Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Patriots advance
TM
n $2.00 n LANCASTERONLINE.COM
Sanctions
to be lifted,
Americans
released
I FELT LIKE WE
WERE JUST ERASED
IRAN, page A5
CAMPAIGN 2016
Dems brace
for a messy
winter race
Clinton, Sanders contest
heats up as primaries loom
Neighborhood pride in Lancasters Southeast was never greater than when bands and drill teams marched down
South Duke Street during the Conestoga Elks Parade. This undated photo from before the urban renewal of the
1960s captures a sense of community that was later fractured. The homes on this block are long gone.
The top of the Griest Building can be seen in the upper left corner.
Then & now: Photos of what this area of the city looks like today n page A7
JHAWKES@LNPNEWS.COM
COMING MONDAY
ALSO INSIDE
INDEX
CLASSIFIEDS........... CL1
LIVING......................... B1
LOTTERY................... A2
n Watch it live on
LancasterOnline or at .
bit.ly/2016mlkbreakfast
MONEY........................ D1
NATION & WORLD...A17
OBITUARIES...........A20
PERSPECTIVE............E1
RELATED
CONTENT
Film adaptation
of locals memoir
to be screened
n Living, page B1
REAL ESTATE..........RE1
SPORTS....................... C1
TRAVEL.....................B10
TV WEEK..................TV1
DEMOCRATS, page A4
ERASED, page A6
CRIME
RROBINSON@LNPNEWS.COM
36 17 H
Columbia
police
charged Ronald Lee
Sheetz, 41, with homicide in the death of
44-year-old
Michael
Oberdorff Sr., Lancaster
County District AttorHOMICIDE, page A5
TODAY'S WEATHER
Ronald
Sheetz,
41, has
been
charged
with
homicide,
officials
say.
A2
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
PENNSYLVANIA LOTTERY n
SUNDAY,
JAN. 10
Here are the winning Pennsylvania and Powerball lottery numbers for the week starting Jan. 10
MONDAY,
JAN. 11
TUESDAY,
JAN. 12
WEDNESDAY,
JAN. 13
THURSDAY,
JAN. 14
FRIDAY,
JAN. 15
SATURDAY,
JAN. 16
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ABLACKBURN@LNPNEWS.COM
CONTACT US
General info: 291-8811, P.O. Box
1328, Lancaster, PA 17608
Newsroom: Tips, stories and
announcements, 291-8622,
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CORRECTIONS
LNP wants to correct
substantive errors of fact.
To request a correction or
clarification, call the news desk
at 291-8622 or email
news@LNPnews.com
many images and check the screen to make sure the exposures and compositions are good.
But when I used the Graflex Speed Graphic, I realized
I had to slow down. The camera is bulky for still photography and needs to be set up on a tripod. And I needed a
light meter to help set the cameras speed and aperture for
the proper exposure. I also had to wear my reading glasses
when I looked at the viewfinder which shows the cameras subject matter upside down to make sure the subject was in focus.
I shot only eight film sheets and at the time I had no idea
if they would come out OK.
When I got home from Chester, I gathered the darkroom
chemicals and the processing equipment. After an hour
of setting up and processing, I was excited to see how the
negatives turned out.
I decided to choose a 4x5 image. The textures and
streaks likely created by heat from when the film sat in
storage for roughly eight years can be seen in the image
above.
Though King has passed, it was important to me to capture his legacy in this special way.
THE METHOD Graflex Speed Graphic Camera with 4x5 Kodak Tri-X 320 film sheet. Exposure 1/400 @ 5.6. ISO 320.
Shot in black and white with a red filter and processed with Kodak photographic chemicals. Negative shot with Nikon D600
with backlight. Inverted and processed in Adobe Lightroom and Photoshop. For more Through the Viewfinder photos and
musings, visit LancasterOnline.com/TTV
2016
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LOCAL
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Catching up
on the news
FARM SHOW
n Lancaster County claimed
A3
FOR SALE
n The long-vacant Bulova
building in downtown
Lancaster is listed for an
online auction in February.
City officials had threatened
to seize the building by
eminent domain last year. The
auction is set for Feb. 22-24.
Starting bid for the building is
$800,000.
1.
PERDUE FILING
n Perdue Agribusiness, in a
3.
4.
ART MANAGER
n Heidi Leitzke was named
BrandYourself.com, which
manages online reputations,
plans to open an office in
Lancaster, bringing 100 fulltime jobs here in the next
three years. The office will be
at 53 W. James St.
5.
$1M WINNER
FIRE ESCAPE
n Three city residents,
SURPLUS FALLS
n Lancaster General Health,
MARTIN LUTHER
KING JR. DAY
Government offices
and many agencies are
observing a holiday on
Monday.
n Closed are: City
Hall, Lancaster County
Courthouse, federal and
state offices, banks, state
liquor stores, schools. There
is no regular mail delivery.
n RRTA: Regular service.
6.
The 100th Pennsylvania Farm Show came to a close on Saturday. n 1. Caleb Flohr puts a hat on a brown Swiss cow. n 2. Emma Oberholtzer,
of East Earl, prepares a horned Dorset ewe for judging. n 3. Jeremiah Snyder, of Manheim, tucks away a second-place ribbon during
Shropshire sheep judging. n 4. Sheep are lined up during the final day of competition. n 5. Brooke Killmon throws an axe during a lumberjack
demonstration. n 6. Maggie Geyer makes potato donuts, a popular treat inside the food court at the Farm Show.
As exciting as 100th Pennsylvania Farm Show was, exhibitors also are happy when it ends
EARLE CORNELIUS
ECORNELIUS@LNPNEWS.COM
TRANSPORTATION
LNP CORRESPONDENT
RECRUITMENT
Fire department
wants you to join
Prospective volunteer day is set
CHRISTOPHER PRATT
CPRATT@LNPNEWS.COM
Your rings
dont fit
anymore?
R.X. Hearing
Aid Service
Happy
Moment
Suk Shuglie
GA L L E R Y
We can
fix that!
A4
FROM PAGE A1
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
New phase
The contest was certain
to intensify this weekend, with the Democratic candidates gathering
in Charleston, South
Carolina, on Saturday
night for a party dinner
and the annual fish fry
hosted by Rep. James
Clyburn, D-S.C. Then
theres tonights debate,
the final one before the
Iowa caucuses on Feb. 1.
The New Hampshire primary is Feb. 9.
I think it is a new
phase of the campaign,
said Joel Benenson,
Clintons chief campaign
strategist. We talked
about how close this was
going to be in (Iowa and
New Hampshire). They
always are historically
and were ready to have
this debate engaged.
In the past week, Clinton has shifted course
in apparent response to
Sanders strong poll results. She has stepped up
her criticism of her rival,
a self-described democratic socialist, after
carefully avoiding that
during the campaign.
The new approach carries risks. Sanders is popular with liberals who
are part of the coalition
that Clinton will need to
win the White House.
Clinton and her supporters still remember
her disappointing thirdplace finish in Iowa in
2008 against Obama.
Clintons team has retooled her schedule to
add stops in Iowa in the
week ahead. The candidate has made near-daily
television appearances
where she has challenged Sanders stances
on health care and gun
control.
Clinton and Sanders were each booked
on four morning news
shows today.
Her campaign said
Saturday it was sending out top party representatives, including
the mayor of Atlanta
and the former mayor
of Philadelphia, to campaign for her in Iowa.
Former President Bill
Clinton has been out
making her case in early
voting states, and daughter Chelsea Clinton has
offered critical words
about Sanders, leading
to a back-and-forth over
his health care plan.
Theyre very afraid
of a repeat in 2008 and
theyre getting very aggressive, said Sanders
campaign manager Jeff
Weaver. I expect at any
moment now theyll go
hard negative on us and
were prepared for that.
But we wont be negative
on them.
Gun control
Clinton has tried to
dismiss Sanders proposals as unrealistic and
disingenuous. She points
to his 2005 vote for legislation giving gun manufactures immunity from
lawsuits as a sign that
the senator wouldnt
Thursday:
Home &
Garden
In an antiestablishment
time, youre
essentially
branding
yourself as the
establishment
candidate.
Above, Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton speaks in Ames, Iowa, in this
photo taken Jan. 12. Below, Democratic presidential candidate, Sen. Bernie Sanders,
I-Vt, speaks in Hanover, N.H., in this Jan. 14 photo. There was a time when Democrats
fretted about Hillary Clintons presidential campaign becoming a coronation, leaving
her without the tests of a primary season to prepare for a general election matchup
against the Republican nominee. In the past two weeks, the race for the Democratic
Partys 2016 presidential nomination has evolved from relatively civil disagreement
over policy into a contentious winter competition between Clinton and Sanders.
Clintons campaign
complained this past
week when Sanders
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FROM PAGE A1
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Iran
Continued from A1
negotiated separately,
but Secretary of State
John Kerry had made
it clear in recent weeks
that he was engaged in
behind-the-scenes talks
on the fate of the Americans, and clearly wanted
the issue cleared up before the nuclear agreement went into effect.
In a statement, the director general of the International Atomic Energy Agency, Yukiya Amano,
said that agency inspectors on the ground verified that Iran has carried
out all measures required
under the JCPOA, to enable implementation day
to occur, using the abbreviation for the accord,
the Joint Comprehensive
Plan of Action.
Lifting sanctions
In recent weeks, Iran
has shipped 98 percent
of its nuclear fuel out of
the country, destroyed
the innards of a major
plutonium-producing
reactor and mothballed
more than 12,000 of the
centrifuges that enrich
uranium.
For President Barack
Obama, the lifting of the
sanctions a step attacked by Republicans
in Congress, who voted
unanimously against the
nuclear deal is a major
step in ending more than
three decades of hostility between the two
countries. In the waning
months of his presidency, it fulfills a promise
Obama made to reverse
course in the countries
relations, and will clearly
be one of the defining elements of his legacy.
Irans actions, he has
argued, will assure the
No steady job
Sheetz was living a
half block away from the
Oberdorffs at 226 Lawrence St., with seven other people. Several of his
roommates on Saturday
said they were shocked
by the incident because
they didnt think he was
Closed down
Speaking to reporters
late Saturday night at
the IAEAs headquarters
overlooking the Danube,
Kerry said that he had
now achieved his goal:
rolling back Irans facilities so far that the United States would have at
least a years notice if
the country were to race
for a bomb. We would
know it almost immediately and we would have
time to respond appropriately, he said.
Each of the pathways
that Iran had to a nuclear weapon have been
verifiably closed down,
he said. Noting that Iran
has frozen much of its
activity during the negotiations, he responded to
critics of the deal including, without naming
them, the Republican
violent.
Harold Franklin, 40,
said Sheetz had been in
Huntingdon State Prison for years, but got out
last year and had been
trying to turn his life
around ever since.
Sheetz was doing some
remodeling in the house,
including installing new
cabinets, but had been
trying for months to get
a steady job. His criminal record, however,
hampered his chances,
Franklin said. At one
point, he was hired for
a position but was fired
after one day when the
employer discovered his
record.
Sheetzs roommates
said he loved Allison,
but couldnt move away
with her like he wanted
because he could not secure a job to raise enough
money.
Court records show
that Sheetz had a series of convictions from
the early 1990s through
presidential candidates
who say that Iran will
immediately cheat.
We have now two years
of compliance under our
belt, he said. Obviously,
past performance does
not guarantee future results. But, he said, we
know without doubt that
there is not a challenge
in the entire region that
wouldnt become much
more complicated if Iran
had the ability to produce nuclear weapons.
The completion of the
deal comes at a crucial
time for the Iranian government of President
Hassan Rouhani, who
came to power vowing
to get rid of the crippling
sanctions and faces a
critical
parliamentary
election at the end of
February. Iranian officials raced to dismantle
the facilities quickly
U.S. intelligence agencies
had estimated it would
take far longer so that
they could go to the polls
with news that the frozen
assets, mostly from oil
sales, had been released,
and could be used to prop
up an ailing, contracting
economy.
Facing intense criticism at home from military officials who fought
giving up Irans nuclear
abilities, Rouhani will
also argue that he succeeded in getting lifted
the restrictions that kept
Iranians from transferring funds with overseas
relatives and trading in
everything from carpets
to crude oil.
He and Foreign Minister Mohammed Javad
Zarif have an uphill battle: hard-liners did not
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Friday night
Morrissey said she saw
Sheetz talking on the
phone to Allison around
8:30 or 9 p.m. Friday and
said Allison must have
been agitated.
He was saying, Whats
wrong? and Where you
at? and asked if she was
walking or in a car, Morrissey said. Then he came
down, slammed the door
behind him and leaves.
Thats the last time his
housemates saw him.
Its a shock, it really is,
Morrissey said of the tragedy. He always seemed
like a nonviolent person. She said he helped
her carry groceries and
chipped in to assist neigh-
Sheetz is on
the run
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A5
A6
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
South Duke Street once was the black communitys Main Street. But urban renewal in the 1960s transformed
whole blocks of that vibrant hub into public housing and suburban-style institutional buildings. Since
1993, SACA has worked to rebalance the Southeast by building and rehabbing scores of homes for sale.
n
pe
ip
Sh
.
St
E.
St.
Buildings demolished
in Southeast
Lancaster during
1960s-70s urban
renewal.
Low-rent apartments
built with public funds
in Southeast Lancaster
during 1960s-70s
urban renewal.
t.
ke S
pea
a
s
e
Ch
erry
awb
Str
976 831
Phoenix
Academy
Susquehanna St.
Woodward Hill
Cemetery
Juniata St.
ke
Du
S.
S. Queen St.
Consequences
of Urban
Renewal
NEW/REHABILITATED UNIT
FOR 1ST-TIME HOMEOWNER
URBAN RENEWAL AREA
URBAN RENEWAL HOUSING
.
St
.
St
e.
Av
Roberto
Clemente
Park .
St
in
h
up
Da
Co
New Dauphin
St.
nd
la
ck
Ro
ML King
ES
n
tia
ris
Ch
grants.
n Sold to households earning less than 80 percent of Lancaster
Countys median income.
n Selling price of $99,600.
n Four clusters in Southeast: Palm Street (16 homes), Plum
and East End (11 homes), North and Locust (13 homes),
Chesapeake Street (12 homes.)
n Received award for good urban design.
LOW-INCOME PUBLIC
HOUSING FOR RENT
n
ee
Gr
St.
S. Ann St.
E. Farnum St.
Green
t.
rS
e
t
es
Ch
Edward Hand ES
.
St
S. Queen St.
e
m
Li
t.
tS
us
c
Lo
e.
Av
S.
ch
ur
Ch
.
St
ng
hi
rs
Pe
St.
rd
wa
Ho
e.
Av
.
St
S. Duke
E. Vine St.
S. Plum St.
E. Mifflin St.
S.
Lancaster
County
Convention
Center
S. Lime St.
nest
oga
Lancaster County
Central Park
Rive
358 144
Lancaster landlords
and homeowners
who refused to rent
or sell to blacks in
1964-65.
Lancasters burden
While each impoverished household
has its own circumstances that sabotage self-sufficiency, experts say living
in an environment where almost everyone else earns too little to support
themselves makes poverty doubly burdensome.
Those neighborhoods have more
crime and dispiriting blight; they have
less access to good schools and jobs,
the nonprofit National Housing Conference says. Dysfunction is no longer
the exception, but the norm. Poverty
becomes embedded in the culture of
the place.
The U.S. Census Bureau specifically
defines concentrated poverty as places where more than 40 percent of the
families are living below the federal
poverty line, currently $24,250 for a
family of four.
Three of the citys 14 census tracts
exceed the 40-percent threshold, and
two of those three are in the Southeast.
Not a single Lancaster County census
tract outside the city comes close to
40-percent poverty. (A tract in struggling Columbia borough tops out at 24
percent.)
Particularly worrisome for the
Southeast is the stickiness of concentrated poverty. The United States had
1,110 high-poverty urban neighborhoods in 1970. Forty years later, only
100 of those neighborhoods saw poverty decline.
But over the same period, the number of high-poverty neighborhoods
nearly tripled to 3,100. The data is in
a report by CityObservatory, a Knight
Foundation-supported think tank.
The Southeasts story, then, is a microcosm of the larger, national narrative of segregation, suburbanization,
de-industrialization and institutional
racism.
Its a story that goes back more than
100 years to when Lancaster relegated
almost all black people, both the poor
Nice neighborhood
The diversity of incomes and races
made for a nice neighborhood, says
Richard Simms, 80, a retired city police
officer and district judge who, while
living on North Street as a boy in the
1940s, worked in a Jewish-owned corner grocery.
Observant Jews would ask Simms
into their South Duke Street homes
on the Sabbath to turn the lights and
stoves on and off.
Theyd hug and kiss me, recalls
Simms, who is black. They were just
nice people.
ERASED, page A7
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
A7
Despite millions in investment, plans to lift neighborhoods out of poverty face uncertain future
JEFF HAWKES
JHAWKES@LNPNEWS.COM
Erased
Continued from A6
Blatant discrimination
Concerned about the plight of displaced black Lancastrians, members
of Lancasters Friends Meeting tried
to hold the city accountable by documenting housing discrimination.
Starting in March 1964, a Friends
committee systematically called city
landlords and real estate agents whenever an apartment or home became
available and asked if they would rent
or sell to a minority.
Most people told us an abrupt No,
and hung up, recalled Bob Neuhauser,
88, of East Lampeter Township, who
served on the committee.
If a black person seeking housing
went to see a landlord or a home owner, he or she was often informed the
place was already rented or sold. The
committee proved that kind of discrimination was happening by sending
a committee member to confirm that
an apartment was available before the
black housing seeker showed up, only
to be turned away.
Of the committees 409 contacts with
Lancaster landlords and home sellers,
only 51 or one in eight were open
to minority housing seekers, Neuhauser said in a 2007 paper recounting the
committees work.
After the Civil Rights Act of 1964 prohibited discrimination in public housing, the Lancaster Housing Authority
could no longer shirk responsibility for
relocating blacks to other parts of the
city.
But the authoritys proposal to build
so-called scattered housing at sites
around the city met with stiff resistance.
White city residents formed pressure
groups that succeeded in getting city
council and the zoning board of appeals
to block scattered-site projects.
In October 1970, 500 marched to a
city council meeting to oppose a plan
for 26 two-story, brick homes in the
800 block of Fremont Street in Lancasters Southwest.
It has been proven ... that property
values decrease whenever public project housing has been planted, a citizens group leader told council members. There is also an element of crime
that follows public project housing
wherever it goes. Another opponent
called the plan the assassination of a
neighborhood ... the assassination of
beautiful Lancaster city.
The foot-dragging by Lancaster leaders worked. By 1974, President Richard
Nixon halted public housing subsidies.
Federal money for scattered-site projects in Lancaster evaporated as the
Multiple
strategies
Promoting homeownership as a counterbalance to public housing
was only one strategy for
remaking the Southeast
after the setback of 1960s
urban renewal. Other efforts include workforce
training, business loans
and infrastructure improvements.
Millions of dollars of
public and philanthropic
investment have been
pumped into the Southeast to try to achieve a
turnaround that remains
elusive.
LNP attempted to
quantify the investments made over the last
25 years. Our conservative estimate: $51.2 million. (The amount isnt
Limited success
VISION, page A8
Senior public housing, upper left, and general public housing, foreground, reshaped the
landscape of Lancasters Southeast.
Unlike the front-page photo, this image shows the east side of South Duke Street today,
a suburban-style plaza in stark contrast to the historic architecture demolished during
urban renewal.
Betty Hurdle grew up in a Locust Street home demolished during urban renewal.
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Business
development
Percent of
homes in
poverty
Ha
rri
sb
ur
g
41-50%
31-40%
21-30%
Below
20%
Walnut St.
Av
e.
King St.
Lancaster
City
.
St
t.
hS
ep
s
Jo
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Because having answers means having choices.
Many people avoid testing because theyre afraid of learning they have HIV. The fact is, people
with HIV now live fuller, healthier livesespecially when diagnosed and treated early. Today there
are medicines to help you manage your health long-term and avoid passing HIV to your partner or
baby. Everyone between the ages of 13 and 64 should be tested for HIV. Ask your family doctor
to include a test at your next wellness visit, or stop by Lancaster General Health Physicians
Comprehensive Care for fast, free, confidential testingno appointment needed. Our test uses
no needles, and results are ready in 20 minutes.
w
Ne
Chestnut St.
t.
rS
e
t
es
Ch
.
St
Vine St.
.
ve
dA
n
lla
Ho
ke
Du
Ann St.
Shrinking funds
LANCASTERS
POVERTY POCKET
e.
Av
iew
irv
Fa
Lime St.
Continued from A7
Queen St.
A8
commission on which
he and another SACA
manager sit and to private-sector and philanthropic commitments.
The Southeast will
need new commitments,
energy and local dollars,
especially local dollars, if
state and federal funding
continues to recede.
You dont give up.
You dont roll back your
agenda because the other guy wont help you,
Graupera said. You
have to find out who
will.
SACAs refusal to quit on
the Southeast is why Garcia, of North Street, is now
starting his fourth year
as a homeowner. Garcia
remains elated, having
festively displayed his
pride over the holidays by
decorating his porch with
wreaths, garland and beribboned baskets.
While he would welcome a stronger police
presence in his area and
better code enforcement
across the Southeast,
Garcia thinks the neighborhood is getting better.
Garcia says his positive
outlook also extends to
himself. Homeownership gave Garcia a confidence that he lacked
when he was a renter in
his ability to accomplish
more in life.
Owning a house, he
said, made me more
accountable. It became
more important for me
to make more money. It
became more important
for me to push a little
further.
No giving up
Carlos
Graupera,
SACAs long-time director, is concerned about
the growing headwinds
to progress, although
he is no stranger to the
slog of community development. He has tried
for decades to convince
Lancasters leaders to invest in the Southeast, not
always with success.
They didnt know how
committed we were,
and they didnt think
anything could happen
here, Graupera said.
SACAs website continues to express a degree
of skepticism, noting
Lancasters poverty crisis gets lost in the excitement about Lancasters
burgeoning downtown.
It calls on policy makers
and community leaders to replace feel-good
Band-Aids with solution-focused, povertyfighting investments.
Graupera,
however,
said hes encouraged old
attitudes are changing.
He points to the mayors 12-member poverty
Lancasterr
County.
717-544-4943
LGHealth.org/GetTested
My Lancaster County
Richard Hertzler
control.
HIV Take
Take the test.
This project is supported by the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) under grant number P06HA29265-01-00Ryan White
HIV/AIDS Part C Development Grant. This information or content and conclusions are those of the author and should not be construed as the official position or policy of, nor should any endorsements be
inferred by HRSA, HHS or the U.S. Government.
shop.lancasteronline.com/collections/books
Published by LNP MEDIA GROUP, Inc., a Steinman Communications Company
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
A9
URBAN RENEWAL
DNEPHIN@LNPNEWS.COM
A newer view
Emerson Sampaio is a
newer face in the community.
He and his wife, Nora,
bought a house from the
housing partnership in
the first block of West
Strawberry in December
2014. They now have a
10-month-old son, Arlo.
Dick Hecker stands along the 400 block of West Vine Street.
NOW
THROUGH
1/22/16
4 years in a row!
Sean Mark
FROM PAGE A3
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
with a laugh.
Instead, he was making
sure the booth wouldnt
run out of milkshakes
before Saturdays close.
I was sweating a little bit (Friday) night,
he said, noting that the
booth had run out of
printed cups and that
supplies ran low Friday
night.
Saturday, people stood
in long lines to sample
the three milkshake
flavors chocolate, vanilla and this years new
flavor, strawberries and
cream.
Tons of potatoes
Nearby, Rahn Troutman was trying to keep
up with the rapid sales
of baked potatoes, sweet
potatoes, French fries
and potato donuts.
By the time the Farm
Show closed Saturday at
5 p.m., Troutman estimated they had sold 12
tons of baked and sweet
potatoes, another 12
tons of French fries and
24,000 dozen potato donuts.
Troutman, of Dornsife,
is an institution at the
Farm Show. His family
has run the Pennsylvania Co-Operative Potato
Growers booth since
1973.
He was excited when
the 100th Farm Show
began last week. But
he, too, was ready to go
home.
Youre excited when
its over, he said.
Miranda Hernley, 22,
Above: Parker Lengel takes a sip of his milkshake during the final day of the 100th Pennsylvania Farm Show
Saturday. Top right, Joy Schultz pulls and her daughter
Jen Supplee pushes a cart of supplies as granddaughter
Karlie gets to ride. Right, farm-class horse-pulling took
place in the large arena.
of Bethel Township in
Lebanon County, said
her cows were ready to
return home.
Theyre never happy
to be here, she said, noting that Farm Show week
throws off the cows routines.
They
miss
their
friends, she said.
One thing the cows do
enjoy at the Farm Show,
she said, are the warm
indoor temperatures.
Prize-winning
day
Not everyone was ready
for the 100th edition of
the Farm Show to end.
Saturday was Burnell
Oberholtzers
familys
time to shine. The Oberholtzers, of East Earl,
took top honors in the
All Other Entries sheep
lamb.
He also showed the
champion ram and
champion and reserve
champion ewe in the
youth division.
It was a busy week, but
well worth it, said his
father, Brian, who owns
Weeping Willow Farm in
Manheim.
Three years ago, Jeremiahs sister, Gwendolyn,
showed the champion
Shropshire ram.
Sidelights:
Attendance: Because the Farm Show
does not charge an admission fee, there is no
exact attendance count.
Officials instead use a
car count. This year, despite raising the parking
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FROM PAGE A3
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
A11
23
The issues
Route 897 is a state
road. Residents at past
public meetings repeatedly pointed that out to
supervisors, questioning why the township
was taking the lead on
the project, estimated
to cost $1.5 million in
state, county and township funds.
Residents at those
meetings also asked if
there was a connection
between the realignment and a 235-unit
Shady
Maple
Smorgasbord
897
Realigned
roadway
plan
scrapped
Todd
y Drive
Continued from A3
322
East Earl
500 ft.
897
residential
development with commercial
space proposed by East
Earl LLC just to the
east.
On a sketch plan, East
Earl LLC had shown a
secondary access road
coming off the proposed realigned section
Its a very
exciting and
rewarding
opportunity.
Bill Hall, Fire
Department Mount Joy
Potential volunteers
dont need to have prior
experience in emergency services, said Hall,
who helped organize the
event.
Hall said applications
handed out at a similar open house in 2015
helped the Mount Joy
department add nine
members, a shot in the
arm for an agency whose
call volume has increased in recent years.
Fire departments face
several challenges in filling positions, including
an aging volunteer force.
Statewide,
volunteer
firefighter numbers have
declined from 300,000
in the 1970s to about
50,000, according to a
University of Pittsburgh
committee.
HIGHER EDUCATION
Saturday:
traffic.
The project had been
in planning since the
late 1990s, according to
Shriver and Kreider.
But residents said that
a traffic light installed
in the meantime at Toddy Drive and Route 322
alleviated their safety
concerns, which were
originally part of the
reasoning for the realignment when it was
first proposed.
In pushing the project, Shriver and Kreider had also pointed
out that $500,000 of
county grant funds
would be lost if it were
abandoned prior to the
countys deadline.
Kreider said last February that $123,416 of
HACC
STAFF
Community college
HACC is launching a
nondegree educational
program for students
with
developmental
disabilities.
Participants in the
Career Bridges program will be able to
earn either a culinary
specialist or nurse aide
training
certificate,
learning skills alongside other HACC stu-
Connect with us
dents.
The program is underwritten by a $150,000
grant from the Pennsylvania Developmental Disabilities Council,
a state-level advocacy
group authorized by
federal disability law.
The community college is accepting applications through March
15. Classes will start in
the fall at HACCs Harrisburg campus.
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LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Boy, 14, has been charged with two counts of theft from a vehicle, police say
DAN NEPHIN
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An armed robber
got away with a small
amount of cash at a Turkey Hill convenience
store in southwest Lancaster city on Friday.
The robber pulled out
a small handgun in front
of an employee who was
standing outside the
520 Hershey Ave. store
shortly before 2 a.m., city
police Lt. Kevin Fry said.
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Ephrata 1759 West Main Street, Ephrata, 717-733-9930
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NATION/WORLD
Roll call
headwaters.
Voting yes: Meehan, Pitts
House
n Mountaintop-removal coal mining:
Senate
n Congressional audit of Federal
Votes Ahead
This week, the Senate will debate a
bill to intensify screening of refugee
applicants from Iraq and Syria, while
the House will be in recess.
Chat with us
on Twitter:
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ELECTIONS
ASSOCIATED PRESS
VENEZUELA
MIAMI HERALD
Venezuelan
President Nicolas Maduro
has called on his opposition counterparts to
work with him to help
get the country out of
a deep economic crisis.
But even as he called for
unity, Maduro invoked
emergency decree powers.
Maduro made the pitch
during his annual speech
Friday before a National
Assembly that is in opposition hands for the
first time in 17 years.
The Central Bank released economic information for the first time
in more than a year, confirming what everyone
knew: The economy is in
shambles.
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In the Foxshire Plaza
forms.
In a rebuttal, National
Assembly
President
Henry Ramos said he
and his colleagues were
willing to work with the
administration if it was
truly willing to change.
The socialist model
is wrong. Its flawed and
there are the figures that
prove it, Ramos said,
referring to the grim
economic data. If there
was truly a will to change
course, then obviously
we would be interested.
How can we want lines,
inflation, and insecurity?
Also during the session,
Maduro presented a decree giving him emergency economic powers
for 60 days. The decree
had been approved in the
waning days of the outgoing assembly but was
published in the official
register only on Friday.
The assembly is expected to debate the decree
next week.
Ramos also said his
bloc in the assembly
would not back down
from a proposed amnesty law.
We cannot move
forward here without
liberating political prisoners, he told the president.
PEST CONTROL
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LOCAL/NATION
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
CALIFORNIA
Blast
fears
stall gas
leak plan
LOS ANGELES TIMES
The possibility of a
catastrophic explosion
prompted
regulators
Saturday to delay efforts
to capture and burn leaking natural gas that has
sickened and displaced
thousands of residents
of Porter Ranch.
Mohsen Nazemi, deputy executive officer of the
South Coast Air Quality
Management District,
which was expected to
approve the plan at a
meeting Saturday, acknowledged that the
idea was very unusual
and somewhat untested.
The plan is now on
hold until local fire officials and state and federal regulators have signed
off, Nazemi said.
