a campaign rally at the I-X Center in Cleveland.
is a climate of frustration
and fright not seen since
the 1960s, or even the
1850s when, in the words
of Joanne Freeman,
a Yale historian who
has studied violence in
American politics, each
side was convinced that
the other side was about
to destroy America or
what they believed to be
Voter concerns
In Chicago on Friday,
such a determination
seemed very much in
evidence.
Michael Joseph Garza,
Open House
A convenient
and affordable
way to update
your glasses!
29 Keller A
Ave. LLancaster
717-399-2020
GOODS
4229 O
Oregon Pik
Pike B
Brownstown
717-626-2020
a 27-year-old employee
of a Chicago logistics
company who is part
Mexican and part Italian, had read about the
Trump rally on Facebook and, after discussing his candidacy with
his wife, felt compelled
to protest it to make a
point about immigration
and tolerance.
Even if Trump just
ruins this country for
four years, I cant go to
my children and say I
did nothing to try to stop
him, Garza said.
It is the kind of deepseated mistrust and
alarm over an unspeakably bleak future that is
also expressed by supporters of Trump like
Denise Rubino, 50, a bartender from Concord,
North Carolina.
She worries that an
America without Trump
at its helm would be a
disaster and despairs
WHERE ES
INSPIRED LIV
.
t
o
o
R
e
k
Ta
5 off 10 off
ANY
PURCHASE
of $50 or more
Cannot be combined
with other offers.
Cannot be used on
previous purchases.
Expires 3/31/16
LANCASTERS
SPECIALTY MARKET
ANY
PURCHASE
of $100 or more
Cannot be combined
with other offers.
Cannot be used on
previous purchases.
Expires 3/31/16
LANCASTERS
SPECIALTY MARKET
JOIN US FOR AN
OPEN HOUSE
USES,
AT ANY OF OUR FIVE CAMP
.
8:3
PM
FROM
16 16
, 20
FR6OM 1-03P.M
JAN
, 20
RI. L2817
AP
(at the intersection of 501 & 322 Behind Brickerville House Restaurant)
W W W . L A N C A S T E R S S P E C I A LT Y M A R K E T . C O M
FROM PAGE A8
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
A9
WYOMING CAUCUSES
president.
Also Saturday, Hillary
Clinton won the Democratic caucus on the
Northern Mariana Islands. The U.S. territory
is in the Pacific Ocean
near Guam.
Clinton received 54
percent of 189 votes
cast to earn four of the
six delegates at stake.
Vermont Sen. Bernie
Sanders picked up two
delegates.
GOODBYE TO WINTER
SAY
Mar. 3 - Apr. 3, 2016
SALE
s
SAVE
u
l
p
up
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Warnings
In a testament to how
vitriolic the campaign
has become, a wide
range of figures have
pleaded for a lowering
of the political temperature and the heated messages, warning that it
would produce physical
altercations, or worse.
Trumps own team
seems highly attuned to
the possibility.
On Saturday, in a rally
at an airplane hangar in
Dayton, not long after he
had mocked a protester
being escorted out Go
back to mommy, he said
a man jumped a security barrier and rushed
toward the stage. Trump
ducked his head, grabbing his podium with
both hands before backing away.
One of Trumps personal security guards,
who has worked for him
for years, was the first
to jump on stage. Three
other men who appeared
to be Secret Service
agents leapt on stage, and
all formed a ring around
Trump, while other security grabbed the man,
tackled him and then escorted him away.
Christine Todd Whitman, the former Repub-
Fast,
Affordable,
Convenient,
Easy
9.95
OIL CHANGE
conventional or
synthetic blend oil
& filter included
19.95 PA
INSPECTION
& EMISSIONS
30%
on Select
Premium Carpet
18 MONTH FINANCING**
NO Interest NO Money Down
Fivepointville Wyomissing
Lancaster Camp Hill
*Vouchers for 2 cleanings given at time of purchase.
Offer cannot be combined with other discounts, other
promotional offers, or previous purchases. **See store
PA005901
PEST CONTROL
www.KirchnerBrothers.com
717.394.8838
717-445-1792
PA005901
HOME EQUITY
LINE OF CREDIT
717-394-4242
LancasterOnline
to
>>>>>>>>>
LANCASTERPREOWNED.COM
PROMOTIONAL
OFFER RATE
REGULAR HELOC
RATES AS LOW AS
1.99%APR* 3.99%APR*
Qualit
Bird Fo y
od
ALW
AYS FRE
SH
*APR-Annual Percentage Rate. Home Equity Line of Credit (HELOC) promotional rate of 1.99% APR is available on all new money adv anced for a 6-month period of time from
the date of the first advance. THE HELOC permits borrowing up to 100% of the available equity in a primary residence (excludes rental properties). Minimum advance of $200
to qualify. Any principal payments will apply to promotional balance first. Regular home equity line of credit is based on Prime Rates published in the Wall Street Journal
on the last business day of the month plus a margin based on loan-to-value and credit worthiness with a floor of 3.99%. Maximum rate of 18%. This promotional annual
percentage rate will automatically terminate at the end of the promotional period. No notice to borrower required. Other restrictions may apply. This offer may be withdrawn
at any time. Ask an associate for details.
We do business in accordance with the Federal Fair Housing Law and Equal Credit Opportunity Act
717.208.6881
LOCAL
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
HEALTH
Complaint inspection
Aug. 5: 1 minimal harm
deficiency.
MORE
ONLINE
n Pleasant View
Retirement Community,
544 N. Penryn Road,
Manheim: Standard
inspection Nov. 9: 3
minimal harm deficiencies.
n Quarryville
Presbyterian Retirement
Community, 625
Robert Fulton Highway,
Quarryville: Standard
inspection Sept. 21: 5
minimal harm deficiencies.
FILE PHOTO
The Hamilton Arms Center, pictured in this 2011 file photo, was among the Lancaster
County nursing homes inspected by the Pennsylvania Department of Health in 2015.
n Elizabethtown Nursing
and Rehabilitation
Center, 141 Heisey Ave.,
Elizabethtown: Complaint
inspections Oct. 23 and
Nov. 15 and standard
inspection Dec. 2: 1
actual harm deficiency
and 8 minimal harm
deficiencies.
The report says a resident
developed a serious bed
sore in two weeks and that
records did not document
any treatment in the first
week.
n Harrison Senior
Living of Christiana, 41
Newport Ave., Christiana:
Complaint inspections Nov.
9 and Nov. 24: 1 actual
harm deficiency and 7
minimal harm deficiencies.
The report says a patient
died after being given
oxygen without record of
physician consultation,
and that there were
failures with other patients
to document proper
monitoring and verification
of physician orders outside
the standard range.
n Lakeside at Willow
Valley, 300 Willow
Valley Lakes Drive,
Willow Valley: Complaint
n ManorCare Health
Services Lancaster,
100 Abbeyville Road,
Lancaster: Complaint
inspection Sept. 1 and
standard inspection
Sept. 21: 5 minimal harm
deficiencies.
n Masonic Village at
Elizabethtown, 1 Masonic
Drive, Elizabethtown:
n Susquehanna
Valley Nursing and
Rehabilitation Center,
745 Chiques Hill Road,
Columbia: Complaint
inspections Oct. 22 and
Nov. 6: 1 actual harm
deficiency and 4 minimal
harm deficiencies.
The report says a
resident died after being
found unresponsive,
documentation failed
to show appropriate
physician consultation
and family notification,
and those problems
contributed to a delay in
the patients transfer to an
emergency department.
n United Zion Retirement
Community, 722 Furnace
Hill Pike, Lititz: Standard
inspection Sept. 8: 1 actual
harm deficiency and 4
minimal harm deficiencies.
The report said a lack of
timely identification and
monitoring contributed to
two patients developing
serious pressure ulcers.
Advanced
A higher level of heart care is now available
at WellSpan Ephrata Community Hospital.
At WellSpan Health, we want to help you reach your goals in life. So, if your hearts health
is standing in the way, take comfort in knowing that advanced new treatment procedures
are now available at WellSpan Ephrata Community Hospital.
Get higher-level treatment from the specialists of WellSpan Cardiology (formerly Heart
Specialists of Lancaster County). These physicians now perform angioplasty, stent
therapy and other advanced procedures right here in Ephrata.
Receive complete heart care, including prevention, diagnostics, and medical and
interventional treatments and cardiac rehabilitation in one location.
Learn how to keep your heart healthy with our special HeartTalks education series,
scheduled right in your community.
Take comfort in knowing your heart is in good hands with the regions most
comprehensive system of care across Lancaster, Lebanon, Adams and York Counties.
A12
LOCAL
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
BIRD-IN-HAND
BURGLARY
of an electrical meter, firefighters called PPL for assistance. Guests had to evacuate the structure, and
electricity was cut to it as a precautionary measure.
Within a few hours, guests returned to the building
and the electricity was restored.
Minimal damage occurred to the building and there
were no reported injuries, authorities said.
Happy 100th
Birthday,
Nicholas
Roumeliotis!
www.landisathome.org | 717-509-580 0
Thanks LNP Readers for naming us your Favorite Home Care
LEACOCK
COLEMAN
CENTER
FEATURED VENDOR:
3 DOZEN
FREE
EGGS
EVERY SATURDAY:
when you
spend $25
or more at
Corn Crib
Produce
THE
BIG
SALE
20%-50%off
FREE
No Hassle
Checking for
unioncommunit ybank.com
Visit one of our conveniently located Branch Offices to experience our friendly service.
Centerville 301 Centerville Road, Lancaster, 717-735-3871
Columbia 921 Lancaster Avenue, Columbia, 717-684-6872
Columbia 10 South 18th Street, Columbia, 717-684-5619
Elizabethtown 1275 South Market Street, Elizabethtown, 717-367-9652
Ephrata 1759 West Main Street, Ephrata, 717-733-9930
Hempfield 190 Stony Battery Road, Landisville, 717-898-3531
Lancaster 38 East Roseville Road, Lancaster, 717-581-0948
UCB will deposit $50 into your new Free Checking Account at time of opening. To qualify for another $100 deposit into the account, one ACH Direct Deposit must be made by an employer or other outside source and the use of the debit card at least
once within the first 60 days of account opening. The $100 deposit will be made into the account within 10 days of meeting the qualifications. Minimum of $50 required to open the account not including the $50 promotion amount. This promotion
is only available to customers who have not had an open checking account within 6 months of this promotion. All account owners must be qualifying customers. Offer limited to one per qualifying household. Internal transfers between accounts or
deposits made at a branch or ATM do not qualify. Subject to IRS 1099 reporting for year in which received. Limited time only, offer may be extended, modified or discontinued at any time without prior notice. Surcharge free ATM usage through the Allpoint
network. Minimum of $10 required to open the Minors Statement Savings account not including the $10 promotion amount, age restrictions apply.
Debt
Continued from A3
Tuesday:
Business
Local business
news & profiles
Wednesday:
Food
Thursday:
Home &
Garden
Tips & trends
$3000
00
5- P
$ C. Room!
139
8
WIT
H CO
UPO
N
CLOSEOUTS
EXPRESS ROOMS
FLOOR SAMPLES
20
SOFA ONLY
$798
DESIGNER SELECTED
EXPRESS ROOM
TOP NAME
BRANDS LIKE:
PACKAGES
STARTING AT
698
CENTURY
STICKLEY
THOMASVILLE
FLEXSTEEL
STANLEY
& More!
$3880
80
4 -P
$ C. Room!
183
8
WIT
H CO
UPO
N
SAVE
QUEEN BED
ONLY
$798
50-80
% OFF EVERYDAY!
RETAIL
SOLID WOOD!
LIMITED QUANTITES!
STARTING
AT
358
STARTING
AT
50-80 OFF
%
RETAIL
BONUS COUPON
698
OVER 30 RECLINERS
STARTING
AT
328
EXTRA
10% off
248
LAMPS/ACCESSORIES
UP
TO
80 OFF
%
RETAIL
BONUS COUPON
100off
EXTRA $
~OR~
50off
EXTRA $
STARTING
AT
QUEEN SETS
STARTING AT
498
WORLD
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
MIGRANTS
GERMANWINGS CRASH
PIRAEUS, Greece
Clutching an English
phrase book, Mohammed Sawadi is preparing
to head north.
The 23-year-old university student traveled
from Damascus with his
two cousins. They knew
Greeces borders were
closed before leaving
home but say nothing
will stop them from getting to northern Europe.
We made a vow: We
will get to Europe, and we
will stay together, said
Sawadi, wearing a Batman T-shirt and holding
a map of central Athens.
The three cousins
crossed Turkey before
reaching the Greek island of Chios and taking
a ferry to Piraeus, the
countrys largest mainland port, near Athens.
Sawadi wants to join his
brother in Germany and
eventually settle in The
Netherlands.
European leaders are
determined that they
wont make it out of
Greece anytime soon.
The countrys borders were sealed off to
migrants and refugees
a week ago, and NATO
expanded patrols in the
eastern Aegean Sea
and waited for signs that
the number of arrivals
was beginning to slow.
Its not yet clear if that
is happening: From an
average of 2,000 arrivals
per day at Greek islands
facing Turkey so far this
year, the numbers have
become more uneven.
The daily number
stayed below 1,000
most of the past week,
but spiked to 3,340 on
Wednesday, according
to data from the United
Nations refugee agency
UNHCR. About half of
those arriving are from
Syria, with the rest
mostly from Afghanistan and Iraq.
Pennsylvania
Specialty
Pathology
BARCELONA, Spain
(AP) Doctors who
treated Germanwings pilot Andreas Lubitz for depression and mental illness before he killed 150
people by crashing into
the Alps last year refused
to speak with French investigators who were trying to prevent a similar
sequence from ever happening again, one victims
father said Saturday.
The French investigators told relatives at a
meeting in Barcelona
that the German doctors
were not required to talk
about Lubitzs medical
conditions under German privacy laws and
they didnt, even though
the 27-year-old also died
in the March 24, 2015,
plane crash.
The experts from
Frances BEA crash investigation agency did
obtain detailed German
medical records about
Lubitz but they emphasized that the doctors, those who treated
him, refused to give any
information, said Robert Tansill Oliver, who
ANNUAL SPRING
GUN SHOW
Saturday, March 12th
8am-4pm
Sunday, March 13th
8am-3pm
742 Hollow Rd., New Providence, PA 17560
www.slcfsa.com
Lawn Tractor
Batteries
On Sale Now!
717.393.7771 | www.psppath.com
Join us!
hug
e se
lection
ce
servi
affordable priicing knowledgeable
www.northmuseum.org/sciencefair
Boarding
Dart
Foundation
Platinum Sponsor
Silver Sponsor
Media Sponsor
Venue Sponsor
Public Hours:
Wednesday, March 16
4:00 pm 6:30 pm
Alumni Sports & Fitness Center
Franklin & Marshall College
10% Off
Guss
FAMILY RESTAURANT
For the Widest Breakfast
Selections Come to
Guss Keystone Family
Restaurant, featuring
Banana Bread French Toast,
Multi-grain Pancakes, Malted Waffles,
Granola Pancakes, Sweet Potato Pancakes,
Stuffed French Toast, Avocado or Spinach
Poached, Numerous Benedicts,
Variety of Omelets Including: Egg White,
Vegetable, Greek, Asparagus, Meat Lovers,
Cheesesteak, Western, and thats just the
beginning. Our Own Fresh Baked Oatmeal,
Grits, Fresh Cut Homefries, Apple Sausage,
SSmoked
Sm
okkedd SSausage.
a saage
au
g.
Breakfast Is
Served All Day!
15
off
25 %
off
They
emphasized
that the doctors,
those who
treated him,
refused to give
any information.
Robert Tansill Oliver,
victims father
Ch
New eck Out
ly
Ou
RestRenovater
a
in Ep urant d
hrata
!
TOTAL
BREAKFAST
CHECK
NATION
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
A15
WEATHER
HATTIESBURG, Miss.
As the Leaf River rose
north of Hattiesburg,
Mississippi, 26-year-old
Rebecca Bruce and her
fianc grabbed what they
could and left the shed
where they live. The water was more than 2 feet
deep indoors when they
left, she said.
We lost everything,
Bruce said Saturday.
Ive got a book bag full
of dirty clothes, and I
was lucky to get that.
Bruce was among
about 20 people in a Red
Cross shelter in the Forrest County Community
Center on Saturday, as
creeks and rivers continued to rise after torrential rains pounded
the Deep South. It was
one of nine shelters open
in Mississippi and 24 in
Louisiana.
Downpours part of
a system affecting Louisiana, Mississippi, Arkansas, Tennessee and
Alabama submerged
roads and cars, washed
out bridges and forced
residents to flee homes.
At least three people
have died in Louisiana
alone. Mississippi officials were still looking for
two missing fishermen,
but had no reports of injuries or deaths, said Lee
Smithson, head of the
Mississippi Emergency
Management Agency,
or MEMA. A Hancock
County sheriffs deputy
was hospitalized after
his patrol car skidded
into a ditch Friday night,
but is now recovering at
home, Chief Deputy Don
Bass told the Sun Herald.
MEMA reported ma-
In Petal, a suburb of
Hattiesburg, Azri Oatis
and two friends were
steadily shoveling sand
into white bags in hopes
Since 1968
THINK SPRING!
EMILY WAGSTER
PETTUS
717- 684-2243
291-5555
O N E S TO GA
YE
GET SUPPORT
800.272.3900 | WWW.ALZ.ORG/PA
Suk Shuglie
Original
on Canvas
GA L L E R Y
Highmark Blue Shield is an independent licensee of the Blue Cross and Blue Shield Association.
OBITUARIES
Deaths from
earlier in the week
The following deaths
were reported in the past
week. Complete obituaries
can be found in the
LancasterOnline.com news
archives.
APPEL, Fred, 93,
Sadsburyville, March 8.
AUKAMP, Paul C. II, 57,
Holtwood, March 7.
AUKER, Edwin S., 82,
Ephrata, March 6.
BORTZ, Shirley A., 73,
Lancaster, March 8.
BRAUN, Michael, 55,
Lancaster, March 4.
BURKHOLDER, Elva, 83,
Morgantown, March 2.
BUSHNELL, Collins E. Jr.,
89, Lititz, Jan. 25.
CINTRON, Carmen, 62,
Lancaster, March 4.
CONNELLY, Janet L., 79,
Manheim, March 10.
CRAWFORD, Stanley L., 62,
New Holland, March 8.
CROSS, Doris E., 66,
Lancaster, March 8.
DEIBERT, Robert E., 72,
Lititz, March 4.
DEPPEN, Gary W., 70,
Lititz, March 1.
DERSTINE, Grace
(Clemens), 88, Pequea,
March 8.
Lancaster, March 7.
GRIFFITH, David A., 53,
Lancaster, March 4.
GROFF, Elizabeth H., 98,
Manheim, March 11.
GROFF, Louise M., 80,
Lancaster, March 6.
HAAGEN, Marian (Nelson),
95, Lititz, March 4.
HABECKER, Janet
(Hoover), 68, Lancaster,
March 9.
HALL, Robert J., 62,
Forksville, March 2.
HAMMER, Carl E., 49,
Manheim, March 6.
HAMMONS, Ruth E. (Reed),
92, Lancaster, March 3.
HAWTHORNE, Grace L.
(Price), 85, Smoketown,
March 8.
HEFFNER, Leonard K., 81,
Lancaster, March 7.
HERR, Teresa, 91,
Elizabethtown, Feb. 29.
HERSHEY, Arlene N., 79,
Bethel, March 9.
HINTON, Henry, 80,
Lancaster, March 1.
HOFFMAN, June E., 82,
Morgantown, March 2.
HOLTON, Richard A., 83,
East Petersburg, March 4.
JOHNSON, Dale C., 87,
Stillman Valley, Ill., March 6.
JOHNSON, Kirt R., 46,
Quarryville, March 7.
JONES, Henry C., 79,
Millersville, March 5.
CLEARANCE
SALE
SUPPLY IS
LIMITED!
SALE
S
ALE P
PRICE
RICE
$5,199
LancasterHonda.com
Honda
powersports.honda.com ALWAYS WEAR A HELMET, EYE PROTECTION AND PROTECTIVE CLOTHING. NEVER RIDE UNDER THE INFLUENCE OF DRUGS OR ALCOHOL, AND NEVER USE THE
STREET AS A RACETRACK. OBEY THE LAW AND READ THE OWNERS MANUAL THOROUGHLY. For rider training information or to locate a rider training course near you, call the Motorcycle Safety
Foundation at 1-800-446-9227. CB is a registered trademark of Honda Motor Co., Ltd. 2014 American Honda Motor Co., Inc. (02/14) *MSRP does not include $350 in destination charges.
Specializing in reconstructions,
reductions and enhancements.
Whether youre considering reconstructive surgery, simply want to improve your
silhouette or having difficulty returning to your pre-baby figure after pregnancy,
you can turn to Bryan Cicuto, D.O., with confidence. Dr. Cicuto is a fellowshiptrained plastic and reconstructive surgeon. He is skilled in breast augmentation,
lifts and reconstruction, as well as in breast reduction surgery for women and
men. Dr. Cicuto will listen carefully to your preferences, then refine or restructure
your body for a natural, enhanced appearance.
Call 717-625-3509 to schedule your free consultation. For a limited time only,
enjoy 25% off aesthetic services including spa, injectable, and laser treatments.
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
TODAYS OBITUARIES
Turn to pages A18 and A23-A27.
Bainbridge, March 8.
McNEILL, Betty A., 88,
Lititz, March 5.
MENDENHALL, Alma E., 82,
Parkesburg, March 6.
MIGDON, Meyer, 92,
Lancaster, March 1.
MILLER, Ida M. (Blocher),
90, Lancaster, March 8.
MILLER, Trudy (Sweigart),
60, New Holland, March 3.
MOYER, Theodore, 89,
Lancaster, March 9.
MUIR, Hayden, 88,
Elizabethtown, March 10.
MURRY, Elizabeth D., 93,
Lancaster, March 6.
OBERHOLTZER, Mildred S.,
91, Lancaster, March 8.
PACHECO-ALEQUIN, Felix,
75, Lancaster, March 8.
PARRETT, J. Samuel Jr., 89,
Elizabethtown, March 5.
PENNELL, Keith H. Sr., 57,
Columbia, March 3.
PENROD, Ramona L., 79,
Lititz, March 9.
PETERS, Anna M.
(Tavaglione), 90, Lancaster,
March 10.
PETERS, Chad M., 39, Lititz,
March 8.
PETERSHEIM, Miriam L., 93,
Gap, March 6.
PHAN, Le, 77, Lancaster,
March 5.
PUTT, Charles A. Jr., 77,
New Kingstown, March 6.
RAMOS, Betty J., 76,
Killbuck, Ohio, March 6.
RHOADES, Jack D. Jr., 72,
Landisville, March 8.
RIEGEL, Bruce D., 78,
Mohrsville, March 3.
RISSER, Marian S., 87, Lititz,
March 5.
RODKEY, Michael C., 60,
Hanover, Feb. 29.
ROTTMUND, Jerry L., 75,
Denver, March 11.
SCHILLING, Margaret E.
(Geibe), 89, Lancaster,
March 8.
SCHOUTEN, Tilly H., 80,
Lititz, Feb. 28.
SCHWEITZER, Betty A., 90,
Adamstown, March 8.
SELDON, George L., 82,
Gap, March 9.
SENTZ, Ruth M. (Lyttle), 85,
Mechanicsburg, March 4.
SINE, Donna J., 78,
Elizabethtown, March 6.
SLATER, Kathleen M., 80,
Manheim, March 6.
SLICK, Eric R., 42,
Lancaster, March 2.
SNAVELY, M. Jean, 90,
Middletown, March 8.
SOLLENBERGER, Kathryne
V., 90, New Holland, March
8.
STEINER, Lorraine F., 50,
New Park, March 3.
STONE, Mary R., 91,
Lancaster, March 4.
STREMBA, Henry J., 97,
Willow Street, March 5.
TOUT, Dorothy J., 84,
Lancaster, March 8.
TROTMAN, Marion (Lewis)
96, Williamstown and Lititz,
March 5.
VAN GORDEN, Charles L.,
85, Lititz, March 9.
VECERO, Matthew L., 77,
Lancaster, March 4.
VELAZQUEZ, Lucila, 84,
Lancaster, March 7.
VO, Xuan Truong, 68,
Manheim, March 8.
WALBORN, Kenneth G., 76,
Elizabethtown, March 2.
WANAMAKER, Cynthia L.,
60, Hanover, March 3.
WEAVER, Gerald L., 87,
Lancaster, March 3.
WEAVER, Janet C., 79, New
Holland, March 6.
WELLER, Dennis A., 63,
Lancaster, March 6.
WIEST, Peter Van Houten,
80, Odenton, Md., March 3.
WILSON, Easton J., 2
months, son of Travis
W. and Kristen M.
(Armstrong), Columbia,
March 2.
WINSETT, Patricia K., 57,
Bainbridge, March 4.
WOLFER, Pauline E., 69,
Lancaster, March 4.
YESKOO, Georgia J., 92,
Lancaster, March 8.
YOHN, Lawrence G., 56,
Columbia and Lancaster,
March 7.
YOUNG, Larry S., 74,
Highmount, March 7.
ZUCH, Carlotta J., 75,
Marietta, March 3.
ZIMMERMAN, Shane L., 3,
son of Erwin R. and Norma
Z. (Nolt) Zimmerman,
Ephrata, March 9.
Since 1952
Home for Funerals
Modest Funerals Plain Coffins
Connect with us
Facebook, Twitter
& Instagram at:
717-656-6833
LancasterOnline
www.FurmanFuneralHome.com
Is traditional medicine
failing you?
Help is Available!
Functional Medicine
treats YOU,
-not just the disease.
Andropause/
Menopause
Thyroid Imbalances
Low Energy
Gut Issues
Weight Loss/
Management
Health Coaching
Join us
i 301, L
2207 O
Oregon Pik
Pike, S
Suite
Lancaster, PA
www.randalicentre.com/functional-medicine
$ 7/lb7.
buy 2, get 1
ue
of equal or lesser val
buy 1, get 1
buy 1, get 2
buy 1, get 1
e
of equal or lesser valu
e
of equal or lesser valu
Thomas
Original English Muffins
e
of equal or lesser valu
buy 1, get 1
buy 1, get 2
e
of equal or lesser valu
e
of equal or lesser valu
Certified Harvest
Fish Fillets
10/ 6
49
Del Monte
Canned Vegetables
2/ 4
buy 1, get 1
Giant Chunk or
Shredded Cheese
All Varieties, 68 oz. pkg.
e
of equal or lesser valu
Bumble Bee
Chunk Light Tuna
5 oz. pkg.
FREE
Juice
Simply Orange
59 fl. oz. btl.
10/ 10
$ 69
Giant Brand Flour
5 lb. bag
OBITS
A29 SUNDAY,
A18 SUNDAY,
MARCH 13,MARCH
2016 13, 2016
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
REMEMBRANCE
CPRATT@LNPNEWS.COM
A 21-year-old airman
with Lancaster ties who
went missing from the
Dover Air Force Base
last month was remembered at a memorial service there Friday. Keifer
Huhman, a member of
the 436th Communications Squadron, was last
seen near his apartment
by the base Feb. 7.
Authorities said his
pickup was found and
towed by Delaware
State Police later that
night on the shoulder of
the William V. Roth Jr.
Bridge, which spans the
Chesapeake and Delaware Canal.
An intense search was
launched but no breakthroughs were made
on Huhmans whereabouts.
Numerous
family
members of the airman
US AIR FORCE
Although Keifers
Air Force family and
siblings grieve the unknown, this will help
provide some sort of
closure, Huhmans father wrote.
Attempts to contact
local family members
Saturday were not immediately successful.
Your Dealership
Alternative
swedishmotors.com
Grace L. (Price)
Ha wthorne, 85 , of
Smoketown, died
T u e s d a y,
March 8 ,
2016 in her
residence.
B o r n
in Shamokin, she was
the wife of Arthur
Ha wthorne, J r. of
Smoketown, and the
daughter of the late
Lloyd and Jessie (Boyer)
Price.
Grace was a member of the Lancaster
Rec Centerr, and loved a
good game of pinochle.
She was an avid bowler,
bowling well into her
80s. Grace adored her
family and was a loving
wife, motherr, and grandmother.
In addition to her
husband of 66 years, she
is survived by a daughter, Deborah L. Negley
and her husband James
N. of Mount Joy; 2 sons,
William L. Hawthorne
and his wife Diane L.
of Gordon ville and
Brian A. Hawthorne of
Smoketown; a granddaughter, Jennifer D.
Geist and her husband
Andrew of Mt. Gretna; 2
great-grandsons, Ryan
and Nathan Geist; and
a brother, Gary Price of
Bossier Cityy, LA. She
was preceded in death
by 1 sister and 1 brother.
It was Graces wish
that no services be held.
Burial will be private at
the convenience of the
familyy.
Kindly omit owers.
Memorial contributions
in Graces memory may
be made to Hospice &
Community Care, 685
Good Dr., PO Box 4125,
Lancaster, PA 17604.
To place a condolence online, please visit
Snyder
erFuneralHo
ome.com
5TH ANNIVERSARY
GALA WITH LEGENDARY
PATTI LUPONE
Grace L.
(Price)
Ha
aw
wthorne
The Bird-in-Hand Bakery & Cafe has been in business for generations,
and we still make many of our baked goods from scratch.
Obituaries
MARCH 19 | 7:30 PM
GALA CIRCLE TICKETS (RECEPTION AND SHOW)
& SOME SHOW-ONLY TICKETS STILL AVAILABLE!
EXHIBITION:
IRVIN TEPPER
MARCH 15 - MAY 6
WINTER CENTER | MILLERSVILLE
,@[n @
n@
|
ne #n
; [@
ne n @
n@ @ @
k |
|@ [@[a
!, ne@
b [
@[@nn[
[nnQ@[n@n
n@a
n@On[
OR Take Out
PLUMBING
HEATING
COOLING
PA6136
www.neffsvilleph.com
625-1000
Minimal trip charge may apply.
POLICE
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Police log
ASSAULT
n FULTON TWP.: State
BAD CHECKS
n EARL TWP.: Police
DRUG
POSSESSION
n LANCASTER TWP.:
FORGERY
n MANHEIM TWP.: Richard
ROBBERY
n LANCASTER TWP.:
THEFT
n MOUNT JOY TWP.:
HARASSMENT
FRAUD
n MARTIC TWP.: A woman
A19
INVESTIGATION
UNAUTHORIZED
USE OF A
VEHICLE
n PEQUEA TWP.: Hans
VANDALISM
n NEW HOLLAND: David
VEHICLE THEFT
n FULTON TWP.: A green
West Earl Township police are looking for the person who robbed a notary and insurance business in Akron
on Friday afternoon.
Police said that a white male wearing a ski mask entered Vaitl Services,
550 S. Seventh St., shortly before 3
p.m. and opened a cash drawer behind the counter.
An employee who tried to stop him
was overpowered and suffered a
hand injury, and the man fled with
cash from the drawer, police said.
He was seen jumping into the passenger seat of a cream-colored Cadillac DeVille waiting on Cocalico Creek
Road. The vehicle drove west toward
Newport Road.
Police described the suspect as a
thin white male, about 6 feet tall. He
was wearing a black ski mask and
tinted yellow glasses, a white hoodie
Follow us on Instagram at
LancasterOnline
ARIZONA
Mens:
Habana, Tabacco,
Taupe
Womens:
Amalfi, Black,
Dark Brown, Habana,
Taupe, Blue Rose,
Pink Rose
1517 Lititz Pike, Lancaster 397-3159 |
THEFT CHARGES
Social Security
Disability & SSI
Tony Hopkins
Attorney
517-9637
1.25
Annual
Percentage
Yield (APY)
M&T 12-Month CD
1.01
Annual
Percentage
Yield (APY)
New
Menu
1
2
This offer is only available at M&T branches in the following Pennsylvania counties: Adams, Centre, Cumberland, Dauphin, Franklin, Lancaster, Lebanon, York.
To open an M&T Select CD, customer must have or open a MyChoice Premium Checking, M&T Select, M&T Select With Interest, Employee M&T Select With Interest or Power Checking account.
The minimum deposit required to open the account is $1,000 of money not already on deposit at M&T Bank. The maximum deposit is $1,000,000 per customer. After the CD is opened,
the minimum balance to obtain the advertised APY is $1.00. APYs stated are accurate as of March 2, 2016. A penalty may be imposed for early withdrawal. Fees could reduce earnings
on the account. Offer may not be available at all M&T Bank branches. Advertised APYs cannot be combined with any other offer. Rates are subject to change without notice.
Unless otherwise specified, all advertised offers and terms and conditions of accounts and services are subject to change at any time without notice. After an account is opened or service
begins, it is subject to its features, conditions and terms, which are subject to change at any time in accordance with applicable laws and agreements. Please contact an M&T representative
for full details.
2016 M&T Bank. Member FDIC.
MarketPulse
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Dow industrials
Nasdaq
S&P 500
1.21% (wkly)
0.67% (wkly)
s 4-wk. 7.76%
t YTD -1.22%
1.11% (wkly)
s 4-wk. 9.47%
t YTD -5.17%
s 4-wk. 8.44%
t YTD -1.06%
S&P mid-cap
19,000
-5.23
218.18
MON
THUR
FRI
TUES
WED
5,400
4,800
16,000
4,600
-59.43
25.56
-12.22
86.31
MON
TUES
WED
THUR
FRI
$1,000
6403.31
INDEX
Dow Jones industrial average
4,000
Nasdaq composite
4,200
Close: 17,213.31
1-week change: 206.54 (1.2%)
18351.36 15370.33
CLOSE
17220.09
16821.86
17213.31
+206.54
+1.2
7695.95
7426.84
7693.09
+41.24
+0.5
8937.99
NYSE Comp.
10105.01
9826.52
10104.19
+135.78
+1.4
Nasdaq Comp.
4748.79
4607.99
4748.47
+31.45
+0.7
2134.72
1810.10
S&P 500
2022.37
1969.25
2022.19
+22.20
+1.1
1551.28
1215.14
S&P MidCap
1407.80
1368.40
1407.13
+7.93
+0.6
22537.15 18462.43
Wilshire 5000
20805.60
20251.30
20802.97
+193.50
+0.9
Russell 2000
1094.50
1054.56
1087.56
+5.63
+0.5
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
t
s
s
t
s
s
t
t
-1.2
(((($@9542| -3.0
+2.5
9999963| -14.0
-0.4
((*&^%99653| -6.0
-5.2
((((^%$!876421| -2.5
-1.1
((((*%#@!8431| -1.5
+0.6
(((%#!99432| -5.6
-1.7
(((*$#@!9853| -4.3
-4.3
*&%$99997421| -11.7
Cargo Revenue
Airlines are packing jets full of passengers these days
In millions of dollars
as they post record profits. But its a different story
938 937
below the wing, with cargo revenues plunging.
934
American Airlines, Delta Air Lines and United Airlines $900
875
all saw year-over-year declines in the amount they
813
charged to haul freight. Its a basic supply and demand
800
problem, especially overseas. There are too many
760
ships and aircraft hauling cargo and with a slowdown
700
in Chinas economy less demand for goods.
Airlines make most of their money from passengers
AAL
DAL
UAL
who want to hop from one part of the world to another 600
especially last-minute business travelers buying
expensive tickets. But that doesnt mean airlines ignore
500
that giant empty space beneath the passenger seats.
14 15
14 15
14 15
New passenger jets are built with more freight space
and the airlines are adding new non-stop international
Cargo Ton Miles AAL DAL UAL
routes popular with shippers. Unfortunately, these new
In millions of dollars
planes are entering fleets just as demand for rushed
2,333
cargo falls.
14
2,357
The big three U.S. airlines charged an average of
2,487
35 cents a mile to fly a ton of cargo last year. Thats
2,314
15
down 8 percent from the
2,190
38 cents a ton charged a
2,614
year prior. Given that
they moved 7.1 billion
Cargo yield per ton mile
cargo ton miles, that
In cents
price drop resulted in
$237 million less in
37.50
39.63
revenue.
14
3.3
Copper
1,112
1,040
0.5
High-yield bonds
1,022
9.5
1,019
1.1
1,017
-0.2
Emerging-market stocks
REITs
S&P 500
Technology stocks
European stocks
Asian stocks
Small-cap stocks
15
FUND
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
TotRetBdI
TotRetIs
500Adml
HltCrAdml
InstIdxI
InstPlus
InstTStPl
IntlStkIdxAdm
IntlStkIdxIPls
MuIntAdml
TotBdAdml
TotIntl
TotStIAdm
TotStIIns
TotStIdx
WelltnAdm
ABALX
23.89
CAIBX
57.13
CWGIX 42.85
ANCFX 50.20
AGTHX 39.54
AMECX 20.49
AIVSX
33.84
AWSHX 38.54
DODIX
13.39
DODFX 35.06
DODGX 160.13
FCNTX 94.59
FUSVX 71.39
FKINX
2.10
MWTIX 10.72
PTTRX
10.06
VFIAX 187.40
VGHAX 85.89
VINIX
185.56
VIIIX
185.57
VITPX
45.48
VTIAX
23.94
VTPSX
95.75
VWIUX
14.30
VBTLX
10.76
VGTSX 14.31
VTSAX
50.25
VITSX
50.26
VTSMX 50.22
VWENX 63.84
Fidelity
Fidelity Spartan
FrankTemp-Franklin
Metropolitan West
PIMCO
Vanguard
* - annualized
NAV
$CHG ---------- PERCENT RETURN ---------1WK 1WK 1MO 1YR RANK 5YRS* RANK
+0.16
+0.71
+0.50
+0.60
+0.37
+0.22
+0.39
+0.54
+0.06
+0.57
+2.68
+0.55
+0.83
+0.02
-0.01
...
+2.19
+1.25
+2.18
+2.17
+0.50
+0.35
+1.39
-0.01
-0.02
+0.21
+0.55
+0.55
+0.54
+0.67
+0.7
+1.3
+1.2
+1.2
+0.9
+1.1
+1.2
+1.4
+0.5
+1.7
+1.7
+0.6
+1.2
+1.0
-0.1
...
+1.2
+1.5
+1.2
+1.2
+1.1
+1.5
+1.5
...
