Times Leader 05-29-2013
Times Leader 05-29-2013
Times Leader 05-29-2013
BUSINESS, 8B
WILKES-BARRE, PA
50
ThIS IS oNE couNTry AmErIcA. Its not about blue states or red states, or Democrats or republicans. We all share the same values and principles.
TUNKHANNOCK AREA
WYOMING Jimmy Carter, the Plains, Ga., peanut farmer who became the 39th U.S. president, told more than 500 people at the site of Wyoming Monument that the United States will stay strong, improve and grow as long as citizens retain high moral and ethical values and principles. Carter, 88, and his wife, Rosalynn, 85, were in town to speak at the monument Tuesday afternoon. Later they hosted a dinner at the Stegmaier Mansion in Wilkes-Barre to raise money for the Plains Helping Plains effort begun in 2010 by Larry and Diane Cook. After leaving the White House, Rosalynn and I talked about what we would do with the rest of our lives, Carter said. We decided to help our hometown and to help where we can in the world. Carter, who forged lasting relationships with Soviet Premier Leonid Brezhnev and the Peoples Republic of China and
See CARTER, Page 12A
Former President Jimmy Carter told a crowd at Tuesdays Memorial Day event at the Wyoming Monument that the nations future depends on its citizens.
WYOMING Victoria Smulowitz has thought of running for president for ve years. A 9-year-old student at the Wycallis Elementary School in the Dallas School District, she got to meet one person who held the job she wants more than anything. How do you become president? Victoria asked former President Jimmy Carter after his speech at the Wyoming Monument on Tuesday afternoon. Carter hugged the girl, offered her advice and then told her he would vote for her if Im still around, unless my grandSee MEET, Page 12A
More than 500 people turned out in the rain Tuesday to hear former President Jimmy Carters speech at a Memorial Day celebration at the Wyoming Monument in Wyoming including 10-month-old Mae Baloga of Wyoming, who clutches an American ag.
TUNKHANNOCK In a ruling that could have a big impact on the 2013-14 budget still in the works, an arbitrator has ordered Tunkhannock School District to reinstate all 32 teachers furloughed in a massive budget-cutting effort last July and to give those teachers full back pay and benets compensation. The district announced 32 furloughs on July 3, followed by a teacher rally that evoked im- One year of passioned, even back pay for tearful testi- 32 furloughed monials from teachers students and alumni praising would add up the suspended to about $1.9 staffers. The million, not union followed through counting benwith a griev- ets or any ance heard in other comNovember. A pensation. decision was handed down Friday, when school was recessed for Memorial Day Weekend. The union had argued for full reinstatement on the basis of two points: Both sides had signed a memorandum of understanding, or MOU, barring such furloughs, and the layoffs were so extensive they violated a state law barring districts from furloughing teachers solely for nancial purposes. Arbitrator Thomas G. McConnell Jr. found the rst argument so convincing he ruled in favor of the union without giving consideration to the second argument. The case hinged on an MOU drawn up after the last contract expired Aug. 31, 2011. The district faced a tight nancial crunch thanks to state funding cuts, and negotiations for a new contract were still unsettled. The two sides signed an agreement freezing wages for one year, implementing other items both sides had agreed to at that point and barring any furloughs for the duration of the agreement, runSee TEACHERS, Page 8A
WILKES-BARRE A new partnership between nine regional food banks across Pennsylvania hopes to promote the ght against hunger and help members to secure food, ll shortages and share ideas. The groups leaders and ofcials from most of the member food banks gathered at the Weinberg Food Bank in Wilkes-Barre
on Tuesday to discuss the initiative and tout its goals. They were joined by U.S. Sen. Bob Casey, D-Scranton, who serves as the cochairman of the U.S. Senate Hunger Caucus. Pennsylvania member food banks last year served more than 2 million people, with demand continuing to remain as high again this
See FOOD, Page 8A
Several Luzerne County residents urged county council Tuesday to do something about problems encountered in last weeks primary election.
Hazleton resident Carmella Yenkevich said more than 500 votes were cast for Steve Hahn in Carbon and Schuylkill counties because Luzerne Countys election ofce did not notify the two counties of Hahns withdrawal in the Hazleton Area School Board race as required. Yenkevich, a candidate in that race, said the 500 votes would have drastically changed the outcome,
and she does not believe she or other candidates should be forced to obtain signatures, hire legal counsel and le court action seeking a new election in the two counties. Thats not acceptable to me, Yenkevich said during the on-theroad meeting at the Hazle Township municipal building. The Board of
See COUNTY, Page 8A
INSIDE
All tied up
Pacers douse the Heat.
SPORTS, 7B
09815 10011
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PITTSTON City Council addressed discrimination on Tuesday night, passing an ordinance aimed at protecting the rights of homosexual, transgender and disabled residents.
Council did not refer to any specic problems of discrimination, but said that as the city updates its downtown, it also wants to update its policies, making it possible for all its residents to prosper. The ordinance, drafted by city solicitor Sam Falcone, includes protection for all persons, regardless of actual or perceived race, color, sex, religion, ancestry, genetic information, national origin, sexual orientation
or expression, gender, familial status, and mental and physical disabilities. Our administration is forward-thinking and progressive, Falcone said. Ted Martin, representing Equality Pennsylvania, said the ordinance was invaluable in the areas of housing and employment. Most people understand that everyone needs an income and a place to live, said Martin,
but, quite frequently, landlords refuse to rent to people they perceive as different from them. Daniel Parry asked council to reject the ordinance, saying it would lead to discrimination against those who held Christian religious beliefs. The ordinance is unnecessary and problematic, Parry said. We are not presently denying any groups their civil rights.
Rebekka Parry said as a parent of young children in Pittston, she was concerned about the citys moral environment. Similar ordinances have been passed in 30 other municipalities in Pennsylvania and, Martin said, they would protect 30 percent of the states residents. Martin said he hoped the state also would pass legislation reinforcing the concept of equality and opportunity for its residents.
Police blotter
PLYMOUTH A man was arraigned Tuesday on charges he assaulted his father during a robbery. Frederick Lamont Johnson, 31, of West Main Street, Plymouth, was charged with two counts each of simple assault, harassment and disorderly conduct, and a single count of robbery. He was jailed at the Luzerne County Correctional Facility for lack of $25,000 bail. John Moore Jr. told police his son asked him for money Monday night. Moore said that when he refused to give his son money, the son punched him several times, knocking out a tooth, and tried to take his wallet, according to the criminal complaint. A preliminary hearing is scheduled on June 5. WILKES-BARRE City police reported the following: Someone stole a speed enforcement device from WilkesBarre police early Monday morning. Ofcers had been conducting speed enforcement along Wilkes-Barre Boulevard a little before 1 a.m. when an ofcer requested assistance. The ofcer stationed at the speed enforcement device left the area to provide backup and, upon returning, found that someone had taken the device. Police said theft charges will be led against Keon Tyler after a woman reported that he had been in her Sherman Hills apartment in Building 308 on North Empire Court and took her iPhone 5, refused to give it back and left with it on Monday. Quientin Rone, 30, was to be charged with criminal contempt after he allegedly violated a protection from abuse order when Linda Powell, who applied for the protection, said she found him in her living room at 139 Sambourne St. when she arrived home from a part at about 6 p.m. Monday, police said. Powell told police that Rone became enraged when she ordered him to leave and tried to strike her with a closed st, police said. Police checked the area but couldnt nd Rone. HANOVER TWP. Township police reported the following: Terri Lynn Rovinski, of Ashley, was cited with leaving the scene of an accident, driving on a suspended license and driving without insurance after a May 20 crash on Hazle Street in the Newtown section, township police said. Rovinski was driving a 2007 Land Rover owned by Jamarr Reid & Flawless Family Inc., Wilkes-Barre, when the vehicle struck a utility pole, the stairs to a business and a 2002 Ford pickup owned by Traci and Jason Davis, of Ashley, police said. Kathleen Zellock, of Oxford Street, reported the license plate of her 2007 Kia sedan was stolen sometime between May 22 and May 27. Jeffrey Politz, of Boland Avenue, Hanover Township, reported someone entered
W H AT S n E X T
The board meet in work session June 18 at 7 p.m.
EXETER Taxpayers in the Wyoming Area School District might get an unexpected break as the School Board approved a nal proposed $30.1 million budget, which includes a tax increase of 2.3 percent. The budget is not binding, but is more favorable to taxpayers than the preliminary budget approved in April that included exceptions allowed by the state. The districts business manager, Tom Melone, said several factors allowed for the nal proposed budget. The district did not use any of its contingency funds this year, he said. He also said that adjustments for unpaid leave and sabbaticals added to the districts fund balance. The proposed budget calls for a 13.8522 millage rate for taxpayers who live in Luzerne County and a 76.9683 millage rate for those who live in Wyoming County. A mill is $1 in tax for every $1,000 in assessed property value.
The proposed tax increase would add about $36 to the average home in Luzerne County. Those living in Wyoming County would actually receive a small decrease in their taxes. In other matters: A request by the Wyoming Area Football Parents Association to hold the Warrior Tribe Trot at a venue that will be announced later raised a great deal of discussion. Solicitor Jarrett Ferentino said he was caught off guard by the request. He questioned whether the gambling-type activity would fall within the new legal guidelines for charitable fundraising. I think we have to review it, he said. The board voted to approve the event subject to Ferentinos approval. Administrators fielded several questions about the districts nancial relationship with the Luzerne Intermediate Unit. Board members and residents alike questioned the $762,000 contract the board approved for 2013-2014 services provided by the unit. change his address without approval and must participate in the countys Day Reporting Center. According to the criminal complaint ed by Hazleton Detective Lt. Kenneth Zipovsky, on Aug. 17 Donahue sent an email to Salavantis threatening to shoot it out with ofcers if the district attorney did not do as he wanted. He also made not-so-veiled threats that people would be killed if he did not get the actions he demanded, the complaint said. Also on Tuesday, Donahue requested the charges against him be dropped, citing the email does not specically contain a threat to commit violence and was a single isolated communication. Pierantoni scheduled a hearing for that request on June 14 as well as a pretrial hearing for June 26. The state Attorney Generals ofce is prosecuting the case.
his unlocked Toyota Tundra late Monday night and stole a 12-gauge Remington model 870 shotgun. An investigation determined that other unlocked vehicles may have been entered around the same time, but no other victims had come forward, police said. Lauren Hertzlerm, of West Division Street, reported four lawn chairs were stolen from his front porch sometime during the early-morning hours on Saturday. Teressa Baratta reported four cast-iron tubs were stolen from the rear of her property during the daytime hours on May 20. WILKES-BARRE The Wilkes-Barre Ofce of the state police Bureau of Liquor Control Enforcement reported the following: Prospect Street Caf, 23 S. Prospect St., Nanticoke, was cited with violating sections of the state liquor and crime codes and the Controlled Substance Act on March 18 dealing with: simple assault, terroristic threats, harassment, tempering with or fabricating evidence, disorderly conduct, public drunkenness and possession of drug paraphernalia. City police that night had arrested the owner, Paul Halliday, 37, of West Ridge Street, Nanticoke, after investigating an assault inside the troubled tavern. Halliday had nailed an ofce door shut and threatened to shoot police if they forced open the door, according to charges led. Halliday also had allegedly kicked his girlfriend when he saw her talking to another man inside a restroom, police had said. Capones Bar & Grill Inc., 520 Main St., White Haven, was cited with selling or providing alcohol to a minor on April 13. HAZLETON City police reported the following: Andrea Kolinofsky, 38, of Hazleton, was to be cited with careless driving after she rearended a 2007 Jeep being driven by a juvenile girl at 7:45 a.m. Tuesday, police said. Police said the Jeep was stopped at the intersection of Diamond Avenue and Carson Street to turn left onto Carson Street when Kolinofskys 2004 Hyundai struck the rear of the Jeep. No injuries were reported. The Hyundai was towed. Police are investigating the theft of copper pipe from a vacant property at 201 E. Hemlock St. Anyone with information should contact police by calling 459-4940 or calling 911 and asking for a Hazleton ofcer. Police were called to investigate damage to a front window of a residence in the 500 block of Peace Street
just before 6 p.m. Monday. Anyone who might have witnessed the damage occur or anyone with information should call 911 and ask to speak with Hazleton police. A 27-year-old man reported Monday that someone entered his residence in the 100 block of South Church Street sometime around 2 a.m. and stole his Dell XPS 17 laptop computer. Anyone with information should call 911 and ask to speak with Hazleton police. PITTSTON TWP. A former Pittston Township couple face assault charges after police responded to their residence for a reported domestic dispute just after midnight on Monday. Police were met outside by Romayne Kmetz and informed that her ex-husband, Henry Kmetz, was inside arguing with their daughter and that Romayne wanted Henrys guns conscated. Police found Henry and his daughter, Jessica Kmetz, and Romaynes mother, Bernadine Elick, inside, yelling and stating that the ght was over Jessicas graduation and Henrys drinking, according to court papers. Romayne and Jessica told police that Henry said he couldnt take it anymore and started walking towards the guns. Romayne called 911, Henry pushed her, Jessica tried to stop him, Henry grabbed Jessica around the neck in a choke hold and Jessica bit him on the arm to get away, police said. Henry told police his daughter and ex-wife beat him, that Jessica bit him on the arm when he tried going to his bedroom and that his wife punched him in the head and kicked him in the groin, police said. Henry Kmetz, 52, and Romayne Kmetz, 48, both were charged with two counts each of simple assault and harassment. Henry was transported to the township police station and checked out by emergency medical services for the bite and complaints of high blood pressure. Jessica and Romayne were also taken into police custody, police said. SALEM TWP. Joshua Daum, 24, of East Front St., was charged with simple assault, harassment and disorderly conduct after his girlfriend, Lacy Anecki, reported that he struck her in the eye during an argument they had during a discussion over past relationships, police said in court papers. NANTICOKE David Marinus, 47, of Apollo Circle, Nanticoke, was charged with simple assault and harassment after his girlfriend, Heather Szymaszek, with whom he resides, reported on Tuesday that he grabbed her and pushed her in the chest area onto a bed, according to court papers. Luzerne Borough Building, 144 Academy St., Luzerne. PITTSTON Residents are reminded that when paying taxes, sewer maintenance fees, etc., the original bill should be provided with payment. They should not detach any part of the bills.
OBITUARIES
Berzanski, Cecelia Bidding, Raymond Jr. Boncal, Mary Freitas, John Heilbrunn, Sally Herbert, Duane Hoskins, Pastor Harold Josulevicz, Francis Kemler, Joan Lacina, Mary Makarczyk, Susan Morrash, James Pisaneschi, George Sites, Lester Svintozelskiy, Matrena
Page 6A
coUrt brieFS
WILKES-BARRE A Hazleton man charged with directing threats at Luzerne County District Attorney Stefanie Salavantis was released from jail Tuesday after requesting nominal bail. Sean Donahue, 43, of Cleveland Street, is charged with terroristic threats and harassment in the case stemming from an Aug. 17 incident. Donahue asked to be released from the county prison on nominal bail. State law says a defendant who cannot make bail must be brought to trial within 180 days of arrest or be released on nominal bail, which can be as low as $1. County Judge Fred Pierantoni granted the request, setting Donahues bail at $20,000. Pierantoni said Donahue is not to possess weapons, cannot
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BUILDING TRUST
The Times Leader strives to correct errors, clarify stories and update them promptly. Corrections will appear in this spot. If you have information to help us correct an inaccuracy or cover an issue more thoroughly, call the newsroom at 829-7242.
TIFFANI PRESCOTT WAS omitted from the list of graduates of Kings College published Monday, May 20 on Page 4A.
ALBANY, N.Y. Baristas, managers and Starbucks itself put in their two cents Tuesday before New Yorks highest court in a tip-jar dispute that could have broad consequences for the states hospitality workers and, ultimately, em-
ployees at the coffee chains thousands of U.S. retail stores. The arguments pitted lowlevel workers against assistant managers and the company over who is entitled to the cash tips coffee customers leave when picking up their daily pick-me-up.
HAZLETON In a special meeting of the Hazleton Area School Board on Tuesday, the panel voted unanimously to secure the services of an industrial hygienist to determine the correct way to remediate
the recently reported mold issues at the districts Academy of Sciences magnet school in the former Can-Do building. The board is awaiting a comprehensive report from the contractor before determining a course of action to effectively address the mold issue.
MUNiciPAl brieFS
LUZERNE Borough meetings for June will be as follows: Sewer Authority monthly meeting, 7 p.m. June 4; Borough Council work session, 7 p.m., June 5; monthly council meeting, 7 p.m., June 12. All meetings are in the
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IN BRIEF
WILKES-BARRE
One change in last weeks unofcial primary election results has been identied so far by Luzerne County Bureau of Elections Director Marissa CrispellBarber during Tuesdays tallying: Mark Lehnowsky has won a Republican and a Democrat nomination for a seat on the Northwest Area School Board through write-in votes, she said the unofcial ELECTION tally shows. A tally sheet showed that Lehnowsky won 120 write-in votes on the Democrat ballot and 137 on the Republican. There were four open seats in the race. Three other candidates names appeared on the ballot: Michael J. Kreidler, Alton Farver and Peter J. Lanza Sr. The results remain unofcial until certication by the Board of Elections at a 5:30 p.m. meeting Monday in a yet-to-be-determined location. There could be changes in other races tallied by bureau inspectors. Crispell-Barber will be reviewing all of the municipal race tallies between today and Friday. One inspector noted that write-in votes brought Ann Nancy Hughes and John Gibbons to a tie for a Democrat nomination to one of three open council seats in Ashley.
timesleader.com
PAGE 3A
2013
Five people have been charged in the August invasion of the Lehman Township home of an elderly woman who hid from the intruders and gunre in a closet. State police at Wyoming al-
lege Charles C o n d e n III, 20, lastknown address as W r i g h t Street, Edwardsville, Conden red several rounds into a residence at 360 Huntsville-Idetown Road on the Lehman Township estate compound of prominent area businessman Ken Pollock on
Aug. 3. The home invasion was part of a crime spree allegedly involving Conden and his cohorts, Aliyah Hill, 18, of Edwardsville; Payne Prasnikar, 21, of Stillwater; Antonio Suarez, 18, and Sara Gryskevicz, 19, both from WilkesBarre. Hours before Conden allegedly shot his way into the home of Marion Pollock, 89, he and Prasnikar allegedly
robbed a convenience store on East Main Street in Nanticoke, stealing a cash register that was later dumped along a road; burglarized a garage in Edwardsville; robbed a convenience store on the Dallas Memorial Highway in Kingston Township, and a residence in Jackson Township on Aug. 2-3. Authorities said the ve people were driving around randomly targeting places to
plunder in a car they allegedly stole in West Nanticoke. Their spree did not stop as they left the area. They traveled to Ocean City, Md., where Conden robbed the Raceway Citgo Convenience Store on Ocean Gateway and discharged a round from the same handgun at a customer at about 5 p.m. Aug. 3. A pursuit ensued after the
See CONDEN, Page 10A
HARRISBURG
More than 70 lawyers will serve as 2013-14 chairs of Pennsylvania Bar Association committees and sections. Many of the associations policies and positions prompting development of state laws and actions viewed as benecial to the legal system, the courts and the public result from actions initiated by the leaders and members of these groups. Among the attorneys, Richard M. Goldberg, of Hourigan, Kluger & Quinn PC, Kingston, was renamed chair of the PBA Judicial Campaign Advertising Committee, which promotes accurate, fair and dignied judicial campaign advertising among candidates seeking election to the commonwealths appellate courts by monitoring and reviewing complaints.
Pango CEO Dani Shavit displays the Pango Smart Parking App on his phone.
WILKES-BARRE
The Osterhout Free Librarys North Branch will hold a pasta dinner fundraiser 4 to 7 p.m. Saturday in the librarys Community Room, 28 Oliver St., Parsons. The event is an all-you-can eat homemade pasta dinner along with a book sale, bake sale and basket rafe. Take-outs are available after 3 p.m. and walk-ins are welcome. Cost is $8 for adults and $4 for kids 8 and under.