For more than two
months, a damaged well
at Southern California
Gas Co.s Aliso Canyon
storage facility has been
spewing noxious fumes
and foul odors into nearby communities.
To stop the leak, the
company is drilling a relief well to the giant natural storage tank about
8,500 feet beneath the
surface, but that isnt expected to be finished until early February.
So officials, looking for
more immediate relief,
came up with the plan to
burn the gas.
Earlier in the week,
however, the state Public Utilities Commission
expressed concerns that
the damaged well could
be vulnerable to a blowout, which would allow
even greater release of
environmentally damaging gases or cause an explosion.
A letter from the commission to the company
included a warning that
damage to the well system, which was subjected to two months of
aggressive high-pressure
pumping to try to plug
the leak that began in
October, might now permit air to mix with methane in a way that could
be catastrophic.
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.
ALLGYER, Lydia A., 52,
Mill Hall, Jan. 8.
ANDERSON, Barry R.,
69, Lititz, Jan. 8.
AUGHINBAUGH,
Charles H., 93, Akron,
Jan. 10.
BARLEY, Gladys M., 87,
Millersville, Jan. 8.
BATTAGLIA, Nancy
(Norton), 69, Columbia,
Jan. 11.
BEDNAR, Louis E., 76,
Lancaster, Jan. 10.
BENNER, Anna M., 84,
Elida, Ohio, Jan. 8.
BERGMANN, Evelyn,
85, Lancaster, Jan. 5.
BOWMAN, Margaret
P., 87, East Earl and
Ephrata, Jan. 10.
BRESCH, Anthony M.,
60, Lancaster, Jan. 9.
BRITTON, Franklin E.,
83, New Holland, Jan. 7.
BROWN, Diane L., 63,
Lancaster, Jan. 7.
BRUBAKER Jonas B.
Jr., 89, Marietta and
Lancaster, Jan. 8.
BUOHL, Richard E., 70,
Seminole, Fla., Jan. 10.
CAMPBELL, Cody A.,
24, Jan. 11.
CARROLL, Patricia
(Brady), 74, East
Petersburg, Jan. 10.
COEN, Karen J., 62,
Lititz, Jan. 12.
CRESPO, Miguel A., 59,
Lancaster, Jan. 10.
DANZ, Richard A., 64,
Washington Boro, Jan.
7.
DECKER, James E., 77,
Elizabethtown, Jan. 7.
DOMBACH, Richard D.,
90, Lancaster, Jan. 9.
DOURTE, Jeanette
(Frey), 94,
Mechanicsburg, Jan. 8.
EBNER, Frederick W.,
84, Lancaster, Jan. 11.
ESH, Elias S., 86,
Intercourse, Jan. 7.
ESH, Susan M., 9
months, daughter
of Henry Esh Jr. and
Martha Smucker Esh,
Coatesville, Jan. 9.
FALLAN, Ann C., 86,
Lititz, Jan. 9.
FORBERGER, Paula M.,
87, Lancaster, Jan. 13.
FORRY, Alfred P. Sr.,
90, Wrightsville, Jan.
Follow us on Facebook at
LancasterOnline
Wednesday:
Food
TODAYS OBITUARIES
Todays obituaries can be found on pages A20, A21, A22 and A23.
13.
FREEMAN, Paul H., 96,
Denver, Jan. 8.
FREY, Charles E., 87, Lititz,
Jan. 8.
FRICK, Elizabeth M., 87,
Quarryville, Jan. 12.
FRITZ, Janet C., 85,
Ephrata, Jan. 7.
FRY, Thomas E., 65,
Bradenton, Fla., Jan. 4.
GARMAN, Isaac S., 90,
Lebanon, Jan. 8.
GAUS, Ardythe M., 78,
New Providence, Jan. 14.
GINGRICH, John H., 82,
Lebanon, Jan. 6.
GOTTSHALL, David W., 73,
Ephrata, Jan. 13.
HARROLD, Michael D., 69,
Columbia City, Ind., Jan. 9.
HARTLEY, Christopher J.,
50, Conestoga, Jan. 7.
HECK, Cleo R., 98,
Nottingham, Jan. 12.
HERR, Audrey M., 73,
Hummelstown, Jan. 9.
HERSHEY, Robert E., 92,
Elizabethtown, Jan. 9.
HERTZLER, Irene, 97,
Honey Brook, Jan. 11.
HERZOG, Veronica C., 90,
Manheim, Jan. 4.
HEVNER, Nancy A., 82,
Columbia, Jan. 9.
HINTON, James H., 64,
Lancaster, Jan. 9.
HOCKENBERRY, Mija, 83,
Erie, Kan., Jan. 12.
HOOVER, Herbert B., 88,
Reading, Jan. 11.
KENDIG, John F., 86, Lititz,
Jan. 7.
KENDIG, Richard L., 62,
Lancaster, Jan. 11.
KENNEDY, Ernest L. Sr.,
98, New Holland, Jan. 10.
KING, Mary L., 73,
Gordonville, Jan. 11.
Paul Erwin
DPT, Co-Owner
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CAMP HILL/
LEMOYNE OFFICE
836 Market St. (Rear)
Lemoyne, PA 17043
HERSHEY OFFICE
1128 Cocoa Avenue
Hershey, PA 17033
(717) 533-7000
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AWARE LANCASTER
YOGA & WELLNESS DAY
Tamara Bennawit,
Au.D., FAAA
717.207.7464
442 Running Pump Rd
Lancaster
Celebrating 16 years in
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LANCASTER OFFICE
1697 Oregon Pike
Lancaster, PA 17601
(717) 945-6938
Manheim, Jan. 9.
STAUFFER, Franklin D., 82,
Leola, Jan. 10.
STEFFY, Jason J., 82,
Ephrata, Jan. 9.
STONER, Amelia R., 78,
Quarryville, Jan. 12.
STONER, Phyllis L., 75,
Mount Joy, Jan. 11.
SUTER, Donald K., 87,
Lancaster, Jan. 7.
SWEARER, Lynford V., 83,
Elizabethtown, Jan. 11.
SWINEHART, Clarence R.,
83, Lancaster, Jan. 8.
WAGNER, Frederick K., 80,
Lancaster, Jan. 8.
WALKER, Mildred, 90,
Lancaster, Jan. 7.
WALTMAN, Martin E., 80,
Lancaster, Jan. 13.
WENGER, Richard C., 89,
Lititz, Dec. 10.
WISE, Clarence R. Jr., 73,
Ephrata, Jan. 9.
WRIGHT, David S., 74,
Mountville, Jan. 5.
WRIGHT, Jane F., 84,
Akron and Lancaster, Jan.
3.
ZINK, Mildred C., 102,
Mount Joy and Columbia,
Jan. 5.
A15
OF LANCASTER
MarketPulse
PLAYBOY PAD
The storied Playboy Mansion is on
the market for $200 million. But
theres a catch: Buyers have to
agree to allow Playboy Magazine
founder and party master Hugh
Hefner to continue to work and live
there. Negotiations between the
seller and buyer would determine
whether the 89-year-old playboy
stays for free or rents the place
back. The 5-acre property located
in Los Angeles exclusive Holmby
Hills hit the market earlier this
week. It features 29 rooms, game
house, home theater, wine cellar,
gym, tennis court, swimming pool
and four-bedroom guest house. It
also comes with the notorious
cave-like grotto where Playboy
bunnies have long frolicked with
guests.
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Dow industrials
V
19,000
52.12
MON
TUES
-2.95% (wkly)
-3.68% (wkly)
t 4-wk. -7.67%
t YTD -9.21%
-5.64
MON
TUES
WED
THUR
t 4-wk. -10.11%
t YTD -11.28%
FRI
$1,000
15,000
J
Close: 15,988.08
1-week change: -358.37 (-2.2%)
INDEX
HIGH
LOW
YTD
1YR
CHG %CHG MO QTR%CHG %CHG
16593.51
15842.11
15988.08
-358.37
-2.2
7013.67
6560.11
6689.06
-257.30
-3.7
11254.87
9192.07
NYSE Comp.
9644.45
9192.07
9299.63
-229.13
-2.4
5231.94
4292.14
Nasdaq Comp.
4714.80
4419.41
4488.42
-155.21
-3.3
2134.72
1857.83
S&P 500
1950.19
1857.83
1880.33
-41.70
-2.2
1551.28
1246.65
S&P MidCap
1318.12
1246.65
1269.83
-38.65
-3.0
22537.15 19075.51
Wilshire 5000
20099.65
19075.51
19335.23
-531.87
-2.7
Russell 2000
1056.92
983.98
1007.74
-38.46
-3.7
Common owners
and airfares
15
* - annualized
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
-8.3
(((^%$!9875432| -8.7
-10.9
999995321| -23.7
-8.3
((&%#@!9987| -12.8
-10.4
((((&^#@!865| -3.2
-8.0
(((*%$@!9765421| -6.9
-9.2
((*^$!9976431| -11.3
-8.7
(((^$98764321| -9.0
-11.3
(*&^%$#@!99954| -14.4
TICKER
NAV
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
GrowStk
500Adml
HltCrAdml
InstIdxI
InstPlus
IntlStkIdxIPls
MuIntAdml
PrmcpAdml
TotBdAdml
TotIntl
TotStIAdm
TotStIIns
TotStIdx
WelltnAdm
ABALX
22.70
CAIBX
52.98
CWGIX 39.77
ANCFX 46.39
AGTHX 37.18
AMECX 19.15
AIVSX
30.80
AWSHX 35.44
DODIX
13.26
DODFX 32.24
DODGX 147.16
FCNTX 90.45
FUSVX
66.11
FKINX
1.96
MWTIX 10.69
PTTRX
10.06
PRGFX 47.91
VFIAX 173.53
VGHAX 85.28
VINIX
171.82
VIIIX
171.83
VTPSX
87.58
VWIUX
14.38
VPMAX 94.33
VBTLX
10.74
VGTSX 13.09
VTSAX
46.49
VITSX
46.50
VTSMX 46.48
VWENX 60.43
1.6
Investment-grade bonds
1,007
0.2
983
-1.3
955
-3.0
942
-1.7
941
-1.1
REITs
S&P 500
Technology stocks
European stocks
Copper
Asian stocks
Emerging-market stocks
Small-cap stocks
Oil
$500
940
0.2
926
-1.9
926
-2.3
919
-2.7
911
-2.1
903
-3.6
842
-6.2
$1,000
3.4
2.6
2.4
5.5%
3.6
3.2
2.3
1.9
6.9%
4.4
3.4
5
9
3
7
5.2
3.9
5.8%
COMPANY
Nymox Pharmaceutical
NYMX
2.20
+0.9
-39.6
Eagle Pharmaceutical
EGRX
76.94
-6.1
-20.8
Voltari Corp
VLTC
3.86
-10.9
-25.9
Sophiris Bio
SPHS
1.67
+9.2
-3.5
DS Healthcare Grp
DSKX
2.10
-16.0
-21.9
Anacor Pharma
ANAC
93.75
-2.1
-10.4
Heron Therapeutics
HRTX
22.71
-3.9
-11.7
Exelixis Inc
EXEL
4.23
-13.6
-15.2
NeoPhotonics Corp
NPTN
8.50
-3.1
-12.4
Dyax Corporation
DYAX
38.09
+0.9
+1.8
Sarepta Thera
SRPT
14.28
-60.3
-62.0
Eldorado Resorts
ERI
10.34
-3.0
+0.3
GigOptics Inc
GIG
2.83
-4.1
-3.4
EFOI
10.79
-16.0
-25.4
ABCD
NexPoint CreditStrat
NHF
4.44
-5.3
-13.1
17.70
-9.3
-9.0
MeetMe Inc
MEET
3.31
-23.7
+4.7
LightPath Tech
LPTH
3.21 +14.2
+44.6
Aoxing Pharmaceut
AXN
0.75
+1.4
-24.2
REPH
7.01
-19.9
-18.8
4.4
3.4
4
5
1
2
-1.8
-7.7
-9.2
-2.4
-2.1
-6.2
-6.8
-5.4
-1.7
-20.3
-10.0
+0.6
-3.6
-12.4
-0.3
-1.1
+2.4
-3.6
+1.6
-3.6
-3.6
-12.5
+2.6
-4.0
-0.4
-12.7
-5.1
-5.1
-5.2
-3.8
High-yield bonds
5.8%
11.4
6.9
1 +8.3
3 +5.2
4 +4.8
1 +8.8
3 +9.2
4 +6.9
4 +8.5
1 +9.9
4 +3.5
5 -0.3
4 +8.6
1 +10.1
2 +10.0
5 +3.4
+4.7
3 +3.5
1 +11.3
2 +10.1
1 +19.2
2 +10.1
2 +10.1
5 -1.0
1 +5.3
4 +11.4
2 +3.3
5 -1.1
3 +9.6
3 +9.6
3 +9.4
2 +7.6
%RTN
1YR
+450.6
+381.2
+374.0
+238.3
+226.9
+175.8
+171.6
+168.3
+165.3
+164.4
+158.7
+153.2
+151.3
+149.3
+148.1
+147.8
+143.8
+141.7
+138.7
+134.2
PE YLD
dd
...
dd
...
dd
...
dd
...
dd
...
dd
...
dd
...
dd
...
65
...
dd
...
dd
...
dd
...
cc
...
17
...
dd 30.6
q 16.3
19
...
64
...
...
dd
...
IndustryRankings
$CHG ---------- PERCENT RETURN ---------1WK 1WK 1MO 1YR RANK 5YRS* RANK
-0.34 -1.5
-4.8
-0.86 -1.6
-4.5
-1.10 -2.7
-7.8
-1.30 -2.7
-8.6
-1.37 -3.6
-9.8
-0.33 -1.7
-4.9
-0.74 -2.3
-7.5
-0.82 -2.3
-8.0
-0.07 -0.5
-0.2
-1.19 -3.6 -10.9
-4.69 -3.1
-9.8
-2.10 -2.3
-8.8
-1.45 -2.1
-7.8
-0.05 -2.5
-5.3
+0.02 +0.1 +0.5
-0.03 -0.3 +0.1
-1.85 -3.7 -10.4
-3.82 -2.2
-7.8
-2.52 -2.9
-6.9
-3.77 -2.1
-7.8
-3.78 -2.2
-7.8
-3.13 -3.5
-8.3
...
... +1.3
-2.38 -2.5
-8.6
+0.02 +0.2 +1.0
-0.47 -3.5
-8.3
-1.19 -2.5
-8.3
-1.19 -2.5
-8.2
-1.18 -2.5
-8.2
-0.73 -1.2
-4.8
-3.1 %
1,012
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 Jan. 14
AP
PERCENT CHANGE
1WK 1MO 1QTR
INDUSTRY
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
LocalFunds
FUND
1-week
... today is percent
worth change
3.7
3
4
6
7
3
6
7
8
Commodities
$1,013
Utilities stocks
Share
holder
rank
2
140
CLOSE
Fidelity
Fidelity Spartan
FrankTemp-Franklin
Metropolitan West
PIMCO
T Rowe Price
Vanguard
Bonds
Gold
6560.11
983.98
Stocks
Close: 4,488.42
1-week change: -155.21 (-3.3%)
9214.77
1296.00
Nasdaq composite
4,400
4,200
Derby
4,600
150
AT&T Inc
Air Products
Alcatel-Lucent
Alcoa Inc
Applied Indl Tch
Armstrong World Inds
Bco Santander SA
Bon Ton Store
CNH Indl NV
Campbell Soup
Carpenter Tech
Clarcor Inc
Costco Wholesale
Donegal A
Donnelley RR & Sons
Exelon Corp
Frontier Comm
Fulton Financial
GlaxoSmithKline PLC
Harley Davidson
Henry Schein Inc
Hershey Company
Intl Paper
Johnson & Johnson
Kellogg Co
Kroger Co
L-3 Communications
M&T Bank
t 4-wk. -6.24%
t YTD -8.00%
Russell 2000
4,800
160
COMPANY
5,400
FRI
16,000
Source: FactSet
AP
-2.17% (wkly)
5,000
170
06
S&P mid-cap
5,200
HOUSING OUTLOOK
Fitch Ratings sees U.S. home
prices climbing about 5 percent
this year. That should nudge home
prices closer to levels last seen
during the peak of the housing
Source: FactSet
boom 10 years ago. Even so, the
credit ratings agency says home
values now appear more sustainable than they were in 2006. Since
then, the nations population has
added more than 20 million people
FAMILY
and incomes have increased.
When adjusted for inflation,
American Funds
current home prices remain more
than 20 percent below their 2006
peak, the firm notes. Still, in states
like California where prices have
risen sharply in recent years,
home values could ease
somewhat this year.
130
THUR
17,000
CONSISTENTLY INCONSISTENT
The notion that the past
performance of an investment fund
should augur how it will fare
consistently into the future doesnt
hold up most of the time, according
to a new report by S&P Dow Jones
Indices. Out of 678 domestic
equity funds that were in the top
quartile of top-performing funds as
of September 2013, only about 4.3
percent remained there by the end
of last September. Even a smaller
portion of large-cap funds held the
high ground, just 1.2 percent. The
more time passes, the less likely it
is that top-performing funds will
hold on to their status, S&P said.
180
WED
18,000
18351.36 15370.33
190
t 4-wk. -8.83%
t YTD -10.36%
S&P 500
StocksRecap
52-WEEK
HIGH
LOW
200
-3.34% (wkly)
t 4-wk. -6.66%
t YTD -8.25%
210
-2.19% (wkly)
14,000
S&P/Case-Shiller
20-city home price index
2006-2015
Nasdaq
Utilities
Telecommunications
Consumer Goods
Health Care
Industrials
DJ Total Market index
Consumer Services
Oil & Gas
Financials
Technology
Basic Material
0.5
-0.7
-2.0
-2.1
-2.2
-2.4
-3.1
-2.6
-3.0
-2.5
-4.8
6.
7.
1 HHHHI 8.
9.
1 HHHII
10.
3 HHHII
3 HHHII
3 HHHII
1 HHHII
Aerospace & Defense
-2.5
3 HHIII FLIR Systems
FLIR
+3.2
1 HHHHI Heico Corp
HEI
-3.2
HEI/A
-5.4
2 HHHHI Heico Inc A
-1.0
4 HHHII General Industrials
NC
+5.2
2 HHHHI NACCO Inds
Luxfer Hldgs PLC
LXFR
+2.4
2 HHHHH
Bemis Co
BMS
-0.1
1 HHHHI
Support Services
-1.8
3 HHHII Rentrak
RENT +16.9
HHHHH Franklin Covey
FC
+5.3
ONE
+1.8
2 HHHHI Higher One Hldgs
-3.0
1 HHHHH Industrial Engineering
HURC
-5.3
1 HHHHI Hurco Mfg
Milacron Holdings
MCRN -8.1
2 HHHHI
AGCO Corp
AGCO
-0.8
1 HHHHI Industrial Transportation
-2.5
1 HHHHI Willis Lease Finance
WLFC
-2.2
5 HHIII Air Transport Svcs
ATSG
-0.8
CHRW +0.7
2 HHHHI C.H. Robinson Wwde
-3.1
1 HHHHH Electronic/Elec. Equipment
ESIO
-2.2
3 HHHII Electro Sci
Landauer Inc
LDR
+0.4
5 HHHII
Nam Tai Property
NTP
-8.9
2 HHHHI Construction & Materials
-3.4
2 HHHHI Layne Christensen
LAYN
+8.6
2 HHHHI Integrated Electricl
IESC
-1.9
USLM +0.1
1 HHHHH US Lime & Minerals
RATING
1.9
-1.5
-5.3
-5.8
-6.4
-6.6
-6.7
-7.4
-8.0
-8.1
-10.1
%RTN
1YR
-2.9
-1.8
-7.0
-4.8
-7.9
-8.3
-7.8
-21.1
-8.9
-7.7
-14.0
(((^%!987652| -10.6
(((($@9542| -6.0
((((*$85421| -3.3
(((($@9542| -6.0
(((&^%@!9865| -9.2
(((*^%976521| -7.9
((((*&^%$!642| -0.9
9999963| -28.0
(((*^#@!976543| -8.1
((((&%$!8742| -4.3
*&^!999972| -23.2
-3.2
+12.4
+7.4
+2.0
-4.2
-9.2
-7.6
+6.1
-8.2
-11.0
+5.6
+63.8
-12.5
-5.9
-21.4
+1.1
-16.7
+16.8
-0.7
-11.4
-8.2
+10.9
-27.3
-22.5
-7.0
-22.5
+42.8
+13.5
(*&^%#653| -4.0
((^$|754 +6.8
(*&$#!75421| -7.0
((^$|542 +2.0
((^$|6321 3.0
(%$#@942| -20.5
*&^@!9731| -25.0
((^$|53 +1.6
(*&^%#@!651| -3.8
&^%$#986421| -32.9
((^$|31 +0.4
(*%!8532| -11.6
*&^%#9653| -23.7
*%$!984321| -30.7
((^$| 0.0
((^$|654321 +4.9
*^%$#97643| -28.0
(*^%$764321| -8.6
((^$|875432 +17.1
(*%#!852| -11.3
(*#@!861| -12.4
*&^$#965421| -24.3
(*&^%65321| -4.3
((^$|8654321 +14.7
(($6| -2.5
9964| -42.5
((^$|9986432 +52.8
($#!95421| -21.8
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 115.64
ALU
3.06
AA
6.85
AIT
36.72
AWI 40.24
SAN
4.27
BONT 1.10
CNHI 6.13
CPB 44.45
CRS 24.75
CLC 44.13
COST 117.03
DGICA 13.05
RRD 12.78
EXC 25.09
FTR
3.96
FULT 11.00
GSK 37.24
HOG 40.90
HSIC 126.17
HSY 82.41
IP
35.69
JNJ 81.79
K
61.13
KR
27.32
LLL 101.11
MTB 105.42
6
1
5
1
2
1
1
1
1
9
1
2
7
1
1
2
1
3
2
1
6
1
1
7
8
8
4
1
36.45
158.20
4.96
17.10
45.56
60.70
7.79
7.67
9.72
55.08
45.42
67.10
169.73
16.40
20.22
38.25
8.46
14.59
49.08
66.28
161.62
111.35
57.90
106.33
73.68
42.75
132.92
134.00
33.99
117.82
3.91
6.90
37.66
39.95
4.30
1.52
5.96
52.99
25.25
46.45
150.39
13.12
13.15
27.46
4.24
11.76
38.90
40.44
146.72
83.32
36.42
97.00
70.67
38.49
111.69
104.49
0.45 1.3
-1.20 -1.0
-0.09 -2.3
-1.17 -14.5
-0.77 -2.0
-2.51 -5.9
0.01 0.2
-0.23 -13.1
-0.25 -4.0
1.88 3.7
-2.02 -7.4
1.45 3.2
-1.72 -1.1
-0.66 -4.8
0.33 2.5
-0.36 -1.3
-0.43 -9.2
-0.43 -3.5
-0.52 -1.3
-3.31 -7.6
-3.56 -2.4
-1.60 -1.9
0.52 1.4
-1.16 -1.2
-0.81 -1.1
-2.31 -5.7
-2.86 -2.5
-5.68 -5.2
s
t
s
t
t
t
t
t
t
s
t
t
t
t
t
s
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
s -1.2 +7.9
t -9.4 13.2
s 2.1 +20.3
t -30.1 53.1
t -7.0 4.6
t -12.6 20.4
t -11.7 34.3
t -27.6 71.1
t -12.9 17.8
s 0.8 +17.7
t -16.6 37.0
t -6.5 22.7
t -6.9 +12.7
t -6.8 14.7
t -10.7 9.4
t -1.1 23.0
t -9.2 30.6
t -9.6 +5.2
t -3.6 3.7
t -10.9 33.5
s -7.3 +6.5
t -6.7 21.1
t -3.4 28.7
t -5.6 2.5
s -2.2 +7.3
s -8.0 +16.8
s -6.5 9.1
t -13.8 6.2
1
3
1
5
2
3
4
5
3
1
4
4
1
3
3
4
4
1
2
4
1
3
4
2
1
1
3
2
8.7
8.3
3.3
-14.0
4.2
2.6
-7.8
-26.2
...
11.0
-7.2
2.1
18.4
2.3
0.8
-3.7
-6.8
4.5
5.4
3.9
18.0
13.3
8.7
11.9
9.4
30.1
11.0
6.5
37 5.6
19 2.7
... ...
12 1.7
14 2.9
29 ...
... 8.1
... 13.2
75 ...
25 2.4
17 2.9
17 1.9
28 1.1
15 4.1
12 7.9
12 4.5
... 9.9
14 3.1
... 6.3
11 3.1
26 ...
21 2.8
14 4.8
18 3.1
69 2.8
19 1.1
16 2.3
14 2.7
Merck & Co
Natl Penn Bcs
Nwst Bancshares Inc
PNC Financial
PPL Corp
Patterson Cos
Penn Natl Gaming
Penney JC Co Inc
Pfizer Inc
Rite Aid Corp
Sears Holdings Corp
Skyline Cp
Supervalu Inc
TE Connectivity Ltd
Tanger Factory
Tegna Inc
Tyson Foods
UGI Corp
Univrsl Corp
Urban Outfitters
Verizon Comm
WalMart Strs
Weis Mkts
Wells Fargo & Co
Windstream Hldgs
YRC Worldwide Inc
52-WK RANGE
FRIDAY $CHG %CHG
%CHG %RTN RANK %RTN
TICKER LOW
HIGH CLOSE 1WK 1WK 1MO 1QTR YTD 1YR 1YR 5YRS* PE Yld
MRK
NPBC
NWBI
PNC
PPL
PDCO
PENN
JCP
PFE
RAD
SHLD
SKY
SVU
TEL
SKT
TGNA
TSN
UGI
UVV
URBN
VZ
WMT
WMK
WFC
WIN
YRCW
45.69
9.66
11.52
81.84
29.18
39.90
13.34
6.50
28.47
5.88
17.30
2.17
4.46
54.32
30.30
21.30
37.10
31.51
39.02
19.26
38.06
56.30
38.56
47.75
4.42
9.50
4
6
3
3
6
1
2
2
3
5
1
0
1
1
2
3
9
3
7
1
5
2
1
1
1
1
63.62
12.80
14.11
100.52
36.74
53.07
20.23
10.09
36.46
9.47
46.23
4.30
12.00
73.73
40.80
33.40
54.42
38.61
58.89
47.25
50.86
90.97
51.91
58.77
14.05
21.37
51.14
11.38
12.29
86.33
33.29
40.24
14.13
7.01
30.81
7.64
17.14
4.60
4.53
55.08
31.35
24.02
51.49
33.28
51.63
21.17
44.43
61.93
39.16
48.82
5.24
9.94
0.06
-0.19
-0.37
-1.12
-0.10
-2.15
-1.04
-0.16
-0.19
-0.12
-0.89
0.90
-1.56
-3.07
-1.16
0.52
-0.81
-0.15
0.03
-1.19
-0.40
-1.61
-1.46
-0.74
-0.65
-2.25
0.1
-1.6
-2.9
-1.3
-0.3
-5.1
-6.9
-2.2
-0.6
-1.5
-4.9
24.3
-25.6
-5.3
-3.6
2.2
-1.5
-0.4
0.1
-5.3
-0.9
-2.5
-3.6
-1.5
-11.0
-18.5
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
s
t
t
t
s
t
t
t
t
t
s
t
t
t
s
t
t
t
t
t -3.2 14.4
t -7.7 +20.9
t -8.2 +8.3
t -9.4 +7.2
t -2.5 +6.2
t -11.0 17.3
t -11.8 7.0
t 5.3 9.2
t -4.6 1.5
s -2.6 +4.1
t -16.6 49.6
s 29.4 +33.3
t -33.2 52.0
t -14.8 9.6
t -4.1 18.2
t -5.9 +2.6
s -3.5 +29.6
t -1.4 8.0
t -7.9 +36.1
t -6.9 35.8
t -3.9 -0.9
s 1.0 26.9
t -11.6 15.0
t -10.2 -0.8
t -18.6 44.3
t -29.9 43.6
3
1
1
1
1
3
3
3
2
2
5
1
5
3
3
2
1
3
1
4
2
4
3
2
4
4
11.8
8.3
5.9
8.2
11.3
6.8
12.3
-23.4
14.2
49.0
-19.3
-26.6
-7.3
10.4
7.6
18.1
25.5
11.3
9.6
-10.0
9.1
5.2
2.9
10.6
8.3
-60.6
14
15
18
12
11
18
...
...
23
35
...
...
7
9
25
5
17
23
15
12
17
13
18
12
...
11
3.6
3.9
4.6
2.4
4.5
2.2
...
...
3.9
...
...
...
...
2.4
3.6
2.3
1.2
2.7
4.1
...
5.1
3.2
3.1
3.1
11.5
...
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
A17
Nation&World
FOR THE LATEST UPDATES, GO TO LANCASTERONLINE.COM
In brief
VIRGINIA
Feds:
Man
tried
to join
ISIS
HUNTINGBURG, IND.
MARK MAZZETTI
THE NEW YORK TIMES
FLINT, MICHIGAN
Trump booed at
conservative event
Donald Trump ran afoul of some
conservative activists Saturday with an
attack on GOP presidential rival Ted
Cruz for his failure to disclose certain
bank loans during his 2012 Senate bid.
You give a campaign contribution
to Ted Cruz, you get whatever the hell
you want, Trump told a tea party gathering in the early voting state of South
Carolina. By the time Trump added
that he thinks Cruz is a nice guy, loud
boos had commenced among the hundreds of attendees.
POWERBALL
ASSOCIATED PRESS
A security man walks past the Splendid Hotel in Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso, on Saturday.
BURKINA FASO
O U A G A D O U G O U,
Burkina Faso The
Al-Qaida fighters who
stormed a popular hangout in Burkina Fasos
capital at dinnertime
came with a mission to
kill as many people as
possible, survivors and
officials said Saturday,
firing at people even as
they fled and setting the
cafe ablaze.
When the gunfire
stopped after a more
than 12-hour siege on
the cafe and nearby hotel, at least 28 people had
been slain in an unprecedented attack on this
West African country
long spared the jihadist
violence experienced by
its neighbors.
Like the extremist attacks from Paris to Jakarta, the assailants in
the Friday evening attack
targeted an area where
WASHINGTON The
Justice
Department
charged two Virginia
men Saturday with terrorism-related offenses,
one day after FBI agents
arrested one of them at
an airport where officials
believe he was planning
to begin a journey to
Syria to fight with the Islamic State.