-0.2
+1.5
+1.1
+1.1
+1.1
+1.1
+6.2
+7.7
+10.8
+11.3
+11.5
+7.6
+10.8
+10.1
+1.3
+17.9
+14.3
+9.4
+10.8
+9.9
-0.4
+0.2
+10.8
+8.3
+10.8
+10.8
+11.6
+12.2
+12.2
-1.2
-0.7
+12.1
+11.5
+11.5
+11.5
+6.7
+1.9
+0.2
-4.3
+1.5
-1.0
-0.1
+1.0
+1.0
-0.5
-16.3
-4.3
+0.1
+1.3
-6.4
+1.0
-0.3
+1.3
-2.3
+1.3
+1.3
-0.7
-6.8
-6.8
+3.8
+1.3
-6.9
-0.8
-0.7
-0.9
+1.0
1
1
3
1
2
1
1
1
4
5
4
1
1
5
2
4
1
1
1
1
2
3
3
1
1
3
3
3
3
1
+9.2
+6.7
+6.4
+10.2
+10.5
+7.9
+10.4
+11.2
+3.5
+1.6
+10.3
+11.3
+11.5
+4.5
+4.6
+3.4
+11.5
+18.7
+11.5
+11.5
+11.1
+0.9
+1.0
+4.8
+3.3
+0.8
+11.0
+11.0
+10.9
+8.5
1
1
2
3
3
1
3
1
2
3
2
2
1
2
1
3
1
2
1
1
1
4
4
2
3
4
2
2
2
1
RATING
HHHHI
HHHHI
HHHII
HHHII
HHHII
HHHII
HHHII
HHHHI
HHHHI
HHIII
HHHII
HHHHH
HHHHI
HHIII
HHHHH
HHHHI
HHHHI
HHHHH
HHHHI
HHHHI
HHHHI
HHIII
HHIII
HHHHI
HHHII
HHHII
HHHHI
HHHHI
HHHHI
HHHHH
1.4
996
-0.6
978
-0.1
968
-0.2
946
0.3
946
-0.3
939
-1.1
934
-0.4
$1000
Voltari Corp
VLTC
4.47
-0.2
+29.2
Nymox Pharmaceutical
NYMX
2.32
-1.7
+7.9
SPI
7.18
-12.3
+4.8
Internet Gold-Golden
IGLD
15.55 +10.1
+30.7
Energy Recovery
ERII
9.43 +25.0
+69.3
Educational Devel
EDUC
11.51
-0.3
+15.7
Alexco Resources
AXU
0.76
+7.9
+12.7
Sophiris Bio
SPHS
1.92
-5.0
+21.5
Oclaro Inc
OCLR
4.24
-12.6
-0.7
NeoPhotonics Corp
NPTN
12.07
+4.3
+25.9
GSV
1.00
-1.0
+31.6
Hawaiian Holdings
HA
45.35
-0.9
+25.1
NexPoint CreditStrat
NHF
19.14
+4.5
+9.0
PLPM
3.43 +15.9
+27.5
MUX
1.92
+0.5
+20.8
PRMW
9.39
+8.7
+13.0
Lo Jack
LOJN
6.45
+0.3
+0.6
GAI
8.77
+2.7
+3.1
MaxLinear Inc
MXL
17.34
-1.0
+25.1
Electromed Inc
ELMD
4.95
+5.8
+61.8
%RTN
1YR
+405.5
+387.8
+270.4
+263.3
+248.4
+197.1
+184.1
PE YLD
dd
...
dd
...
...
...
...
...
dd
...
20
3.1
+166.2
...
...
dd
...
+151.6
...
...
cc
...
+137.9
...
...
14
...
+124.8
+118.6
...
...
dd
0.5
+117.2
...
...
40
...
+112.3
...
...
cc
...
25
...
+159.0
+148.8
+137.0
+118.2
+113.8
+112.2
q 15.0
IndustryRankings
PERCENT CHANGE
1WK 1MO 1QTR
INDUSTRY
LocalFunds
FAMILY
$500
998
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 March 10
AP
37.72
32.84
37.12
35.85
1.2 %
$1,201
Investment-grade bonds
1-week
... today is percent
worth change
Gold
YTD
1YR
CHG %CHG MO QTR%CHG %CHG
LOW
4209.76
WOMAN POWER
Does more diversity in companies
lead to bigger profits? Theres an
ETF to track that. A new fund
investing in U.S. companies with
women on their boards and in
executive ranks has just been
launched. Ticker symbol: SHE.
Called the SPDR Gender Diversity
fund, the exchange-traded fund
tracks a basket of big companies
that score highest in their industries
on several yardsticks showing
women in top spots.
Commodities
Oil
5231.94
943.09
Bonds
Utilities stocks
HIGH
Stocks
Close: 4,748.47
1-week change: 31.45 (0.7%)
11254.87
1296.00
AT&T Inc
Air Products
Alcoa Inc
Applied Indl Tch
Armstrong World Inds
Bco Santander SA
Bon Ton Store
CNH Indl NV
Campbell Soup
Carpenter Tech
Clarcor Inc
Costco Wholesale
Donegal A
Donnelley RR & Sons
Exelon Corp
Frontier Comm
Fulton Financial
GlaxoSmithKline PLC
Harley Davidson
Henry Schein Inc
Hershey Company
Intl Paper
Johnson & Johnson
Kellogg Co
Kroger Co
L-3 Communications
M&T Bank
Merck & Co
s 4-wk. 11.89%
t YTD -4.25%
Derby
4,400
52-WEEK
HIGH
LOW
9176.20
-8.77
5,000
17,000
COMPANY
0.52% (wkly)
s 4-wk. 11.51%
s YTD 0.61%
5,200
18,000
14,000
AP
0.57% (wkly)
StocksRecap
15,000
Russell 2000
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.8
11.8
10.4
9.6
9.5
9.4
9.0
7.3
6.8
5.9
5.5
1.9
2.3
1.3
0.8
0.7
0.6
1.0
0.3
1.5
1.0
2.1
3.2
1.7
-2.3
-0.5
-3.5
1.8
0.1
4.1
-3.0
15.2
15.9
%RTN
1YR
99952| -17.1
*&#!99743| -12.8
(((%@|3 0.1
((*&^%#@!5421| -0.6
(*&^$#9632| -6.4
((&^%#@8543| -3.4
((*$842| -3.0
(((%@|9732 7.1
(*&^%961| -6.3
(((%@|9765431 8.3
(((%@|9876542 11.0
3.0
-2.8
+1.9
+1.3
+5.9
1.6
CSAL
+1.2
NRF
+2.6
RAS
-3.1
NSM
+0.3
-0.1
EMES +11.4
TREE
-4.8
REXI +12.6
IEP
-3.7
-0.1
OFG
+5.0
BOFI
+1.9
FCTY +35.7
BBX
+3.2
1.6
MBI
+5.4
NATL +32.6
UIHC
-1.2
ANAT
+8.7
GNW
UNM
LNC
AEG
16.2
+64.7
+26.0
+22.7
+21.9
12.5
+41.7
+41.6
+41.5
+40.4
9.1
+61.7
+43.8
+42.6
+36.1
8.5
+38.1
+31.7
+28.2
+27.1
6.7
+42.1
+27.7
+24.5
+23.3
-6.3
-26.5
-6.7
-20.9
+2.5
3.7
+19.8
-19.2
+13.7
+10.6
-6.9
+4.4
-9.0
+40.6
-3.1
-9.4
+5.6
+1.1
+39.2
-4.2
3.6
+65.6
+14.2
+2.3
+13.5
((&%$#741| -9.2
*^%@987653| -62.5
((*@63| -4.5
(*^$#@!8765321| -30.9
(*&^@873| -24.5
((*%@!521| -2.4
((*^#@| 0.0
(%$#9841| -49.2
(@!98621| -52.4
*&%987532| -58.8
((&$@7543| -11.5
998632| -84.8
((*^#@|987652 +62.3
(*%$#@94| -33.0
(*&^@873| -24.5
((&%#@!74321| -9.9
*&%$#!9874| -57.1
((%$@!8421| -17.4
((*^#@|8543 +19.6
((*^#@|7521 +10.4
((*^#@|532 2.8
((*^#@|5432 +3.8
((*^#@|7643 +13.6
((#861| -20.2
((*^#@|863 +20.6
Local Stocks
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 114.64
AA
6.14
AIT
35.55
AWI 35.92
SAN
3.69
BONT 1.10
CNHI 5.67
CPB 44.45
CRS 23.99
CLC 44.13
COST 117.03
DGICA 12.69
RRD 12.07
EXC 25.09
FTR
3.81
FULT 11.48
GSK 37.24
HOG 36.36
HSIC 126.17
HSY 82.41
IP
32.50
JNJ 81.79
K
61.13
KR
27.32
LLL 101.11
MTB 100.08
MRK 45.69
0
6
5
5
3
4
3
4
0
4
4
7
7
6
0
5
7
3
5
0
6
4
0
0
8
6
4
5
38.42
155.79
14.29
45.56
60.70
7.79
7.67
9.72
63.94
45.42
66.99
169.73
15.99
20.22
34.98
7.61
14.59
49.08
63.03
170.24
102.99
56.49
107.48
76.24
42.75
131.36
134.00
61.70
38.36
136.47
9.52
40.11
42.12
4.93
2.59
6.97
63.99
32.25
51.70
152.71
14.76
16.19
34.73
5.38
13.50
40.35
48.93
169.75
92.72
39.90
107.71
75.53
38.64
119.09
111.32
53.20
0.43
1.68
-0.05
0.35
-0.94
0.43
0.01
0.02
2.04
0.54
0.07
1.81
-0.06
0.32
1.37
-0.08
-0.03
1.21
2.17
1.78
-0.46
1.17
1.21
0.30
1.80
-0.41
1.09
1.58
1.1
1.2
-0.5
0.9
-2.2
9.6
0.4
0.3
3.3
1.7
0.1
1.2
-0.4
2.0
4.1
-1.5
-0.2
3.1
4.6
1.1
-0.5
3.0
1.1
0.4
4.9
-0.3
1.0
3.1
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
t
t
s
t
s
s
s
t
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
t
t
t
s
11.5 +23.4
4.9 7.7
-3.5 29.1
-0.9 3.9
-7.9 25.0
1.2 22.3
23.3 41.6
1.9 5.2
21.8 +46.0
6.5 13.8
4.1 18.1
-5.4 +4.7
4.8 +3.2
10.0 11.1
25.1 +13.0
15.2 21.2
3.8 +13.2
0.0 5.1
7.8 19.2
7.3 +24.1
3.9 4.2
5.8 23.1
4.9 +12.6
4.5 +25.1
-7.6 +4.5
-0.4 2.7
-8.1 6.2
0.7 1.1
1
3
4
2
4
4
4
3
1
3
4
2
2
3
1
4
1
3
4
1
3
4
1
1
2
2
3
2
10.8
11.6
-8.8
7.4
2.1
-6.0
-25.9
...
15.4
-2.0
5.6
18.7
6.5
2.7
-0.2
-0.7
6.4
6.5
5.5
20.3
13.7
12.7
15.2
9.0
27.5
11.3
7.4
13.6
17
21
16
15
44
...
...
87
28
26
19
29
15
17
13
...
16
...
14
30
22
15
18
28
19
17
15
25
5.0
2.4
1.3
2.8
...
7.1
7.7
2.0
2.0
2.2
1.7
1.0
3.7
6.4
3.6
7.8
2.7
6.1
2.5
...
2.5
4.4
2.8
2.6
1.1
2.2
2.5
3.5
Patterson Cos
52-WK RANGE
FRIDAY $CHG %CHG
%CHG %RTN RANK %RTN
TICKER LOW
HIGH CLOSE 1WK 1WK 1MO 1QTR YTD 1YR 1YR 5YRS* PE Yld
NPBC 10.24
12.80
100.52
NWBI 11.55
PPL
PNC
77.67
29.18
PDCO 38.51
14.11
37.23
53.07
11.70
-0.04
-0.3
s t -5.1 +14.0
1 12.0
86.40
-0.90
-1.0
s t -9.3 5.2
13.28
36.56
44.34
0.14
1.27
-0.32
1.1
3.6
-0.1
Pfizer Inc
PFE
36.46
30.50
0.79
2.7
RAD
28.25
5.88
11.99
9.47
11.22
7.97
0.01
-0.06
-0.7
s t -9.0 7.5
s t -5.5 5.9
1 -22.1
...
46.23
16.76
-1.29
-7.1
s t -18.5 55.0
Supervalu Inc
SVU
12.00
5.62
0.46
8.9
s t -17.1 48.4
TE Connectivity Ltd
Tanger Factory
Tegna Inc
TEL
SKT
3.94
51.70
29.46
TGNA 21.11
5.01
73.73
36.55
33.40
5.00
59.72
34.74
24.71
0.45
-0.34
0.77
-0.16
-0.6
2.3
s t -7.6 14.1
s s
6.2
+3.1
-0.6
s t -3.2 9.0
0.9
s s 14.8 +25.1
Tyson Foods
TSN
37.10
66.82
67.69
Univrsl Corp
UVV
44.48
58.89
55.50
0.01
0.0
Verizon Comm
VZ
38.06
52.96
52.53
0.72
1.4
Weis Mkts
WMK 37.14
51.91
42.48
0.72
1.7
s s -4.1 11.0
4.3
s s 27.6 14.0
UGI Corp
Urban Outfitters
WalMart Strs
Windstream Hldgs
UGI
31.51
URBN 19.26
WMT 56.30
39.26
47.25
83.90
38.74
33.11
67.17
2.73
9.9
0.33
4.2
5.45 19.7
0.89
1.3
WFC 44.50
58.77
50.07
-0.04
-0.1
YRCW 6.25
21.37
9.47
0.19
2.0
WIN
4.42
13.24
8.22
0.34
s s 26.9 +81.6
s s -1.0 +27.0
5 -21.9
5
-4.3
8.8
3 13.3
3 17.7
1 28.8
1 15.0
9.5
...
...
18 3.9
s s 40.6 +42.9
2.17
...
36
SHLD 14.56
SKY
3 12.7
19 2.0
1 45.8
...
8.3
+9.0
s s
1.7
12 2.4
3 12.2
1 -20.2
-0.01
20 4.2
16 4.1
s s 68.5 +53.5
14.58
15 3.8
1 13.4
0.1
20.23
8.6
6.00
7.1 +30.7
7.0
s s -1.9 5.7
PENN 12.51
JCP
s s
-0.7
s t -0.8 +18.8
...
...
...
...
...
10 2.2
16 3.3
11 2.3
20 0.9
21 2.3
17 3.8
s s 45.5 25.3
0.6
18
9.6 14.3
7.7
15 3.0
s s 13.7 +14.9
s s
s t -7.9 4.0
s t -33.2 46.9
1 11.9
4.5
2 11.5
3 10.7
5 -57.9
...
12 4.3
20 2.8
12 3.0
33 7.3
...
...
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
A21
Nation&World
FOR THE LATEST UPDATES, GO TO LANCASTERONLINE.COM
In brief
NEW YORK
3 presumed dead in
Hudson River crash
A tugboat crashed into a barge on the
Hudson River north of New York City
early Saturday, killing one crew member and leaving two missing and presumed dead.
The 90-foot tugboat named Specialist hit a barge around 5:20 a.m. near
where the new Tappan Zee Bridge is
being built, police said. The tugboat
sank, spilling about 5,000 gallons of
fuel into the water, authorities said.
Westchester County Executive Robert Astorino identified the dead crewman as Paul Amon, 62, of Bayville, New
Jersey.
MILAN
Avalanche kills 6
in Italian Alps
An avalanche struck high in the Italian Alps on Saturday, killing six backcountry skiers and injuring another
as a swath of snow hundreds of yards
wide cascaded down.
Helicopters ferried both survivors
and the bodies back to the valley floor
from the avalanche site, located not far
below Monte Nevosos 11,017-foot peak.
The mountain is close to the Austrian
border in Italys Alto Adige region.
CAIRO
Unrest at prison
injures 2 officials
Inmates set a fire, seized control of a
dormitory and stabbed two corrections
officials, including the warden, during
a violent uprising at a prison in southern Alabama, authorities said Saturday. The riot prompted the governor
to repeat an earlier call for measures to
modernize the states prisons to make
them safer and easier to control.
The William C. Holman Correctional
Facility, which serves as the states only
execution facility, was on lockdown
hours after a riot erupted late Friday.
Alabama Department of Corrections
spokesman Bob Horton said the injuries were not life-threatening. About
100 inmates were involved, Horton said.
CHICAGO
Window washers
rescued at high-rise
Two window washers were rescued after they were left dangling briefly outside
a high-rise building in downtown Chicago when part of the scaffolding broke.
Chicago Fire Battalion Chief Patrick
Mahoney told WMAQ-TV that firefighters were called to the scene Saturday when one side of the scaffolding
dropped. He said the two men were
in harnesses dangling from about the
15th floor. Mahoney said the scaffolding company was trying to determine
what went wrong.
ST. PAUL, MINN.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Um Zainab, a victim exposed to a chemical attack, receives treatment Friday at a hospital in Taza, northern Iraq.
ISLAMIC STATE
The perpetrators
will pay dearly.
said.
By the next morning, Fatima had
died, Wais said.
The hundreds of wounded are
suffering from infected burns, suffocation and dehydration, said
Helmi Hamdi, a nurse at the Taza
hospital. He said eight people were
transferred to Baghdad for treatment.
There is fear and panic among
the women and children, said Adel
Hussein, a local official in Taza.
Theyre calling for the central government to save them. Hussein
said a German and an American
forensics team arrived in the area
to test for the presence of chemical
agents.
U.S. and Iraqi officials said U.S.
special forces captured the head of
the IS unit trying to develop chemical weapons in a raid last month in
northern Iraq.
The U.S.-led coalition said the
chemicals IS has so far used include chlorine and a low-grade
SYRIA
Resumption of peace talks bring hope, but its an extremely fragile moment
ZEINA KARAM
ASSOCIATED PRESS
again at any point. Bitter divisions over the future of President Bashar
Assad threaten to scuttle
any serious negotiations
for a political transition
in the immediate future.
Talk is on the rise that a
partition is the best case
scenario.
Still, there are numerous indications that the
war has reached a point
when guns may start giving way to politics.
We are finishing phase
one and moving on to
phase two, Barabandi
said.
At the heart of the current diplomacy: an internationally shared desire
to put an end to a war that
has unleashed Islamic extremists across the globe,
destabilized neighboring
countries and inundated
Europe with refugees.
International
opin-
STATE
PHILLY AIRPORT
REPLACEMENT DOORS
393-0859
HIGHWAY FUNDING
HARRISBURG Call
it Pennsylvanias highway robbery.
A pot of money from
a huge increase in fuel
taxes and motorist fees
under a 2013 law designed to shore up Pennsylvanias highways and
bridges is not so huge
anymore, as a growing
amount is getting diverted to the Pennsylvania
State Police.
Now, alarmed transportation
planners,
construction firms and
engineers are looking at
12-year Department of
Transportation projections that show a fattening state police budget
consuming more dollars
for construction projects. Lawmakers are taking notice, too.
I think people are
shocked to find that
what they voted for is going to the Pennsylvania
State Police, Transportation Secretary Leslie
Richards said.
A consensus is building
in the Capitol to clamp
down on the decades-old
use of highway dollars
for the state police. But a
battle is shaping up over
how to fill the breach or
whether the money can
be found in the states
ASSOCIATED PRESS
A janitor was
the only airport
employee seen
on surveillance
video entering
the restroom
while the
bag was
unattended.
www.georgejgrove.com
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
in 1,700 of Pennsylvanias
2,561 municipalities get
either full-time or part-time
police services from the
state police for free.
n Here is a rundown of the
percentage of residents in
each county who receive
the service:
n WYOMING: 100 percent
n FULTON: 100 percent
n POTTER: 100 percent
n SUSQUEHANNA: 100
percent
n JUNIATA: 100 percent
n SULLIVAN: 100 percent
n CAMERON: 100 percent
n FOREST: 100 percent
n BEDFORD: 94 percent
n WAYNE: 92 percent
n ARMSTRONG: 91
percent
n PIKE: 90 percent
n PERRY: 90 percent
n CLARION: 88 percent
n HUNTINGDON: 85
percent
n TIOGA: 84 percent
n INDIANA: 80 percent
n FAYETTE: 80 percent
deficit-ridden operating
account.
First under the microscope is one particular
part of the state police
budget thats fueling renewed unrest in the Legislature: police service
thats free to local taxpayers in municipalities that
have shut down their police departments.
Besides the question
of fairness, some believe
the service amounts to
an unconstitutional use
of highway dollars.
Under the state constitution, motorist fees and
n SNYDER: 78 percent
n WARREN: 77 percent
n SOMERSET: 76 percent
n CLINTON: 75 percent
n CRAWFORD: 75 percent
n JEFFERSON: 74 percent
n GREENE: 72 percent
n MONTOUR: 71 percent
n VENANGO: 69 percent
n BRADFORD: 68 percent
n FRANKLIN: 66 percent
n UNION: 65 percent
n ADAMS: 64 percent
n SCHUYLKILL: 61 percent
n CLEARFIELD: 60
percent
n MCKEAN: 59 percent
n BUTLER: 50 percent
n MONROE: 48 percent
n LYCOMING: 6 percent
n CAMBRIA: 45 percent
n LAWRENCE: 43 percent
n CENTRE: 42 percent
n WESTMORELAND: 41
percent
n ALLEGHENY: 0.20
CoolSculpting
FREE
www.pitapitusa.com
L ancashire Terrace
percent
n WASHINGTON: 35
percent
n ERIE: 35 percent
n MERCER: 35 percent
n MIFFLIN: 34 percent
n CHESTER: 31 percent
n COLUMBIA: 30 percent
n CUMBERLAND: 27
percent
n BERKS: 25 percent
n DAUPHIN: 24 percent
n LEHIGH: 23 percent
n LUZERNE: 21 percent
n LANCASTER: 16 percent
n LACKAWANNA: 16
percent
n NORTHAMPTON: 15
percent
n YORK: 15 percent
n BEAVER: 10 percent
n DELAWARE: 9 percent
n MONTGOMERY: 8
percent
n BUCKS: 7 percent
n CARBON: 40 percent
n BLAIR: 40 percent
n ELK: 39 percent
n LEBANON: 38 percent
n NORTHUMBERLAND: 38
2015
percent
n PHILADELPHIA: 0
percent
0% FINANCING
Pets Welcome!
Entry Fees begin at $37,970
Inquire about our LEASE PROGRAM
Immediate 1 and 2 Bedroom
Cottages Available
5REHUW+
5$1&.
,QF
3OXPELQJ+HDWLQJ
$LU&RQGLWLRQLQJ
DELUXE
FLOOR PLANS!
Now Ready to Show!
&
/LQ*RRG 6RQ
3OXPELQJ+HDWLQJ
$LU&RQGLWLRQLQJ
FAIR HOUSING
PA#001962
OBITS
A28 SUNDAY,
LNP
| LANCASTER,
PA MARCH 13, 2016
Obituaries
Dale Thomas Landis
Barbara E.
Chilletti
Barbara E. Chilletti,
68, of New Providence,
entered
into rest at
her home
on Frida y,
March 11,
2016, surrounded
by her family. Born
in Binghamton, NY
Y,
she w as the daughter of the late Earl and
Grace (Bendler) Bradyy.
She and her husband,
Joseph A. Chilletti had
celebrated 48 years of
marriage in April.
Barbara retired from
Lancas ter General
Hospital. She was a
member of St. Catherine
of Siena Catholic
Ch urc h an d enj oy ed
sewing and gardening.
Besides her hus band she is survived by
daughters: Christiana
o f Ne w P r o vi d e nc e ,
Antoinette, wife of Jon
Mills of FL, and Theresa,
ance of Fred Yo
oung of
l
ih
Alice Mary
Kilgore
Manley
Terence T.
Longmore
Methodist Church.
S h e i s s u r v i v e d by
a Daughter: Eileen L.
Sheaffer of Washington
a
Boro, PA and a Son:
Thomas C. husband of
Carol Manley of Yo
ork,
PA. Also surviving is
a Grandson: Edward
S h e a f fe
f r of Florida,
Granddaughter:
J ennifer Benna wit
of Washington Boro,
P A and a Great Granddaughter:
Emers yn Sheaffer .
She was preceded in
death by a Son-in-Law:
Edward L. Sheaffer and
Sisters: Laura Kauffman
and Dorothy Kilgore.
Funeral Services for
Alice will be held from
the Clyde W. Kraft
Funeral Home, Inc., 519
Walnut
a
St., Columbia,
PA on Tuesday, March
15, 2016 at 11:00AM
( VIEWING: 10:00AM11:00AM) with Rev.
James L. Garner off iciating. Interment
will fo
ollow in Fairview
Cemetery Wrrightsville,
PA.
Terence T. Longmore
of Lancaster, PA, formerly of Cherry Hill,
NJ, died March 10, 2016.
Age 60. Loving father
of T.J. Longmore (ance Alyson Serafin) of
Lancaster, PA and Darra
Longmore of Lancaster,
PA. Devoted grandfather of Austin, Connor
and Isabella. Beloved
son of Bette FavaLongmore of Cherry
Hill, NJ and F. Ralph
Longmore (Shirley) of
Maple Shade, NJ. Dear
brother of Richard
of Haddonfield, NJ;
Gregory G. (Patricia L.
Sullivan) of Marlton,
NJ; Raymond (Carmela)
of Mt. Laurel, NJ; Katie
e|}[
e@ nn
Qne n
b
@
Q@[
n n
[|
e | @ n nb Q
| @ n Qn@ @ n@
M n @
LIMITED 4X4
Lebanon
1510 Cornwall Road
717.454.0061
M 3
Transform
your body in time
for summer.
WWW.LANCASTERNEUROSCIENCE.COM
a non-invasive fat
reduction technology.
$100 OFF
a CoolSculpting
treatment.
Exp. 4/30/2016
Shamrock n
Rolls
Lenten Specials
& Delicious Dealss
Parkesburg
950 Octorara Trail
610.857.6630
#8989
Lancaster
1671 Crooked Oak Drive
717.569.5331
HOME OF THE
LOW LEASE
PAYMENT!
NEW 2015 JEEP
GRAND CHEROKEE
REGISTER ONLINE AT
www.lancasterneuroscience.com/events
OTHER OBITUARIES
ON PAGE A18
60
YEARS
SAME
LOCATION
Lease Disclaimer:
Lease with
a $1,995
cash or trade
downpayment
and 10,000
alloweable miles
per year. Tax
and tag fees
extra with 1st
payment due at
signing. Expires
3/21/2016.
OBITS
A24 SUNDAY,
A24 SUNDAY,
MARCH 13,MARCH
2016 13, 2016
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Obituaries
Deaths Reported
Appel, Linda Seifert
Schladermundt
65, wife of Frank Appel,
of Kailua, Hawaii. February 11, 2014.
Bair, Jean E. (Texter) *
Of Stevens. March 12,
2016. Good Funeral
Home & Cremation
Centre, 336-4909
Broome, Jack G.
84, of Millersville.
March 10, 2016. Andrew
T. Scheid Funeral
Home, 872-2266
Chilletti, Barbara E.
68, wife of Joseph A.
Chilletti, of New Providence. March 11, 2016.
Dewald Funeral & Cremation Services, Inc.,
786-3530
Deckert, Robert M.
66, of East Petersburg.
March 11, 2016. Sheetz
Funeral Home, Inc.,
653-5441
Diehm, Yvonne M.
78, wife of Glen L.
Diehm, of Lititz. March
9, 2016. Charles F. Snyder, Jr. Funeral Home &
Crematory, 560-5100
Eberly, Russell K.
89, of Lancaster. March
10, 2016. DeBord Snyder Funeral Home &
Crematory, Inc., 3944097
Edkin,
Thomas
Joseph
67, husband of Lynn
Fisher
Edkin,
of
Lebanon. March 10,
2016. Kreamer Funeral
Home & Crematory,
Inc., 867-4811
Englert, Dana M.
86, of Columbia. March
11, 2016. Clyde W. Kraft
Funeral Home, Inc.,
684-2370
Frey, H. Wayne
77, husband of Joyce
(Graul) Frey, of Lancaster. March 10, 2016.
Charles F. Snyder, Jr.
Funeral Home & Crematory, 560-5100
Fry, Thomas E.
65, husband of Cleta
Geltz, of Bradenton, FL.
January 4, 2016.
Gamble, Matthew T. *
42, of Mount Joy.
March 10, 2016. Sheetz
Funeral Home, Inc.,
653-5441
Good, Ruth A. (Witmer)
97, of Willow Street.
February 8, 2016. Good
Funeral Home & Cremation Centre, 3364909
Grant, Caroline Ida
Smith
90, wife of Richard E.
Grant, of Homestead
Village. March 5, 2016.
DeBord Snyder Funeral
Home & Crematory,
Inc., 394-4097
Habecker,
Janet
Hoover
68, wife of Nelson
Habecker, of Lancaster.
March 9, 2016.
Hanlon, John H.
63, husband of Susan
Hanlon, of Effort.
March 9, 2016. Matinchek & Daughter
Funeral Home, 9447015
Hawthorne, Grace L.
(Price)
85, wife of Arthur
Hawthorne, Jr., of
Smoketown. March 8,
2016. Charles F. Snyder,
Jr. Funeral Home &
Crematory, 560-5100
Benjamin
Frank F.
Herrr, Jr.
Benjamin Frank F.
Herrr, Jr., 71, of Ephrata,
p a s s e d
away o n
T h u r s d a y,
M a r c h
10, 20 16 ,
at Maple
Fa r m s, a f ter battling cancer for
21 months.
H e w as born in
Coatesville to the late
Benjamin and Virginia
(Townsley) Herr and
was the husband of
Virginia Ginny L.
(M ontg omery) H err;
they were married for
51 years.
He is a graduate of
Avondale High School,
attended James Street
M ennonite Church,
en
njo
j yed g oing to the
mountains for hunting
and he liked deep sea
fishing.
i
Frank worked
for New H olland
Machine Company for
33 years, Rohrers Seed
and Herrs Chips.
In addition to his
wife, Frank is survived
by 4 children, Charlotte,
wife of Glenn Dussinger
of New Holland, Kim
H err of Lancas ter,
She rry Sh ow alte r of
Ephrata, Douglas, husband of Shannon Herr
of Adamstown; 2 brothers, James E., husband
of Helen Herr of Bird
In Hand, Robert A.,
husband of Becky Herr,
Sr. of New Holland; 6
grandchildren, Ryan,
Codyy, Heather, Amber,
Lukas and Emerson.
A visitation will be
held on Saturday, March
26, 2016, from 10 to 11
a.m. at the James Street
Mennonite Church, 323
W. James St., Lancaster,
followed by a memorial
service at 11 a.m., with
Pastor Stan Shantz off-ciating. Interment will
be private at the convenience of the familyy.
Arrang ements b y
Stradling
F uneral
Homes, Inc., Akron/
Ephrata. Online condolences can be given at
stradlingfuneralhome.
com.
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.
* No Obituary appears
Services Today
Johnson, Kirt R.
Colemanville United
Methodist Church, 210
Colemanville Church
Road, Conestoga, 3 PM.
Reynolds Funeral and
Cremation Services,
Inc.
Marandola, Basil J.
Intercourse United
Methodist Church, 39
Queen Road, Intercourse, 3:30 PM. The
Groffs Family Funeral
& Cremation Services,
Inc.
Lau, Sang
Charles F. Snyder, Jr.
Funeral Home & Crematory, 3110 Lititz Pike,
Lititz, 12 PM. SpachtSnyder Family Funeral
Home & Crematory
Wolfer, Pauline E.
Lutheran Church of the
Good Shepherd, 750
Greenfield Rd, Lancaster, 3 PM. Charles F. Snyder Jr. Funeral Home &
Crematory
Dana M.
Englert
Dana M. Englert,
86, of Columbia, died
Friday,
March 11,
2016
at
St. Annes
Retirement
Community after
a brieff illness. She was
married 56 years to the
late William F. Englert,
Sr. who preceded her
in death in 2007
7. A lifelong Columbia resident,
she was the daughter of
the late William A. and
Margaret Weelsh Mann.
A graduate of
Columbia High School,
Class of 1947, she
worked for many years
as a licensed practical nurse at the fo
ormer
Columbia H ospital
and later at Lancaster
General Hospital and
was a caregiver to many.
She was a also a partner with her husband
Bill, operating the B &
D Grocery Store on N.
Seventh St. in Columbia
for many years. Dana
enjoyed entertaining
family and friends at her
family pool, traveling
and spending time with
her family and grandchildren, especially during the holidays.
The family would
like to express their appreciation to the staff at
Addendum
Service
Scheduled
Thomas E. Fry
A funeral service
for Thomas E. Fry will
be held at 10 AM on
Saturday, March 19,
2016, at Holy Trinity
Church, 409 Cherry
Street, Columbia, PA
17512.
Browse or leave a
condolence from your
smart phone at
LancasterOnline.com/
Obituaries
www
w..goodfuneral.com
The advertising department
publishes obituaries provided
by funeral homes or crematoria,
based on information provided
to them by families. It does not
accept obituaries from individuals. Obituaries and related
materials, submitted to LNP
Media Group, Inc. may be edited
for style, policy or legal reasons, and they become the property of LNP Media Group, Inc.
More than a
funeral service,
its about
sharing a life.
Stoughton,
Mark
Howard Sr.
60, husband of Debra
(Gilgore) Stoughton, of
Lancaster. March 10,
2016. Charles F. Snyder,
Jr. Funeral Home &
Crematory, 560-5100
Wedel, Jean Martin
88, of Lancaster. February 19, 2016. DeBord
Snyder Funeral Home
& Crematory, Inc., 3944097
Ruth Anna
Good
OTHER OBITUARIES
ON PAGES A25, A26,
A27, A23 & A18
Mark C. DeBord
TM
CHOICE
Chip & Chad Snyder
Lititz Pike
Downtown Lancaster
414 East King St.| 717.393.9661
Charles F. (Chip) Snyder, Jr.
Funeral Director/Supervisor
Funeral Director/Supervisor
Millersville
Spacht-Snyder Lititz
Funeral Director/Supervisor
Supervisor/Pre-Planning Specialist
Mark D. Burkholder
www.SnyderFuneralHome.com
OBITS
A25 SUNDAY,
LNP
| LANCASTER,
PA MARCH 13, 2016
Alice Larson
Schroeder
Alice
Larson
Schroederr, 84, a resident
of Brethren
Village, died
Weednesday
evening,
March 9,
2016
at
Hospice
and Community Care,
Mt. Joy.
At the time of her
death Alice w as a
member of Highland
Presbyterian Church.
She was preceded in
death by her husband
of 62 years, the Rev.
Charles A. Schroeder. As
the wife of a pastor she
was fully engaged in the
work of the churches
her husband served.
She was trained in
bookkeeping and accounting and worked
for Simon Lever for a
short time before her
retirement. She worked
for Red Rose Transit
Authority for 19 years
and began her career
at Alden Lumber Mill,
Alden, NY
Y.
She
attended
Maryville Colleg e;
Maryville, TN. Born in
Athens, TN, she was
the daughter of the late
Bertram M. and Lucille
Johnson Larson. She
was the last sibling of a
family of ve children.
All have preceded her in
death.
Surviving her are a
son, Timothy C., married to Linda Ruoss
Schroeder of Manheim;
a daughter, Linda K.,
married to Russell A.
Payne of Lititz; two
grandchildren, Matthew
R., married to Lindsey
Rossman Snavely and
Jayme Snavely; and two
great-grandchildren,
McKenna and Emerson
Snavely. She was predeceased by her siblings: Margaret Angel,
Frances Ab
bel, Bertram
M. Larson, and Rev.
Robert A. Larson.
Relatives and friends
are respectfully invited
to attend a Memorial
Service in the Chapel of
Brethren Village, 3001
Lititz Pike, Lancaster,
PA on Saturday, March
19, 2016 at 11:00 a.m.
with Chaplain Mark
Tedford off iciating.
Fr i e n ds m a y c a l l a t
chapel on the same
date from 10:00 a.m.
until the time of service. Interment in the
Me m o r i a l G a r d e n s o f
Highland Presbyterian
Church will take place
at the convenience of
the familyy.
In lieu of flowers,
contributions in Alices
memory would be appreciated by Hospice
and Community Care,
685 Good Drive, PO
Box 4125, Lancaster, PA
17604-4125.
To send an on-line
condolence, please visit:
DeBordSnyder.com
William B.
Mellingger
e
William B. Mellinger,
75, of Willow Street,
died unexp e c t e d l y,
T h u r s d a y,
March 10,
2016
at
Lancaster
General
Hospital.
He was married 4
years to Evelyn Keeport
Bomberg er Melling er.
His fiirst wife, Rhoda
Wiker Melling er died
in 2008. Born in Willow
Street, he was the son
of the late C. Mervin
and Fannie Burkhart
Mellinger.
Willie was a co-owner of B. G. Melling er
and Sons, Inc. of Willow
Street. He was a graduate of Lampe ter Strasburg High School
and a member of the
Refton Bre thren-InChrist Church. Willie
lived a life which exempliff iied Christ-lik e
humility, g entleness,
generosityy, and compassion. He kept himself
very active with his love
off family, friends, and
the outdoors. He enjoyed gardening, riding
motorcycle and spending time at the family
cabin.
Surviving besides
his wife is a daugh ter, B. Elaine (Dennis)
Brubaker of Manheim; a
son, Donald (Dr. Susan)
Mellinger of Lancaster; a
step-son, Ed Bomberger
of M ountville; and
two s tep-daughters ,
Bonnie (Bill) Weeidman
of Cones toga, and
Deb (Todd) Kemrer
of Conestoga; sev en
grandchildren, Be th
(Doug ) Bollinger, Becky
(Derrick) Sensenig,
Duane (Trac y Hall)
B r u b a k e r,
Ja s o n
Brubaker, and Rachel,
Ryan and J ordan
Mellinger;
three
s tep-grandchildren,
Adrienne, Darren, and
Allison Weidman;
e
ten
great-grandchildren; a
brother, Kenneth (Ella
Mae) Mellinger and a
sisterr, Fran (Dr. Donald)
Kraybill.
A Funeral Service
will be held on Saturday,
March 19, 2016 at 10:00
A.M. at the Refton
Brethren-In-Christ
Church, 110 Church
Road, Refton, with
Pastor Mike Anderson
officiating. Friends may
call at the church on
Friday evening from
6:00 to 8:00 P..M. and
on Saturday from 9:00
A.M. until the time of
the service. Interment
in the New Providence
Mennonite Cemetery.
In lieu of owers, contributions in Willies
memory may be made
to the Refton BrethrenIn-Chris t Missions
Fund, 110 Church Road,
P.O. Box 68, Refton, PA
17568. To send an online condolence, visit
DeBordSnyder.com
Nanc y G. H oop,
D.Ed., 84, passed away
peacefully
at her home
in L iti tz,
on Sunday,
March 6 ,
2016.
Born in
Weestmoreland Countyy,
PA,
A she was the daughter of the late Charles
H. and Elizabeth Sloan
Garlow. Nancy was happily married for 60 years
to E. Paul Hoop, Jr., who
passed away in 2012.
Nanc y
graduat ed in 1952 from the
Pennsylvania Colleg e
for Women (no w
Chatham University)
in
Pittsburgh,
and later earned a
Master s degree from
Millersville University
of Pennsylvania. In
1985 she was awarded a
Doctorate in Education
by t h e U n i ve r s i t y o f
Pennsylvania.
An educator by training and profession,
N a n c y w a s f o r m a ny
years an elementary
school principal and
Director of Elementary
Education for the
L am pe te r - St ra sb u rg
School District. Nancy
was actively involved
in civic and community affairs, especially
with organizations devoted to education. She
served for a number of
years as a member of
the Manheim Township
School Board and was
a member of the Chi
Chapter of Delta Kappa
Gamma and Chapter
K of P.E.O
.
., both organizations focused on
womens education.
She was a member of
the Donegal Chapter
of the Daughters off the
American Revolution.
Nancy was a member
off the congregation of
Highland Presbyterian
Church for nearly 50
years and for some years
served as a member of
the churchs Session.
Nancy is survived by
her daughter, Elizabeth
Hoop Fay, wife of Joseph
B. G. Fay of Malvern, PA
A;
a son, E. Paul Hoop III,
husband of Rita C. Hoop,
of Ashburn, VA
A; and four
grandchildren to whom
she was devoted.
A Memorial Service
will be held at 2:30
P.M.
. on Monday, March
21, 2016 at Highland
Presbyterian Church,
500 East Roseville Road,
Lancaster, with the Rev.