HARRISBURG
Thirteen people were killed and 245 others were injured in the 760 crashes investigated by the Pennsylvania State Police during the four-day Memorial Day holiday weekend driving period. There were no fatalities in Luzerne County. The ofcial holiday driving period was May 24-27. During that time, troopers cited 1,280 individuals for not wearing seat belts and issued citations to 146 motorists for not securing children in safety seats. Troopers also issued 9,720 speeding citations and arrested 438 operators for driving under the inuence. Of the 760 crashes investigated by state police, 85 of those, including ve fatal crashes, were alcohol-related. During last years four-day Memorial Day holiday driving period, 13 people died and 311 others were injured in 817 crashes to which state troopers responded.
NICHOLSON
WILKES-BARRE Scranton will be the rst city in Northeastern Pennsylvania to use a smartphone app that enables downtown drivers to pay for parking in public lots and metered spaces with their cellphones. The app, called Pango, has customers in 48 cities in Israel and Europe and three cities in the United States Latrobe, Pa., Auburn N.Y., and now Scranton. Wilkes-Barre participated in a pilot
program for new parking meter technology back in February 2011, but that program was designed to increase revenue through a system that would have used sensors and other technology to alert ofcials when parked vehicles exceeded time limits or a meter needed to be emptied. Wilkes-Barre Municipal Affairs Manager Drew McLaughlin said a report issued last year showed the city could increase parking revenue with the system, and those revenues were included in a proposal to lease the citys parking meters and garages, but the parking authority voted down the proposal. McLaughlin said pursuing the technology was put on hold as the lease was being considered and was not pursued
after the deal was rejected because the administration had more pressing matters. Dani Shavit, CEO of Pango Shyyny USA of Baltimore, said he was attracted to Scranton because it has made infrastructure improvements that, in turn, have attracted new and innovative businesses such as food trucks that have become downtown staples. We are looking for cities with potential, Shavit said. Mayor Christopher Doherty believes smartphone parking is a natural progression. Years from now, people are going to wonder why we didnt always pay with
See PANGO, Page 10A
The railroad-owned bridge carrying state Route 1025 in Nicholson over the Canadian Pacic Railroad will now be closed to vehicular and pedestrian trafc until further notice due to its poor condition, according to Pennsylvania Department of Transportation. There is a posted detour.
WILKES-BARRE
A Heights Crime Watch meeting will be held Thursday at 7 p.m. at the Puritan Church, 67 S. Sherman St. There is plenty of parking in the rear of church.
WILKES-BARRE An apartment building on Hazle Avenue was condemned by the city code enforcement ofce and a fugitive from New York was captured after police investigated a domestic dispute Tuesday morning. Andre Allen, 22, of 617 Hazle Ave., apartment 3, was arraigned on charges he used another name to identify himself to an ofcer. Police investigated a dispute involving a woman and Allen, who allegedly claimed he was going to kill her unborn child. Allen and the woman were stopped
by police on McLean Street and transported back to his apartment. Allen claimed he had a passport inside the apartment that identied him as Christopher A. Thomas, according to the criminal complaint. Once back at the apartment, the woman told police she had thrown all of Thomas belongings outside and the landlord picked it up. The landlord informed police that Thomas is David Burke. Police believe Allen is using numerous aliases. Allen ran into the apartment building after the woman had gone inside. Police forced their way inside the building for fear of the womans unborn child and Allens previous threats, the complaint says.
See CONDEMNED, Page 10A
Wilkes-Barre Police and building inspectors leave 617 Hazle Ave. after a man was apprehended on a fugitive from justice warrant from New York.
You wont nd it marked on many if any calendars, but today is PA529 Day, set aside by the state to draw attention to a tax-deferred saving plan for college. It may be obscure to most, but there are 3,096 529 accounts in Luzerne County that helped families save $31 million for college, according to the state Department of Treasury, which runs the federally backed program. Federal and state taxes are deferred as long as money remains in a 529 account, and both the principal and investment income are tax free upon withdrawal if used for qualied purposes, mainly tuition, room and board, though other college costs are on the list. At worst, a person can withdraw the money to use for any purpose and pay the taxes they would have owed anyway. There is no bad outcome, said state Treasury Secretary Rob McCord, a staunch proponent of the program who gladly touts rapid growth in participation and amount saved under his tenure. We have record enrollment and record savings, McCord said. As of March 31, there were 176,256 accounts statewide holding $2.785 billion. Regionally, Luzerne County has the most accounts and the most money saved, which is not surprising considering its the largest, population-wise. Lackawanna County is a close second, with 2,856 accounts holding $30.2 million. Among adjacent counties, lightly-populated and largely rural Wyoming County has the fewest accounts, 262 holding $2.54 million. There are two types of 529 accounts in Pennsylvania. One guarantees investment returns will match tuition increases at certain institutions. The other gives greater exibility in how money is invested, but does not guarantee returns. PA529 Day is more that a sales pitch by program proponents. To lure people to enroll via the state website at PA529.com, the state is waiving the $50 enrollment fee for those who sign up by Friday (use the code TimeFlies when prompted). Sign up by the deadline and you also will have a chance to win one of ve $529 accounts opened on behalf of the winners by the state. Its never too early and its never too late to enroll, McCord said Tuesday. Whether youre a grandparent who just heard about a second grandchild on the way, or somebody already in college, it usually makes economic sense to make use of these programs, and its super easy to do.
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N A T I O N
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IN BRIEF
Actor and director Ben Afeck receives an honorary degree Sunday at Brown Universitys commencement in Providence, R.I. Afeck was among six artists, writers, scientists and educators to receive the degrees from the Ivy League school at commencement exercises. He received a doctor of ne arts degree.
WHITE MARSH, MD.
INDIANAPOLIS
POINT PLEASANT, N.J. President Barack Obama and Gov. Chris Christie reunited for a buddy trip to the beach Tuesday, showing off the improvements to the Jersey Shore in the seven months since it was hit by Superstorm Sandy and encouraging tourists to return to the storied vacation destination. The Jersey Shore is back, and its open for business, the president said on a cloudy and drizzly day. The trip served as a sort of tourism commercial, featuring the two politicians playing at an arcade on the boardwalk, high-ving excited kids and marveling at a giant sand castle under construction. The president, in a playful speech, said, If they ever let me have some fun, Id have it here. Obama said the Jersey Shore had a special place in the nations heart and its mythology. He quoted Bruce Springsteens Jersey Girl, saying, Down the shore everythings all right. But the days agenda also played up the role the Democratic president and the Republican governor have played in helping the area recover after the storm crushed seaside property, took out portions of the boardwalk and devastated key tourist destinations. Although Obama noted that restaurants and arcades were open, he also stressed that the reconstruction work continued. Were not done yet, and I want to make sure that everybody understands that, he said. Were going to keep on going until we nish. Standing just a hundred
AP PHOTO
President Barack Obama and New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie walk along the boardwalk Tuesday during their visit to Point Pleasant, N.J.
yards from the shore at Asbury Park, Christie credited cooperation among local, state and federal government for the progress. This has been a community effort, everybody working together, Christie told the crowd. The cause of
rebuilding was more important, he said, than any kind of politics at all. Obama and Christie paid an unannounced visit to the Point Pleasant boardwalk. They checked out progress on what Obama said would be the worlds tallest
sand castle, which currently has a wood frame and scaffolding. Ed Jarrett, the designer, said he is building it from top to bottom. The town is going for the Guinness record for sand castles, several folks on the boardwalk said.
BEIJING A newborns cries from a public restroom in a residential building in eastern China led a tenant to a startling discovery: a baby boy trapped in a sewage pipe beneath a squat toilet. Fireghters, unable to pull the baby out, ended up sawing away an L-shaped section of the pipe and carrying it to a hospital, where it was delicately pried apart to save the infant. Video of the two-hour rescue of Baby No. 59 so named because of his incubator number in the hospital in the Pujiang area of the city of Jinhua was shown on Chinese news programs and websites late Monday and Tuesday. The baby, who weighed 6 pounds, 2.8 ounces, had a low heart rate and some minor abrasions on his head and
limbs, but was mostly unhurt, according to Zhejiang Online, the provinces ofcial news site. The placenta was still attached. It was unclear how the baby ended up in the toilet, but police said they were treating the case as an attempted homicide. The Pujiang county police bureau said on its ofcial microblog account that the boys mother has been located and that an investigation was under way, but it gave no further details. In the video, ofcials were shown removing the pipe from a ceiling that apparently was just below the restroom and then, at the hospital, using pliers and saws to gently pull apart the pipe, which was about about 3 inches in diameter. News of the babys ordeal was met with horror and pity by bloggers on Chinese sites. Most speculated that the child had been dumped by his parents down the toilet. The landlord of the building told Zhejiang News that there were no
AP PHOTO
Rescue workers cut away parts of a sewage pipe where a newborn baby was trapped in Pujiang, China.
signs that the birth took place in the restroom and she was not aware of any recent pregnancies among her tenants.
WASHINGTON A partisan showdown is looming over what is known as the nations secondhighest court, with President Barack Obama poised to nominate as many as three choices for the understaffed U.S. Court of Appeals in Washington in the face of a Republican proposal to distribute its vacancies to other parts of the country. The District of Columbia Circuit has been at the center of years of wrangling between the White House and the Senate because its judges have so much inuence over national and even international matters. Many cases, heard on the fth oor of the federal courthouse across from the Capitol, relate to the balance of power in Washington and review of actions by federal agencies that affect health, safety and the environment for all Americans. The White House is planning to pair Obamas nominations with an aggressive push to get them conrmed despite a GOP bill to trim the number of judges on the D.C. circuit. Republicans are taking their attempts to manipulate the federal judiciary to an entirely new level, Obama senior adviser Dan Pfeiffer said in a written statement that the White House planned to post on its blog Wednesday as part of its campaign on judicial nominations. The White House has been frustrated by the successful blocking of one of Obamas nominees to the circuit and by key decisions there recently against Obamas agenda. The circuit overturned the administrations regulation clamping down on power plant pollution that crosses state lines, rejected its attempt to require large graphic health warnings on cigarette packages and found that Obama exceeded his power in bypassing the Senate to make recess appointments. We have a majority in that court that is wreaking havoc with the country, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid argued last week on the Senate oor. Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell responded to Reid, The real issue, I guess, is he disagrees with the rulings on the D.C. circuit. Although Obama also has gotten some victories from the D.C. circuit, which upheld his health care law and his administrations rule on greenhouse gases, he was stymied in his attempts to add his own nominees to its bench until last week. Obamas rst offering, Caitlin Halligan, waited two and a half years before withdrawing her nomination in March with Republicans blocking a vote on her conrmation.
BALTIMORE Passengers whose cruise aboard Royal Caribbeans Grandeur of the Seas was cut short by an onboard re began arriving back in Baltimore on charter ights from the Bahamas on Tuesday afternoon, with many praising the response of the company and crew. Ill never go on any other cruise line, said Craig Dzubak,
26, of Pittsburgh, who was on his rst cruise. They couldnt have handled it any better. He said he and his wife, Chelsea, were planning their next cruise while on the ight home. Robert Alexander of Hamilton, N.J., said he was impressed by how well-prepared everyone on board was for emergencies. An actor from the ships theater made announcements to passengers after they were evacuated from their rooms, he said. Meanwhile, the vice president of the Grand Bahama Shipyard said the ship would be repaired at his facility, though a full assessment of damage hadnt been done yet.
We are still working with the cruise line to assess the repairs, and I sent a crew over there this morning, Reuben Byrd said Tuesday. Im assuming it will be a big job for us, he added. Royal Caribbean spokeswoman Cynthia Martinez did not immediately return phone calls or emails Tuesday afternoon about the repairs. Earlier, she said she had no updates on the incident or cause. Byrd said the shipyard didnt know about the cause, either. The U.S. Coast Guard and the National Transportation Safety Board planned to investigate. The re began at 2:50 a.m. Monday and was extinguished
AP PHOTO
The re-damaged exterior of Royal Caribbeans Grandeur of the Seas cruise ship is shown docked Monday in Freeport, Grand Bahama island.
about two hours later, with no injuries reported. Photos show a substantial area of the stern
burned on several decks of the ship the length of about three football elds.
PAGE 6A
O B I T U A R I E S
JOAN HUGHES KEMLER, 70, of Moosic and formerly of Duryea, died Monday, May 27, 2013. Born Feb. 1, 1943, she was a daughter of the late Clarence Bubbie Sr. and Bessie Decker Hughes. She was preceded by husband Arthur W. Kemler Jr.; sisters Marian Nalaschi, Louise Killino, Cathy Fritz; brother Ronald; a granddaughter. Surviving are children, Cynthia Smith (David), Arthur Kemler III (Elizabeth); siblings Dorothy Marianelli, Barbara Shrader, Debra Hughes, Donna Maul, Jackie Grugnale, Clarence Hughes Jr., Willard Butch Hughes, Louis Hughes, Thomas Hughes; other family and friends. Blessing services 8 p.m. today at Thomas P. Kearney Funeral Home Inc., 517 N. Main St., Old Forge. Friends may call 4 p.m. until services. MARY BONCAL, 85, of Nanticoke, died Friday, May 24, 2013, at Geisinger Wyoming Valley Medical Center, Plains Township. Born in Nanticoke on March 13, 1928, she was a daughter of the late Edwin and Eliza Roddu Dilling. She was preceded by her husband, Alexander. Surviving are her husbands nieces, Albina Boncal, New York; Mrs. Walter (Barbara) Demcke, Long Island; cousin, Robert Tamarantz, Arizona; friends, neighbors and her beloved Skipper. Funeral 11 a.m. Thursday at Stanley S. Stegura Funeral Home Inc., 614 S. Hanover St., Nanticoke. Mass of Christian Burial 11:30 a.m. in the main site of St. Faustinas Parish, 520 S. Hanover St., Nanticoke. Friends may call 10 a.m. until services. MATRENA KROM SVINTOZELSKIY, 84, East Northampton Street, WilkesBarre, died Monday, May 27,2013, at home, surrounded by her family. Born in Ponorniza, Ukraine, daughter of the late Ivan and Elizabeth Krom, she was a member of Full Gospel Slavic Church, Edwardsville. Surviving are daughter, Galina, and husband Ivan; sons, Victor and wife Svetlana, Alexander and wife Nadia; daughter-in-law, Zoya; grandchildren, Sergey, Pavel, Bogdon, Alex, Sergey, Igor, Vitaliy, Svetlana and Inna. The family thanks Dr. Edward Carey and his staff for their excellent care. Funeral 10 a.m. Thursday at Yeosock Funeral Home, 40 S. Main St., Plains Township. Friends may call 6 to 8 p.m. today and 9 a.m. until services. LESTER SITES, 64, of Dallas, passed away Monday, May 27, 2013. He was the owner and operator of L. Sites Trucking Co. He was preceded in death by parents, Lester and Dorothy Gray Sites; brother, Robert. Surviving are children, Lester Sites and Brittany, and their son, Edward; David Sites and wife, Amber, and their sons, David and Luke; Dottie Krashnak and husband Tony, and their children, Tony, Nickolas and Karley; sister, Ann Nardone. Viewing will be 6 to 8 p.m. Thursday at the S.J. Grontkowski Funeral Home, Plymouth. In lieu of owers, contributions may be made to the Luzerne County SPCA. To submit condolences, visit www.sjgrontkowskifuneralhome.com. DUANE J. HERBERT, 53, of Bear Creek Township, passed away Tuesday morning at his home. Funeral arrangements are pending from the Corcoran Funeral Home Inc., 20 S. Main St., Plains Township. CECELIA (LEGINS) BERZANSKI, 92, formerly of the Hanover section of Nanticoke, passed away Tuesday at the Birchwood Nursing and Rehabilitation Center, Nanticoke. Funeral arrangements are pending from the Stanley S. Stegura Funeral Home Inc., Nanticoke. RAYMOND T. BIDDING JR., 51, of Kingston, passed away peacefully on Friday, May 24, 2013, surrounded by his family. Born June 15, 1961, in Cherry Point, N.C., he was a graduate of Wyoming Valley West High School. He was preceded in death by father Raymond Sr. and sister-in-law Donna Bidding. Ray is survived by his mother, the former Geraldine D. Bobeck, Dallas; daughter, Theresa Kasson, Wilkes-Barre; brothers, Vincent Bidding and his wife, Christine, Larksville; Robert Bidding, Harveys Lake; Brian Bidding, Kingston; Tony Bidding, Houtzdale, Pa.; many nieces, nephews and cousins; friend and father gure, Joe Luksic, Wilkes-Barre. Friends may call 7 to 9 p.m. Friday at Kopicki Funeral Home, 263 Zerbey Ave., Kingston. PASTOR HAROLD S. HOSKINS, 74, a resident of Falls and co-pastor of Maranatha Fellowship Church, Swoyersville, died Monday in Tyler Memorial Hospital, Tunkhannock Township, Wyoming County, after being stricken earlier at his home. Funeral arrangements have been entrusted to and will be announced by the H. Merritt Hughes Funeral Home Inc., a Golden Rule Funeral Home, 451 N. Main St., Wilkes-Barre, at a later time.
Sally Heilbrunn
May 24, 2013
rancis Frank Josulevicz, 79, of Hanover Township, passed away Monday, May 27, 2013, at Geisinger Wyoming Valley Medical Center, Plains Township. He was born on March 2, 1934, in Wilkes Barre, a son of the late Charles and Helen Witek Josulevicz. He was a graduate of Coughlin High School and served in the U.S. Army. He was self employed as a drywall nisher. Frank was a member of the Exaltation of the Holy Cross Church, Hanover Township. Surviving are his wife of 48 years, Wanda; daughters, Donna, Las Vegas; Gail, at home; son, Brian and his wife, Melissa, Dallas; grandchildren, Zachery and Celeste Josulevicz; brothers, Charles, Parsons; Edward, Bear Creek; sister, Gloria Recek, Lehman; nieces and nephews. Funeral will be held at 9:30 a.m. Friday from the Charles V. Sherbin Funeral Home, 630 Main Road, Hanover Township, followed by a Mass of Christian Burial at 10 a.m. in the Exaltation of the Holy Cross Church, Buttonwood, Hanover Township. Interment will be in St. Marys Cemetery, Hanover Township. Friends may call 5 to 8 p.m. Thursday at the funeral home.
aranne Sally Heilbrunn, 63, of Scranton, passed away at Geisinger Community Medical Center on Friday, May 24, 2013, following a brief illness. Daughter of Sarah and Jim McNulty, Sally was born on July 21, 1949, and grew up in Inkerman. She was a graduate of St. John the Evangelist High School. Sally held a bachelors degree in psychology from Manseld State University. Additionally, in the 1990s, Sally graduated from Luzerne County Community College as a registered nurse. Sally then used her education to help others by working as a registered nurse in behavioral health rst at Community Medical Center, and followed by Clarks Summit State Hospital until she retired in early 2011. Sally was a generous, intelligent, loving and caring woman who enjoyed spending time with her son, shopping, traveling and at family events. Sally was preceded in death by her father, Jim McNulty. Sally is survived by her son, Jeffrey Heilbrunn; mother, Sarah McNulty; sister, Elizabeth OMalley;
several cousins, nieces and aunts. She is deeply missed by all. A blessing service will be held at 10 a.m. Friday in the Peter J. Adonizio Funeral Home, 251 William St., Pittston. Entombment will be in Mount Olivet Cemetery, Carverton. Friends may call from 5 to 8 p.m. Thursday at the funeral home. Following the funeral, there will be a brief luncheon served in Sallys memory. Luncheon details will be provided at the funeral. Online condolences may be made at www.peterjadoniziofuneralhome.com.
usan M. Marianna Makarczyk, 64, of West Main Street, Glen Lyon, passed away on Friday at Hospice Community Care, Inpatient Unit, Geisinger South Wilkes-Barre, with her daughter, Michelle, and her son, Jeffrey, by her side. She was born in Nanticoke on Dec. 14, 1948. She was a daughter of the late Andrew A. and Alvina E. Demski Sweeney. She was a member of the Sunshine Club. She enjoyed gardening and she loved to make beautiful bow creations for her family and friends to enjoy. She loved to cook and entertain her family and friends with her exceptional deviled eggs, aka sliders, and her famous banana bread cake. She loved to spend time with her family and her lifelong friends, but, most of all, she loved to spend time with her loving granddaughter, Harley. She was preceded in death by her husband of 40 years, Stanley Paul Slug Makarczyk Jr.; and her stepson Kenneth Makarczyk. Surviving are her son, Jeffrey Lynn; daughter, Michelle Lynn,
George J. Pisaneschi
May 27, 2013
and her ance, Sam Atkinson; stepdaughter, Janine Floryshak, and her husband, John; stepson Stanley P. Makarczyk III and his wife, Diane; granddaughter, Harley; brother, Andrew Sweeney, and his wife, Rita; niece, Marianne Sweeney. Funeral services will be 9:30 a.m. today at George A. Strish Inc. Funeral Home, 211 W. Main St., Glen Lyon. A Mass of Christian Burial will be at 10 a.m. in Holy Spirit Parish/St. Adalberts Church, Market Street, Glen Lyon. Interment will follow in St. John the Baptist Cemetery, Glen Lyon. Family and friends may call 8:30 a.m. until time of services.