Both men, Joseph Hassan Farrokh and Mahmoud Amin Mohamed
Elhassan, are in FBI custody and face up to 20
years in prison if they are
convicted, the Justice
Department said Saturday in a news release.
The department did
not cite any evidence
that the two men had
direct contact with operatives for the Islamic
State and seemed to base
the terrorism charges in
large part on conversations they had with three
FBI informants.
The arrests came as
counterterrorism officials reported that the
number of Americans
trying to get to Syria and
Iraq to fight with the
Islamic State has fallen
off.
In October, the FBI director, James B. Comey,
said he was not certain
of the reasons for the
decline, but cited as possibilities the brutal living conditions in Syria
as well as what seemed
to be a new effort by the
Islamic State to inspire
Americans to carry out
attacks at home.
The prospect that the
Islamic State might incite its American followers to attack in the
United States has led the
FBI to drastically escalate surveillance including electronic eavesdropping of people
suspected of having ties
to, or sympathies for, the
Islamic State.
Farrokh, a 28-year-old
native of Pennsylvania,
was arrested at the airport in Richmond, Virginia, where he was planning to fly to Chicago and
on to Amman, Jordan,
according to a criminal
complaint released Saturday.
HAWAII
A18
STATE
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
COURTS
Kevin Steele
ANALYSIS
HARRISBURG With
a Feb. 16 deadline looming for would-be candidates to gather the voter
signatures to get on
Pennsylvanias primary
election ballot, the high
profiles of some statewide contests are overshadowing other races.
Nomination races for
president and U.S. Senate have been heating up
for months. So has the
battle over the state attorney generals office,
where incumbent Kathleen Kane faces at least
five potential opponents
for the Democratic nod.
gK
Treasurer
A race for the Democratic nomination is
shaping up between Joe
Torsella of Montgomery County, a former
state Board of Education
chairman who President Barack Obama appointed to a top United
Nations post in 2011,
and Albert Baker Knoll
of Pittsburgh, son of the
late Lt. Gov. Catherine
Baker Knoll and a former
oil industry lobbyist.
Otto Voit, a business
executive from Berks
County, is the only Republican hopeful to sur-
face so far.
This would be the first
statewide campaign for
all three candidates.
The current treasurer,
Tim Reese, is not seeking a full term. Gov. Tom
Wolf appointed him to
finish the second term
of ex-Treasurer Rob McCord, who resigned a
year ago before pleading
guilty to attempted extortion for using his post
to strong-arm state contractors into contributing to his gubernatorial
campaign.
Auditor general
First-term incumbent
Eugene DePasquale, a
Democratic former state
legislator from York who
is seeking re-election,
Judicial
retirement age
The states 1,029 judges
and justices currently
must step down by the
end of the year in which
they turn 70. The constitutional amendment
would move the age to
75.
Proponents of the
change argued that it
would benefit the judiciary by allowing seasoned judges to stay on
the bench longer. Opponents called it unneces-
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Twenty judges will
turn 70 in 2016, according to the Administrative
Office of Pennsylvania
Courts.
Unusual twist
ALLENTOWN
Council:
Mayor
must go
NATION
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
HEALTH
ture.
Against a frustrated,
profoundly un-WASPlike Republican electorate that craves the
visceral pugnaciousness
of Donald Trump or the
outsider anger of Sen.
Ted Cruz, Bushs family values of cordial restraint, of civil discourse,
of earnest public service can seem almost
quaint.
Barbaras shadow
Bush tells voters who
wonder why he cannot summon Trumps
TV-friendly fury that he
wasnt brought up that
way. He struggles with
a basic task in politics
bragging conceding
that, when he does, he
feels the looming presence of Barbara Bush,
his boast-averse mother.
And in an age of topicchanging sound bites, he
is oddly determined to
respond to every inquiry.
Ive had 62 years of
life thats been jammed
into my DNA that when
someone asks you a
question, you answer it,
he said recently.
Longtime friends still
speak with admiration
of Bushs anachronistic
outlook, sounding a bit
like Miss Manners tsktsking the political world
for leaving its elbows on
the table.
C. Boyden Gray, who
served as White House
counsel under the elder
Bush, ticked through the
code of conduct the Bush
dynasty has long embodied: Civility and good
manners were kind of
assumed, he said.
You would be generous to a loser, you would
not boast about your
victory, you would be
civil during an engage-
resented.
He obviously has
manners,
hes
restrained, hes not going
to go out and nail somebody because he doesnt
like them. He doesnt
come across a dirty politician, Emanuel said.
So if I say Im leaning
toward Trump, I also
have a sentimental place
in my voting heart for
Jeb Bush, as well.
For decades, the blueblooded Bush dynasty
occupied an elevated
position in the nations
social and civic fabric.
I would use the word
old-school, said Gregory W. Slayton, whom
George W. Bush appointed chief of mission
to Bermuda, and who
is now supporting Sen.
Marco Rubio. Humility is something I love
about the Bush family. Thats an admirable
leadership trait that has
been completely lost,
at least for many of our
candidates.
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Less-educated
While the death rate
among young whites
rose for every age group
over the five years before 2014, it rose faster
by any measure for the
less educated, by 23
percent for those without a high school education, compared with
only 4 percent for those
with a college degree or
more.
The drug overdose
numbers were stark. In
2014, the overdose death
rate for whites ages 25 to
34 was five times its level
in 1999, and the rate for
35- to 44-year-old whites
tripled during that period. The numbers cover
both illegal and prescription drugs.
That is startling, said
Dr. Wilson Compton,
the deputy director of
the National Institute on
Drug Abuse. Those are
tremendous increases.
Rising rates of overdose deaths and suicide appeared to have
erased the benefits from
advances in medical
treatment for most age
A19
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OBITS
A20 SUNDAY,
A20 SUNDAY,
JANUARYJANUARY
17, 2016 17, 2016
Deaths Reported
Agesen, Sandra J.
Stump
November 3, 2015.
Stewart Family Funeral Home, 903-5812008
Alspach, Patricia A. *
62, wife of Jim C.
Alspach, of Lancaster.
January 13, 2016.
Andrew T. Scheid
Funeral Home, 3978298
Buller, Paul T.
62, of Mount Joy. January 12, 2016. Sheetz
Funeral Home, Inc.,
653-5441
Chico, Benjamin Corchado *
78, of Lancaster. January 15, 2016. Cremation Services of Lancaster, 273-6283
Cooper, Clyde D. Jr.
75, of Masonic Villages.
January 11, 2016.
DeBord Snyder Funeral Home & Crematory,
Inc., 394-4097
Dietz, Suzanne M.
73, wife of Marlin Dietz
Jr., of Marietta. January 15, 2016. Sheetz
Funeral Home, Inc.,
653-5441
Dodds,
Katherine
Heitmueller
85, of Mountville. January
15,
2016.
Workman
Funeral
Homes, Inc., 285-4513
Dougherty,
Dan
Robert
65, husband of Pamela
Kay
Dougherty.
January 14, 2016.
Matinchek & Daughter Funeral Home,
944-7015
Foltz, Lester Franklin
85, husband of Betty E.
(Beam) Foltz, of
Brownstown. January
15, 2016. Stradling
Funeral Homes, Inc.,
733-2472
Forberger, Paula M.
87, of Lancaster. January 13, 2016. Charles F.
Snyder Jr. Funeral
Home & Crematory,
560-5100
Fry, Thomas E.
65, husband of Cleta
Geltz, of Bradenton,
FL. January 4, 2016.
Hambleton, Mildred
C.
109, of Lancaster. January 14, 2016. DeBord
Snyder Funeral Home
& Crematory, Inc.,
394-4097
Hess, Lynn R.
60, husband of Cindy
K. Kreider Hess, of
New Providence. January
14,
2016.
Workman
Funeral
Homes, Inc., 285-4513
Hillas, Thelma Mae
(Scheid)
69, of Lancaster. January 13, 2016. Andrew T.
Scheid Funeral Home,
397-8298
Hollinger, Jay Scott
48, husband of Stacy
Jane
(Richards)
Hollinger, of Holtwood. January 14,
2016. Dewald Funeral
and Cremation Services, Inc., 786-3530
Obituary notices are provided as an advertising service
by the Classified Advertising
department of LNP Media
Group, Inc.
Deaths Reported and Obituaries may be placed by first
calling the Obituary Coordinator at 295-7875, then submitting the written notice either
by
e-mail
(obits@LNPnews.com) or by
fax (717-399-6523), MondayFriday, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.; Saturday, 2 to 6 p.m.; Sunday, 3 to
6 p.m.
The advertising department
publishes obituaries provided
by funeral homes or crematoria, based on information provided to them by families. It
does not accept obituaries
from individuals. Obituaries
and related materials, submitted to LNP Media Group, Inc.
may be edited for style, policy
or legal reasons, and they
become the property of LNP
Media Group, Inc.
n@ n@n @ n@@[n
n [@ n@b
n n@n @ n
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M 3
Addendum
Thomas E. Fry
Services
Today
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Clyde
Chick
D. Cooper, Jr. 75, of
Masonic
Villages,
died
at
9:50 PM on
Mo n d a y,
January 11,
2016, after a
long siege of
heart problems
and diabetes.
Cooper,
known mostly
as Chick, was born in
Lancaster, a son of the
late Clyde D. and Frances
Elizabe th Billmeyer
Cooper. He graduated
from McCaskey High
S c h o o l i n 1 9 5 8, f r o m
Millersville University
in 1970 and from
Missouri Auc
u tion school
in 1982.
H e once work ed
for the new spapers
in Lancaster, Pa., and
Wilmington, Del., and,
quite separatelyy, for
A m t ra k an d f o r t h e
Railroad Museum of
Pennsylvania. At one
t i m e , h e a l s o ow n e d a
restaurant in Strasburg
and, among other activities, held a Pennsylvania
auctioneers license.
As a Freemason,
Cooper was a member of
Lodge 286 of Columbia
and the Craftsman
Cl ub o f th at l odg e;
the Lancaster Lodg e
of Perfection; and the
Harrisburg Consistoryy.
He also was a member of the Columbia Fish
and Game Association
and a lover of nature,
ne art, literature, history, philosophy, women
and sherryy.
Cooper was preceded
in death by his wife of
36 years, Helen Jane
Brubaker Cooper, but
is survived by a sister,
Frances Elizabeth, wife
of S. Paul Schmuck, of
Palmyra; two brothers, John R., of near
Manheim, and Thomas
B., of Lancaster; and a
number of nieces and
nephews. He also was
a close companion of
DelDonna Forrest, of
Millersville.
Services will be private at the convenience
of the familyy. In lieu of
flowers, contributions
in his memory may
be made to Masonic
Village, 1 Masonic Drive,
Elizabe thto wn, P A
17022. To leave an online condolence for the
family please visit:
DeBordSnyder.com
Lester
Franklin Foltz
Louis T.
Ma
atr
t oni, Jr.
Louis T. Matroni,
Jr., 63, of Lancaster,
PA, passed
away u n expectedly
on January
13, 2016 at
his second
home in
Holly Springs, NC. Born
in Lancaster, he was
the son of Mary (Suter)
Matroni of Lancaster,
PA and the late Louis
T. Matroni, Sr. Louis
was the loving husband
of 44 years to Susan
(Marouchoc) Matroni.
He was a 1970 graduate of J.P
P. McCaskey
High School. He retired in January 2011
after 38 years of service
with Armstrong World
o
Industries. Louis was
an avid sports enthusiast. He loved golf &
bowling. In his younger
years, he played softball & baseball. He also
played with the York
o
Barbell Softball Team.
He liked watching sprint
car races & NAS CAR.
Louis enjoyed watching
the Carolina Hurricanes
Hockey Games with his
son & grandchildren.
Surviving in addi tion to his wife, Susan, &
mother, Maryy, is a son,
L. Thomas Matroni, III,
husband of Barbara; 2
OTHER OBITUARIES
ON PAGES A21,
A22 & A23
grandchildren: Helena
Matroni and Louis T.
Matroni, IV
V, all of Holly
Springs, NC; brother,
Mark Matroni; sis ter, Barbara Matroni;
mother-in-law, Helen
Marouchoc; and sister -in-la w, Roberta
Marouchoc, all of
Lancaster, PA
A.
Louis was preceded
in death by a brother,
Kevin Matroni.
Friends will be received from 4-6 PM
with a Prayer Service
beginning at 6 PM on
Tuesday, January 19,
2016 at the Charles
F. Snyder, Jr. Funeral
Ho me & C rem at oryy,
3110 Lititz Pike, Lititz,
PA 17543. In lieu of owers, contributions may
be made to Dominican
Sisters of the Perpetual
Rosaryy, 1834 Lititz Pike,
Lancaster, PA 17601. To
send the family online
condolences, please visit SnyderFuneralHome.
com.
In life, there are two
kinds of people. Some
come and go in our lives
unnoticed. And then
there are the very precious few who touch our
lives, and we are forever
blessed.
IN LOVING MEMORY OF
BETTY ROBERTS
GIGL CAPP
www.BuchHeisey.com
626-2464
(717) 394-4097
More than a
funeral service,
its about
sharing a life.
717-394-5300
Jeremy R. DeBord
TM
Fourman, Samuel B.
Hill United Church of
Christ, 3801 Hill
Church Rd., Lebanon,
1:30 PM. Kreamer
Funeral Home
For anyone who recently experienced the loss of an adult family member.
Here you can learn from others, listen, and share if youd like. We will give
you a workbook that will help you journey through the seemingly endless
tasks you must undertake in the coming weeks. Coffee provided.
Gottshall, David W.
Roseboro Stradling
Funeral Home, 533
Walnut St., Denver, 4
PM
Souder, Polly A.
Orr Auditorium, Willow Valley Manor, 211
Willow Valley Square,
Lancaster, 2 PM.
Foster-Warne Funeral
Home
Obituaries
Clyde D.
Cooperr, Jr.
WAY P
INTS
Funeral Director/Supervisor
Spacht-Snyder Lititz
127 South Broad Street
717.626.2317
Jacqueline Adamson
Millersville
Downtown Lancaster
Supervisor/Pre-Planning Specialist
Funeral Director/Supervisor
717.872.5041
Mark D. Burkholder
TM
Funeral Director/Supervisor
www.SnyderFuneralHome.com
OBITS
A21 SUNDAY,
LNP
| LANCASTER,
PA JANUARY 17, 2016
Russell
Butch
Jenkins, Jr.
Russell Butch
Jenkins, Jr. passed into
the Lords
hands on
Wednesday,
January 13,
2016, joining his belov ed son,
Rus ty. H e
was surrounded by his family as he courageously battled
cancer and is now at
peace.
He was married 40
years to Cindy Binderup
Jenkins.
Butch was a member of Millers ville
Community United
Methodist Church and
enjoyed his relationship
with his church and the
Lord.
Butch w as em p lo y e d
by
Dart
Container for 30 years
in the Maintenance
Department.
He
was a Brother of the
Lamberton Lodge #476
F.&A.M.
.
in Lancaster.
He enjoyed racing, hunting, shing and most of
all, his son Rusty s 69
Mustang.
In addition to his
wife, he is survived by a
daughter, Shelley wife of
Ken Dauberman of FL; a
sister, Bonnie Arista of
TX; and ve grandchildren. He was preceded
in death by his son,
Rustyy.
A Viewing will be
held on Weednesda y,
January 20, 2016 from
6:00 to 8:00 P..M. at the
DeBord Snyder Funeral
Home, 141 E. Orang e
St., Lancaster, PA. A
Masonic Service will
be held at the Funeral
y
Home on Wednesda
e
evening at 7:45 P..M.
Funeral Services and
Interment will be private and held at the convenience of the familyy.
In lieu of owers, contributions in Butchs
memory may be made
to Lamberton Lodg e
#476 F..&A.M., 213 W.
Chestnut St., Lancaster,
PA 17601. To send an online condolence, visit
DebordSnyder.com
717-394-4097
Roxanne
McMellen
Roxanne McMellen,
73, of Willow Street,
p a s s e d
away o n
January
12, 2016 at
C o n es t o g a
View. She
was the loving wife of Joseph C.
McMellen, Jr. Born in
Lancaster, PA,
A she was
the daughter of Russell
and Marguerite (Miller)
Botzum.
In addition to her
husband Joseph, she is
survived by her three
sons, Eric, Harry and
Robert Myers; and her
s tep so ns, Frankl in
Tr i mb le an d Jas on
and Jeremy BuBa
McMellen. Also surviving are 11 grandchildren.
Relatives and friends
are respectfully invited
to at tend M emorial
Service at DeBord
Snyder Funeral Home
& Crematoryy, 141 E.
Orange St., Lancaster,
PA 17602 on Thursday,
January 21, 2016 at 2:00
PM. Friends may greet
the family at the funeral
home from 1:00 PM until the time of the service. Interment to follow in Riverview Burial
Park. To leave an online
condolence for the family please visit:
DeBordSnyder.com
Obituaries
Rose
Armstrong
Ramsey
Dan Robert
Doc
Dougherty
OTHER OBITUARIES
ON PAGES
A22 & A23
Jay Scott
Hollinger
Kattherine Dodds
K a t h e r i n e
Heitmueller Dodds, 85,
of Mountville, passed
away peacefully into
the arms of
God, sur rounded by
her loving family on
Friday, January 15, 2016
at home. She was the
wife of the late William
E. Dodds, Jr. to whom
she was married for 56
years before he passed
away on May 4, 2006.
She was born in the river
hills of Cones toga,
da ugh ter off t he la te
Walter and Bertha Reiff
Heitmueller. She was a
longtime member of
Trinity
Reformed
United Church of Christ.
She loved nature and offten visited the river hills
of Conestoga, sharing
that love with family and
friends her entire life.
Kate was a proffiicient
gardener, which was her
passion. She loved growing owers, going to the
beach and traveling all
over the United States.
She thoroughly enjoyed
any gam e s he e v er
played, and thrived on
teaching her children,
grandchildren, and
friends how to play new
ones. She believed that
all things were an adventure, even if not for pleasure. She lived a full life
with family and friends
that adored her and
whom she adored. She
will be deeply missed by
all that knew her.
She is survived by
four children: Michael
E . ( M i c h e l l e ) D o d d s,
Mountville; Revv. Patricia
A. Dodds, Lock Haven;
K atrina M. (Mark)
Bradley D. Kohr
Haldy/Keener
Memorials
Eitnier
Memorials
o
divisions of
a tribute to life
www.ging richmemorials.com
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
717-394-4097
A21
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
OBITS
A22 SUNDAY,
A22 SUNDAY,
JANUARYJANUARY
17, 2016 17, 2016
Nancy L. Kilp
Suzanne M.
Dietz
717-394-4097
Always
In Loving Memory:
Steven Fisher
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Obituaries
OTHER
OBITUARIES
ON PAGE
A23
Lynn
R.
Skip H ess ,
60, of New
Providence,
passed a w a y
on Thursda y,
J anuary 1 4,
2016 at home.
H e w as the
husband of Cindy K.
Kreider Hess to whom
he was married for 31
y ea rs. He w as b or n
in Lancaster, son of
Joann L. Brachendorf
He rsh eyy, m arri ed to
Da vid Hershey, East
Pe tersburg, and the
late Robert P. Hess.
He was a grounds and
maintenance superin tendent for Millersville
University before his
retirement in 2011. He
was a veteran of the US
Air Force; life member
of the NRA; a member of the Academy of
M odel A eronautics;
and enjo yed hunt i n g , f l y fi s h i n g , c o o king, yard work, Harley
Davidson Motorcycles;
and NASCAR, with Dale
Earnhardt, Sr. as his favorite driver.
Surviving in addition
to his wife, mother, and
step-father, his stepmother: Brenda S. Hess,
Conestoga. One daughter: Jennifer L. (Jason
D.) Rowland, Pequea.
Two grandchildren:
Zoe K. and Zachary C.
Rowland. Three sisters:
Kimberly A. (Andrew)
Youndt, Manheim;
K aren L. (Donald)
Carter, Quarryville;
and Kathryn M. (Chris)
Skiles, Quarryville. Two
half-bro thers: Da vid
Hersheyy, Bainbridg e;
and Brian R. (Carrie)
Hess, Lancaster.
The family requests
hat those atttending the
that
service should wear blue
jeans.
The Funeral Service
will be held at the
Funeral
W orkman
e t
Homes, Inc., 114 Wes
Main Street, Mountville,
e
y, January
on Wednesda
.
20, 2016 at 3:00 P.M.
with Pastor Charles A.
Deutsch, off iciating.
Interment in Creswell
Ceme tery with Full
Military
Honors.
Friends ma y call at
he Wo
orkman Funeral
the
Homes, Inc. from 2:00
P..M. to 3:00 P..M. Please
omit owers. Memorial
contributions may be
made in his memory
to: Lancaster County
Veterans Affairs. To
send an online condolence, visit:
Workmanfuneralhomes
.
o
com
Simple, Dignified
Cremation Services
at a Much Lower Cost
William E.
Shelley
William E. Shelley,
77
7, of Lititz, PA
A, passed
away
on
We d n e s d a y,
J anuary
6,
2016 at his residence.
H e w as the hus band off the late Sue A.
Eckhardt Shelleyy, Ph.D,
who passed away in
2007
7. Born in Decatur,
IL, he was the son of
Frank Shelley and Belva
Peters Peel.
Bill had been an attorney for 20 years,
practicing in Illinois and
Florida.
H e w a s a U S A r my
veteran, serving as a
Captain. He had been
s tationed in South
Korea and the US.
He enjoyed playing
old time Americana folk
music on his guitar.
He is survived by
his daughter, Mary
K. Shelley, married
to Ralph Dubayah of
University Park, MD; his
2 grandsons, Wyyatt and
Bryce Dubayah and his
brotherr, Donald Shelley
of Macon, IL.
Services will be held
in Decatur, IL. Please
make contributions in
Bills memory to the
Paralyzed Veterans of
America, 801 18th St.
NW
W, Washington, DC
20006. To send an online condolence, please
visit
SnydeerrFuneralHo
ome.com
LancasterOnline.com/
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Mary K. Rosier
717-CREMATE (273-6283)
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n SEND STORY TIPS & INFO TO: JON FERGUSON, 291-8839, JFERGUSON@LNPNEWS.COM
Lancaster
Movie magic
Members of the arts community
recall most memorable films
n Entertainment, page B4
JAY DROWNS
MOVIES
Forkful of finance
Film adaptation of local mans memoir to be screened in Carlisle
JENELLE JANCI
JJANCI@LNPNEWS.COM
hile on a business trip to Kansas City, James Adams anticipated an important phone call
while he grabbed some lunch
at a barbecue restaurant.
Adams was waiting for word about who
would play him in the film adaptation of his
memoir, Waffle Street, which recounts Adams transition from a product manager at
a $30 billion money management firm to a
waiter at a 24-hour waffle diner after the financial crisis of 2008. The book interweaves
lessons in finance and business with vignettes
from his time serving waffles.
The Secret Service comes in this restaurant while were waiting in line, says Adams,
who lives in Lancaster. Like, You either
need to leave, or you need to subject yourself
to a pat-down. We have an important visitor.
Patrons also were instructed not to take any
phone calls during President Barack Obamas
visit. Sure enough, the films screenwriter and
producer, Autumn McAlpin, called as he was
eating his barbecue near the president.
Im like, Youre not going to believe this,
but Id rather take this phone call than meet
the president, Adams says. It was more important to me than meeting the president. I
want to know whos going to play me. This is
a big deal.
Turns out, James Lafferty, who played Nathan Scott in the television series One Tree
Hill, was picked to play Adams in the film.
Actor Danny Glover, best known as Detective
Sgt. Roger Murtaugh in the Lethal Weapon
film series, assumes the role of the short-or-
Area beginnings
Adams grew up in Mechanicsburg and attended school in the Cumberland Valley
School District until his was in fifth grade,
when his parents sent him to Harrisburg
Academy. He was the captain of the lacrosse
team and a member of the swim team, graduating as salutatorian.
He excelled in history and political science
classes, and eventually decided on an accounting finance major at Wake Forest University.
Finance is a very comprehensive discipline, Adams says. If youre a generalist like
I was, its like a kid in a candy store, because
you have to know a little about everything.
IF YOU GO
n What: Waffle Street screening
n Where: Carlisle Theatre, 40 W.
High St., Carlisle
n When: 7:30 p.m. Jan. 30
n Cost: $10
n More info: carlisletheatre.org
MUSIC
55
up
to
Fa
Sp cto
ec ry
ial
%
s
Off
tune.
She says she made
her first attempt at
songwriting at age 6
and started a YouTube
Channel when she
was in eighth grade,
inspired by other YouTubers she watched
online.
I admired them being able to say, This is
who I am, and putting
it out there on the Internet for everyone to
see, Chloe says.
She used the channel
as an outlet for humor-
MUSIC, page B3
WINTER SALE
www.myersfurniturepa.com
B2
LIVING
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
MOVIES
Downward trend
A downward trend
in TV ratings indicates
the red carpet glow is
fading, so the academy
would benefit by attracting a more diverse crowd
through its nominations.
Bring in more viewers of
color, or of geekdom, by
celebrating their movies,
too.
Star Wars: The Force
Awakens did receive
five Academy Award
nominations in technical categories, so quality
isnt the issue.
Moviegoers
havent
plunked down more
than $820 million to appreciate sound mixing,
and The Force Awakens isnt revered only
for its visual effects. Buying John Williams nominated musical score on
iTunes would be cheaper
than a movie ticket, if
Restaurant inspections
The Pennsylvania
Department of Agriculture,
866-366-3723, uses a
risk-based inspection
reporting process for
restaurants and other food
handlers.
Asian Market LLC, 248
E. Liberty St., Jan. 8. No
violations.
Lancaster Cupcake, 120
N. Duke St., Jan. 8. No
violations.
The Bakers Table, 480 New
Holland Ave., Suite 300,
Jan. 8. Food employee
in deli area not wearing
proper hair restraints, such
as nets, hats, or beard
covers.
US Gas Mart, 401 N. Lime
St., Jan. 8. New food facility
in operation more than 90
days has not employed
a certified supervisory
employees as required.
Raw eggs stored above
ready-to-eat foods in walkin refrigerator. Womens
toilet room not provided
with covered waste
receptacle for sanitary
napkins. Mops not being
hung to air-dry.
Burgard Elementary
School, 111 S. Penn St.,
Manheim, Jan. 5. No
violations.
La Academia Partnership
Charter School, 30 N. Ann
St., Jan. 6. No violations.
Old Country Buffet, 1700L
Fruitville Pike, Jan. 6. No
violations.
Par Cafe at Liberty Place,
313 W. Liberty Place, Jan. 6.
No violations.
Peking Palace Restaurant,
1025 Dillerville Road, Jan.
6. Food prep area hood, a
nonfood contact surface, is
not cleaned at a frequency
to preclude accumulation
of grease. Preset tableware
for customers is not
displayed so that only
handles are touched by
consumers and employees.
Paint is peeling from walls
behind equipment in food
prep area, and walls are not
durable and smooth.
El Jibarito Restaurant,
546 S. Lime St., Jan. 7. No
violations.
Brogue Hydroponics, 2
Highest ratings
It isnt coincidence
that the shows highest
ratings ever 55 million
viewers occurred in
1998 when Titanic, then
the top grosser ever, won
a boatload of Oscars.
Quick solution: Create a major award or two
for most folks watching at home, who wont
see Carol but loved
Furious 7 (another
LUCASFILM
Peter Mayhew as Chewbacca and Harrison Ford as Han Solo are shown in a scene from
Star Wars: The Force Awakens.
blockbuster
snubbed
Thursday). Make room
by handing out technical
awards earlier, like the
Grammys.
Oscars recent color
barrier two years running with all-white acting nominees isnt as
easily corrected. In recent years the academy
added members of color,
increasing diversity but
obviously not enough.
One suggestion: Expand the acting and
directing races to 10
nominees. The move
did make the academys
best picture voting more
inclusive of small films
like Room, if not box
office hits. It might allow smaller groups sup-
MoviE-Town Cinema
8, 700 N. Hanover St.,
Elizabethtown, Jan. 5. No
violations.
Neffsville Sunoco, 2548
Lititz Pike, Jan. 5. Cleaning
detergent for retail sale
displayed on shelving above
snack foods. Raw shell eggs
stored above milk in reach-in
cooler.
Customer
Appreciation Week!
Any Half Bone in Ham
$39.99
4 Sturgis Lane
Lane, Lititz
Lititz, PA 117543
75 717-627-7856
7543
Mon-Sat 10am-5pm; Second Friday til 9pm
LOCAL/ADVICE
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
AMY DICKINSON
ASK AMY
and they dont recognize how hard Im working. It gets to the point I dont want to talk
about my art at all. I want to enjoy my family
get-togethers again. How can I let on (politely)
that Im not interested in their bombardment of
ill-informed advice? Struggling Artist
DEAR STRUGGLING: Everybodys an expert, and
the less people know about your particular field, the
more expert their advice becomes.
What you are going through is akin to people telling a certain struggling writer (yours truly), You
should write a book and get Oprah to endorse it!
This sort of statement might actually be a vote of
confidence from the person offering it; unfortunately, instead it highlights the fact that none of these
spectacular goals has been met. Its a quick way to
feel like a loser.
Dont stop talking about your work (if youre
asked) or avoid or ignore this unsolicited advice
but look for effective ways to cope with it. You
should work for Disney could be met with That
might be very cool. Do you know anyone there I can
call?
Remember always that this is really your fan club;
theyre just disguised as a Greek chorus of know-italls.
DEAR AMY: Two months ago, I got married.
Up until the night before my wedding, I was
given the impression that my mother and
stepfather would be there. It wasnt until my
rehearsal that I found out they werent coming.
I was devastated. My mom and I had a bond
that I thought couldnt be broken.
I found out that the reason she didnt come
was because my husband isnt religious.
How do I move on from this? She texted me
on my one-month anniversary, and it was like
nothing had happened. Every time I think
Meaningful
messages
Chloe says she admires how her favorite
bands Panic! at the Disco and Paramore make
music with meaningful
messages.
Youll find a lot of
songs now that dont
have any meaning. Or if
they do have meaning,
its rude to some person, Chloe says.
viral.
Since I recorded my
first song with them,
it feels like I can only
grow from there, Chloe
says. They dont seem
to ever be disappointed
in me. They seem to be
proud of me, whether
my voice cracks or not.
Cancer research
Once the album was
finished, Chloe decided
to donate 10 percent of
its sales to ovarian cancer research.
Recently, my greataunt passed away from
ovarian cancer, Chloe
says.