Dr. Ann Osborne officiating.
i
Family and
friends will be received
from 1:30 P.M. until the
time of the service. In
lieu of flowers, contributions may be made
in Nanc y s name to
Highland Presbyterian
Church, 500 E. Roseville
Road, Lancaster, PA
17601. To send an online
condolence, visit
DeBordSnyder.com
717-394-4097
717-394-4097
717-394-4097
Obituaries
Nancy G.
Hoop, D.Ed.
Yvonne M.
Diehm
Yv o n n e
Diehm,
ag e 78, entered into
h e aven o n
Wednesday,
March 9,
2016
at
Magnolias
of
Lancaster. Born
April 30, 1937, she
h was
the daughter of the late
Raymond & Ella Worley
o
and was a 1955 graduate of Manheim Central
High School.
S h e i s s u r v i v e d by
her husband of nearly
60 years, Glen L. Diehm
of Lititz. Yvonnes children are: Lynn Gurliacci
(John) of Sparrowbush,
NY
Y; Beth Fenton (Jim)
of Lancas ter; Glen
Diehm Jr. (Elizabeth) of
Lebanon; James Diehm
(Joan) of Manheim;
and Mark Diehm of St.
Charles, MO. Also surviving are Yvonnes beloved 12 grandchildren,
6 great-grandchildren
and her sister, Veerna
Long (of Manheim). She
was preceded in death
by her sister, Laura
Obetz.
Yvonne truly enjoyed
being a homemaker and
raising her children. She
shared her gifts of creativity (quilting, sewing,
cooking, baking, ceramics, gardening, home dcor) with everyone. She
genuinely cared for and
loved relating to people.
She knit together her
large family and made
holidays and family reunions particularly special. Yvonne & Glen
enjoyed RV traveling,
including many trips to
see Penn State football
games.
The entire Diehm
family wishes to give
heartfelt thanks to the
staff at Magnolias &
Grane Hospice, whose
l ov i n g c a r e s m o ot h e d
her long, challenging
journeyy.
A Celebration of Life
service for Yvonne will
be held on Saturday,
April 2, 2016 at 11:00
AM at Fores t Hills
M ennonite Church,
100 Quarry Road, Leola,
PA 17540. Guests may
greet the family from 10
AM 11 AM. Interment
will be private. In lieu
of owers, please honor
Yvonnes memory with
a gift to the Lancaster
Parkinsons Support
Group, P..O. Box 251,
East Petersburg, PA
17520. To send an online
condolence, please visit
SnydeerrFuneralHo
ome.com
e
| @ n
nb Q |
@ n Qn@
@
n@
M n @
t
PA 17
3225 M
Main
i St
St., CConestoga,
17516 Melanie B. Scheid, Supervisor, Funeral Director 717.872.1779 or 717.393.1776 www.thegundelchapel.com
Haldy/Keener
Memorials
Eitnier
Memorials
a tribute to life
Jean M. Wed
e el
717-394-4097
divisions of
o
OTHER OBITUARIES
ON PAGES A26,
A27, A23 & A18
www.ging richmemorials.com
(717) 299-4007
2733 Columbia Ave. Lancaster
Flexible Employment opportunities available.
www.lancaster-402.comfortkeepers.com
Simple, Dignified
Cremation Services
at a Much Lower Cost
717-CREMATE (273-6283)
LancasterCremations.com
On-Site
Crematory
Professional
Care | Convenient
Location
Owned
On-Site |Crematory
| Affordable
Pre-Payment
Option
ocally
Affordable
Plans | | Fast
Turnaround
Professional
CarePre-Payment
| Fast Turnaround
Convenient
Location
OBITS
A26 SUNDAY,
A26 SUNDAY,
MARCH 13,MARCH
2016 13, 2016
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Obituaries
Elsie A.
Minnich
3.5%
Stop, Dont
Renew that CD!
Earn 3.5% apy
gK
| n |n nn
nnb
nnQn @
[n n n
@ @ n
M n nen
LAW
DUIS
CRIMINAL DEFENSE
specialized DUI trainingg
(717) 872-4605
How
H
ow is D
Dad???
Russell K.
Eberly
717-394-4097
OTHER OBITUARIES
ON PAGES
A27, A23 & A18
Jack G. Broome
Ja c k
G.
Broome, 84,
of Millersville,
formerly of
Ironstone
Ridge Road,
Lancaster,
went to be
with his family
on Thursday,
March 10, 2016
at Hospice &
Community
Care, Mount Joy. He was
the husband of Andrea J.
(Cousin) Broome, who
died in 2005. They were
married fty years at the
time of her death. Jack
met and married his
wife, Andrea in France
during his Military
Assignment in Europe.
Jack retired from
Charles
Poultry
Company, Lancaster.
Born July 27, 1931
in Millersville, he was
the son of the late
John C. and Mildred
B. (Brimmer) Broome.
A Christian, Jack was
a member of St. Paul
Lutheran
Church,
Millersville. He was
a proud U.S. Army
Veteran. Jack enjoyed
hunting and spending time at his mountain home that he built
in Central, Columbia
County, PA. He enjoyed
working in his yard and
was a Mr. Fix-It organized person. Jack was
an avid Philadelphia and
Penn State sports fan.
Surviving are two
daughters, Michelle L.,
married to Raymond K.
Rankin, of Conestoga
and Denise A., married
to Dennis L. Martin, of
Lancaster and one son,
Jacque W. Broome, of
Wrightsville; six grandchildren: Matthew
Rankin, Jacqueline
Flugga,
Danielle
Martin, Becky Broome,
Samantha Broome and
Sarah Broome and three
great-grandchildren:
Gabrielle, Tyler & Cole.
He was also preceded
by a brother, W. Robert
Broome (2014).
The family would like
to express their sincere
appreciation to Hospice
& Community Care for
the love, care and compassion shown to Jack
and the family during
his nal days.
Relatives and friends
are respectfully invited to attend the
Funeral Service to be
held at the Andrew T.
Scheid Funeral Home,
320 Blue Rock Road,
Route 999, Millersville,
PA 17551 on Saturday,
March 19, 2016 at 2PM
Interment will be in the
Millersville Mennonite
Cemetery, Millersville,
PA with Military
Honors. There will be a
viewing at the Andrew
T. Scheid Funeral
Home-Millersville on
Saturday between 1
and 2PM. Kindly omit
flowers. Memorial
Remembrances can
be made in Jacks
memory to Hospice &
Community Care, www.
hospiceandcommunitycare.org.
To submit an on-line
condolence, visit: www.
scheidfuneralhome.com
Exclusive Provider of
Veterans Funeral Care
717-872-2266
Caroline S. Grant
(717) 394-4097
H. Wayne
y Frey
H. Wayne Freyy, 77
7,
of Lancaster, PA passed
away u n expectedly in the
Emerg enc y
Room at
Lancaster
General
Hospital on Thursday,
March 10, 2016. He
was the husband of
Joyce (Graul) Frey to
whom he was married
on November 9, 1963
and would have celebrated their 53rd wedding anniversary this
November.
Born in Manor Twp.,
he was a son of the
l a t e C h a r l e s Ho ove r
and Anna Buckwalter
(H ess) Frey. Wa yne
w as a 1 9 56 g r ad u ate of East Lampeter
High School and was
employed and retired
from Norfolk- Southern
Railroad affte
t r 43 years
as an Operations Safety
Manag er. He was an
a vid train collector
and enjoyed attending
train shows and was a
member of the Train
Collector Association
and the Holy Spirit
Lutheran Church in
Lancaster, PA.
A Wayne
served his country in the
US Army. He was a loving and caring husband
and father who will be
missed by all who knew
him.
In addition to his wife
Joyce, he is survived
by his son David W.
Frey of Lancaster, PA;
four sisters Elizabeth
G. Ament and Miriam
J. Walton bo th of
Landisville, PA, Arlene
Fawber of Lancaster,
PA and Jean M. wife of
Harold L. Krumrine of
Litttlestown, PA
A; one sister-in-law May E. Frey
of Lancaster, PA
A; seven
nephews and nine nieces. Wayne was preceded
in death by two brothers James H. Frey and
Robert T. Freyy, a sister
Pauline E. Hess, and two
nephews.
Memorial services
will be held Thursday,
March 17
7, 2016 at 3pm
from the Charles F.
Sn yder, Jr. Funeral
Ho me & C rem at oryy,
3110 Lititz Pike, Lititz,
PA 17543. Interment
will be held privately.
A visitation will be
held one hour prior to
the service from 2:003:00PM at the funeral
home.
Please omit flowers and consider a contribution to the Train
Collectors Association,
P.O
. . Box 248, Strasburg,
PA 17579-0248.
Share online condolences at
Snyder
erFuneralHo
ome.com
Jay Ra
aymond
y
Snyder
OBITS
A27 SUNDAY,
LNP
| LANCASTER,
PA MARCH 13, 2016
Obituaries
Janet
Habecker,
Hoover
68, of
Lancaster
passed away
at
home
surrounded
by her family on March
9, 2016, after a recent diagnosis of
cancer. She was the
cherished wife of Nelson
Habecker to whom she
was married for 46
years. Born in Lancaster,
she was the much-loved
daughter of Virginia
Sauder Hoover and the
late Rev. Harlan Hoover
and daughter-in-law of
Anna May and the late
Charles Habecker.
She will be dearly
missed by her daughters
and sons-in-law, Heidi
Habecker of Arlington,
Virginia, Melody and her
husband
Patrick
Lehman of Arlington,
Virginia, and Monica
and her husband Ismael
Matus of Washington,
D.C. She was the loving
grandmother of Avery,
Savannah,
and
Catherine Lehman.
Janet is survived by her
brother Carl and his wife
Janet
Hoover
of
Manheim, brother
Clifford and his wife
Jane
Hoover
of
Westport, Maine, brother Nelson Hoover and
his ance Carol Hess of
Lancaster, sister Nancy
and her husband
Richard Bagg of
Augusta, Georgia, brother Jeffrey and his wife
Laura Hoover of
Swisher, Iowa, sister-inlaw Shirley and her husband Gary Collins of
Elizabethtown, and sister-in-law Lois and her
husband Dean Glover of
Lancaster as well as two
nieces and ten nephews.
Barbara Pearman, 84
Ba rb ara
E v el yn
Pearman died peacefull
u y in the
Lancaster
General
Hospital on
January 23,
20 16 . She
was in her
84th year. Her departure
was unexpected, and
p re m at u re fo r t h os e
closest to her.
Her husband, Trevor,
predeceased her in 2007
7.
They met in England
while she was attending
the Queen Elizabeth
School of Nursing and
he,
Birmingham
Univ ersity M edical
School. They shared a
lifetime fiilled with adventures, the most notable brought about by
their decision to emigrate to the United
States, and the subsequent voyag e on the
ocean liner Queen
Elizabe th I from
Southampton, England
to New York
o Harbor in
1967
7.
One
constant
throughout Barbaras
l i f e wa s h e r i m m e n s e
pride in her twins,
Christopher, with whom
she lived in Lancaster,
and Clare (wife of Mark
Grochowski)
of
Wilmington, Delaware.
Not surprisingly
y, that
pride extended to her
belo v ed
grandson,
Graham, a senior at the
University of Tampa. In
addition to her roles as
mother and grandma,
Barbara was sister to
John (Linda) Weller
e
and
J ennifer (Stephen)
Lacey, and A untie
Barbara to Simon,
J onathan, Lis and
Matthew, six grandnephews and one grandniece, all in England.
Ov er the years ,
Barbara v olunteered
with both the Lancaster
General and St. Josephs
H ospital A uxiliaries,
serving as president of
the latter; served as recording secretary and on
the
Legislative
Commit tee of the
Medical Auxiliary; was
secretary of the Advisory
B oa rd to th e St at e
Health Department of
Thomas
Joseph Edkin
Th omas
J o seph
Edkin, 67
7, of Lebanon,
p a s s e d
away s u r rounded by
his lo ving
family on
March 10,
2016 at his
residence. He was the
husband of Lynn Fisher
Edkin, with whom he
spent 42 years in marriage.
Born in Eas ton,
PA on April 24, 1948,
he w as the son of
Margaret Moyer Edkin
of Lebanon and the late
Thomas Henry Edkin.
Thomas was a graduate of Lebanon Catholic
High School and
Franklin and Marshall
College. He was a realtorr/ broker for Thomas
H. Edkin Inc. for over 40
years. Tom was a member of The Assumption
of the Blessed Virgin
Maryy. He enjoyed collecting trains, was a
Yaankees fan, and he was
involved in politics.
In addition to his
wife, he is survived
by his children Mark
Edkin, Sarah and
her husband Chris
Harrison, grandchildren, Tommy, Sophia,
and Angelina, siblings
Dianne Stott (Craig ),
Linda Yabiku (Don),
Barbara Fegan (Bob),
Dave Edkin (Crytsal),
Bill Edkin, and Stephen
Edkin (Clarissa). He was
preceded in death by a
brotherr, Michael Edkin.
A memorial mass will
be held on Thursday,
Ma rch 1 7, 2 0 16 at
12:30PM from the
Assump tion of the
Blessed Virgin Maryy,
2nd North 8th Street,
Lebanon. Burial will be
in Holy Cross Cemeteryy.
There will be a time of
visitation held with the
family from 10:30AM
till 12:30PM.
In lieu of flowers,
contributions can be
made to his church or
Lebanon Catholic High
School in Thomass
Memoryy, 1400 Chestnut
Street, Lebanon, PA
17042. www
w..kreamerfuneralhome.com
Robert M.
Deckert
Robert M. Deckert,
66, of East Petersburg
passed away on March
11, 2016.
Born in
Lancaster, he was the
son of the late Amos
and Esther Koenig
Deckert. He is survived
by three sisters: Marie
(Jay) Suydam with
whom he resided, Faye
(Charles) Bowman,
Lancaster; Trish (John)
Gockley of Lititz, and
three brothers: William
(Sue Marks) Deckert
and James (Linda
Bleacher) Deckert
both of Lancaster and
Larry (Carol Dombach)
Deckert of Akron, and
many loving nieces and
nephews.
Services will be private and held at the convenience of his family.
Memorial contributions
in Bobs memory to
the Humane League of
Lancaster County, 2195
Lincoln Highway East,
Lancaster, PA 17602
would be deeply appreciated. To send an online condolence, please
visit www.sheetzfuneralhome.com
Sheetz
Funeral Home, Inc.
Mount Joy, PA
GOLD/SILVER HEADQUARTERS
BUYERS-SELLERS
SUSQUEHANNA COIN
Willow Valley Square, Lancaster
717-464-4016 www.susquehannacoin.com
Douglas R.
Pietsch
Douglas R. Pietsch,
71, of Mount Joy, died
peacefully
surrounded by his
fam ilyy, on
March 10,
2016, at his
residence.
He was the husband
of Carole (Caldwell)
Pietsch, and would have
celebrated 48 years of
marriage on June 14th.
Born in Lancas ter,
he was the son of the
late Robert and Mary
(Hagen) Pietsch. Doug
had worked for Alcoa
Products of Lancaster
for 40 years before retiring in 2008. Doug
pro udly s erv e d his
country in the U.S.
Marine Corps during
the Vietnam Waar. He
enjoyed woodworking,
shing, riding motorcycles, and networking on
the computer. Doug was
a l s o a n av i d E a g l e s
fan, and enjoyed traveling throughout the U..S.
with his wife to see the
many splendors off this
countryy. But his greatest
joy recently was spending time with his grandchildren.
Surviving in addition
to his wife Carole are ve
children, Weendy Waaite
of Lancaster, Kimberly
wife
of
Stephen
McKain of Mount Joy,
Laurie wife of Michael
Connelly of Lancaster,
Kevin Prescott companion of Jennifer Hargis
of Mount Joy, Douglas
Jr. husband of Jamie
Pietsch of Maytown; six
grandchildren, Jason,
Ryan, Stephanie, Justin,
Allyson, Benjamin; ve
great-grandchildren
and one on the way; two
brothers, Edwin husband of Jan Pietsch of
Lancaster, Robert husband of Janice Pietsch of
Ashburn, VA
A, and three
sisters, Margaret wife
of Jim Supeck of Willow
S t r e e t , Jo y c e F l e m i n g
of Lancas ter, J an
wife of Lou Kauffman
of Strasburg; and a
brother-in-law, Larry
husband of Caroline
Caldwell of Locus t
Grove, VA
A.
Relatives and friends
are respectfully invited
to attend his memorial
service at the Milton
Grove United Methodist
Church, 2192 Cloverleaf
Road, Mount Joy, on
Friday March 18, 2016
at 1:00 pm. There will be
a time of visitation with
the family following the
service in the church fellowship hall. Interment
in Conestoga Memorial
Park, with full military
honors, will be private.
Please omit flowers,
contributions in Doug s
memory may be sent to
Compassionate Care
Hospice, 1513 Cedar
Cliff Dr., Suite 100,
Camp Hill PA 17011. To
send the family on-line
condolences , please
visit:
BuchFuneral.com
John H.
Hanlon
,@[n @
n@
| ne #n
; [@ ne n
@ n@
@ @ k |
|@ [@[a
!,
ne@ b [
@[@nn[
[nnQ@[n@n
OTHER OBITUARIES
ON PAGES A23 & A18
Ruby P.
( Wo
ood) Peters
Rub y P. ( Wood)
Peters, 91 of Ocean Cityy,
MD, and
formerly of
Quarryville,
PA, passed
away peacefully
on
Fe b r u a r y
27
7, 2016 surrounded by
her loving daughters
and sons-in-law.
Ruby was born in
Warrensville, NC on
July 13, 1924 and was
the daughter of the late
Waalter and Ida (Hardy)
Wood. In addition to
her parents, Ruby was
predeceased b y her
siblings, Vernie
e
Wood,
o
G r ac e B a r k e r, H a z el
Fisher, Lois Grayson,
Ray Wo
ood, Ethel Raneyy,
Earl Wood
o
and June
Roland. She is survived
by her brother, Donald
Wo
ood.
She was predeceased
by the love of her life,
her husband of 62 years,
Charles R. Peters who
died in 2009. Ruby is
survived by her daughters , Victoria Bell
(Joseph) of Ocean Cityy,
MD, Pauline Thomas
(David) of Willow
Street, PA and Diane
Cameron (Barry) of
Rising Sun, MD.
Rub y s grandchil dren: Cort Cameron
(La v erne), J ulianne
(Bell)
Bruecks
(Michael), Tina (Neff )
Kreger (Pat), Lori (Neff )
Mat thew s (Darious),
Joseph C. Bell, Shannon
(Cameron) Ballerino
(K eith) and K arl
Schoener (Tiff
ffaany). She
has 13 great-grandchildren and many nieces
and nephews she loved
so much.
The most important
aspect of Ruby s life
was her family whom
she treasured and loved
dearlyy. Throughout her
life she enjoyed being
a homemaker and was
a fabulous cook. She
prepared many meals
for family celebrations.
Ruby also loved going to
Bluegrass Festivals with
her husband, Charlie
and enj oyed pla yin g
Bingo in Oxford, PA.
A
Interment will be
private and at the convenience of the familyy.
,n@ n
@n n @b
Q @n
n
n@n nn
n n |
n
@e
n e
n
n
@n @
M
,nQ
21 W. Main St.
Mount Joy, PA
717-653-4371
Affordable Rates
Top Background Checks
CAREGIVERS with CHARACTER!
Nurse Owned & Operated
717.393.3450
N O E N T R A N C E & N O B U Y- I N F E E S
Millersville | 872-9100 Landisville | 898-4663
OAKLEAFMANOR.COM
Up to
$1,000
Factory
Bonus
Cash
ITS HER
2016 NI E!
SS
TITAN 4X AN
XD CUM 4
M
TURBO D INS
IESEL
72 Month
0%
Financing
Available
24 M O N T H/20,0 0 0 MIL ES F R E E M A IN T EN A N C E
2015 NISSAN 2016 NISSAN 2016 NISSAN 2015 NISSAN 2016 NISSAN
SENTRA
ROGUE
ALTIMA
PATHFINDER MAXIMA SR
0%
FINANCING
AVAILABLE
MODEL
12215
0%
3,500
FINANCING
AVAILABLE
OFF MSRP
$1,000
FACTORY
BONUS CASH
0%
MODEL
22316
FINANCING
AVAILABLE
MODEL
32616
3,000
MODEL
21015
OFF MSRP
LEASE
FOR
LEASE
FOR
LEASE
FOR
36/36 TERM
2016 ROGUE
MODEL 22316
PLUS TAX
36/36 TERM
2016 ALTIMA
MODEL 13616
5,000
OFF MSRP
OFF MSRP
PLUS TAX
OFF MSRP
FINANCING
AVAILABLE
OFF MSRP
2016 NISSAN
FRONTIER
4X4 CREW CAB
0%
MODEL
13616
MODEL
16416
PLUS TAX
36/36 TERM
2015 PATHFINDER
MODEL 21015
2015 NISSAN
TITAN 4X4
CREW CAB
MODEL
36415
6,000
OFF MSRP
ALL NEW
2016 NISSAN
ALTIMA IS
HERE!
LANCASTER NISSAN
SE HA
BLA E
NICK D SPAOL
IA Z
*LIMITED TIME
3,000 CASH
UNDER $13K CARS!
12 Maxima Premium
23K miles, certified $19,666
12 Frontier SV
Certified w/ 36k $22,888
14 Titan Pro-4X
07 Xterra
61K, $14,995
FOR
WE GUARANTEE
$3,000 FOR YOUR
TRADE IN ON
SELECT VEHICLES.
JUNKERS!
12 SENTRA SR - B175
13 ROGUE SV - U15641C
13 ROGUE - U16019A
13 SENTRA SV - U13965A
12 ALTIMA - U15611A
12 Maxima
15 Juke SL AWD
1800 miles, loaded $25,995
12 Murano SL
14 Outlander Sport,
44K, $17,995
69K, $16,995
14 NV200
12 G37x AWD
$25,977
12 Subaru Legacy
1 . 2 5 % f i n a n c i n g a v a i l a b l e a n d a 7 y e a r, 1 0 0 , 0 0 0 m i l e w a r r a n t y o n N i s s a n C e r t i f i e d p u r c h a s e s !
CERTIFIED
PRE-OWNED
Living
n SEND STORY TIPS & INFO TO: JON FERGUSON, 291-8839, JFERGUSON@LNPNEWS.COM
Lancaster
Touch
of green
BENEFIT
A diva returns
Broadway star Patti LuPone, who has performed at the Fulton
and had a role in Witness, will sing at the Ware Center
JANE HOLAHAN
JHOLAHAN@LNPNEWS.COM
Show tunes
Her show will feature a variety of show
tunes from some of Broadways best composers.
Ill be doing Rodgers and Hart, Rodgers and Hammerstein, Bernstein, Jule
Styne and Sondheim a lot of
Steins, she says with a laugh.
LuPone shook up her set list
recently and will be singing
a lot of new songs.
This will be only the
second time Ive performed (these songs)
in front of people,
DIVA, page B14
Evita, 1979
Evita, 2009
HEALTH
Former smoker
Reel, a former smoker who quit in
the 1970s, had been given a clean bill
of health for years, so the diagnosis
HEALTH, page B17
Lancasters Best
Kept Secret
Guss
KEYSTONE
FAMILY RESTAURANT
B2
LOCAL
Restaurant inspections
The Pennsylvania
Department of Agriculture,
866-366-3723, uses a
risk-based inspection
reporting process for
restaurants and other food
handlers.
OMPH Church, 320 Church
Ave., Ephrata, Feb. 27. No
violations.
Dollar General No. 13688,
560 S. 7th St., Akron,
Feb. 26. Light is visible on
bottom of storage room
door. Seal to prevent vector
entrance.
Dollar General Store No.
13335, 1835 N. Reading
Road, Stevens, Feb. 26. No
violations.
Dollar Tree No. 2388, 369
N. Reading Road, Ephrata,
Feb. 26. Light visible under
storage room door. Seal to
prevent vector entrance.
Dirt and debris on left side
of storage room floor.
Kog Hill Winery, 105
Twin Country Road,
Morgantown, Feb. 26. No
violations.
Musser Specialty Foods,
1583 Main St., Gordonville,
Feb. 26. No violations.
Our Lady of Lourdes
Catholic Church, 150 Water
St., New Holland, Feb. 26.
Ice machine not cleaned at
a frequency to prevent the
presence of mold.
Pops Caramel Corn, 955 N.
State St., Ephrata, Feb. 26.
Portions of cement floor
contain cracks and crevices
and is no longer a smooth,
easily cleanable surface. A
tub of lemons and a bag of
ice in the handwash sinks,
indicating uses other than
handwashing.
The Corner Cafe, 955 N.
State St., Ephrata, followup, Feb. 26. No violations.
V & Y Mini Market II, 705
High St., Feb. 26. Grocery
food was beyond the
manufacturers expiration
date; removed from
shelves. The floor in the
food prep area is not
durable, smooth, nonporous, non-absorbent.
China One, 105 Doe Run
Road, Manheim, Feb. 25.
Severely dented, distressed
canned items in rear
storage area and intended
for use or sale in the food
facility. Raw chicken was
stored above other raw
meats and produce in the
walk-in cooler. Ice machine
not cleaned at a frequency
to prevent the presence of
mold.
Dollar General No. 2182,
347 S. Main St., Manheim,
Feb. 25. Some litter on
floor in rear store room.
Funcks Restaurant &
Bar, 365 W. Main St.,
Leola, opening, Feb. 25.
Mechanical warewashing
equipment does not
have a manufacturer
data plate with operation
specifications. Gauges
on low-temperature
dishwashers at bar only
obtained a temperature of
110F, after more than three
attempts and not 120F as
required. There is no plate
covering the bottom of
kitchen steam table.
Ginza Restaurant,
565 Greenfield Road,
Lancaster, follow-up,
Feb. 25. Food employee
wiping nose with his
apron. Employee was
prompted to change
apron and wash hands.
Same employee coming
out of the restroom with
his apron on. Employee
was prompted to change
his apron and wash his
hands.
Graziano-Pizzeria Grill, 107
Doe Run Road, Manheim,
Feb. 25. Some litter and
debris under and around
shelves in rear storage
area. Accumulation of dust
on return air vents of fume
hood.
Hand in Hand Fire Co., 313
Enterprise Road, P.O. Box
250, Bird-in-Hand, Feb. 25.
No violations.
Hempfield High School,
200 Stanley Ave.,
Landisville, Feb. 25. No
violations.
Hoggies, 696 Bridge Valley
Road, Pequea, Feb. 25.
Temperature measuring
device for ensuring proper
temperature of equipment
is not available or readily
accessible in two reach-in
refrigerators. Food slicer
with dried food residue
accumulation; cleaned.
Reach-in refrigerators
have dried food residue
on non-food contact
surfaces. Food facility has
an employee who held a
certified food manager
certificate; however, the
certificate has expired and
is no longer valid.
Long Memorial United
Methodist Church, 2660
Lititz Pike, Feb. 25. Several
small, ant-like insects
on the counter top. An
aerosol can of Solorcaine
stored next to food and
above the dish drainer.
A food processor and
two can openers with
old food residue. An ant
trap canister stored on
the counter near food
equipment.
McDonalds Restaurant No.
33998, 2000 Strickler Road,
Manheim, follow-up, Feb.
25. Food employees in prep
area, not wearing proper
hair restraints, such as nets
or hats that completely
restrain ponytails. Shelving
used as drying rack not
cleaned at a frequency to
preclude accumulation
of dirt and soil. Old food
residue, dishes and utensils
in two of the handwash sink
in the rear area, indicating
uses other than hand
washing. The handwash
sink in the front service
area was blocked by a mop
pail and not accessible at
all times for employee use.
Assorted plastic bins, trays,
racks and utensils, food
contact surface, were on
the drying rack with food
residue and were not clean
to sight and touch. Cleaned
containers are stacked (wet
nesting) not allowing for
proper drying. No signs
or poster posted at all the
handwash sinks remind food
employees to wash their
hands.
The Lucky Dog, 1942
Columbia Ave., follow-up,
Feb. 25. No violations.
Turkey Hill No. 252, 735 S.
Broad St., Lititz, follow-up,
Feb. 25. No violations.
Glouners Coastal Foods,
Central Market, March 4. No
violations.
Groffs Vegetables, Central
Market, March 4. No
violations.
Mean Cup, 398 Harrisburg
Ave., Suite 200, March 4.
No violations.
Rics Bread 2, 45 Market
St., Suite 1005-1006, March
4. No violations.
Square One Coffee, 145
N. Duke St., March 4. No
violations.
Thoms Bread, 1 W. Grant
St., March 4. No violations.
Brothers Pizza, 256 S.
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Ephrata Community
Hospital, 169 Martin
Ave., Ephrata, Feb. 29.
Irreversible registering
temperature indicator
for hot-water sanitizing
AT THESE LOCATIONS
LANCASTER
MARCH 23 AT 6:30 PM
(717) 509-5050
LITITZ
Sensenig Poultry
717.626.2410
READING
LOCAL/ADVICE
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
AMY DICKINSON
ASK AMY
MUSIC
DAVID MCCLISTER
Births
BEREZHNA, Marina Z.,
and Nikolay A. Brosalov,
Lancaster, a daughter,
at Women & Babies
Hospital, Monday.
BURKHOLDER, Dan
M. and Amy (Fox),
Newmanstown, a son,
at WellSpan Ephrata
Community Hospital,
Friday.
COLLURA, Cristina
M., and Jerald Jay
Ecenrode, Lancaster, a
daughter, at Women &
Babies Hospital, Feb. 25.
COLON, Jennifer (Bricker),
and Eduardo Cruz Jr.,
Lititz, a son, at Heart
of Lancaster Regional
Medical Center, Tuesday.
CONSYLMAN, Joshua
C. and Amanda (Hall),
Lancaster, a son, at
Ephrata Community
Hospital, Friday.
GONZALEZ, Mariah,
and Jamaal K. Gillespie,
Lancaster, a son, at Women
& Babies Hospital, Tuesday.
We can coordinate
everything for a complete home look including
rooms, walls and windows
or just give you a few ideas.
ongwood anor
B3
Swags
Cornices
Shutters
Custom
Bedding
Open House
April 10th
1:00 - 3:00 pm
717-354-2233
Hours:
Mon-Fri 10-5 Sat 10-2
1
1064 East Main St. (Rt. 23) Blue Ball, PA
MARCH 17 - APRIL
RIL 30, 2016
510 Centerville Rd
Lancaster, PA 17601
B4
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Entertainment
THE FUTURE OF ART
The Scholastic and Lancaster County Young Artists exhibitions are in full
swing at the Demuth Museum and the
Lancaster Museum of Art this month,
and as always, the works are amazing.
Since a picture can say a thousand
words, we thought wed keep the text
short and display some of the award winners in the shows. (See details about the
shows and other winners on page B5.)
Shown here are two-dimensional
works, clockwise from top: Ryan
OConnell, grade 11, Solanco, Clementines, Pear and Pomegranate (LCYA
Gold and Award of Excellence); Brianna Maule, 12, Solanco, Ephemeral
(LCYA Gold and Award of Excellence);
Cassandra Edwards, 12, Manheim
Central, Why So Blue (LCYA Honorable Mention, Merit Award); Ciana
Malchione, 11, Solanco, Home is a
Place (Scholastic Gold, American Visions nominee and LCYA Gold); Nolan
Wherley, 12, Lancaster Catholic, Untitled (LCYA Silver, Merit Award).
And three-dimensional pieces, from
left, Jiaxin Wu, 11, Lancaster Mennonite, Family (LCYA Honorable Mention, Merit Award, Scholastic Silver);
Tiffany Shrom, 12, Solanco, Ancient
Crackled Geometry (LCYA Gold,
Merit Award, Scholastic Silver) and
Faith Osborne, 12, Lampeter-Strasburg, Bubble Blower with Brass Leaf
(LCYA Gold, Merit Award).
Scholastic
and
ENTERTAINMENT
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
ART
April 3.
The Scholastic pieces
are on exhibit from 10
a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesday
through Saturday and 1
to 4 p.m. Sunday at the
Demuth Museum, 120
E. King St. Lancaster
Museum of Art, 135 N.
Lime St., is showing
the Young Artist works
during the same hours.
THEATER
JHOLAHAN@LNPNEWS.COM
Connect with us
Facebook, Twitter
& Instagram at:
LancasterOnline
outside of Broadway,
Robin says.
According to Thomas
Schumacher, president
and producer of Disney Theatrical Productions, Newsies is the
most-requested Disney
stage title among regional theaters, community theaters and
high schools in North
America.
The classic underdog
story is about the young
boys who sold newspapers on the streets of
New York. Many were
orphans. When newspaper magnate Joseph
Pulitzer raises the rate
the boys have to pay
for the newspapers, the
boys decide to go on
strike.
STEPHEN KOPFINGER
UNSCRIPTED
Cordless Window
Shading Sale!
Vignette Modern
Roman Shades
Do you
understand your
homeowners
insurance?
GET TO KNOW US!
Do you know that you may be able to get these extra cost savings
on your auto insurance?
First Accident Forgiveness Waiver of Deductible
Loan/Lease Gap coverage New Car Discount Contact us today.
www.PhillipsDecorating.com
10 Colonial Ave., Millersville, PA 17551
717-340-3380 / www.martininsurance.com
B5
JHOLAHAN@LNPNEWS.COM
B6
MOVIES
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
REVIEW
Shrewd contrast
This image shows Mary Elizabeth Winstead, left, and John Goodman in a scene from 10 Cloverfield Lane.
Harder battle
Then shes drawn into
a much harder battle,
tightening our anxiety for her like a noose.
of external terrorism
and homemade authoritarianism, has Michelle
been rescued or kidnapped? The question
becomes more combustible scene by scene as
the film works her over,
handling us the same
way. Much of 10 Cloverfield Lane is an ingenious game of Who Do
You Trust? Emmett feels
a bit too nice and needy
with his broken arm in
a sling. Theres a prison
guard air around control freak Howard and
Whats playing
Heres whats playing in Lancaster
County this weekend.
10 Cloverfield Lane (PG-13,
105 minutes, horror) A woman
wakes up after a car accident to
find herself in a basement with a
survivalist and his follower, who
tell her she cant leave because
the world is unihabitable.
45 Years (R, 93 minutes,
drama) A long marriage falls
apart when the body of the
husbands first love is discovered
frozen and preserved in the Swiss
Alps. Charlotte Rampling and Tom
Courtenay star.
Alvin and the Chipmunks: The
Road Chip (G, 86 minutes,
animation) Alvin, Simon and
Theodore come to believe that
Dave is going to propose to his
new girlfriend in Miami and then
dump them. They have three
days to get to him and stop the
proposal, saving themselves not
only from losing Dave but from
gaining a terrible stepbrother.
The Big Short (R, 130 minutes,
comedy) How the financial crisis
was rigged and how several
investors made a killing while
Wall Street was busy killing the
economy.
The Brothers Grimsby (R,
83 minutes, comedy) Nobby
(Sacha Baron Cohen), a sweet
but dimwitted English football
hooligan, reunites with his longlost brother Sebastian (Mark
Strong), a deadly MI6 agent, to
prevent a massive global terror
attack.
Creed (PG-13, 133 minutes,
sports drama) Adonis Johnson
Creed (Michael B. Jordan), the son
of former heavyweight champion
Apollo Creed, wants to follow in
his fathers footsteps and asks
Rocky Balboa (Sylvester Stallone)
for help.
Daddys Home (PG-13, 96
minutes, comedy) Will Ferrell
plays an amiable guy who feels
the pressure when his stepkids
dad, played by Mark Wahlberg,
returns.
Deadpool (R, 108 minutes,
superhero action) The origins
story of Marvel Comics
unconventional anti- hero
Deadpool, who is Special Forces
operative/mercenary Wade
Wilson. Ryan Reynolds stars.
n 10 Cloverfield Lane is
STREAM OR RENT
Owens and the 1936 Olympics,
held in Berlin, where Hitler was
trying to prove to the world the
supremacy of Aryans.
The Revenant (R, 156 minutes,
drama) Leonardo DiCaprio stars
as explorer Hugh Glass, who is
attacked by a bear and left for
dead by members of his team.
Guided by his sheer will, he
survives a brutal winter to find
redemption and seek revenge for
those who betrayed him. Inspired
by a true story.
Ride Along 2 (PG-13, 101
minutes, comedy) Kevin Hart
continues to annoy his future
brother-in-law, Ice Cube, even
though hes now a cop. The two
are sent to Miami to capture a big
drug dealer.
Risen (PG-13, 107 minutes,
Biblical drama) After the death
of Jesus, an agnostic Roman
centurion (Joseph Fiennes)
is ordered by Pontius Pilate
to investigate the rumors of a
risen savior who is being seen
throughout Jerusalem. Through
interacting with Apostles and
other Biblical figures, the centurion
begins to believe.
Room (R, 113 minutes, drama) A
woman (Brie Larson), kidnapped
when she was a teen and forced
to live in a basement, and Jack
(Jacob Tremblay), the son she has
while a hostage, must find a way
to escape and deal with the real
world.
Spotlight (R, 128 minutes,
drama) The investigative team
of the Boston Globe uncovers
the pedophile priest scandal in
the Catholic Church of Boston.
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
B7
FILE PHOTOS
ANSWERS
1. Thomas Jefferson, violin; 2. Condoleezza
Rice, piano; 3. Albert Einstein, piano; 4.
Fred Rogers, trombone; 5. Malik Rose,
tuba; 6. Mahatma Gandhi, concertina; 7.
Samuel L. Jackson, trumpet and French
horn; 8. Gwen Stefani, flute.
Jennifer Kopf
Connect with us
DIET
Facebook, Twitter
& Instagram at:
LancasterOnline
PER ARCH
Lancaster
717.715.1442
York (East)
717.900.5889
York (West)
717.900.5811
B8
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Food
ERIN NEGLEY
THE PRESS TABLE
ERIN NEGLEY
ENEGLEY@LNPNEWS.COM
This loaded baked potato frittata has a St. Patricks Day twist: green bell pepper clovers as a garnish.
You can add some green pepper clovers for some added good luck
plate. In the residual bacon grease, cook
the potatoes over medium heat, stirring
regularly, until tender and nicely golden,
about 10-12 minutes. Add the green onions,
and cook for another minute.
ANN FULTON
Kids are sometimes faulted for playing with their food. Even as an adult,
I cant always resist the temptation. I
havent conducted any scientific studies, but Im pretty sure that some silly
antics enhance the taste of a meal. Im
certain they make mealtime more fun.
Holidays are a perfect time to stir
a whimsical ingredient or two into a
recipe. My initial plan for today was a
straightforward, albeit tasty, recipe for a
loaded baked potato frittata.
With St. Patricks Day approaching,
it seemed fitting enough, given the
historical significance of the potato in
Ireland. But then I recalled a picture I
once saw of clovers fashioned out of bell
peppers, and my enthusiasm for this
recipe skyrocketed.
It didnt matter that green peppers
had no prior place in this frittata. If you
make the recipe in any other month,
you can skip them and instead garnish
this egg-based relative of the classic
stuffed potato with some extra bacon,
snipped chives or a dollop of sour
cream.
For the month of March, however,
I recommend fashioning a few green
pepper clovers. If you dont much care
for green peppers, I give you permission
to pick them off. This garnish is primarily about bringing some laughs and
perhaps a little luck to the dinner
table.
In the spirit of more holiday fun, the
John Wright Restaurant in Wrightsville
is featuring this frittata on its menu
throughout the month. The restaurants
version will be clover-free, but with
good reason.