John Freitas
May 22, 2013
ohn Freitas, 71, of North Empire Street, Wilkes-Barre, passed into eternal life Wednesday evening in the Geisinger Medical Center, Danville, following a prolonged illness. Born June 1, 1941, in Linden, N.J., he was a son of the late Anthony and Stephanie Freitas. Mr. Freitas proudly served our country with the U.S. Marine Corps during the Vietnam War. Upon the time of his honorable discharge, John was the recipient of several awards and citations, including the Vietnam Campaign Medal, the Vietnam Device Medal with three stars, the Bronze Star with Combat V Medal, the Combat Action Ribbon and the Vietnam Presidential Unit Citation. Until his retirement, Mr. Freitas worked as a bus driver for Academy Bus Co., of Hoboken, N.J., and previously with the Frank Martz Co., Wilkes-Barre, conducting many cross-country tours in the United States and Canada for more than 30 years. He and his wife, the former Barbara Siecko, celebrated 48 years of married life on March 3, 2013. In addition to his beloved wife, Barbara, at home, are their children, Lori Freitas, Yardley; Gregory, Wilkes-Barre; John P. and his wife, Natalie, Langhorne, and Nicholas and his wife, Tina, Pawcatuck, Conn.; ve grandchildren; several nieces and nephews. Funeral services for Mr. Freitas were private and at the convenience of his family. There were no public visitation hours. The John V. Morris Family Funeral Homes Inc. of Wilkes-Barre is honored to care for Mr. Freitas and his family at this time. Memorial contributions may be made in Johns memory to the SPCA of Luzerne County, Fox Hill Road, Plains Township. To send his wife and children online words of comfort, friendship and support, please visit the funeral homes website at www. johnvmorrisfuneralhomes.com.
eorge J. Pisaneschi, 84, of West Wyoming, passed away on Monday, May 27, 2013, at the Commonwealth Home Health and Hospice Unit at St. Lukes Villa, Wilkes-Barre. Born in Parsons, he was a son of the late Louis and Frances Parise Pisaneschi. George was a member of St. Monicas Parish at Our Lady of Sorrows Church, West Wyoming, and a graduate of Coughlin High School. He was a U.S. Army veteran, having served during the Korean War. Prior to retirement, he worked at Procter & Gamble, Mehoopany, and then continued to work at Highland Manor Nursing Home, Exeter, for the next 15 years. Preceding him in death was his twin brother, Louis, who recently passed away on Oct. 31, 2012. Surviving are his wife of 57 years, the former Rita Pisaneschi; sons, Argante Gante and his wife, Michelle, Larkmount Manor, and George D. Dino Pisaneschi, West Wyoming; granddaughters, Maria, Wyoming; Mary Jonelle, Clifton, N.J., and Beth, Bronx, N.Y.; sister, Christine Pisaneschi, Larkmount Manor; numerous nieces, nephews and cousins.
Military funeral services will be held at 9:30 a.m. Thursday by the AMVETS Honor Guard at the Gubbiotti Funeral Home, 1030 Wyoming Ave., Exeter. A Mass of Christian Burial will be at 10 a.m. at St. Monicas Parish at Our Lady of Sorrows Church, Eighth Street, West Wyoming, with the Rev. Leo McKernan, pastor, as celebrant. Entombment will be in Mount Olivet Mausoleum, Carverton. Relatives and friends may call 5 to 8 p.m. today at the funeral home. Memorial donations, if desired, may be made to the SPCA, 524 E. Main St., Wilkes-Barre, PA 18702.
ary Theresa Lacina, 84, of Swoyersville, passed away Monday, May 27, 2013, at the Wilkes-Barre General Hospital. Born July 30, 1928, in Swoyersville, she was a daughter of the late Peter and Catherine Antos. She was a member of St. Elizabeth Ann Seton Parish, Swoyersville. Mary was a loving wife, mother and grandmother. She loved owers, gardening and crafts, but most of all she loved her family and taking care of them. She is deeply loved and will be sadly missed by all who knew and loved her. She was preceded in death by her sisters, Alice, Sophie and Anna; brothers, Runner, Walter, Henry and Edward. Surviving are her husband of 66 years, Charles G. Lacina; children, Charles J. Lacina and his wife, Karen, Florida; Kathy Shedletsky, Kingston; Mark Lacina, Las Vegas; Audrey Lacina, Las Vegas, and Mary Lacina, Florida; grandchildren, Karen, Kimmy and Kelly, Zandy,
David and Christopher, Jennifer and Jessica, and Michael; 16 greatgrandchildren; one great-greatgranddaughter. Funeral services will be held 9:30 a.m. Friday from Bednarski Funeral Home, 168 Wyoming Ave., Wyoming, with a Mass of Christian Burial at 10 a.m. in St. Elizabeth Ann Seton Parish, Swoyersville. Interment will be held in Mount Olivet Cemetery, Carverton. Friends may call 6 to 8 p.m. Thursday at the funeral home.
James Morrash
May 26, 2013
ames Morrash, of Media, Pa., died Sunday, May 26, 2013, in Allentown. He was born in Wilkes-Barre on March 22, 1926, and graduated from Meyers High School. He was a U.S. Army veteran of the Second World War. He received his bachelors degree in engineering from Penn State University and his masters degree in engineering from the University of Delaware. He had a successful career with Westinghouse Corp. and retired after many years with them. He was married to Betty Elizabeth Levergood Morrash who died in 1996. He was also preceded in death by his parents, Michael and Helen Morrash, and his many siblings, George, John, Lamya, Elias, Sadie, Albert, Mary, Jennie and Joseph. He is survived by many nieces, nephews, great-nieces and great-
nephews, who lovingly knew him as Uncle Jim. James and Betty were avid golfers and travelers. They were longtime members of the Rolling Green Golf and Country Club in Springeld, Pa. James continued to be an active member of the Rolling Green Country Club after Bettys passing, where he will be deeply missed. There will be a graveside service and burial 11 a.m. Friday at the St. Mary Antiochian Orthodox Cemetery in Hanover Township. There will be no calling hours. In lieu of owers, donations may be made in his name to Good Shepherd Rehabilitation Hospital, Good Shepherd Plaza, 850 S. Fifth St., Allentown, PA 18103. Arrangements by Mamary-Durkin Funeral Service, 59 Parrish St., Wilkes-Barre.
FUNERALS
ATKINSON - Thomas, funeral 10 a.m. today at H. Merritt Hughes Funeral Home, 451 N. Main St., Wilkes-Barre. CARICHNER - Sarah, memorial service 7 p.m. Wednesday at Sheldon-Kukuchka Funeral Home Inc., 73 W. Tioga St., Tunkhannock. COOMBS - Ruth, funeral 11 a.m. today at Mayo Funeral Home Inc., 77 N. Main St., Shickshinny. DIESO-STEGURA - Janet, funeral 10 a.m. today at Yanaitis Funeral Home Inc., 55 Stark St., Plains Township. Friends may call 9 a.m. until service. DOMBROSKI - Alfred, funeral 9 a.m. Thursday at Yanaitis Funeral Home Inc., 55 Stark St., Plains Township. Mass of Christian Burial 9:30 a.m. in Ss. Peter & Paul Church, Plains Township. Friends may call 5 to 8 p.m. today at the funeral home. ERMAK - Mark, friends may call 4 to 8 p.m. today at Kopicki Funeral Home, 263 Zerbey Ave., Kingston. FETTERMAN - Mary Ellen, funeral 9:30 a.m. Thursday from George A. Strish Inc. Funeral Home, 105 N. Main St., Ashley. Mass of Christian Burial 10 a.m. in St. Andrew Parish, Parrish Street, Wilkes-Barre. Friends may call 5 to 8 p.m. today. GAUGHAN - Rosemary, funeral 10:30 a.m. today at Nat & Gawlas Funeral Home, 89 Park Ave., Wilkes-Barre. Mass of Christian Burial 11 a.m. in St. Nicholas Church, 226 S. Washington St., WilkesBarre. GRUEN - Thomas, funeral 11 a.m. today in Tunkhannock Assembly of God Church. KOPEC - Theodore Jr., friends may call 5 to 8 p.m. today at Bednarski & Thomas Funeral Home, 27 Park Ave. Wilkes-Barre. Memorial service 8 p.m. MACKIN - Mary, funeral 9 a.m. Thursday at Metcalfe-Shaver-Kopcza Funeral Home Inc,. 504 Wyoming Ave., Wyoming. Mass of Christian Burial 9:30 a.m. in St. Cecilias Church of St. Barbaras Parish, Exeter. Friends may call 5 to 8 p.m. today at the funeral home. MAKARCZYK - Susan, funeral 9:30 a.m. today at George A. Strish Inc. Funeral Home, 211 W. Main St., Glen Lyon. Mass of Christian Burial 10 a.m. in Holy Spirit Parish/St. Adalberts Church, Market Street, Glen Lyon. Friends may call 8:30 a.m. until services. MASCHAK - Betty, funeral with Panachida 10 a.m. today at Damiano Funeral Home Inc., Blaine and Cleveland streets, McAdoo. MUZZY - Arlene, public memorial dinner 6 p.m. Friday at Jenningsville Community Center. RAPPAPORT- Marvin, Shiva 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. today at the family home in Kingston. ROMANUSKI - Charles, celebration of life 10 a.m. today at Yeosock Funeral Home, 40 S. Main St., Plains Township. Friends may call 9:30 a.m. until service. SENGHAAS - Carl, friends may call 5 to 7 p.m. Thursday at Kopicki Funeral Home, 263 Zerbey Ave., Kingston. STUPPINO - Antoinette, funeral 9 a.m. today at Peter J. Adonizio Funeral Home, 251 William St., Pittston. Mass of Christian Burial 9:30 a.m. in St. Joseph Marello Parish, Pittston. TARTONIS - Romaine, funeral with service 11 a.m. today at Kizis-Lokuta Funeral Home, 134 Church St., Pittston. Friends may call 9:30 a.m. until service.
DENVER A set of laws to govern how recreational marijuana should be grown, sold and taxed was signed into law Tuesday in Colorado, where Democratic Gov. John Hickenlooper called the measures the states best attempt to navigate the uncharted territory of legalized recreational pot. The laws cover how the drug should be raised and packaged, with purchasing limits for outof-state visitors and a new marijuana driving limit as an analogy to blood alcohol levels. Hickenlooper didnt support marijuana legalization last year, but he praised the regulatory package as a good rst crack at safely overseeing the drug. Recreational marijuana is really a completely new entity, Hickenlooper said, calling the pot rules commonsense oversight, such as required potency labeling and a requirement that
marijuana is to be sold in childproof opaque packing with labels clearly stating the drug may not be safe. Colorado voters approved recreational marijuana as a constitutional amendment last year. The state allows adults over 21 to possess up to an ounce of the drug. Adults can grow up to six plants, or buy pot in retail stores, which are slated to open in January. The governor said Tuesday he believes the federal government will soon respond to the fact that Colorado and Washington state are in violation of federal drug law. But Hickenlooper didnt have a specic idea of when. We think that it will be relatively soon. We are optimistic that they are going to be a little more specic in their approach on this issue, Hickenlooper said. Pressed for details, the governor jokingly referred to unrelated scandals surrounding the U.S. Department of Justice.
The Times Leader publishes free obituaries, which have a 27-line limit, and paid obituaries, which can run with a photograph. A funeral home representative can call the obituary desk at (570) 829-7224, send a fax to (570) 829-5537 or e-mail to tlobits@timesleader.com. If you fax or e-mail, please call to conrm. Obituaries must be submitted by 9 p.m. Sunday through Thursday and 7:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday. Obituaries must be sent by a funeral home or crematory, or must name who is handling arrangements, with address and phone number. We discourage handwritten notices; they incur a $15 typing fee.
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MOORE, Okla. Before residents of Moore can rebuild, theyll have to deal with the debris from the deadly tornado that devastated the Oklahoma City suburb: crushed wood, mangled siding and battered belongings that could make a pile reaching more than a mile into the sky. The splintered remains rst stop is a landll where items will be sorted, then recycled or burned. Bricks, for instance, will go to charity projects such as Habitat for Humanity; wood, paper and clothing will be incinerated. I could be sad about it, but its not going to make anything come back. Its just a house. Its just stuff. We have each other, Jessie Childs said as bulldozer and backhoe operators reduced her house near the Plaza Towers Elementary School to a 10-foot pile of rubble. The school was destroyed in the top-of-the scale EF5 tornado that carved a 17-mile path of destruction on May 20. In all, 24 people were killed, including seven children in the school. With each load of debris, Moore moves another step closer to recovering from the storm that damaged or destroyed 4,000 homes and businesses. Against a cacophony of snapping lumber, crunching metal and the beepbeep of bulldozers in reverse, Clayton Powell sorted through the listing remains of his Moore home. Youre sifting through rubble piles trying to nd that one photo, memories you cant restore, Powell said. Im sure there are a few things I havent even thought of and wont miss. Presidential approval of a major disaster declaration typically covers 75 percent of the cost for communities to remove debris. In Moores case, Presi-
AP PHOTO
Friends and family members carry what remains of piano through the rubble Saturday at a tornadoravaged home in Moore, Okla. Before construction workers can begin rebuilding Moore, they have to overcome a mile-high pile of crushed wood, shattered glass and obliterated belongings.
dent Barack Obama approved even more assistance. Under a pilot program, the federal government will pay 85 percent of debris removal costs for the rst 30 days and 80 percent for the next 60. The expectation is that quicker debris removal speeds up the overall recovery. The Oklahoma Department of Transportation brought in 400 of its workers and 250 pieces of equipment, including dump trucks and front-end loaders, to help with the process, said Transportation Secretary Gary Ridley. As residents pick through the remains of their homes for the few surviving personal treasures, theyve developed a way for crews to know when its OK to take stuff away. If its out on the curb, anybody can come out and get it, said Charlie Baker of Blanchard, watching a bulldozer raze his daughters house and push it to the street. A relative found her Tiffany
necklace, but theres not much else worth salvaging. Jumping into the pile quickly after the storm, Kathy Duffy struggled to even nd things that actually belonged to her sister, who was out of town when the storm hit. None of the clothes we found is theirs. None of the pictures we found is theirs, Duffy said last week. Thats denitely not theirs, she said, pointing to a pair of large black sweatpants draped over a chair. Paul Borges, who lives on the east side of Moore, found a crowbar and a 1979 baseball card featuring a player he had never heard of. A neighbor found onehalf of a $100 bill. A eld near the Abundant Life church was littered with canceled checks from 1980 and from a town 16 miles away. Along Eagle Street was a pink, fuzzy slipper and a gray bra, with no sign they traveled together. After debris arrives at the landll, workers will go through
it, Moore Mayor Glenn Lewis said. Wood, paper and clothing will be placed in a burner box, a device that uses its own scraps to generate heat to the point that it eventually consumes itself, Lewis said. Hazardous material will likely go out of state. Albert Ashwood, Oklahomas emergency management director, could not estimate the cost or the amount of the debris beyond I can tell you there will be plenty. His agency on Monday estimated that just under 4,000 homes and businesses were destroyed or seriously impacted by storms May 19 and 20 a gure about half that from a similar EF5 tornado in Joplin, Mo., two years ago. The Missouri storm generated 3 million cubic yards of debris. If Moores debris eld winds up about half that, the pile would cover an NBA-sized basketball court, like the one where the Oklahoma City Thunder play, to a depth of 1.7 miles.
WASHINGTON The storm engulng the Internal Revenue Service could provide a boost for lawmakers who want to simplify U.S. tax laws a code that is so complicated most Americans buy commercial software to help them or simply hire someone else to do it all. Members of Congress from both political parties say the current uproar over the targeting of conservative political groups underscores that overly complex tax provisions have given the IRS too much discretion in interpreting and enforcing the law. This is the perfect example of why we need tax reform, said Rep. Tim Grifn, R-Ark., a member of the tax-writing House Ways and Means Committee. If you want to diminish and limit the power of the IRS, you have got to reduce the complexity of the tax code and take them out of it. There are still formidable obstacles to completing a major tax overhaul this year or next. Democrats and Republicans start off with opposite views on whether the government should levy more taxes and on who should pay what share. The two sides also dont trust one another, making it difcult to envision agreement on which popular tax breaks to keep and which to scrap. Most taxpayers pay someone to do their taxes or they buy commercial software to help them le. In a report earlier this year, national taxpayer advocate Nina E. Olson ranked complexity as the most serious problem facing both
taxpayers and the IRS. People simply trying to comply with the rules often make inadvertent errors and overpay or underpay, she said, while others often nd loopholes that enable them to reduce or eliminate their tax liabilities. The IRS scandal has little, if anything, to do with most everyday taxpayers, yet some lawmakers hope the attention will help galvanize support for the rst major tax overhaul since 1986. A little over two weeks ago, the IRS revealed that agents assigned to a special team in Cincinnati had targeted tea party and other conservative groups for additional, often burdensome scrutiny when they applied for tax-exempt status. The targeting lasted more than 18 months during the 2010 and 2012 election campaigns, hindering the groups ability to raise money, according to a report by the agencys inspector general. The ensuing storm has cost two top IRS ofcials their jobs, and a third has been placed on paid administrative leave. Investigations by Congress and the Justice Department are underway. The IRS was screening the groups applications because agents were trying to determine their level of political activity. IRS regulations say that tax-exempt social welfare organizations can engage in some political activity but the activity cannot be their primary mission. It is a vague standard that agents struggled to apply, according to the inspector generals report. Lawmakers in both parties have complained for years that overtly political groups on the left and right have taken advantage of the rules, allowing them to claim tax-exempt status and hide the identities of their donors.
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Dallas
Public Square
Dallas
H U M F O R D
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N E W S
A day of care and kudos for United Way UGI, DEP to clean up
Organization holding awards breakfast before volunteers set out to begin projects.