I really wanted to
do something with that.
She was a very caring
person, so I wanted to
honor her.
Chloe
occasionally
performs with The
Cramer Brothers at a
restaurant near her
home, where shes
shared some of her
original music, and
her music plays on local radio. Thats not
bad for a high-schooler
whos also juggling being sophomore student
council president as
well as a member of the
French club and multiple choral groups.
Hearing her songs on
the radio is not something that just happened
in a day, Chloe says.
Its something that I
wanted to do and I was
determined to do, but
I never believed would
happen.
HAWAII
Births
BROWN, Seth U. and
Stephanie (Bender),
Columbia, a son, at
Women & Babies
Hospital, Tuesday.
DeJESUS, Eliana M.,
and John Luis Cotto,
Lancaster, a daughter,
at Women & Babies
Hospital, Monday.
HUNT, David C. and Jodi
(Lacock), Washington
Boro, a son, at Women
& Babies Hospital,
Tuesday.
MILLISOCK, Bryan M.,
and Tarsheima Davis,
Adamstown, a son,
at WellSpan Ephrata
Community Hospital,
Thursday.
TORRES, Efrain A. and
Tara (Miller), Lancaster,
a daughter, at Women &
Babies Hospital, Jan. 10.
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B4
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Entertainment
FILMMAKING
To Kill a Mockingbird
The Wizard of Oz
The Fountainhead
Members of the regional arts community recount some of the films that changed their lives
JANE HOLAHAN
AARON YOUNG
JHOLAHAN@LNPNEWS.COM
KATHLEEN SPENCER
Director of the Early Music Series at St.
James Episcopal Church: Toutes les
Matins du Mond
DAVID DISAVINO
DAVE DIERWECHTER
DAVID NICE
MARY HAVERSTICK
ANNE MEEDER
Actress, singer: The Sound of Music
MOVIES, page B5
THEATER
JENELLE JANCI
UNSCRIPTED
David Bowie
Brandon
Flowers
Flowers says hearing
Bowies Changes inspired him to drop out
of school and pursue
music. Flowers was
one of the most popu-
BOWIE, page B5
JHOLAHAN@LNPNEWS.COM
The process
Throughout the school year,
hundreds of plays are produced
at colleges and universities, and
respondents mostly professors from other schools in the region are asked to see each show,
then talk to the students about it,
remaining as objective as possible.
The cast of Millersville Universitys Bury the Dead includes, from left, Jules
Diehl, Ryland X. Beck and Christian Kriebel.
Reprise
Bury the Dead was scheduled
to be performed three times last
Friday at West Chester.
We go in on Thursday night and
PLAY, page B5
ENTERTAINMENT
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Bowie
Continued from B4
St. Vincent
Morrissey
Lady Gaga
Gagas outrageous fashion
Movies
Continued from B4
ELISEO ROMAN
Actor, singer: Its a
Wonderful Life
JACK HUGHLETT
Playwright, composer,
theater director: The
Fountainhead
Nirvana
Nirvanas cover of The Man
Who Sold the World was popularized through the bands nowiconic 1993 MTV Unplugged
performance. After Kurt Cobain,
the bands frontman, died just a
few months later, Bowie spoke
out about the cover.
I was simply blown away when
I found that Kurt Cobain liked my
work, and have always wanted to
talk to him about his reasons for
covering The Man Who Sold the
World, Bowie said.
He added: It was a good
straightforward rendition and
sounded somehow very honest.
It would have been nice to have
worked with him, but just talking
with him would have been real
cool.
Maybe now, theyll finally get
the chance to chat.
to traditional standards
of what they ought to look
like. I was in eighth grade
at the time and the concept that struck me was
the message of following your own instincts in
creating new things. In
my case it was composing
and writing, which I continue to do all my life.
JOE DEVOY
MITCH NUGENT
BONNIE BOSSO
Director of theater
production and public
relations manager at
Franklin & Marshall
College: Its a
Wonderful Life
TONY BRILL
Play: Millersville
Continued from B4
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MOVIES IN REVIEW
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
COMEDY
DVDS
Kevin Hart is a rookie policeman who gets in over his head in Ride Along 2.
Whats Playing
Alvin and the Chipmunks: The
Road Chip (PG, 86 minutes,
animated) Through a series
of misunderstandings, Alvin,
Simon and Theodore think
Dave is going to propose to his
new girlfriend in Miami ... and
dump them. They have three
days to get to him and stop the
proposal.
Band of Robbers (NR, 95
minutes, adventure) A modernday retelling of Mark Twain's
iconic books. When Huck Finn is
released from prison, he hopes
to leave his criminal life behind,
but his lifelong friend, and
corrupt cop, Tom Sawyer, has
other plans.
The Big Short (R, 130 minutes,
comedy/drama) Four outsiders
in the world of high-finance who
predicted the credit and housing
bubble collapse of the mid2000s decide to take on the big
banks for their lack of foresight
and greed.
push-up bra.)
Ken Jeong has the
Ken Jeong role as A.J., a
squirrely,
comic-relief
hacker who is the key to
cracking the big case. A.J.
often cracks wise from
the back of the car as Ben
and James bicker the
day away. The hyperactive Ben never shuts up
and constantly screws
up on a level that would
have him facing criminal
charges in the real world.
The closed-off, perpetually growling James keeps
telling Ben to shut up and
to stay focused. If either
character has anything
approaching a second dimension, it has eluded me
through two movies.
Kevin Hart is an enormously talented stand-up
comic and an instantly
likable screen presence.
Most of his movies havent
been very good, but they
make a lot of money. Hart
has the talent and the charisma to take it to the next
level and do stellar work
in more challenging fare.
In Ride Along 2, hes
on cruise control all the
way.
at the Penn, Regal and MoviETown theaters. Its rated PG13 for sequences of violence,
sexual content, language and
some drug material. Running
time is 102 minutes.
STREAMING
about his home in the Arctic,
which is being taken over by
developers, and comes to New
York with his three lemming
pals. (No reviews)
The Peanuts Movie (G, 86
minutes, animated) The gang is
back in 3D! Charlie Brown tries
to get the Red-Haired Girl to
notice him and Snoopy fights his
enemy, the Red Baron.
Point Break (PG-13, 113
minutes) An undercover cop
makes his way into a scene
of bank-robbing extremesports athletes in this remake
of Kathryn Bigelow's Point
Break.
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.
Sisters (R, 118 minutes,
comedy) Amy Poehler and Tina
Fey star as sisters who have one
last wild party in their parents
house before the new owners
arrive.
Spectre (PG-13, 148 minutes,
action) Bond is back for the
24th film in the franchise. He
must fight a sinister organization
that is set on destruction, with
stops in Mexico City and Rome.
A lot of amazing
documentaries have
been made in the last
decade or so, and any
number of them can be
found on Netflix. Heres a
list of seven of the best:
1. The Up Series
In 1964, the BBC
program called Seven
Up interviewed 14
7-year-old kids from
across the country. And
then, seven years later,
came another program
with those same kids,
now age 14. Director
Michael Apted has
returned every seven
years ever since. The
latest is 56 Plus, which
was completed in 2013.
2. Stories We Tell
Actress/director Sarah
Polley transforms an
incredibly personal story
into a look at the nature
of storytelling and truth
as she investigates the
man she has always
assumed was her
biological father.
3. Life Itself
Film critic Roger Ebert
had a complicated and
amazing life. Here, as
he comes to the end of
it, we look back at his
childhood, his passion
for newspapers, late
nights spent in bars and
his many relationships.
4. Keep on Keepin On
A heartwarming look
at 93-year-old jazz
trumpeter Clark Terry
and his mentorship of
a 20-something piano
prodigy who is blind and
stricken with debilitating
nerves.
5. What Happened,
Miss Simone?
The great singer Nina
Simone struggled with
fame, anger, self worth
and ultimately her
mental health. The film
explores her powers as
a singer as well as the
politics of the 1960s.
6. 20 Feet from
Stardom
Backup singers are
often unappreciated
and forgotten about,
but they play an integral
part in the success of the
music. This documentary
looks at what it takes to
be a successful backup
singer and the cost it
can have. It is filled with
plenty of great songs.
7. Muscle Shoals
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
B7
10 ways you
can boost
healthy
changes in
your home
If you are making
healthy change in
your household to
start the new year off
right, consider the
following tips put
forth by dietitians
and pediatric weightmanagement experts.
Dont focus
on numbers. New
research suggests
that BMI and other
weight-related numbers do not necessarily correlate with
healthy outcomes.
Focus instead on
small changes that do
make a difference.
Spend more time
outdoors. Walk, play,
hike, explore. Nature
fosters both physical
and mental health.
Teach portions.
Divide your plate:
Half of it goes to fruit
and vegetables; onequarter of it goes to
carbohydrates and
starches; and the final
quarter of it to meat
and protein.
Bring mindfulness to your dinner
table. Eat slowly.
Have conversations.
At first it will seem
forced but, with practice, it will become
second nature.
Drink only
water and milk. Add
lemons, strawberries,
etc. to water to give
it flavor if needed.
Stop buying soda and
sports drinks.
Eat out less often.
Take steps to make
eating at home on
busy evenings easier.
Use a slow cooker,
make meals ahead of
time and allow yourself a night of canned
soup and sandwiches.
Do not single out
one person in the
household. Healthy
changes will make
everyone feel better,
even kids who are not
overweight. Success
rates are low for children and teens who
are asked to make
changes alone.
Make small
changes. Start by adding in exercise and
outdoor time. Then
change what you
are drinking. Then
decrease restaurant
foods. Spread these
changes out over
months so they do
not feel drastic.
Have healthy
snacks readily accessible. Snacks make
up about a third of
a childs diet. Dont
eliminate them, just
change them.
Pay attention to
breakfast. It is critical
that your child eat a
breakfast every day
that contains protein,
calcium and carbohydrates. Dont skip it.
No matter what.
MORE INFO
n healthychildren.org
n choosemyplate.gov
n Dr. Pia Fenimore, of
ebru/flicker
A splurge is OK, but following a high-fat, low-fiber diet on a regular basis may be harming more than your own
health: A new study shows that it can create lasting harm for the generations that come after you.
in industrialized societies.
The
results were stark
enough in the
mice, whose guts,
collectively, were
colonized by an increasingly impoverished population of bacteria,
viruses
and
protozoa. They
then fed four
successive
generations
of mice a diet
that was low
in microbiota-accessible
carbohydrates.
Even when they put
parent generations back
on a high-fiber diet, the
dearth of microbial diversity in the guts of
younger generations became ever starker.
And when the researchers switched subsequent
generations
back to a high-fiber diet,
the shift failed to restore
the microbiotic diver-
STUDY SUMMARY
n The high-fat, low-fiber
FITNESS
RODALEWELLNESS.COM
Sims adds.
Now, you can get your
caffeine fix and make
your session all-themore successful. Hows
that for productive?
31 Millersville Road
Lancaster, PA 17603
717-208-8655
License Pending
www.SignatureSeniorLiving.com
B8
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Food
KARA NEWHOUSE
THE PRESS TABLE
KARA NEWHOUSE
KNEWHOUSE@LNPNEWS.COM
Black bean flour can be reconstituted into a lush, velvety sauce for this comfort-food enchilada casserole.
ANN FULTON
Black bean flour starts out white and powdery, but can be turned into a dark,
sauce when mixed with a liquid.
ESTHER MARTIN
COUPON CUTTING MOM
FOOD
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
B9
COMFORT FOOD
MELISSA DARABIAN
ASSOCIATED PRESS
finely chopped
ASSOCIATED PRESS
n 2 teaspoons vegetable
oil, divided
n 2 teaspoons smoked
paprika
higher price.
I dumped out some
of the contents of the
bag to show what black
bean flour looks like
whitish and powdery.
As soon as the flour is
mixed with a liquid,
however, it transforms
into the deep black color
you would expect.
The texture is smooth
and velvety while the flavor is the precise equivalent of unsalted, cooked
or canned black beans in
pureed form, making it
perfectly suited for use
in enchiladas, burritos,
tacos, soups and dips.
Black bean flour is high
in fiber and protein and
is a good source of iron,
magnesium and phosphorus.
Just like whole black
beans, the flour is low in
both sodium and fat.
Economical with a
long shelf life, black
bean flour will incorporate into recipes quickly
no soaking time
needed. Simply reconstitute it with water, broth,
Easy Cheesy
Enchilada Casserole
Makes approximately 8
servings
Ingredients:
n 3 cups low-sodium
vegetable broth
n 2 tablespoons chili
n 2 cups (8 ounces)
n 12 (6-inch-diameter)
corn tortillas
Directions:
Preheat the oven to 400
degrees. Set aside an
ungreased 9-by-13-inch
baking dish.
In a large saucepan,
combine the vegetable
broth, onion, tomato sauce,
chili powder, oregano and
salt.
powder
n teaspoon dried
oregano
2015
n teaspoon Tabasco
dining...redefined
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LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Travel
An exterior view
of the five-star
Montage Laguna
Beach resort in
Laguna Beach,
Calif.
DESTINATION
Open since
1907, Pike
Place Market
is the hub
of Seattle
where fresh,
local produce,
seafood, specialty foods
and crafts are
bought by
thousands of
visitors each
day.
CHRISTOPHER REYNOLDS
LOS ANGELES TIMES
Botswana
Its a smallish country, about the size
of France, with not quite 2 million people. But Botswana, in southern Africa,
has the Okavango Delta and the vast
Central Kalahari Game Reserve. In
fact, 38 percent of the countrys territory is set aside for national parks, reserves and wildlife management areas.
And as of 2016, it also has 50 years
of independence. Before 1966 it was a
British protectorate known as Bechuanaland.
Now, as a democracy with a reputation as the least corrupt country in
Bozeman, Montana
Bozeman makes a great gateway to
Yellowstone National Park 80 miles
south, in part because of Bozeman Yellowstone International Airport. Day
by day, this college town (population:
about 42,000) seems to sprout more
reasons for a visitor to linger, especially if its summer.
The Lark Hotel, opened early this
TOP, page B11
IF YOU GO
n Harlem Heritage
CRUISE NEWS
Snow in New Mexico caused vacation plans to change for writer of this story.
TRAVEL TIPS
In this file
photo, the
Carnival
Legend
arrives at
Port Everglades
in Fort
Lauderdale, Fla.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
TRAVEL
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
B11
LANCASTER COUNTY
SCHOOL RETIREES
n Tuesday, March 8: Philadelphia Flower Show/100th
EXCHANGE RATES
These foreign exchange selling rates, as of the close of
business Jan. 14, 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. $
0.7496
1.33
0.745
1.34
1.0673
0.94
0.1582
6.32
Euro (EUR)
1.1724
0.85
1.5483
0.65
0.009091
110.00
0.06024
16.60
0.1223
8.18
0.6969
1.43
1.5483
0.65
Swedish Kroner(SEK)
0.1274
7.85
Tips
Continued from B10
Dublin, Ireland
A hundred years ago, Dublins
Easter Rising launched Ireland on
a path to independence from British rule. The armed insurrection
brought bloody results, including
the execution of 16 leaders, but in
1922 the Irish Free State was established.
In months ahead, dozens of
centennial events are planned in
Dublin, including an exhibition
at the National Library of Ireland,
lectures at Trinity College and
various historical re-enactments.
The National Museum of Ireland will unveil Proclaiming
a Republic: the 1916 Rising
on March 3. On Easter Sunday,
March 27, at 1:15 p.m., wreathlaying ceremonies are planned at
spots throughout the city.
Info: ireland.ie; museum.ie.
New
Continued from B10
applejazz.com.
Natchez, Mississippi
This small Mississippi city,
about 170 miles upriver from New
Orleans, celebrates its 300th anniversary in 2016. Natchez is on a
bluff above the Mississippi and full
of tragic, surprising history and
elegant architecture. Its also the
southwestern end of the Natchez
Trace Parkway, a 444-mile scenic highway through Mississippi,
Alabama and Tennessee that was
once a Native American trail.
No billboards, no businesses, no
commercial vehicles but plenty of
cars and bicycles. Natchez has home
and plantation tours; horse-drawn
carriages; art galleries; a Museum of
African-American History and Culture; more than 40 bed-and-breakfasts and Natchez National Historical Park.
Info: visitnatchez.org; nps.gov/
natr; natchezms300.com.
Orange County,
California., coast
This territory is about as pleasant as California gets. And as these
four examples show, improvements continue. In Dana Point,
the completion of a $30 million
overhaul at the St. Regis Monarch
Beach is expected in the spring.
(It has two goats on site to supply
fresh goat cheese for the restaurants.) Another five-star property, the Montage Laguna Beach,
upgraded its spa offerings and
further gilded its Catalina, Sunset
and Aliso suites. The former Aliso
Creek Inn has been reborn as the
Ranch at Laguna Beach.
Info: stregismb.com; montagehotels.com/lagunabeach; islandhotel.com; theranchlb.com.
Seattle
The Seattle light-rail system in
April will add stops in Capitol Hill
(perhaps the citys best restaurant neighborhood) and the University of Washington. Later in
OUR
Washington, D.C.
Williamstown,
Kentucky
January
BIG
Cruise
Sale
January 1
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*New bookings only. Booking window January 11 - 23, 2016. Restrictions apply and vary by offer. All offers are subject to availability at time of booking. Offers may apply to
select sailings. Complimentary gifts are provided with final travel documents. Travel Insured $20 Boscovs Gift Card will be issued after purchase. Onboard credit is per cabin
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Boscovs Travel Specialist.
B12
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
N.Y. Times
best-sellers
Nonfiction Paperbacks
1. The Big Short, by Michael Lewis. (Norton)
The people who saw the real estate crash
coming and made billions from their foresight.
2. Yes Please, by Amy Poehler. (Dey Street/
Morrow) A humorous miscellany from the
comedian and veteran of Saturday Night Live
and Parks and Recreation.
3. The Boys in the Boat, by Daniel James
Brown. (Penguin) A group of American rowers
pursued gold at the 1936 Berlin Olympic
Games.
4. I Am Malala, by Malala Yousafzai with
Christina Lamb. (Little, Brown) The Nobel
Peace Prize-winner and teenage activist
recounts her path to learning.
5. The Devil in the White City, by Erik Larson.
(Vintage) A story of how an architect and a
serial killer were linked by the Worlds Fair of
1893.
6. Alexander Hamilton, by Ron Chernow.
(Penguin) First published in 2004, this
biography of a founding father has been turned
into the Broadway hip-hop musical Hamilton.
7. In the Heart of the Sea, by Nathaniel
Philbrick. (Penguin) The sinking of the New
England whaleship Essex in 1820, by a sperm
whale. The basis of the movie.
8. 13 Hours, by Mitchell Zuckoff with members
of the Annex Security Team. (Twelve) An
account by U.S. security personnel of their
battle against the terrorists during the attack
on the State Department compound in
Benghazi, Libya, in 2012.
9. Quiet, by Susan Cain. (Broadway) Introverts
approximately one-third of the population
are undervalued in American society.
10. Thinking, Fast and Slow, by Daniel
Kahneman. (Farrar, Straus & Giroux) How we
make choices in our business and personal
lives.
Mass-market paperbacks
1. The Choice, by Nicholas Sparks. (Vision) How
a North Carolina mans decisions about love
and death play out in his life.
2. The Martian, by Andy Weir. (Broadway) After
a dust storm forces his crew to abandon him,
an astronaut embarks on a dogged quest to
stay alive on Mars.
3. Point Blank, by Fern Michaels. (Kensington)
In this continuation of the Sisterhood series, the
group heads to China to search for a friends
missing daughter.
4. Last One Home, by Debbie Macomber.
(Ballantine) After years of estrangement, sisters
get an unexpected opportunity to start fresh.
5. Invisible, by James Patterson and David Ellis.
(Grand Central) Searching for her sisters killer,
a former FBI researcher finds a link between
scores of unsolved cases.
6. The Patriot Threat, by Steve Berry.
(Minotaur) When stolen Treasury documents
threaten Americas very foundation, Cotton
Malone, a retired intelligence officer, gets on
the trail.
7. Motive, by Jonathan Kellerman. (Ballantine)
While investigating a womans murder, the
psychologist Alex Delaware and Lt. Milo Sturgis
see a link to a cold case and the possibility of a
serial killer.
8. Mr. Mercedes, by Stephen King. (Pocket
Books) In a race-against-the-clock thriller, a
murderers weapon is a luxury car, but now hes
ready to take down thousands at once.
9. Burn, by James Patterson and Michael
Ledwidge. (Grand Central) Detective Michael
Bennett gets a report of strange goings-on in a
condemned building, leading to a burned body
and an underground criminal world of terrifying
depravity.
10. Trust No One, by Jayne Ann Krentz. (Jove)
Stalked after the death of her murdered boss,
a woman gets help in the form of a rich but
bored venture capitalist.
Books
REVIEW
DETAILS
n Dark Money:
LISA ABITOL
Jane Mayer, a writer for The New Yorker magazine, has written a book about the Koch
brothers titled Dark Money.
The Hidden
History of the
Billionaires Behind
the Rise of the
Radical Right
n By Jane Mayer
n Doubleday
n 449 pages
($29.95)
Family patriarch
Mayer begins with Fred Koch,
the family patriarch. Oddly
enough, she writes, the fiercely
libertarian Koch family owed
part of its fortune to two of his-
Outsize influence
The Kochs, Mayer is careful to
remind us, are only one of several fabulously wealthy families
that have tried to move America
to the right. Their outsize influence is a result not only of their
outsize fortune according to
Forbes magazine, the brothers
are the fifth and sixth wealthiest
Americans, with a combined family income larger than that of Bill
DARK MONEY, page B13
Check it out!
Treat yourself to one of these new graphic novels. Find them on the graphic novel shelves at the Duke Street Library.
1. Ody-C Volume 1: Off to Far Ithicaa, by
Matt Fraction. A science fiction retelling
of Homers Odyssey starting with the
end of a great war in the stars and the
beginning of a very long journey home
for Odyssia and her crew of warriors.
2. Legendary Star-Lord Volume 1: Face
it, I Rule, by Sam Humphries. Peter Quill
battles the Badoon, fights to save an
orphanage and still finds time to flirt
with the X-Mens Kitty Pryde all in a
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Bookends
Luncheon to host
Anna Quindlen
Pulitzer Prize-winning author Anna
Quindlen is coming to Lancaster to talk
about her latest novel, Millers Valley,
which is set in northeastern Pennsylvania.
Quindlen will speak at the 2016 Lancaster Library Luncheon. The event is a fundraiser for county libraries organized by
Aarons Books in Lititz and the Friends of
the Lancaster County Library System.
Tickets for the luncheon at Calvary
Church, 1051 Landis Valley Road, are $45
and can be purchased at Aarons Books in
Lititz or by calling Cathy Doremus at 6273772. More information and a ticket order
form are online. A copy of the book will be
included with each ticket.
The author has written novels (One
True Thing, Black and Blue and Blessings) and nonfiction books (A Short
Guide to a Happy Life and How Reading
Changed My Life.) Her New York Times
column Public and Private won the Pulitzer Prize in 1992. She now has a column in
Newsweek.
Millers Valley, according to the authors website, is about a woman coming
of age as she unearths surprising secrets
about her family, and unexpected truths
about herself.
BOOKS/LOCAL HISTORY
FLASHBACK LANCASTER
Childrens laureate
to visit libraries
Sandy Asher, Lancaster Countys Childrens Laureate, is leading a special project happening at public libraries through
March 30 that encourages children to Celebrate Libraries.
Asher will lead a program at Manheim
Community Library on Saturday at 10 a.m.
The project also will be presented at:
Manheim Township Public Library, Jan.
26, 6 p.m.; Columbia Public Library, Feb. 3,
1:30 p.m.; Strasburg-Heisler Library, Feb.
11, 6:30 p.m.; Eastern Lancaster County Library (New Holland), March 3, 6:30 p.m.;
Lancaster Public Library, March 4, 5:30
p.m; Moores Memorial Library (Christiana), March 17, 6 p.m.; and Adamstown Area
Library, March 30, 4 p.m.
All the programs are free and open to the
public, but those interested should contact
the individual library in case registration is
required.
The project will culminate on April 1 with
a special exhibit at Millersville Universitys
Ware Center in downtown Lancaster.
Asher was named Lancaster Countys Childrens Laureate in December 2014 by the
Lancaster Literary Guild. She saw it as an opportunity to promote literacy and libraries.
The Celebrate Libraries project took
shape with the help of the Literary Guild,
Millersville University, the public libraries
of Lancaster County, and staff from the Library System of Lancaster County.
B13
Shoppers gather around a television at a store at Park City Center to learn about the start of Operation Desert Storm.
Dark Money
Continued from B12
Gates but also of their intellectual prowess and organizational skills. For more than
a decade, they have organized donor summits to which they have invited like-minded billionaires, political consultants, media
celebrities and elected officials. At these
meetings, plans are made, issues chosen,
money raised, donations pooled, spending
coordinated for the next election cycles.
The Koch brothers and their allies insist, and no doubt believe, that their war
on big government has been motivated by
their commitment to the individual freedoms that government interferes with.
Still, it was impossible not to notice,
Mayer writes, that the political policies
they embraced benefited their own bottom
lines first and foremost. Lowering taxes
and rolling back regulations, slashing the
welfare state and obliterating the limits
on campaign spending might or might not
have helped others, but they most certainly
strengthened the hand of extreme donors
with extreme wealth.
Send
photos and
information
to: Valerie
Marschka, LNP,
P.O. Box 1328,
Lancaster, PA
17608-1328,
or by email to
vmarschka@
LNPnews.com.
B14
LOCAL
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
IN THE SPOTLIGHT
ENEGLEY@LNPNEWS.COM
Follow us on Instagram at
LancasterOnline
My guilty pleasure:
Stopping at Dunkin Donuts for a blueberry cake
doughnut.
Hobbies: I love my
flowers and houseplants.
I love my outside gardens. Im trying to attract a bluebird.
My taste in movies: I love sci-fi movies.
Because of my grandchildren, Im working
through all of the Star
Wars movies.
If someone wrote a
book about my life,
I would like the title
to be: Think Good
Thoughts.
Saturday:
Faith &
Values
LancasterOnline
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& Learn
medexpress.com
LOCAL
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Morgans return
Joey Kramer
A rock n roll-themed
coffee shop owned by
Aerosmiths drummer
is on schedule to open
in the spring. The Sun
Chronicle reports Joey
Kramers Rockin &
Roastin Cafe is expected to open its doors in
April. It will be located in North Attleborough, Massachusetts,
about 40 miles outside
of Boston. Aerosmith
formed in Boston in
1971. Kramer has said
the 1,500-square-foot
facility will serve up organic coffee with a rock
n roll ambiance. The
cafe will feature Kramers drum kit and other
Aerosmith
memorabilia. Kramers business partner, Frank
Cimler, says Kramer
already has a line of
organic coffee. They
say the shop is a way to
branch out into retail
and is the first of what
Tracy Morgan
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30
TRIBUTE
*This includes your sitting (if using a participating professional photographer) and insertion into
the newspaper. The sitting is for mothers and children only. Additional sittings may be charged by
photographer. Re-shoots are subject to additional fees. Minimum package price may apply.
**Please note that non-professional photos may not reproduce in the same fashion as a photo from
a professional photographer.
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eyelid is inverted or folded inward. After two surgeries and two rounds of
treatment with different
ointments, this issue too
has been overcome.
A highly affectionate
and fairly relaxed feline,
Squish an estimated
2 years old still has a
yen to play. He enjoys the
company of other cats,
playing with them when
they come near.
Happy and lithe, Squish
is simply biding his time
until he finds his forever
home.
You can visit Squish
from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. today at Pet Pantrys satel-
LANCASTER CARES
BIRTHDAYS
TODAY IN HISTORY
2015
B15
NOW $
A Reflection by Sherry
www.areflectionbysherry.com
AKRON | (717) 380-3103
amm Photography
ammphotography.zenfolio.com
QUARRYVILLE | (717) 715-7025
DB Photography
www.dbphotography25.com
LANCASTER | (717) 799-3317
Mily Photography
www.milyphoto.com
LANCASTER | (717) 443-5125
M. Swinehart Photography
mswinehartphotography.vpweb.com
LANCASTER | (717) 989-1556
Photography by Kaylyn
www.photographybykaylyn.com
EPHRATA | (717) 945-3391
Precious Image Photography
www.preciousimagephoto.com
LANCASTER | (717) 940-2294
Sharpshooters Photography LLC
sharpshootersphotographyllc.com
NEW HOLLAND | (717) 629-3687
Tin Star Moments, LLC
www.tinstarmoments.com
LITITZ | (610) 996-7550
When in Rome
Photography by Shelly
wheninromephotographybyshelly.com
LANDISVILLE | (717) 799-2804
B16
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Celebrations
717.291.4957
celebrations@lnpnews.com
www.lancasteronline.com
Anniversaries
Engagements
KilpatrickRossi
WatersSterling
WhislerRizzo
DavisZimmerman
RuhlBryant
Once in awhile,
Right in the middle of an ordinary life,
Love gives us a fairy tale.
Anonymous
PRiMA Theatre
Live Entertainment and Lighting services for your
big day! Wherever and whatever youre up to,
PRiMA is ready for you!
19 N. Prince St. Lancaster
717.327.5124
Wilbur Chocolate
Chocolate filled favor boxes and
wedding themed chocolate molds
48 N. Broad Street Lititz
717.626.3249
A Tea Affair
A Perfect Place for your Bridal Shower
6 Sturgis Lane Lititz
717.626.1776
CR Lapps
Catering for All Your Events!
Weddings, Picnics, Party Trays, Etc.
101 Fite Way Quarryville
717.786.1768
Encks Custom Catering
Celebrating is our business! Catering
for all occasions. Call about our
Banquet & Conference Center
244 Granite Run Dr. Lancaster
717.569.7000
Contact Celebrations:
Exceptional Weddings
Performing Ceremonies throughout Lancaster
& Chester Counties.
New Holland 717.419.7579
www.exceptionalweddings.org
Lancaster Marriott
at Penn Square
We now Pronounce your Wedding
Breathtaking!
Downtown Lancaster
717.239.1600
Acorn Farms
We offer indoor & outdoor catering for
weddings, corporate events, picnics, and
other events in Lancaster, York, Harrisburg,
and surrounding areas.
3141 Mount Joy Road Mount Joy
717.653.6182
Wyndridge Farm
Weddings, Celebrations, Gatherings
& Events. Where you celebrate
Life - Live Crafty!