The restaurant and adjacent gift shop,
n 8 large eggs
n 1/4 cup sour cream
n 1/2 teaspoon each kosher salt and
freshly ground pepper
n 5 pieces bacon
n 12 ounces (about 2 small to medium)
russet potatoes, diced
CONTEST
ENEGLEY@LNPNEWS.COM
FOOD/LIVING
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
B9
ESTHER MARTIN
COUPON CUTTING MOM
Walgreens
When you use your
Pure Silk coupon from
the Feb. 28 LNP RedPlum along with this
$1.39 Pure Silk sale
price, you will be paying
only 89 cents per can.
You will also be able to
score Schick Disposable
Razors for $1.99 per
pack after you use the $4
Schick coupon from todays LNP SmartSource.
Walgreens is also offering Irish Spring Body
Wash for $3.49. When
you use the $1 Irish
Spring coupon from
todays LNP SmartSource and also receive
a $1 Register Reward at
checkout, it will bring
your total to $1.49 for
Rite Aid
This week at Rite Aid,
Complete Solution (for
contact lenses) is on sale
for $7.99, and when you
add in the $3 coupon
from todays RedPlum,
you will be paying $4.99.
This purchase will also
earn you $1 in Plenti
Points, which brings the
final cost per bottle to
only $3.99.
You will be paying just
$1.99 per pack of razors
when you combine
todays SmartSource $4
Schick coupon with this
weeks Schick sale price
of $5.99.
When you use the $1
M&Ms coupon from
todays RedPlum insert,
you will pay $4 for two
bags. This purchase also
will earn you $1 in Plenti
Points, which brings the
final cost to just $1.50
per bag.
CVS
Did you know you can
sometimes make money
shopping? These are
my favorite deals, and
this week at CVS there
is a moneymaking deal.
Colgate Toothpaste is on
sale for $3.39, and when
you use the $1 Colgate
coupon from the March
6 LNP SmartSource,
you will pay $2.39. This
purchase then earns
you $2.50 in Extra Care
Bucks, which makes this
purchase a moneymaker
of 11 cents.
This Extra Care Buck
has a limit of two, so
if you have a second
coupon, I recommend
buying the second pack
and earning an even
great moneymaker.
Irish Spring Body
Wash is on sale at CVS
for $3.99. When you
use the $1 Irish Spring
Target
For turnips:
vinegar
Thursday:
Home &
Garden
MONDAY
10% OFF
YOUR LUNCH
EXPIRES 04-30-2016
#1 Two Large Eggs (Any Style) with Home Fries & Toast........................................$3.60
#2 Western & Cheese Omelette with Home Fries & Toast .....................................$6.10
#3 Ham & Cheese Omelette with Home Fries & Toast...........................................$6.10
#4 Mushroom, Cheese Omelette with Home Fries & Toast...................................$5.90
#5 American Cheese Omelette with Home Fries & Toast ......................................$5.70
#6 Chipped Beef Over Toast Served with Home Fries ............................................$6.10
#7 Short Stack of French Toast, Two Eggs (Any Style) & Two Strips of Bacon........$6.25
#8 Short Stack of Pancakes, Two Eggs (Any Style) & Two Strips of Bacon.............$6.25
#10 Sausage Gravy Over Biscuits with Home Fries ...............................................$6.25
Silver Spring
Family Restaurant
(717) 285.5974
pafamilydining.com
LNP
VALID MON-THURS ONLY. With coupon. Not valid with other offers. Expires 3/31/16
12
Delicio
Flavors uos
Hand-M f
ade
Hand-D
ip
Gourmeped
Ice Crea t
m
We have
Gluten-Free
products!
Spring Hours:
Mon-Sat 8-5pm
CLOSED SUNDAY
Find us on Facebook
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Travel
DESTINATION
A UNIQUE GETAWAY
Panama: From Trump Hotel to canal cruise, the area offers many activities
A bird enjoys
the view from
Trump Hotel
infinity pool in
Panama City.
This is a sculpture in
the lobby of Trump
Hotel and Tower in
Panama City.
AMUSEMENT
ORLANDO SENTINEL
FAMILY GETAWAY
DEWAYNE BEVIL
IF YOU GO
n To start planning a getaway to
TRAVEL
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
B11
EXCHANGE RATES
These foreign exchange selling rates, as of the close of
business March 9, 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. $
0.8089
1.24
0.8062
1.24
1.0769
0.93
0.1574
6.35
Euro (EUR)
1.1776
0.85
1.5242
0.66
0.009419
106.17
0.06086
16.43
0.1255
7.97
0.7209
1.39
1.5242
0.66
Swedish Kroner(SEK)
0.1265
7.91
NATURE
Narrow winding cobblestone streets, beautifully decaying buildings next to new, hip
boutiques, a plethora
of Panama hat stores,
and an unusually large
number of bistros and
bars. The concierge of
the Trump Hotel suggests I dine at Caliope,
a 7-month-old restaurant that shows and
tastes like a veteran.
Superb.
Equally impressive, for
very different reasons, is
the BioMuseo, which sits
on a narrow strip of land
on the Amador Causeway in Panama City. .
And then, of course,
there is the Panama Canal itself. France made
an ill-fated attempt to
carve the canal through
the Isthmus of Panama
in the 1880s. That failed
for a variety of reasons,
Princeton
Continued from B10
case in point.
I first stayed at the
inn in 2011, when Id
gone to Princeton to
follow the Albert Einstein trail. Einstein
stayed at the inn when
he first arrived after
fleeing Germany.
My latest trip to
Princeton was spurred
by a memorable meal at
the inn, Here are some
other ways of seeing
the Princeton area:
Art attack
Grounds for Sculpture, Hamilton: Id
heard about this museum and sculpture park
in Hamilton, about 15
minutes southwest of
Princeton and considered part of the Princeton tourism region.
On the 42-acre site of
the former New Jersey
State Fairgrounds, he
established what is now
a whimsical, inspiring
and educational indoor
and outdoor museum.
More for an art-attack:
Princeton University
Art Museum: Founded
in 1882, with 70,000
works ranging from ancient to contemporary
art. Free. At the campus,
you can call up artmuseum.princeton.edu/
campus-art for a tour of
art around the campus.
Einstein
His house at 112 Mercer St. is a private residence. You can look
from the sidewalk. Its
certainly low key, a twostory white house. But
when you stand in front
of it think about this: It
was home to not one,
but three, Nobel Prize
winners, including the
physicist Frank Wilczek
(2004) and economist
and Tenafly High School
graduate Eric Maskin
of an intricate system of
locks.
Its amazing that the
bow doesnt tilt dangerously, as nearly all the
guests jockey for position along the bow railing
as our 1,000-ton ship is
raised like a childs paper
boat placed in an empty
bathtub, when the taps
are turned on, only in this
case the ship is buoyed by
water gushing from underwater pipes, enabling
it to reach the higher lock
level. (If I were an engineer, or a better communicator, I could explain
more). Suffice it to say, it
is a marvel.
The next morning,
the Star Breeze sails
smoothly onto the Pacific Ocean and all on board
are treated to a celebratory buffet breakfast in
one of several indoor/
outdoor restaurants.
IF YOU GO
n Historical Society of
Tuesday:
Business
bostravlancaster@boscovs.com
boscovstravel.com
*See your Travel Specialist for complete details. Booking window for 30% off: 3/144/3/16. Offer applies to sailings departing on or after 3/16/16 and excludes
China departures. Guests receive 30% off standard cruise fare. All other charges, including but not limited to taxes, fees and port expenses are additional and
apply to all guests. Prices and offers apply to new, individual and named group bookings confirmed at prevailing rates are subject to availability and change
without notice, capacity controlled and may be withdrawn at any time. All bookings made 3/143/19/16 will receive chocolate covered strawberries during
sailing. Booking window for earning on board credits and reduced deposit: 3/143/19/16. On board credit is per stateroom and will be applied at the time of
booking to eligible reservations. Booking window for Specialty Dining offer: 3/143/31/16. Certain restrictions apply. 2016 Royal Caribbean International.
Ships registry: Bahamas. 15048168
More angles on
the past
Princeton Battlefield
State Park: The 200-acre
site of the 1777 battle that
resulted in Washingtons
victory over the British.
You can also visit the
Clarke House Museum,
built in 1772 and used as
a hospital by troops on
both sides of the conflict.
About 12 miles away
is Washington Crossing
State Park, which commemorates the winter
when the general and
his troops crossed the
Delaware River into New
Jersey on Christmas Day
in 1776.
WESTLAKETOURS
www.westlaketours.com
717-626-0272
B12
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
N.Y. Times
best-sellers
Nonfiction paperbacks
1. Alexander Hamilton, by Ron Chernow.
(Penguin) First published in 2004, this biography
of a founding father was turned into the
Broadway hip-hop musical Hamilton.
Books
COMICS
FANTAGRAPHICS BOOKS
This undated handout photo shows a portion of The Complete Peanuts 1999-2000. President Barack Obama wrote the
foreword for the penultimate volume of The Complete Peanuts, a series published over 12 years.
Top of list
Obama was inevitably at the top
of the list, he said. Lets just reach
for the stars. All he can do is say no.
Jake Tapper of CNN, who wrote
the foreword to Vol. 22, put Groth in
contact with the White House and
the request eventually found its way
to the president.
It was a great day when we got
Eisner Awards
Check it out!
Are you planning a spring-break trip? Make the miles fly by with one of these captivating new audiobooks. Find
them on the new-book shelf at the Duke Street Library.
1. House of the Rising Sun, by James
Lee Burke. A Texas Ranger escapes a
violent encounter, taking with him a
stolen artifact that has an Austrian arms
dealer pursuing him and targeting his
estranged son.
2. Did You Ever Have a Family, by Bill
Clegg. June is the only survivor after
a deadly explosion kills her entire
family. Alone and directionless, she
drives across the country, away from
her small Connecticut town. In her
wake, a community emerges, weaving
a beautiful and surprising web of
BOOKS
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Bookends
B13
WRITING
Quindlen tix
are available
Luncheon tickets for Pulitzer Prize-winning
author Anna Quindlen are sold out, but there
are $25 general admission tickets available for
those who want to hear her speak.
Quindlen, whose latest book is Millers Valley, set in northeastern Pennsylvania, will
speak at 1:30 p.m. Thursday, April 14, at Calvary Church, 1051 Landis Valley Road.
She is appearing at the 2016 Lancaster Library Luncheon organized by the Friends of
the Lancaster County Library System and
Aarons Books in Lititz.
The general admission tickets do not include a copy of Millers Valley, but they can
be used as a 10 percent-off coupon toward the
purchase of a hardbound copy of the book.
Tickets can be purchased at Aarons Books,
35 E. Main St., Lititz, or by calling Cathy Doremus at 627-3772..
It also has been announced that author
Tom Bailey, who teaches creative writing at
Susquehanna University in Selingsgrove,
will serve as the interview/moderator for
Quindlens appearance here.
Baileys novel The Grace that Keeps the
World was picked for the One Book, One
Community program in 2008.
Landis Homes
to host signing
Rhoda Stauffer Oberholtzer, author of Designed: A Life of Business Fulfilled with Purpose, will sign copies of her book from 3:30
p.m. to 5:30 p.m. Tuesday at Landis Homes,
1001 E. Oregon Road, Lititz
The book explores her pathways of faith,
work, family, and her roles as wife, mother, entrepreneur and teacher. She grew up in Lancaster County, one of 12 children of the Roy
and Florence Stauffer family, which started
Stauffers of Kissel Hill.
She is married to Jay Oberholtzer, with
whom she raised three sons and now has four
grandchildren and three great-grandchildren.
Oberholtzer spent many years working in
floral design. which led her to use floral designs to illustrate Biblical teachings.
Her books will be available for sale at the
event, which will take place in Landis Homes
Westview Community Room.
For more information, call 569-3271 or visit
landishomes.org.
Lancaster gets
coloring book
Local graphic and interactive designer David Ramsay, Jr. released the 24-page Historic
Downtown Lancaster Coloring Book on March
9.
The self-published coloring book includes
more than 20 illustrations of some of Lancasters most historic landmarks, including Central
Market, old City Hall, the Fulton Opera House,
the original Hotel Brunswick and the Pennsylvania Railroad Station, now the Amtrak station
Ramsay studied graphic and interactive design
at Millersville University, where he now works.
The coloring book is available online at www.
LancasterColoringBook.com.
Author releases
her 4th novel
Lancaster County writer Holly Bish has released her fourth novel, Her Safe Harbor, the
final installment in the authors Crawford Family Series.
The author describes the novel this way: 1893
... Jennifer Crawford, the peacekeeper in a wellto-do Boston family rife with anger, deceit, and
even treachery, was born to solve mathematical
mysteries at a time when women are only beginning to venture from home and into the world
of commerce and politics. Beautiful and shy, she
struggles to find the courage to face a scheming
mother and guide a father denying their familial dysfunction, hesitant to traverse the volatile
economics banks are facing at the turn of the
twentieth century. But danger threatens when
she discovers the crimes of an abusive man determined to make Jennifer his own.
Zebidiah Moran, chief of staff for a new senator in Washington, is determined to uncover
the lovely Jennifers secrets and guard her from
danger. But will his sacrifices be enough to keep
her safe?
For more information, visit www.hollybushbooks.com
Above, author Trudy Nan Boyce, a retired Atlanta Police Department officer, poses for a portrait in Atlanta. Boyce says an untitled novel she is writing was inspired in part by the shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri. Below, author Walter
Mosley poses at Lincoln Center in New York. Mosley says he has been working on a book about a former New York City policeman investigating the shooting of two officers by a black man and learning that the officers had tried to kill the man first.
AP NATIONAL WRITER
Wrongly
convicted
David Baldaccis novel
The Last Mile, scheduled for April, tells of a
black man on death row
and the likelihood he was
wrongly convicted. Mosley, best known for Devil
in the Blue Dress and
other novels featuring
the black detective Easy
Rawlins, says he has been
working on a book about
a former New York City
policeman investigating
the shooting of two officers by a black man and
learning that the officers
had tried to kill the man
first.
In the end he realizes
that he has to come to
some kind of understanding about how the system
works, that his own sense
of law and justice is never
going to work for him,
says Mosley, who is calling the novel Detective,
Heal Thyself.
Louise Pennys The
Great Reckoning, coming out in August, focuses
on a corrupt police academy in Quebec and how
trainees absorb a hostile
mentality toward nonwhites. In one passage,
a white cadet confronts
a black woman, Myrna
Landers, and glares at
her as he tells her not to
advance any further.
Myrna Landers had
Rodney King
Phillips, who set his
1994 novel Violent
Spring in the aftermath
of the Los Angeles police
beating of Rodney King,
said he was hoping that
such younger authors as
Aaron Philip Clark and
Desiree Zamorano would
tell stories reflecting
more recent events.
The old days of the PI
with just a file and an ad-
B14
SPOTLIGHT
IN THE SPOTLIGHT
Continued from B1
TSTUHLDREHER@LNPNEWS.COM
She is well-known
for her big, bold,
brassy performances,
her masterful acting
(her resume is filled
with straight plays)
and her emotional intensity and commitment to songs.
And everyone has
heard about her actions last summer,
when she was performing in Shows
for Days at Lincoln
Center. An audience
member was texting
throughout the show
and LuPone went
down into the audience and confiscated
the womans phone.
In a statement the
next day, she wrote:
We work hard on
stage to create a world
that is being totally
destroyed by a few,
rude, self-absorbed
and
inconsiderate
audience members
who are controlled by
their phones. ... I am
so defeated by this issue that I seriously
question whether I
want to work on stage
anymore.
Be warned, Ware
Center audiences!
We are a selfish society, LuPone says.
Technology
has
turned us into isolationists. The people
dont know how many
times we dont stop
the show.
But for all the diva
qualities
LuPone
might possess, she is
still vulnerable and
insecure.
Wednesday:
Food
Thursday:
F U R N I S H I N G S & G I F TS
SPRING
FEVER?
WE'VE GOT
THE CURE!
15% off
STOP BY
One Item
TODAY!
1 coupon per person/per day.
Expires 3/19/16.
to benefit
the
SATURDAY, MARCH 19
5:00-8:00 PM
WE BUY GOLD
Silver, Coins,
Watches, Jewelry
& Antiques
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Natural Stoneworks
455 Ice Avenue, Lancaster
Join us for an evening of fun, food, art,
raffle items and much, much more!
This is a free family & pet-friendly event.
Music provided by MAMA TRIED.
No One
Will Bea
Our Goldt
Prices!
BIA
We Buy Diamonds!
March 1820
All Welcome
presented by
Ronald L. Hartman
Intimate show
And in an intimate
show like the one at the
Ware Center, LuPone
says, there are no masks.
I learn so much by doing concerts like this,
she says. You are vulnerable to the audience.
There is something to be
said for looking someone
in the eye and they look
back.
She concedes that
when she goes to Los Angeles to perform or to audition for TV pilots, she
gets depressed.
L.A. is a scary city for
me, she notes. I dont
look like anything the
L.A. power brokers hire.
The women are too beautiful, the bodies too perfect.
She recalls her last visit,
when she was working
with the Los Angeles Opera in Kurt Weills Rise
and Fall of the City of
Mahagonny, and auditioned for a TV pilot.
It was humiliating. It
made me feel like I was
just beginning.
LuPone, who was born
and raised in Long Island, was about 4 when
she knew her life was
going to be in show business.
I fell in love with the
audience, she says.
They were all smiling and since I was 4, I
thought they were all
smiling at me. And I
thought, I cant get into
trouble up here.
Following in the footsteps of her older brother,
Robert LuPone (who was
nominated for a Tony for
playing Zach in A Chorus Line) LuPone went
to Juilliard and became
a member (1972-76) of
the Acting Company, a
prestigious classical repertory touring company
run by Juilliard professor
John Houseman, who
played the intimidating
law professor in the movie The Paper Chase.
They screened that
movie for us and we
all said, so whats new?
Thats him, LuPone recalls with a laugh. He
scared me.
A blessing
But she considered
those years a blessing.
I was very lucky. I was
handed my Equity card
and was gainfully employed for four years.
It was The Acting Company that brought her to
the Fulton. And the role
would go on to earn her
her first Tony nomination.
Eva Peron in Evita
IF YOU GO
n Who: Patti LuPone.
n Where: Ware Center,
42 N. Prince St.
Varicose veins,
aching, heaviness,
fatigue, and swelling
of your legs could be
signs of superficial
venous reflux disease.
A simple office procedure could be the answer
you've been looking for. Our procedures are
covered by most insurance plans, including Medicare.
FREE VEIN
SCREENINGS
Saturday, March 19 at 8:30 am
Lancaster Location only
VEIN CENTER
OF LANCASTER
LOCAL
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Steve Martin
n 1865: Confederate
BIRTHDAYS
William H. Macy, 66
Catherine Kitty
Genovese, 28, was
stabbed to death near her
Queens, New York, home;
the case gained notoriety
over the supposed
reluctance of Genoveses
neighbors to respond to
her cries for help.
A mothers work is
never done, but Lolas is,
fortunately.
Before arriving at the
shelter, this old English
bulldog mix spent her
first five years in a breeding kennel, producing
numerous litters of puppies.
Now shes looking for
some well-deserved rest,
with a soft bed in a home
to call her own. Please
consider helping Lola
get whatever Lola wants
by taking her into your
home.
Not that Lola is demanding. She has become a staff favorite at
the SPCA because of her
gentle demeanor and
willingness to please.
She always greets us at
the front of her kennel
and kindly waits for us
to recognize her and provide her with treats.
Lola loves everyone
and would do well in
just about any type of
family setting. She is a
champion kisser and will
smother you with affection. She gets along well
children and with other
dogs.
org.
Please join us April
23 at Lancaster County
Central Park for our first
Pacers for Pets 5K Run
and Dog Walk. You can
register and pay online
at lancasterspca.org under the events tab, or
download the registration form and mail it in.
All proceeds go toward
caring for homeless animals.
DINING
394-7111
Celebrate
Easter
Sunday
with us at
MoveableFeast
Fresh Food Made From Scratch
The
Easter Buffet
,P
A
Lanca
Serving
S
i our ttraditional
diti
l
family style dinner or
choose from our
menu dining options.
www.goodnplenty.com
Brunch to Include:
Carved Ham :: Seafood Display :: Omelettes
Dessert Display :: And Much More
est. 1875
r
ste
B15
717.285.9474
Visit us at www.themoveablefeast.net
2015
Encks
CUSTOM CATERING
B16
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Celebrations
Engagements
WaltonGriffin
WelkMcFeaters
TrimbleTubay
~ John Berger
CELEBRATIONS GUIDELINES
CR Lapps
Catering for All Your Events! Weddings,
Picnics, Party Trays, Etc.
101 Fite Way Quarryville
717.786.1768
>> FAVORS
A Tea Affair
A Perfect Place for your Bridal Shower
6 Sturgis Lane Lititz
717.626.1776
Sugar Plums & Tea
Plan your special occasion with us.
Bridal Shower Baby Shower
Anniversary Birthday
403 Bank Barn Lane Lancaster
717.394.9166
www.sugarplumsandtea.com
>> CATERING
Oregon Dairy
Stunning, custom-made cakes. Perfect
for your occasion. From traditional,
to contemporary, to extravagant, to
whimsicalwell create a cake that you and
your guests will remember for years to come!
2900 Oregon Pike Lititz
717.656.2856
Patterson
68th
>> BAKERY
717.291.4957
celebrations@lnpnews.com
www.lancasteronline.com
Anniversaries
Helm Robinson
Contact Celebrations:
Wilbur Chocolate
Chocolate filled favor boxes and
wedding themed chocolate molds
48 N. Broad Street Lititz
717.626.3249
Wambold 65th
Shrom 45th
Rudisill 5th
For more information or to advertise on this page, please contact 717.291.8800 or email advertising@LNPnews.com
LOCAL
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Restaurant inspections
Continued from B2
accumulations. Trash
receptacles outside the
food facility that are not
in immediate use are not
covered properly. Deeply
scored cutting boards not
resurfaced or discarded as
required.
Tugs BBQ @ Corn Crib
Market, 35 W. Main St.,
Mount Joy, March 5.
Commercially processed
refrigerated, ready-toeat, time/temperature
control for safety food (deli
meats), located in the front
counter, and held more
than 24 hours, is not being
marked with the date it
was opened. The inner
panel of the middle door
of the three-door Victory
cooling unit is cracked and
has exposed insulation. The
surface is no longer smooth
and easily cleanable.
Turkey Hill Minit Market
No.33, 549 S. Market St.,
Elizabethtown, March 5.
Walk-in cooler floor and
wall at freezer entrance
has heavy ice and residue
accumulations. Rear main
door to facility is not tight
fitting at the bottom and
side.
Twisted @ Corn Crib
Market, 35 W. Main St.,
Mount Joy, opening, March
5. Food utensils (tongs)
stored in a container of
water that is not maintained
at 135F.
Bart Township Fire Co.
Special Div, 11 Furnance
Road 72, Quarryville, March
3. No violations.
Celebrations
Anniversaries
Bingeman
65th
Go to
www.lancasteronline.com/
celebrations/create to place
your special announcement.
Enterline 50th
Weddings
ZimmermanMcCauley
The goal in
marriage is not
to think alike,
but to think
together.
~ Robert C. Dodds
B17
came as a shock.
When I started
Googling lung cancer, what I found read
like a horror story,
Aurand says, noting
that she read stories
about people who
were diagnosed and
died within weeks.
When a fun family evening of playing
Pictionary turned serious Reel couldnt
catch her breath after
laughing at her husbands poor drawing
skills Aurand prepared for the worst.
Her mother was admitted to the hospital
and the doctor began
emergency chemotherapy. Reel was given a grim diagnosis: six
to 12 months to live.
Still, she made a recovery that Aurand
says was nothing
short of a miracle.
As quickly as the
cancer came on, it
went away, she says.
Reel
responded
well to chemotherapy
and was declared disease-free just before
Christmas 2011.
It was a miraculous
recovery, but we didnt
fully understand at
the time that once
cancer gets into your
bones, its not coming
out, Aurand says.
So the family focused
on making the most
of Reels days, including enjoying the birth
of Aurands daughter,
whom she named Kylar in honor of Reels
maiden name.
We were very fortunate that my mom
got to meet her granddaughter and that
treatment had helped
my mom go months
feeling really good,
Aurand says.
By September 2012,
however, it was evident Reel was slowing
down. The family explored other treatment
options, including a
chemo pill that gave
Reel a rash so painful
she couldnt sit down.
My mother would
have done absolutely
anything to get one
more good day of time
with her family, Aurand says. She tried
everything she could.
By the end, Reel
couldnt
remember
things like Aurands
phone number and
Moms story
Being able to tell my
moms story has been
that piece of continuing
her legacy, Aurand says.
Thats very important
to me.
LUNG FORCE Heroes
from every state will participate in Advocacy Day,
including cancer survivors, caretakers and others affected by the disease.
American Lung Association advocates will
meet with senators and
representatives to share
their stories and press
for investments in research funding for early
detection methods and
better treatments for the
disease, which accounts
for nearly 27 percent of
all cancer deaths.
Deb Brown, president
and CEO of the American Lung Association of
the Mid-Atlantic, says
progress has been made
in fighting the disease,
including new FDA-
A reason to
LancasterOnline.com/celebrations/create
Photo courtesy of Melissa Mortimer, Captured by Missi Photography
Saturdays in March
Book Signings
Author Meet & Greets
Book Readings
B.R. BOOKS
Ristenbatt.com
PROM GIVEAWAY
Our ultimate prom package will include a dress,
hair and makeup, flowers, and tuxedo!
Heres
H
eres h
how
ow tto
oe
enter:
nter:
Visit www.lancasteronline.com/promgiveaway.
Answer a few simple questions and youre automatically entered to win!
A winner will be selected randomly and LancasterOnline.com readers
will vote for their favorite dress and tuxedo.
Sponsored by
Hurry!
March 17
is the
th
deadline
to
t enter
is March 17th
$ 78
per pound
Whole
Boneless
Pork Loin
prices
good h 17!
arc
u
r
th M
All Corned
Beef - per lb
40
Cabbage
per lb
29
$ 49
$ 99
cut & wrapped free of charge by our Meat Professionals!
sam
e it
em
e it
y more
Freschetta Pizza
$ 99
Weis Quality
Ice Cream
y more
bu
VE
SA
more!
each
2 $5
Detergent
Folgers or Dunkin
Donuts Coffee
Yoplait Greek or
Plenti Yogurt
$ 99
$ 88
THE
Guinness Pub
Draught
$ 99
90 or 150 ounce
88
3.38 to 12 ounce
4 to 5.5 ounce
Olivias
Organic Salad
FwRheEn yE2ou!
5 ounce
2 $7
Sargento Shredded
ded Cheese
Chhee
eesse
se
8 ounce
sam
buy
e it
em
only
Selected Martins
s or Wise
Wis
ise Potato
ise
Po
Chips - 8 to 9.75 ounce
Clorox Bleach
55 or 64 ounce
$
WE GUARANTEE THE LOWEST PRICE IN THE AREA!
59 ounce
2 $6
If a local competitor advertises any of our tagged LOWEST PRICE GUARANTEE items at a lower price, we
will give you DOUBLE THE DIFFERENCE with purchase.
Simply
Juices
48 ounce
2 $6
2 $5
onl
16 ounce
20 ounce
4.4 ounce
em
Land o Lakes
Butter
28.28 to 30.88 oz
excludes gluten free
SkinnyPop
Popcorn
onl
8!
only 88
em
sam
onl
buy in
multiples
of
Over 600
items!
e it
sam
LIMIT 6
LIMIT 4
BEER CAFE
Killians Irish Red
6 count 12 ounce
$ 69
Harp Lager
6 count 12 ounce
10
LIMIT 4
49
Guinness Draught
or Stout
6 count 11.2 ounce
10
49
We reserve the right to limit quantities. Not responsible for typographical or pictorial errors.
is
Look outftohr
Friday
FRIDAY, MARCH 18
Fantastic Friday from 9AM to 9PM Friday, March 18 ONLY.
Sports
n SEND STORY TIPS & INFO TO: CHRIS OTTO, 291-8662, COTTO@LNPNEWS.COM
Nova upset
Seton Hall
stuns Wildcats
k Page C2
PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES
PIAA WRESTLING
Lobeck
earns
bronze
Meanwhile,
Northern
Lebanons Funck
was fourth in
Class AA
DAVE BYRNE
DBYRNE@LNPNEWS.COM
HERSHEY At this
level of competition, in
the final weekend of a long
season, every wrestler is
dealing with one malady
or another.
Which is why Lancaster Catholcs Joe Lobeck
didnt make a big deal of
the injury he suffered in
a quarterfinal loss Friday
morning.
Until he limped and
hitched his way from
the awards podium to an
awaiting reporter, he gave
no hint of how hobbled he
was.
Nor did his performance.
Lobeck swept through
the consolation bracket
of the PIAA Class AA
120-pound bracket, demolishing four opponents
one by fall, three by
major decision to claim
third place.
You just have to adjust
and wrestle your best, the
Lehigh-bound lightweight
explained.
This is the first time
I was in the consolation
bracket (of a tournament)
since my sophomore
year, he added. After
losing a tough one in the
quarterfinals, I just wanted to place as high as I possibly could.
It was in that quarterfinal loss to eventual champion Charlie Lenox of Fort
LeBeouf where Lobeck
was hurt.
On that takedown call
yesterday, when we were
Philadelphia Phillies starting pitcher Mark Appel delivers to the New York Yankees during the sixth inning of a spring training baseball
game on March 3, in Tampa, Fla.
FUTURE BRIGHT
Phillies have some promising starting pitchers down on the farm this season
MATT GELB
MORE BASEBALL
Page C8
n Commentary: Injury to Phillies OF Aaron Altherr
is disappointing, Page C8
n Fantasy baseball: Speedsters lead talented pack
of second basemen, Page C8
back in Clearwater,
the three pitchers
were sent to minorleague camp. They
were never going to
make the Phillies
not this spring but
the three weeks were
designed as an audition. A chance for
the decision makers to learn about
three pitchers who
joined the organization within the last 15
months.
And a time to grow
the budding friendship among three
players who one day
could form a Phillies
nucleus.
I think deep down
we all kind of see
that and think about
FUTURE, page C8
NOTE TO READERS
n The results of Saturday
COLLEGE SCENE
ICE HOCKEY
Yarnalls blasts
powering Pitt
BILL ARSENAULT
LNP CORRESPONDENT
Ebys destination
is set for Elmira
KEVIN FREEMAN
KFREEMAN@LNPNEWS.COM
SUBMITTED PHOTO
HOCKEY, page C5
C2
SPORTS
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Pirates win Big East Tournament championship for first time in 23 years
Isaiah
Whitehead
scored 26 points, including the deciding threepoint play with 18 seconds left, and Seton Hall
won the Big East Tournament for the first time
in 23 years by defeating
No. 3 Villanova 69-67
on Saturday at Madison
Square Garden.
Whitehead drove hard
on the right side, flipped
the ball in softly off the
glass and was fouled.
His free throw gave the
Pirates a 68-67 lead. Villanova had two more
chances
sandwiched
around a free throw by
Angel Delgado, but the
Pirates held on to beat
the defending champions.
It was Seton Halls
third Big East Tournament title, the others
coming in 1991 and 1993.
The third-seeded Pirates (25-8) earned the
leagues automatic bid
to the NCAA Tournament, their first berth in
10 years.
Seton Hall led for almost the entire game,
going ahead by 14 points
in the first half and 11 at
halftime. The top-seeded Wildcats (29-5) finally started hitting from
3-point range in the
second half. They tied
the game four times before finally taking their
first lead since 3 minutes
into the game when Kris
Jenkins 3-pointer gave
them a 67-64 lead with
50 seconds to play.
A free throw by Whitehead 8 seconds later
made it a two-point
game but Villanova
didnt score again, turning the ball over once
and missing three shots,
including one that fell
short at the buzzer from
Ryan Arcidiacono.
Whitehead, who had
eight of the Pirates 13
turnovers, was selected
the tournament MVP.
Desi Rodriguez added
12 points for the Pirates
and Derrick Gordon had
10.
Jenkins led the Wildcats with 23 points, and
Josh Hart had 17. Arcidiacono scored five points
and was 2 for 10 from
the field, including 1 of 6
from 3-point range.
Seton Hall built its 4029 halftime lead by taking advantage of eight
Villanova
turnovers,
three off the teams average for a game. The
Pirates shot 56.7 percent in the half (17 for
30) while the Wildcats
shot 44.4 percent (12 for
27), including 2 of 9 from
3-point range.
Connecticut 77, Temple 62: Daniel Hamilton
and Shonn Miller scored
19 points apiece and
Connecticut shrugged
off a slow start to beat
top-seeded Temple in
the semifinals of the
American Athletic Con-
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Seton Halls Isaiah Whitehead (15) shoots over Villanovas Kris Jenkins (2) during the second half of the Big
East mens championship Saturday.
ference Tournament.
Showing no signs of fatigue after needing four
overtimes to win the
longest game in league
history in the quarterfinals, the Huskies built a
16-point first-half lead
and weathered a couple
of Temple surges before
pulling away for good
down the stretch.
Jalen Adams, whose
shot from beyond midcourt forced a fourth OT
against Cincinnati on
Friday, had 11 points as
fifth-seeded UConn (2310) advanced to Sundays
tournament final.
Jaylen Bond led Temple (21-11) with 17 points
and 10 rebounds. The
conference
regularseason champions were
just under 36 percent
from field, missed 10 free
throws and finished 4 of
20 on 3-point attempts.
Michigan State 64,
Maryland 61: Denzel
Valentine had 18 points,
10 assists and seven rebounds to lead No. 2
Michigan State past No.
18 Maryland in Saturdays Big Ten Tournament semifinal.
The leagues player of
the year sealed it with
two free throws with 0.8
seconds to go, and Melo
Trimbles desperation
heave from 55 feet away
didnt get past midcourt.
Michigan State (28-5)
has won 12 of 13 and will
face No. 13 Purdue in
Sundays title game.
Robert Carter Jr. had
18 points and eight rebounds to lead Maryland. Trimble finished
with 11 points.
Despite making only
two baskets over the final
10 minutes, the Terrapins still could have
taken the lead after Val-
NCAA Tournament
berth since 2013 in
a defensive struggle
that was markedly different from their 9990 semifinal shootout
with Marshall.
Hampton
81,
South
Carolina
State 69: Reginald
Johnson Jr. had 21
points and eight assists and top-seeded
Hampton beat South
Carolina State to
win its second consecutive Mid-Eastern
Athletic Conference
Tournament.
Brian
Darden
scored 22 points, Jervon Pressley 14 and
Quinton Chievous 13
for the Pirates (2010), who outscored
the Bulldogs 14-2 over
the final four minutes to win the MEAC
championship for the
sixth time.
Eric Eaves scored 25
to lead South Carolina
State (19-14), which
was seeking its first
NCAA tournament
berth since 2003.
Texas A&M 71,
LSU 38: Tonny Trocha-Morales scored
13 points as No. 17
Texas A&M trounced
LSU and freshman
star Ben Simmons to
reach the Aggies first
conference tournament championship
game since 1994.
The Aggies (267) will play for the
Southeastern Conference Tournament
title on Sunday after
sharing the regularseason crown with
No. 16 Kentucky.
They will face either
the Wildcats or Georgia.
Kentucky
93,
Georgia 80: Jamal
Murray scored 26
points, Tyler Ulis
added 25 and both
keyed a late 11-3 run
that helped No. 16
Kentucky put away
Georgia in Saturdays semifinal of the
Southeastern Conference Tournament.
Fresno State 68,
San Diego 63: Marvelle Harris scored
18 points to lead
Fresno State to a 6863 victory over San
Diego State to win
the Mountain West
title and earn its first
NCAA Tournament
berth since 2001.
Southern 54, Jackson State 53: Adrian
Rodgers made a jump
shot with 17 seconds
left to lift Southern
University to a victory
over Jackson State
in the Southwestern
Athletic Conference
championship game,
clinching the Jaguars
first NCAA Tournament
appearance
since 2013.
SOURCE: ASSOCIATED PRESS
NBA ROUNDUP
SPORTS ON TV
AUTO RACING
NETWORK
TIME
ABC
12:30pm
FOX
3:30pm
NETWORK
TIME
Atlantic 10 Championship:
St. Josephs vs. VCU
CBS
12:30pm
ESPN
1pm
ESPN2
1pm
CBS
3pm
AAC Championship:
Memphis vs. Connecticut
ESPN
3:15pm
CBS
5:30pm
NETWORK
TIME
ESPNU
9am
ESPNU
11am
Southland Championship:
Central Arkansas vs. Sam Houston State
CBSSN
12:30pm
Horizon Championship:
Green Bay vs. Milwaukee
ESPNU
1pm
Northeast Championship:
Robert Morris at Sacred Heart
ESPNU
3pm
NETWORK
TIME
CYCLING
Paris-Nice: Stage 7
NBCSP
8:30am
NETWORK
TIME
GOLF
6am
GOLF
1pm
NBC
3pm
NETWORK
TIME
NHL
3pm
NETWORK
TIME
MLB
6am
MLB
9am
MLB,MASN
1pm
GOLF
ICE HOCKEY
WHL: Prince George at Victoria
ROOT
1pm
MLB
4pm
MLB
8pm
MLB
12am
MLB
3am
NETWORK
TIME
ABC
3:30pm
Indiana at Atlanta
NBA
6pm
NETWORK
TIME
NBA
NHL
Pittsburgh at New York Rangers
Toronto at Detroit
SOCCER
NBC
12:30pm
NBCSP
7:30pm
NETWORK
TIME
FS1
9am
FS1
10:20am
FS1
12pm
NBCSP
12pm
FS2
12:30pm
FS2
3pm
ESPN2
5pm
FS2
6pm
FS1
7pm
NHL ROUNDUP
Note
SPORTS
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
GOLF ROUNDUP
Defending champion Spieth moves into tie for ninth shooting bogey-free 67
SOCCER
n Hempfield High School graduate Travis Worra made
his first career MLS start in goal Saturday for D.C.
United and made three saves to earn the shutout in a
scoreless tie against the New England Revolution.
SOFTBALL
ASSOCIATED PRESS PHOTOS
Thailand
Classic:
Scott Hend of Australia
shot a 70 to retain the lead
after the third round of
the Thailand Classic on
the par-72 Black Mountain Golf Course.
The 43-year-old Hend
produced five birdies for
a three day total of 14
under-par 202 to take a
two-shot advantage Saturday over Peter Uihlein
of the United States.
I knew it was going to be a tough day,
very windy so Im very
pleased, said Hend, in
search of his eight Asian
Tour title. Its not very
often you get a chance to
lead a tournament on a
Saturday night, let alone
on a Sunday.
Uihlein, the first-round
leader, shot four birdies
for a 69 and 12-underpar 204.
Belgiums Thomas Pieters scored the lowest
round, a bogey-free 66 for
a three-day total of 205
to share third place with
Swedens Pelle Edberg.
SOURCE: ASSOCIATED PRESS
HERSHEY BEARS
TIM GROSS
Local digest
MENS LACROSSE
Left, Bill Haas watches his tee shot on the 17th hole during the third round of the Valspar Championship Saturday.
Right, Jordan Spieth takes a fairway shot on the ninth hole.