By BILL OBOYLE boboyle@timesleader.com
PLAINS TWP. The theme for the 2013 United Way Day of Caring is Operation Dream, and this years dream is huge. About 622 volunteers representing 43 businesses are helping 34 organizations by performing 34 projects this spring, ve of which will be done today. Total volunteer hours will exceed 3,700, providing an estimated $82,000 in value to the groups helped. Were thrilled at the effort, Bill Jones, United Way of Wyoming Valley president/CEO,
said Tuesday. This years projects will have a tremendous positive effect on our community. This morning the United Way of Wyoming Valley will hold its Operation Dream A Day of Caring and Awards Event at the Woodlands Inn & Resort. Doors will open at 8 a.m. with a short program starting at 8:30. Jones said the events presenting sponsor is Blue Cross and the other Dream Maker sponsors include Sallie Mae, Wegmans and the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins. Jones said more than 300 people will attend, and after the event the volunteers will go out to complete the community projects. Jones said United Way still needs about 70 volunteers to
help complete 15 community projects. Those interested can register online at www.unitedwaywb.org. At todays breakfast, eight community campaign achievement awards will be presented in addition to the following ve awards of high distinction: United Way Corporate Award (more than 100 employees): Blue Cross of NE PA United Way Corporate Award (fewer than 100 employees): The Citizens Voice Rose Brader Community Service Award: Gary H. Williams United Way Sam Bianco Labor Award: UFCW Local 1776 Sarah & Anthony F. Kane Jr. Achievement Award: Kevin Sickle The ve projects being worked
on today: Anthracite Scenic Trails Association, cleanup and maintenance. Agency project coordinator is Judy Rimple, and companies volunteering are Blue Cross of Northeastern Pennsylvania and Lord & Taylor. Camp Kresge, WilkesBarre YMCA, White Haven, general cleanup. Agency project coordinator is Mike McElhinney, and companies volunteering are Air Products and Blue Cross of Northeastern Pennsylvania. Camp Acahela, Boy Scouts of America, Blakeslee, preparing camp for summer season. Agency project coordinator, Dave Srebo; companies volunteering, Williams Gas Pipeline Transco and Mid-Atlantic Youth Services.
Nanticoke property
Old site of gas manufacturing plant contains contaminated groundwater, soil.
CITy ACQUIRES T H R E E PA R C E L S
OXON HILL, Md. Jae Canetti said he screamed No! when he learned the National Spelling Bee would be introducing a vocabulary test. He started changing the way he prepared, studying denitions of words on the bus ride to school each day. At least the extra work appeared to have paid off. When the 11-year-old from Fairfax, Va., took the test Tuesday morning, he felt he did just ne. I knew a lot of the words, Jae said. It denitely was not, like, painstaking. The 86th edition of the Scripps National Spelling Bee took on new meaning or rather, lots of meanings
with organizers having decreed that the precocious youngsters need to prove they know more than just how to spell. The 281 competitors took a 45-minute computer test that probed their knowledge of both spelling and vocabulary, with the results to be combined with todays onstage round to determine who advances to the seminals Thursday. For the most part, the spellers had the same reaction to the vocabulary test: Good idea, but they wished they had known about it sooner. I think everybody wasnt expecting it, because it was something you werent thinking they were going to put in, said 12-year-old Mary Elizabeth Horton from West Melbourne, The election board is expected to meet Monday night to vote to certify the election results. Several council members criticized the notication failure regarding Hahn. Ofcials in Carbon and Schuylkill counties may expect Luzerne County to pay for a new Hazleton Area School Board election in their counties, ofcials said. It was embarrassing to all of us, and it was embarrassing to the area, said Councilman Rick Morelli. He said mistakes happen, but he is particularly disappointed in a lack of communication and transparency on how the matter will be resolved. He noted county Election Director Marisa Crispell-Barber was hired by county Manager Robert Lawton. Councilman Stephen A. Urban said council cant vacate the election board seats held by ve unpaid citizens because the home rule charter prohibits council from interfering with county boards and authorities. Councilwoman Elaine Maddon Curry said an error that
Fla. But it denitely changes everything. Organizers announced the addition of vocabulary seven weeks ago, saying it reinforces the bees mission to encourage students to broaden their knowledge of the English language. They waited until all of the qualifying bees had been completed so that the spellers would be on equal footing in their preparation. Before they announced the vocabulary, I paid attention to the denitions but I didnt focus too much, said 13-year-old Arvind Mahankali of New York. But then after they announced it, I occasionally had my dad quiz me on vocabulary words, and I studied the denitions once in a while. allowed 500 votes for a withdrawn candidate in a very close election is very disturbing. It just shouldnt happen, she said. Councilman Edward Brominski said Luzerne County made the mistake and should be responsible for correcting it. Councilwoman Linda McCloskey Houck said she pushed for Tuesdays resolution because county ofcials must ensure the rights of citizens are protected. Countywide reassessment also was discussed Tuesday because Hazleton resident Jack Mundie said many Hazleton area properties are selling far below assessed values. He cited a double-block assessed at $166,000 that recently sold for $55,000 and said he will provide many more examples to council. The last countywide reassessment, which took effect in 2009, was at the height of the market, Mundie said. I dont think its fair were paying more taxes than the rest of the county, Mundie said, adding he does not believe another reassessment will cost an
Spelling Bee contestant Arvind Mahankali, 13, departs after completing the test phase of the Bee Tuesday.
AP PHOTO
COUNTY
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Elections was at fault, and I believe they should resolve it to the satisfaction of the voters and the candidates. Hazle Township resident Marfy Yanac said the error is very concerning. Whos going to be accountable for the discrepancy that happened? she asked. Ann Marie Shelby, also of Hazle Township, described problems she witnessed in the primary and previous elections. Wilkes-Barre Township resident Bob Caruso, who has monitored elections for decades, asked county council to request the resignation of election board members. People are shocked and dismayed by this last primary election, Caruso said. Council passed a resolution Tuesday requiring the election board to investigate primary election problems and attend the June 25 council meeting to explain what happened.
enormous amount of money because new photographs and property descriptions are not needed. Urban has called for another reassessment and said he and former Commissioner Tom Makowski passed a resolution in 2003 requiring the county to complete a reassessment every four years to prevent assessments from getting stale. County ofcials havent honored this edict, saying the expense of a new reassessment isnt justied when state statistics show the countys assessments are still sound. The last revaluation cost $8 million and was more involved because the values had not been updated since 1965. The next reassessment is supposed to be completed in-house and cost signicantly less, ofcials said. Lawton said county Assessment Director Tony Alu will attend an upcoming council meeting to discuss the matter. Morelli said county ofcials must weigh the cost and pros and cons because the last reassessment was a nightmare.
NANTICOKE The former site of a gas manufacturing plant in the city where soil and groundwater are contaminated will soon be cleaned up by UGI Penn Natural Gas with oversight from the state Department of Environmental Protection. The site, located at the intersection of Walnut and Arch streets, will take between two and three years to clean up and is one of 11 similar properties in Pennsylvania. Its a multiyear project to get all these sites remediated and returned to some sort of functional site, said Joseph Swope, a communications director for UGI. Swope said the work at the 11 properties is due to an agreement with the state DEP dating back to March 2004. He said soil at each property is tested for contaminants and then a plan is developed to clean each site. That may include removal of soil to return the property back to a functional state. Swope said adjoining properties also are tested for contaminants . He said gas used in homes was once manufactured in plants that havent been functioning since the 1950s. The Nanticoke plant has since been demolished. Unfortunately, the manufactured gas process did leave some contaminated soil, Swope said. UGI and the DEP recently cleaned a site in Scranton, and another exists on Water Street in Wilkes-Barre, Swope said. Other sites are in Columbia, Montour and Lycoming coun-
Nanticoke recently acquired three ood-damaged properties located along Arch Street after delinquent taxes were forgiven and the Federal Emergency Management Agency approved the purchase. In a May 22 ling in Luzerne County, solicitors for the city asked for a real estate tax abatement on three parcels along Arch Street, belonging to Edward and Elaine Rasmus and Jean Kotsko. Solicitor William Finnegan said the properties were purchased by the city through FEMA after the September 2011 ood. The properties received extensive damage, Finnegan said. According to the court ling, the three parcels of land had combined unpaid and delinquent city taxes of $1,758. In the court ling, Finnegan asked that the delinquent taxes be satised, which was ultimately granted by County Judge Lesa Gelb. Finnegan said as of last week, the city now owns the three parcels of land, but said the city is unsure what will be done with the properties. The buildings located on the properties will most likely be razed, Finnegan said. During the September 2011, water from the Susquehanna River ooded the nearby Weis Market parking lot, located near the Arch Street properties.
ties. The process of cleaning up the site begins with a legal notice published in local newspapers, followed by a 30-day public comment period. Nanticoke has until June 21 to submit a request to UGI for development of a public involvement plan. Swope said sites of former gas manufacturing plants have previously been turned into parking lots or parks in several areas. He said it is not known yet what the site in Nanticoke will be used for, if anything.
TEACHERS
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ning through Aug. 31, 2012. The district announced the furloughs nearly two months before that date but noted they would not take effect until after it, thus complying with the MOU. The union argued the date of implementation was irrelevant because a clause in the agreement says this MOU shall expire upon the ratication of a successor agreement. It was an MOU contract, union representative Sheila Saidman said Tuesday, stressing the word contract. As in any contract, you remain under the status quo until a successor agreement is signed. No such agreement was signed. Saidman said she didnt know how much the decision would cost the district. According to state data, the average teacher salary in the district for 201011 the latest available data was $59,813. At that rate, one year of back pay for 32 furloughed teachers would add up to about $1.9 million, not counting benets or any other com-
pensation. According to McConnells opinion and award, the union argued the wage freeze was explicitly for one year but the furlough ban was not. The district argued both were clearly intended to last only one year. The district has fought with tremendous zeal in this case, and has parsed this memorandum of agreement in an attempt to have a different result reached here, McConnell wrote. I have read the memorandum at least a dozen times, with both parties arguments in mind, and each time I came away clearly convinced that the (teacher union) Association has posited the correct interpretation. District Superintendent Michael Healey did not return a call Tuesday afternoon, but the district has the right to appeal to Wyoming County Court. After that, either side would have the right to appeal to Commonwealth Court. Saidman was condent it would be upheld, at least at the higher level. Ive seen this sort of decision overturned at the county level sometimes, she said, but upheld at the commonwealth level.
Saidman noted some of the teachers had been called back through the year and would not be eligible for full back pay. The School Board has already passed a preliminary budget with expenditures set at $45.9
million and property taxes increased form 68.1 to 69.6 mills. A mill is a $1 tax on every $1,000 of assessed property value. The board can revise the budget but must pass a nal budget by June 30.
EXETER A woman employed as a bookkeeper at Avenue Auto Sales on Wyoming Avenue was charged Tuesday with stealing nearly $50,000 from the business. Patricia A. Avery, 49, of High Mountain Road, Exeter Township, was arraigned by District Judge Joseph Carmody in West Pittston on three counts each of theft by unlawful taking and receiving stolen property, and a single count of forgery. She was released on $7,500 unsecured bail. Police allege Avery, while employed as a bookkeeper, paid herself with extra paychecks, overtime and petty cash from 2009 through 2012, according to the criminal complaint. Avery used three different accounts to plunder from the business, police allege. Police said in the complaint Avery unlawfully took
$10,202.22 from the Avenue Auto Sales general account, $11,996.72 from the business garage account and $26,320.75 from the payroll account. Owner Joseph Appel discovered the thefts when he noticed in September that Avery overpaid herself $150, the complaint says. He checked prior payroll accounts and discovered more missing money that led to an audit, which showed overpayments to Avery, the complaint says. Police questioned Avery on Jan. 9, when she allegedly admitted to overpaying herself but was unsure of the amount. She stated she was told to take an extra $20 per week for gasoline and the use of her vehicle for business, according to the complaint. In a second interview with police on March 28, Avery admitted she was taking extra money to make ends meet and pay bills, the complaint states. said that potential exists as he sees one of the groups roles being that as an advocate for funding to combat hunCasey ger. A m o n g those at the Weinberg Food Bank to participate in the announcement of the new entity was state Sen. John Yudichak, who voiced frustration with the economy and the percentage of people forced to rely on assistance for food. This new association will allow for better cooperation and communication between all of our food banks to ensure that all families are getting the assistance they need and it will also provide a strong, unied voice in the ght against hunger at the state and federal level, Yudichak, D-Plymouth Township, said.
FOOD
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F E E D I n G P E n n S y LVA n I A
Members include Central Pennsylvania Food Bank in Harrisburg; Channels Food Rescue, Harrisburg; Community Food Warehouse of Mercer County, Sharon; Greater Pittsburgh Community Food Bank, Duquesne; H & J Weinberg Northeast Pennsylvania Regional Food Bank, Wilkes-Barre; Philabundance, Philadelphia; Second Harvest Food Bank of the Lehigh Valley and Northeast Pennsylvania, Allentown; Second Harvest Food Bank of Northwest Pennsylvania, Erie; and Westmoreland County Food Bank, Delmont.
year, Caryn Long, the Harrisburgbased groups executive director, said. There are an estimated 1.8 million food insecure people in Pennsylvania, according to Feeding Americas Map the Meal Gap study. Feeding Pennsylvania was created, in part, to make sure that number shrinks. Feeding Pennsylvania member food banks and other local charities are already stretched to the breaking point trying to keep up with increased need as families in our state continue to feel the impact of the recession, Long said. Gene Brady, executive director of the Weinberg Food Bank and the vice chairman of the new Feeding Pennsylvania board, said locally there has been a 10 percent increase in the number of people
using a food pantry, soup kitchen, after-school food program or other organization thats served by the Weinberg Food Bank in the past year. Even though the recession might be ending for some, he said the lower end of the economic spectrum is typically the last to see the positive impacts. This recession has been protracted, Brady said, noting that with so many across the state relying on assistance, a centralized food bank organization can best coordinate resources and assistance among all member organizations so food can nd its way to
areas with the greatest need and any excess amounts of food at one food bank can be shifted to help those in need elsewhere in the state. He said the new organization will bring together food banks with common causes and common problems and allow them to communicate and share ideas easier. Other states have done it and its been successful. We thought we should take a look at doing it too, Brady said. While the organization is not listed as a lobbyist entity, Brady
N E W S
PAGE 9A
HARRISBURG Pennsylvanias Supreme Court has adopted the rst set of statewide policies, procedures and standards of conduct for elected constables who serve civil papers, transport prisoners and do other work for local courts, Chief Justice Ronald Castille said Tuesday. The rules, the product of
more than two years of work by a group that included judges, court ofcials and constables, are a critical step toward reining in a system that detractors say has long lacked standards in such areas as qualications and professionalism, the chief justice said. A 2008 series of articles by The Associated Press catalogued dozens of examples of misconduct, including consta-
bles caught stealing court funds, having sex with prisoners, threatening people with weapons and illegally impersonating police. It cited concern among judges, lawyers and police about the potential for abuses by armed constables with minimal training or supervision. Under the new rules, constables will continue to be elected and work as independent con-
tractors by the courts, but they will be subject to uniform standards and policies that include: Elected or appointed constables seeking work from the courts must be certied by the Pennsylvania Commission on Crime and Delinquency, a process that requires completion of basic training and continuing education, and show proof that they have liability insur-
ance providing coverage of at least $250,000 per incident and $500,000 per year. Constables must comply with standards of conduct established by the Unied Judicial System, which require that they avoid conicts of interest and abstain from soliciting funds for any purpose or engaging in political activity while performing judicial duties. A constable must carry
identication and wear clothing that clearly identies him or her as a constable while performing judicial duties. Vehicles used for the transportation of defendants to and from court must be in roadworthy condition and be equipped with a permanent cage behind the drivers seat that securely separates the constable from the defendants.
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10+ Prime Commercial Acres w/200+ff on RT 315 & 500+ff on Fox Hill Rd. Surrounded on 3 sides by Mohegan Sun Casino & Race Track. Easy access to RT 81 & PA Turnpike, (RT 476) MLS#12-3849 ANN LEWIS 714-9245
State of the art 34,000 SF office bldg w/open floor plan. Features 1000 SF data center, 8000 SF warehouse space & parking for 165 cars. Zoned C-4 Heavy Commercial. MLS#12-3565 JUDY RICE 714-9230 OR RHEA SIMMS 696-6677
Great Investment Opportunity! Price reduced $905,000 from original list price. Currently priced below appraisal. MLS#11-1346 VIRGINIA ROSE 2889371
Now is the time to have your own Large Commercial Warehouse beautiful business! This property offers it all: & Office space. Over 3.5 acres overlooking convience, high traffic, and walking distance to many the river & mountains. Developers need to stores and restaurants downtown! MLS#08-2790 see! Perfect for Townhouses! MLS#13-737 PEG 714-9247
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Retail, Office, Medical Whatever your need - This 4000 SF Bldg can accommadate it! Parking for 10. NEW PRICE! MLS#12-276 JUDY RICE 714-9230
High traffic location. 2900 SF professional office space w/basement storage. Pkg for at least 12 cars. MLS#12416 RHEA SIMMS 696-6677
Prime Mountain Top location feature 4 units and over 7,000 sq. ft. of space. 3 store fronts and 1 in rear. Dont pass this up take a look today. MLS#13-1714 EVELYN 715-9336
5100 SF Masonry building zoned for lumber yard, machine shop, heavy equip, etc. Over an acre w/parking. MLS#12-3216 DEANNA 696-0894
4 Story brick office building. Located in high traffic area. 2 lots included for parking. MLS#MLS# 13-2075 ANDY 714-9225
PRIME LOCATION - Vacant land with Penn Dot access already in place. Close to everything! MLS#12-2517 DAVID 970-1117 or SANDY 970-1110
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY - NO REAL ESTATE. Turn key operation. Ice cream business. Owner will stay on to assist w/ transition. Retail bakery as sub-tenant. MLS#13-1390 SHARON 970-1106
Great opportunity! an operating US Post Office, plus a 3 bedroom apartment and 1 bedroom apartment on Main Rd. Priced to sell! MLS#12-4400 BOB 970-1107
Warehouse w/office area. 28,000 SF w/overhead door. Ample parking. Easy access to Rte 81. Motivated Seller! MLS#12-2947 JUDY RICE 714-9230
Great Kingston location - Good visibility on corner lot. Open space, small kitchen area. Has been used for banking, retail space. MLS#13-1772 RHEA SIMMS 696-6677
Bank owned Warehouse with loading dock, offices, 3 bathrooms. Additional pole building offers more space. Over 1 acre. MLS#13-355 TRACY 696-6674
2-Story masonry bldg on 96x180 lot w/pkg for 36 cars. Ideal for apts or small mfg business. MLS#12-1758 MIKE 970-1100 or MARGY 696-0891
Former automotive repair/gas station w/tanks removed on .481 acre corner lot. High visibility, high traffic flow, easy access on/off Cross Valley, 2 rest rooms, 2 garage bays, parking for 30. MLS#13-917 CLYDETTE 696-0897
Currently set up for a business on 1st floor with 3BR apartment on 2nd floor. Rear is a large garage with storage above. MLS#13-735 ANDY 714-9225
Unique bldg currently used as single residence. May be converted to suit your needs (w/zoning approval). MLS#13-583 DAVID 970-1117
PRICE REDUCED- Former restaurant close proximity to turn pike, secluded location could be used as office. Visible from Rt 115. MLS#13-108 MIKE JOHNSON 970-1100
This 2400 SF bldg features offices & garage w/overhead door. Across from Hollenback Golf Course. MLS#11-4561 JUDY RICE 714-9230
6000+ SF furniture store, plus apt. & lots more space. High traffic area. MLS#11-3865 RAE DZIAK 714-9234
Priced to sell! Former store perfect for a small business or offices! Plus 3 modern apartments for addtional income. Detached garage, OSP in rear behind fence. High traffic area & convenient location! MLS#12-3805 RAE DZIAK 714-9234
Currently being used as 1 story residential home - zoned highway commercial. Being sold as is. Additional commercial land MLS#13-602 PATTY ARMELLINO 715-9332
Large 8000 SF building looking for a new lease on life! Zoned Commercial. MLS#11-4058 SANDY 970-1110 or DAVID 970-1117
Former bar with 2 apartments, liquor license & equipment included, no kitchen in bar, osp for 12 cars. Let apartments pay the mortgage! MLS#13-784 ANDY 714-9225
Flood damaged property1st floor gutted & ready to remodel! Prime location. Successful business location for years. MLS#12-4560 MARK N 696-0724
Spacious building in high traffic location with ample parking. Adaptable to many uses. MLS#12-3786 ANN LEWIS 714-9245
Newly remodeled immaculate office building. Plenty of parking. Reception areas, 5 offices, kitchenette. Handicap access. MLS#13-667 DANA 715-9333
1800 SF former church. LL has approx. 1500 SF, hall & small kitchen; .39 acre rectory, just shell & 1 car garage. MLS#13-1743 MATT H 714-9229
15/SF includes gas heat, electric, water & sewage. OSP for 30 cars. Utilities can be separated. MLS#13-959 MATT 714-9229
Modern office building w/1300SF available! Newly renovated building w/tons of parking & great location! inclusive MLS#131142 JUDY RICE 714-9230
Prime space on corner of Market & Franklin Streets. Currently FNCB Bank. Ideal for Bank or Credit Union. Additional 1500SF on 2nd floor available. Parking in rear. MLS#13-904 JUDY RICE 714-9230
Located in Central City - on site parking with loading docks, record storage space, climate controlled, secure building, metal racks available for organized storage. MLS# VIRGINIA ROSE
Prime Location 32,000SF, 1900SF - 12 pkg spaces. MLS#09- 30+ parking, including trailer spaces 3085 MLS#08-1305 MARGY 696-0891 VIRGINIA ROSE 288-9371
N E W S
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smartphones. When we tell them we used to pay with coins, they arent going to believe us, Doherty said. Scranton does not have to pay any extra to have Pango on its streets. However, Pango gets a portion of the money earned from the fees assessed. Revenue projections were not released Tuesday. With Pango, drivers no longer have to look for change or deal with parking machines. With Pango, users can park and then pay by their cellphone in less than 30 seconds. Signing up for Pango in cities that offer the service is free. There are three ways to sign up. They are: Visit www.myPango.com; Download the Pango mobile app available for iPhone, Blackberry and Android users; Call 1-877-myPango (1877-697-2646) from any mobile phone capable of receiving text messages. Once users have signed up, they can use their cellphones to pay for parking wherever there is a Pango sign, which is $1 an hour and charged to a credit card tied to the app. Users can pay by using the app, by calling 1-877-myPango from any phone or by texting 410779-3311. All options are seamless and easy to use, and it only takes 10 to 20 seconds, Shavit said. Pango also provides a reminder service that warns users 15 minutes before their parking time expires. If they need more
PHILADELPHIA In their own way, four women being sentenced this week for working at a corrupt, grimy Philadelphia abortion clinic were just as desperate as the patients. Lynda Williams, 44, was trying to raise four children after her husband was murdered. Sherry West, 53, had been waiting more than a year for disability after contracting hepatitis C through her work as a medical assistant at a Veterans Administration Hospital, where she had spent 20 years.