885 Pleasant Ave., Dallastown,
717-244-9900
www.wyndridge.com
Farmer 68th
Dissingers Celebrate
Golden Anniversary...
Randy and Millie (Denison) Dissinger, of Manheim, celebrate their
50th wedding anniversary. They were married
on January 15, 1966 at
Salem United Church of
Christ in Columbia, PA.
Randy retired from a
long career in hydraulic and pneumatic sales.
Millie is retired from
over 27 years of service
at the Manheim Central
School District. Randy
enjoys gardening and
exercising while Millie enjoys reading and
quilting. They both take
pleasure in visiting with
friends and family.
They are the parents
of three children: Corry Dissinger, husband
of Kirsten Zug, Lititz;
Dana, wife of Jack Davis, Nottingham; and
Leigh Ann, wife of Travis Rohrer, Lititz. The
Dissingers have 7 grandchildren.
Fireside Tavern
Our Grand ballroom and picturesque
grounds provide the ideal setting for your
wedding ceremony and reception. We can
make your special day the most memorable
day of your life.
1500 Historic Dr Strasburg
717.687.7979
Dissinger 50th
Envy Studio
Our upscale urban-chic studios artistically
driven staff uses the buzz of the city as
inspiration to create red-carpet looks for hair,
nails and wedding styles that your friends will
envy!
24 W. King St. Lancaster
717.435.9343
Lancaster School
of Cosmetology
Pamper Your Bridal Party
50 Ranck Ave. Lancaster
717.299.0200
Elite Coach
Nostalgic 20 Passenger Trolley &
25-56 Passenger Coaches, Perfect for Guest
Transportation
1685 W. Main Street Ephrata 800.722.6206
www.elitecoach.com
For more information or to advertise on this page, please contact 717.291.8800 or email advertising@LNPnews.com
Announce life's
milestones in
Celebrations
Let your extended family in
on the big secret: You're happily
engaged!
Tell your old schoolmates that
you finally married that special
someone.
Share the excitement of your big
anniversary!
Go to www.lancasteronline.com/
celebrations/create to place your
special announcement.
LIVING
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Inspections
Continued from B2
Darrenkamps at Willow
Valley, 106 Willow Valley
Square, follow-up, Jan.
4. Hot dogs were held at
125 degrees, rather than
135 degrees or above as
required; repeat violation.
Items discarded.
Doe Run Elementary
on Gramby, 123 Gramby
Road, Manheim, Jan. 4. No
violations.
Kings Grocery, 1044
N. Georgetown Road,
Paradise, follow-up, Jan. 4.
No violations.
Manheim Central Senior
High School, 400 Adele
Ave., Manheim, Jan. 4. No
violations.
Miesse Candy, 118 N. Water
St., Suite 102, Jan. 4. No
violations.
New China House, 721 S.
Broad St., Lititz, Type 2
ready-to-eat, time/
temperature-controlledfor-safety food, located in
reach-in cooler and small
cooling unit in front, and
held more than 24 hours,
is not being marked with
date it was opened. Person
in charge does not have
adequate knowledge of
food safety in this food
facility as evidenced by this
noncompliant inspection.
The person in charge has
failed in managerial duties in
ensuring food safety in this
facility. A working container
of weed killer was stored
next to food, equipment
and single-service articles
in back storage area.
Detergent and Pine-Sol
stored with coffee filters
and above single-service
items in back storage room.
Chemicals (paint primer)
stored in cabinet under soda
machine, on shelving above
and with food, utensils
and equipment. A food
employee certification is
displayed but individual
is no longer employed by
the food establishment.
An employee is scheduled
to take test Jan. 28. Food
employees in food prep
Waffle
Continued from B1
5
Generations
Celebrated
Stoltzfus 5
Generations
LancSports.com
Having a
wedding,
shower,
or party?
www.LancasterCountyWinery.com
or 717-464-3555
After college, he
worked as a credit
analyst at Protective
Life Insurance Co. He
then traded and monitored the credit quality
of a $3 billion corporate bond portfolio at
Jefferson-Pilot before
landing his dream job
at the money management firm.
However, he lost his
job in a wave of layoffs
after months of experiencing the financial
crisis firsthand.
I like to say that
my experience was
about as visceral as
you can get, because
youre dealing with the
people that lost all the
money, Adams says.
Youre either on the
phone with them or
youre upstairs in the
trading desk watching
everything implode.
You have a front-row
seat to the meltdown.
Adams says he knew
that he needed to take
a break from the business world.
I was just emotionally spent, Adams
says. I was drained. I
couldnt keep sort of
apologizing to our clients for our atrocious
performance. You just
saw the whole system
breaking, and I needed
to get away from it.
Adams realized he
had a gift for writing
when he put together
an annual Christmas
letter to send to friends
and family. By the second year, the piece had
strayed away from the
usual family update.
It got to be more
about Jimmys sort of
general ruminations
more than, Heres
what were doing, and
heres what we did last
year, Adams says.
That was more fun for
me, to sort of ponder
things out loud rather
than just providing a
travel log.
When he took a job at
the waffle restaurant,
he also immersed himself in economic history. Adams estimates he
read 40 books on the
topic during that time.
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Sports
n SEND STORY TIPS & INFO TO: CHRIS OTTO, 291-8662, COTTO@LNPNEWS.COM
Crush is
back with Os
Report: Davis resigns with
the Baltimore Orioles
for 7 years, $161 million
k Page C5
NFL PLAYOFFS
MIKE GROSS
PENN STATE FOOTBALL
Franklin
deserves
more time
to recruit
and rebuild
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Kansas City Chiefs free safety Husain Abdullah (39) pushes New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady (12) out of bounds short of the goal
line in the first half Saturday in Foxborough, Mass.
FOXBOROUGH,
Mass.
The Patriots late-season
slump didnt mean much
when the playoffs came to
New England. Kansas Citys
11-game winning streak mattered even less.
With Rob Gronkowski and
Julian Edelman coming back
from injuries to help Tom
Brady return to his Super Bowl
MVP form, the Patriots earned
a spot in the AFC title game for
the fifth year in a row, beating
the Chiefs 27-20 on Saturday.
Its pretty special to get
back to another AFC championship game, said Brady, who
will play for the conference
title for the 10th time in his ca-
LATE GAME
At press time, the Arizona
Cardinals led the Green Bay
Packers, 17-13, in the fourth
quarter of their NFC divisional
playoff game. For the result, go
to LancasterOnline.com.
MORE COVERAGE
n Preview of todays Seahawks-
ON THE AIR
n Who: Pittsburgh Steelers
(11-6) vs. Denver Broncos
(12-4)
n TV: CBS
FRANKLIN, page C5
WOMENS BASKETBALL
KEVIN FREEMAN
KFREEMAN@LNPNEWS.COM
SUBMITTED
REIMER, page C3
C2
SPORTS
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
SPORTS ON TV
COLLEGE MENS BASKETBALL
American at Army
Creighton at DePaul
Michigan State at Wisconsin
2pm
NBCSN
3pm
S. Illinois at Drake
ESPNU
4pm
Michigan at Iowa
BTN
4:30pm
ESPNU
6:30pm
ESPNU
8:30pm
NETWORK
TIME
BTN
12pm
ESPNU
12pm
FSN, ROOT
12:30pm
FS2
1pm
MASN
1pm
SEC
1pm
ESPN2
1:30pm
BTN
2pm
ESPNU
2pm
Missouri at Arkansas
SEC
3pm
MASN
3pm
Baylor at Texas
ESPN2
3:30pm
CBSSN
4pm
SEC
5pm
CBSSN
6pm
NETWORK
TIME
ESPN2
11:30am
GOLF
6pm
NETWORK
TIME
FS1
8pm
FS1
10pm
NETWORK
TIME
FOX
1pm
CBS
4:30pm
NHL
NETWORK
TIME
Carolina at Pittsburgh
ROOT
3pm
Philadelphia at Detroit
NBCSN
7:30pm
NETWORK
TIME
Premier League,
Manchester United at Liverpool
NBCSN
9am
NBCSN
11:15am
NETWORK
TIME
ESPN2
7pm
Georgia at Alabama
Davidson at VCU
GOLF
STAFF REPORT
SPORTS@LNPNEWS.COM
NFL
1pm
1:30pm
HUMANS, CANINES
HIT CENTRAL PARK
FOR POLAR BEAR 5K
12pm
FS1
CBS
LOCAL RUNNING
CBSSN
CBSSN
Northwestern at Maryland
TIME
UConn at Houston
Above, runners and their dogs take off at the start of the Polar Bear 5K Saturday morning in Lancaster Central Park. Below, Otis gets warmed up to run his first 5K along with owner Steph Weiser of Columbia.
NETWORK
SOCCER
TENNIS
Australian Open, first round
NHL ROUNDUP
BEARS WIN
Hershey won the shootout to record a 4-3 victory
over visiting Springfield on Saturday night in front
of 10,568 at Giant Center.
Hershey goalie Dan Ellis was dandy in the shootout,
stopping four of Springfields five shots.
Hershey earned the win via shootout goals by
Connor Carrick and Christian Djoos.
Hershey had forced overtime on Chris Bourques
third-period power-play goal, his 18th of the season,
which brought the Bears back from a 3-2 deficit.
Hersheys first two goals were by Riley Barber, his
sixth and seventh of the season.
The Bears host Springfield again at 5 p.m. today.
net.
Devils 2, Coyotes 0:
Cory Schneider stopped
38 shots for his third
shutout of the season,
leading New Jersey over
Arizona.
Schneider, who was
selected as an All-Star
for the first time in his
career, is 12-6-2 in 20
starts on the road this
season.
Senators 5, Kings 3:
Mika Zibanejad scored a
tiebreaking power-play
goal with 6:50 to play,
and Ottawa roared back
from a two-goal deficit
in the third period for a
victory over Los Angeles.
Vincent
Lecavalier
scored his first goal for
the Kings. The veteran
centers goal was the
412th of his NHL career,
but his first since joining
the Kings in a trade with
Philadelphia last week.
Lecavalier plans to retire this summer, but
hes fitting in well as Los
Angeles third-line center, playing the Kings
two-way style and excelling on faceoffs.
Sabres 4, Nationals 1: Evander Kane
had a goal and an assist,
Chad Johsnon stopped
33 shots, and Buffalo
beat Washington to
hand Capitals goalie
Braden Holtby a rare
loss.
Marcus
Johansson ruined Johnsons
shutout bid 2:54 into
the third period with
an unassisted goal.
Washington center
and former Flyers
captain Mike Richards played his first
game since the Kings
terminated his contract this summer
after a border arrest
for possession of a
controlled substance.
Blue Jackets 2,
Avalanche 1: Jack
Johnson scored with
1:07 left off Avalanche forward Cody
McLeods skate to
give Columbus a victory over Colorado.
Blues 4, Canadiens 3: Jori Lehtera
scored 2:04 into
overtime, Brian Elliott made a careerhigh 46 saves and St.
Louis beat Montreal.
Ty Rattie tied the
game with 5:25 left
for St. Louis, and
Robby Fabbri and
Paul Stastny also
scored. The Blues
have won three of
four after enduring
a five-game losing
streak.
Bruins 3, Maple
Leafs 2: Brad Marchand scored with 47
seconds left in the
third period to lift
Boston over Toronto.
Patrice
Bergeron
scored twice for Boston and Tuukka Rask
finished with 26 saves
as the Bruins extended Torontos losing
streak to five straight.
SOURCE: ASSOCIATED PRESS
NBA ROUNDUP
Philadelphia routs
Portland, 114-89
Okafor, 76ers snap four-game streak
Jahlil Okafor had 25
points and 10 rebounds
to help the Philadelphia
76ers snap a four-game
losing streak with a 114-89
rout of the Portland Trail
Blazers on Saturday night.
Richaun Holmes added
17 points off the bench
and Ish Smith and Robert Covington scored
16 apiece for the Sixers,
who enjoyed a rare blowout victory. They improved to 5-37 with their
most lopsided win of the
season.
Damian Lillard scored
14 points to lead the Blazers, who dropped to 18-25
as their three-game winning streak ended. C.J.
McCollum finished with
13 and Mason Plumlee
and Miles Leonard had 12
apiece.
Portland, in the midst of
a three-game East Coast
swing, looked flat from the
opening tip.
Okafor torched the Blazers for 10 points in the
first four minutes and 17
in the first quarter as
many as the entire Portland team. With a mixture
of post moves and jumpers, the rookie center only
missed one of his nine
shot attempts in the opening quarter to help Philly
take a 29-17 lead.
The Sixers extended
their lead to 22 with 7:45
left in the second quarter
on a Covington transition
3-pointer, moments after
a Nerlens Noel block on
the other end. Covington hit another three less
than two minutes later to
put Philly up 25 and the
Sixers went into halftime
with a comfortable 68-43
SPORTS
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
ASSOCIATED PRESS
No. 9 Duke.
Demetrius Jackson
added 24 points and
Steve Vasturia finished
with 22 as the Fighting Irish (12-5, 3-2
Atlantic Coast Conference) beat Duke for
the fourth time in five
tries.
Freshman Luke Kennard had 30 points and
Brandon Ingram added 25 for the Blue Devils (14-4, 3-2), who have
lost two straight for the
first time this season.
Pittsburgh 84, Boston College 61: Jamel
Artis scored 22 points
and No. 20 Pittsburgh
recovered from a forgettable loss at No. 21
Louisville.
Michael Young had 13
points, five rebounds
and nine assists for
the Panthers (15-2, 4-1
Atlantic Coast Conference).
Temple 67, Cincinnati 65, (2OT): Jaylen
Bond scored on a putback with 20.2 seconds
left in the second overtime for the Owls (9-7,
4-2 American),
Cincinnatis
Gary
Clark stripped the ball
from Josh Brown as
he went up for a shot
in the lane and the ball
was tipped out to Obi
Enechionyia on the
left wing. Enechionyia
just got off a shot that
grazed the rim as the
shot clock expired.
The ball dropped into
Bonds hands for the
easy putback.
Women
UConn 104, Temple
49: Breanna Stewart
had 22 points, 10 rebounds and five blocks
to lead No. 1 UConn.
Katie Lou Samuelson
added career-highs of
21 points and six assists.
It was only the second home game of the
season for the Huskies
at their on-campus facility, their first since
a 91-81 win over Notre
Dame Dec. 5.
UConn (16-0, 6-0
AAC) has won 53
straight games, one
behind Louisiana Tech
(1980-82) for the third
longest winning streak
all-time.
SOURCE: ASSOCIATED PRESS
Having fun
this year
Shelby has a lot of
mental
toughness,
said MU coach Mary
Fleig. That says it all.
I have been so hard on
her. To see her growth
in the five years, physically and mentally ... I
think she took a great
approach over the summer. This is the best
Shelby
Reimer
Getting back
on track
Millersville
missed
the playoffs for the first
time in 20 seasons last
season but appear to
be on their back to the
postseason. The Marauders evened their
conference record at
6-6 with the win over
Bloomsburg and have
won nine games overall,
two short of last seasons total.
There are 11 games
remaining, however, including a game at West
Chester on Wednesday.
Upon graduation, Reimer hopes to enter the
state police academy.
The criminology and
sociology major has already taken the oral and
written exams for acceptance into the academy.
But going forward, she
doesnt think she can
leave basketball behind.
I thinking Im always going to have to
be around the game because I have so much
passion for it, she said.
I can definitely see
myself coaching somewhere.
Odds
are,
shell
achieve her goals. She
has vaulted every hurdle on her journey to
this point and seems to
be in a good place.
Prior to the game
against
Bloomsburg,
Fleig was talking to
Huskies coach Bill
Cleary, who is in his
eighth season. Hes seen
Reimers progression,
year by year.
Bill said, I would
never have thought
(Shelby) could do what
shes doing right now,
Fleig said. I said, Thats
the kind of kid she is.
C3
Local digest
TRACK AND FIELD
n Franklin & Marshall competed at the Kutztown
SQUASH
n In Hartford, Conn., the No. 10 Franklin & Marshall men
battled in a number of matches but ultimately came
up short, dropping a 9-0 contest against No. 1 Trinity
College on Saturday. The Diplomats fell to 3-5 on the
year, while the Bantams kept on rolling at 9-0.
COLLEGE WRESTLING
Diplomats beaten
by No. 8 Lehigh
STAFF REPORT
SPORTS@LNPNEWS.COM
Thursday:
Home &
Garden
C4
SPORTS
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
F&M 82,
WASHINGTON 72
Comets stumble
vs. the Bulldogs
ANTHONY BURKHART
LNP CORRESPONDENT
GOLF
Snedeker, Blair
tied in Sony Open
Brandt Snedeker and
Zac Blair shared the lead
after the third round of
the Sony Open on Saturday at Waialae Country
Club in Honolulu.
Blair, who shot a 6-under 64, and Snedeker
(66) are at 16-under par.
Kevin Kisner (66) is
third at 15 under, one
ahead of Si Woo Kim
(65).
Fabian Gomez (65) is
alone in fifth place, at 12
under.
EurAsia Cup: Captains picks Lee Westwood and Ian Poulter
won their matches again
Saturday to help Europe take a 9-3 lead over
Asia in the EurAsia Cup
at Glenmarie in Kuala
Lumpur, Malaysia.
Europe took 4 of six
points in foursomes after
also earning 4 points
Friday in the opening
fourball matches. Westwood and Matthew Fitzpatrick beat Anirban La-
STAY UP TO DATE:
SPONSORED BY:
Dips
climb
to 13-2
Glenn Robinson
passes Bobby
Knight on alltime coaching
victories list
STAFF REPORT
SPORTS@LNPNEWS.COM
SUBMITTED
Hall of Honor: Lancaster Catholic High School welcomed Ryan Purvis, left, and Katie
Hayek into its Hall of Honor on Friday evening. During his time as a Crusader, Purvis
(Class of 2004) earned seven varsity letters in two sports: football (three) and
basketball (four). He was a three-season Section Three all-star tight end and punter;
in his final season at LCHS, he was also named a Section Three all-star defensive
end. Purvis was also the starting center for the 2003 PIAA championship basketball
team. Hayek (Class of 2002) received seven varsity letters in two sports: soccer
(three) and basketball (four). She started as a guard all four years on the basketball
team, finishing with 1,510 points. As a senior, she averaged 23 points, four rebounds,
four assists and three steals per game. As team captain in her senior year, Hayek led
the Crusaders to Section Three, L-L League and District Three Class AAA titles.
LOCAL COLLEGE BASKETBALL
SPORTS@LNPNEWS.COM
Men
Lancaster Bible 97,
Morrisville State 66:
Kurt Keltner scored 25
points as the Chargers
remained unbeaten (12-
JWALK@LNPNEWS.COM
45th season
Robinson is currently
in his 45th season at the
helm of the Franklin &
Marshall basketball program.
Washington
started
out with a 12-10 lead five
minutes into the game in
a tightly contested opening segment.
F&M hit another gear
and went on a 12-0 run
with two 3-pointers
from Hunter Eggers, and
the Diplomats went up
22-12 at 12:27.
F&M held at least a sixpoint edge the remainder of the half and went
into the break with a 4334 lead.
F&M went up by 18
points, 56-38, on a Lior
Levy free throw at 14:36
before the Shoremen answered and came within
12 at 12:57.
Free throws
Connect with us
Facebook, Twitter
& Instagram at:
LancasterOnline
SPORTS
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
WOMENS TENNIS
AP SPORTS WRITER
ASSOCIATED PRESS
MLB NOTEBOOK
The rumblings go
beyond playcalling or
scheme. Youve heard
them.
Hes all glitz, no substance. Like a celebrity
chef who never goes in
the kitchen, hed rather
perform than coach.
The endless enthusiasm, the glad-handing,
the catch-phrases
hed probably change
to fancy uniforms, if he
could get away with it.
Hes just not one of us.
Nittany Nation wants
to win big. It also wants
the world to believe it
wants much more.
Its probably emphasized here with our staff
and our fans and our
alumni more place than
Ive ever been, Franklin
said in October. People
want it all. What I mean
by that is its not a winat-all-costs place. This is
a place that truly values
our guys getting a real
education and worldclass education.
They want to see our
guys making a positive
impact in the community. They also want to
see our guys being successful on the field, and
they really dont want to
give up one for the other.
They want them all.
Thats what they say.
When the games are
being played, they want
to win.
If you are to understand college football,
C5
AUSTRALIAN OPEN
In this October 2015 file photo, Orioles Chris Davis follows through batting against
the Yankees. Multiple people with knowledge of the situation say Davis has agreed to
a seven-year, $161 million contract with the Baltimore Orioles, pending a physical. The
people spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity Saturday because the
Orioles have not announced the transaction.
dictionary.
What the kid implies
isnt that recruiting is a
big part of the game, but
that it is its own game,
a fierce, noisy battle
against larger-than-life
figures like Harbaugh.
Even Franklins critics
admit hes great at it.
Given the waters Penn
State swims in, less than
great wont be enough.
He needs more time.
Thats so obvious it feels
banal to have to say it,
but its not even the
key point, in Franklins
defense.
Saquon Barkley, the
brilliant freshman running back, was committed to Rutgers a little
over a year ago. Then
Franklin reportedly got
one-on-one with him,
and simply wouldnt
take no for an answer.
One serious meeting is
all it took.
So Nordin comes to visit
next weekend. Lavert
Hill, a big-time DB from
Detroit who flipped from
Penn State to Michigan
a couple months back,
was at Penn State this
weekend.
If youre a Penn State
fan, who do you want
stating your case to
those kids, Franklin or
one of us?
MENS TENNIS
C6
NFL
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Panthers seek
redemption in
playoff rematch
Seattle ousted Carolina last season
STEVE REED
ON THE AIR
CHARLOTTE, N.C.
Carolina Panthers coach
Ron Rivera says the Seattle Seahawks are starting
to feel a little like a division opponent.
The teams will meet
for the sixth time in four
years and for the second
straight season in the
NFC divisional playoffs
today. The Seahawks
have won four of the
previous five matchups,
including a 31-17 playoff
victory last year in Seattle.
But this time its a little
different.
Not only will the game
be played in Charlotte,
where the top-seeded
Panthers (15-1) have
won 11 straight, but the
Seahawks face a Carolina team thats more
confident and battledtested.
Some of that stems
from Carolinas 27-23
win over the two-time
defending NFC champions in Week 6 when Cam
Newton connected on a
26-yard touchdown pass
to tight end Greg Olsen
with 32 seconds left.
The Panthers say that
win helped jumpstart
their 14-0 start this season and gave them confidence they could beat
the best.
It was just a matter of
getting over that hump,
said cornerback Josh
Norman.
AP SPORTS WRITER
Mirror images
It led Panthers safety
Roman Harper to declare this week: We are
the better team.
In many ways, the Seahawks and Panthers
are mirror images of one
another, which may help
explain why the last five
games have come down
to the wire.
They both have dynamic quarterbacks who
can make plays with
their arms and their feet;
strong running games
led by powerful, bruising backs; and defenses
that excel at keeping the
opposition out of the end
zone.
But the most intriguing matchup may be
Carolinas No. 1 scoring
offense against Seattles
defense, which has allowed the fewest points
in the league.
Newton became the
first QB in league history
to throw for 35 touchdown passes and run for
10 scores in a season.
Hell face a defense loaded with playmakers.
This is the most diversified offense that we
see, and the dynamics of
what Cam is able to do
and the way that theyre
willing to run with him
makes this a really difficult offense to prepare
for, Seattle coach Pete
PAULA WOLF
WHEELCHAIR QUARTERBACK
Tough
challenges, low
expectations
to confront
Pederson
So the Eagles (apparently) finally settled
on Kansas City Chiefs
at Carolina Panthers
n When: 1 p.m. today
n Where: Bank of America
Stadium, Charlotte, N.C.
n TV: Fox
offensive coordinator
Doug Pederson as their
new head coach.
This whole search has
looked like something
out of the Keystone
Kops, with the nadir being former Giants head
coach Tom Coughlin
withdrawing his name
from consideration.
I actually preferred
Pederson to Coughlin,
but its still embarrassing when a candidate
does that, because it
reflects poorly on the
organization.
The bottom line, how-
Steelers Antonio Brown, shown after making a catch against the Bengals, was the top receiver for fantasy owners.
DAN MASSEY
FANTASY SPORTS
These
receivers were
a great catch
for owners
in 2015
In light of the
decline in output by
NFL running backs
discussed last week,
one may conclude
that aerial production
around the league has
increased, and indeed
it has. The 2015 season represented the
fifth successive year
of record per-team,
per-game averages of passing yards.
Somewhat surprisingly, however, wide
receivers have been
fairly immune from
the upswing in the
passing game.
Looking at the 20
seasons immediately
preceding 2015, an
average of 20 wide receivers reached 1,000
yards per season.
This years total of 22
is hardly out of line.
Because of the large
number of receivers
who rack up yardage,
the key to identifying
valuable fantasy receivers is recognizing
those who regularly
perform well.
Of the 21 receivers that gained 1,000
yards in 2014, just
11 of them slightly
over half were able
to replicate the feat in
2015. The average receiving yards of these
21 men plummeted
from 1,264 in 2014 to
973 in 2015.
A good portion of
this decline is due to
injury, yet yardage
per game from this
group dropped, too.
Jordy Nelson and
Kelvin Benjamin
missed all season, and
of the other 19 receivers in the sample, 12
had fewer yards per
game in 2015 than
2014.
Fantasy owners
Texans DeAndre Hopkins, catching a pass against the Titans, was No. 6 among wide receivers in fantasy football.
hard to miss.
There was plenty of
excitement among the
fanbase at the Kelly hire.
With Pederson, on the
other hand, the expectations of the Eagles faithful can hardly get much
lower.
So welcome back to
Philadelphia, Doug.
And good luck, because
youre really going to
need it.
FOOTBALL
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
C7
NFL NEWS
Steelers
Continued from C1
New England Patriots tight end Rob Gronkowski (87) celebrates his first touchdown against the Kansas
City Chiefs Saturday in Foxborough, Mass.
Continued from C1
Kansas City..................3 3 7 7 20
New England...............7 7 7 6 27
First Quarter
NEGronkowski 8 pass from Brady (Gostkowski kick), 10:23.
KCFG Santos 34, 1:52.
Second Quarter
NEBrady 1 run (Gostkowski kick), 3:23.
KCFG Santos 32, :12.
Third Quarter
NEGronkowski 16 pass from Brady (Gostkowski kick), 8:24.
KCA.Wilson 10 pass from A.Smith (Santos
kick), 2:12.
Fourth Quarter
NEFG Gostkowski 40, 14:46.
NEFG Gostkowski 32, 10:20.
KCWest 1 run (Santos kick), 1:13.
A66,829.
KC
NE
First downs..................................27
21
Total Net Yards...........................378
340
Rushes-yards....................... 32-135
14-38
Passing.......................................243
302
Punt Returns............................ 2-27
1-22
Kickoff Returns........................ 3-90
1-26
Interceptions Ret........................0-0
0-0
Comp-Att-Int.......................29-50-0 28-42-0
Sacked-Yards Lost.......................1-3
0-0
Punts..................................... 3-35.7
3-42.0
Fumbles-Lost..............................1-1
0-0
Penalties-Yards........................ 5-40
6-24
Time of Possession................ 37:51
22:09
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
RUSHINGKansas City, West 17-61,
A.Smith 9-44, Davis 6-30. New England,
S.Jackson 6-16, Edelman 1-11, Brady 6-6,
White 1-5.
PASSINGKansas City, A.Smith 29-50-0246. New England, Brady 28-42-0-302.
RECEIVINGKansas City, Kelce 6-23,
A.Wilson 5-57, Conley 5-33, Avant 4-69, Maclin 2-23, West 2-15, Davis 2-13, Harris 1-10,
Hammond Jr. 1-2, Sherman 1-1. New England,
Edelman 10-100, Gronkowski 7-83, LaFell 3-6,
K.Martin 2-57, White 2-39, Amendola 2-18,
S.Jackson 1-2, Bolden 1-(minus 3).
MISSED FIELD GOALSNone.
NFL PLAYOFFS
Wild Card
Conference Championships
Sunday, Jan. 24
AFC
Pittsburgh-Denver winner vs. New England.
3:05 p.m. (CBS)
NFC.................................... 6:40 p.m. (FOX)
Super Bowl
Sunday, Feb. 7
At Santa Clara, Calif., 6:30 p.m. (CBS)
ASSOCIATED PRESS
C8
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
C9
Outdoors
Slow season for duck hunters
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/calendarjan16.
To submit calendar items, email:
preilly@lnpnews.com; call 5753039; or send to Ad Crable, PO
Box 1328, Lancaster, PA 176081328.
TODAY
n CLAY SHOOT: Atglen
The migration of waterfowl through Pennsylvania has been slow this year, frustrating local duck and goose hunters, but recent cold
weather could bring in more birds. Duck season closed Thursday in Pennsylvanias South Zone, which covers Lancaster County. However, theres still two more weeks of goose hunting left.
P.J. REILLY
LNP OUTDOORS WRITER
MONDAY
n TRAP SHOOT: Paradise
TUESDAY
n TRAP SHOOT: Southern
WEDNESDAY
n ARCHERY SHOOT: Mount Joy
FRIDAY
MUDDY RUN
PREILLY@LNPNEWS.COM
SATURDAY
n TACTICAL SHOOT: Manheim
JAN. 24
n 3-D SHOOT: Big Buck Archery
Clubs 30-target 3-D shoot from
7 a.m.-1 p.m.; $9. The club is on
Miller Road in Hummelstown.
JAN. 31
n BLOCK SHOOT: Manheim
SKIING
WENGEN,
Switzerland Aksel Lund Svindal was due some good
luck and a win on the historic Lauberhorn hill. He
got both on Saturday.
Svindal won a tricky
World Cup downhill in
challenging weather on
Saturday, finally winning Switzerlands classic Alpine ski race at the
SPORTS
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Leader Leicester also draws with last-place Aston Villa; Arsenal can reclaim top spot by drawing at Stoke today
ROB HARRIS
AP SPORTS WRITER
LONDON In an
English Premier League
campaign about restoring pride at Chelsea, the
fallen champions still
ensure their games cannot be ignored. Its not
just fascination with
watching a wealthy team
in decline.
On Saturday, a dreary
opening 45 minutes
against Everton made
way for a thrilling second half that started
with John Terrys own
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
Speed and Agility Training
will be held Wednesday
and Friday evenings in
January from 5:30 to
6:30 p.m. for four weeks.