C3
WOMENS BASKETBALL
n Lancaster Bible College saw its season come to an
WOMENS LACROSSE
n Lancaster County Day grad Kelly Daggett, now a
WOMENS SOCCER
n Penn College senior Robyn Beddow (Lampeter-
WRESTLING
n Messiah Colleges Ben Swarr, a sophomore from
SOCCER
BARCELONA, Spain
Lionel Messi scored
one goal and figured
in four more to keep
Barcelona on course
to retaining its Spanish
league title with a 6-0
rout of Getafe on Saturday, increasing its
Spanish record to 37
games without a loss in
all competitions.
The only blemish on
Messis superb display
was a missed penalty
in the first half.
Otherwise, the Argentina forward led
a dominant performance that does not
GOT GUNS?
WE BUY, SELL AND TRADE FIREARMS
Large selection of handguns for
personal protection
Skilled and patient staff will help
you choose the perfect weapon
On-site gunsmithing
868 Route 41, Gap, PA 17527
717.442.9538
thevillagearms.com
Guns Ammo Supplies
C4
SPORTS
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Medals await
after struggles
L-L grapplers didnt get what they
were hoping for Saturday morning
DAVE BYRNE
DBYRNE@LNPNEWS.COM
HERSHEY High
medals were not in the
cards for the LancasterLebanon Leagues quartet at the PIAA Class
AAA championships.
Warwicks
Devin
Schnupp, Penn Manors
Jonah Barley and Manheim Centrals Jared
Siegrist were slated to
wrestle for fifth place
Saturday night at Hersheys Giant Center as
the 2016 season came
to a close.
Meanwhile, Conestoga Valleys Jose Morales
was set to wrestle for
seventh place Saturday
night.
A fifth wrestler, Penn
Manors Jack Zimmerman, placed eighth after being injured in the
fourth round of consolations Friday night.
Saturday mornings
championship
semifinals were unkind to
Siegrist and Schnupp, as
each took hard losses.
As good as Siegrist has
been from neutral all
season, Bethel Parks
Nino Bonaccorsi was
that much better, scoring four takedowns,
three on single leg
shots, in a 9-4 win over
Siegrist.
Later, unable to break
free on bottom, Siegrist
was tilted twice by Mifflin Countys Noah
Stewart, who added a
third-period escape for
a 6-0 victory in the consolation semis.
Schnupps semifinal
with Julian Chlebove of
Northampton hinged on
a key third-period moment when Chlebove
son of Northamptons
1994 state champion
Whitey Chlebove, who
also was a two-time
state medalist at Whitehall funked out of a
Schnupps single leg
shot, emerging into a
cradle.
The five-point move
gave Chelebove a 6-0
lead with less than a
minute to go and he finished out an 8-1 victory.
The big move from
NOTE TO
READERS
n The results of
Saturday nights
PIAA Class AAA
championship and
placement wrestling
matches were not
available for this edition,
because of an early
press time necessitated
by the overnight change
to Daylight Savings
Time.
Coverage of the Class
AAA medal round will
appear in Mondays LNP.
neutral
haunted
Schnupp once more
as Gage Curry of
North Hills, a threetime medalist and
returning runner-up,
majored
Schnupp
9-0 in the consolation semis.
Up 3-0, Curry hit
Schnupp with a fourpoint move with 46
seconds left in the
second period and
holding him there
for half a minute. A
third, and final, takedown sealed Currys
victory in the third
period.
In the consolation bracket, Barley
thumped Dan Iredale of Conestoga,
12-5, blowing the
match open in the
third period when
he took Iredale to his
back on a cross-ankle
pick, good for four
points.
Later, though, he
twice tried to turn
Nick Carr of Abington Heights with
armbars in the third
period of their consi
semi, stopped both
times when they
were determined to
be potentially dangerous situations.
Carr reversed with
44 seconds left and
held Barley down to
the end.
As with Siegrist, a
pair of second-period tilts doomed Morales in a 12-3 consi
quarterfinal loss to
KJ Fenstermacher of
Liberty.
BOXING
Above, Lancaster Catholics Joe Lobeck, top, works toward a 10-0 major decision over Lewisburgs Jordan Gessner in
the 120-pound third-place match at Saturdays PIAA Class AA Wrestling Championships at Giant Center in Hershey.
Below, Northern Lebanons Luke Funck, left, works against Franklins Dakota Geer in the third-place match at 182.
Geer recorded a 4-1 decision over Funck.
semifinals in overtime
by Montoursvilles Garrett Hoffman, added a
second-period escape
to go up 3-0. (Hoffman
was pinned in the finals,
in 1:43, by returning
170-pound champ Greg
Bulsak of South Park.)
Funck escaped in the
third period, but gave up
a penalty point for a false
start, and a 4-1 final.
Funck finished the year
42-3, his three losses
coming to Bulsak, 5-2,
Geer and Hoffman, 1-0,
in the state team championships.
You know you can always do better, Funck
said. I hate to say that,
but theres always next
year.
MLB ROUNDUP
SPONSORED BY:
Ocean Spa
60/1 hr
$10 OFF Massage
$
that?
Freese, 32, arrived in
Bradenton early Friday
morning and worked
out at the Pirates minor
league facility.
Wieters hurt: Baltimore Orioles catcher
Matt Wieters left Sundays game against the
Minnesota Twins in
the first inning because
of right elbow soreness. Wieters, who had
Tommy John surgery in
June 2014 and didnt return until nearly a year
later, had an X-ray and
will be re-evaluated on
Monday.
I think everybody
gets alarmed because of,
rightfully so, with the
surgery there. Hopefully,
itll manage and be OK,
Orioles manager Buck
Showalter said.
SOURCE: WIRE SERVICES
SPORTS
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
INDY
XFINITY
MIKE CRANSTON
JENNA FRYER
ASSOCIATED PRESS
ST.
PETERSBURG,
Fla. Not even illness
could slow Will Power
on the streets of St. Petersburg.
Power led a Team Penske sweep of the top
four spots in qualifying
for the IndyCar seasonopener, and he did it in
record time.
Power broke his own
track record three times
Saturday. His best time
around the streets of
St. Petersburg was in
the second session, but
he won the pole in the
third session at 1 minute, 0.2450 seconds. The
record set in his second
session was 1:00.0658.
It was Powers sixth pole
at St. Pete in nine career
races. The Australian has
won 43 career poles.
Power downplayed the
qualifying session, but
praised his Penske team
for repairing his car after
AVONDALE, Ariz.
Kyle Busch made it 3
for 3 in the Xfinity Series this season, cruising to another victory at
Phoenix International
Raceway on Saturday.
A week after leading
all but one lap at Las
Vegas, Busch led 175
of 200 laps on the mile
oval to win for the record 79th time in the
second-tier series.
Busch also posted a
dominating win at Atlanta. He didnt race in
the opener at Daytona.
In the past three
weeks, Busch has led
493 of 563 laps.
Buschs biggest obstacle was lapped traffic and the lone competition his Joe Gibbs
Racing
teammates.
Busch and series rookie Erik Jones raced
side-by-side for several laps before their
green-flag
pitstops
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Will Power sits in his car on pit road after winning the
pole position for todays IndyCar Firestone Grand Prix
of St. Petersburg on Saturday.
he wrecked on Friday.
Had to replace the
whole rear end. Firstclass team, I love driving
for Team Penske, he said.
C5
Power is a two-time
winner at St. Pete but
didnt reveal much in
terms of his strategy for
the race today.
Phoenix victory and fifth in six races. He has a seriesrecord seven wins at the track.
n Last week: Brad Keselowski won at Las Vegas for the
second time in three years.
n Fast facts: The race is the fourth of the year. Denny
Hamlin won the season-opening Daytona 500, and Jimmie
Johnson took the Atlanta race. Dale Earnhardt Jr. won
the rain-shortened race at the track in November.
n Next race: Auto Club 400, March 20, Auto Club
Speedway, Fontana, California.
n Online: http://www.nascar.com
Ebys hockey
path
Eby, a defenseman,
started playing organized hockey with the
Lancaster
Firebirds.
He then played for the
Hershey Junior Bears
Triple-A team and the
Hershey team that plays
annually in the Quebec
Tournament.
He came back to Lancaster and his Firebirds
bantam team went to
described Eby as a a
puck-moving defenseman. A lot of players at
this level can skate and
pass and shoot but he
has good hockey sense.
Hes undersized for his
position (Eby is 5-foot8) but because he is so
smart, he doesnt put
himself in situations
where he will get outmuscled for the puck.
He can beat the forechecker with a good
pass or a slick move.
For the NAPHL, the
Titans played a series of
showcases, two in Minnesota, one in Michigan
and another in New Jersey.
Coaches from higherskilled
development
teams scout the showcases and it was at one
of them that the coaches
from the Kenai, Alaska
Junior team saw Eby
play. Kenai plays in the
Featured Course:
IRON VALLEY
GOLF CLUB
IR
N
VA L L E Y
G
A Course
Like No
Other!
120 WEEKDAY
WEEKENDS
$
180 & HOLIDAYS
SPRING RATES
MARCH 14 - APRIL 8
Weekday
Sr.- $23
Open-2pm- $25
2pm- close- $20
Weekend
Open-12pm- $30
12-2pm - $25
2pm close- $22
$1150
$17
Expires 3/31/16
898-7852
www.ironvalley.com
Pine
Meadows
Golf Complex
(2 miles South
of Manheim off Rt. 72)
WWW.CROSSGATESGOLF.COM
SPRING RATES!
Weekdays:$22 PP
Weekends & Holidays:*
7-11am $37PP
11am-2pm $28PP
After 2pm $26PP
Specials:
AFTER 11AM
Cannot be combined with any other offer. Not valid with leagues, groups,
tournaments or other offers. All prices include cart. Valid thru 4/29/16.
Good Friday
www.ironvalley.com
2 Player Weekday
717-279-7409
SPECIAL!
$
25 to ride
after 10am
Lebanon Valley
G.C.
Please call for tee times. Not valid with leagues, groups,
tournaments, Holidays or other offers. Must present coupon.
All prices include cart. One Coupon per 4-some. Expires 3/25/16. LN
BLUE
WHITE
Yardage 7026
6452
6028
72
72
72
72
72
Ratings
74.9
72.3
69.5
65.0
69.2
Slope
138
133
130
112
123
Par
GOLD
RED
5214 4905
Name ___________________________
WIN A $100
GIFT CERTIFICATE
Address __________________________
Town ____________________________
State/Zip _________________________
Age _____________________________
Phone (
) _____________________
Advertiser ________________________
C6
SPORTS
BARRY DECKER
ROLL EM
Each bit of
perfection
just a little
bit different
Bowling has created
events that will last a
lifetime for Brian Kachel.
From his first to his
21st, every perfect game
has been a little different than the one before,
according to the Ephrata
kegler, 44.
There always seems
to be at least one lucky
break somewhere in
the game, Kachel said.
Your ball may go a little
high, but the pins seem
to fall just right.
Nerves in the 10th
frame are always a factor, he added ... be it
that first 300 game or
the 21st.
It is always a feeling of
accomplishment when it
is over, he said.
His first one was rolled
ALLEY NOTES
Perfect games were rolled by
Jon Rogers and Gene Sholly at
222 Dutch Lanes.
High series (800, men; 700,
women) were rolled by Troy
Lint (805), Jon Rogers (804),
Scott Canfield (804) and Mike
Lewis (802) at 222 Dutch Lanes;
Jennifer Ferrara (728) at Leisure
Lanes; and by Lisa Farwell (710,
718) at Clearview Lanes.
HIGH SCORES
CLEARVIEW LANES
Connect with us
Facebook, Twitter
& Instagram at:
LancasterSports
YOUR
WEEKEND
STARTS
HERE
flymagazine.net/newsletter/
LEISURE LANES
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
IDITAROD
ASSOCIATED PRESS
A man suspected of
intentionally driving a
snowmobile into teams
of two mushers near
the front of the Iditarod
Trail Sled Dog Race was
arrested Saturday in a
Yukon River village.
Arnold Demoski, 26,
of Nulato was arrested
on suspicion of assault,
reckless endangerment,
reckless driving and six
counts of criminal mischief.
A message left for Demoski at his home was not
immediately returned.
He told the Alaska Dispatch News that he had
not intentionally driven
into the dog teams of Aily
Zirkle and Jeff King, but
he had blacked out while
returning from drinking
in another village.
The crashes killed one
of Kings dogs and injured at least two others
12 miles outside of Nulato. One of Zirkles dogs
also was injured.
SPORTS
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
C7
NFL ROUNDUP
Bryant faces
ban for season
Steelers receiver again violated
leagues substance abuse policy
Quarterback Christian Hackenberg, above, and defensive linemen Austin Johnson (99) and Anthony Zettel, below, are
auditioning again for the NFL during Penn States pro day on Thursday in State College.
MIKE GROSS
PENN STATE FOOTBALL
football since.
Its always been in
the back of my mind,
even when I was up here
wrestling, Gingrich told
Blue-White Illustrated
last May. All the stuff I
loved in wrestling, I feel
like, will transfer over
to football: taking care
of myself, recovery and
even the mentality.
Gingrich wrestled at
heavyweight for the
Nittany Lions, and was
ranked as high as 12th
nationally in the weight
class. He is listed at 6-2,
285 and played football
at Bald Eagle Area High
School in Wingate.
Trevor Williams,
Kyle Carter, Tarow
Barney, Brandon
Johnson, Angelo
Mangiro and Dom
Salamone: These six
players will be working
out for the pros for the
first time.
Carter, a tight end,
made some freshman
All-America teams in
2012, under OBrien, but
hasnt done much since.
Mangiro played every
offensive line position
during his Penn State
career, and is wellregarded as a leader and
teammate.
Barney is a JUCO
transfer DT with size (61, 305) who played in 25
games in 2014-15.
Johnson is a RB from
Middletown, Salamone
a TE/FB type. Neither
played much.
Williams is the most
intriguing of this group.
He played in all 49
games of his college
career, started 43, and
made honorable mention all-Big Ten twice.
Williams isnt a
splashy playmaker,
but opponents always
seemed reluctant to
throw at him.
Isnt that what you
want from a corner?
Ryan Keiser: A 2014
grad who started at free
safety for most of that
season, Keisers college
career ended after he
sustained a broken rib in
practice.
Complications led
to multiple surgeries.
Keiser was in intensive
care for a week, and
hospitalized at Hershey
Medical Center for over
three weeks.
Keiser, who was a cocaptain in 14, is a campus minister for Victory
Christian Fellowship at
Penn State.
Jon Schnaars: A
6-foot-3, 210-pound
wide receiver from East
Stroudsburg, Schnaars
will be the catcher, or
one of them, for Hackenbergs throwing workout.
Schnaars is a Central
Dauphin High School
graduate. He led NCAA
Division II with 114
catches for 1,610 yards
and 22 touchdowns in
2015.
Other than receiving
for Hack, Schnaars will
apparently not work out
or be tested Thursday.
Penn States pro day is
open to the media, but
not the public. Workouts
are scheduled to begin at
about 10:30 a.m.
Lancasterr
County.
My Lancaster County
Richard Hertzler
HORSE RACING
ARCADIA, Calif. (AP) Longshot Melatonin won the $1 million Santa Anita Handicap by 4 1/2
lengths.
Ridden by Joe Talamo, Melatonin ran 1 1/4 miles in 2:02.01 and
paid $34.60, $13.80 and $6 at 16-1
odds on Saturday.
Hard Aces returned $19.20 and
$7.20, while 7-5 favorite Effinex
was another half-length back in
third and paid $2.80 to show.
Effinex, a forgotten second to
Triple Crown winner American
Pharoah in the $5 million Breeders Cup Classic last fall, had
shop.lancasteronline.com/collections/books
Published by LNP MEDIA GROUP, Inc., a Steinman Communications Company
C8
BASEBALL
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
PAULA WOLF
WHEELCHAIR QUARTERBACK
Altherr injury a
tough break for
the Phillies
It might not seem
like a big deal when
one of the projected
starting outfielders
on a rebuilding team
gets hurt in spring
training, but I was
really disappointed to
learn Aaron Altherr
was going to be out
4-6 months following
wrist surgery.
The young Phillies
right fielder was one
of the players I most
looked forward to
watching this season.
In the month or
so he was with the
Phils in 2015, Altherr
impressed in a lot of
areas fielding, throwing, baserunning and
power.
I think the potential
was always there for
him to develop into a
multi-tool threat when
he was drafted out of
high school in 2009,
but injuries held him
back until he made terrific strides last season.
Even with Altherrs
absence, there are still
plenty of young guys
to keep an eye for the
Phils, including Maikel
Franco, Odubel Herrera and Aaron Nola.
Still, an outfield of
Herrera, Bourjos and
Tyler Goeddel/Cody
Asche is not going to
strike fear into many
opponents.
Phillies offense. Outfield prospect Nick Williams, who came to Philadelphia last summer
from the Texas Rangers in the Cole Hamels
trade, added a three-run
homer in the eighth.
Starting time
Phillies: Velasquez
needed 64 pitches to get
through four innings,
his longest start of the
spring. He allowed two
runs in the second inning, then issued a walk
with one on and no one
out and made an error
on a pickoff throw attempt. I guess my fastballs were all over the
place, he said. I have to
do something else other
than throw fastballs,
fastballs, fastballs.
Trainers room
Phillies catcher J.P.
Arencibia was removed
from the game after
hitting a double in the
second inning. He previously fouled a ball off
his toe, an injury not
considered
serious.
...RHP Jerad Eickhoff
(small right thumb
fracture) allowed three
earned runs on four hits
in a minor league game.
He could make his next
appearance this week
in what would be his
first Grapefruit League
game of the spring.
...RHP David Hernandez (triceps tendinitis)
threw a side bullpen
session without issue
on Saturday. He hasnt
pitched in a game
since March 1. ... OF/
INF Cody Asche (right
oblique) remains day to
day.
Adding Altherr to
Herrera and Bourjos, however, would
at least have been a
dynamic defensive
group, one thats
vastly better than
what the team trotted
out much of last year.
And I wanted to see
what Altherr could do
in the lineup, especially batting in a runproducing spot No.
5 or 6 in the order.
Apparently, Jayson
Werth suffered the
same type of wrist injury before he signed
with the Phillies, and
he recovered quite
nicely.
But it might take
time, and its probably best not to expect
anything from Altherr
in 2016, although the
prognosis is he that
could return as early
as July.
Maybe the silver
lining is one of the
teams outfield prospects not currently
ready for the majors
will perform well
enough at Triple-A to
get recalled, whether
its Roman Quinn or
Nick Marshall.
Quinn is already
having a nice spring,
with four extra-base
knocks three triples
and a homer among
his first six hits.
So Altherrs injury
is extremely unfortunate for him, but
perhaps an unexpected opportunity
for someone else.
DAN MASSEY
FANTASY SPORTS
Speedsters
lead the pack
at second base
For much of baseballs history, second
base has been devoid
of power hitters, evidenced by the fact that
no other position has
fewer members of the
300 home run club.
The 21st century reversed the trend, starting out with a spate of
strong second basemen.
At least five players
slugged .475 or better
every season from 2004
through 2009, before
the power regressed
to the point where no
second baseman did it
in 2014 and the only one
to do it in 2015 played in
a paltry 86 games.
This overarching
characteristic of the
position has a twofold meaning for
fantasy owners. First,
the threshold for what
constitutes a power
hitter is significantly
lower at second base
than elsewhere on the
diamond. Secondly,
owners will need to
look for players who
excel in other areas.
Two players at second stand out for their
ability to hit for a high
average and steal a lot
of bases. Jose Altuve
and Dee Gordon both
collected 200 hits and
stole 30 bases in 2015.
Altuve also did it in
2014, to become the
first keystone sacker
to do it since Alfonso
Soriano in 2002. In
fact, Altuve and Rod
Carew are the sole
second basemen ever
to go 30/200 in backto-back seasons.
Add in his 15 home
runs from 2015 and
Altuve is the sixth
second baseman in
history to smack 15
homers, accumulate
200 hits steal 30 bases
in a single season. This
versatility easily makes
him the premiere
choice at second base,
as he enters his age-26
season.
Although Gordon
cannot match Altuves
muscle, he is the nextmost desirable second
baseman thanks to
his stolen base totals,
which led the majors
ASSOCIATED PRESS
2016 SECOND
BASE RANKINGS
1. Jose Altuve, Astros; 2.
Dee Gordon, Marlins; 3.
Rougned Odor, Rangers;
4. Anthony Rendon,
Nationals; 5. Robinson
Cano, Mariners; 6. Brian
Dozier, Twins; 7. Ian
Kinsler, Tigers; 8. Addison
Russell, Cubs; 9. Kolten
Wong, Cardinals; 10. Logan
Forsythe, Rays.
11. Jason Kipnis, Indians;
12. DJ LeMahieu, Rockies;
13. Ben Zobrist, Cubs; 14.
Jonathan Schoop, Orioles;
15. Dustin Pedroia, Red
Sox; 16. Joe Panik, Giants;
17. Neil Walker, Mets; 18.
Starlin Castro, Yankees; 19.
Brandon Phillips, Reds; 20.
Howie Kendrick, Dodgers.
becoming a regular in
2009, last season represented his lowest totals
in stolen bases (three)
and runs (76) and his
second-worst number
of RBIs (56). Approaching his 35th birthday,
Zobrists best days are
behind him.
When Zobrist was
traded away from Tampa Bay after the 2014
campaign, the move
opened the door for
Logan Forsythe, who in
his initial season as an
everyday player, hit 17
home runs, rapped .281
and tallied nine steals.
No other second baseman reached all of those
levels in 2015 or 2014.
He may be available late
into the draft to provide
owners with great value
at the position.
Jonathan Schoop,
like the rest of his
Baltimore lineup, is
adept at hitting home
runs. Unfortunately,
he almost never draws
walks, leading to fewer
on-base opportunities
and hardly any runs
being scored. Since the
start of 2014, he has the
second-lowest runs-toHR ratio among second
basemen. Outside of his
inability to cross the
plate, Schoop is largely
similar to Minnesotas
Brian Dozier, and can
be gotten for a much
lower price.
Different
routines
This spring, Thompson is living in the same
Clearwater apartment
complex as Eflin, who is
roommates with Aaron
Nola. Thompson and
Eflin carpooled some
days, but then Eflin
started leaving at 5:45
a.m., and that was too
early for Thompson.
Eflin fishes, but sometimes hed golf with
Thompson.
Appel, who is staying
Part of the
future
Nola, hardly a veteran
himself but entrenched
in his role as the rotations young flag-bearer,
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
C9
Outdoors
HUNTING
WATCH
THE VIDEO
P.J. REILLY
LNP OUTDOORS WRITER
n See LancasterOnline.
This hunter is aiming the Benjamin Pioneer Airbow by Crosman, which is an air-powered device that shoots arrows. A
state lawmaker hopes to legalize airbows here for hunting.
seasons.
As best I can tell,
Crosman, with its long
history of making airpowered guns, is rare in
making an air-powered
device that shoots an
arrow. I actually found
only one other manufacturer: FX Airguns, of
Sweden.
How it works
Heres how the airbow
works:
The stock undeniably
resembles a rifles, and
you bring it to your
shoulder and hold it
just like a rifle.
Theres a tube running through the
middle of the stock that
somewhat resembles
the barrel of a rifle or
shotgun. On top of that
tube is a thin, metal
pipe. The tube is the
air reservoir, and the
pipe accepts a hollow,
carbon arrow shaft.
After filling the reservoir with air from a
special canister, you
slide the shaft over the
pipe until it is seated
back at the shoulder
Calendar
The Outdoors Calendar items
below are just a few of the
activities this week from
throughout Lancaster County
and beyond. To read the full
calendar online, go to bit.ly/
calendarmarch12. To submit
calendar items, email: preilly@
lnpnews.com; call 575-3039; or
send to Ad Crable, PO Box 1328;
Lancaster, PA 17608-1328.
SUNDAY
n Hike for public: Led by
MONDAY
n Build a Bluebird Box program:
TUESDAY
n Aquarium Club of Lancaster
County meets: 7:30 p.m., at
Hempfield United Methodist
For buffalo,
coyotes, deer?
Theres a famous video
circulating of professional hunter Jim Shockey
killing a buffalo with an
airbow on a ranch in Texas. That would certainly
indicate it has plenty of
energy to handle North
Americas biggest game.
While air-powered
devices are illegal in
Pennsylvania, there are
states that allow airguns
for hunting, which would
seem to cover the airbow,
according to Crosman.
Crosmans website
claims there are 27 states
where the airbow would
be legal for hunting
coyotes and predators.
Pennsylvania is not
among them.
The site lists four states
North Carolina, South
Carolina, Alabama and
Arizona where the
airbow can be used for
hunting deer.
Where theyre legal
for hunting, airbows are
considered air-powered
guns. I could find no evidence they are legal for
hunting anywhere in any
WEDNESDAY
n Slide show: Why the Atlantic
archery-only season.
No question, the fear
among Pennsylvania
bowhunters is that if
airbows are legalized for
any use here, thats a first
step toward legalizing
them for archery deer
season in the future.
Over the past 15 years
or so, bowhunters here
watched the crossbow
go from being an illegal
device to being allowed
only for use by handicapped bowhunters during archery deer season,
to being allowed for use
by anyone during all firearms big-game seasons,
and now to being allowed
for use by anyone during
all firearms and archery
big-game seasons.
Even as the crossbows popularity during
Pennsylvania archery
seasons grows, there are
bowhunters who object
to it being considered the
same as a compound or
traditional bow.
Gaining ...
popularity
Gergely seems to
believe you cant hold
THURSDAY
n Muhlenberg Botanical Society
FRIDAY
n Lancaster Herpetological
UPCOMING
n 23rd annual Pennsylvania
SPORTS
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
TRAINING
Lititz recCenter is offering
Speed, Agility & Strength
for Young Athletes on
Tuesdays and Thursdays
starting March 1, 7-8 p.m.
Participants will improve
power, strength, endurance,
explosiveness, balance
and flexibility. For more
information, contact
simonababou@lititzrec.
com or 626-5096 ext. 239.
Rock Sports Speed and
Agility Training will be
held on each Monday and
Wednesday of March from
5:30 to 6:30 p.m. These
sessions, for all athletes,
are led by a certified
strength and conditioning
specialist with workouts
designed to improve
coordination, linear speed,
agility, reaction time,
conditioning, power and
basic strength. Cost is $95.
For more information or
to register, contact tina.
rocksports@gmail.com,
call 806-5852 or visit
rocksportspa.com.
BASEBALL
Challenger Little League
of Lancaster County is
taking registrations for
the 2016 spring season.
This program is open to
all children and adults
who have a disability that
does not allow them to
participate in a traditional
baseball program. There is
no cost for this program.
For more information,
visit eteamz.com/
challengerlancaster or call
Mike Tafelski at 682-0938.
Registration must be
complete by March 25.
The March Arm
Strengthening & Training
Program will be held at
Rock Sports for players
in grades 4-12 looking to
develop their arm strength
and improve their overall
throwing speed and power.
This program runs Mondays
and Thursdays from March
3 to March 31. Grades 4-8
are 6 to 7:30 p.m.; cost is
$125. Grades 9-12 are 7 to 8
p.m.; cost is $75. For more
information or to register,
contact tina.rocksports@
gmail.com, call 806-5852
or visit rocksportspa.com.
The Be Uncommon
Baseball Bootcamp will
be held at Rock Sports
each Saturday in March.
Grades 1-4 (8U and 10U)
meet from 3 to 4:45 p.m.
and grades 5-8 (12U and
14U) meet from 1 to 2:45
p.m. Cost is $175. Team
discounts are available.
For more information or
to register, contact tina.
rocksports@gmail.com,
call 806-5852 or visit
rocksportspa.com.
BASKETBALL
Athletes for Better
Education will hold a
regional tournament
April 8 and 9 at Garden
Spot High School. There
will be eight different
age divisions for both
boys and girls: 10-under,
11-under, 12-under,
13-under, 14-under,
15-under, 16-under and
18-under. Each team is
guaranteed three games.
Register by March 25. For
more information and
registration visit afbe.org
or contact Jason Bieber
at (866) 906-2323 or
jbieber@afbe.org.
COACHING
OPENINGS
Lampeter-Strasburg
Athletic Department has
the following coaching
vacancies: varsity boys
basketball head coach,
junior high girls soccer
assistant coach, junior
high field hockey assistant
coach and high school
girls volleyball assistant
coach. Qualified candidates
should have previous
playing and/or coaching
experience. Interested
candidates should submit
a letter of interest, resume,
clearances (PA criminal, PA
child abuse, FBI criminal),
and references to: Branden
Lippy, Director of Athletics,
Lampeter-Strasburg
School District, PO Box
428, Lampeter, PA 17537.
Application deadline: April
1.
DOG SHOW
The Lancaster Kennel Club,
along with the Delaware
County and York County
Kennel Clubs, present The
Celtic Classic Annual All
Breed Dog Show on March
16-20. There will be more
than 800 entries each day
in either Conformation,
Obedience or Rally events.
Shows start daily at 8 a.m.
at the York Expo Center.
Admission is free. Check
thecelticclassic.com or lkc.
club for specific breed and
event times and building
locations.
FOOTBALL
The East Petersburg
Bulldogs midget football
and cheerleading teams
are accepting registrations
for the 2016 season.
Signups will be held March
19 from 9 a.m. to noon
at the East Petersburg
Community Building, 6051
Pine St., East Petersburg.
Early registration with
discounted rates will
continue through March
31. For registration forms
and information, visit
eastpetebulldogs.org or
GOLF
A nine-hole ladies league
will be held each Tuesday
at 9 a.m. at Tanglewood
Golf Club in Quarryville.
Play will open April 19 with
a three-lady scramble,
and events will continue
through September. For
more information call Doris
at 786-2578 or Kathy at
(610) 932-3520.
Registration for the Four
Seasons 9-Hole Ladies
Golf League is underway.
The 2016 kickoff meeting
will be held at 7:30 a.m.
April 7 at the course, 949
Church Street, Landisville,
with the first day of play
to follow. The season runs
Thursdays from April 7
through Oct. 13. For more
information, call 898-0104.
Four Seasons Golf Club will
have two youth programs.
A Junior Golf Summer
Program for boys and
girls ages 10-17 will be
held every Tuesday from
June 14 to Aug. 2 with a
one-hour group clinic at
9:30 a.m. followed by golf.
Juniors will play either 9
or 18 holes depending on
ability. Also, a Short Tees
Program for boys and
girls ages 5-9 will be held
every Tuesday from June
14 to July 26 with a group
clinic at 1 p.m. followed by
golf games. Cost for each
program is $150 per player.
More information and the
application is available at
fourseasonsgolfclub.club.
For more information, call
898-0104.
Four Seasons 18-hole
Ladies Golf Association
will open the season with
a membership meeting at
7:30 a.m. April 7 followed
by casual golf at 9 a.m. for
those who wish to stay and
play. Membership is open
to ladies with a handicap
not to exceed 40 strokes.
Membership dues are $60,
payable to FSLGA and
mailed to Joyce Stabler,
720 Terrace Ave., Mount
Joy, PA 17552. Questions
may be directed to 5075417.
The Lancaster County
Junior Golf Tour offers
a summer-long series
of competitive golf
tournaments for boys and
girls ages 9 through 18 and
still enrolled in school
high school graduates are
not eligible. Registration is
underway. Visit lcjgt.com
for more information or to
register.
LIFEGUARDING
An American Red Cross
Lifeguarding Course,
including CPR/AED/
First Aid for Professional
Rescuers, will be held
at Lititz recCenter.
Participants must be 15
by the end of the class,
which will run March 31
through April 3 or April
14-17 (Thursday and
Friday from 5 to 9 p.m.,
Saturday and Sunday
from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.).
Fee is $235 for members,
$275 for nonmembers.
The rec is also offering
an American Red Cross
Lifeguarding Review
Course (for lifeguards with
current certificates that
need to renew) on May
21 from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Fee is $110 for members,
OFFICIALS
TRAINING
The PIAA START Referee
Recruiting Program will
be held at 7 p.m. on April
3, 10 and 17 at Millersville
University. START
Students of Today are
Referees of Tomorrow
is a program for anyone
interested in becoming
a soccer, volleyball, field
hockey or football official
on the scholastic level.
The program is open to
anyone over the age of
18. The PIAA will waive
the registration fee for
students with current
college identification cards.
Participants without a
current college ID must
pay a $30 fee. To register,
email Lauren Hannaford,
Graduate Assistant of
Campus Recreation, at
lahannaf@millersville.
edu indicating your sport
of interest. A minimum
of five candidates must
register for that program
to proceed. For more
information, contact
Hannaford at 871-5748.
REC CENTERS
Brightside Opportunity
Center, at 515 Hershey Ave.,
Lancaster, offers a variety
of programs for all ages,
and a diverse population.
Yoga, a nutritionist,
fitness, personal trainers,
basketball, Zumba and Soul
line dancing are among
the available programs. To
register call 509-1342 or
come in.
Greater Elizabethtown
Area Recreation &
Community Services offers
programs and activities
for all ages. Registration
is accepted online at
GetintoGEARS.org, by
phone (367-0355) or fax
(367-4138) with a Visa or
MasterCard credit card, and
by walk-in or mail-in at 600
E. High St., Elizabethtown,
PA 17022. Registration is on
a first-come, first-served
basis.
Hempfield Rec Center,
950 Church St., Landisville,
offers instructional,
group exercise and
sports programs for
all ages. Opportunities
include aquatics, fitness,
lifeguarding, personal
training, sport-specific
training, tennis, wellness
and special events. For
more information, visit
hempfieldrec.com or call
898-3102.
Lampeter-Strasburg
YMCA, 800 Village
Road, West Lampeter
Township, offers a variety
of leagues and programs.
Call 464-4000 or visit
lancasterymca.org.
Lancaster Family YMCA
offers a wide variety of
youth and adult sports
programs, including
basketball, roller hockey,
soccer and more. For
more information, visit
lancasterymca.org or
contact Deric Hafer, sports
director, at Dhafer@
lancasterymca.org or 4644000, ext. 1212.
Lancaster Rec offers
instructional, exercise and
recreational programs. Call
392-2115, ext. 147, or visit
lancasterrec.org.
Lititz recCenter offers a
variety of programs for
all ages including sports,
fitness, wellness, aquatics
and special events. For
more information visit
lititzrec.com or call 6265096.
Manheim Township
Recreation Department
offers a selection of sports
leagues and programs. Call
290-7180, ext. 3100, or visit
manheimtownship.org.
Masonic Life Center,
Elizabethtown, has fitness
programs, pool classes and
swim times. For details,
visit masonicvillagespa.
org (click on Elizabethtown
under Location).
Southern End Community
Association SECA in
Quarryville, offers a wide
variety of recreational,
exercise, sports programs
and leagues. Call 806-0123
or see secarec.org.
YMCA at New Holland,
123 N. Shirk Road, offers
personal fitness class and
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
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 6:15
p.m. The club will be
running at the Lancaster
Junction Rail Trail this
week. The rail trail is on
Champ Boulevard, at the
Salunga exit off Route
283. For more information,
contact Betsy at 5376205. Information about
Thursday evening and
Sunday morning trail runs
can also be found on the
club website, lrrclub.org.
SHOOTING
The Conewago Rod
and Gun Club will
hold a National Rifle
Association Basic Pistol
Course on April 24 at its
clubhouse, 1483 Turnpike
Road, Elizabethtown.
Running from 8 a.m. to
4 p.m., the course will
teach fundamentals
and safety. Its cost is
$60 for members, $80
for nonmembers. To
register, send checks,
payable to Conewago
Gun Club, to P.O. Box
144, Elizabethtown, PA
17022. Note Basic Pistol
Course on the check.
Participants must provide
their own handguns. For
more information, contact
Scott Deiter at training@
conewagogunclub.org.
SOCCER
Penn Legacy Soccer
registration is open for
the 2016-17 Travel League.
The program is open
for boys and girls in the
Under 9 to 19 age groups.
Go to pennlegacy.org/
travel-premier/tryouts.html
for more details and to
register.
The Penn United Force
Soccer Club will hold
tryouts for its Premier
teams on April 1 and 8.
The tryouts, to be held at
Weaver Road Turf Complex,
2750 Weaver Road,
Lancaster, are for boys
and girls, birth years from
1998 to 2009. To register
or for more information,
go to pennunitedforce.com
and click on Registration/
Tryout Forms.
The Lancaster Inferno, a
pro-am team in the United
Womens Soccer League,
is hosting open tryouts
from 5 to 6:30 p.m. March
19 and 1:30 to 3 p.m.
April 17 on turf at Lanco
Fieldhouse, 1901 Miller
Road, East Petersburg.
The $50 registration fee
covers both tryout sessions
and includes a T-shirt.
Visit lancasterinferno.
com/lancaster-infernoteam-tryouts/ for more
information and to
register. Contact info@
lancasterinferno.com with
questions.
York County Spring Coed
Soccer League begins
March 20. Matches are
Sundays only, 10 and 11
a.m. and noon and 1 p.m.
Season is 10 matches.
Players of all levels are
welcome, 9-v-9, no offsides
format. New teams are
being accepted. For
more information contact
Sean Heist at 577-8213 or
seanheist22@gmail.com.
Wick Futball Over30 recreation league
registration is open until
March 21. The games are
played at 6 p.m. Sunday
evenings in the Lititz area
and run from April 3 until
Aug. 28. Register online as
an individual at leagues.
bluesombrero.com/
wickfutball to be placed on
a team. Questions? Contact
Tim Meyer at tgmmeyer@
gmail.com.
The Elizabethtown Area
Youth Soccer Program is
an instructional program
for boys and girls in
grades 1-5. It will run on
Saturdays from 9 to 10:30
a.m., April 9 to May 21 at
the Fairview Soccer Fields,
8853 Elizabethtown Road,
Elizabethtown. Fee is $45
for members, $52 for nonmembers. To register or
for more information, visit
GetintoGEARS.org or call
367-0355.
Lititz Youth Soccer Club
will hold tryouts for its
boys and girls travel teams
SOFTBALL
The Jerry Ross Slow
Pitch League is looking
for teams for the 2016
season. The league plays
doubleheaders at Rapho
Park in Mount Joy, with the
season to begin April 24.
A meeting will be held at 1
p.m. March 27 at the House
of Pizza on Chestnut Street
in Lancaster. For more
information contact Steve
Enedy at 492-9816.
A coed softball team is
looking for one female
outfielder to play
Wednesday nights in
Lancaster. If interested,
call Mark at 397-3314 or
368-6287.
SWIMMING
The John Apple Swim
Fund is offering two
scholarships for swimmers
who attend a Lancaster
County high school. The
John Apple Memorial
Scholarship ($1,000) is
available to swimmers
in their senior year who
plan to pursue college
swimming. Deadline is
April 11. The John Apple
Swimming Award ($500)
is available to swimmers
in grades 9-12 who are
committed to joining a
USA swim team. Deadline
is June 1. More information
and applications can
be found online at
johnappleswimfund.org.
New Holland Swim Team
will hold registration for
children in grades K-12
who can swim the width of
New Holland pool (25M).
Dates are April 2 from 9
a.m. to noon and April 6
from 6 to 8 p.m. at Garden
Spot Fire Rescue, 339 E.
Main St., New Holland. For
more information, contact
newhollandswimteam.
com or email
newhollandswimteam@
gmail.com.
Millersville University is
hosting its learn to swim
clinic starting March 14.
Cost is $60 per swimmer.