Adrienne Moton, 36, was steered to the Womens Medical Society through a career school, where she was studying to be a medical assistant. And Elizabeth Hampton had been in foster care as a girl with the third wife of clinic owner Dr. Kermit Gosnell. All but Hampton have pleaded guilty to murder in the deaths of babies born alive or an oversedated patient. Hampton was sentenced Tuesday to a year on probation after admitting she lied to a grand jury about the patients 2009 overdose death. Williams, West and Moton
face 20 to 40 years in prison for third-degree murder, but they are expected to get far less time after their testimony helped send Gosnell to prison for life for killing three babies born alive during abortions. Gosnell, 72, was convicted this month of three counts of rst-degree murder in the infant deaths, and involuntary manslaughter in the death of patient Karnamaya Mongar. Gosnell agreed to serve a life term without parole rather than face a death-penalty hearing. In exchange, he has waived his right to appeal.
Pangos Smart Parking mascot (a large brain) sits on North Washington Avenue in downtown Scranton.
time, motorists can use cellphones to extend parking time by ending the original session and starting a new one. That service costs $1.99 a month a car. However, the rst 30 minutes are free. In addition, Pango gives downtown Scranton merchants the opportunity to advertise with the company. As a result, and Gryskevicz was sentenced to seven years. Hill pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit armed robbery and had her case transferred to juvenile court in Maryland. State police and police in Edwardsville, Kingston Township and Nanticoke led charges against Conden, Hill, Prasnikar, Suarez and Gryskevicz with district judges James Tupper, Paul Roberts and Donald Whittaker. They have not been arraigned. Marion Pollock was awakened by the house alarm and her dog barking at about 1:50 a.m. Aug. 3, and hid in a closet with a cellphone. She heard two male voices in her home and called a family member, who urged her to stay in the closet, according to charges led. State police believe four shots were red through a rear glass door, which tripped the alarm. There was also evidence that a shot was red while the intruders were in the house. Pollock was not injured, state police said.
CONDEN
Continued from Page 3A
users can view coupons and promotions in the vicinity of their parking zone. Carl Von Luger Steak and Seafood Restaurant, 301 N. Washington Ave., was the rst business to advertise with Pango. Now through the end of June, Scranton drivers who sign up will get 10 free parking hours. We want everyone to get used to Pango, Shavit said.
PITTSBURGH The population of six major Pennsylvania cities increased modestly between 2010 and 2012, according to new data from the U.S. Census Bureau. Last week, the Census Bureau released a list of population trends in 729 U.S. cities with populations of more than 50,000, from those with the strongest population growth to the weakest. Philadelphia had the strongest growth in Pennsylvania, at 1.4 percent, or just more than 21,600 people. That put Philadelphia at No. 472 on the growth list nationally. Cedar Park, Texas, was rst with a growth rate of 12 percent, and Youngstown, Ohio, was last on the national list, with a loss of 2.4 percent. In Pennsylvania, Allentown
grew by 942 people, Pittsburgh by 509, Bethlehem by 121, Lancaster by 38 and Reading by 22. Erie showed the largest decline of any Pennsylvania city,
with a loss of 739 people, and Scranton declined by 280. The census report is based on population changes from April 1, 2010, to July 1, 2012.
Ocean City robbery that ended in a crash with another vehicle. Conden escaped, leaving Hill, Prasnikar, Suarez and Gryskevicz behind in the wrecked car, where they were arrested. Condens escape did not last long. He was apprehended by state police when he was spotted walking in the area of Wyoming Avenue and Market Street in Kingston on Aug. 7, and later extradited to Maryland. Court records in Maryland indicate Conden, Prasnikar, Suarez and Gryskevicz pleaded guilty to armed robbery. Conden and Prasnikar were sentenced to 10 years in prison, Suarez was sentenced to 11 years
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CONDEMNED
Continued from Page 3A
Police found the woman and another man, Wayne A. Grant, inside a second-oor apartment. Grant attempted to block ofcers from entering the apartment where Allen was found hiding, according to the complaint. Allen was taken to the Kingston Police Department where a LiveScan of his nger and palm prints indicated his true identity, and arrest warrants in New York, police said. Police said several rearms were inside the apartment. The city code enforcement ofce condemned the building due to building code violations. Allen was arraigned by District Judge Rick Cronauer in Wilkes-Barre on charges of ight to avoid apprehension, escape and false identication to law enforcement. He was jailed at the Luzerne County Correctional Facility for lack of $50,000 bail. No charges have been led related to the rearms. A preliminary hearing is scheduled on June 4.
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PAGE 11A
Editorial
Our OpiniOn: COunCiLMAn BrOMinSKi
UZERNE COUNTY posed to vote for or against a Councilman Edward candidate based on qualicaBrominski seems to tions and suitability for the pohave a few neurons mis- sition. Voting no to make room for ring in the denitions lobe of a local candidate or as a no his brain. condence vote in the In an email to fellow manager are both pocouncil members, Bro- This has litical reasons. minski explained his no nothing This has nothing to vote against Linda Coxen to do with do with the qualicaof Colorado, County Mantions of either candiager Robert Lawtons the qualidate, or with Lawtons original nominee to head cations performance. It is the judicial services/reof either about all the wrong cords division. Coxens nomination was rejected candidate, or things Brominski did. He voted against a and current county em- with Lawcandidate he believed ployee Joan Hoggarth tons perfor- was right for the job, landed the job. Brominski explained mance. It is discrediting his comhe thought Coxen was about all the mitment to excellence. the better candidate, but wrong things He voted no under voted against her as a the assumption she no condence vote in Brominski would still get the job, the manager, not the ap- did. diminishing his integplicant. He said he asrity and trustworthisumed Coxen would still ness. He voted no to get the nod. show disapproval of the Quoth Brominski: Had I, in County Manager, raising doubts my wildest dreams, knew that about his own judgment and efthere was a move afoot to reject fectiveness. Want Lawton out? her for a local candidate, less Convince enough fellow counqualied and proposed to be cil members to replace him, or hired for more money, I would convince enough voters to elect denitely have voted for Ms. council members who will oust Coxen. him. I apologize to those of you Worst of all, Brominski acwho voted for Ms. Coxen as I let cused others of playing politics your good judgment down, but while joining the game, then igI am disappointed to learn that nored his own culpability. those who voted no with me, did He may have wanted to show so for personal/political rea- a lack of condence in Lawton, sons (emphasis added). but voters were given reason to Heres the rub: Youre sup- lack condence in Brominski.
MARK GUYDISH
COMMENTARY
mouse. If you wanted the results, you had to do it the old fashioned way: Gathering it yourself, rather than having it spoon fed to your LCD screen while wolng down pizza and coffee. Please. A little perspective. Until 2007, there was no such thing as online results here. We survived ne for decades without them. If you wanted numbers you had three choices: Get them yourself by racing to each polling place and writing them down, station reporters in different political beehives where interested politicos tallied races they cared about and who would share their numbers, or hover at the courthouse rotunda to glean any scraps of info you could get before deadline. You want havoc of the great confusion and disorder type? It was the norm prior to online results. Notably, the county website was back up before the nal, unofcial count was
I could be sad about it, but its not going to make anything come back. Its just a house. Its just stuff. We have each other.
Jessie Childs As bulldozer and backhoe operators reduced her tornado-destroyed house in Moore, Okla., to a 10-foot pile of rubble.
available. When the data that mattered was there, everyone with a computer had access to it. Which means the story wasnt really about the county server going down, it was about the media not having instant access at out desktops. And the county is not required to post results online as soon as they are available. Such postings make a great deal of sense and certainly should be done, and county ofcials would rightly face brutal criticism if it werent. But its a courtesy, not a right. In a bit of irony, the crash may have been caused by the growing number of media people logging on to see election results every few minutes. After all, it doesnt seem likely the general public was overwhelming the server. Only 19.79 percent of people over 18 voted in Luzerne County. Thats an all-time low, and its the real calamity here. When less than one-fth of those who can vote do, it may be time to start talking about a democracy meltdown that could lead to havoc.
Mark Guydish can be reached at 829-7161
salute to the Boy the national Scout organization Scouts of America na- to vote against welcoming gays. tional council for its And the issue has been diviimportant vote to al- sive locally, with area United low gays to be members of the Way chapters considering cuts organization although not as of funding for the Scouts beadult leaders. cause of its lack of incluThats a half-step in Local troops siveness. the right direction. Robert Woods, execumust now Now the group should tive director of the Unitmuster its courage to open their ed Way of York County, march the rest of the hearts and said he was pleased with way down the path to minds to the decision but had equality. welcome gay hoped the group would We hope that some include gay Scout leadday in the near future Scouts. ers as well. What do this venerable group, Sadly, that you tell a boy who goes which has taught gen- might not through the Boy Scouts erations of youngsters organization and gets be a simple so many valuable life his Eagle Scout and lessons, will eventually or smooth then is told he cant be welcome all who wish to process. a troop leader? he said. join and lead. Why just go halfway Local troops must through all this? now open their hearts and Indeed. minds to welcome gay Scouts. Well, perhaps some day. Sadly, that might not be a This half-way decision is a simple or smooth process. Many local Scouts and lead- new birth of freedom for gay ers, after all, joined a rally at Scouts but with a shadow of the local New Birth of Freedom Jim Crow hanging overhead. York Daily Record Council headquarters to urge
ust because you are not old enough to vote, does not mean that you cannot make a difference. This is true of Edwardsvilles Junior Councilman Matthew Dubaskas. In politics, it is easy to overlook someone going above and beyond, especially someone not of voting age, and from a political family like Matthew Dubaskass, the grandson of Edwardsville Mayor Bernard Ace Dubaskas and son of Edwardsvilles Wyoming Valley West School Board Member Brian Dubaskas. But that is exactly what he is doing. Matthew, a year away from casting his rst ballot, is a junior at Wyoming Valley West. A member of the WVW football and wrestling teams, Matthew spends a great deal of his free time in the athletic arena. After that, its politics for him. Its in our blood, Matthew said told me after an Edwardsville town council meeting. Its neat to see how everything works in town. Far too often, people get caught up in the Republican versus Democrat mentality, but not Matthew. He said that he takes each issue one at a time, exactly the type of balance we need in our towns, county, state, and country. Learning about politics doesnt start when you enter the voting booth after
turning 18. It starts before. Whether its reading the newspaper, watching the news, or interacting with your local government (or all three!), it takes initiative to tear down old stereotypes, seek knowledge, and desire to make the changes necessary going forward. Matthew is following in the footsteps of his family: by grabbing the bull by its horns. I can only encourage more people to do the same; if you see a problem, do something about it. To paraphrase Edmund Burke, The worst thing in life is for good people to do nothing. I praise Matthew Dubaskas, because it is an individual such as Matthew who will become one of our future leaders.
he letter from Mary Ann Haas wrongly portrays NETWORK and its Nuns on the Bus tour. Instead of trying to block the tour from using Catholic properties, Catholics should welcome this group and hear its challenging message. The National Catholic Social Justice Lobby was founded three decades ago specically to advocate for efforts that close the gap between the rich and the poor in our country. It lobbies governments to end policies that support rac-
ism, greed, and violence. NETWORK has never claimed to speak for the church. Its advocacy is solidly rooted in the churchs social justice teachings. It has not advocated for womens ordination or marriage equality; rather, it stands shoulder to shoulder with the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops in suggesting programs that help the least among us. Its rst bus tour opposed Representative Paul Ryans anti-poor budget, which the Bishops called immoral. This time the tour focuses on immigration reform, something the Bishops have been advocating for years. NETWORK has opposed food stamp cuts and the mean-spirited sequester, which dramatically hurt the poor, the elderly, and children while protecting the rich. In Pennsylvania, led by NETWORK, 1300 sisters, priests, and brothers from 19 congregations advocated that Governor Corbett drop his opposition to the expansion of Medicaid, which would decrease the number of uninsured in our state by 700,000, including 232,000 children and save $878 million, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation. In the centuries-long tradition of the Catholic Church, the Nuns on the Bus give a voice to the call for social justice rst made by Jesus. We praise NETWORK and honor its work.
Joseph Rogan Eynon President Pax Christi NEPA
MALLArd fiLLMOre
dOOneSBurY
PAGE 12A
N E W S
CARTER
Continued from Page 1A
PA ST v I S I TS
Non-political presidential visits to Luzerne County: Former President Jimmy Carter spoke at the Wyoming Monument Tuesday afternoon, which was his second visit to the county in the last two years. He was here in 2011 for an event at Cook & Cook Estate Liquidators in Plains Township. Other non-campaign presidential visits to the county include: Rutherford B. Hayes, Wyoming Monument speech, 1878. Teddy Roosevelt, Wyoming Monument speech, 1905. William Howard Taft, Chamber of Commerce dinner in 1915. Franklin D. Roosevelt, two visits in 1936 following the devastating ood. Harry S Truman, 1952, reason unknown. Richard M. Nixon, 1972 following the Agnes Flood.
helped broker peace between Egypt and Israel, said Pennsylvania feels like home to him. He said he particularly enjoys shing in the State College area. Pennsylvanians are good people, very hospitable and friendly, he said. When I was a toddler, I could peek out the window and see my future wife in her cradle with no clothes on, he said of his wife of 67 years during a light moment of his speech. The comment drew a huge laugh from the crowd. Carter, a Nobel Peace Prize recipient, talked about The Carter Center and its worldwide mission of promoting peace and ghting disease in Third World countries. We deal with countries that arent all that friendly toward the United States, he said. We want to alleviate suffering in the world. The former president said The Carter Center has fought six preventable diseases Guinea worm, river blindness, trachoma, schistosomiasis, lymphatic lariasis and malaria by using health education and low-cost prevention methods. Carter said trachoma is prevalent in poor, rural communities that lack the tools for basic hygiene clean water and adequate sanitation. Infections are spread through contact with dirty clothes and hands, and ies attracted to peoples eyes. In the advanced stage of the disease, called trichiasis, a persons eyelashes turn inward, scraping the cornea with every excruciating blink, causing scarring, diminished vision and, eventually, blindness, Carter said. He said the center has built nearly 3 million household latrines to reduce the breeding sites for the ies. Im known as the No. 1 latrine builder in the entire world, he said with a smile. The center also has dramatically reduced the number of
Stan Cooper of WilkesBarre, left, poses for a photo with former President Jimmy Carter at Tuesdays Memorial Day celebration event at the Wyoming Monument in Wyoming. Cooper and President Carter talked about y-shing. Cooper had also sent the president some y lures some years back in which President Carter remarked he did receive them.
Fighting disease
Abby Barhight, 11, right, sings God Bless America along with former President Jimmy Carter and First Lady Rosalynn Carter at Tuesdays Memorial Day celebration event at the Wyoming Monument in Wyoming.
Guinea worm cases, from 3.5 million cases to under 500. Carter said the center takes on projects nobody else will touch and he said the results have had a dramatic impact worldwide. Carter is the third U.S president to speak at the Wyoming Monument, a memorial to the lives lost in the Battle of Wyoming the Revolutionary Warera battle of July 3, 1778, during which 277 area residents were killed. Remains of the dead are interred at the site. Presidents Theodore Roosevelt (1905) and Rutherford B. Hayes (1878) also spoke at the monument. Carter, a Baptist who teaches Bible stories every Sunday in his hometown, advocates peace. Our country should be the champion of justice and for equality of opportunity, he said. America should always promote human rights and freedom around the world. Carter talked about a recent gathering of ve U.S. presidents at the dedication of the George W. Bush Library in Texas. He
Advocates peace
Several hundred people went to the Wyoming Monument on Tuesday to hear former President Jimmy Carter speak at the Memorial Day celebration event in Wyoming.
said the former chief executives are members of the same fraternity to ensure that the United States remains the greatest nation on Earth. To be here today at this historic monument is truly an
honor, he said. This is one country America. Its not about blue states or red states, or Democrats or Republicans. We all share the same values and principles. Carter took the stage shortsaid the historical value of his visit got her teary about it all. Condron is known for her devotion to preserving the regions history. This is truly a celebration of what those early pioneers did to preserve this land this country, she said. And this monument that stands in honor for all of those who sacriced their lives. How grateful we all must be. Condron said to have a former president the third to speak at the monument is a well-deserved tribute. Jack Meyer, 14, of Susquehanna County, and Elisabeth Johnson, 12, of Scranton, sat patiently waiting for Carter to arrive. They were their with their teacher, Marianne Meyer, as part of their civics class. Its not often a former U.S. president visits so close to home, Meyer said. We felt this would be a good experience for
ly after 3 p.m. and ended his speech at 3:27. Before he began to talk, he stepped off the stage and removed barricades to allow more people to get under the cover of the tent as rain fell the entire time. some of our students.