The sessions 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
for all sports. The cost is
$95 per athlete. For more
information or to register
contact tina.rocksports@
gmail.com or visit
rocksportspa.com.
Sports Performance
Strength and Power
Training, custom-designed
based on sport, age
and gender and led by
a certified strength and
conditioning specialist, is
available by appointment
for individuals or teams/
groups. For more
information or to schedule
contact brian.rocksports@
gmail.com.
BASEBALL
Rock Sports is running
its Arm Strengthening
and Training Program in
January and February. All
baseball players in grades
6-12 looking to develop
arm strength and improve
overall throwing speed
and power are encouraged
to register. Led by Jeff
Swarr, the program and
runs twice a week for four
weeks each month. Cost
is $125 per single month
or, if registering for both
January and February,
$100 per month. For more
information or to register
contact tina.rocksports@
gmail.com or visit
rocksportspa.com.
The Hempfield Youth
Associations online
registration is currently
open for Spring 2016
intramural baseball.
Registration closes Feb. 13.
Visit www.hyasports.com
to register and for program
details.
St. Joseph Catholic Club
will hold signups and
uniform fittings for boys
ages 7 to 12 on Jan. 23
from 11 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. in
the gym at 410 St. Joseph
St., Lancaster. Practice
starts in the gym in March,
and season runs from April
20 to June 25. Coaches
are needed also. For more
information, call Alan
Walsh at 344-4851.
Manheim VFW and
Manheim Lions will hold
their final 2016 travel
baseball registration Jan.
17 from 2 to 4 p.m. The
registration is for ages 7
thru 14, covering the 8U,
10U, 12U and 14U spring
teams. The registration
will be held at Keystone
Baseball Academy, 662
Ditz Drive, Manheim, in
the downstairs conference
room.
Keystone State Baseball
& Softball Academy, 662
Ditz Drive, Manheim will be
hosting Rawlings 2016 Bat
Line Demo Day on Feb. 13
and 14 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Space will be available for
players to test the bats. For
questions, contact 665-0901.
BASKETBALL
The Knights of Columbus
Council 6810 will hold a
free-throw championship
from 1 to 5 p.m. Jan.
17 at St. Leo the Great
School, 2427 Marietta
Ave., Lancaster. All boys
and girls ages 9 to 14 may
participate by showing
proof of age (e.g., copy
of birth certificate) and
written parental consent.
A participants age
category is based on age
as of Jan. 1. Contestants
register at the door by
filling in a brief entry form.
Contestants receive a
certificate of participation.
Winners receive a winners
certificate and wall plaque
or trophy, and move on to
district, regional and state
competition. International
champs are named by KofC
HQ based on scores from
state-level contests. For
more info call/text George
Elko at 203-6210 or email
gmelko@comcast.net.
The Pennsylvania Lady
Rens are seeking female
basketball players in
Central Pennsylvania for
the upcoming AAU season.
Open tryouts will be held
at Linden Hall School in
Lititz on two dates. On Jan.
24, grades 5-6 will try out
from 2:30 to 4 p.m., and
grades 7-8 from 4-5:30
p.m. On Feb. 7, grades 9-10
will try out from 1 to 2:30
p.m., grades 5-6 from 2:30
to 4 p.m. and grades 7-8
from 4 to 5:30 p.m. For
more information, email
rensbasketball@gmail.com
or call 538-6122. Register
at leaguelineup.com/
allsportsrens.
Richardson Hoops will hold
tryouts for its The Future
girls AAU and showcase
basketball teams for grades
3-9. Tryout dates are
Jan. 17, 24 and 31 at Body
Zone Sports and Wellness
Center. For more info, go
to richardsonhoops.com or
contact Shaun Richardson
at 484-663-3750.
BLOCK SHOOT
Gentlemen MC Sportsmen
are having a block shoot
on Jan. 24 from 1 to 5 p.m.
at their clubhouse, 937
Lancaster Pike, just south
of Buck Motorsports Park
on Route 272. 12-gauge
only. No one under 12
years of age. For more
information, call Mike at
344-7587.
CHEERLEADING
Manheim Township Youth
Cheerleading is looking
for coaches for its 2016
season. Coaches will
need clearances that will
be provided by MTYFA.
Contact Crystal Weaver at
crraiders40@comcast.net
or 669-3178.
COACHING
OPENINGS
Hempfield Rugby Club/
Penn Legacy Rugby Club
has an opening for a boys
U15 coach. Coaching
assistants are available
for this existing program.
Contact Curt Walter
at 629-8938 for more
information.
Lancaster Mennonite
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 Ron Stief, sports
director, at rstief@
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
programs, swim instruction,
league and a wide variety
of programs for youth,
adult and seniors. Visit
lancasterymca.org.
Town Square Health Club
in Manheim offers land and
water exercise activities.
Call Haley Brumbach at
664-6306.
FOOTBALL
BANQUET
The annual Manheim
Central football banquet
will take place at 3 p.m.
at Encks Banquet Center
south of Manheim on Jan.
31. The public is invited.
GUN SHOW
The Lancaster Muzzle
Loading Rifle Association
will hold its 57th annual
gun show Jan. 30 and 31
at the Lancaster Farm and
Home Center, 1383 Arcadia
Road, Lancaster. The show,
featuring more than 100
tables, will run 8 a.m. to 4
p.m. Jan. 30 and 9 a.m. to 3
p.m. Jan. 31. A donation of
$5 is requested. For more
information, call 368-4653.
GYMNASTICS
GEARS is holding classes
for girls and boys ages 6-12
on Thursdays from Feb. 4
through March 17. Class A
for Beginners is from 6:45
to 7:45 p.m., and Class B
for Intermediate/Advanced
is from 7:45 to 8:45 p.m.
Classes are at the GEARS
Community Center, 70 S.
Poplar St., Elizabethtown.
To register or for more
information, go online at
GetIntoGEARS.org or call
367-0355.
LACROSSE
Manheim Township Boys
Lacrosse registration
is now open for boys
in grades 2 through 8.
Registration can be done
online at townshiplacrosse.
com. Details regarding
teams, equipment handout,
and schedules can be
found on the website.
Registration for the spring
season also includes Winter
Skills sessions at Lanco
Fieldhouse.
LIFEGUARDING
Central Park Swimming
Pool needs certified
lifeguards for the 2016
summer season. The
Lancaster County
Department of Parks &
Recreation is accepting
applications for various
lifeguarding positions
for this summer. For
more information visit
lancastercountyparks.org
or web.co.lancaster.pa.us/
Jobs.aspx?CID=98.
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.
Ephrata Rec Center,
130 S. Academy Drive,
offers a wide variety of
programs for all ages
including sports, fitness,
wellness, aquatics and
special events. The center
is holding an Open House
through Jan. 17. New
members will have startup
fee waived, receive a free
gift, and be entered into
drawings to win a 13-week
group fitness class and
locker rental for a year.
For more information visit
ephratarec.com or call
738-1167.
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,
RUGBY
Spring rugby registration
is now open for Hempfield
Rugby Club/Penn Legacy
Rugby Club. Open to
boys and girls in grades
7-12. Contact Curt Walter
at 629-8938 or visit
pennlegacy.org/rugbyfc.
html
RUNNING
The Lancaster Road
Runners Club invites
runners of all ages and
abilities to participate in
its spring fun runs, held
throughout the area every
Tuesday evening at 6:30
p.m. The club will meet at
Longs Park in Lancaster
through the remaining
winter months. Enter the
park via the Bluebird Drive
entrance from Harrisburg
Pike, and follow to the first
parking area on the right.
For more information,
contact Steve at 2013173. Information about
Thursday evening and
SEMINARS
Coaches Time Out, a
seminar designed to
help coaches with the
skills needed to balance
their jobs and other
responsibilities, will be held
Jan. 22-24 at DoubleTree
at DoubleTree Resort by
Hilton Hotel Lancaster.
There will be national
speakers to discuss topics
such as faith, family and
finances. Cost is $175 per
coach or $225 per couple.
For more information, go
to coachestimeout.org.
SENIOR GAMES
The 2016 Senior Indoor
Games will be held at
LANCO Fieldhouse on
Feb. 23-25. The games are
open to all athletes who
are ages 55 and older as of
Feb. 23. Many sports will
be played over the three
days, including running,
throwing, badminton, bocce,
horseshoes, cornhole toss,
target golf, foul shots,
penalty kicks and more.
To register call LANCO
Fieldhouse at 560-0717, or
go to lancofieldhouse.com
and click on Sports/Special
Events.
SKIING
Lancaster Ski Club will
hold a membership Meet
& Greet from 7 to 9 p.m.
Jan. 21 at Tellus 360, 24
E. King St., Lancaster, on
the second floor behind
the Tig Caleb Lounge.
Guests are welcome, and
first-time members get
$5 off their membership.
For more information,
visit lancasterskiclub.net,
find Lancaster Ski Club
on Facebook, or call Brian
Leatherman at (646) 5848161.
SOFTBALL
Franklin & Marshall will
conduct its All-Skills
Softball Clinic from 9
a.m. to noon Feb. 21. For
more information, visit
fandmsoftballcamps.com.
Manetas Park (formerly
Zinns Park) is accepting
teams for the mens slow
pitch softball weeknight
league. For more
information, contact Mike
Shenk at 203-7420.
St. Joseph Catholic Club
will hold signups and
uniform fittings for girls
ages 6 to 15 from 11 a.m.
to 4:30 p.m. Jan. 23, in
the gym at 410 St. Joseph
St., Lancaster. Practice
starts in the gym in March
and the season runs
from April 25 to June 18.
Coaches are also needed.
For information call Bill
Souders at 284-4074.
VOLLEYBALL
GEARS is accepting teams
for its Winter 2016 Church
Coed Sixes Volleyball
League, scheduled to
begin Feb. 8 and conclude
in early May. Interested
teams should submit a
roster and registration fee
no later than Jan. 29 to
be included. Games will
be on Mondays between
6:30 and 9:30 p.m. at the
Daubert Gym, GEARS
Community Center Gym
and Elizabethtown Area
Middle School Gym. The
league is a 10-match
season with playoffs.
League fee is $200 per
team. For additional
information visit
GetintoGEARS.org or call
John Myers at 367-0355.
BOWLING
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
BARRY DECKER
ROLL EM
PMs Fisher
continues
family
tradition
Fresh off a championship in the Lisa Bowman
Adult/Junior Tournament last month, Nick
Fisher will continue
to put his two-handed
approach to work on
the lanes with his Penn
Manor High School
team.
Capturing that tourney title with Comets
coach Neal Vital, the
duo led throughout the
event.
But Fisher, a junior, is
not new to winning.
He also notched the
2014 Leisure Lanes
Adult/Junior Tourney
championship with his
father, Ed Fisher.
It was a great feeling,
winning with my dad,
the younger Fisher said.
Family success in the
sport has been a tradition, as he is proud to
proclaim.
My two sisters and
I all qualified for PIAA
bowling championships, he said, noting that eldest sister
Kelly, now a Mountville
Elementary School
teacher, was a member
of the first Penn Manor
girls team, which went
to states in 2003.
Meanwhile, sister
Shaylyn, now a student
at Elizabethtown College, was a member of
the Comets squad that
finished second in the
2014 PIAA team championships.
And Nick Fishers
Comets boys team finished fourth at the state
tourney last season.
This season, Fisher
also captured the Lancaster Junior Doubles
Tourney title with Manheim Township grad
John Mertz.
Background: The son
of Ed and Sharon Fisher
is employed part-time
by Stauffers.
Leagues/averages:
High school, 208; Leisure Saturday Morning,
203.
ALLEY NOTES
Perfect games were rolled by
Merle Burkhart Jr. at Leisure
Lanes, Terry Martin at Dutch
Lanes and Win Randler and Ryan
Lightner at Clearview Lanes.
A near-perfect game was rolled
by Cole Snavely at Dutch Lanes.
High series (800, men; 700,
women) were rolled by Merle
Burkhart Jr. (814) at Leisure
Lanes and Shayne Beck (809) at
Dutch Lanes.
HIGH SCORES
CLEARVIEW LANES
C11
Penn Manor junior Nick Fisher, who employs an unusual two-handed approach, has followed his father and sisters to success in bowling.
Shiffler 639, Gary Keck 636,
Walt Haubenreisser 626, Gary
High 613, Tyler Seiverling 596,
Denny Noll 591, Tim Hanna
574, John Helman 565, Paul
Stubenrauch 526, Bob Hartman
522 (Sportsmen); Mike Sheeler
722, Tony Becker 688, Ricky
Winner 669, Jeff Becker 665,
Ced Yates 630, Marv Rote 625,
Jim Rosborough 618, Joseph
Carlo 609, Jon Lee 605, Brian
Harman 586, Larry Kibler Sr.
571 (Monday Hdcp); Chris Stum
709, Brent Fortney 690, Jim
Ritzman 680, Tim Livingston
666, Skip Eichelberger 665,
Tom Lappe 637, Gary Reed 600,
George Keyes 576 (Majors); Ryan
Lightner 300-768, Bob Lightner
725, Bob Miller 720, Win Randler
300-719, Walt Haubenreisser
672, Bill Lease 672, Kevin Eyster
672, Nick Borrell 641, Don Bailey
640, Ken Hoerner 632, Art
Reisinger 612, Gary Reven 607,
Wayne Conrad 555, Dave Novak
523 (Businessmen).
Women: Katrina Martin 634,
Shannon Lee 572, Kathy Miller
518, Terri Lee 496, Bobbi Griffith
461, Stacy Parsons 458, Ashleigh
Nolan 424, Heather Kreiser 416,
Cora Reese 381 (Pinbelles); Lisa
Farwell 642, Beth Garman 634,
Sherry Margucci 611, Karen Clark
566 (Majors).
Mixed: Sam Weber Jr. 649,
Charlie George Jr. 578, Robin
Baker 573, Kevin Darco 549,
Deb Whitebuffalo 503, Bobbi
Griffith 454, John Groff Jr. 441,
Matt Hood 418 (Mixed Outlaws);
Steve Decker 664, Shirlee
Waugh 627, Bill Lease 605, Dave
Whitebuffalo 590, Matt Decker
310 (Crackers); Bob Hartman
552, Gail Vanderwerf 500, Ryan
Gibson 438, Kirsten Thomas
352 (Monday Mixed); George
Keyton 557, Jason Mills 517, Cole
Eagleton 512, Tytus McGarvey
474, Tom Taylor 424 (Rookies).
Seniors: Lindy Condran 656,
Larry Condran 550, Rich Oliver
518, Harry Hershey 451, Jean
Condran 429 (Early Birds); Walt
Haubenreisser 655, Harry Grove
600, Art Ackerson 583, Lee
Young 571, Patrice Burkhardt
445, John Sweeney 399, Arlene
Chodkowski 324 (Community
Seniors); Jeff Stum 682, Lindy
Condran 623, Dale Hilsher 596,
LEISURE LANES
SPECIAL OLYMPICS
LNP CORRESPONDENT
Positive event
BARRY DECKER | LNP CORRESPONDENT PHOTOS
Charles Groff, of Millersville, and Caitlin Stafford, of Reinholds, carried the symbolic torch in opening ceremonies
during the 2016 Lancaster County Special Olympics
Bowling Tournament at 222 Dutch Lanes on Saturday.
For more photos, see lancasteronline.com.
C12
SPORTS
AUTO RACING
Gearing
up for
NASCAR
season
DAVID SCOTT
INVESTIGATION
Stewart, heckler
in confrontation
RECREATIONAL
SWIMMING
Ephrata Tidal Waves 540,
East Pennsboro Aquatic Club 476
Ephrata Results
BOYS
8 & younger
25 Freestyle 2. C. Rennix, 3. I. Schneider.
25 Breaststroke 2. K. Lagaspi.
25 Backstroke 2. N. King, 3. C. Rennix.
25 Butterfly 2. C. Rennix, 3. I. Schneider.
50 Freestyle 1. I. Schneider, 3. N. King.
100 Freestyle Relay A: 2. Ephrata (I.
Schneider, R.J. Dominey, C. Rennix, K. Legaspi).
9-10
50 Freestyle 3. L. Kimbel.
50 Breaststroke 2. A. Weaver.
50 Backstroke 1. L. Kimbel, 3. B. Bear.
50 Butterfly 1. B. Siple, 3. L. Kimbel
100 Freestyle 1. B. Siple, 2. A. Weaver.
100 IM 1. B. Sipel, 2. A. Weaver.
200 Freestyle Relay A: 1. Ephrata (L.
Kimbel, A. Weaver, R. Bear, B. Siple); B: 2.
Ephrata (E. Mentzer, C. Johnson-Null, T. Lorditch, K. Garcia).
11-12
50 Freestyle 1. O. Campbell, 2. N. Kimmel, 3. R. Sabol.
50 Breaststroke 1. T. McGillian, 2. N.
Young, 3. C. McSparran.
50 Backstroke 1. O. Campbell, 2. R.
Brubaker, 3. C. McSparran.
50 Butterfly 1. N. Kimmel, 2. C. McSparran, 3. N. Young.
100 Freestyle 1. O. Campbell, 2. R. Brubaker, 3. C. McSparran.
100 IM 1. T. McGillan, 3. C. Schwanger.
200 Medley Relay A: 1. Ephrata (R.
Brubaker, T. McGillian, O. Campbell, N. Kimmel); B: 2. Ephrata (C. Schwanger, N. Young,
C. McSparran, R. Sabol).
11-18
200 Freestyle 2. T. McGillian.
13-14
50 Freestyle 1. A. Zimmerman.
100 Breaststoke 2. P. Miller.
100 Freestyle 2. P. Miller.
100 Backstroke 2. P. Miller.
100 Butterfly 1. A. Zimmerman.
200 IM 1. K. Farrow, 2. A. Zimmerman.
GIRLS
8 & younger
25 Freestyle 2. L. Lutz, 3. K. Brass.
25 Breaststroke 2. B. Burkholder, 3. H.
Eby.
25 Backstroke 1. B. Burkholder, 2. A.
Musser, 3. K. Brass.
25 Butterfly 2. L. Lutz, 3. A. Musser.
50 Freestyle 2. L. Lutz, 3. O. Archibald.
100 IM 1. B. Burkholder.
100 Freestyle Relay A: 1. Ephrata (B.
Burkholder, K. Brass, O. Archibald, L. Lutz);
B: 3. Ephrata (G. Schwambach, A. Zimmerman, A. Musser, C. Burkholder).
9-10
50 Freestyle 2. K. Christopher, 3. E.
Kingston.
50 Breaststroke 3. K. Barshinger.
50 Backstroke 2. K. Barshinger.
50 Butterfly 2. O. Beard, 3. T. Roth.
100 Freestyle 1. O. Beard, 2. K.
Barshinger.
100 IM 3. E. Kingston.
200 Freestyle Relay A: 1. Ephrata
(M. Martin, K. Christopher, S. Brass, K.
Barshinger); B: 3. Ephrata (O. Beard, D.
Yocum-Pringle, E. Rennix, E. Kingston).
11-12
50 Freestyle 1. A. Fedorshak.
50 Breaststroke 3. L. Hocker.
50 Backstroke 2. A. Fedorshak.
50 Butterfly 3. J. Nolt.
100 Freestyle 1. A. Fedorshak, 3. J.
Moyer.
100 IM 2. J. Moyer, 3. K. Eby.
200 Medley Relay A: 1. Ephrata (A. Fedorshak, E. Huber, J. Nolt, L. Hocker); B: 2.
Ephrata (S. Siemion, M. Murphy, J. Moyer,
S. Ehrhart); C: 3. Ephrata (J. Pauley, K. Eby,
A. Kwiatkowski, A. Hovan).
11-18
200 Freestyle 1. M. Campbell, 2. E.
Mendenhall.
13-14
50 Freestyle 3. E. Mendenhall,.
100 Freestyle 2. M. Campbell, 3. L.
Weaver.
100 Breaststroke 1. L. Weaver.
100 Backstroke 2. L. Weaver, 3. E. Mendenhall.
100 Butterfly 3. A. Weaver.
200 IM 2. M. Campbell, 3. A. Weaver.
200 Medley Relay A: 2. Ephrata (L.
Weaver, M. Campbell, E. Mendenhall, A.
Weaver).
15-18
50 Freestyle 1. B. Fisher, 2. E. McCombs.
100 Freestyle 1. A. Zimmerman, 2. E.
McCombs.
100 Breaststroke 1. B. Fisher, 2. V. McCombs.
100 Backstroke 1. A. Zimmerman, 3. V.
McCombs.
100 Butterfly 1. A. Zimmer, 2. E. McCombs, 3. B. Fisher.
200 IM 1. E. McCombs.
200 Medley Relay A: 1. Ephrata (A.
Zimmeman, V. McCombs, E. McCombs, B.
Fisher).
SCHOLASTIC
SWIMMING
BOYS
L-L LEAGUE
Section One
League
Overall
W L T W L T
Hempfield................. 2 0 0 6 0 0
Warwick.................... 3 0 0 6 0 0
Cedar Crest............... 2 1 0 5 2 0
Manheim Twp.......... 1 1 0 5 1 0
McCaskey................. 0 3 0 2 3 0
Penn Manor.............. 0 3 0 2 4 0
Section Two
W L T W L T
Conestoga Valley...... 3 0 0 4 1 0
Elizabethtown........... 2 1 0 2 4 0
Lanc. Catholic........... 2 1 0 2 4 0
Cocalico.................... 1 1 0 2 4 0
Lamp.-Strasburg....... 1 1 0 1 5 0
Ephrata..................... 0 2 0 0 5 0
Manheim Central...... 0 3 0 0 6 0
GIRLS
L-L LEAGUE
Section One
League
Overall
W L T W L T
Manheim Twp.......... 2 0 0 6 0 0
Hempfield................. 2 0 0 6 0 0
Cedar Crest............... 2 1 0 6 1 0
Warwick.................... 2 1 0 5 1 0
Penn Manor.............. 0 3 0 3 3 0
McCaskey................. 0 3 0 1 4 0
Section Two
W L T W L T
Cocalico.................... 2 0 0 3 3 0
Elizabethtown........... 2 1 0 2 4 0
Lanc. Catholic........... 2 1 0 2 4 0
Lamp.-Strasburg....... 1 1 0 2 4 0
Ephrata..................... 1 2 0 1 4 0
Conestoga Valley...... 1 2 0 1 4 0
Manheim Central...... 0 3 0 0 6 0
HORSE RACING
PENN NATIONAL RESULTS
1st$14,300,5 1/2f
3-Sweet Liam (Otero W.)...... 4.80,3.60,2.80
4-True Belief (Gonzalez E.)............ 9.60,3.60
9-Durendal (Potts C.)............................ 3.00
Also Ran: Bears Pegasus, Gotsum Goldust, Revival Plus, Cosmic Crash, Old Key
West, Celoso, A Little Extra, Monba Jam-
OFF-TRACK WAGERING
TRANSACTIONS
BASKETBALL
National Basketball Association
CHICAGO BULLS Recalled F-C Cristiano
Felicio from Canton (NBADL).
FOOTBALL
National Football League
BALTIMORE RAVENS Named Leslie
Frazier secondary coach, Joe Cullen defensive line coach and Scott Cohen coaching
assistant/opponent analysis. Announced
cornerbacks coach Matt Weiss will become
the linebackers coach.
TENNESSEE TITANS Named Mike Mularkey coach.
HOCKEY
National Hockey League
ANAHEIM DUCKS Traded LW Carl
Hagelin to Pittsburgh for LW David Perron
and D Adam Clendening.
DALLAS STARS Loaned D Jamie Oleksiak to Texas (AHL) on a conditioning assignment.
LOS ANGELES KINGS Agreed to terms
with C Anze Kopitar on an eight-year contract.
American Hockey League
SAN ANTONIO RAMPAGE Recalled F
Alex Belzile from Fort Wayne (ECHL).
ECHL
ECHL Suspended Evansvilles Vincent
Dunn one game for his actions during a Jan.
15 game at Toledo. Suspended Wichitas
Erick Lizon indefinitely and fined him an
undisclosed amount for his actions during
a Jan. 15 game at Utah.
SOCCER
National Premier Soccer League
CORINTHIANS FC SA Named Benjamin
Galindo coach.
COLLEGE
OREGON Named Brady Hoke defensive coordinator.
UTAH STATE Named David Kotulski
linebackers coach.
UTEP Named Tom Mason defensive
coordinator.
GOLF
JOBURG OPEN LEADING SCORES
Saturday
At Royal Johannesburg and Kensington
Golf Club
Johannesburg
Purse: $978,310
e-East Course: 7,677 yards, par-72
w-West Course: 7,228 yards, par-71
Third Round
A. Wall, England........... 65w-67e-68e200
Z. Lombard, S. Africa..... 71e-64w-65e200
H. Porteous, S. Africa.... 66e-66w-68e200
R. McGowan, England.... 67e-62w-73e202
J. Blaauw, S. Africa........ 66w-69e-67e202
P. Dunne, Ireland.......... 71e-63w-68e202
D. Im, USA..................... 69e-68w-65e202
J. Hugo, S. Africa........... 67e-65w-71e203
J. Walters, S. Africa....... 65e-69w-69e203
B. Akesson, Sweden...... 70e-64w-70e204
R. West, S. Africa.......... 68e-69w-67e204
F. Aguilar, Chile............. 67e-65w-73e205
M. Siem, Germany........ 66w-70e-69e205
A. Haindl, S. Africa........ 72e-64w-69e205
J. Carlsson, Sweden...... 66e-67w-73e206
T. Fisher Jr., S. Africa..... 67w-70e-69e206
M. Williams, Zimbabwe... 65w-70e-71e206
Also
E. Els, S. Africa.............. 70w-70e-68e208
CONESTOGA
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
NHL
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Florida..........44 26 13 5 57 118 98
Detroit..........44 23 14 7 53 110 114
Boston..........44 23 16 5 51 133 116
Tampa Bay....44 23 17 4 50 116 106
Montreal.......45 23 18 4 50 126 113
Ottawa..........45 21 18 6 48 125 138
Buffalo..........45 18 23 4 40 105 122
Toronto.........43 16 20 7 39 108 122
Metropolitan Division
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Washington...44 33 8 3 69 144 95
N.Y. Rangers....44 24 15 5 53 127 115
N.Y. Islanders...44 24 15 5 53 122 110
New Jersey....46 22 19 5 49 101 110
Carolina........46 20 18 8 48 111 124
Pittsburgh.....43 20 16 7 47 103 108
Philadelphia...42 19 15 8 46 96 113
Columbus.....46 17 25 4 38 116 146
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Central Division
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Chicago.........47 30 13 4 64 135 108
Dallas............45 29 12 4 62 151 120
St. Louis........48 26 15 7 59 121 121
Minnesota....44 22 14 8 52 113 103
Colorado.......46 22 21 3 47 129 129
Nashville.......44 19 17 8 46 113 123
Winnipeg......45 21 21 3 45 118 129
Pacific Division
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Los Angeles....43 27 13 3 57 115 97
Arizona.........44 22 17 5 49 122 133
San Jose........42 22 18 2 46 120 114
Vancouver.....45 18 17 10 46 109 126
Anaheim.......43 19 17 7 45 86 102
Calgary..........42 20 20 2 42 115 129
Edmonton.....45 17 23 5 39 109 133
NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for
overtime loss.
Fridays Games
Boston 4....................................... Buffalo 1
Chicago 4..................................... Toronto 1
Vancouver 3........................ Carolina 2 (OT)
Tampa Bay 5.................... Pittsburgh 4 (OT)
Winnipeg 1............................. Minnesota 0
Anaheim 4...................................... Dallas 2
Saturdays Games
N.Y. Rangers 3............... Philadelphia 2 (SO)
New Jersey 2................................ Arizona 0
Ottawa 5................................ Los Angeles 3
Boston 3...................................... Toronto 2
Buffalo 4............................... Washington 1
Columbus 2................................ Colorado 1
St. Louis 4.......................... Montreal 3 (OT)
Minnesota at Nashville............................(n)
Calgary at Edmonton...............................(n)
Dallas at San Jose....................................(n)
Sundays Games
Carolina at Pittsburgh....................... 3 p.m.
Vancouver at N.Y. Islanders............... 4 p.m.
Florida at Tampa Bay........................ 5 p.m.
N.Y. Rangers at Washington.............. 5 p.m.
Montreal at Chicago......................... 7 p.m.
Philadelphia at Detroit................ 7:30 p.m.
Los Angeles at Anaheim................... 9 p.m.
Mondays Games
Edmonton at Florida.................... 7:30 p.m.
Pittsburgh at St. Louis....................... 8 p.m.
Colorado at Winnipeg....................... 8 p.m.
Buffalo at Arizona............................. 9 p.m.
Ottawa at San Jose.................... 10:30 p.m.
Rangers 3, Flyers 2
N.Y. Rangers......................1 1 0 0 3
Philadelphia.....................1 0 1 0 2
N.Y. Rangers won shootout 1-0
First Period1, Philadelphia, Schenn 10
(Couturier, Raffl), 3:58. 2, N.Y. Rangers, Miller 9 (McDonagh, Lundqvist), 16:08 (pp).
Second Period3, N.Y. Rangers, Kreider 7
(Nash, Stepan), 4:49.
Third Period4, Philadelphia, Simmonds
12 (Voracek, Giroux), 10:33 (pp).
OvertimeNone.
ShootoutN.Y. Rangers 1 (Zuccarello G,
Boyle NG), Philadelphia 0 (Gostisbehere
NG, Giroux NG, Voracek NG).
Shots on GoalN.Y. Rangers 16-4-9-2
31. Philadelphia 12-11-10-336.
GoaliesN.Y. Rangers, Lundqvist. Philadelphia, Mason. A19,843 (19,537).
T2:36.
Colorado............................... 0 1 0 1
Columbus.............................. 1 0 1 2
First Period1, Columbus, Dubinsky 9
(Murray, Jones), :58.
Second Period2, Colorado, Wagner 4
(Iginla, Bigras), 6:02.
Third Period3, Columbus, J.Johnson 6
(Goloubef, Saad), 18:53.
Shots on GoalColorado 6-13-1130.
Columbus 5-6-1021.
GoaliesColorado, Pickard. Columbus,
Korpisalo. A17,776 (18,144). T2:28.
Sabres 4, Capitals 1
Washington........................... 0 0 1 1
Buffalo.................................. 2 2 0 4
First Period1, Buffalo, Varone 1 (Ristolainen, Bogosian), 10:30. 2, Buffalo,
Schaller 1, 16:00 (sh).