Registration available
at Millersvilleathletics.
com (click on Camps,
then Swimming), or go to
marauderaquaticclub.org
and its Lessons & Clinics
page. There are six sessions
for the spring: Spring 1,
March 14-23, Mondays and
Wednesdays at 4:30 p.m.
and 5:15 p.m.; Spring 2,
March 15-24 ,Tuesdays and
Thursdays at 4:30 p.m. and
5:15 p.m.; Spring 3, March
28-April 6, Mondays and
Wednesdays at 4:30 p.m.
and 5:15 p.m.; Spring 4,
March 29-April 7, Tuesdays
and Thursdays at 4:30 p.m.
and 5:15 p.m.; Spring 5,
April 11-20, Mondays and
Wednesdays at 4:30 p.m.
and 5:15 p.m.; and Spring
6, April 12-21, Tuesdays
and Thursdays at 4:30 p.m.
and 5:15 p.m. For more
information contact Kyle
Almoney at Kalmoney@
millersville.edu.
TENNIS
The Tennis Central 2016
Spring Junior Team Tennis
League is now holding
registration. The league will
play Saturdays from May
14 to June 25 at are high
schools. A parent/player/
captain meeting will be
held at 3:30 p.m. April 23 at
Racquet Club West Indoor
Tennis Courts, 200 Running
Pump Road, Lancaster. For
more information, contact
League Coordinator Jody
Wilson at 538-2400 or
jodyswilson@gmail.com.
Tennis Central of Lancaster
County will hold the
Lancaster County Tennis
Hall of Fame Inductee
Dinner at 6 p.m. April 30
at the Lancaster Tennis
& Yacht Club. The cost
is $65/person. For more
information, contact Ann
Clark at squid716@aol.
com or visit tenniscentral.
org. Program sponsorship
opportunities are available
and tax-deductible
donations are welcome.
WRESTLING
PJW Area XIII will hold
the Youth Division area
championship event on
March 26 at Franklin &
Marshall College. Wrestlers
in the 8U, 10U and 12U
age groups that reside in
Berks, Lebanon, Dauphin or
Lancaster counties may to
participate. Registrations
are online only through
wrestlereg.com. Visit
pjwarea13.com for more
information.
SPORTS
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Scene
BOWLING
CLEARVIEW
Continued from C1
Nick (Yarnall)
is a pure hitter.
He has a very
solid approach
at the plate and
can make a big
difference with
one swing of the
bat.
Joe Jordano, Pitt coach
DUTCH
THURSDAY SENIOR FUNDAY
Bob Landis..................... 224-190-194608
THURSDAY SENIORS
Shaun Chubb................. 175-194-232601
NEW HOLLAND
Scott Anderson.............. 236-235-236707
COMMERCIAL
Jeff Waller...................... 267-278-246791
Shawn Whitmyer........... 279-247-247773
Troy Lint......................... 269-248-247764
Jon Rogers..................... 277-237-247761
Terry Martin.................. 248-225-268741
Rick Miller..................... 242-236-246724
Eric Montgomery.......... 240-256-214710
Todd Sigeti..................... 205-246-258709
Scott Canfield................ 245-223-235703
Cara Weidman............... 233-199-216648
ZOO
Bryce Carvell.................. 147-106-109362
Nick Sweigart................. 112-102-134348
Liam Ulrich...................... 96-100-137333
Jocelyn Sweigart................ 100-97-99296
Rebekah Omundsen............ 81-95-78254
COED
Cody Sciscione............... 182-225-192599
Drew Wolf..................... 179-176-156511
Zach Fetter.................... 150-220-118488
Jennifer Sensenig.......... 135-146-143424
Emily Omundsen........... 126-150-137413
Tessa Pasker.................. 148-158-105411
SATURDAY SENIORS
Allison Hresko................ 236-231-245712
Ashley Sham.................. 254-247-210711
Isaac Erickson................ 247-267-183697
Tony Lutz....................... 246-257-159662
Austin Barilar................. 246-189-217652
Cole Snavely.................. 194-225-218637
Cameron Zwally............. 219-191-226636
Jared Bigley................... 197-323-204633
Braden Ewing................ 203-171-254628
Andie Gribble................ 214-224-187625
Corey Hanna.................. 205-212-223621
Katelyn Martin............... 201-205-211617
SATURDAY BUMPERS
Mason Muckle........................ 112-82194
Miles Sweigart.......................... 73-99172
McKenna Straley...................... 98-78176
Brooklyn Carvell....................... 72-96168
LEISURE
B.C.A. MIXED
Matt Bloomer................ 229-258-299786
THURSDAY SENIORS
Mike Conner.................. 212-190-236638
Jack Huber..................... 216-200-221637
Cindy Bonham............... 175-177-180532
MYERS AUTOBODY LADIES
AnneMarie Craft............ 213-257-194664
Wendi Simet.................. 221-224-194639
Beth Graham................. 200-215-215630
Sue Schickel................... 256-193-180629
Cindy McLaughlin.......... 184-214-209607
Lynda Johnson............... 167-205-234606
CONESTOGA INDIVIDUAL
Scott Kennedy............... 266-227-258751
Dave Kennedy................ 190-259-257706
Clyde Kemmerly............ 244-216-244704
Ryan Waltz..................... 214-222-268704
Denny Rittenhouse, Jr.... 279-244-178701
DERRS
Bill Shickley.................... 225-248-229702
FRIDAY NIGHT MIXERS
Rick Waller.................... 238-214-257709
BANTAM PREP
Lacey Slaymaker............ 138-176-149463
Eva Brubaker................... 104-159-99362
Joseph Hull...................... 88-138-114340
Kayla Wasche.................. 88-134-107329
Megan Wisler...................... 92-90-99281
Priest McKenzie............... 71-103-104278
Billy Green........................... 82-89-73244
JUNIOR
Nick Tomlinson.............. 155-210-164529
Bob Walker.................... 175-130-193498
Xander Green................ 159-181-116456
Evan Wright................... 142-131-134407
MAJOR
Zach Bowers.................. 221-240-256717
Cory Goshert................. 258-225-214697
Ryan Graham................. 232-278-177687
Brett Wolgemuth........... 189-212-244645
Makenzie Kirchner......... 178-164-230572
TANGLEWOOD
GIRLS
BASKETBALL
PIAA CHAMPIONSHIPS
QUARTERFINALS
CLASS AAA
TRANSACTIONS
ROCKY SPRINGS
THURSDAY SENIORS
Ron Thomas................... 225-179-233637
Ron Summers............... 201, 193-242636
Kevin Riley..................... 214-216-183613
Dave Simmons............... 216-225-161602
FRIDAY NIGHT THUNDER
Chris Emerich................ 246-242-246734
Jim Easton..................... 236-231-191658
Justin Heiney................. 218-194-246658
Robin Heiney................. 248-195-212655
GOLF
PGA
VALSPAR CHAMPIONSHIP
Saturday
At Innisbrook Resort, Copperhead Course
Palm Harbor, Fla.
Purse: $6.1 million
Yardage: 7,340; Par 71
Third Round
Bill Haas............................... 71-67-67205
Graham DeLaet................... 72-66-68206
Charley Hoffman................. 69-72-67208
Ryan Moore......................... 70-69-69208
Patrick Reed........................ 71-70-68209
Charles Howell III................. 67-72-70209
Steve Stricker....................... 71-66-72209
Charl Schwartzel.................. 71-70-69210
Lee McCoy........................... 74-71-66211
Jordan Spieth....................... 76-68-67211
Jason Gore........................... 72-72-67211
John Huh............................. 71-71-69211
Henrik Stenson.................... 71-70-70211
Justin Thomas...................... 72-67-72211
Retief Goosen...................... 70-69-72211
Scott Brown......................... 70-69-72211
Daniel Berger....................... 70-68-73211
Will MacKenzie.................... 70-67-74211
Danny Lee............................ 70-72-70212
Louis Oosthuizen................. 72-70-70212
Sung Kang............................ 72-68-72212
Jerry Kelly............................ 70-69-73212
Sam Saunders...................... 74-71-68213
Shawn Stefani...................... 73-72-68213
Daniel Summerhays............ 71-73-69213
Danny Willett....................... 70-72-71213
Jamie Lovemark................... 70-71-72213
K.J. Choi............................... 74-67-72213
George McNeill................... 74-66-73213
Branden Grace..................... 72-72-70214
Justin Hicks.......................... 72-72-70214
Patton Kizzire....................... 71-73-70214
Russell Knox......................... 75-69-70214
Brandon Hagy...................... 70-73-71214
Greg Yates........................... 69-73-72214
Kevin Na.............................. 74-68-72214
Tyler Aldridge...................... 70-72-72214
Cameron Smith.................... 70-71-73214
Camilo Villegas.................... 72-73-70215
Justin Leonard..................... 72-72-71215
Luke Donald......................... 75-69-71215
Thomas Aiken...................... 75-69-71215
Jason Dufner....................... 72-71-72215
Whee Kim............................ 72-71-72215
Steve Wheatcroft................ 73-68-74215
BASEBALL
American League
TEXAS RANGERS Assigned RHP Miles
Jaye, RHP Scott Williams, and C Kellin Deglan to their minor league camp.
National League
ATLANTA BRAVES Released RHP Kyle
Kendrick and RHP Chris Volstad. Optioned
RHPs Danny Burawa, Tyrell Jenkins and
Casey Kelly and INF Daniel Castro to Gwinnett (IL), and RHP Mauricio Cabrera to Mississippi (SL). Reassigned RHPs Chris Ellis
and Madison Younginer, LHPs David Holmberg and Sean Newcomb, and INFs Chase
dArnaud, Nate Frieman and Rio Ruiz to
their minor league camp.
BASKETBALL
National Basketball Association
MEMPHIS GRIZZLIES Signed G Ray
McCallum and C Alex Stepheson to 10-day
contracts.
FOOTBALL
National Football League
CHICAGO BEARS Agreed to terms with
LB Jerrell Freeman on a three-year contract, DL Mitch Unrein on a two-year contract and WR Marc Mariani on a one-year
contract.
DETROIT LIONS Signed S Rafael Bush.
WASHINGTON REDSKINS Signed P
Tress Way to a five-year contract.
Canadian Football League
WINNIPEG BLUE BOMBERS Signed
WR-KR Solomon Patton.
HOCKEY
National Hockey League
CALGARY FLAMES Assigned D Tyler
Wotherspoon to Stockton (AHL).
American Hockey League
AHL Suspended Providence C Ben Sexton one game for a boarding incident in a
March 11 game against Hartford.
ECHL
ECHL Suspended Atlantas Ian Barteaux
one game and fined him an undisclosed
amount for his actions in a March 11 ECHL
game at South Carolina. Suspended Bramptons Tim Billingsley one game and fined
him an undisclosed amount for his actions
in a March 11 game against Orlando. Fined
Tulsas Brian Nugent an undisclosed amount
for his actions in a march 11 game at Missouri.
MANCHESTER MONARCHS Announced
F Maxim Kitsyn was assigned to the team
by Ontario (AHL). Loand D Matt MacKenzie
to Portland (AHL). Signed F Steve Brown.
READING ROYALS Announced G Martin Ouellette was recalled to Lehigh Valley
(AHL). Signed G Nick Niedert.
COLLEGE
BIG TEN CONFERENCE Announced
that Wisconsin hockey player Jedd Soleway
has been suspended for one game, under
the conferences supplemental discipline
process.
TEXAS A&M Agreed to terms with
mens basketball coach Billy Kennedy on a
five-year contract.
C11
AUTO RACING
NASCAR XFINITY
Saturday
At Phoenix International Raceway
Avondale, Ariz.
Lap length: 1 miles
(Start position in parentheses)
1. (3) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 200 laps, 0
points; 2. (1) Erik Jones, Toyota, 200, 40; 3.
(2) Daniel Suarez, Toyota, 200, 38; 4. (10)
Justin Allgaier, Chevrolet, 200, 37; 5. (5)
Chase Elliott, Chevrolet, 200, 0; 6. (4) Ty
Dillon, Chevrolet, 200, 36; 7. (6) Austin Dillon, Chevrolet, 200, 0; 8. (16) Elliott Sadler,
Chevrolet, 200, 33; 9. (7) Brad Keselowski,
Ford, 200, 0; 10. (17) Brennan Poole, Chevrolet, 200, 31.
11. (8) Brandon Jones, Chevrolet, 200,
30; 12. (9) Darrell Wallace Jr., Ford, 199, 29;
13. (11) Brendan Gaughan, Chevrolet, 199,
28; 14. (13) Ryan Reed, Ford, 199, 27; 15.
(14) Justin Marks, Chevrolet, 199, 26; 16.
(12) Blake Koch, Chevrolet, 199, 25; 17. (15)
Jeb Burton, Ford, 199, 24; 18. (26) Dakoda
Armstrong, Toyota, 198, 23; 19. (28) Dylan
Lupton, Chevrolet, 198, 22; 20. (23) J.J. Yeley, Toyota, 198, 21.
21. (24) Ryan Preece, Chevrolet, 197, 20;
22. (22) David Starr, Toyota, 197, 19; 23.
(18) Spencer Gallagher, Chevrolet, 196, 0;
24. (19) Ross Chastain, Chevrolet, 196, 17;
25. (25) Ray Black Jr., Chevrolet, 196, 16;
26. (27) T.J. Bell, Toyota, 196, 15; 27. (21)
Ryan Sieg, Chevrolet, 195, 14; 28. (20) Jeremy Clements, Chevrolet, 195, 13; 29. (35)
B.J. McLeod, Ford, 194, 12; 30. (38) Harrison Rhodes, Chevrolet, 194, 11.
31. (34) Garrett Smithley, Chevrolet, 194,
10; 32. (31) Timmy Hill, Chevrolet, 193, 0;
33. (36) Joey Gase, Chevrolet, 191, 8; 34.
(37) Derrike Cope, Chevrolet, 191, 7; 35.
(32) Mario Gosselin, Chevrolet, 190, 6; 36.
(33) D.J. Kennington, Dodge, 190, 5; 37.
(40) Todd Peck, Ford, 188, 4; 38. (39) Mike
Harmon, Dodge, 182, 3; 39. (30) Morgan
Shepherd, Chevrolet, overheating, 11, 2;
40. (29) Jeff Green, Toyota, vibration, 5, 1.
Race Statistics
Average Speed of Race Winner: 114.087
mph.
Time of Race: 1 hour, 45 minutes, 11 seconds.
Margin of Victory: 2.285 seconds.
Caution Flags: 3 for 16 laps.
Lead Changes: 5 among 4 drivers.
Lap Leaders: E.Jones 1-5; K.Busch
6-97; T.Dillon 98-108; K.Busch 109-177;
B.Keselowski 178-186; K.Busch 187-200.
Leaders Summary (Driver, Times Led,
Laps Led): K.Busch, 3 times for 175 laps;
T.Dillon, 1 time for 11 laps; B.Keselowski, 1
time for 9 laps; E.Jones, 1 time for 5 laps.
Top 10 in Points: 1. D.Suarez, 144; 2.
E.Sadler, 136; 3. T.Dillon, 135; 4. J.Allgaier,
132; 5. B.Jones, 129; 6. E.Jones, 126; 7.
B.Gaughan, 119; 8. R.Reed, 106; 9. B.Poole,
102; 10. D.Wallace Jr., 96.
NASCAR Driver Rating Formula
A maximum of 150 points can be attained
in a race.
The formula combines the following categories: Wins, Finishes, Top-15 Finishes,
Average Running Position While on Lead
Lap, Average Speed Under Green, Fastest
Lap, Led Most Laps, Lead-Lap Finish.
NASCAR SPRINT CUP
BOYS
BASKETBALL
PIAA CHAMPIONSHIPS
QUARTERFINALS
CLASS AAAA
Allderdice 59...............................Carlisle 42
Phila. Roman Catholic 73.......... Parkland 60
Plymouth-Whitemarsh 52..............Gratz 43
Reading 73.................................. Chester 64
CLASS AA
Aliquippa 50..................West Middlesex 20
Camp Hill 60......................Conwell Egan 57
Lincoln Park Charter 68.... Quaker Valley 44
Mast. Charter North 75..... Camp Hill Trin. 67
C12
SPORTS SLATE
BASEBALL
COLLEGIATE
Franklin & Marshall vs. Endicott (2) in
Winter Haven, Fla., 9:30 a.m.
SOFTBALL
COLLEGIATE
Franklin & Marshall at Randolph-Macon
(2), 1 p.m.
TENNIS
COLLEGIATE WOMEN
Franklin & Marshall vs. Oklahoma Baptist
in Orlando, Fla., 1 p.m.
SCHOLASTIC
WRESTLING
PIAA CHAMPIONSHIPS
At Giant Center, Hershey
CLASS AA
SATURDAY
CHAMPIONSHIP FINALS
106 - Kevan Gentile, Jim Thorpe d. Jaret
Lane, Southern Columbia, 7-1.
113 - Gavin Teasdale, Jefferson-Morgan
t.f. Kollin Myers, Boiling Springs, 23-8, 3:33.
120 - Charlie Lenox, Fort LeBoeuf d. Faris
Messai, Jamestown, 6-3.
126 - Brian Courtney, Athens d. Max
Murin, Central Cambria, 3-2.
132 - Taylor Ortz, Brookville d. John Pipa,
Harrisburg Bishop McDevitt, 7-2.
138 - George Phillippi, Derry d. Cole Wetzel, Boiling Springs, 6-2.
145 - Michael Carr, South Fayette d.
James Duffy, Smethport, 3-1.
152 - Damon Greenwald, Burrell d. Gio
Vonne Sanders, Jeannette, 3-1 OT.
160 - Jake Wentzel, South Park d. Louie
Head, Eisenhower, 3-0.
170 - Jacob Oliver, Huntingdon d. Anthony Walters, Westmont Hilltop, 6-4 OT.
182 - Greg Bulsak, South Park p. Garrett
Hoffman, Montoursville, 1:43.
195 - Gavin Hoffman, Montoursville d. Bill
Bowlen, Jefferson-Morgan, 6-3.
220 - Harrison Cole Nye, Harrisburg
Bishop McDevitt d. Josiah Jones, Westmont
Hilltop, 2-1 TB.
285 - Jacob Beistel, Southmoreland d.
Zach Stafford, Cambridge Springs, 3-2.
THIRD PLACE
106 - Aaron Burkett, Chestnut Ridge d.
Beau Bayless, Reynolds, 4-1.
113 - William Girard, Williams Valley d.
Alan Diltz, Benton, 4-0.
120 - Joe Lobeck, Lancaster Catholic m.d.
Jordan Gessner, Lewisburg, 10-0.
126 - Cole Matthews, Reynolds d. Jonathan Gabriel, Bedford, 3-1.
132 - Jacob Wasser, Palisades d. Todd
Lane, Southern Columbia, 5-0.
138 - Jarret Carter, Fort LeBoeuf d. Cole
Aaron, Brookville, 3-1 OT.
145 - Kody Komara, Freedom (D-7) d.
Seth Baney, Huntingdon, 5-0.
152 - Nicholas Monico, Saegertown p.
Nate Newberry, Biglerville, 5:41 OT.
160 - Blake Marks, Southern Columbia
d. Braden Fochtman, Berlin Brothersvalley,
1-0.
170 - Anthony Welsh, Beth-Center d. Dayton Wickwire, Towanda, 4-1.
182 - Dakota Geer, Franklin d. Luke
Funck, Northern Lebanon, 4-1.
195 - Connor Frey, Lehighton d. Blake
Reynolds, Greenville, 1-0.
220 - Gage Gladysz, Greenville d. Ethan
Budd, Port Allegany, 5-4 OT.
285 - Brylee Shumaker, Redbank Valley d.
Alexander Nicholas, Salisbury, 4-1 TB.
FIFTH PLACE
106 - Keelan Kunselman, Brookville d.
Chase Shields, Harrisburg Bishop McDevitt,
7-0.
113 - Bronson Garber, Upper Dauphin d.
Darren Yearick, Penns Valley, 5-0.
120 - Jalin Hankerson, Boiling Springs d.
Angelo Barberio, Muncy, 3-2.
126 - Mason Lindenmuth, Brockway d.
Tanner Altobelli, Redbank Valley, 3-1 OT.
132 - Collin Glorioso, Huntingdon d. Jared
McGill, Chestnut Ridge, 1-0 UTB.
138 - Creighton Edsell, Wyalusing Valley
d. Chase Anklam, Pen Argyl, 5-4.
145 - Seth Hogue, Reynolds by forfeit
over Caleb Clymer, Northwestern Lehigh,
152 - Shae Bloom, Curwensville t.f. Morgan Derermer, Chestnut Ridge, 17-1, 4:53.
160 - Austin Farabaugh, Penn Cambria d.
Ryan Farber, Northern Lehigh, 1-0.
170 - Brandon Stokes, Milton by forfeit
over Cody Mulligan, Saegertown.
182 - Zach Zimmerman, Troy d. Christian
Hutzell, Meyersdale, 2-1.
195 - Zach Sintobin, Clarion d. Connor
Buttry, Chestnut Ridge, 7-5 OT.
220 - Joey Gladish, Allentown C.C. m.d.
Rasaun Culberson, South Fayette, 13-5.
285 - Crae McCracken, Loyalsock Township d. Dawson Otis, Wyalusing Valley, 4-0.
SEVENTH PLACE
106 - Joe Klock, Benton d. John Consorti,
Wilson, 7-2.
113 - Gavin Park, Brookville d. Ritchie
Markulics, Notre Dame-Green Pond, 1-0.
120 - Mark-Samuel Sallot, Harbor Creek
d. Ryan Carlson, Brockway, 8-3.
126 - Brian Earlston, Line Mountain d.
Tanner McHugh, Tamaqua, 1-0.
132 - Michael Stuart, Benton d. Chaise
Hauck, Reynolds, 6-1.
138 - Justin McCoy, Chestnut Ridge p.
Dallas Bulsak, South Park, 2:51.
145 - Keith Batkowski, Montoursville d.
Ashton West, Bermudian Springs
152 - Jon Wagner, Huntingdon d. Caleb
Hetrick, Brookville, 4-3.
160 - Dalton Group, Susquenita d. Cody
Jenkins, South Allegheny, 5-0.
170 - Jeremy Walsh, Benton d. Dakota
Mackley, Eastern York, 11-10.
182 - Jacob Driskel, Penn Cambria d. Jared Mooney, Palmerton, 6-0.
195 - Logan Fisher, Huntingdon d. Deven
Simpson, Cambridge Springs, 7-0.
220 - Devin Fontenez, Saucon Valley d.
Cole Rickert, Reynolds, 3-2 TB.
285 - Josh Lind, Mount Pleasant d. Evan
Sweesey, Freedom (D-7), 5-3.
FINAL TEAM STANDINGS
1. Brookville 72.5, 2. Huntingdon 70.5,
3. Boiling Springs 63.5, 4. Reynolds 62.5, 5.
(tie) Harrisburg Bishop McDevitt, Chestnut
Ridge 61, 7. (tie) Montoursville, South Park
60, 9. (tie) Southern Columbia, JeffersonMorgan 54.
LOCAL TEAMS
37. Northern Lebanon 21, 39. Lancaster
Catholic 20, 63. Pequea Valley 10, 100.
Annville-Cleona 2.
FRIDAYS LATE RESULTS
FIFTH ROUND CONSOLATIONS
106 - Aaron Burkett, Chestnut Ridge d.
Chase Shields, Harrisburg Bishop McDevitt,
8-3; Beau Bayless, Reynolds d. Keelan Kunselman, Brookville, 2-0.
113 - Alan Diltz, Benton d. Bronson Garber, Upper Dauphin, 7-0; William Girard,
Williams Valley m.d. Darren Yearick, Penns
Valley, 10-2.
120 - Joe Lobeck, Lancaster Catholic m.d.
Angelo Barberio, Muncy, 10-1; Jordan Gessner, Lewisburg d. Jalin Hankerson, Boiling
Springs, 4-2.
126 - Jonathan Gabriel, Bedford d. Mason Lindenmuth, Brockway, 4-3; Cole Matthews, Reynolds d. Tanner Altobelli, Redbank Valley, 4-2 sv.
132 - Todd Lane, Southern Columbia d.
Collin Glorioso, Huntingdon, 4-1; Jacob
Wasser, Palisades m.d. Jared McGill, Chestnut Ridge, 8-0.
138 - Cole Aaron, Brookville d. Creighton
Edsell, Wyalusing Valley, 6-1; Jarret Carter,
Fort LeBoeuf d. Chase Anklam, Pen Argyl,
4-2.
145 - Kody Komara, Freedom (D-7) by
forfeit over Caleb Clymer, Northwestern
Lehigh; Seth Baney, Huntingdon d. Seth
Hogue, Reynolds, 3-1.
SCOREBOARD
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
MLB
SPRING TRAINING
AMERICAN LEAGUE
W
L
Pct
Toronto...................... 9
2
.818
Texas.......................... 8
2
.800
Houston..................... 8
3
.727
Chicago...................... 6
4
.600
Seattle....................... 6
4
.600
Detroit....................... 7
5
.583
Oakland..................... 5
5
.500
Boston....................... 5
6
.455
Los Angeles................ 5
6
.455
Minnesota................. 5
6
.455
Tampa Bay................. 5
6
.455
Cleveland................... 4
5
.444
Kansas City................ 5
8
.385
New York................... 3
7
.300
Baltimore................... 1
10
.091
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W
L
Pct
Arizona...................... 9
3
.750
Philadelphia............... 9
3
.750
Los Angeles................ 5
2
.714
Washington............... 7
3
.700
St. Louis..................... 7
4
.636
Colorado.................... 6
5
.545
Miami........................ 5
5
.500
Milwaukee................. 5
5
.500
Cincinnati................... 5
6
.455
New York................... 4
5
.444
San Francisco............. 5
8
.385
Atlanta....................... 3
8
.273
Chicago...................... 3
8
.273
Pittsburgh.................. 3
8
.273
San Diego................... 2
8
.200
NOTE: Split-squad games count in the
standings; games against non-major league
teams do not.
Fridays Games
Miami 6.................................. Minnesota 5
St. Louis 4.............................. Atlanta (ss) 3
N.Y. Yankees 7........................... Baltimore 1
Pittsburgh 4............................ Tampa Bay 3
Philadelphia 9........................ Atlanta (ss) 2
Washington 9............................ N.Y. Mets 5
Houston 10................................... Detroit 4
Toronto 2................... Boston 1 (10 innings)
L.A. Angels 8........................ L.A. Dodgers 4
Texas 8.................................... Milwaukee 5
Seattle 5.............................. San Francisco 4
Arizona 12............................. Kansas City 3
Chicago Cubs 7.................. Cincinnati (ss) 4
Oakland 9.......................... Cincinnati (ss) 4
Chicago White Sox 8................ San Diego 3
Colorado 6................................ Cleveland 1
Saturdays Games
St. Louis (ss) 4............................. Houston 3
Tampa Bay 2......................... N.Y. Yankees 1
Detroit 3.................................. Pittsburgh 0
Baltimore 8............................. Minnesota 1
Miami 11...................................... Boston 8
Philadelphia 8.............................. Toronto 5
St. Louis (ss) 14.......................... N.Y. Mets 9
Chicago Cubs (ss) 9..... Chicago White Sox 2
Arizona (ss) 9............... San Francisco (ss) 5
Texas 14...................................... Oakland 5
Milwaukee 7.............................. Colorado 6
Arizona (ss) 3......................... Kansas City 0
L.A. Angels 9................ San Francisco (ss) 5
Cleveland vs. San Diego...........................(n)
Washington vs. Atlanta............................(n)
Chicago Cubs (ss) vs. L.A. Dodgers (ss)....(n)
Seattle (ss) vs. Cincinnati.........................(n)
L.A. Dodgers (ss) vs. Seattle (ss)..............(n)
Sundays Games
Boston vs. Tampa Bay (ss) at Port Charlotte,
Fla., 1:05 p.m.
Detroit vs. Pittsburgh at Bradenton, Fla.,
1:05 p.m.
N.Y. Mets vs. Miami at Jupiter, Fla., 1:05 p.m.
Baltimore vs. Minnesota at Fort Myers, Fla.,
1:05 p.m.
Toronto
Philadelphia
ab r h bi
ab r h bi
Pillar cf 3 0 0 0 Galvis ss 3 0 0 0
Fields rf 1 0 0 0 Fthrstn ss 2 0 0 0
Jansen ph 0 0 0 1 Hrrera cf 3 0 2 1
Dnldsn 3b 3 0 1 0 Swny cf 2 0 2 0
Dmngz 3b 2 0 0 0 Franco 3b 3 0 1 0
Btsta dh 3 0 0 0 Jackson 3b 2 0 0 0
J.Berti ph 1 1 0 0 Howard 1b 3 0 0 0
Tlwitzki ss 2 0 0 0 Ruf 1b
0 0 0 0
Mier pr-ss 1 1 1 2 Blanco dh 3 0 0 0
Clbllo 1b 3 1 1 0 Crwfrd ph 1 0 0 0
Tellez 1b 1 0 0 0 Hrnndz 2b 3 1 1 0
Sndrs lf 3 1 2 1 Nina 2b 1 1 1 0
Burns lf 1 0 0 0 Ruiz c
2 1 1 0
Cclni rf-cf 1 0 1 0 Arencibia c 2 1 2 2
Alfrd cf 1 0 0 0 Moore pr-c 0 1 0 0
Goins 2b 2 0 0 0 Goeddel lf 3 0 1 0
Adams 2b 1 1 0 0 Williams rf 1 1 1 3
Thole c 3 0 0 1 Lough rf-lf 4 2 2 2
Sanchez c 1 0 1 0
Totals 33 5 7 5 Totals 38 8 14 8
Toronto................ 020 000 021 5
Philadelphia......... 002 012 03x 8
EArencibia (1), Velasquez (1). DPToronto 1. LOBToronto 6, Philadelphia 7.
2BSaunders (1), T.Sanchez (1), Arencibia (3). 3BColabello (1). HRJ.Mier (1),
Arencibia (2), N.Williams (1), Lough (1).
SBSweeney (1), Lough (1). CSJ.Mier
(1). SGoins. SFD.Jansen.
IP H R ER BB SO
Toronto
Dickey L,1-1................ 41-e 5 3 3 0 1
Tepera......................... 2-e 1 0 0 0 1
Penny...........................2 4 2 2 0 0
R.Hernandez................1 4 3 3 0 1
Philadelphia
Velasquez....................4 4 2 2 2 3
A.Bailey W,1-0.............1 0 0 0 0 1
Hinojosa......................2 1 0 0 1 3
Leroux..........................1 1 2 2 0 3
Medina........................1 1 1 0 0 3
HBPby Penny (Ruf). WPLeroux.
PBL.Moore.
UmpiresHome, Toby Basner; First,
Bob Davidson; Second, Tom Hallion; Third,
James Hoye.
T2:43. A8,691 (8,272).
At Sarasota, Fla.
Minnesota............ 100 000 0001 8 2
Baltimore............. 310 002 20x8 10 1
May, Runzler (3), T.Rogers (5), Tonkin
(6), Boshers (7), Graham (8) and K.Suzuki,
J.Hicks; U.Jimenez, Roe (4), Britton (6),
ODay (7), Redmond (8), C.Lee (9) and
Wieters, A.Perez. WU.Jimenez. LMay.
HRsBaltimore, St.Tolleson (1), A.Perez
(1).
At Lakeland, Fla.
Pittsburgh............. 000 000 0000 9 2
Detroit................. 100 100 01x3 6 1
Locke, Holdzkom (5), OFlaherty (6),
Jor.Rondon (7), Partch (8) and Stewart,
J.Stallings; Pelfrey, Fr.Rodriguez (6), Valdez
(7), Farmer (8) and J.McCann, Mi.Gonzalez.
WPelfrey. LLocke. SvFarmer. HRs
Detroit, J.Martinez (2).
WOMENS
BASKETBALL
NCCAA D-I MIDWEST FINAL
At Rochester, NY
VOLLEYBALL
COLLEGIATE MEN
PSU-Altoona 3, Lanc. Bible 0
SCOREBOARD
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
NBA
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
W
L Pct GB
Toronto.......................43 20 .683
Boston........................39 27 .591 51-w
New York....................27 40 .403 18
Brooklyn.....................18 47 .277 26
Philadelphia..................9 56 .138 35
Southeast Division
Charlotte.....................37 28 .569
1
Atlanta........................36 29 .554
2
Washington................30 34 .469 71-w
Orlando......................28 36 .438 91-w
Central Division
Cleveland....................46 18 .719
Indiana........................35 30 .538 111-w
Detroit........................33 32 .508 131-w
Chicago.......................32 32 .500 14
Milwaukee..................27 38 .415 191-w
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Southwest Division
W
L Pct GB
x-San Antonio.............55 10 .846
Memphis....................39 26 .600 16
Houston......................33 33 .500 221-w
Dallas..........................33 33 .500 221-w
New Orleans...............24 40 .375 301-w
Northwest Division
Oklahoma City............44 21 .677
Portland......................34 32 .515 101-w
Utah............................30 35 .462 14
Denver........................27 38 .415 17
Minnesota..................21 45 .318 231-w
Pacific Division
x-Golden State............58
6 .906
L.A. Clippers................42 22 .656 16
Sacramento................25 39 .391 33
Phoenix.......................17 48 .262 411-w
L.A. Lakers...................14 52 .212 45
x-clinched playoff spot
Fridays Games
Philadelphia 95........................ Brooklyn 89
Charlotte 118............................ Detroit 103
Houston 102............................... Boston 98
Miami 118................................. Chicago 96
Memphis 121.......... New Orleans 114 (OT)
Minnesota 99................. Oklahoma City 96
Utah 114............................. Washington 93
Orlando 107...................... Sacramento 100
Golden State 128.................... Portland 112
L.A. Clippers 101..................... New York 94
Saturdays Games
Indiana 112................................. Dallas 105
Charlotte 125.......................... Houston 109
Miami at Toronto.................................... (n)
Detroit at Philadelphia........................... (n)
New Orleans at Milwaukee.................... (n)
Memphis at Atlanta................................ (n)
Oklahoma City at San Antonio................ (n)
Washington at Denver............................ (n)
Phoenix at Golden State......................... (n)
Orlando at Portland................................ (n)
Sundays Games
Cleveland at L.A. Clippers............ 3:30 p.m.
Utah at Sacramento.......................... 6 p.m.
Indiana at Atlanta............................. 6 p.m.
Milwaukee at Brooklyn..................... 8 p.m.
New York at L.A. Lakers............... 9:30 p.m.
Mondays Games
Dallas at Charlotte............................ 7 p.m.
Chicago at Toronto...................... 7:30 p.m.
Denver at Miami.......................... 7:30 p.m.
Memphis at Houston........................ 8 p.m.
Portland at Oklahoma City............... 8 p.m.
Detroit at Washington...................... 8 p.m.
Minnesota at Phoenix.................... 10 p.m.
New Orleans at Golden State.... 10:30 p.m.
Cleveland at Utah...................... 10:30 p.m.
MENS
BASKETBALL
SATURDAYS SCORES
TOURNAMENTS
America East Conference
Championship
Stony Brook 80......................... Vermont 74
American Athletic Conference
Semifinals
Memphis 74.................................Tulane 54
UConn 77.....................................Temple 62
Atlantic 10 Conference
Semifinals
Saint Josephs 82.........................Dayton 79
VCU 76......................................Davidson 54
Big 12 Conference
Championship
Kansas 81........................... West Virginia 71
Big East Conference
Championship
Seton Hall 69............................Villanova 67
Big Ten Conference
Semifinals
Michigan St. 64........................Maryland 61
Purdue 76.................................Michigan 59
Conference USA
Championship
Middle Tennessee 55........ Old Dominion 53
Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference
Championship
Hampton 81............................... SC State 69
Mountain West Conference
Championship
Fresno St. 68...................... San Diego St. 63
Southeastern Conference
Semifinals
Kentucky 93................................Georgia 80
Texas A&M 71................................... LSU 38
Southwestern Athletic Conference
Championship
Southern U. 54...................... Jackson St. 53
Sun Belt Conference
Semifinals
Louisiana-Monroe 82.....Texas-Arlington 71
UALR 72................... Louisiana-Lafayette 65
NCAA Division II
First Round
Ala.-Huntsville 98..........................St. Leo 81
Augustana (SD) 100....................Harding 88
Barry 107......................................Rollins 92
Bellarmine 100......................... Ferris St. 84
Fort Lewis 95.....................Dallas Baptist 87
Indianapolis 77.......................... Ashland 60
Lenoir-Rhyne 83.................. King (Tenn.) 79
Lincoln Memorial 98.................... Lander 71
Mercyhurst 66............... Wheeling Jesuit 65
S. New Hampshire 88...........Holy Family 80
Union (Tenn.) 86................... Eckerd 85 (OT)
Virginia St. 76......................Fairmont St. 66
West Liberty 90.........................Concord 69
Wingate 89........................... Montevallo 88
CONNECTICUT (23-10)
Nolan 0-1 0-0 0, Hamilton 8-14 2-3 19,
Miller 8-12 3-4 19, Gibbs 3-7 1-2 9, Purvis
2-8 2-2 8, Adams 3-9 4-4 11, Facey 0-0 0-0
0, Calhoun 2-2 0-0 5, Amilo 0-0 0-0 0, Foxen
0-0 0-0 0, Noyes 0-0 0-0 0, Brimah 3-3 0-0
6. Totals 29-56 12-15 77.
TEMPLE (21-11)
Enechionyia 2-13 0-0 5, Bond 7-9 3-7 17,
Brown 4-7 0-1 10, Dingle 0-5 1-2 1, DeCosey 4 17 6-10 14, Alston Jr. 0-1 0-0 0, Williams 0-1 0-0 0, Robbins 0-0 0-0 0, Watson
1-1 0-0 2, Aflakpui 0-0 0-0 0, Coleman 5-10
2-2 13. Totals 23-64 12-22 62.
HalftimeUConn 39-28. 3-Point Goals
UConn 7-14 (Purvis 2-4, Gibbs 2-5, Adams
1-1, Calhoun 1-1, Hamilton 1-2, Miller 0-1),
Temple 4-20 (Brown 2-3, Coleman 1-3, Enechionyia 1-7, Dingle 0-2, DeCosey 0-5).
Fouled OutDingle. ReboundsUConn
36 (Hamilton 11), Temple 35 (Bond 10).
AssistsUConn 14 (Adams 8), Temple 10
(Brown 4). Total FoulsUConn 17, Temple
16. TechnicalBond. ANA.
ATLANTIC 10 TOURNAMENT
SEMIFINAL
AHL
Finlay (Justin Meram, 74th), Hector Jimenez (Cedrick, 59th), Wil Trapp, Federico
Higuain, Tony Tchani, Kei Kamara.