This is a perfect day for a farmer, he said. This is my 37th visit to Pennsylvania. When I ran for president, I carried every county in Pennsylvania except one Bucks County. I havent been back there since. U.S. Sen. Bob Casey, D-Scranton, didnt attend the speech, but he issued a welcoming statement to the Carters. He is the third president of the United States to visit the Wyoming Monument a tribute to those who lost their lives in the pursuit of freedom, Casey said. President Carter is a living testament to public service, and we are honored by his visit. Carter served as president from 1977 to 1981. He and his wife were in the area in 2011 with the Cooks, owners of Cook & Cook Estate Liquidators in Plains Township. Wyoming Mayor Bob Boyer said he was proud to have the Carters in his town and declared Tuesday as Jimmy Carter Day in the borough. He introduced two Wyoming residents Jeanne Zano, who sang the national anthem and Abby Barhight who sang God Bless America. Today we all witnessed history, said Larry Cook. We asked for an historic speech and we got one today. Wyoming Borough Mayor Bob Boyer said he was honored to have the Carters in his town. An event like this renews interest in history, he said. And it feels good to see the community come out to support us. In his introduction of the Carters, Larry Cook of Cook & Cook Estate Liquidators in Plains Township, said the former president and rst lady are true champions of human rights, peace and freedom. He said he was proud to call them friends. Boyer acknowledged Wyoming resident Florence Jumper who will turn 100 years old on Thursday. Yeah, Im here, Jumper yelled from the crowd. Asked what was her secret to longevity, she said, My mother raised me right. The Carters and the other 500 attendees laughed and wished Jumper a happy birthday.
MEET
Continued from Page 1A
Living a dream
son runs against you. Victoria, accompanied by her mother, Stacy, said she might be ready for a run for the White House in 2044 or 2048 and she said Carter gave her a plan to get herself ready. He told me I have to be nice to people, she said. He said I cant act like Im better than anybody else. He told me to go out and meet people in the community. Stacy Smulowitz said that when Victoria learned Carter was coming to the Wyoming Valley, she went on the Internet to research him. Betsy Condron, 85, of Kingston, said she was impressed with Carters accomplishments and his sense of humor. She
Marcella Starr, president of the Wyoming Monument Association, said she felt like she was living a dream. Starr has seen the monument restored through the generosity of several donors the largest gift coming from the late Dr. Joseph Mattioli and his wife, Rose, of $100,000. And Tuesday the 39th president spoke at the site and he even painted a picture of the monument that was to be auctioned off last night at a dinner at the Stegmaier Mansion in Wilkes-Barre. The monument has been restored for future generations, Starr said. I never thought I would see this in my lifetime. And I am very proud to have President and Mrs. Carter here to speak. They could have chosen from many other historical sites.
SEVEN-DAY FORECAST
TODAY
HIGH LOW
89 62
THU FRI
SAT
Partly sunny
90 63 93 63 90 65
SUN MON TUE
TEMPERATURES High/low Normal high/low Record high Record low PRECIPITATION 24 hrs ending 7 p.m. Month to date Normal m-t-d Year to date Normal y-t-d COOLING DEGREE DAYS Yesterday Month to date Year to date Last year to date Normal year to date RIVER LEVELS Susquehanna
Wilkes-Barre Towanda
In feet as of 7 a.m. Tuesday.
ALMANAC
Syracuse 80/64
NATIONAL FORECAST
Seattle 63/50 Winnipeg 73/56 Billings 62/48 Montreal 73/62 Toronto 78/62
Albany 78/64
Degree days are an indicator of energy needs. The more the total degree days, the more energy is necessary to cool.
0 32 36 75 25
Stage
3.52 3.06 1.75 3.40
Chg
-0.44 +0.61 -0.21 -0.28
Fld Stg
22 16 16 18
Thunderstorms possible
Showers possible
Partly sunny
Lehigh
Bethlehem Port Jervis
86 61 75 53 72 51
Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. 2013
Delaware
Scranton 84/62 Wilkes-Barre Williamsport 89/62 New York May 31 June 8 86/62 84/70 Pottsville First Full State College 86/63 Allentown 84/63 86/63 Harrisburg Reading Philadelphia 87/64 June 16 June 23 86/62 88/69 THE POCONOS Highs: 77-83. Lows: 58-64. Sunny intervals, warmer and more humid today with a shower or thunderstorm. THE JERSEY SHORE Highs: 74-80. Lows: 62-68. A thunderstorm in the morning; otherwise, turning sunny and more humid today. Partly cloudy tonight. THE FINGER LAKES Highs: 77-83. Lows: 61-67. Some sun, warmer and more humid today with a shower or thunderstorm around. Partly cloudy tonight. NEW YORK CITY High: 84. Low: 70. Partly sunny today; a shower or thunderstorm around, mainly early, warmer and more humid. PHILADELPHIA High: 88. Low: 69. Some clouds, then sunshine, warmer and more humid today. Partly cloudy, warm and humid tonight.
Last
New
Denver 73/45
Atlanta 86/66
Miami 83/75
Summary: Heat will build over the South today. Locally severe thunderstorms will reach from the Plains to the Great Lakes, New York state and New England. More rain will fall on the Northwest and South Florida.
Anchorage Baltimore Boston Buffalo Charlotte Chicago Cleveland Dallas Denver
Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation today. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Today Thu 73/51/s 70/51/s Honolulu 88/66/s 92/67/s Indianapolis 72/66/r 86/71/pc Las Vegas 78/65/t 83/64/pc Milwaukee 87/61/pc 87/63/s New Orleans 88/66/pc 84/66/t Norfolk 84/66/pc 86/67/pc Okla. City 84/72/pc 87/72/t Orlando 73/45/t 76/45/s Phoenix
Today Thu Today Thu 88/72/sh 87/73/s Pittsburgh 88/63/pc 90/64/pc 86/67/pc 85/68/pc Portland, ME 59/55/r 81/62/pc 90/73/pc 94/75/s St. Louis 88/71/pc 85/67/t 76/64/pc 81/63/t San Francisco 64/50/pc 66/50/s 84/74/t 86/74/t Seattle 63/50/sh 62/48/c 87/67/pc 87/66/s Wash., DC 90/71/s 92/73/s 78/68/t 87/70/t Key: s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, 89/71/pc 88/72/t c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, 97/78/s 99/78/s r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.
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N B A P L AY O F F S
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Memphis Grizzlies guard Tony Allen (9) has the ball taken away by San Antonio Spurs forward Tim duncan (21) during the rst half in Game 4 of the Western Conference nalsMonday in Memphis, Tenn.
AP PHOTO
MEMPHIS, Tenn. Tim Duncan is so close to his rst NBA championship in six long years that the Spurs star isnt worried about the little issue of being rusty once the nals actually start. My sole focus is trying to get this done, trying to get another
championship, Duncan said. I dont care records; I dont care age. I dont care any of that stuff. I just want to do what I have to do to try to win a championship. San Antonio ended its six-year drought between NBA Finals by nishing a sweep of the Memphis Grizzlies 93-86 on Monday night for its fth Western Conference title. The rst sweep in a conference nal since the Nets beat Detroit in 2003 also earned the Spurs a nine-day break before Game 1 of the nals June 6. Duncan said the benet will be
INSIDE:
the Spurs should be completely healthy with their legs underneath them. Were going to be a little rusty starting the rst game its just how it is, Duncan said. Were going to try to gure out how to practice, how to stay sharp. But bottom line, were going to be a little rusty. Hopefully, we can shake that off real quick and get right back to our rhythm.
All the Spurs worked hard to be just four wins away from adding a title to those won in 1999, 2003, 2005 and 2007. Duncan was the MVP of the rst three of those nals, but hes now 37 and wrapping up his 16th season. Tony Parker said hes been doing his best to get Duncan back to this point for what might be the 6-foot-11 forwards nal chance at a championship. He promised Duncan they would return after blowing a 2-0 lead in the conference nals a year ago
See dUNCAN, Page 7B
C a l d e r C u p p l aY o f f s : e a s t e r n f i n a l s , g a M e 3
IL BASEBALL
Its been almost two weeks since the WilkesBarre/Scranton Penguins last played a game at home. Now, as they enter tonights Game 3 of the Eastern Conference nals against the Syracuse Crunch, the Penguins not only nd themselves playing in the familiar conUP NEXT nes of the Mohegan Sun Arena, but with home ice advantage for the remainder of the series. Were really in a best-ofve series with home ice advantage, said head coach The Penguins John Hynes. We want to take face the Crunch advantage of that. at Mohegan Sun Still, it wont be easy. Arena tonight The Crunch have yet to and Friday in the Eastern Conferlose on the road in the playence nals. offs and during the regular season they had the second-best road record in the AHL. Thats why it was crucial that the Penguins came away with at least a split from the rst two games in Syracuse. Id take that any day, said Brian Dumoulin. That was a very big split up in Syracuse and having three games at home helps us out a lot. It also helps that, with Games 3 and 4 at home, the Penguins dont have to worry about all the logistics of being on the road for the next several days. Its nice to be home and not have to worry about hotels and stuff like that, Dumoulin said.
See PENGUINS, Page 3B
NORFOLK, Va. For a period of time during the offseason Hazletons Russ Canzler was a member of the Yankees organization and could have been a RailRider this season. But he was shortly designated for assignment and latched on with TIdES Baltimore. On Tuesday, playing for Baltimores Triple-A RAILRIdERS afliate in Norfolk, the rst baseman helped the Tides beat S cranton/Wilkes-Barre 10-8 going 3-for-5, including a home run and a goahead RBI single in the bottom of the eighth of a wild game that consisted of three lead changes at Harbor Park. The Tides trailed 7-6 entering the bottom of the eighth. But Canzler came through with a two-out single scoring Jason Pridie to tie the game at 7-7. Three batters later, Norfolks Zelous Wheeler doubled scoring a pair to put the Tides ahead 10-7. All four runs in the inning were charged to RailRiders reliever Cody Eppley (2-2), who lasted just 2/3 of an inning allowing two walks and three hits.
10 8
COLLEgE FOOTBALL
Competition wide open when the team returns to practice eld in August.
By TOM COYNE Associated Press Writer
O LY M P I C S
practices resume in August. Golson is out for the fall semester and will have to re-enroll at the school, which he has indicated he intends to do. Its certainly going to be a challenge, Kelly said. He is our starting quarterback. He started in a national championship game. But were very fortunate we have experienced quarterbacks in Tommy Rees and Andrew Hendrix. Kelly said Rees and Hendrix both have a strong understanding of his offense, and freshman Malik Zaire, who enrolled in January, picked up a lot during
Notre dame coach Brian Kelly, left, said all of his remaining quarterbacks will have a chance to replace Everett Golson, right, for the 2013 season, and possibly beyond.
AP PHOTO
spring practices. Its going to be a challenge, but one we think we can overcome, he said. Thats what these kids are about. They over-
came a lot last year, and theyll continue to do it this year regardless of whos at that quarterback position.
See IRISh, Page 5B
ST. PETERSBURG, Russia As the man leading wrestlings charge to preserve its Olympic status, Nenad Lalovic believes hes done what it takes. Three months after wrestling was surprisingly dropped from the 2020 Games, Lalovic will present a new-look sport and revamped governing body to the IOC on Wednesday in a bid to keep its Olympic place. Im condent, Lalovic, the new president of international federation FILA, said Tuesday. A lot of people say to me, Oh, you wont face any problem
here. But well see. We did everything we could. Nothing else was possible. We will continue, no matter what we will be decided here. Its a new sport. Wrestling is competing against seven other sports for a single opening on the 2020 lineup. The others are a combined baseball-softball bid, karate, roller sports, sport climbing, squash, wakeboarding and the Chinese martial art of wushu. The federations will make closed-door presentations to the IOC executive board, which will decide which sport
See WRESTLING, Page 5B
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S P O R T S L AT E S T L I N E
Major League Baseball FAVORITE at Cubs Detroit at Yankees Washington at Cleveland at Atlanta
3-1 7-2 4-1 6-1 9-2 10-1 15-1 8-1 20-1 3-1 9-2 7-2 4-1 8-1 10-1 15-1 6-1 20-1 7-2 3-1 4-1 9-2 6-1 8-1 15-1 10-1 20-1 3-1 7-2 4-1 6-1 9-2 10-1 8-1 15-1 20-1 5-2 3-1 5-1 4-1 10-1 12-1 6-1 15-1 15-1 4-1 5-1 5-2 3-1 6-1 12-1 15-1 20-1 10-1 3-1 7-2 9-2 5-1 4-1 12-1 8-1 10-1 7-2 3-1 4-1 9-2 10-1 6-1 8-1 15-1 20-1 5-2 4-1 3-1 9-2 6-1 15-1 12-1 10-1 9-2 5-2 12-1 3-1 4-1 15-1 6-1 10-1 10-1 4-1 3-1 5-2 5-1 12-1 6-1 20-1 15-1 3-1 5-2 5-1 6-1 20-1 12-1 15-1 10-1 4-1 12-1 5-2 4-1 5-1 6-1 3-1 10-1 20-1 15-1 9-2 3-1 4-1 10-1 7-2 15-1 8-1 6-1 20-1 3-1 4-1 7-2 8-1 10-1 12-1 5-1 9-2 3-1 4-1 7-2 10-1 9-2 6-1 8-1 15-1 20-1
ON THE MARK
BuLLETIN BOARD
at Angels at San Diego at San Fran. -180/+170 -145/+135 -125/+115 NBA Playoffs Tomorrow FAVORITE at Miami LINE O/U UNDERDOG 8 187 Indiana NHL Playoffs Tonight FAVORITE at Chicago at Pittsburgh Pittsburgh LINE -220/+180 Saturday -170/+150 -185/+165 Boston Boston Odds to Win Series UNDERDOG Detroit Dodgers Seattle Oakland UNDERDOG White Sox at Pittsburgh Boston Mets at Baltimore Cincinnati Toronto at Miami Arizona at Minnesota Kansas City Houston
LINE -110/+100 -125/+115 -170/+160 -120/+110 -120/+110 -200/+185 -140/+130 -135/+125 -110/+100 -200/+185 -200/+185
CAMPS/CLINICS Holy Redeemer Volleyball Skills Camp will be held July 8-12 for grades 6-12 at the Holy Redeemer High School Gymnasium. The morning session is for players going into grades 6-9 and runs from 9 a.m. to noon. The afternoon sessions is for players going into grades 10-12 and runs from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. The camp will be directed by Elijah Porr and will cost $90, which includes a camp T-shirt. To ask about team discount information or to become a camp sponsor, call Jack Kablick at 472-2073, Bob Shuleski at 357-7784 or email bob@girlsvb.com. Kings College will have a eld hockey camp July 15-19 from 9 a.m. to noon. Camp shirts and awards are included. For more Information, call Cheryl Ish at 208-5900 ext. 5756. Monarch Elite Swim Camps have been set for the summer. Kings will host three camps for swimmers ages 13-18 and will be held at the colleges pool in Scandlon Gymnasium. The camps will be held June 3-20, July 8-25 and Aug. 5-22. Camp sessions will be held Monday-Thursday from 4:307 p.m. each day. Swimmers will have the option of attending one, two or all three camps. Swimmers will learn about technique, how to train effectively and much more. The cost for one session is $140 while the rate for attending all three camps is $380. For more information, call Kings swim coach Easterday at 208-5900, ext. 5758, or email him at matthewseasterday@kings.edu. LEAGUES Jim Atherton Mens Open Basketball League applications are still being accepted, which will be played Monday and Tuesday nights beginning Monday, June 3. Monday and Tuesday leagues will be separate leagues. To sign up, call John Leighton at 430-8437. The deadline to enter is Friday, May 31. All games will be played at Miner Park. There will be a 12 team maximum for each league. Kingston Youth Soccer will have registration for fall soccer June 8 from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Kingston Recreation Center. Players can register online at www.kingstonlightning.org. For more information, call Ben Miller at 332-0313. MEETINGS Berwick High School Boys Basketball Boosters will have a meeting Tuesday, June 4, at 5 p.m. in the gymnasium lobby. For more information, call Coach Jason Kingery at 394-7115. Dupont High School Softball Summer League will have a kickoff meeting Thursday, May 30, at 7 p.m. at the Dupont Field House. The meeting is open to any and all high school teams. For more information, call Bob at 881-8744. Heights Packers Football and Cheerleading Youth Organization will be having a Booster Club Meeting on June 4 at 7 p.m. at Stanton Lanes. Everyone is encouraged and welcome to attend. Please come to discuss or listen to all the new changes and exciting events for the upcoming 2013 season. Any questions please email heightspackers68@yahoo.com. Nanticoke Area Little League will have its monthly meeting June 5 at 7:30 p.m. at the high school cafe. Plains Yankees Football and Cheerleading Organization will have a meeting Wednesday, May 29, at 8 p.m. at the Plains American Legion. South Wilkes-Barre Little League will have its all-star meeting/draft Sunday, June 2, at 6 p.m. at the Riverside Cafe on Old River Road in Wilkes-Barre. All minor and major league coaches and board members must attend. Wyoming Valley West Softball Booster Club will have a meeting Thursday, May 30, at 7 p.m. at the WVW Middle School. Parents of all players are encouraged to attend. REGISTRATIONS/TRYOUTS Ed-Lark Hurricanes Football and Cheer signups are on the following dates: Monday, June 3, 5-7 p.m.; Saturday, June 15, from noon to 4 p.m.; Thursday, June 20, 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. Signups will be at the Larksville Borough building. The cost is $40 for the rst child and $5 for each additional child.
Doubles Men First Round Alexander Peya, Austria, and Bruno Soares (7), Brazil, def. James Cerretani, United States, and Lukas Lacko, Slovakia, 6-2, 3-6, 6-1. Aljaz Bedene and Grega Zemlja, Slovenia, def. Lukas Dlouhy, Czech, and Rajeev Ram, United States, 4-6, 6-4, 6-4. Frantisek Cermak, Czech Republic, and Michal Mertinak, Slovakia, def. Benjamin Becker and Philipp Petzschner, Germany, 6-2, 2-1, retired. Mariusz Fyrstenberg and Marcin Matkowski (16), Poland, def. Jan Hajek and Radek Stepanek, Czech Republic, 7-5, 6-3. Jurgen Melzer, Austria, and Leander Paes (9), India, def. Pierre-Hugues Herbert and Nicolas Renavand, Fran., 6-3, 6-3. Philipp Marx, Germany, and Florin Mergea, Romania, def. Gael Monfils and Josselin Ouanna, France, 6-3, 7-6 (4). Christopher Kas, Germany, and Oliver Marach, Austria, def. Robin Haase and Igor Sijsling, Netherlands, 6-7 (5), 6-4, 6-3. Juan Sebastian Cabal and Robert Farah, Colombia, def. Xavier Malisse, Belgium, and Ken Skupski, Britain, 6-4, 4-6, 6-3.