Second Period3, Buffalo, Kane 9
(R.OReilly, Reinhart), 7:14. 4, Buffalo, Franson 4 (Kane, Bogosian), 15:37 (pp).
Third Period5, Washington, Johansson
11 (Chimera), 2:54.
Shots on GoalWashington 7-15-12
34. Buffalo 8-15-629.
GoaliesWashington, Holtby, Grubauer.
Buffalo, Johnson. A19,070 (19,070).
T2:28.
Devils 2, Coyotes 0
New Jersey............................ 1 0 1 2
Arizona.................................. 0 0 0 0
First Period1, New Jersey, Boucher 1
(Stempniak, Zajac), 3:52.
Second PeriodNone.
Third Period2, New Jersey, Palmieri 18
(Blandisi, Larsson), :18.
Shots on GoalNew Jersey 8-5-316.
Arizona 10-15-1338.
GoaliesNew Jersey, Schneider. Arizona,
Lindback. A11,745 (17,125). T2:25.
Senators 5, Kings 3
Ottawa.................................. 0 1 4 5
Los Angeles........................... 1 1 1 3
First Period1, Los Angeles, Carter 13
(Toffoli, Muzzin), 18:37.
Second Period2, Los Angeles, Lecavalier 1 (Carter, Ehrhoff), 7:48 (pp). 3, Ottawa,
Chiasson 3 (Lazar), 11:34.
Third Period4, Los Angeles, Toffoli 21
(Lucic, Kopitar), 3:05. 5, Ottawa, Ryan 14
(Zibanejad, Karlsson), 8:08. 6, Ottawa,
Pageau 10, 8:34. 7, Ottawa, Zibanejad 9
(Ryan, Ceci), 13:10 (pp). 8, Ottawa, Borowiecki 1 (Pageau), 19:46 (en).
Missed Penalty ShotToffoli, LA, 14:32
second.
Shots on GoalOttawa 7-5-1123. Los
Angeles 8-18-733.
GoaliesOttawa, Anderson. Los Angeles,
Quick. A18,230 (18,230). T2:29.
Toronto................................. 1 1 0 2
Boston................................... 1 1 1 3
First Period1, Boston, Bergeron 16
(Krug, K.Miller), :45. 2, Toronto, Komarov
16 (Kadri, Phaneuf), 4:31.
Second Period3, Boston, Bergeron 17
(Chara, Trotman), :39. 4, Toronto, Matthias
4 (Bozak), 17:16.
Third Period5, Boston, Marchand 16,
19:13.
Shots on GoalToronto 13-8-829. Boston 18-13-1445.
GoaliesToronto, Bernier. Boston, Rask.
A17,565 (17,565). T2:41.
BOWLING
CLEARVIEW
JUNIORS
Logan Hoover................ 170-267-269706
Mitchell Hoffmaster...... 246-227-187660
Alaina Telenko............... 156-219-147522
Alexis Lee....................... 182-167-161510
DUTCH
ZOO
Nick Sweigart................... 94-130-109333
Jocelyn Sweigart.............. 104-118-74296
COED
Matt Iseman.................. 150-198-211559
Brady Wiggins................ 199-191-165555
Nathan Barnica.............. 161-129-172462
Tess Pasker..................... 139-110-144393
Isabella Folts.................... 90-127-104321
Haley Jack.......................... 87-120-94301
SENIOR
Allison Kresko................ 236-246-173655
Paige Boyd..................... 215-227-182624
Tony Lutz....................... 222-204-177603
LEISURE
BANTAM/PREP
Cameron Getz................ 104-134-127365
Christopher Hull................ 93-89-152334
Kayla Wasche................... 101-99-103303
Aidan Sofillas................... 70-111-110291
JUNIORS
Tyler Miller.................... 227-178-161566
AnnaBelle Allison........... 164-181-179524
Adam Overly.................. 172-189-158519
MAJORS
John Mertz III................. 209-216-257682
Nick Fisher..................... 218-218-218654
Tyler Gardner................. 254-171-191616
Shawn Mertz................. 203-182-221606
Nick Mease.................... 200-222-184606
Austin Allison................. 194-180-219593
Tyler Lappa.................... 253-171-156580
Cassie Hatfield............... 182-188-189559
Emily Scheurich............. 138-137-202477
AHL
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
W L OL SL Pct Pts GF GA
W-B/Scran.... 28 9 0 1 .750 57 129 83
Portland........ 22 13 1 0 .625 45 117 93
Hershey........ 21 13 1 5 .600 48 124 123
Providence.... 17 15 5 1 .526 40 109 112
Bridgeport.... 19 18 2 1 .513 41 101 109
Hartford........ 18 19 2 0 .487 38 93 112
Lehigh Val..... 17 21 2 1 .451 37 110 114
Springfield.... 14 21 1 2 .408 31 93 122
North Division
W L OL SL Pct Pts GF GA
Toronto......... 31 7 2 0 .800 64 154 94
Albany........... 23 9 5 0 .689 51 107 81
Utica............. 18 15 3 3 .538 42 112 109
St. Johns....... 16 14 5 3 .526 40 111 126
Syracuse....... 17 15 6 1 .526 41 101 110
Rochester..... 18 18 2 1 .500 39 94 125
Binghamton... 15 20 3 0 .434 33 109 123
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Central Division
W L OL SL Pct Pts GF GA
Rockford....... 22 10 2 3 .662 49 108 98
Gr. Rapids..... 23 12 0 1 .653 47 112 86
Charlotte....... 23 12 1 1 .649 48 116 106
Milwaukee.... 24 13 2 0 .641 50 110 104
Lake Erie....... 19 13 3 3 .579 44 100 103
Chicago......... 17 16 1 2 .514 37 104 100
Manitoba...... 11 20 2 3 .375 27 75 117
Iowa................ 9 25 2 3 .295 23 78 121
Pacific Division
W L OL SL Pct Pts GF GA
Ontario......... 20 9 2 1 .672 43 86 65
San Jose........ 18 10 3 3 .618 42 100 99
Texas............. 20 14 3 3 .575 46 153 138
San Diego...... 17 15 1 1 .529 36 89 101
San Antonio... 16 16 7 0 .500 39 110 121
Bakersfield.... 14 14 2 2 .500 32 91 94
Stockton....... 13 15 1 2 .468 29 91 98
NOTE: Two points are awarded for a
win., one point for an overtime or shootout
loss.
Saturdays Games
Charlotte 3........................ Manitoba 2 (OT)
Toronto 6................................... St. Johns 3
Utica 1................................... Albany 0 (OT)
Hershey 4............................... Springfield 3
Syracuse 4.......................... W-B/Scranton 2
Portland 3............................... Bridgeport 1
Rochester 2........................... Binghamton 1
Hartford 2........................... Lehigh Valley 1
San Jose at Iowa......................................(n)
Stockton at Rockford...............................(n)
Milwaukee at San Antonio......................(n)
Lake Erie at Chicago.................................(n)
Bakersfield at Ontario..............................(n)
Texas at San Diego...................................(n)
Sundays Games
Toronto at St. Johns.................... 2:30 p.m.
Portland at Providence................ 3:05 p.m.
Chicago at Grand Rapids................... 4 p.m.
Springfield at Hershey...................... 5 p.m.
Lehigh Valley at Bridgeport.............. 5 p.m.
Manitoba at Charlotte................. 5:30 p.m.
Stockton at Iowa............................... 6 p.m.
Texas at Ontario................................ 6 p.m.
Mondays Games
Lake Erie at Rockford........................ 2 p.m.
Hartford at Providence................ 3:05 p.m.
Syracuse at Rochester................. 3:05 p.m.
Bakersfield at San Jose................ 4:15 p.m.
Springfield........................1 2 0 0 3
Hershey............................1 1 1 0 4
1st Period-1, Hershey, Barber 6 (Boyd,
Leach), 10:05. 2, Springfield, Grant 7 17:46
(PP). Penalties-Bowey Her (interference),
11:34; Cunningham Spr (boarding), 12:28;
Barber Her (hooking), 16:44; Bowey Her
(boarding), 19:21.
2nd Period-3, Hershey, Barber 7 (Bowey,
Djoos), 4:38 (PP). 4, Springfield, Carey 12
(Cunningham, Grant), 9:52. 5, Springfield,
Thomas 9 (Jeffrey, Grant), 18:47 (PP).
Penalties-Grant Spr (delay of game), 2:54;
Barber Her (hooking), 17:47; Bourque Her
(slashing), 19:18.
3rd Period-6, Hershey, Bourque 18 (Barber, Brown), 12:53 (PP). Penalties-Grant Spr
(holding), 11:28.
OT Period- No Scoring. Penalties-No Penalties
Shootout - Springfield 1 (Carey NG, Cunningham NG, Thomas NG, Jeffrey G, Monardo NG), Hershey 2 (Bourque NG, Boyd
NG, Gazley NG, Carrick G, Djoos G).
Shots on Goal-Springfield 13-15-6-2-036. Hershey 17-8-7-3-1-36.
Power Play Opportunities-Springfield 2 of
5; Hershey 2 of 3.
Goalies-Springfield, Langhamer 1-2-1 (35
shots-32 saves). Hershey, Ellis 12-6-2 (36
shots-33 saves).
A-10,568
GYMNASTICS
PRESTIGE
At Hyattsville, MD
Friday
LEVEL SIX
Child A
A. Lopez beam, 9.5, 3rd. T. Peters
floor, 9.575, 1st; all-around, 37.275, 2nd.
Junior A
E. Oriel bars, 8.95, 3rd; beam, 9.375,
2nd; floor, 9.5, 2nd; all-around, 36.975,
2nd. M. Heintzelman beam, 9.275, 3rd;
all-around, 36.625, 3rd.
Junior B
M. Karpathios beam, 9.550, 2nd.
Saturday
LEVEL NINE
Session 9
Junior A
E. Leese vault 9.1, 1st; floor 9.4, 1st,
all-around 35.9, 2nd.
Senior B
B. Reitnauer floor 9.275, 1st.
Session 10
Junior A
A. Nikolaus floor 9.2, 3rd. S. Sober
vault 9.15, 3rd; all-around 35.575, 3rd. E.
Cesarone beam 9.3, 3rd.
SCOREBOARD
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
SPORTS SLATE
SQUASH
COLLEGIATE MEN
Franklin & Marshall vs. Middlebury at
Williams, 11 a.m.
Franklin & Marshall at Williams, 2 p.m.
COLLEGIATE WOMEN
Franklin & Marshall vs. Middlebury at
Williams, 11 a.m.
Franklin & Marshall at Williams, 2 p.m.
WRESTLING
SCHOLASTIC
NONLEAGUE
Solanco at Council Rock So., TBD
NBA
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
W
L Pct GB
Toronto.......................25 15 .625
Boston........................22 19 .537 31-w
New York....................20 21 .488 51-w
Brooklyn.....................11 30 .268 141-w
Philadelphia..................5 37 .119 21
Southeast Division
W
L Pct GB
Atlanta........................24 17 .585
Miami.........................23 17 .575
1-w
Orlando......................20 19 .513
3
Washington................19 20 .487
4
Charlotte.....................18 22 .450 51-w
Central Division
W
L Pct GB
Cleveland....................28 10 .737
Chicago.......................23 16 .590 51-w
Indiana........................22 18 .550
7
Detroit........................22 18 .550
7
Milwaukee..................18 25 .419 121-w
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Southwest Division
W
L Pct GB
San Antonio................35
6 .854
Dallas..........................23 18 .561 12
Memphis....................22 19 .537 13
Houston......................21 20 .512 14
New Orleans...............13 26 .333 21
Northwest Division
W
L Pct GB
Oklahoma City............29 12 .707
Utah............................17 22 .436 11
Portland......................18 25 .419 12
Denver........................15 25 .375 131-w
Minnesota..................12 29 .293 17
Pacific Division
W
L Pct GB
Golden State...............37
4 .902
L.A. Clippers................26 13 .667 10
Sacramento................16 23 .410 20
Phoenix.......................13 28 .317 24
L.A. Lakers.....................9 32 .220 28
Fridays Games
Oklahoma City 113............... Minnesota 93
Washington 118...................... Indiana 104
Portland 116.......................... Brooklyn 104
Boston 117.............................. Phoenix 103
Dallas 83.................................... Chicago 77
New Orleans 109.................. Charlotte 107
Milwaukee 108................. Atlanta 101 (OT)
Miami 98.................................... Denver 95
Cleveland 91............................. Houston 77
Saturdays Games
Milwaukee 105....................... Charlotte 92
Philadelphia 114....................... Portland 89
Detroit 113........................ Golden State 95
Boston 119....................... Washington 117
Atlanta 114.............................. Brooklyn 86
New York at Memphis.............................(n)
L.A. Lakers at Utah...................................(n)
Sacramento at L.A. Clippers.....................(n)
Sundays Games
Phoenix at Minnesota................. 3:30 p.m.
Dallas at San Antonio....................... 7 p.m.
Miami at Oklahoma City................... 7 p.m.
Indiana at Denver............................. 8 p.m.
Houston at L.A. Lakers................. 9:30 p.m.
Mondays Games
Philadelphia at New York.................. 1 p.m.
Portland at Washington.................... 2 p.m.
Utah at Charlotte.............................. 2 p.m.
New Orleans at Memphis............ 2:30 p.m.
Chicago at Detroit........................ 3:30 p.m.
Orlando at Atlanta............................ 5 p.m.
Brooklyn at Toronto..................... 7:30 p.m.
Golden State at Cleveland................ 8 p.m.
Boston at Dallas........................... 8:30 p.m.
Houston at L.A. Clippers............ 10:30 p.m.
MENS
BASKETBALL
SATURDAYS SCORES
EAST
Adelphi 77................. S. New Hampshire 72
Buffalo 74....................... Cent. Michigan 61
Catholic 73................................ Scranton 62
Clarkson 84.......................William Smith 70
Colgate 84..................................Bucknell 73
Columbia 74................................Cornell 70
Drew 76.............................Susquehanna 74
Duquesne 95.................St. Bonaventure 88
Edinboro 61....................Pitt.-Johnstown 59
Farmingdale 70................................Sage 51
F&M 82...................... Washington (Md.) 72
Grove City 68...................................Thiel 59
Holy Family 83............ Wilmington (Del.) 55
Houghton 91................................... Utica 83
James Madison 86...............Hofstra 82 (OT)
LIU Brooklyn 79............................Bryant 61
Lehigh 87................................Holy Cross 66
Mass.-Lowell 95.................... UMBC 89 (OT)
Mount St. Marys 82.......St. Francis (Pa.) 72
Navy 87.....................................Lafayette 61
Northeastern 69...................... Delaware 60
Old Westbury 72.......................Purchase 55
Pittsburgh 84.................. Boston College 61
Rhode Island 73.......................... La Salle 62
Robert Morris 64...... Fairleigh Dickinson 58
Saint Josephs 80......................Fordham 55
Sciences (Pa.) 77.................Chestnut Hill 66
Seton Hall 81........................ Providence 72
St. Francis Brooklyn 85.......Sacred Heart 67
Stockton 87.................................... Kean 54
Stony Brook 80..............New Hampshire 50
Temple 67......................Cincinnati 65 (2OT)
Towson 69.................................... Drexel 50
Vermont 83................................Hartford 68
Villanova 55........................ Georgetown 50
Wagner 70......................................CCSU 48
William Paterson 81...........College of NJ 76
Yale 77..........................................Brown 68
SOUTH
Alabama A&M 80..........Alabama St. 75 (OT
Alcorn St. 93........................MVSU 87 (3OT)
Asbury 76..................... Indiana-Kokomo 58
Auburn 75.................................Kentucky 70
Barton 85........................Belmont Abbey 71
Bellarmine 81.............................. Quincy 79
Belmont 76...........................Austin Peay 58
Berea 83.................................. Hiwassee 75
Bethel (Tenn.) 107......... Brewton-Parker 86
Carson-Newman 88....................... Coker 73
Charleston Southern 82........... Campbell 75
Chattanooga 94.............................. ETSU 84
Clayton St. 87...............................Flagler 73
Clemson 76................................... Miami 65
Cleveland St. 70................... N. Kentucky 65
Coastal Carolina 71.................High Point 68
Coastal Georgia 61.... Martin Methodist 60 (OT)
Coppin St. 62............ Bethune-Cookman 54
Cumberlands 78.................St. Catharine 58
Davidson 86................................. UMass 74
Elon 65.......................Coll. of Charleston 64
FAU 63............................. Louisiana Tech 61
Florida 80............................... Mississippi 71
Florida A&M 72.....................Morgan St. 65
Florida Gulf Coast 85.............SC-Upstate 56
Freed-Hardeman 80..... Missouri Baptist 68
Georgetown (Ky.) 80... Lindsey Wilson 77 (OT)
Georgia Southern 66.....Louisiana-Monroe 51
Grambling St. 66.................. Prairie View 63
Guilford 81.......................... Shenandoah 69
Hampden-Sydney 69.....Washington & Lee 63
Hampton 79................................NC A&T 62
Harvard 69..................................Howard 61
Houston Baptist 73.............New Orleans 69
Incarnate Word 75...............SE Louisiana 71
Jacksonville 76......................... Lipscomb 73
Jacksonville St. 82................... UT Martin 60
Johnson C. Smith 81........ Fayetteville St. 77
King (Tenn.) 114...........................Erskine 45
Lane 81..........................LeMoyne-Owen 78
Lee 98......................................... Shorter 83
Louisiana-Lafayette 87...........Georgia St. 54
Maryland 100.............................Ohio St. 65
McNeese St. 72............Sam Houston St. 68
Memphis 71...................... South Florida 56
Mercer 70.......................... Wofford 69 (OT)
Middle Tennessee 64........ Old Dominion 61
Milligan 77........................... St. Andrews 70
NJIT 71........................................ Stetson 59
Norfolk St. 88......................... NC Central 79
North Carolina 67......................NC State 55
North Florida 93................Kennesaw St. 78
Notre Dame 95............................... Duke 91
Pfeiffer 87........................... Mount Olive 71
Pikeville 81....................... Campbellsville 67
Presbyterian 69..........................Radford 68
Reinhardt 103................................ Bryan 98
Rhodes 66...................................Hendrix 60
Roanoke 91..................Randolph-Macon 85
SC State 90.......................... Delaware St. 79
Samford 84........................... W. Carolina 68
Savannah St. 68.........Md.-Eastern Shore 61
Sewanee 77..................................Centre 52
South Alabama 88......Texas-Arlington 85 (OT)
South Carolina 81..................... Missouri 72
Southern Miss. 66............................. FIU 60
Spalding 76................................Webster 67
Syracuse 83......................... Wake Forest 55
Tenn. Wesleyan 76.......Truett McConnell 46
Tennessee 80....................Mississippi St. 75
Texas A&M 79.............................Georgia 45
Texas Southern 71................. Jackson St. 65
The Citadel 89.............................Furman 86
Troy 66.......................................Texas St. 57
UAB 74..................................... Charlotte 72
UCF 89................................East Carolina 69
UNC Asheville 75............ Gardner-Webb 69
UNC Wilmington 97..William & Mary 94 (OT)
WOMENS
BASKETBALL
SATURDAYS SCORES
EAST
Adelphi 72................. S. New Hampshire 68
Akron 69...................................... Buffalo 61
Albany (NY) 64.............................. Maine 59
Army 52...............................American U. 42
Bryant 63............................ LIU Brooklyn 55
Bucknell 71................................... Colgate 5
CCSU 62......................................Wagner 52
Cornell 66................................ Columbia 59
Drew 68.............................Susquehanna 59
Fairfield 59.............................Manhattan 57
Fairleigh Dickinson 83.......Robert Morris 68
F&M 59...................... Washington (Md.) 42
Grove City 67...................................Thiel 45
Hartford 51............................... Vermont 47
Holy Family 93............ Wilmington (Del.) 78
Houghton 68................................... Utica 62
Loyola (Md.) 63.......................Boston U. 54
Navy 65............................. Lafayette 58 (OT)
Old Westbury 82..................Purchase St. 57
Pitt.-Johnstown 80....................Edinboro 65
Rhode Island 72.......................... La Salle 61
Richmond 74............................... UMass 68
Sacred Heart 68.......St. Francis Brooklyn 51
Sage 74............................... Farmingdale 51
St. Bonaventure 70..........George Mason 55
St. Francis (Pa.) 87.......Mount St. Marys 57
St. Michaels 65...................Post (Conn.) 60
Stockton 60.................................... Kean 54
Stony Brook 63..............New Hampshire 54
UConn 104...................................Temple 49
UMBC 68............................Mass.-Lowell 44
West Virginia 72.......................... Kansas 35
Yale 81..........................................Brown 54
SOUTH
Alabama St. 86................Alabama A&M 50
Alcorn St. 81................................. MVSU 66
Asbury 87..................... Indiana-Kokomo 57
Augusta 79......................... Columbus St. 72
Belmont 88...........................Austin Peay 82
Belmont Abbey 68....................... Barton 66
Berea 83.................................. Hiwassee 75
Bethel (Tenn.) 75........... Brewton-Parker 60
Bethune-Cookman 69............Coppin St. 56
Bryan 68..................................Reinhardt 66
Campbellsville 67...................... Pikeville 54
Carson-Newman 88....................... Coker 49
Chattanooga 72...........UNC-Greensboro 61
Claflin 58................................. Spring Hill 42
Clayton St. 70...............................Flagler 58
Coastal Carolina 73....Charleston Southern 62
Coastal Georgia 52.....Martin Methodist 48
ETSU 74................................ W. Carolina 62
Emory & Henry 79.......Randolph-Macon 61
Erskine 75............................ King (Tenn.) 70
Fayetteville St. 68........Johnson C. Smith 59
Florida Gulf Coast 54.............SC-Upstate 43
Freed-Hardeman 87..... Missouri Baptist 53
Furman 70................................. Wofford 61
Gardner-Webb 58.............UNC Asheville 56
Grambling St. 69.......... Prairie View 66 (OT)
Hampton 55................................NC A&T 52
Hendrix 51.................................. Rhodes 38
Houston Baptist 71.............New Orleans 51
Incarnate Word 70...............SE Louisiana 66
Jacksonville 81......................... Lipscomb 51
Kennesaw St. 70................North Florida 55
Lee 64......................................... Shorter 48
Liberty 77................................ Winthrop 61
Limestone 91............................Converse 54
Lindsey Wilson 64........Georgetown (Ky.) 52
Louisiana Tech 65............................. FAU 62
Louisiana-Lafayette 77...........Georgia St. 57
Louisiana-Monroe 50.....Georgia Southern 49
Loyola NO 67............................ Faulkner 57
Marshall 81.......................................Rice 52
McNeese St. 82............Sam Houston St. 79
Mercer 63..................................Samford 60
Morgan St. 67..................... Florida A&M 62
NC Central 63........................ Norfolk St. 62
Old Dominion 61....... Middle Tennessee 58
Quincy 83.............................. Bellarmine 75
Radford 79..............................Longwood 67
SC State 61.......................... Delaware St. 48
SE Missouri 60............... Tennessee Tech 57
BOYS
BASKETBALL
L-L LEAGUE
Section One
League
W L
Cedar Crest..................10 1
McCaskey......................9 2
Hempfield......................8 3
Manheim Township.......6 5
Penn Manor...................3 8
Warwick.........................2 9
Section Two
League
W L
Lebanon.........................8 3
Conestoga Valley...........7 4
Garden Spot..................5 6
Solanco..........................4 7
Elizabethtown................2 9
Ephrata..........................2 9
Section Three
League
W L
Lamp.-Strasburg..........10 1
Elco................................9 2
Cocalico.........................9 2
Manheim Central...........8 3
Donegal.........................5 6
N. Lebanon....................2 9
Section Four
League
W L
Lanc. Catholic................8 3
Lanc. Mennonite...........6 5
Pequea Valley................3 8
Ann.-Cleona...................3 8
Columbia.......................3 8
Leb. Catholic..................0 11
TRI VALLEY
C13
GIRLS
BASKETBALL
NONLEAGUE
SCHOLASTIC
WRESTLING
Hempfield 55, Ephrata 11
Overall
W L
14 2
11 4
11 5
8 8
6 9
4 13
Overall
W L
11 5
12 5
8 7
8 9
4 12
3 12
Overall
W L
14 1
14 2
13 3
11 4
6 10
5 11
Overall
W L
9 7
7 9
5 11
5 12
6 10
2 13
JUNIATA (64)
T. Clark 1 2-2 16, J. Mingle 3 4-4 13, A.
White 2 0-0 10, B. Clark 4 0-0 8, J. Parson 4
0-2 8, B. Leonard 2 0-0 4, A. Zendt 0 0-0 0.
Totals 17 7-10 64.
LANCASTER COUNTRY DAY (37)
T. Eynon 2 2-2 15, S. Frick 1 2-4 4, P. Price
2 0-0 4, L. Walling 2 0-0 4, T. Cody 2 0-0 4, A.
Burke 0 0-0 3, S. Maley 0 3-4 3, A. Williams
0 0-0 0, W. Lisk 0-0 0, J. Starzyk 0-0 0, D. Izzo
0-0 0, F. Rangel 0-0 0, J. Adler 0-0 0, B. Fry
0-0 0, K. Lojewski 0-0 0. Totals 9 7-10 37.
Juniata.................... 14 17 22 9 64
Lanc. Country Day..... 6 14 8 9 37
3-Point Goals T. Clark 4, A. White 2, J.
Mingle; T. Eynon 3, A. Burke. Fouled Out
None.
NONLEAGUE
LAMPETER-STRASBURG (55)
M. Achille 4 3-4 11, C. Brown 4 1-1 9, L.
Beers 3 0-0 8, J. Boynton 4 0-2 8, B. Sandberg 4 0-1 8, D. Metz 3 0-1 6, I. Beers 1 0-0
3, J. Groff 0 2-2 2, L. Miller 0 0-0 0. Totals
23 6-11 55.
OCTORARA (53)
J. Ray 5 6-8 16, C. Ray 5 3-6 13, D. London
5 0-0 13, J. Dickinson 2 0-0 4, S. Pugh 2 0-0
4, J. Mayo 1 0-0 3. Totals 20 9-14 53.
Lampeter-Stras........ 16 11 11 17 55
Octorara.................. 16 16 15 6 53
C14
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Lancaster Weather
TODAY
MONDAY
36
17
TUESDAY
26
13
REGION
LANCASTER
Some sun, then clouds today. High
34 to 38. Winds southwest 4-8
mph. Partly cloudy tonight with a
snow shower. Low 15 to 19. Winds
west 7-14 mph.
40
30
12 AM 3
9 NOON 3
9 12 AM
Brownstown
Columbia
County Park
Ephrata
Flory Mill
Manheim
Mount Joy
Smoketown
Truce
Below
Flood
5.91
39.18
11.09
9.82
3.85
2.16
Bradford
26/7
500
NATION
Scranton
32/15
Harrisburg
38/19
Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
-8/-22
Atlanta
48/29
El Paso
61/33
Houston
56/37
Chihuahua
63/28
Jan 23 Jan 31
Feb 8 Feb 15
T-storms
-10s
Rain
Showers
-0s
Washington
41/23
Kansas City
14/1
Los Angeles
69/52
TODAY
MON
Sunrise
7:25 a.m. 7:24 a.m.
Sunset
5:06 p.m. 5:07 p.m.
Moonrise 12:06 p.m. 12:47 p.m.
Moonset
12:45 a.m. 1:52 a.m.
Full
Last
New
First
New York
39/24
Detroit
Chicago 22/9
6/-4
Denver
39/25
0s
Snow
10s
Montreal
19/15
Toronto
25/11
Minneapolis
-4/-14
Billings
25/18
San Francisco
59/54
Flurries
Ice
30s
Cold Front
40s
50s
60s
Warm Front
70s
80s
100s
M ..................................$23,855
MSRP
HHONDRU DISCOUNT ............ -$1,610
RRetail Trade-In Assistance Cash .. -$2,000
Competitive
C
Lease Rebate ..... -$500
LEASE FOR
$189
STK#16F335
LEASE FOR
$129
YOUR PRICE
47
AVAILABLE
LEASE FOR
$19,745
STK#16F188
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.
MON
Hi/Lo/W
28/22/sf
48/29/s
39/26/c
39/23/c
36/27/pc
26/10/sn
25/10/sn
6/-4/pc
46/27/pc
55/33/pc
39/25/c
38/19/pc
82/65/pc
60/43/s
69/52/pc
42/14/pc
55/41/s
39/24/c
69/42/r
40/24/c
68/46/s
32/8/sf
40/29/c
59/54/r
41/23/c
29/24/pc
40/21/s
29/18/pc
28/14/pc
30/15/sn
18/8/sf
15/10/sf
9/0/pc
40/18/s
52/41/pc
50/27/s
27/14/pc
82/66/s
64/42/pc
66/54/c
29/13/s
57/40/s
30/18/pc
62/39/s
31/18/pc
71/46/pc
15/7/sf
39/29/r
59/53/r
29/16/pc
High:
Low:
82 at Naples, FL
-26 at Rugby, ND
MANHEIM
$29,495
Lancaster
665-3551
17
AVAILABLE
MSRP ..................................$50,135
HONDRU DISCOUNT ............ -$4,750
Factory Rebate.................... -$4,750
Ford Package Discount ....... -$2,000
Competitive Lease Rebate ..... -$500
2015 FORD
MSRP ..................................$25,885
HONDRU DISCOUNT .............-$1,138
Factory Rebate.....................-$1,500
Ford Credit Bonus ................-$1,000
CCompetitive Lease Rebate ......-$500
CMAX SE
STK#15F871
40 MPGs
YOUR PRICE
$21,747
YOUR PRICE
$12,000
OFF!