C13
NHL
United 0, Revolution 0
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
W L OL SL Pct Pts GF GA
W-B/Scran.... 36 19 4 1 .642 77 188 153
Hershey........ 34 17 3 7 .639 78 210 180
Providence.... 29 18 9 3 .593 70 182 163
Portland........ 31 23 3 1 .569 66 159 159
Bridgeport.... 31 23 3 3 .567 68 166 172
Hartford........ 31 27 2 0 .533 64 153 163
Lehigh Val..... 27 29 3 3 .484 60 176 184
Springfield.... 21 30 3 4 .422 49 152 198
North Division
W L OL SL Pct Pts GF GA
Toronto......... 44 13 4 0 .754 92 242 156
Albany........... 36 15 8 0 .678 80 167 136
Utica............. 30 21 5 3 .576 68 177 166
Rochester..... 29 26 2 1 .526 61 155 182
St. Johns....... 27 24 8 3 .524 65 173 192
Syracuse....... 25 23 9 3 .517 62 163 188
Binghamton... 23 32 4 1 .425 51 165 198
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Central Division
W L OL SL Pct Pts GF GA
Rockford....... 33 14 7 4 .664 77 173 153
Gr. Rapids..... 37 20 1 1 .644 76 189 144
Milwaukee.... 37 20 3 0 .642 77 171 154
Lake Erie....... 32 19 5 5 .607 74 159 154
Charlotte....... 29 24 3 3 .542 64 165 180
Chicago......... 25 27 5 3 .483 58 154 183
Iowa.............. 21 34 3 4 .395 49 138 182
Manitoba...... 18 34 4 5 .369 45 140 205
Pacific Division
W L OL SL Pct Pts GF GA
Ontario......... 34 14 3 1 .692 72 144 103
Texas............. 34 21 5 3 .603 76 232 200
San Diego...... 30 20 2 2 .593 64 157 160
San Jose........ 26 19 6 3 .565 61 157 151
Bakersfield.... 25 22 5 2 .528 57 168 171
Stockton....... 25 24 1 2 .510 53 150 166
San Antonio... 24 30 8 0 .452 56 170 199
NOTE: Two points are awarded for a win,
one point for an overtime or shootout loss.
Saturdays Games
Hartford 4........................... Lehigh Valley 2
Albany 4........................................... Utica 3
St. Johns 2.................................. Hershey 1
Rockford at Charlotte..............................(n)
Manitoba at Grand Rapids......................(n)
Portland at Springfield.............................(n)
Rochester at Syracuse.............................(n)
Toronto at Providence.............................(n)
Bridgeport at W-B/Scranton....................(n)
Milwaukee at Chicago.............................(n)
San Diego at Ontario...............................(n)
San Jose at Bakersfield............................(n)
Texas at Stockton.....................................(n)
Sundays Games
Rockford at Charlotte....................... 1 p.m.
Hershey at St. Johns................... 2:30 p.m.
Toronto at Albany............................. 3 p.m.
Hartford at Portland......................... 3 p.m.
Utica at Providence..................... 3:05 p.m.
Grand Rapids at Chicago................... 4 p.m.
W-B/Scranton at Bridgeport............. 5 p.m.
Lake Erie at San Antonio................... 5 p.m.
Syracuse at Springfield..................... 5 p.m.
Binghamton at Rochester............ 5:05 p.m.
Milwaukee at Iowa........................... 6 p.m.
Ontario at San Jose........................... 8 p.m.
Mondays Games
No games scheduled
Tuesdays Games
Charlotte at Rockford....................... 8 p.m.
IceCaps 2, Bears 1
Hershey................................. 1 0 0 1
St. Johns............................... 0 1 1 2
1st Period1, Hershey, Vrana 9 (Boyd, C.
Bourque), 17:16. Penalties-Ranger Stj (tripping), 11:55.
2nd Period2, St. Johns, Friberg 10 (McNally, Yogan), 4:51. Penalties-Vrana Her
(slashing), 17:48; R. Bourque Her (roughing), 19:39.
3rd Period3, St. Johns, Holloway 18
4:28 (PP). Penalties-Barber Her (highsticking), 2:57; Gregoire Stj (closing hand
on puck), 6:32; Sill Her (boarding), 9:34;
Pasquale Stj (tripping), 16:33; Camper Her
(hooking), 19:59.
Shots on GoalHershey 11-10-3-24. St.
Johns 6-10-6-22.
Power Play OpportunitiesHershey 0 of
3; St. Johns 1 of 5.
GoaliesHershey, Ellis 22-8-2 (22
shots-20 saves). St. Johns, Pasquale 10-6-0
(24 shots-23 saves).
A-5,721. RefereesPierre Lambert (39),
Jon McIsaac (45). LinesmenJim Vail (75),
Joe Maynard (24).
MLS
LACROSSE
COLLEGIATE MEN
Kenyon.................................. 2 4 0 3 9
Franklin & Marshall............... 3 3 6 4 16
Kenyon Scoring: J. Galardi 3, R. Jacobs 3,
J. Florence, A. Lopez, C. Ferraro.
Franklin & Marshall Scoring: M. Rama
4, S. Rogers 4, W. Rhudy 2, M. Bossidy, C.
Casey, M. Wasik, H. Rice, R. Ziegler, J. Gladstone.
Kenyon Assists: J. Florence 2, R. Jacobs 2,
C. Ferraro.
Franklin & Marshall Assists: S. Rogers 4, M.
Sanzone, M. Rama, M. Bossidy, R. Ziegler.
SOG: K 40; F&M 46.
Saves: KP. Shevelson 16; F&MT.
Moore 15.
Ursinus.................................. 3 5 2 2 12
Elizabethtown....................... 1 1 1 4 7
Ursinus Scoring: L. Panaccione 3, S. Mussoline 2, I. Desenberg 2, P. DeSimone 2, G.
Brown, L. Harrison, M. Cioeta.
Elizabethtown Scoring: J. Clark 4, M.
Speckt 2, J. Waters.
Ursinus Assists: L. Panaccione 3, G. Brown
3, M. Cioeta, P. DeSimone, C. Fitzgerald, L.
Duke.
Elizabethtown Assists: J. Clough 3, N.
Specht, C. Larkin.
SOG: U 21; E 17.
Saves: UB. Neff 10; ED. Miracle 8, B.
Calle 1.
COLLEGIATE WOMEN
Ithaca....................................... 4 1 5
Franklin & Marshall.................. 8 7 15
Ithaca Scoring: G. Berne 2, R. Marion 2,
M. Racicot.
Franklin & Marshall Scoring: G. Frank 5,
P. Moriarty 5, N. Delinsky 2, A. Mergner 2,
C. Jackson.
Ithaca Assists: M. Racicot 2, A. Panara, M.
Cadwell.
Franklin & Marshall Assists: G. Saliba 4, C.
Jackson 2, S. Blicht 2, N. Delinsky, T. Freud,
M. Hughes.
SOG: I 18; F&M 35.
Saves: IE. Ross 4, K. Presuto 7; F&MK.
Hardt 11, J. McKay 0.
Washington & Jefferson............ 6 3 9
Elizabethtown........................ 10 9 19
Washington & Jefferson Scoring: C. Kallos
5, H. DeLoache 2, A. Bulger, M. Ewansik.
Elizabethtown Scoring: N. Donahue 4, C.
Thompson 3, D. Robidoux 3, A. Stang 3, M
Baker 2, K. Thompson 2, A. McLamb 2.
Washington & Jefferson Assists: A. Dikos
2, A. Bulger.
Elizabethtown Assists: C. Thompson, K.
Thompson, A. Stang.
SOG: W&J 13; E 32.
Saves: W&JL. Yerardi 4, M. Mulokey 9;
EA. Kopytko 3, A. Gibson 1.
East Stroudsburg...................... 2 9 11
Millersville............................... 4 8 12
East Stroudsburg Scoring: J. Zimmer 3, L.
Nunes 2, L. Green, C. Rahmer, B. Fritz, K.
Wiltraut, E. Fitzsimmons, A. Porpora.
Millersville Scoring: B. Hufnagel 4, A.
Mack 2, S. Fusco 2, R. Landis, T. Davis, J.
Damirgian, N. Sell.
East Stroudsburg Assists: L. Nunes 2, T.
Jefferis, L. Green.
Millersville Assists: S. Fusco 3, A. Mack, B.
Hufnagel.
SOG: ES 19; M 21.
Saves: ESJ. Maxwell 9; MB. WestonWyatt 8.
EASTERN CONFERENCE
W L T Pts GF GA
Montreal.................2 0 0 6 6 2
Toronto FC..............1 0 0 3 2 0
N.Y. City FC..............1 0 0 3 4 3
Philadelphia............1 1 0 3 2 3
New England..........0 0 2 2 3 3
Orlando City...........0 0 2 2 3 3
Chicago...................0 1 1 1 4 5
D.C. United.............0 1 1 1 1 4
Columbus...............0 2 0 0 2 4
New York................0 2 0 0 0 5
WESTERN CONFERENCE
W L T Pts GF GA
Real Salt Lake..........1 0 1 4 4 3
Los Angeles.............1 1 0 3 4 2
FC Dallas.................1 0 0 3 2 0
Portland..................1 0 0 3 2 1
Sporting K.C............1 0 0 3 1 0
San Jose..................1 0 0 3 1 0
Colorado.................1 1 0 3 1 1
Houston..................0 0 1 1 3 3
Vancouver...............0 1 0 0 2 3
Seattle....................0 2 0 0 1 3
NOTE: Three points for victory, one point
for tie.
Fridays Games
Orlando City 1..................... Chicago 1 (tie)
Saturdays Games
New England 0................ D.C. United 0 (tie)
Montreal 3................................ New York 0
Real Salt Lake 2............................. Seattle 1
Colorado 1............................. Los Angeles 0
Philadelphia 2.......................... Columbus 1
Vancouver at Sporting Kansas City......... (n)
FC Dallas at Houston............................... (n)
Sundays Games
Toronto FC at New York City FC........ 5 p.m.
Portland at San Jose......................... 7 p.m.
Friday, March 18
Orlando City at New York City FC..... 7 p.m.
Saturday, March 19
Columbus at Chicago........................ 5 p.m.
Houston at New York........................ 7 p.m.
Montreal at FC Dallas....................... 9 p.m.
Vancouver at Seattle....................... 10 p.m.
Real Salt Lake at Portland.......... 10:30 p.m.
San Jose at Los Angeles............. 10:30 p.m.
Sunday, March 20
New England at Philadelphia....... 2:30 p.m.
Colorado at D.C. United.................... 5 p.m.
Toronto FC at Sporting Kansas City...... 7 p.m.
Union 2, Crew 1
Philadelphia............................. 1 1 2
Columbus................................. 0 1 1
First half1, Philadelphia, Pontius 1,
45th+ minute.
Second half2, Philadelphia, Pontius 2,
71st. 3, Columbus, Kamara 1 (Saeid), 87th.
GoaliesPhiladelphia, Andre Blake; Columbus, Steve Clark.
Yellow CardsFabinho, Philadelphia,
56th; Carroll, Philadelphia, 65th.
RefereeHilario Grajeda. Assistant RefereesJames Conlee. Jason White. 4th OfficialGeoff Gamble.
A17,015 (22,555)
Lineups
PhiladelphiaAndre Blake, Fabinho,
Keegan Rosenberry, Richie Marquez, Ken
Tribbett, Brian Carroll, Leo Fernandes (Sebastien Le Toux, 61st), Warren Creavalle,
Chris Pontius (Fabian Herbers, 86th), Ilsinho (Roland Alberg, 75th), C.J. Sapong.
ColumbusSteve Clark, Gaston Sauro,
Michael Parkhurst, Waylon Francis (Mohammed Saeid, 74th), Harrison Afful, Ethan
D.C. United............................... 0 0 0
New England............................ 0 0 0
First halfNone.
Second halfNone.
GoaliesD.C. United, Travis Worra; New
England, Bobby Shuttleworth.
Yellow CardsKoffie, New England, 26th;
Acosta, D.C. United, 45th+; Franklin, D.C.
United, 56th; DeLeon, D.C. United, 64th;
Sarvas, D.C. United, 88th.
RefereeSilviu Petrescu. Assistant RefereesPeter Manikowski. Claudio Badea. 4th
OfficialRobert Sibiga.
Lineups
D.C. UnitedTravis Worra, Steve Birnbaum, Taylor Kemp, Sean Franklin, Bobby
Boswell, Luciano Acosta (Alvaro Saborio,
62nd), Rob Vincent, Marcelo Sarvas, Lamar
Neagle (Miguel Aguilar, 84th), Nick DeLeon,
Chris Rolfe (Julian Buscher, 71st).
New EnglandBobby Shuttleworth, Jose
Goncalves, Chris Tierney, Andrew Farrell,
Lee Nguyen, Je-Vaughn Watson, Diego Fagundez, Gershon Koffie (Daigo Kobayashi,
88th), Scott Caldwell, Charlie Davies (Juan
Agudelo, 34th), Teal Bunbury (Kelyn Rowe,
74th).
HORSE RACING
PENN NATIONAL RESULTS
1st$12,400,6f
6-R U Forreal (Potts C.)......... 2.40,2.10,2.10
3-Sterlings Bailesa (Flores E.)....... 5.00,3.00
7-Entusiasta (Guzman P.)...................... 3.20
Also Ran: Shotgun Sally, A Little Extra,
Shegotmorethaneven. Late Scratches: Outpatient. Race Time: 1:15.26. Exacta (6-3)
Paid $4.80; Superfecta (6-3-7-2) Paid $5.46;
Trifecta (6-3-7) Paid $8.40.
2nd$15,200,1m70yds
3-Gold Man (Cora D.)............ 3.80,2.40,2.40
6-Mizzen the Action (Otero W.).... 3.60,3.00
4-Loveshackled (Garcia W.).................. 4.20
Also Ran: Tom Cat Allie, Rick the Bartender, Just Another Toy. Race Time: 1:45.13.
Daily Double (6-3) Paid $7.60; Exacta (3-6)
Paid $5.70; Superfecta (3-6-4-5) Paid $5.83;
Trifecta (3-6-4) Paid $9.30.
3rd$33,300,1m
2-Calculation (Whitney D.)....... 8.00,4.40,3.40
3-Jumping Bean (Guzman P.)...... 10.60,4.00
5-Sweeter Surprise (Wolfsont A.)......... 3.60
Also Ran: Elysian, (dq)Start Again, Galanthus. Race Time: 1:42.45. Daily Double (32) Paid $27.40; Exacta (2-3) Paid $36.20;
Superfecta (2-3-5-1) Paid $47.42; Trifecta
(2-3-5) Paid $59.95; Pic 3 (6-3-2) Paid $7.00.
4th$18,100,1m
7-Milwaukee Red (Garcia W.).......28.40,12.40,5.60
6-It Is Back (Flores E.)................. 11.60,8.20
1-New Freedom (Corujo W.)................. 3.60
Also Ran: Just a Wildflower, Great Starlene, Flatters Secret, Kernel Slanders,
Its the Rush, Proud Reward. Race Time:
1:41.44. Daily Double (2-7) Paid $89.20;
Exacta (7-6) Paid $123.10; Superfecta (76-1-4) Paid $547.33; Trifecta (7-6-1) Paid
$240.15; Pic 3 (3-2-7) Paid $58.55; Pic 4
(5/6-3-2-7) Paid $57.75.
5th$29,500,1m
5-M Js Warrior (Cruz A.)...... 7.60,3.40,2.60
1-Mongolian King (Boyce F.)......... 3.60,2.80
3-Winning Shot (Whitney D.)............... 3.60
Also Ran: Gansett Bay, Melodious Tune.
Late Scratches: Omarvelous. Race Time:
1:39.51. Daily Double (7-5) Paid $153.20;
Exacta (5-1) Paid $8.80; Trifecta (5-1-3) Paid
$17.70; Pic 3 (2-7-5) Paid $135.45.
6th$12,400,6f
9-Midnight Ball (Rodriguez A.)..... 9.00,5.00,3.40
6-Souparion (Hernandez J.)...... 32.20,10.40
3-Pennie My Love (Whitney D.)............ 6.80
Also Ran: Gitanilla, Party, Po Mahina,
Princess Emma Rose, Adrift, Sunspot Baby,
Nobiz Like Gobiz. Late Scratches: Jojos Gal.
Race Time: 1:13.13. Daily Double (5-9) Paid
$36.60; Exacta (9-6) Paid $180.50; Superfecta (9-6-3-2) Paid $4,164.51; Trifecta (9-63) Paid $424.15; Pic 3 (7-5-9) Paid $150.70.
7th$13,800,1m
2-Drop to Pop (Otero W.)..... 5.20,2.60,2.20
6-Citis Barometer (Rodriguez A.).... 2.40,2.60
1-Demographic Trend (Conner T.) ....... 3.80
Also Ran: Beau Who, Battleship Gray,
Open Ice Hit. Race Time: 1:39.78. Daily
Double (9-2) Paid $26.40; Exacta (2-6) Paid
$6.00; Superfecta (2-6-1-5) Paid $2.41; Trifecta (2-6-1) Paid $6.95; Pic 3 (5-9-2) Paid
$33.55.
COLLEGE
BASEBALL
Post....................... 200 000 0 2 3 2
Millersville............ 200 414 x 11 12 0
M. DAriano, A. Johnson (6) and L. Leonardi; R. Anderson, M. Binder (7) and M.
Stoltzfus, B. Novak (7). WPR. Anderson.
LPM. DAriano. SO-BB: M. DAriano 4-3,
A. Johnson 0-2; R. Anderson 6-3, M. Binder
0-2. HRM. Stoltzfus.
Post....................... 000 000 0 0 5 0
Millersville............ 021 101 x 5 6 0
E. Esposito, K. Crimmins (5) and L. Leonardi; K. Peterson, S. Muscovitch (4), M. Ulrich (5), L. Grant (6), C. Stoneback (7) and B.
Snyder. WPK. Peterson. LPE. Esposito.
SO-BB: E. Esposito 5-5, K. Crimmins 1-0; K.
Peterson 6-1, S. Muscovitch 0-0, M. Ulrich
0-0, L. Grant 0-0, C. Stoneback 0-0.
Stevenson............. 172 000 3 13 12 1
Elizabethtown....... 300 010 0 4 5 1
A. Romanowski and J. Dimon, J. Lugo (7);
K. Elwell, A. Lippy (3), R. Masciarelli (7), J.
Kwak (7) and C. Smith. WPA. Romanowski. LPK. Elwell. SO-BB: A. Romanowski
2-2; K. Elwell 1-3, A. Lippy 5-3, R. Masciarelli 0-2, J. Kwak 0-1.
Stevenson............. 300 010 0 4 7 0
Elizabethtown....... 000 020 0 2 5 3
C. Perez, R. Foxwell (5), T. Fitzsimmons
(5) and J. Dimon; S. Jones, J. Singer (5), Z.
Tomasko (7) and C. Smith. WPC. Perez.
LPS. Jones. SO-BB: C. Perez 2-0, R. Foxwell 0-4, T. Fitzsimmons 2-2; S. Jones 4-3, J.
Singer 0-0, Z. Tomasko 0-0. HRC. Joseph.
COLLEGE
SOFTBALL
Franklin & Marshall...000 100 3 4 11 0
Mary Washington....000 201 0 3 10 3
I. Schaefer and E. Russell; E. Stinson, C.
Merson (7) and O. Tatara. WPI. Schaefer.
LPC. Merson. SO-BB: I. Schaefer 3-0; E.
Stinson 2-1, C. Merson 0-0.
Franklin & Marshall...000 605 0 11 14 0
Mary Washington....011 201 0 5 11 3
K. Wenger, T. Long (5) and E. Russell, C.
Good (5); K. Deppe, C. Merson (4), E. Stinson (6) and K. Kean. WPK. Wenger. LPK.
Deppe. SO-BB: K. Wenger 0-1, T. Long 1-1;
K. Deppe 5-4, C. Merson 0-2, E. Stinson 0-0.
HRM. Rogers.
Millersville............... 000 145 10 13 1
Catawba................... 010 000 1 6 0
B. Andraos and M. McCurdy; C. Turner,
P. Ellenberg (5) and T. Adams. WPB. Andraos. LPC. Turner. SO-BB: B. Andraos
2-1; C. Turner 6-2, P. Ellenberg 1-4. HRM.
McCurdy.
Millersville............ 230 002 1 8 13 2
Catawba................ 020 140 2 9 15 0
C. Pinchorski, B. Andraos (5) and M. McCurdy; P. Ellenberg, C. Turner (2) and T.
Adams. WPC. Turner. LPB. Andraos.
SO-BB: C. Pinchorski 1-3, B. Andraos 1-0; P.
Ellenberg 2-1, C. Turner 5-3. HRH. Lutz, K.
Campbell; M. Brann.
WEIGHTLIFTING
BRISTOLS BIG BENCH COMPETITION
At Bristol, Pa
55-59 Age Group
Chuck Herman, Lancaster 390 lbs
Bench press, 1st place.
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Boston..........70 39 23 8 86 213 188
Florida..........67 37 21 9 83 187 163
Tampa Bay....68 39 24 5 83 186 163
Detroit..........68 34 23 11 79 173 181
Montreal.......68 32 30 6 70 186 190
Ottawa..........69 31 30 8 70 198 218
Buffalo..........70 28 33 9 65 167 190
Toronto.........66 22 33 11 55 159 197
Metropolitan Division
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Washington....67 49 13 5 103 217 155
N.Y. Rangers....68 39 22 7 85 194 176
N.Y. Islanders...66 37 21 8 82 190 166
Pittsburgh.....67 35 24 8 78 183 170
Philadelphia...66 32 23 11 75 170 175
Carolina........69 31 26 12 74 170 186
New Jersey...68 32 29 7 71 151 170
Columbus.....68 28 32 8 64 180 211
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Central Division
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Dallas............69 41 20 8 90 223 198
St. Louis........69 40 20 9 89 178 168
Chicago.........69 41 22 6 88 195 168
Nashville.......68 34 21 13 81 187 173
Colorado.......69 35 30 4 74 186 195
Minnesota....68 31 27 10 72 178 171
Winnipeg......67 27 35 5 59 173 201
Pacific Division
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Los Angeles...66 40 22 4 84 179 152
Anaheim.......67 37 21 9 83 167 159
San Jose........67 37 24 6 80 198 177
Arizona.........68 29 32 7 65 181 211
Vancouver.....66 26 28 12 64 160 190
Calgary..........68 28 35 5 61 182 213
Edmonton.....70 27 36 7 61 169 205
NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for
overtime loss.
Fridays Games
Pittsburgh 3............................. Columbus 2
Philadelphia 3......................... Tampa Bay 1
St. Louis 5.................................. Anaheim 2
Dallas 5........................................ Chicago 2
Arizona 4...................................... Calgary 1
Saturdays Games
Boston 3.............................. N.Y. Islanders 1
Buffalo 3............................. Carolina 2 (OT)
Detroit 3....................... N.Y. Rangers 2 (OT)
Minnesota at Montreal...........................(n)
Toronto at Ottawa...................................(n)
Philadelphia at Florida.............................(n)
Colorado at Winnipeg..............................(n)
St. Louis at Dallas.....................................(n)
Arizona at Edmonton...............................(n)
Nashville at Vancouver............................(n)
New Jersey at Los Angeles.......................(n)
Washington at San Jose...........................(n)
Sundays Games
Pittsburgh at N.Y. Rangers.......... 12:30 p.m.
Tampa Bay at Columbus................... 3 p.m.
Toronto at Detroit........................ 7:30 p.m.
Mondays Games
Florida at N.Y. Islanders..................... 7 p.m.
Los Angeles at Chicago..................... 8 p.m.
St. Louis at Calgary........................... 9 p.m.
Nashville at Edmonton..................... 9 p.m.
Winnipeg at Vancouver.................. 10 p.m.
New Jersey at Anaheim.................. 10 p.m.
Bruins 3, Islanders 1
N.Y. Islanders......................... 0 1 0 1
Boston................................... 1 1 1 3
First Period1, Boston, Eriksson 26
(Spooner, Krug), 18:26 (pp).
Second Period2, N.Y. Islanders, Tavares
26 (Okposo), 10:48. 3, Boston, Pastrnak 11
(Krejci, Eriksson), 19:51.
Third Period4, Boston, Pastrnak 12 (Eriksson), 17:26.
Shots on GoalN.Y. Islanders 5-12-9
26. Boston 14-11-631.
GoaliesN.Y. Islanders, Greiss. Boston,
Rask. A17,565 (17,565). T2:27.
N.Y. Rangers.......................1 0 1 0 2
Detroit..............................0 0 2 1 3
First Period1, N.Y. Rangers, Stepan 16
(Kreider, Zuccarello), 19:11.
Second PeriodNone.
Third Period2, Detroit, Helm 9 (Glendening, DeKeyser), 4:28. 3, N.Y. Rangers,
Kreider 15 (Yandle, Zuccarello), 15:33 (pp).
4, Detroit, Richards 9 (Abdelkader, Zetterberg), 19:28 (pp).
Overtime5, Detroit, Helm 10 (Datsyuk,
DeKeyser), 3:03.
Shots on GoalN.Y. Rangers 7-10-4-4
25. Detroit 15-9-14-543.
GoaliesN.Y. Rangers, Lundqvist. Detroit,
Mrazek. A20,027 (20,027). T2:37.
TENNIS
BNP PARIBAS OPEN
Saturday
At The Indian Wells Tennis Garden
Indian Wells, Calif.
Purse: Men: $7.04 million (Masters 1000);
Women: $6.84 million (Premier)
Surface: Hard-Outdoor
Singles
Men
Second Round
Milos Raonic (12), Canada, def. Inigo
Cervantes, Spain, 6-1, 6-3. Alexandr Dolgopolov (26), Ukraine, def. Robin Haase,
Netherlands, 6-4, 6-2. Federico Delbonis,
Argentina, def. Jaoa Sousa (32), Portugal,
7-6 (6), 6-4. Richard Gasquet (8), France,
def. Nicolas Mahut, France, 6-4, 6-1.
Tomas Berdych (6), Czech Republic, def.
Juan Martin del Potro, Argentina, 7-6 (4),
6-2. Gael Monfils (13), France, def. Pablo
Carreno Busta, Spain, 7-5, 7-6 (1). Bernard
Tomic (17), Australia, def. Rajeev Ram,
United States, 6-4, 7-5. Leonardo Mayer,
Argentina, def. Viktor Troicki (20), Serbia,
7-5, 6-3.
Albert Ramos-Vinolas, Spain, def. Nick
Kyrgios (24), Australia, 7-6 (4), 7-5. Borna
Coric, Croatia, def. Thomaz Bellucci (29),
Brazil, 6-2, 6-2. Andy Murray (2), Britain,
def. Marcel Granollers, Spain, 6-4, 7-6 (3).
Guido Pella, Argentina, def. Pablo Cuevas (22), Uruguay, 6-1, 4-6, 6-4. Andrey
Kuznetsov, Russia, def. Jeremy Chardy (28),
France, 6-4, 6-2. Marin Cilic (10), Croatia,
def. Ryan Harrison, United States, 6-4, 6-3.
Women
Second Round
Johanna Konta (25), Britain, def. Madison
Brengle, United States, 6-4, 6-0. Denisa Allertova, Czech Republic, def. Angelique Kerber (2), Germany, 7-5, 7-5. Roberta Vinci
(9), Italy, def. Margarita Gasparyan, Russia,
6-3, 6-7 (7), 7-6 (5). Monica Puig, Puerto
Rico, def. Anna Karolina Schmiedlova (28),
Slovakia, 6-1, 6-2.
Magdalena Rybarikova, Slovakia, def.
Daria Gavrilova (31), Australia, 2-6, 7-5,
6-4. Christina McHale, United States, def.
Garbine Muguruza (4), Spain, 7-5, 6-1. Belinda Bencic (7), Switzerland, def. Lauren
Davis, United States, 6-3, 3-6, 6-3. Timea
Bacsinszky (12), Switzerland, def. Tsvetana
Pironkova, Bulgaria, 6-2, 6-1.
Karolina Pliskova (18), Czech Republic,
def. Shelby Rogers, United States, 6-2, 6-4.
Elina Svitolina (17), Ukraine, def. Annika
Beck, Germany, 4-6, 7-6 (0), 6-1. Daria Kasatkina, Russia, def. Anna-Lena Friedsam,
Germany, 7-5, 6-3.
Doubles
Men
First Round
Pierre-Hugues Herbert, France, and Nicolas Mahut (7), France, def. Grigor Dimitrov,
Bulgaria, and Max Mirnyi, Belarus, 7-6 (5),
6-2.
Women
Quarterfinals
Raquel Atawo, United States, and Abigail
Spears (8), United States, def. Denisa Allertova, Czech Republic, and Petra Kvitova,
Czech Republic, 6-3, 6-2.
C14
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Lancaster Weather
TODAY
MONDAY
54
42
TUESDAY
49
44
REGION
LANCASTER
Mostly cloudy and mild today
with rain beginning. High 52 to
56. Winds east-northeast 4-8 mph.
Rain at times tonight. Low 40 to
44. Winds east 8-16 mph.
50
40
30
12 AM 3
9 NOON 3
9 12 AM
Feet
Below
Flood
4.81
36.93
12.19
12.07
4.11
2.50
NATION
Partly sunny
Wind: WNW 8-16 mph
Winnipeg
51/32
San Francisco
61/54
Rain
-10s
Washington
59/48
Houston
82/56
Showers
-0s
0s
Snow
10s
Flurries
20s
Ice
30s
Cold Front
40s
50s
Warm Front
60s
70s
80s
100s
37/25/pc
72/56/c
52/48/r
55/48/r
41/38/r
55/43/r
65/47/sh
53/44/sh
76/54/t
84/59/s
63/30/pc
50/44/r
81/69/sh
74/53/pc
68/50/c
71/54/c
82/64/pc
47/43/r
86/64/pc
52/47/r
80/58/pc
64/49/t
50/36/sh
60/49/c
57/49/r
110s
MANHEIM
Mt. Joy
Lancaster
7 time winner!
2016 FORD FUSION
N SE
M ..................................$23,995
MSRP
HHONDRU DISCOUNT ............ -$1,500
RRebate................................ -$2,000
CCompetitive Lease Conquest.... -$500
$179
STK#16F335
43
AVAILABLE
$149
$19,999
MSRP ..................................$19,195
HONDRU DISCOUNT .............-$1,200
Factory Rebate.....................-$2,000
Competitive Lease Rebate ......-$500
2016 FORD
EXPLORER 4X4
STK#16F163
YOUR PRICE
$20,930
2016
FORD F150 4X4
STK#16F421
2016 FORD
MSRP ..................................$31,285
HONDRU DISCOUNT .............-$1,090
Factory Rebate........................-$500
Competitive Lease Rebate ......-$500
EDGE AWD
STK#16F387
YOUR PRICE
$28,245
MO
72
AVAILABLE
**36 mo
$0 Security Deposit
$2,799 Due At Signing
Tax
Tax, Tags
Tags, License & $134 Doc fee extra
YOUR PRICE
339
$1,000 REBATE
0% AVAILABLE
665-3551
22
AVAILABLE
X 60MO
MSRP ..................................$33,855
HONDRU DISCOUNT ............ -$3,360
Factory Rebate.................... -$2,000
Competitive Lease Rebate ..... -$500
LEASE FOR
$
$15,495
$30,999
0%
**36 mo
$0 Security Deposit
$2,599 Due At Signing
Tax, Tags, License & $134 Doc fee extra
YOUR PRICE
MSRP ..................................$34,265
HONDRU DISCOUNT ............ -$1,816
Factory Rebate....................... -$950
Competitive Lease Rebate ..... -$500
YOUR PRICE
23
AVAILABLE
**36 mo
$0 Security Deposit
$2,800 Due At Signing
Tax, Tags, License & $135 Doc fee extra
$139
MSRP ..................................$25,140
HONDRU DISCOUNT ............ -$1,710
Factory Rebate.................... -$2,000
Competitive Lease Rebate ..... -$500
LEASE FOR
YOUR PRICE
LEASE FOR
38/24/s
74/59/t
55/45/r
57/46/sh
55/37/pc
50/41/r
53/49/r
52/43/r
73/57/c
77/52/s
66/37/pc
55/44/r
81/71/pc
71/54/pc
65/54/pc
74/58/t
78/65/s
60/42/c
83/67/t
58/46/r
78/56/s
56/50/r
62/46/sh
61/54/r
59/48/sh
E-TOWN
Congratulations
Hondru Ford!
STK#16F294
Hi/Lo/W
High:
88 at Stateboro, GA
Low: 12 at Tuolumne Meadows, CA
Harrisburg
MON
Hi/Lo/W
90s
0
16
15
16
32
31
22
0
11
14
10
20
26
18
53
22
0
23
17
SATURDAY EXTREMES
Miami
82/70
Monterrey
90/51
HONDRUAUTO.COM
LEASE FOR
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.
Atlanta
74/59
Chihuahua
80/39
T-storms
TODAY
Chicago
52/43
Kansas City
64/50
Denver
66/37
0-0
8-32
36-36
35-35
18-48
12-40
15-24
0-0
20-30
36-36
10-16
19-19
20-36
12-30
32-32
12-50
0-0
16-20
28-28
NATION
New York
60/42
Detroit
50/43
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Source: OnTheSnow.com
Toronto
45/39
El Paso
75/49
New
Trails
Snow Base Open
Alpine Mtn.
Bear Creek Mtn.
Big Boulder
Blue Knob
Blue Mountain
Camelback Mtn.
Canaan Valley
Eagle Rock
Hidden Valley
Jack Frost
Liberty
Roundtop Mtn.
Seven Springs
Shawnee Mtn.
Snowshoe Mtn.
Timberline
Tussey Mtn.
Whitetail
Wisp
Montreal
45/26
Los Angeles
65/54
STK#16F495
SKI REPORT
Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Minneapolis
57/45
TODAY
MON
Sunrise
7:19 a.m. 7:18 a.m.
Sunset
7:10 p.m. 7:11 p.m.
Moonrise 10:29 a.m. 11:17 a.m.
Moonset
none 12:47 a.m.
First
Full
Last
New
Harrisburg
55/44
Billings
61/41
6.89
POP: 30%
Scranton
58/38
Seattle
50/41
POP: 25%
Williamsport
Punxsutawney
56/41
Wilkes-Barre
52/43
58/39
State College
50/40
HISTORY
RIVER STAGES
Susquehanna
at Harrisburg
at Marietta
Conestoga
at Lancaster
at Conestoga
Ozone
39
44
POP: 60%
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
56
36
Resort
Altoona
51/42
500
Yesterdays readings
Main Pollutant
Particulates
Ozone
Brownstown
Columbia
County Park
Ephrata
Flory Mill
Manheim
Mount Joy
Smoketown
Truce
300
Bradford
52/39
Butler
53/47
Todays forecast
PRECIPITATION
57
37
Oil City
52/45
AIR QUALITY
Source: www.atmos.millersville.edu/~wic
63
41
POCONOS
Mostly cloudy and mild, a shower
this afternoon. High 52 to 56.
Occasional rain tonight.
Erie
54/44
DELAWAREMARYLAND
Periods of rain today; mild in the
Maryland panhandle. High 53
to 62.
TEMPERATURE
Lancaster
56/34
Ephrata
60/33
New Holland
59/36
Lancaster (last year)
48/30
Normals for the day
49/30
Year to date high 79 on March 9
Year to date low
5 on Feb. 14
PRECIPITATION
24 hours ending 7 p.m.
0.00
Month to date
0.06
Normal month to date
1.29
Month to date departure
-1.23
Year to date
7.54
Normal year to date
6.77
Year to date departure
+0.77
Greatest Mar. total
7.28 (1993)
Least Mar. total
0.65 (2006)
POP: 20%
ALMANAC
60
71
45
POP: 45%
WEDNESDAY
60
45
POP: 70%
POP: 65%
$29,195
LEASE FOR
24 mo
$0 Security Deposit
$3,900 Due At Signing
Tax, Tags, License & $135 Doc fee extra
36 mo
$0 Security Deposit
$2,900 Due At Signing
Tax, Tags, License & $135 Doc fee extra
$299
Tax, tags, lic, $135 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 lilight
ht dduty
t ttruckk will
ill receive
i 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 4/4/2016 (Not responsible for typos)
2015 CHEVY
MSRP ..................................$15,920
HONDRU DISCOUNT ............... -$425
Chevy Select Model Bonus Cash .. -$1,000
Chevy Conquest Cash ............... -$1,000
Chevy Consumer Cash ................. -$500
Chevy Bonus Cash ...................... -$500
SPARK
STK#15C372
YOUR PRICE
$12,495
2016 CHEVY
VY
CRUZE
LEASE FOR
$
149
MO
STK#16H024
22 CRUZES
AVAILABLE
EQUINOX FWD
LEASE FOR
$
STK#16H014
199
13 EQUINOX
AVAILABLE
MO
MALIBU LT 13 MALIBUS
STK#16C122
AVAILABLE
YOUR PRICE
2016 CHEVY
COLORADO
MO
214
367-6644 OR 1-877-924-6644
SILVERADO LT 4X4
$28,995
$23,931
2 GREAT
LOCATIONS!
RT. 72 MANHEIM
YOUR PRICE
MO
YOUR PRICE
4 Corvettes Available
2-Z06s Available
36 mo
$0 Security Deposit
$2,500 Due At Signing
Tax, Tags, License & $135 Doc fee extra
Includes Competitive Lease Cash
199
LEASE FOR
$
STK#16C036
$24,160
LEASE FOR
$
24 mo
$0 Security Deposit
$0 Due At Signing
Tax, Tags, License & $135 Doc fee extra
Includes Competitive Lease Cash
YOUR PRICE
$16,178
UP TO
42 MPG
2016 CHEVY
2016 CHEVY
MSRP ..................................$20,035
HONDRU DISCOUNT ............... -$357
Chevy Consumer Cash ................ -$1,000
Chevy Competitive Lease Cash ... -$1,500
Chevy Select Model Bonus Cash .. -$1,000
LEASE FOR
$
329
MO
YOUR PRICE
$37,995
30 mo
36 mo
OVER 50
24 mo $0 Security Deposit
$0 Security Deposit
$0 Security Deposit
SILVERADOS
$1,750 Due At Signing
$2,500 Due At Signing
$2,500 Due At Signing
Tax, Tags, License & $135 Doc fee extra
Tax, Tags, License & $135 Doc fee extra
Tax, Tags, License & $135 Doc fee extra
AVAILABLE
Includes Competitive Lease Cash
Includes Chevy Conquest Cash
Includes GM Lease Loyalty Cash
All leases are 10,000 mi/yr. All lease payments are plus tax Tax, tags, license & $135 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 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. Chevrolet Loyalty Cash is for customers who currently own or lease a 1999 or newer Chevrolet passenger car or light duty truck.
Chevy Conquest Cash must be a non-GM 1999 or newer passenger car or light duty truck to qualify. Residency restrictions apply. All incentives are good until 3/14/2016.
MSRP ..................................$22,790
MSRP ..................................$41,270 2016 DODGE
2015 RAM 1500
2016 DODGE
HONDRU DISCOUNT ............... -$577
DISCOUNT ............ -$2,590
LEASE FOR HONDRU
Chrysler Capital Bonus .......... -$500
Rebate ................................ -$6,000
MSRP ..................................$20,330
Rebate ................................ -$2,500
Chrysler Capital Bonus ................ -$500
STK#16D072
HONDRU DISCOUNT ............... -$306 STK#16D010
MO
Rebate ................................ -$1,250
CREW CAB
EXPRESS 4X44 $
STK#15D467
294
X 36 MO
with $0 due
at signing!
80 RAMS
AVAILABLE
2016 JEEP
MSRP ..................................$30,125
HONDRU DISCOUNT ............... -$916
YOUR PRICE
$26,706
LEASE FOR
282
MO
X 36 MO
with $0 due
at signing!
$0 Due at Signing
25 CHEROKEES
AVAILABLE
DART RALLYE
YOUR PRICE
CARAVAN SE
$32,180
$18,774
$0 Due at Signing
6 DARTS
AVAILABLE
2016 JEEP
215
X 36 MO
with $0 due
at signing!