POST TIME 6:30 p.m. All races one mile First-$6,000 Clm.Pace;clm.price $7 ,500 5 Passion Starlet G.Napolitano 1-2-2 Steady as they come 2 So Confusing M.Kakaley 2-5-3 Raced well off the claim 7 Marymac Is A Whack A.McCarthy 8-2-3 Freehold invader 9 Four Starz Trop M.Simons 3-3-5 Simons the new pilot 4 Four Starz Molly M.Miller 5-9-3 Down a notch in price 3 Bathing Beauty A.Siegelman 5-6-4 Goes for team Siegelman 6 Hally M.Romano 8-8-8 Again near the rear 1 Cherry Bomb J.Bartlett 8-6-6 Slim chances 8 Marks Quik Pulse T.Buter 6-4-7 Slow for sure Second-$13,000 Cond.Pace;n/w 2 pm races life 6 Greatdayforamerica G.Napolitano 3-1-3 Cruises 2 Diligent Prospect A.McCarthy 1-8-7 A rich maiden 4 Mary Bits J.Morrill 4-2-2 Lightly raced filly 5 Destinys Desire T.Jackson 8-1-3 Kakaley opted off 7 True Reflection J.Bartlett 6-4-6 In this class a long while 8 Ellas Twin M.Kakaley 7-4-9 Slows abruptly 3 Macsdirtylilsecret M.Miller 5-1-3 Not ready for these 1 Scirocco Caliegirl E.Carlson 6-7-8 No answers 9 Kiss My Artist A.Napolitano 7-2-8 Say bye bye to your $2 Third-$4,500 Clm.Pace;clm.price $5,000 1 Another Dawn T.Jackson 6-3-1 Controls from the pole 6 Catchajolt T.Buter 3-1-4 Fast early foot 2 Bambinas Sorella J.Bartlett 8-2-2 10yr old mare still going 8 Bond Blue Chip M.Kakaley 2-3-7 Has to get an early spot 4 Polishedperfection J.Morrill 4-3-5 Didnt fire from rail last out 5 Party At Joyces J.Kakaley 7-6-6 The party is still over 9 Nutmegs Desire H.Parker 5-7-1 Best work done at Monti 3 Prairie Ganache M.Simons 6-5-7 Kavoleff a cold trainer 7 Magnetic Draw J.Antonelli 7-9-5 Going in reverse quickly Fourth-$6,000 Clm.Trot;clm.price $7 ,500 3 Broadway Victory M.Kakaley 3-7-1 Drops and pops 6 Winners Streak J.Morrill 3-3-2 A fan favorite 8 Idadazzle E.Carlson 3-8-6 Been a hot commodity 7 Eng-Amer Davanti A.Napolitano 4-1-4 A Nap owns & drives 9 Mac Atack Mac A.McCarthy 1-2-8 Fitting Andy Mac drives 4 La Hollywood B.Simpson 7-3-1 Back from the big track 2 Cutty M.Simons 3-4-2 Best work done in NY 1 Keystone Torch M.Miller 8-4-8 Hard to recommend 5 Over Ruled G.Napolitano 9-8-8 I rule no prayer Fifth-$8,500 Clm.Pace;clm.price $10,000 6 Blissfull Dreamer J.Morrill 9-1-1 First time lasix the trick 3 Final Executive G.Napolitano 4-4-5 Another adding lasix 8 Gale Storm A.McCarthy 3-5-1 Marks 2nd start for Norris 7 Smokin N Grinin T.Buter 5-5-5 One better than fifth 2 Braveheartedmillie A.Miller 3-5-8 Andy Miller the new pilot 1 Sandy Absolut T.Jackson 7-4-3 Leveled off it seems 9 Rolltideroll E.Carlson 1-8-3 Moves up off easy score 5 Market Dynamics M.Kakaley 4-8-4 Off the market 4 Mysticole Maggie M.Romano 7-4-5 Double digits on the board Sixth-$13,000 Cond.Trot;n/w $8,000 last 5 4 Summer Indian M.Kakaley 8-8-4 Stays flat and jogs 5 Magglio T.Buter 3-9-2 Nice trotter, when right 3 All About Justice M.Simons 5-3-7 Simons solid at Tioga 7 Dig For Dollars K.Oscarsson 4-2-4 Classy veteran trotter 2 R Sam J.Morrill 2-5-9 Finding his stride? 9 Zeitgeist A.Napolitano 1-2-6 Post a major concern 8 Order By Texas T.Jackson 6-6-2 Back in from Philly 6 C-O-To Bluegrass A.McCarthy 6-7-4 Second start for Adams barn 1 All Munky Business E.Carlson 8-7-1 Remains chilly Seventh-$12,000 Clm.Pace;clm.price $15,000 7 Fanelli Royal J.Morrill 1-5-7 Repeater 3 Garys Party M.Kakaley 2-7-8 Again plays the chase role 8 Fresh Dream A.McCarthy 7-4-4 Been racing with better 2 Two Beers Away E.Carlson 8-7-4 Looking for another can 5 Cage Fighter G.Napolitano 7-1-2 Saratoga import 6 Banging The Drum J.Anotnelli 4-7-8 Beat down 4 Sir Jack A.Miller 7-7-7 Yep another seventh 1 Sax Solo M.Romano 9-8-8 His act is old Eighth-$13,000 Cond.Pace;n/w $9,500 last 5 6 Duel Cheeks G.Napolitano 1-5-5 Was super in that triumph 1 Hostess Lisa T.Buter 6-3-2 Merits look from pole 8 Clear View Hanover H.Parker 4-5-6 Id put on top with better post 4 Nite Games J.Bartlett 9-6-2 Bit of class relief helps 5 Farouche Hanover T.Jackson 2-6-3 Former Open pacer 2 Kaylas Dream M.Romano 3-1-3 This is a tough group 3 Hay Beautiful J.Morrill 4-8-1 Does pick up Morrill 9 Dragon Princess A.Miller 3-9-10 Dethroned 7 Angela M.Kakaley 5-1-4 Pompano shipper overmatched Ninth-$14,000 Clm.Hndcp Pace;clm.price $15-20,000 6 Mrs Battin J.Morrill 1-3-1 Jims choice is mine too 4 Sha Delight M.Kakaley 1-3-1 The one to catch 8 Buck Stops Here A.Miller 2-1-1 Hitting board conistently 5 G G Roulette A.McCarthy 1-3-1 Moves up from 10 claimers 7 Express Jet M.Miller 4-8-1 Canadian newcomer 3 Jasperthat A G.Napolitano 4-5-2 Ruiz-Nap good duo 2 Picked By An Angel M.Simons 6-2-7 Id pick against 1 Whirlwind T.Buter 7-6-6 Blown away Tenth-$19,000 Cond.Trot;n/w $18,500 last 5 4 Keystone Thomas A.McCarthy 2-1-2 Class shines thru 5 Top Billing A.Miller 1-2-2 Deserving favorite 8 Worth The Money As G.Napolitano 1-5-8 Offers a big late kick 2 Fox Valley Smarty M.Miller 6-2-3 Miller the new reinsman 1 Bluff M.Kakaley 1-6-2 Enjoyed off track at YR 3 Fools Revenue T.Jackson 3-5-1 Hard to recommend 6 Berkshire J.Morrill 7-1-1 Quit badly last wk 7 Proud Moment T.Buter 6-4-4 Winless in 14 prior Eleventh-$12,000 Clm.Pace;clm.price $15,000 7 Lumiere M.Miller 1-2-6 Fits well with these 8 Ladys Bag Man M.Kakaley 3-8-3 New one from Berkeley 2 Articulate E.Carlson 3-1-3 Late on arrival 6 Flight Exec J.Morrill 7-6-4 Flies in for a check 5 No Fear Doubt T.Buter 3-3-2 Raced decent in first start 9 Well Done Hanover G.Napolitano 3-9-4 Constantly draws poorly 1 Terror To Cam J.Bartlett 6-8-7 No one is afraid 3 Last Chance T A.Siegelman 8-4-4 Waiting for easier 4 Slippery Sam M.Simons 8-6-7 Slip slides away Twelfth-$15,000 Cond.Pace;n/w $11,500 last 5 3 Seascape Hanover J.Morrill 4-4-3 New Oakes addition is ready 1 Delta Dawn Hanover G.Napolitano 2-2-1 Again grabs the place 5 Miss Annie J A.Miller 3-8-8 Coming to hand now 6 Momma Rock J.Bartlett 1-3-1 Upset lesser at 11-1 7 Perfectly Royal A.Napolitano 2-1-6 Use in supers 9 Kiss Dont Bite A.McCarthy 2-6-5 Off a long layoff 8 Franciegirl M.Miller 1-2-7 Won right off the barn change 4 Runaway Tray M.Kakaley 2-1-4 This is a quality field 2 Ace Of Pace T.Buter 8-8-3 Hides Thirteenth-$13,000 Cond.Pace;n/w $8,000 last 5 9 Poker Hat G.Napolitano 8-2-4 Good luck getting 12-1 3 Martial Bliss J.Bartlett 3-7-5 Adams remains a warm trainer 1 Silver Eagle J.Morrill 2-8-3 Qualified well for this 2 Sand Savage B.Simpson 2-3-4 Sent by team Simpson 7 Sand Summerfield M.Kakaley 5-7-1 Behind the other Sand 6 Midas Blue Chip T.Buter 5-5-5 Not on his game 5 Mattoxs Spencer E.Carlson 5-2-1 Overpowered 8 American Gi A.Siegelman 7-6-7 Turned away 4 Bettors Curse A.McCarthy 7-6-5 McCarthy struggling of recent Fourteenth-$15,000 Cond.Trot;n/w $11,000 last 5 2 Lindy Mcdreamy A.McCarthy 8-3-2 Its his time 9 Zooming T.Buter 1-6-6 Tyler owns and steers 3 Windell Winkie G.Napolitano 3-1-6 Bounced off big score 1 Miss Chip K M.Kakaley 2-3-8 Retains Kakaley in bike 7 Commander K E.Carlson 4-6-8 Cant sustain bid 6 Hero Of My Dreams J.Morrill 4-7-3- Becomes a nightmare 8 Sonny Mcdreamee B.Simpson 3-7-9 The sun is going down 4 Celebrity Lovin T.Jackson 4-7-1 Ill take a pass 5 My Love Bi M.Miller 5-9-8 Out of it quickly Fifteenth-$13,000 Cond.Pace;n/w 2 pm races life 3 After Alimony M.Miller 1-1-6 Starts off the late double 6 Stunning Lady J.Morrill 1-6-5 Certainly a contender 5 Naughty Marietta A.Miller 5-1-8 Didnt fire at Yonkers 7 Keystone Wanda T.Schadel 3-4-3 Todd only 1 win in 2013 4 Ornate Hanover M.Kakaley 2-3-2 Best work done at Saratoga 8 Charismatic Kelsey A.McCarthy 5-2-6 A toss from this spot 1 Tiger Boudoir B.Simpson 2-6-3 Lacks bite 2 Red Feather G.Napolitano 9-2-2 One more race to go Sixteenth-$13,000 Cond.Trot;n/w 2 pm races life 7 Hall La La M.Simons 1-2-3 Seems to like front end 9 Casanostra C.Norris 2-1-7 Norris good with trotters 1 Themida M.Kakaley 8-6-7 Rounds out the trifecta 6 Weve Got It All M.Miller 3-9-4 Makes 2nd career start 8 Heytheregeorgiegirl J.Morrill 4-1-9 Im still not buying 3 Pineys Schooner A.Napolitano 9-1-6 Made a break in latest 5 Matriarch Hanover G.Napolitano 2-4-1 Raced well in the mud 2 Paris Kentucky M.Romano 6-2-7 Wrong state 4 A Girl Named Tim T.Jackson 6-5-8 See you on Sat
Yep, you guessed it, another sixteen race slate on tap for this evening at Pocono Downs. It looks to be a very competitive card from top to bottom, good luck with your selections this evening. BEST BET: SUMMER INDIAN (6TH) VALUE PLAY: LUMIERE (11TH)
at Philadelphia -110/+100
Heights Packers Football and Cheerleading Registrations for boys and girls between the ages of 6-12 will be held at Coal Street Pavillion on June 2, June 16, and June 30 between 2-4 p.m. Must be 6 years old by August 1 and provide a copy of birth certicate for each child and a physical form completed by rst practice. If you have any questions please email us at heightspackers68@yahoo. com . Cost for registration are as follows: $35 for one child, $50 for two children and $65 per family. All information may also be found on our website at http://www. heightspackers.webs.com/. Plains Sports Hall of Fame Association is seeking names and biographical information of former or current residents of Plains who have distinguished themselves in athletics as players, coaches or contributors to athletic programs. Nomination forms can be obtained at the Plains American Legion or from the members of the Hall of Fame Association Board of Directors (Nathan Fritz, Francis Gavin, John Kelly, Joe Kropiewnicki, Clarence Ozgo, Dom Pape, Don Stark III, Gary Vanderburg, Dan Wallace, or Lou Luchetti). Nominations can be submitted on the forms or by letter and it is important to include as much biographical information and documentation as possible as well as a current address to aid the Committee in the selection process. Nominations and information should be sent to: Plains Sports Hall of Fame Association, PO Box 1625, Plains, PA 18705. To be considered for induction in 2013, the nominations and the biographical information must be submitted prior to July 1. Plains Yankees Football and Cheerleading Organization will have registrations Wednesday, May 29, from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. at the Plains American Legion, 101 E. Carey Street, Plains. The cost is $60 for one child or $75 per family, with additional uniform fees for rst-time players. Bring a recent picture of your child along with a copy of your childs birth certicate. UPCOMING EVENTS/OTHER Crestwood Football will have its annual Iron Man Competition Friday, May 31, at 6 p.m. at the football stadium. Parents and community members are invited. Dr. George P. Moses 2nd Annual Golf Classic will be held Friday, July 5, at Sand Springs Golf Club. A captain and crew format will be used and entry deadline is July 1. The cost is $75 per player, which includes, green fees, cart, prizes, refreshments and dinner. Checks are to be made out to Wyoming Valley Athletic Association with entries mailed to chairman Jack Monick, 9 Van Horn St., Wilkes-Barre, Pa. 18706. For more information, email Jacqmonique@ gmail.com or call 647-8010. Proceeds will go to local charities and youngsters with serious medical needs. Kiwanis Club of Mountain Top will hold its 31st annual Score One For Kids Golf Tournament on Friday, June 14 at Sand Springs Country Club. Sponsorships are available and start at the price of $25. Make checks payable to Kiwanis Club of Mountain Top Charitable Foundation and mail them to David Barry, 49 Fieldstone Way, Mountain Top. Luzerne Intermediate Unit will have its 14th annual golf tournament Friday, June 14, at the Blue Ridge Trail Golf Club in Mountain Top. Registration will be at noon and the tournament begins at 1 p.m. The cost is $85 per player or $340 per four-player team. The cost includes green fees, cart, refreshments, gifts, prizes and dinner. To register, visit www.liu18. org or call Jane Jeffery with any questions at 718-4692. U.S. Coast Guard Auxiliary Flotilla 15-03 will offer a safe boating class on Tuesday and Wednesday, June 18 and 19, at the American Legion, Rt. 415, Harveys Lake, from 6 p.m. to 10 p.m. each night. This course qualies those who pass to obtain their PA Boaters Education Certicate and Card, which entitles them to operate boats and personal water crafts on Pennsylvanias rivers and lakes. You must be at least 12 years or older to participate in the class. For more information and reservations, call R.J. Kwiatkowski at 815-0471. The fee is $25 payable at the door on the rst night of the class.
LOCAL CALENDAR
TODAYS EVENTS
HIGH SCHOOL SOFTBALL District 2 Class 4A championship Hazleton Area vs. Williamsport, 5 p.m. Wilkes University District 2 Class A championship Lackawanna Trail vs. Old Forge, 5 p.m. Mid Valley H.S., Throop HIGH SCHOOL GIRLS LACROSSE State championships first round Wyoming Seminary ve. Lewisburg at Wilkes University, 2 p.m. HIGH SCHOOL VOLLEYBALL Class 2A state championships first round Holy Redeemer vs. Schuylkill Valley at Dallas High School, 3:30 p.m.
BASKETBALL
NBA PLAYOFFS
CONFERENCE FINALS (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) EASTERN CONFERENCE Miami 2, Indiana 1 Wednesday, May 22: Miami 103, Indiana 102, OT Friday, May 24: Indiana 97, Miami 93 Sunday, May 26: Miami 114, Indiana 96 Tuesday, May 28: Miami at Indiana, late Thursday, May 30: Indiana at Miami, 8:30 p.m. x-Saturday, June 1: Miami at Indiana, 8:30 p.m. x-Monday, June 3: Indiana at Miami, 8:30 p.m. WESTERN CONFERENCE San Antonio 4, Memphis 0 Sunday, May 19: San Antonio 105, Memphis 83 Tuesday, May 21: Spurs 93, Memphis 89, OT Saturday, May 25: Spurs 104, Memphis 93, OT Monday, May 27: San Antonio 93, Memphis 86
L O C A L R E S u LT S
Blue Ridge Golf Course
Blue Chip Ladies Golf League May 14 Even Holes Winners First Flight: Julia Wincek. Second Flight: Judy Cameron. Third Flight: Lorraine Sokoloski. Fourth Flight: Erin Gallagher. Chip-ins: Theresa Solomon, Blue 4; Julia Wincek, Blue 5.
BASEBALL
INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE
North Division W L Pct. GB Pawtucket (Red Sox) 31 21 .596 Buffalo (Blue Jays) 28 22 .560 2 Lehigh Valley (Phillies) 24 26 .480 6 RailRiders (Yankees) 23 27 .460 7 Syracuse (Nationals) 22 29 .431 8 Rochester (Twins) 21 30 .412 9 South Division W L Pct. GB Durham (Rays) 32 20 .615 Norfolk (Orioles) 32 20 .615 Gwinnett (Braves) 23 30 .434 9 Charlotte (White Sox) 21 32 .396 11 West Division W L Pct. GB Indianapolis (Pirates) 35 18 .660 Columbus (Indians) 29 23 .558 5 Louisville (Reds) 25 27 .481 9 Toledo (Tigers) 16 37 .302 19 Tuesdays Games Louisville 5, Columbus 2 Norfolk 10, Scranton/Wilkes-Barre 8 Gwinnett 5, Syracuse 4 Durham 9, Buffalo 8 Indianapolis 7 , Pawtucket 2 Lehigh Valley 6, Rochester 5, 5 innings, susp., rain Charlotte 12, Toledo 3 Todays Games Columbus at Louisville, 11:05 a.m. Pawtucket at Indianapolis, 1:35 p.m. Lehigh Valley 6, Rochester 5, 5 innings, comp. of susp. game Scranton/Wilkes-Barre at Norfolk, 6:35 p.m. Gwinnett at Syracuse, 7 p.m. Lehigh Valley at Rochester, 7:05 p.m. Buffalo at Durham, 7:05 p.m. Toledo at Charlotte, 7:15 p.m. Thursdays Games Lehigh Valley at Rochester, 11:05 a.m. Scranton/Wilkes-Barre at Norfolk, 6:05 p.m. Columbus at Louisville, 6:35 p.m. Gwinnett at Syracuse, 7 p.m. Pawtucket at Indianapolis, 7:05 p.m. Buffalo at Durham, 7:05 p.m. Toledo at Charlotte, 7:15 p.m.
EASTERN LEAGUE
Eastern Division W L Pct. GB Binghamton (Mets) 30 22 .577 Portland (Red Sox) 28 22 .560 1 Trenton (Yankees) 28 24 .538 2 New Ham. (Blue Jays) 26 27 .491 4 New Britain (Twins) 24 28 .462 6 Reading (Phillies) 19 29 .396 9 Western Division W L Pct. GB Erie (Tigers) 31 19 .620 Richmond (Giants) 27 23 .540 4 Harrisburg (Nationals) 27 25 .519 5 Bowie (Orioles) 23 25 .479 7 Akron (Indians) 22 30 .423 10 Altoona (Pirates) 20 31 .392 11 Tuesdays Games New Hampshire 6, Portland 3, 11 innings Binghamton 8, Altoona 5 Richmond 2, New Britain 1 Harrisburg 9, Akron 1 Trenton 4, Erie 1 Reading at Bowie, late Todays Games Erie at Trenton, 10:35 a.m. New Hampshire at Portland, 6 p.m. Richmond at New Britain, 6:35 p.m. Altoona at Binghamton, 6:35 p.m. Reading at Bowie, 7:05 p.m. Harrisburg at Akron, 7:05 p.m. Thursdays Games Richmond at New Britain, 10:35 a.m. Altoona at Binghamton, 10:35 a.m. New Hampshire at Portland, 6 p.m. Reading at Bowie, 7:05 p.m. Erie at Trenton, 7:05 p.m. Harrisburg at Akron, 7:05 p.m.
HOLES-IN-ONE
Carey sinks rst ace
Nancy Carey, member of the Irem Womens Golf Association, aced the 135-yard 18th hole on the Old Course at the Homestead Resort in Hot Springs Virginia. Her husband, Dave Carey, witnessed the hole-in-one.
Doug Jefferies of Drums aced the 103-yard third hole with a 9 iron May 20 at Sand Springs Country Club. Faye Jefferies and Hugh Mundy witnessed the hole-in-one.