**36 mo
$0 Security Deposit
$2,799 Due At Signing
Tax, Tags, License & $134 Doc fee extra
110s
YOUR PRICE
2015
FORD F150 CREW/C 4X4
STK#15F850
34
AVAILABLE
TODAY
Hi/Lo/W
..................................$32,330
2016 FORD EXPLORER MSRP
HONDRU DISCOUNT ............ -$1,335
**36 mo
**36 mo
$0 Security Deposit
$0 Security Deposit
$2,599 Due At Signing
$3,000 Due At Signing
Tax, Tags, License & $134 Doc fee extra Tax, Tags, License & $134 Doc fee extra
$16,945
0
21
10
12
30
25
11
2
14
20
14
17
20
18
31
17
3
18
17
NATION
Mt. Joy
$20,395
YOUR PRICE
12-36
23-35
24-24
25-25
24-48
12-36
24-48
020-34
24-24
14-24
21-27
24-40
18-36
30-30
31-45
6-12
23-28
16-20
E-TOWN
YOUR PRICE
29
AVAILABLE
**36 mo
$0 Security Deposit
$3,079 Due At Signing
Tax, Tags, License & $134 Doc fee extra
MSRP ..................................$21,070
HONDRU DISCOUNT .............-$1,375
Fa
Factory Rebate.....................-$3,000
Trade Assist ............................-$750
Tra
$119
MSRP ..................................$25,140
HONDRU DISCOUNT ............ -$1,710
Retail Trade-In Assistance Cash .. -$2,000
Competitive Lease Rebate ..... -$500
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
Source: OnTheSnow.com
Harrisburg
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
90s
HONDRUAUTO.COM
New Trails
Base Snow Open
SATURDAY EXTREMES
Miami
78/55
Monterrey
66/37
20s
SKI REPORT
Resort
Seattle
51/42
7.15
Williamsport
Punxsutawney
35/16
Wilkes-Barre
30/9
34/17
State College
33/12
HISTORY
RIVER STAGES
Susquehanna
at Harrisburg
at Marietta
Conestoga
at Lancaster
at Conestoga
300
POP: 35%
0.55
0.51
0.47
0.51
0.63
N.A.
0.55
N.A.
N.A.
POP: 20%
Altoona
34/10
Yesterdays readings
Main Pollutant
Particulates
Particulates
39
Ozone
32
POP: 10%
Mostly cloudy
Butler
31/8
Todays forecast
PRECIPITATION
37
24
Oil City
29/10
AIR QUALITY
Source: www.atmos.millersville.edu/~wic
37
23
POCONOS
Mostly cloudy today. High 27 to
31. A flurry or heavier squall with
little or no accumulation tonight.
37
21
Thickening clouds
Erie
28/14
DELAWAREMARYLAND
Some sun today. A bit of snow in
the south and at the Delaware
coast; a flurry in central parts. High
28 to 41.
TEMPERATURE
Lancaster
49/38
Ephrata
50/38
New Holland
50/39
Lancaster (last year)
40/19
Normals for the day
38/22
Year to date high
60 on Jan. 10
Year to date low
10 on Jan. 6
PRECIPITATION
24 hours ending 7 p.m.
0.47
Month to date
1.51
Normal month to date
1.60
Month to date departure
-0.09
Year to date
1.51
Normal year to date
1.60
Year to date departure
-0.09
Greatest Jan. total
8.12 (1979)
Least Jan. total
0.13 (1981)
POP: 5%
ALMANAC
50
32
19
POP: 0%
WEDNESDAY
26
17
POP: 40%
POP: 5%
$38,135
72
AVAILABLE
**36 mo
$0 Security Deposit
$2,879 Due At Signing
Tax, Tags, License & $134 Doc fee extra
LEASE FOR
$187
Tax, tags, lic, $134 Doc Fee extra. All lease payments include all red carpet lease rebates. Lease payments also include competitive lease conquest rebate which is when customers that currently lease a non-ford/lincoln/mercury motor company car, suv or light duty truck will receive conquest cash towards the
purchase or lease of an eligible new vehicle. Not all buyers will qualify. Availability includes in stock, transit, and scheduled production units Available units include in stock, in transit, and balance to schedule units. *0% AVAILABLE IN LEIU OF OTHER REBATES. All prices good until 2/1/2016 (Not responsible for typos)
2015 CHEVY
MSRP ..................................$14,630
HONDRU DISCOUNT ............... -$635
Chevy Conquest Cash ............... -$1,000
Chevy Bonus Cash ...................... -$500
Chevy Consumer Rebate .............. -$500
SPARK
STK#15C368
2015 CHEVY
SONIC LT
STK#15C161
9 SONICS
AVAILABLE
YOUR PRICE
$11,995
MSRP ..................................$18,085
HONDRU DISCOUNT ............ -$1,090
Chevy Conquest Cash ............... -$2,000
Chevy Bonus Cash ................... -$1,000
Chevy Consumer Rebate .............. -$500
2016 CHEVY
VY
CRUZE
129
MO
STK#16H011
22 CRUZES
AVAILABLE
YOUR PRICE
$14,495
MSRP ..................................$19,810
HONDRU DISCOUNT ............... -$511
Chevy Consumer Cash ................ -$1,000
Chevy Competitive Lease Cash ... -$1,500
Chevy Bonus Cash ...................... -$500
LEASE FOR
$
YOUR PRICE
$16,299
2016 CHEVY
MALIBU
STK#15H324
YOUR PRICE
$17,955
STK#16C048
6 TRAX
AVAILABLE
189
MO
YOUR PRICE
$20,995
2016 CHEVY
STK#16H014
13 EQUINOX
AVAILABLE
367-6644 OR 1-877-924-6644
24 mo
$0 Security Deposit
$0 Due At Signing
Tax, Tags, License & $134 Doc fee extra
Includes Competitive Lease Cash
UP TO
42 MPG
2015 CHEVY
2 GREAT
LOCATIONS!
179
MO
RT. 72 MANHEIM
YOUR PRICE
$22,931
24 mo
$0 Security Deposit
$0 Due At Signing
Tax, Tags, License & $134 Doc fee extra
Includes Competitive Lease Cash
4 Corvettes Available
2-Z06s Available
$11,622
OFF!!!
YOUR PRICE
$39,581
24 mo
$0 Security Deposit
$1,750 Due At Signing
Tax, Tags, License & $134 Doc fee extra
Includes Competitive Lease Cash
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n SEND STORY TIPS & INFO TO: TIM MEKEEL, 481-6030, TMEKEEL@LNPNEWS.COM
RELOCATION
MICHELLE SINGLETARY
THE COLOR OF MONEY
To achieve
financial
goals, let it go
WASHINGTON At
the beginning of the
year, we often talk about
the new things we want
to see happen in our
lives.
When it comes to your
finances, you might
promise to save more or
spend less. You may now
have a plan to reduce
your debt.
But what causes so
many people to fail at
their financial goals?
They cant change and
move forward because
they havent faced their
past. This January, I
want to challenge you
to do something to help
keep your New Years
resolutions.
Let it go.
The reason you cant
keep your financial
resolutions can usually
be traced to the issues,
resentments or childhood memories you just
cant release.
Many of you will have
to dig deep to get to the
root of your problems.
Or, if you cant figure
them out, seek counseling.
So, what do you need
to let go?
Ill start.
As readers of this
column know, my
grandmother Big Mama
raised me. And although
she was a master at
handling her money, she
worried about making
ends meet. I get why she
worried. She was raising
five grandchildren on a
nurses aides salary, and
she had a husband who
had a drinking problem.
Not all of his paycheck
made it home any given
pay week.
Despite the challenges,
Big Mama managed to
pay all her bills on
time, all the time. But
she verbalized her
money worries all the
time.
Big Mama passed on to
me her skills as a money
manager. I also inherited her spirit of worry.
Ive been working on
this worry thing and
nearly have it beat. Yet
it still lingers in the back
of my mind. My husband
and I faithfully save for
the luxuries we want,
but when it comes time
to spend, I fret. I become
anxious about spending
what weve saved. I can
hear my grandmother
say, You just never
know whats going to
happen.
What if I lose my job?
What if my husband
loses his job? What if
one of us gets sick and
cant work? I have a fair
amount of what-ifs to
keep me worried.
But in 2016, Ive got
a strategy to beat the
worry. Ive promised
myself to let it go.
I dont have to replay
the scenes from childhood of my grandmother
searching bars in downtown Baltimore for my
grandfather before he
drank away his salary.
That was her worry, not
mine.
Im not the 10-year-old
girl who cried because
she had to wear really
cheap off-brand sneak-
SINGLETARY, page D6
Crystal and Matt Carper stand inside their Irish dance studio in Akron. They are building a new studio in Brownstown.
HOOLEY
SCHOOL OF
IRISH DANCE
TMEKEEL@LNPNEWS.COM
n Future site:
Brownstown.
n Future facilitys size:
4,200 square feet.
n Future facilitys cost:
$750,000.
This is a rendering of the new Hooley School of Irish Dance.
More space
The Carpers venture will
relocate the school from a
leased
2,400-square-foot
space at 240 N. Seventh St.,
Akron, to 4,200 square feet
at 1 S. State St. (Route 772),
Brownstown.
Construction is expected to
begin by the end of January,
with Apex Structures of New
Holland as the projects general contractor. A June opening is planned.
Irish dance is such a neat
activity for children, Carper
said. We have people coming from all over the county
and from surrounding counties. So I see a lot of opportunity for growth.
Carper and her sister Angelina Press, both certified
Irish dance teachers, could
370 W. Main
St., Leola.
n Hours: 24
hours, daily.
n Phone: 5568635.
n Online:
rutters.com.
CHAD UMBLE
WHATS IN STORE
D2
MONEY
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Willow Street
Carusos moves
Susquehanna Glass
closes factory store
SUSQUEHANNA GLASS
CARUSOS ITALIAN
RESTAURANT
n Address: 2933 Willow Street Pike,
Willow Street.
n Phone: 464-6464.
n Online: carusospizzeria.com/
willowstreet.
MOVE IT STUDIO
n Address: 1180 Erbs Quarry Road,
Lititz.
n Phone: 925-9970.
n Online: moveitstudio.com,
n Phone: 684-2155.
n Online: susquehannaglass.com.
facebook.com/moveitlanc.
SPRINT STORE
n Address: 570 Centerville Road,
Lancaster.
n Phone: 945-6726.
n Hours: 9 a.m.-8 p.m. Monday
through Friday, 10 a.m.-8 p.m.
Saturday, noon-5 p.m. Sunday.
Friday, Jan 22
n Free executive lecture series at Elizbethtown
Christopher
Patterson
Matthew A.
Oas
Erick
Hardwick
Kimberly
Blessing
Andrea
Becker
n Christopher M.
n Mennonite Home
Communities has
promoted Kimberly
Blessing to vice president
of human resources
and organizational
development.
Blessing, of Lancaster, was
hired in 2011 as director of
human resources. Before
that, she was director
of career services at YTI
Career Institute.
Blessing is a graduate
of Johnson & Wales
University.
R. Joseph
Rader
Jeremy
Freimark
n R. Joseph Rader,
WHO TO EMAIL
Calendar
Wednesday, Jan. 20
Whos News
Monday, Feb. 1
n Free public program on business longevity
If youre
planning a family,
you should also
plan on how to
protect them.
Let us help you find the right life insurance for you and your growing family.
Whether its Term, Universal or Whole Life Insurance, we can help you make
the right selection to protect the ones you love most.
Bankruptcies
Here is a list of Lancaster
County bankruptcies
recorded in U.S. Bankruptcy
Court, Eastern District of
Pennsylvania, Reading, Dec.
5-11.
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
D3
Technology
GADGETS
FLYING INTO
THE FUTURE
New drones follow you around,
or even take you places
RYAN NAKASHIMA
AP BUSINESS WRITER
KIM KOMANDO
CYBER SPEAK
The 3 biggest
security
threats of 2016
You can hardly look
at tech news without seeing reports of
viruses, Trojans, data
breaches, ransomware,
remote hacking, ATM
skimmers and plenty
of other threats to your
money and information.
According to security
company Kaspersky,
34.2 percent of computer users experienced at
least one Web attack in
2015. More than 750,000
computers were infected
with ransomware, with
a steady increase every
quarter.
Statistics like this can
seem overwhelming.
Fortunately, most of the
threats break down into
a few categories that
you can guard against.
Today, Im going to take
a look at what are shaping up to be the biggest
threats youll need to
worry about in 2016, and
give you some tips for
how to stay safe.
Data breaches
OK, this threat isnt
a new one. In fact, its
been at the top of everyones watch list since the
massive Target breach
at the end of 2013, which
exposed information
on up to 110 million
customers. However,
the nature of this threat
is going to be shifting in
2016.
Breaches at major
retailers where hackers
steal payment information are going to continue for the foreseeable
future. Hotels are the
target of choice at the
moment with Hilton,
Starwood and others
experiencing attacks
in 2015. However, as
Rapid expansion
So far, none of those
obstacles are slowing
down an industry that
appears to be in full
lift-off. The Consumer
Technology Association
estimates that U.S. consumer drone spending
will more than double to
$953 million next year.
ABI Research believes
the global market for
drones will hit $8.4 billion in 2018, with users
ranging from the military and oil companies
to farmers, journalists,
and backyard tinkerers.
The Fleye drone is demonstrated Jan. 7 at the CES gadget show in Las Vegas; inset, the
Ehang 184 autonomous aerial vehicle is unveiled Jan. 6.
As drone capabilities
continue to grow, drones
may become a massmarket product for average consumers in about
three years, says Patrick
Moorhead,
principal
analyst of research firm
Moor Insights & Strategy.
You should be able to
get a drone that can effectively follow you, not
run into things, and find
things on its own, he
says. Thats pretty cool.
Thats assuming, of
course, that youre not
commuting to work in
one. At CES, Chinese
manufacturer
Ehang
Inc. unveiled a large
drone that it said can
carry a human passen-
ger at speeds of up to 60
miles an hour. The fourarmed quadcopter has
been on more than 100
flights, mostly in wooded
areas of Guangzhou, according to Chief Marketing Officer Derrick
Xiong. Some he didnt
say how many have
carried a human passenger.
Federal aviation regulators declined to comment on Ehangs humancarrying drone, saying
the company hasnt submitted any proposal to
authorities. The Federal
Aviation Administration
advised an Ehang representative at the show to
contact its unmanned
aircraft system office.
Smaller models
lion users.
Newer high-tech toys
that store information
about kids and interact
with them, like Hello
Barbie, could reveal a
lot to hackers. So, before
you buy a high-tech toy
or let your child use an
online site, see what information it asks for that
could be stolen one day.
Ransomware
Just like data breaches,
ransomware isnt a new
thing. Its been a serious
Lock it in while
Browser plug-ins
Britains Ofcom recently found that adults
spend an average of 20
hours a week online,
KOMANDO, page D6
can.
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D4
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Talking Points
Have Friends, Live Longer
Having friends is good for your
physical health, and the benefits
appear to start early in life, according to a new study. Researchers used data from health surveys
of more than 14,000 Americans
from adolescence to old age.
They measured social connections in romantic relationships,
with family and friends, and by
participation in religious and
social organizations. A lower score
was associated with higher levels
of C-reactive protein, a measure
of general inflammation, higher
blood pressure, higher body mass
index and larger waist circumference.
STUART GOLDENBERG
Newspapers Go Nonprofit
H.F. Lenfest, the owner of The
Philadelphia Inquirer, The Philadelphia Daily News and Philly.
com, announced on Jan. 12 that he
had donated the
publications to
a newly formed
nonprofit journalism institute,
The Institute for
Journalism in
MATT ROURKE/
New Media. The
ASSOCIATED PRESS
publications will
run independently. My goal is to
ensure that the journalism traditionally provided by the printed
newspapers is given a new life and
prolonged, while new media formats for its distribution are being
developed, Mr. Lenfest said.
FARHAD MANJOO
PERFECT TIMING? An Etsy pop up shop in Times Square on April 16, the day
PATRICIA COHEN
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
D5
GLENN RIFKIN
Escaping
Autopay
Purgatory
YOUR MONEY
ANN CARRNS
Consumers who agree to automatic withdrawals from their
bank accounts to pay for subscriptions, health club memberships, loans and the like may
sometimes hit roadblocks when
they try to stop the charges.
Its a big problem, said Lauren Saunders, associate director with the National Consumer
Law Center. Banks are obligated
to help customers stop unwanted debits, she says, but they are
sometimes slow to do so.
Many companies including
mortgage and student loan servicers, debt collectors and payday lenders actively solicit approval from consumers for such
preauthorized debits, according
to the federal Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.
Often, consumers agree to such
payments for convenience or to
obtain a lower interest rate on a
loan, because some lenders offer
slightly better terms if borrowers agree to recurring monthly
debits. (Loan payments by automatic debits generally cannot be
required, but lenders can offer
incentives for borrowers to sign
up for them.)
In other cases, borrowers may
not realize that they have authorized an automatic renewal of a
loan and are surprised when a
payment is deducted, Ms. Saunders said. Consumers may end
up paying an overdraft fee if the
automatic debit results in overspending the account.
Consumers, the bureaus di-
SHORT OF TIME Lisa Libretto embraces online shopping, including the ShopAdvisor app and its beacon technology.
Q&A
Are preauthorized debits
the same thing as online bill
payments?
Both methods let you pay a
financial obligation electronically, but they operate differently. When you schedule
recurring payments through
your banks online bill pay
service, you tell your bank
to send the payments for
you. With automatic debits,
you give a company or merchant your bank account
number and your permission
to withdraw payment from
your account on a recurring
schedule.
Will I be charged a fee
for canceling an automatic
debit?
If you formally instruct your
bank to cancel an automatic
charge, the bank may impose
a stop payment fee typically around $30 or $35 as
it would if you canceled a paper check.
CONSTANCE GUSTKE
Kay Larmor, 71, was in and out
of conventional nursing homes.
Then she found Green House
homes at Porter Hills, in Grand
Rapids, Mich., which is helping to
remake long-term care.
Each home houses only 10 elderly people, and each person
has a bedroom and a bathroom.
Ms. Larmor enjoys home-style
cooking like spaghetti with meatballs.
This is my home, Ms. Larmor
said. And I feel cared for.
For greater warmth and nurturing, seniors are turning to
small residences like Green
House, which is part of a complex
of senior housing and care options, and privately owned care
homes that are often unmarked
in residential neighborhoods.
They are usually newer, sometimes cheaper, and generally offer more customized care than
most nursing homes.
Nursing homes have received
plenty of criticism over the years.
They are regulated, but quality
varies widely. And even the best
ones are typically modeled after
hospitals, so aides often wear
scrubs and hallways can feel antiseptic. The ratio of residents to
aides can be high too, creating
more isolation for residents.
Dr. Bill Thomas, a Harvard-educated geriatrician, saw that
loneliness and isolation were big
problems in elder care. So he
helped found the Green House
project in 2003, which Porter
Hills uses as a model that is now
spreading around the country.
To ensure quality, Green House
homes are trademarked and
built to strict certifications.
Green homes were developed
from a blank sheet of paper, said
Scott Brown, director of outreach
CARL RICHARDS
Over the years, Ive noticed that
moment when my children started caring about what other people think of them. One by one,
Ive watched as the opinions of
others become a big deal in their
own decision-making.
As smart, mature adults, we
have a term for that: peer pressure. You know, that dumb thing
A WARM ENVIRONMENT Kay Larmor, 71, prefers Green House at Porter Hills
in Grand Rapids, Mich., to nursing homes. I feel cared for, she said.
D6
MONEY
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Continued from D1
10 years after
The Brownstown Restaurant closed in 2006
when the restaurant
operators sold the property to T&E Group for
$255,000,
according
PENN
COLLEGE
96%
Dance rooms
With the move, Hooleys facility will increase
from a single dance
room in Akron to two in
Brownstown.
Later, the new building could be enlarged to
6,000 square feet, mak-
Singletary: Let it go
Continued from D1
n michelle.singletary
@washpost.com
There is NO sales
tax in PA on coins
and bullion!
2015
13
a national
leader in
applied
technology
education
www.pct.edu Williamsport, PA
An affiliate of The Pennsylvania State University
Perspective
KRISTEN HOUSER
SPECIAL TO LNP
As Cosby case
shows, victims need
time to seek justice
It is time for Pennsylvania
lawmakers to take the statute of
limitations restraints off and allow victims of sexual abuse to file
charges against their abuser at any
time.
The acts allegedly conducted
by actor and comedian Bill Cosby
and countless others who have
abused their power, their celebrity
status or their influence in society to sexually abuse others are
perfect examples of why we must
eliminate the civil and criminal
statute of limitations in sexual
assault-related cases.
Victims sometimes
need decades to even
admit the assault
occurred, let alone
come forward about
what is perhaps the
most traumatic physical
and psychological
betrayal a person can
experience.
JOHN GERDY
SPECIAL TO LNP
HOUSER, page E4
1964
ASSOCIATED PRESS
In this April 3, 1968, file photo, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
makes his last public appearance at the Mason Temple in
Memphis, Tenn.
E2
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Opinion
Beverly R. Steinman
Robert M. Krasne
Suzanne Cassidy
Chairman Emeritus
Executive Editor
In our words
Pennsylvanians need,
deserve full-year budget
THE ISSUE
State budget discussions in Harrisburg got so bad last week that the office
of Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf and the House Republican leadership
appeared to be at odds over whether they were at an impasse. They were
not seeing eye to eye on this basic question: Does Pennsylvania have or
does it still need a budget for the fiscal year that ends June 30?
bit.ly/PaImpasseDispute l bit.ly/SandPonPaBudget12-29-15
CHARLES
KRAUTHAMMER
THE WASHINGTON POST
OP-ED/LETTERS
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
ISMAIL SMITH-WADE-EL
SPECIAL TO LNP
US Constitution open
to interpretation
Sen. Ted Cruz, a U.S. senator
from Texas who is running for
the Republican nomination
for president, is being questioned about his eligibility for
office because he was born in
Canada.
What does the Constitution
actually say? In Article II, Section 1, Clause No. 4: No Person except a natural born Citizen, or a Citizen of the United
States, at the time of the Adoption of this Constitution, shall
be eligible to the Office of President.
It goes on to say that a president must be at least age 35
and have resided in the U.S.for
at least 14 years.
In Sen. Cruzs case, the
meaning of natural born citizen is the issue. This phrase
has been taken to mean a person born within the U.S. or a
territory of the U.S., or born to
parents who are citizens residing outside the U.S.
Sen. John McCain has said
that this is an issue to be
looked at; in President Barack
Obamas case, it was scrutinized.
The lesson to be learned
here is that there is a great deal
of phrasing in the Constitution that is either very general
or confusingly vague.
Our Constitution is not a
rigid, inflexible document but
rather one subject to interpretation.
Dan Betz
East Cocalico Township
Teacher Mrs. V
left legacy of love
Many people may have noticed a long line of cars in funeral procession through the
southwest end of the city on
Jan. 9 and wondered if a VIP
had passed away. She would
not have said so herself but
Barbara Valavanes (Barbara
Karpouzis Valavanes, Obituaries, Jan. 7) was most definitely a very important person
to the thousands of people she
touched.
One may go online and read
the obituary of this amazing
woman and all she accomplished in her 90 years on this
Earth
(bit.ly/BarbaraValavanesObituary). As a child and
many times throughout her
life she faced hard times and
adversity but she worked hard
to turn it all around and always
pay it forward.
For more than 30 years she
taught English as a Second
Language to thousands of
students at McCaskey High
School. She went the extra
mile to help them and their
families acclimate and learn
about their new country and to
become citizens themselves.
They respectfully called her
Mrs. V but she was loved and
treated as a family member.
She was invited to weddings
and other special occasions
Why disarm
only citizens?
Jesus crucifixion
a matter of history
E3
LETTER POLICY
Presidential choices
not looking good
What a sad, scary and even
embarrassing position our nation is in right now. Were preparing for a presidential election and look at our choices.
Although we dont know for
sure, its looking like well have
Donald Trump and Hillary
Clinton from which to choose.
What kind of choice is that?
Aside from his traits of being
arrogant and sometimes vulgar, Mr. Trump has no political
experience. His experience is
We should invest in
treating addiction
E4
PERSPECTIVE
Houser
Continued from E1
discretion regarding
whether or not to press
charges based on the
findings of an investigation. But today as the
public becomes more
informed about sexual
assault, and as actions
and interactions are
preserved through
technology, the ability to
build a strong case with
evidence many years old
can occur more often
than in the past.
Prosecutors reexamined statements
given by Cosby when
he was deposed for a
civil lawsuit brought in
2005 by former Temple
University employee
Andrea Constand. She
is one of more than 50
to warrant an arrest,
let alone go to trial in a
criminal court.
Statutes of limitations
do not serve the best interests of survivors, and
they do not serve the
best interests of public
safety. These roadblocks
to justice serve no one
but perpetrators, allowing them to continue
their behavior virtually
unchecked. If ever there
was a case to eliminate
the statutes of limitations in sexual assault
cases both criminal
and civil it is staring
us in the face.
Even if statutes of
limitations have expired,
it is never too late to
get help. Help is available through rape crisis
centers throughout
Pennsylvania and across
the country, providing hope for victims of
Gerdy
Continued from E1
TELL US WHAT
YOU THINK
MLK
Continued from E1
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Actor and comedian Bill Cosby arrives for a court appearance in Elkins Park, Montgomery County on Dec. 30.
ment.
So why is football not prohibited for children?
Just because your child
wants to play at the age of 12
or 14 does not mean you have
to let him. What would you
say, for example, if your child
came to you at that age and
stated, Id like to begin smoking cigarettes and dropping
acid? With such certainty
regarding the link between
football and brain damage
and such uncertainty regarding the effectiveness of safety
measures and treatment, why
take the chance?
Ultimately, this is about
anatomy, child safety and
parental responsibility.
Id strongly suggest that
every parent with a child playing football or interested in
playing football see the movie
Concussion. And afterward,
look in the mirror and ask
yourself, Was my child made
to play football?
Do you think children should be permitted to play tackle football? Weigh in with your thoughts in a letter to the
editor. Email letters to: LancasterLetters@lnpnews.com; send by fax to 399-6507; or mail to: Letters, c/o LNP,
P.O. Box 1328, Lancaster, PA 17608-1328. Or share your thoughts on LancasterOnline.com at:
n bit.ly/GerdyFootball
Kathryn.
King was to me a
young, well-educated
Baptist minister who
came out of the Jim
Crow churches of the
South preaching brotherhood and nonviolence.
But it was into a land
filled with violence.
Blacks were being
beaten, lynched and
terrorized by Ku Klux
Klansmen who drove
into their neighborhoods wearing their long
white robes and hooded
masks to frighten them.
King, too, had been
threatened a bomb
had been thrown at his
home in Montgomery,
Alabama, and later in
Atlanta, Klan night riders had burned a cross in
his front yard.
It was 1:15 a.m. before
I left the King home, and
both King and Coretta
stood at the door waiting
until I drove off.
At home that morning, I took a breakfast
tray into the den so
that I could watch TV
news. When the Scripto
strike story came on,
my mother, spotting
me as the only white
person in the crowd and
walking alongside King,
questioning him, said,
Honey, be careful. Im
afraid someday someones going to try to kill
that man.
1968
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
ASSOCIATED PRESS
nonviolence. If it refuses
to do this, it will entitle
the Negro to so intensify
his anger that we will go
deeper and deeper into
chaos.
While violence created outrage, televised
accounts of such events
also dramatized the injustice facing his people.
King used that strategy
in an effort to shame
the nation into action.
When he told me the
army of protesters in the
Poor Peoples Campaign
was to invade the very
seat of power, I asked,
How effective would
they be?
He replied that he
had few illusions about
persuading Congress
to action. Congress
sits there, recalcitrant,
a sickness upon them.
When you look at Congress, you see they are
never moved to act unless the nation gets them
to move. We never got
the civil rights bill until
we had Selma, he said,
referring to the assault
on peaceful demonstrators in that Alabama
town.
A new kind of Selma is
needed, he said.
King told me he
had long weighed and
agonized over the risk of
such action, but he felt
the Poor Peoples campaign was a last-ditch
chance for nonviolence.
I asked, What about
the risk of a takeover by
extremists?
King replied, I am
convinced I can control
them. If we came to a
situation where our
actions were leading to
violence, I would call it
off.
He began talking about
the enormous wealth of
America, which he felt
should be used through
tax policies to promote
OPINION
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
E5
Sunday Conversation
GEORGE WILL
THE WASHINGTON POST
DOYLE MCMANUS
LOS ANGELES TIMES
years ago, Bill Clinton and his associates did their best to discredit his
accusers. The pithiest, as usual, was
James Carville, who said of Paula
Jones: If you drag a hundred-dollar
bill through a trailer park, you never
know what youll find.
Its reasonable, as well, to ask what
role Hillary Clinton played in those
cases. But on that count, the evidence
is thin.
She told a friend, Diane Blair, that
Monica Lewinsky was a loony tune
but that was a private comment
that surfaced years later, not a public
slam. And at the time, Bill Clinton
had falsely assured her that Lewinsky was lying and that there had been
no sexual relationship.
As far as is known, Hillary Clinton
didnt throw herself in the way of her
husbands attack dogs. She didnt speak
out in defense of his accusers. She
didnt resign as first lady. She remained
doggedly loyal to her faithless husband
often through gritted teeth.
Does that make her an enabler?
Suggesting, in effect, that Hillary
Clinton had a duty to desert her
husband is a pretty tough standard to
demand of any spouse.
Now, 20 years later, Clinton is pulling out the usual playbook: Insist that
theres nothing here to see. Accuse
your critics of partisanship (perfectly
true, in this case). Argue that the campaign should focus on current problems, not old ones (also perfectly true).
And warn your opponents that theyve
chosen the wrong strategy.
If (Trump) wants to engage in
personal attacks from the past, thats
his prerogative, she said last Sunday.
Its been fair game going back to the
Republicans for some years. They can
do it again if they want to. I think its
a dead end, (a) blind alley for them.
But Trump, whose record as a
champion of women exists mostly
in his imagination, shows no sign of
relenting.
I havent even started in on her
yet, he bragged Monday.
And even if a more gentlemanly Republican wins the GOP nomination,
conservative activists are certain to
keep the questions alive.
Because Hillary Clinton is a
candidate, every part of her record
qualifies as fair game. And if she
continues to deploy her husband as
a spokesman, his record is fair game,
too. Sooner or later, Clinton needs to
confront the past, talk about it and
then try to move on.
n Doyle McManus is the Washington columnist for the Los Angeles Times.
Twitter: @DoyleMcManus
E6
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
generation
BY,
FOR
AND
ABOUT
TEENS
FRESH TAKES
Twitter:
@HolySiaFurler
n What started out as
These looks from Target showcase some of the popular looks for this year, including ruffles, florals, layers and marled knits.
Fashion-forward looks
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Stripes are a perennial fashion trend. But
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WATCH
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Caleb
Benjamin
18, of Mountville
n Benjamin attends
No Type
by Zayn Malik
Creed
n must see | dont see | just rent
THE LIST
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10-SECOND
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in theaters
n Thirty years after the defeat
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Sneha Mittal, 16
in honor of a favorite
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Damian Hondares, 20