YOUR PRICE
$19,213
YOUR PRICE
MSRP ..................................$19,865
HONDRU DISCOUNT ............... -$366
Rebate ................................ -$3,000
Chrysler Capital Bonus ................ -$500
YOUR PRICE
$15,999
LEASE FOR
299MO
30 Grand
Caravans, and Town
& Countrys Available
X 36 MO
with $0 due
at signing!
2016 JEEP
2015 JEEP
WRANGLER UNLIMITED
BLACK BEAR EDITION
GRAND CHEROKEE
LAREDO 4X4 STK#15D683
STK#16D238
MSRP ..................................$35,925
HONDRU DISCOUNT ............ -$1,374
LEASE FOR
LEASE FOR
349
X 36 MO
39 WRANGLERS
YOUR
PRICE
AVAILABLE
MO
with $0 due
at signing!
$34,551
367-6644 OR 1-877-924-6644
RT. 230 ELIZABETHTOWN
$0 Due at Signing
341MO
X 36 MO
with $0 due
at signing!
MSRP ..................................$34,990
HONDRU DISCOUNT ............ -$1,608
REBATE ............................... -$2,000
YOUR PRICE
$31,382
17
AVAILABLE
Money
n SEND STORY TIPS & INFO TO: TIM MEKEEL, 481-6030, TMEKEEL@LNPNEWS.COM
MARKETING
MICHELLE SINGLETARY
THE COLOR OF MONEY
Boost your
all-important
credit score
WASHINGTON So
much of our financial
lives comes down to
certain numbers.
Theres the retirement
figure you hope to get
to so that you can retire
and not worry about
eating better than storebrand potted meat and
rice.
Weve got to guard our
Social Security number.
Although, based on the
frequency of major data
breaches, that number
may already be compromised.
And of course there
is the SAT-like number
that has come to define
our overall financial
identity your credit
score. (Technically, you
actually have more than
one credit score, since
there are several variations of the measure of
our financial worthiness
to become debtors.)
Pumping up your
credit number should
be a priority. The higher
your score, the more
likely youll get favorable
lending terms, because
the algorithms say
youre more expected to
pay your debts.
A landlord is likely to
ask for a credit number.
A potential employer
will want you to disclose
it. Even a date, hoping to
become serious, might
judge you by your credit
score. A Federal Reserve
study found a link between a lasting relationship and good scores.
Couples with similarly
high credit scores tend
to stay together.
So do you know your
number? And more importantly, do you know
enough about how the
credit-scoring system
works to boost your rating if its not measuring
up?
If youre not sure, pick
up the Color of Money
Book Club selection
for this month, Your
Credit Score: How
to Fix, Improve and
Protect the 3-Digit
Number that Shapes
Your Financial Future
(FT Press, $26.99), by
personal-finance author
Liz Weston, who writes
the syndicated column
Money Talk.
Be sure to get the 5th
edition. Why so many
versions?
The credit-scoring
world is complicated
and ever changing.
Twenty years ago,
you didnt even have the
right to know the numbers that lenders used
to judge you, Weston
writes. Today, you can
get dozens of your scores
online within seconds,
along with detailed
information about what
goes into creating each
one. Instead of having
too little information,
sometimes it can feel
like you have too much.
Weston, who also
writes for NerdWallet.
com, has put together a
very informative guide
to the underbelly of
credit scores. Trust me,
there is some stuff under
the hood of this system
that you need help understanding. In fact, she
devotes a whole chapter:
SINGLETARY, page D2
This is a handout image from an ad campaign for Osteo Bi-Flex, a joint health dietary supplement, that is trying to reach millennials and boomers. Some advertisers try to appeal to both groups in the same commercials.
Inclusive approach
Some ads that try to take a more
age-inclusive approach have hit
the target, marketers said, particularly the fashion industrys
campaigns that include women
older than 50, a big change from
its well-known obsession with
youth.
Two examples are Gaps Dress
Normal campaign, with Anjelica
Huston and various other celebrities of different ages, and
LOrals Paris line, which features women of different ages, including Helen Mirren and Blake
Lively.
Peter Hubbell, founder of
BoomAgers, a New York-based
advertising agency and marketing consultancy focused on the
aging consumer, said boomers
would respect those brands that
represent them faithfully while
Were tired
of the idea
that if you
put a Rolling
Stones
song on a
commercial,
youll
reach the
over-50s.
It doesnt
work that
way
Dave Austin,
managing director,
Influent50
Buying power
The superior buying power of
the boomers compared with the
millennials is clearly one factor
forcing marketers to recalibrate
their messages.
MARKETING, page D2
D2
MONEY
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Continued from D1
WISHFUL THINGS
n Address: 326 Hartman
Bridge Road, Ronks.
THE SPECKLED
SHEEP
Road, Lancaster.
n Phone: 435-8359.
n Hours: 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Monday,
plus Wednesday through
Saturday; 9 a.m.-7 p.m. Tuesday.
n Online: thespeckledsheep.
com, facebook.com/
thespeckledsheepllc.
Consignment shop
opening
Wishful Things, a consignment and gift shop outside
Strasburg, is now taking
merchandise ahead of its
planned April 2 opening.
The store at 326 Hartman
Bridge Road (Route 896)
north of Strasburg is in a
1,260-square-foot space in
the Strasburg Square shopping center, near Fulton
Bank.
Owner Deborah Herriman
said she is seeking clothing, jewelry, toys, books and
household goods but doesnt
want big furniture items or
tools. Herriman says shell
Credit-Scoring Myths.
Here are some of the top
myths she dispels:
Checking your credit
report too often will bring
down your score.
You need to pay interest
to get a good score.
Credit counseling is
worse for your score than
declaring bankruptcy.
Your score will automatically drop if you
comparison-shop for rates
such as before buying a car
or applying for a home loan.
(You actually have a window
in which multiple inquiries
wont hurt your score.)
Last month, Chase Slate
released the results of a
study that found that 40
percent of Americans dont
know their number. Of those
who do, 32 percent arent
happy with their scores. Of
those who are dissatisfied
with their score, 82 percent
would like to spend the year
Karen
Watkins
Lancaster.
n michelle.singletary@washpost.
com
Joey
Hughes
WHO TO EMAIL
Bankruptcies
Here is a list of Lancaster County
bankruptcies recorded in U.S.
Bankruptcy Court, Eastern District
of Pennsylvania, Reading, March 1-7.
Erich R. and Sherry L. Broome,
400 block of Cherry Street,
Columbia. Chapter 13.
Jessica Lyn Walbert, 400 block of
Baumgardner Road, Willow Street.
Chapter 7.
Ashley N. McAllister, 200 block of
Cherry Street, Columbia. Chapter 7.
Willis W. Clevenger, first block of
Terrace Avenue, Ephrata. Chapter 7.
Francine
Childs
Ryan
Livengood
Cheri
Palmer
WEST SHORE
Whos News
Calendar
Wednesday, March 16
n Lancaster County Apple Corps,
a Macintosh user group, 7:15
p.m., at Locust Grove Mennonite
School, 2257 Old Philadelphia
Pike. Information is available at
cs.millersville.edu/~ekatz/lcac.
Thursday, April 7
n ABWA Lancaster Area
Express Network business expo
and mixer, 5 p.m., at Lancaster
Country Club, 1466 New Holland
Pike. Members may reserve tables
for $30; those who dont want
a table and non-members may
attend for $15. Registration is
Tuesday, April 19
n Lancaster Society of
Marketing: To boomers
Continued from D1
boomers.
As media touch points
increase and buying
power remains strong,
marketers will have
more and more compelling reasons to boomerang back to boomers,
Nguyen said.
He predicted that in
the next two to three
years, marketers would
work increasingly to
blend strategies that address millennials and
boomers.
Here at Droga5, weve
already begun to take a
more age-agnostic approach, he said, by
building
campaigns
on truths and insights
rather than arbitrary assumptions based on generational stereotypes.
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
D3
Technology
COMMUNICATION
WHY WE
EMOJIS
TNS
KIM KOMANDO
CYBER SPEAK
MOUNTAIN VIEW,
Calif. When cute
smiley faces started
popping up in text
messages in Japan
during the 1990s, software engineers like
Mark Davis didnt
know if the digital
images called emojis
were just a fad.
But by 2006, emojis
were more popular
and tech firms including Google, the
company Davis works
for wanted to operate with Japanese cellphone carriers.
The problem was
that there were three
different carriers that
all had different sets of
emojis. They used the
same code for different emojis, said Davis,
co-founder and president of the Unicode
Consortium, and different codes for the
same emojis.
Approving emojis
sounded like a job for
the Mountain View
nonprofit, which has
relationships
with
companies, governments, and other orga-
UNICODE, page D6
PENN
COLLEGE
2
EMOJIS, page D6
QUEENIE WONG
Ap
ril
HOOPE
tu
rd U N
ay S
E
,
Sa
TRACEY LIEN
Unicode
chief
sorts
out the
smileys
100+
academic majors
bachelor | associate | certificate
60+
student organizations
KOMANDO, page D6
a national
leader in
applied
technology
education
www.pct.edu Williamsport, PA
An affiliate of The Pennsylvania State University
D4
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Spending Well
Talking Points
Emojis Rule Online World
The condom maker Durex started
a campaign to design an emoji to
indicate safe sex on smartphone
keyboards, and it prompted
210 million mentions on Twitter
and, by Durexs
estimates, drew
2.6 billion media
impressions worldwide. Such is the
power of emojis,
and more companies are taking
notice. Some 92 percent of the online population now uses emojis,
according to Emogi, a start-up
that uses them to let people say
how they feel about particular ads.
Swyft Media, which creates alternate phone keyboards featuring
multiple emojis, reports people
send six billion of them a day.
FRAN HAWTHORNE
BRIAN STAUFFER
JEFF SOMMER
Coca-Cola pays steady dividends.
It has done so since 1920. In fact,
it has increased dividends in each
of the last 50 years.
Investors look at that record,
and they count on it, said Douglas J. Skinner, an accounting professor at the University of Chicago. After a while, the dividend
becomes sacrosanct.
Cut dividends? For Coca-Cola,
thats almost unthinkable. Investors would probably see a dividend cut as a sign of trouble. So
its not surprising that despite a
crimp in its cash flow in recent
years, Coke hasnt wavered on its
dividend.
Companies hate to cut dividends. Yet in a difficult financial
environment, large numbers of
corporations are slashing dividends anyway. That trend is disturbing. In 2015, 394 companies
trimmed dividends, according to
Howard Silverblatt, senior index
analyst at S&P Dow Jones Indices. That was a whopping 38 per-
TIM WIMBORNE/REUTERS
A CASH MACHINE Coca-Cola has paid dividends since 1920 and shows no sign
of wavering. In 2015, 394 companies cut dividends, 38 percent more than 2014.
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
D5
al. I had that money in my account. I have the slip to prove it,
Mr. Mangan said.
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is hashing out
rules to limit reordering. Still, the
regulation will not address the
lines of credit, which are considered loans. The credit lines are
supposed to be less expensive
than overdrafts, and if customers pay off the loans quickly, the
charges amount to only a few dollars.
The real problems arise,
though, when customers have no
idea that they signed up for the
loans. Citigroups line of credit is
called Checking Plus, which to
Ms. Lemus, who speaks primarily
Spanish, did not appear to be anything like a loan. Every time she
overdrew her checking account,
Citigroup was lending her money
at 18.25 percent. Citigroup extended the loan in $100 increments,
even if she was short by only $35.
One month Citigroup withdrew
the loan payment two days after
the due date the bank had set. For
this, Citigroup collected an additional $25 for the late payment.
I felt so humiliated, Ms. Lemus
said.
If she made just the minimum
payment, it would take Ms. Lemus 13 years to pay off her credit
line. The bank has been trying to
collect the debt.
ANN CARRNS
Families spend an average of
$24,000 a year on college, but just
over a third take advantage of
federal tax credits and deductions
to help make college more affordable, according to Sallie Mae.
These education tax benefits
can help offset the cost of tuition
and related costs. (Credits reduce
the tax owed, while deductions
reduce the amount of income on
which the tax is calculated.)
The benefits have varying
rules and limitations, and deciding which one works best can be a
challenge, said Michael Sonnenblick, a tax analyst with Thomson Reuters. But the tax savings
can be meaningful, especially for
families with more than one child
in college, so its worth taking the
time to see if you qualify.
The American Opportunity Tax
Credit lets families reduce their
tax bills by as much as $2,500 a
student, for the first four years of
higher education. To receive the
full credit, a single taxpayer can
have 2015 income of up to $80,000,
Mr. Sonnenblick said. A partial
credit is available for income up
to $90,000. (The comparable income limits for married filers are
$160,000 for the full credit and up
to $180,000 for a partial credit.)
The credit is partly refundable,
Q&A
Can I claim both the American Opportunity Tax Credit and
the Lifetime Learning Credit?
A student can claim just one of
the tax credits in a given year.
A family with two or more children, however, can claim different credits for different children, Mr. Sonnenblick said.
How can I tell if Im eligible
for the tax credits?
The Internal Revenue Service
offers an interactive tax assistant tool on its website, which
can help you see if you can
CHRISTOPH HITZ
DAVID SEGAL
Craig Smalley, a tax adviser in Orlando, Fla., received a call about
10 months ago from a panicked client. Someone from the I.R.S. had
just phoned, she said, to say a warrant for her arrest had been issued
for failure to pay back taxes.
Her caller ID displayed the 202
Washington area code, home of
the I.R.S. She told the person on
the phone she needed to call her
accountant. He said that was a
bad idea, because time was running out. She hung up, but her
phone rang again. This time caller
ID displayed the area code of her
home in Clermont, Fla. A voice on
the line said something like: Im
with the Clermont police. We have
a warrant for your arrest.
By the time she reached Mr.
Smalley, she was expecting a police car to roll up to her house.
I told her: Listen, this is a
scam. Dont do anything they are
telling you to do, Mr. Smalley
said. I told her that the I.R.S.
doesnt operate this way. It would
never demand instant payment.
And it would never dissuade you
SKETCH GUY
CARL RICHARDS
There are many shortcuts that
people try to use to determine
how much risk they can handle
with their investments. Maybe
youve heard the story where
your hobbies determine the risk
youre comfortable taking? If
youre a private pilot or a rock
climber, then surely you can handle lots of investment risk.
This years scary markets
have led to lots of talk about how
you should go about deciding
how much risk to take. The way
and goals.
Traditionally, the problem with
these tools has been that if you
answer these questions during a
bull market, you tend to answer,
Risk? No problem, bring it on!
But during a scary market, youre
more likely to say, Risk? Yikes,
get me out of here!
If you or your adviser is not
careful to examine the times you
felt elated or scared about your
financial life, you could be in danger of doing the wrong thing at
exactly the wrong time. Remember, our natural temptation is always to buy high and sell low
to be greedy when everyone else
A continuing scam
demands that you pay
or be arrested.
a total of more than $26 million.
The I.R.S. has been trying to
get the word out about this fraud
with a web page listing common
tricks (https://www.irs.gov/uac/
IRS-Urges-Public-to-Stay-Alertfor-Scam-Phone-Calls).
Among those tricks: getting
the I.R.S.s actual phone number,
800-820-1040, to appear on caller
ID. The same page also describes
what no legitimate I.R.S. agent
would ever do, like ask for a cred-
conversations to help
build a plan based on
your own values, goals
and financial situation.
Specify clearly the
money you have to invest and the goals you
want to hit.
You may find you only
need to have 20 percent
of your assets in stocks
to reach your goals.
CARL RICHARDS
Whatever you discover,
if reaching your goals
requires more risk than youre
is greedy and scared when everycomfortable taking, the next step
one else is scared. And thats the
exact opposite of what Warren
is to reassess your goals.
Buffett suggests we do.
Now that weve been reacI dont think questionnaires are
quainted with scary markets, use
completely useless. In the hands
what youve learned to get clear
of a thoughtful adviser, they proabout what you can handle in
vide a starting point for useful
terms of risk.
D6
TECHNOLOGY
Komando
Emojis
Continued from D3
Continued from D3
on one companys site, and the link is to another site, then proceed with caution.
Another trick is that the text of a link and
the link itself dont have to be the same. In an
email or online, you can hover your mouse
cursor over a link and then look down in the
lower part of the screen to see what the link
really is. You can also right-click on the link,
choose Copy link or Copy link address and
paste the link into word processor to see what
it really is.
Sometimes youll run into shortened links,
especially on Facebook and Twitter. These are
often legitimate links, but it will just show bit.
ly/123456, goog.le/123456 or t.com/123456. In
general, as long as the person posting them is
legitimate, youre OK. If its a random account
you stumbled on that doesnt have a lot of
followers or is posting nonsensical information, be more cautious. Of course, sometimes it
helps to get a second opinion.
communication (thats
from linguist Neil Cohn,
whose own research focuses on how people have
a biological inclination to
draw things), and emojis
became a no-brainer for
digital communication.
Language experts note
that the real innovation
behind emojis lies in their
ability to help people online say what they mean,
so when they write What
the heck? they can signify with an accompanying
laughing emoji or an angry-faced emoji whether
their statement is an expression of amusement or
outrage.
And try as people might,
emojis arent here to replace language. Many
streams of emojis easily
can get lost in translation.
Unicode
Continued from D3
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Easter Remembrance
style $
1 45
Welcome
Caitlin Stashwick, MD
As a fellowship-trained gynecologic
oncologist, Dr. Stashwick specializes
in treating ovarian, uterine, cervical and
other cancers of the female reproductive
system. Her expertise includes complex
pelvic surgery, colposcopy, da Vinci
robotic surgery, chemotherapy and
clinical research.
Education
Medical School: Dartmouth Medical School
Residency: University of Colorado School of Medicine
Gynecologic Oncology Fellowship: University of Pennsylvania
In Loving Memory of
Kathryn Jones
Easter Sunday,
March 27, 2016.
Include a photo of your
loved one, a special poem
or thought.
style $
Thomas Corey
2 25
Were always
thinking
of you, and
we miss you.
Your loving
family, Amy,
Kyle and Emily
1 2
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________
YOUR NAME _______________________________________________________
PHONE _______________________________
ADDRESS _________________________________________________________
I, ________________________________, hereby authorize LNP MEDIA GROUP, Inc. to use the photograph/name/signature
submitted in conjunction with this ad placement. Furthermore, I hereby accept all responsibility for the use of the
likenesses and agree to defend, indemnify and hold harmless LNP MEDIA GROUP, Inc. from any and all actual or alleged
claims resulting from publication of the submitted photo(s) and/or advertisement(s).
MESSAGES, PHOTOS AND PAYMENT MUST BE RECEIVED BY NOON ON MONDAY, MARCH 21, 2016.
A portion of each remembrance
will be paid by
Millersville ~ 717-872-5041
www.SnyderFuneralHome.com
Perspective
WAGE DEBATE
New Yorkers rally in Manhattan in support of Gov. Andrew Cuomos plan to raise the minimum wage in that state to $15 an hour. In Pennsylvania, Gov. Tom Wolf
wants to see the minimum wage increased to $10.15.
STUART WESBURY
CHARLIE CRYSTLE
SPECIAL TO LNP
SPECIAL TO LNP
WESBURY, page E4
ISMAIL SMITH-WADE-EL
SPECIAL TO LNP
CRYSTLE, page E4
n Charlie Crystle is the CEO and co-founder of The Lancaster Food Co., whose mission is to make extraordinary food, sourced from organic farmers as close to home
as possible, and to hire people out of poverty into thriving-wage jobs.
Kelly Ballentine for misconduct, is in the Southeast quadrant of the city. It is one of the
most diverse parts of the city.
Not unrelatedly, it is also the
poorest part of the city, where
many of its most vulnerable
residents live. Those residents
did not take kindly to the idea
of either eliminating that
district or consolidating the
four city magisterial districts
into three.
Let me explain.
People fundamentally
deserve and naturally desire
that decisions made about
their community be made, at
least in part, by persons who
come from their community,
persons with whom they can
identify. Eliminating the district would severely decrease
the likelihood that people
from the Southeast would be
SMITH-WADE-EL, page E4
n Ismail Smith-Wade-El is a
E2
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Opinion
Beverly R. Steinman
Robert M. Krasne
Suzanne Cassidy
Chairman Emeritus
Executive Editor
In our words
Polarization hardly
at a minimum now
THE ISSUE
Gov. Tom Wolf signed an executive order last week that raises the minimum
wage by nearly $3 an hour, to $10.15, for state government employees and
workers on jobs contracted by the state. The Associated Press reported that
this will affect a few hundred state employees, mostly part-time clerical and
janitorial workers ... (and) potentially 109 vendors that provide janitorial,
landscaping, delivery and food preparation services. Wolf told LNP that he
hoped the move would spur the state Legislature to consider raising the state
minimum wage to $10.15 an hour. According to the U.S. Department of Labor, 29
states and the District of Columbia have minimum wage rates higher than the
federal minimum of $7.25 an hour. Pennsylvanias rate remains at $7.25.
Across Pennsylvania, across the United
States and in these pages, the debate rages over
whether states and the federal government
ought to raise the minimum wage.
And debates are great. But debates that are
based on skewed facts and political bias are not
so great.
This, however, is where we are in the United
States of America, polarized and unable to
agree on anything, including the information
on which we base our decisions.
Everyone is entitled to his own opinion, but
not to his own facts, the late Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan famously liked to say.
The senator from New York died in 2003.
Hed likely be appalled by the state of political
discourse now.
These days, we all feel entitled to our own
facts on everything from the solvency of
Social Security to the effects of increasing the
minimum wage. And many of us seeking those
facts turn to websites and news sources that
reflect our political worldview.
Read a liberal website, and youll learn that
raising the minimum wage would result in
no significant job losses. Read a conservative
site, and youll learn that raising the minimum
wage would have an apocalyptic impact on employment.
Even a 2014 report from the nonpartisan
Congressional Budget Office was co-opted by
both sides of the minimum wage issue.
This is what the summary of that report stated: Most (low-wage workers) would receive
higher pay that would increase their familys
income, and some of those families would see
their income rise above the federal poverty
threshold. But some jobs for low-wage workers would probably be eliminated, the income
of most workers who became jobless would fall
substantially, and the share of low-wage workers who were employed would probably fall
slightly.
Later, the report noted: Once the increases
and decreases in income for all workers are
taken into account, overall real income would
rise by $2 billion.
The liberal website PoliticusUSA declared:
New CBO Report Destroys The Republican
Argument Against Raising The Minimum
Wage.
The conservative website Newsmax asserted: CBO Report: Obamas Minimum Wage
Plan Could Cost 1 Million Jobs.
As PBS reported, Both parties seize on CBO
CHARLES
KRAUTHAMMER
THE WASHINGTON POST
OP-ED/LETTERS
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
APRIL KELLY-WOESSNER
LNP COLUMNIST
Teaching jobs
are scarce now
The recent barrage of articles about the lack of teachers in our area pushed me to
respond (Classroom crisis,
Feb. 21). I was flabbergasted
when Flip Steinour said this
soon means every person,
good or bad, who graduates
and gets a certification is going
to get hired. We will have zero
choice.
That is just ridiculous. I am
an educator, and I know at
least 10 others who have tried
to get a job in the public school
system in Lancaster County
over the last two years. Guess
what? No luck. Why? Because
in almost every case, over 200
people applied for each of
those jobs! It is a struggle just
to get an interview! One colleague was told by school officials that they no longer use
online services because the
process of vetting so many applicants is daunting. Another
Columnists wrong
about socialism
Franklin Delano Roosevelt,
elected to an unprecedented four terms as president,
stated: Better the occasional
faults of a government that
lives in a spirit of charity than
the consistent omissions of
a government frozen in the
ice of its own indifference. A
casual scanning of his voluminous correspondence and
speeches would be a cringeinducing exercise for most in
todays Republican Party.
In recent columns, Cal
Thomas, Charles Krauthammer and George Will present
gross caricatures, maintaining
that the Democratic progressive left is motivated by envy
and covetousness of those who
have amassed huge fortunes.
Thomas, in his Feb. 15 column, bemoans more jobs,
more government programs,
more stuff promised by candidate Bernie Sanders. Thomas risible assertion is that the
word liberty is found in the
Constitution or the Declaration of Independence but the
E3
Strong college
presidents recognize
the value and
importance of both
academic and business
cultures and build
bridges between them.
Newmans failures may serve as a
warning against this solution.
Most universities already have a
large number of business experts serving on their boards of trustees. Presidents hire others as senior administrators and advisers.
There are times when the business
model and the academic programs
cannot be separated. Strong presidents
recognize the value and importance
of both academic and business cultures and build bridges between them.
Some colleges, such as Lebanon Valley
College, have further facilitated this
communication by having a few faculty
members serve on the board of trustees.
In any sector, effective leaders are
open to disagreement; they recognize
that examined decisions are better
decisions.
Newmans approach to dealing with
critics was a failure of leadership for
any enterprise, but was most egregious
in one founded on the open exchange
of ideas.
Governor must
address problems
It is discouraging watching and listening to our governor. He has no concept of
how government was set up by
our forefathers as a safety net
against dictatorship. He clearly believes he can run government the same way he ran his
private business: my way or
the highway.
Gov. Tom Wolf refuses to address serious problems of Harrisburgs own making, with
the pension burden being the
greatest.
If he were even remotely
concerned about the welfare
of this state and its citizens, he
would be willing to deal with
the four major problems facing state government: power,
greed, corruption and waste.
With his reckless tax-andspend agenda, he has deceived
many with the idea of free
money, which does not exist.
This leaves many hardworking people, private property
and business owners in Pennsylvania holding the bag, while
taxes continue to be paid to
Harrisburg unabated.
I would be willing to support
better and fairer funding for
education if blatant waste of
taxpayer dollars (such as one of
our local school boards agreeing to pay a superintendents
salary and insurance long after
he resigned) were not true.
School boards and other government bodies dont own a
dime, and it is time they start
functioning in a way that respects the people paying the
bills instead of viewing them
as an endless source for wasteful spending.
What Pennsylvania needs are
people who understand and
have the courage to correct the
decline in the moral condition
of this states government.
Donald R. Pickell
Mount Joy
Political discourse
is at new level
With comments having
been made recently about
the size of a candidates body
parts, I suggest that the level
of political discourse in the
country has reached a level
never before achieved in the
history of the republic.
Robert G. Hunsicker
Lancaster
An independent
for Donald Trump
As a registered independent,
Im loving this election. Democrats are fighting with Republicans and vice versa. Both
are accusing the other side of
causing all the problems in
this world.
Independents and Libertarians sit back and watch. We
have no nationwide primary
elections and couldnt care
less. We look at candidates we
believe can make a difference.
The Republican side is in a
panic. The claim is that Donald Trump will change everything. Mitt Romney is coming
out to fight against him. The
change he is worried about
is that no longer will the Republican Party be bought by
big business. Republicans are
running scared.
Bernie, I like you, but I am
not fond of socialists. Too
many companies have moved
to other countries. If we taxed
what is brought into this country, I believe jobs would be
back. What we need is manufacturing, and all other jobs
will follow.
Mr. Trump, you have my
vote. And from talking to other independents, I believe they
will be voting for you, too.
Deborah Fitzkee
Rapho Township
E4
PERSPECTIVE
Wesbury
MATT MYLIN
MATTERS OF FAITH
Continued from E1
Crystle
Continued from E1
educational attainment
and economic activity.
So why do we tolerate employers who pay
poverty wages, especially
knowing that they pass
the costs of poverty on
to the rest of us? Why do
we patronize the businesses of employers who
fail to pay a living wage
that respects the people
who work for them and
respects the communities
were trying to keep safe
and sound?
The governor knows
theres opposition to a
fair minimum wage. He
wanted to set an example
to get the conversation
moving.
The opposition says a
higher minimum wage
will hurt businesses, people will lose jobs, prices
will increase there will
be mass hysteria. Except
its not really true, save for
one case: If youve built
your business on a model
that relies on poverty
wages, youre going to
have trouble adjusting to
fair, humane wages.
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
co-workers.
Some remember lessons in teamwork and
the pride felt in producing a product or service
that is appreciated by the
customer. This is similar
to what student athletes,
looking back to sports
involvement, learn from
a beloved coach. All in all,
they are valuable experiences to have during this
useful phase in ones life.
But lets not forget the
other side of the coin.
Every cost for providing
a product or service must
ultimately be balanced by
the product or services
price to the customer. The
free market solves this
balance dilemma. As costs
go up and down, the price
of products goes up and
down.
Over the years, food and
clothing have become
much cheaper, thanks to
manufacturing, supplychain and retail marketing
improvements. The free
market has been successful in providing many of
our basic needs at lower
cost, making it possible
for us to spend money on
TVs, computers, iPhones
and the thousands of
other products and services we depend so much
upon today.
Three cheers for this
dramatic improvement in
our quality of life!
But those demanding
higher minimum wages
have totally forgotten
this other side of the coin.
Wages that are higher
than the market value of
the labor provided will
increase a products cost
for the purchaser. That
represents a major hit to
the quality of life of that
purchaser and his or her
family:
A hamburger, affordable
at $1.50, becomes unaffordable at $1.75. A jar of
baby food at 50 cents
becomes unaffordable at
60 cents if you need to buy
10 jars.
Can we not simply use
common sense? In a Feb.
4 Wall Street Journal
editorial, Andy Puzder,
CEO of CKE Restaurants,
which includes Hardees,
Carlos Graupera, CEO & executive director of the Spanish American Civic Association, asks a
question of Lancaster County President Judge Dennis Reinaker Monday during an NAACP forum
on the planned elimination of a magisterial district judge district in Southeast Lancaster.
district or consolidating a
district in the city should
be a nonstarter. If I might
offer a dimes worth of
free advice, Id leave the
city districts alone and
save myself the headache
and the accusations of
gerrymandering.
Apart from monetary
value, theres unspoken
value in people believing
OPINION
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
E5
Sunday Conversation
personality, intimidated opponents, incited violence, glorified their
nations, disregarded international law and connected directly with the
masses helps explain what Trump is doing and how he is succeeding.
It also suggests why Donald Trump presents such a profound danger
to the future of America and the world.
GEORGE WILL
THE WASHINGTON POST
ROBERT REICH
SYNDICATED COLUMNIST
Berkeley. He served as labor secretary under President Bill Clinton. His column is distributed
by Tribune Content Agency. Twitter: @RBReich
E6
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
generation
BY,
FOR
AND
ABOUT
TEENS
TEEN EDITORIAL
ULTIMATE
PROM
GIVEAWAY
n The Prom 2016 season
BEN PONTZ, 17
GNEXT@LNPNEWS.COM
Free college sounds nice, but we are having different discussions about todays youth and paying for college.
Theres the Let us work together to empower youth to
change the world, freeing them from the shackles of student
loan debt to invest in our future mindset.
And then theres the Id rather make youth languish in
low-paying jobs and be beholden to debt collectors indefinitely train of thought.
I mean, really, who is going for option No. 2?
Dont get us wrong: It is ludicrous that, according to one
Forbes report, college costs 250 percent more than it did in
1986, even with an adjustment for inflation. But the solution
to burgeoning college costs is not for the government to pick
up the bill.
When we interviewed Congressman Joe Pitts a few weeks
ago, we asked him about higher-education affordability.
Here is what he said:
The solution to high costs whether in education or
health care or anything else is not to simply move the costs
onto someone else, but to actually deal with the costs and reduce them. We can bring down costs the same way we bring
down the cost of anything else: by increasing supply and by
making use of the competitive nature of the free market.
Using the government to force people who do not or will
not go to college (or their parents) to pay for other people to
go to college does not strike me as fair. Neither does simply
funding whatever colleges ask. It is a historical fact that the
more the government has guaranteed in funding to colleges
and universities, the more expensive attending them has become.
If the government is simply going to foot the bill for whatever college costs, what incentive on earth do colleges have
not to further raise their prices through the roof?
An April report in The New York Times postulates that
it is the rapid increase to the tune of 221 percent in administrative positions in colleges, many with seven-figure
THE LIST
READ
MATTHEW 21-28
WATCH
LISTEN
WEAR
Jinming Yang
19, Harrisburg Area
Community College,
Lancaster Campus
n Yang, photographed at
FULLER HOUSE
on Netflix
n Recently released, this series
continues the storyline of the
show Full House. The focus
is on the oldest daughter, DJ,
who now has two boys and
lives in San Francisco. Her sister
Stephanie and DJs best friend
Kimmy move in with her to help
take care of the boys, creating
a similar atmosphere to Full
House. The classic characters
are still featured, adding a
nostalgic touch to this new
series.
Connor Whitacre, 18
DAMN, DANIEL
n A black-and-white outfit
keeps a look simple.
Liam Edwards, 19
10-SECOND
MOVIE REVIEWS
Zootopia
The Good
Dinosaur
must see | don't see | n just rent
PUZZLES/BRIDGE
Bridge Results
nThe Friday Morning Duplicate
Puzzle No. 1
DRESSING ROOM
DELAY
Puzzle No. 2
su l do l ku
@ Puzzles by Pappocorn
6
1 2
5
2
3
6 8
9
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
6
4
5
7
8
2
4
7 8
9
7
6
2 3
8
PUZZLES/HOROSCOPE
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
TORHET
PROTYH
A
B A N S
E
A I R P
R
I D A R
O O Z E
A
B L E D R I
E D
O N
P T U I
MARCH
T R O N
R
H O T C L O
I
A L A M
N D L E R
K E
E M
M A G D A
N O L O O K
A S A T
E
M
S E M I
E T
V O T
D E F E R
R S O N A L
O S E
L O
P A S
E X
F I B
A N E
S A Y
T S
B L E
R U N
M O
13,E 2016
E A P S
C K
O
L I M P
I N O R
C U E
P A S S
A S E S
S
A R Y
H O P
F O U L
O N I E
P E N D
L
E
T
B
E
NO. 0228
The Answers
The Stars Show the Kind of
Day Youll Have: 5-Dynamic;
4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-Soso; 1-Difficult
ARIES
TAURUS
GEMINI
LIBRA
(Sept. 23-Oct. 22
CANCER
SCORPIO
LEO
Tonight: Encourage
togetherness.
SAGITTARIUS
(Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
8
7
1
4
2
9
6
3
5
4
6
2
5
1
3
8
9
7
9
3
5
8
6
7
1
2
4
7
8
3
6
4
5
9
1
2
6
2
4
3
9
1
5
7
8
1
5
9
7
8
2
4
6
3
3
1
6
2
5
8
7
4
9
CAPRICORN
(Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Your creativity
AQUARIUS
(Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
PISCES
(Feb. 19-March 20
Puzzle No. 2
Puzzle No. 1
5
4
7
9
3
6
2
8
1
2
9
8
1
7
4
3
5
6
BORN TODAY
Actor William H. Macy
(1950), musician Adam
Clayton (1960), singer Neil
Sedaka (1939)
Answer :
GURLFA
VIRGO
CHORUS
FRUGAL
HOTTER
AFRAID
TROPHY
HOLLOW
They would be going out to eat for
sure, but where was
FIDARA
ROCSHU
FOOD FOR
THOUGHT
WHOOLL
44 Metal marble
By DaviD J. K ahn / Puzzles eDiteD By Will shortz
46 Duchamps
NO. 0306
movement
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
47 Sci-fi race
19
20
21
48 It may come in sheets 18
49 Flaps
22
23
24
25
50 Fourth parts in series
26
27
28
29
30
of eight
51 Its a wrap
31
32
33
34
35
36
56 Reached, numerically
37
38
39
40
41
42
58 Dumas swordsman
59 Arctic weather
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
phenomenon
50
51
52
53
60 I Wann a Be
Sedated rockers
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
63 ____ Jemison, first
62
63
64
65
66
African-American
woman in space
67
68
64 Tag end?
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
65 Didnt move
79
80
81
82
83
66 Some newcomers
study, in brief
84
85
86
87
88
89
69 With 16-Down, what
90
91
92
93
94
95
stet means
70 Real-time messaging 96
97
98
99
100
system
101 102
103 104 105
106
107 108
71 ____ piccata
72 Move, informally
109 110
111
112
113
114
73 Three-time All-Star
115
116
117
118
119
120
Longoria for the
Tampa Bay Rays
121
122
123
124
74 Its good for the long
125
126
127
128
haul
75 Lottery winners cry
Stumped? Call: 1-900-285-5656, $1.49 each minute;
76 Mel Blanc, notably
or, with a credit card, 1-800-814-5554.
77 Daughter of Nereus
78 Director Lee
108 Lose, in a way
91 Penalty for poor service, 103 Some electrical plugs
79 Sucked dry
maybe
109 Tousle
104 First string?
85 City on the Brazos
92 Colors 1960s-style
110 ____ Empire
105
Inc.
cover
subj.
River
93
Many
ski
lodges
116 Pay-view connection
106
Journey
to
____,
86 Loretta Lynch and
94
Like
Lhasa
apsos
117 Keyboard abbr.
recurring
segment
on
Eric Holder: Abbr.
Sesame
Street
99
Lhasa
apso
and
others
118 Packers org.?
87 Greek summit
107 Unhip
102 Like polenta
119 Up to, briefly
89 Pit-____
IN CHARACTER
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
11 (16)
Next Week:
Giant panda
update
Mini Quote:
Music
=
Math!
Graphing music
Music is the
pleasure that
the human soul
experiences from
counting without
being aware that
it is counting.
German mathematician
Gottfried Wilhelm
von Leibniz
Fractions in music
+
Half
note
Quarter
note
=
Eighth
note
Eighth
note
Whole
note
Math songs
Resources
On the Web:
bit.ly/1nE0pbm
bit.ly/1RYFEUO
momath.org
At the library:
Try n Find
Mini Jokes
C
J
N
R
E
T
T
A
P
Q
O
G
H
A
L
F
K
D
U
V
N
G
R
A
P
H
S
A
K
A
C
T
G
N
O
S
R T E
M W B
Y A H
R N J
E I O
A P A
X E T
R D B
C I T
R
T
E
O
O
M
B
S
A
C
I
V
R
L
R
R
L
M
I
M
A
H
U
E
V
A
E
S
E
T
O
N
S
J
H
H
U
V
C
C
Q
M
A
Y
T
M W N
L F O
O Z I
S R T
C H C
A Y A
L T R
E H F
A M P
Eco Note
Of all the energy that an
incandescent lightbulb
uses, how much do you think is turned
into light? Only one-tenth! The rest is
turned into heat instead. Thats why a
lightbulb gets so hot.
Cooks Corner
1/4 cup low-fat milk
1/4 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon ground
sage
1/4 teaspoon pepper
What to do:
1. Heat pre-cooked bacon according to directions. Crumble into small pieces.
2. Combine all ingredients in a small baking dish. Place uncovered in a cold oven. Set
for 400 degrees and bake for 12 minutes.
3. Remove dish from oven; stir ingredients thoroughly.
4. Place back in 400-degree oven and bake 10 more minutes until bubbly. Cheese
and milk will form a sauce in the casserole. Serves 4.
BA
PO
LIC
LLS OARD
MOR
CE
TO
WN
OR
MI
LA
GAR
Thank You
The Mini Page 2016 Universal Uclick
Youll need:
4 slices pre-cooked bacon
1 (15.25-ounce) can of sweet wholekernel corn, drained
1/2 cup reduced-fat cheddar cheese
1/2 cup mozzarella cheese
2016 Blue Ox Technologies Ltd. Download the app on Apple and Amazon devices.
adapted with permission from The New 50 Simple Things Kids Can Do to Save the
Earth by The Earthworks Group, Andrews McMeel Publishing (andrewsmcmeel.com)
Teachers:
For standards-based activities to
accompany this feature, visit:
bbs.amuniversal.com/teaching_guides.html