TENNIS
FRENCH OPEN RESULTS
Tuesday At Stade Roland Garros Paris Purse: $28.4 million (Grand Slam) Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles Men First Round Grigor Dimitrov (26), Bulgaria, def. Alejandro Falla, Colombia, 6-4, 1-0, retired. Victor Hanescu, Romania, def. Bernard Tomic, Australia, 7-5, 7-6 (8), 2-1, retired. Tommy Haas (12), Germany, def. Guillaume Rufin, France, 7-6 (4), 6-1, 6-3. Lucas Pouille, France, def. Alex Kuznetsov, United States, 6-1, 7-6 (2), 6-2. Jack Sock, United States, def. Guillermo GarciaLopez, Spain, 6-2, 6-2, 7-5. Dmitry Tursunov, Russia, def. Alexandr Dolgopolov (22), Ukraine, 7-6 (7), 6-4, 7-6 (7). Federico Delbonis, Argentina, def. Julian Reister, Germany, 6-7 (2), 6-1, 6-0, 6-4. Mikhail Youzhny (29), Russia, def. Pablo Andujar, Spain, 4-6, 6-4, 6-2, 6-3. Nikolay Davydenko, Russia, def. Florent Serra, France, 6-3, 6-4, 7-5. Yen-hsun Lu, Taiwan, def. Simone Bolelli, Italy, 6-4, 6-4, 2-1, retired. Denis Istomin, Uzbekistan, def. Florian Mayer (28), Germany, 4-6, 6-3, 7-5, retired. Philipp Kohlschreiber (16), Germany, def. Jiri Vesely, Czech Republic, 7-6 (3), 1-6, 7-5, 6-2. Novak Djokovic (1), Serbia, def. David Goffin, Belgium, 7-6 (5), 6-4, 7-5. Guido Pella, Argentina, def. Ivan Dodig, Croatia, 4-6, 6-4, 6-3, 2-6, 12-10. Stanislas Wawrinka (9), Switzerland, def. Thiemo de Bakker, Netherlands, 7-5, 6-3, 6-7 (1), 7-5. Fernando Verdasco, Spain, def. Marc Gicquel, France, 6-2, 6-3, 6-1. Benoit Paire (24), France, leads Marcos Baghdatis, Cyprus, 3-6, 7-6 (1), 4-3, susp., darkness. Lukasz Kubot, Poland, leads Maxime Teixeira, France, 6-4, 5-7, 3-1, susp., darkness. Horacio Zeballos, Argentina, leads Vasek Pospisil, Canada, 7-6 (9), 6-4, 6-7 (4), 1-4, susp., darkness. Women First Round Sam Stosur (9), Australia, def. Kimiko DateKrumm, Japan, 6-0, 6-2. Mariana Duque-Marino, Colombia, def. Kristyna Pliskova, Czech Republic, 6-2, 6-0. Yaroslava Shvedova (27), Kazakhstan, def. CoCo Vandeweghe, United States, 6-0, 3-6, 6-2. Jelena Jankovic (18), Serbia, def. Daniela Hantuchova, Slovakia, 6-4, 7-6 (7). Marion Bartoli (13), France, def. Olga Govortsova, Belarus, 7-6 (8), 4-6, 7-5. Alize Cornet (31), France, def. Maria Joao Koehler, Portugal, 7-5, 6-2. Silvia Soler-Espinosa, Spain, def. Irina-Camelia Begu, Romania, 6-3, 6-2. Kristina Mladenovic, France, def. Lauren Davis, United States, 6-0, 7-5. Marina Erakovic, New Zealand, def. Elena Baltacha, Britain, 6-3, 6-0. Dominika Cibulkova (16), Slovakia, def. Lesia Tsurenko, Ukraine, 6-1, 6-4.
Tom Seroka of Pittston aced the 155-yard fourth hole with a 20 degree utility club at the Wilkes-Barre Golf Club May 13. Len Kruczek witnessed the holein-one. Michael Blazick aced the 153yard 15th hole Thursday at the Wyoming Valley Country Club. Bob Robel, Mike Kostelansky and Bob Cobra witnessed the hole-in-one.
TRANSACTIONS
BASEBALL
American League BOSTON RED SOXActivated LHP Franklin Morales from the 15-day DL. Optioned RHP Alfredo Aceves to Pawtucket (IL). National League SAN DIEGO PADRESReinstated C Yasmani Grandal from the restricted list. Optioned C John Baker to Tucson (PCL). Designated INF Edinson Rincon for assignment. American Association AMARILLO SOXAcquired INF Brandon Jones from Southern Maryland (Atlantic) for future considerations.
hOCKEY
NHL PLAYOFFS
CONFERENCE SEMIFINALS (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) EASTERN CONFERENCE Pittsburgh 4, Ottawa 1 Tuesday, May 14: Pittsburgh 4, Ottawa 1 Friday, May 17: Pittsburgh 4, Ottawa 3 Sunday, May 19: Ottawa 2, Pittsburgh 1, 2OT Wednesday, May 22: Pittsburgh 7 , Ottawa 3 Friday, May 24: Pittsburgh 6, Ottawa 2 Boston 4, N.Y. Rangers 1 Thursday, May 16: Boston 3, N.Y. Rangers 2, OT Sunday, May 19: Boston 5, N.Y. Rangers 2 Tuesday, May 21: Boston 2, N.Y. Rangers 1 Thursday, May 23: N.Y. Rangers 4, Boston 3, OT Saturday, May 25: Boston 3, N.Y. Rangers 1 WESTERN CONFERENCE Detroit 3, Chicago 3 Wednesday, May 15: Chicago 4, Detroit 1 Saturday, May 18: Detroit 4, Chicago 1 Monday, May 20: Detroit 3, Chicago 1 Thursday, May 23: Detroit 2, Chicago 0 Saturday, May 25: Chicago 4, Detroit 1 Monday, May 27: Chicago 4, Detroit 3 Wednesday, May 29: Detroit at Chicago, 8 p.m. Los Angeles 3, San Jose 3 Tuesday, May 14: Los Angeles 2, San Jose 0 Thursday, May 16: Los Angeles 4, San Jose 3 Saturday, May 18: San Jose 2, Los Angeles 1, OT Tuesday, May 21: San Jose 2, Los Angeles 1 Thursday, May 23: Los Angeles 3, San Jose 0 Sunday, May 26: San Jose 2, Los Angeles 1 Tuesday, May 28: San Jose at Los Angeles, late
AHL PLAYOFFS
CONFERENCE FINALS BEST OF 7 EASTERN CONFERENCE Syracuse 1, Wilkes-Barre/Scranton 1 Saturday, May 25: Penguins 4, Syracuse 2 Sunday, May 26: Syracuse 3, Wilkes-Barre/ Scranton 2 Wednesday, May 29: Syracuse at Wilkes-Barre/ Scranton, 7:05 p.m. Friday, May 31: Syracuse at Wilkes-Barre/Scranton, 7:05 p.m. Saturday, June 1: Wilkes-Barre/Scranton at Syracuse, 7 p.m. x-Monday, June 3: Syracuse at Wilkes-Barre/ Scranton, 7:05 p.m. x-Wednesday, June 5: Wilkes-Barre/Scranton at Syracuse, 7 p.m. WESTERN CONFERENCE Grand Rapids 1, Oklahoma City 1 Friday, May 24: Grand Rapids 2, Oklahoma City 1 Saturday, May 25: Oklahoma City 4, Grand Rapids 2 Wednesday, May 29: Grand Rapids at Oklahoma City, 8 p.m. Friday, May 31: Grand Rapids at Oklahoma City, 8 p.m. Saturday, June 1: Grand Rapids at Oklahoma City, 8 p.m. x-Tuesday, June 4: Oklahoma City at Grand Rapids, 7 p.m. x-Wednesday, June 5: Oklahoma City at Grand Rapids, 7 p.m.
BASKETBALL
National Basketball Association NBAAnnounced the NBA Board of Governors unanimously approved sale of Kings to a Sacramento ownership group led by Vivek Ranadive. ATLANTA HAWKSNamed Mike Budenholzer coach. PHOENIX SUNSNamed Jeff Hornacek coach.
W h AT S O N T v
2:10 p.m. WGN Chicago White Sox at Chicago Cubs 7 p.m. CSN Boston at Philadelphia ROOT Detroit at Pittsburgh SNY, YES N.Y. Mets at N.Y. Yankees 8 p.m. NBCSN Playoffs, conference semifinals, game 7, Detroit at Chicago 2:25 p.m. ESPN2 Mens national teams, exhibition, Germany vs. Ecuador, at Boca Raton, Fla. 8 p.m. ESPN Mens national teams, exhibition, United States vs. Belgium, at Cleveland 5 a.m. ESPN2 French Open, second round, at Paris
MLB
FOOTBALL
National Football League DETROIT LIONSNamed Jeff Backus parttime coaching intern. GREEN BAY PACKERSSigned S David Fulton. SEATTLE SEAHAWKSWaived-injured TE Anthony McCoy. Signed OT Jake Bscherer.
NHL
HOCKEY
National Hockey League COLUMBUS BLUE JACKETSSigned G Anton Forsberg to a three-year, entry-level contract.
SOCCER
SOCCER
Major League Soccer D.C. UNITEDSigned MF Sainey Nyassi.
TENNIS
S P O R T S
PENGUINS
Continued from Page 1B
CANZLER
Continued from Page 1B
You can get back to the normal routine you had in the regular season. But perhaps the biggest benet of playing at home is the fans. Dumoulin recalled the energy that the boisterous home crowd generated during the Providence series and the Penguins are hoping for the same thing tonight. We did a lot of work last series to get the chance to play again and give our fans more hockey to watch, said winger Paul Thompson. Theyve been great to us so far and hopefully we can use playing at home to our advantage.
Notes
Syracuse top scorer and AHL MVP Tyler Johnson didnt practice on Tuesday and his status for tonights game remains unknown. Hynes said Johnsons status doesnt impact his gameplan for tonight. Johnson was injured when he and Chad Kolarik collided in the third period of Game 2. Both players had to be helped off the ice. They have a good team, its not just one player, Hynes said. Hes certainly a guy were aware of a dynamic player, but it doesnt change much for us. We have to be more concerned about how we play and as the games go on we have to make adjustments on certain guys or certain situations. While the first two games saw plenty of physical play, the big hits havent been as prevalent as they were in the Providence series. But that could change. They were very competitive games not a lot of time and space by either team, Hynes
Syracuse scores its third goal to take a 3-1 lead in the second period Sunday as Wilkes-Barre/Scranton goalie Brad Thiessen looks over his shoulder after the shot eluded him.
S c ra n t o n / Wi l ke s - B a r re threatened in the top of the ninth loading the bases with no outs. One run came in when Josh Bell grounded out. But Melky Mesa struck out to end the game. Before one out was recorded in the game by RailRiders starter Brett Marshall, the Tides were up 3-0. Marshall walked the rst batter of the game. Then after allowing a single to Brandon Wood, Ryan Flaherty hit a three-run homer to leftcenter for a 3-0 score. But Scranton/Wilkes-Barre fought back after that early decit tying the score in the top of the third First, Melky
Mesa scored on a groundout by Corban Joseph. Then Thomas Neal doubled home Addison Maruszak before scoring on a double by Zoilo Almonte for a 3-3 score. A Brandon Wood run-scoring single in the bottom of the fourth gave Norfolk the lead back at 4-3. But Almonte came through again in the top of the fth with an RBI single of his own to even the score again. Canzler then blasted his eighth home run of the season in the fth as part of a two-run frame for the Tides as they took the lead back, 6-4. The RailRiders continued to battle scoring a run in the top of the eighth on Josh Bells rst home run of the season. Bobby Wilson also came through in the frame belting an 0-2 pitch to left for a two-run double to
Tides 10, RailRiders 7 Norfolk ab r h bi ab r h bi Joseph 2b 4 1 1 1 Pridie dh 33 1 0 Neal rf 4 2 2 1 Wood ss 41 2 1 Almonte lf 5 0 3 2 Flahrty2b 51 2 3 Mustelier 3b 4 0 0 0 Canzler 1b 51 3 2 Johnson 1b 4 0 0 0 TRbnsn pr/lf 0 1 0 0 Bell dh 5 1 1 2 Hoes lf 42 2 1 Mesa cf 5 2 2 0 Britton rf 31 0 0 Maruszak ss 3 2 2 0 Wheeler 3b 40 2 2 Wilson c 4 0 1 2 CRbnsn c 30 1 1 Avery cf 30 1 1 Totals 38 8 12 8 Totals 36 10 14 1 0 RailRiders 003 010 031 8 Norfolk 300 120 04x 10 E Neal (1). LOBSWB 8, NOR 10. TEAM RISP SWB 5-for-14, NOR 6-for-19. 2BMesa (10), Maruszak (9), Neal (10), Almonte (11), Wilson (5), Pridie (14), Avery (1), Wheeler (1). HR Bell (1), Flaherty (1), Canzler (8). SB Hoes (5). GIDP SWB 1, NOR 2 IP H R ER BB SO RailRiders Marshall 4.1 8 6 6 5 4 Montgomery 2.2 2 2 2 1 3 Eppley (BS, 2; L, 2-2) .2 3 4 4 2 1 Demel .1 0 0 0 0 0 Norfolk Jurrjens 6 8 4 4 1 3 Russell (H,1) 1.2 2 2 2 1 3 Asencio (BS,3; W, 2-0) 1.1 2 2 2 3 1 WP Marshall, Eppley. IBB Britton (by Eppley) UmpiresHP: Will Little; 1B: David Soucy; 3B: Max Guyll T3:19. A3,027. RailRiders
Remaining schedule for the Eastern Conference nals (to order tickets, call 208-PENS): Game 3 tonight Syracuse at W-B/Scranton, 7:05 Game 4 Fri., May 31 Syracuse at W-B/Scranton, 7:05 Game 5 Sat., June 1 W-B/Scranton at Syracuse, 7:00 *Game 6 Mon., June 3 Syracuse at W-B/Scranton, 7:05 *Game 7 Wed., June 5 W-B/Scranton at Syracuse, 7:00 *if necessary
said. There wasnt as many big hits or pounding hits like the Providence series, but theres not time and space. Theres more bumps and rub-outs than the eye-catching hits. The Penguins signed defensemen Scott Harrington and Olli Maatta to amateur tryout
agreements on Tuesday. Both players join WilkesBarre/Scranton after reaching the 2013 Memorial Cup with the Ontario Hockey League champion London Knights. Harrington was Pittsburghs second-round pick in 2011 while Maatta was a rst round selection in 2012. Hynes said both could see action in the playoffs. When you get the opportunity to work with real high-end prospects rst turning pro, its nice to have them. Theres a possibility those guys will be in the lineup. Another prospect is expected to join the Penguins soon as well, as Hynes said defenseman Derrick Pouliot, a 2012 rst round pick (eighth overall), will join the team at some point. On the injury front, Kolarik practiced on Tuesday and Hynes said he is ne. Winger Bobby Farnham is also ready to return to game action, while D Dylan Reese and C Jayson Megna are considered day-to-day.
COLLEgE SPORTS
Kings baseball
Kenny Durling, Evan Robaczewski and Andrew Tressa of the Misericordia baseball team earned All-Region honors from the American Baseball Coaches Association and d3baseball. com. The three seniors, who graduated from Wyoming Valley West, led the Cougars to their third consecutive Freedom Conference championship and a school record for wins in a season with 39. Durling and Tressa were earned rst-team ABCA MidAtlantic All-Region honors, while Robaczewski was named to the third team. Tressa also earned rst-team honors from d3basball.com, while Robaczewski and Durling made the second and third teams, respectively. Tressa earned a second base selection after ranking third on the team in batting (.345). He led the team in walks (31), hit by pitches (18), on-base percentage (.493) and runs (56). Tressa also tallied 80 total bases, which ranked him second on the team. Durling was an outeld selection after leading the team in doubles (18), triples (4), home runs (7) and total bases (106). He added 54 RBI on the season, which tied him for rst on the team. He also hit .319 with 59 hits. Robaczewski, a pitcher, had a 9-2 record with a 2.33 earned run average. He also compiled 70 strikeouts in 77.1 innings, while holding opponents to a .213 batting average. He also tossed two complete games.
Widener baseball
including eight intentional walks. Sweeney also compiled a school-record 22-game hitting streak. Sweeneys efforts also earned him Freedom Conference Player of the Year honors. Eades set a school record in single-season pitching wins with eight. He also tallied a career-best 3.34 earned-run average this season, allowing 21 earned runs in 56.2 innings. Eades also struck out 38 batters. Eades nished his Kings career with the most pitching victories in Monarch history.
honors twice.
Tony Bevevino, Jake Rohring, Bobby Buttafogo and Chris DiMino earned All-Freedom Conference honors for the Kings mens tennis team. Bevevino and Rohrig earned rst-team selections, while Buttafogo was named to the second team. DiMino was pegged as an honorable mention. Wilkes had six mens tennis players named to the 2013 AllFreedom Conference team. Steven Wilson earned Player of the Year honors, while Michael Kranz captured the Rookie of the Year award. Head Coach Chris Leicht earned Coach of the Year. Alex Makos made the rst team, while Max Appello, Connor Peckham and Brendon Blachowski earned second-team spots.
Kings softball
Widener sophomore Marc Noyalis, of Dallas, earned second-team All-Mid-Atlantic Region honors by d3baseball.com as a utility player. Noyalis also was named to the second-team All-Commonwealth Conference as a reliever and honorable mention allleague as a utility player. Noyalis tied for rst in the league with 36 RBI, was second with 55 hits, tied for third with 12 doubles, was fourth with 32 runs, placed fth with 222 putouts and was rst on the team with a .369 batting average. Noyalis also had a 16-game hitting streak during the season and nished the year hitting safely in 29 of 32 games. Noyalis compiled 11 relief appearances with a 2-2 record, 18 strikeouts and two runs allowed in 13 innings of work. Kings Amanda Cardone earned a selection to the 2013 Capital One District 4 All-Academic softball team, as selected by the College Sports Information Directors of America (CoSIDA). Cardone is one of just 12 players to be named to the District 4 team and will now be placed on the national ballot, along with the winners of the seven other districts, for possible selection to the Capital One/ CoSIDA Softball Academic AllAmerican Team. Cardone is a biology major and garners a 3.49 GPA and is a Deans List student. In addition, she has earned Middle Atlantic Conference All-Academic
Kings College seniors Chris Sweeney and Brenton Eades earned 2013 American Baseball Coaches Association Mid-Atlantic All-Regional honors. Sweeney ranks first in NCAA Division III in batting with a .496 average. He hit 10 home runs, 16 doubles and four triples during the season. He also recorded 41 RBI, went 11-for11 in stolen bases and scored 44 runs in 32 games. His .942 slugging percentage also ranks first in the nation. Sweeney also walked a career-high 22 times,
Melanie Nolt of the Wilkes womens tennis team earned the 2013 Giant Steps award at the Middle Atlantic Conference awards luncheon held on the campus of Lycoming College on May 7. The Giant Steps award is given to a studentathlete who has prevailed over great adversity throughout his/ her career. Nolt, a three-time Freedom Conference Player of the Year and rst-team All-Freedom selection, led the Lady Colonels to four of their seven straight Freedom Conference Championships during her career while playing with Type I diabetes. She was diagnosed with the disease in February 2008, her junior year of high school.
Gavin Colley (Tunkhannock) and Erica Szpynda (Berwick) nished ninth in their respective events Saturday for Widener University in the NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships. Colley ran the 100-meter dash in 11.21 seconds, leaving him .05 seconds short of earning All-American honors. Szpynda heaved the shot put 13.69 meters, .01 meters short of earning All-American honors.
phOtO prOViDeD
The Keystone Chapter UniCO Golf Committee completed plans for its First Charity Golf tournament, which will benet local UniCO Scholarships. the tournament is open to single-registration players or a captain and crew format. Cost for a single reservation is $75. For the captain and crew format, registration is $300. a luncheon also will be held. For those wishing to attend the luncheon only, the cost is $25 per person. registration, accompanied by full payment, must be made by June 1. Contact Joe Sadowski at 586-9179 or 561-6131 to register. Standing, from left: Mark e. McDade, Keystone Chapter president; Joe Sadowski, golf tournament chairman; peter noto and ernie DeStefano, Keystone UniCO golf committee; Ben Vauter, panoramas Golf Course manager; ray tropeano and Mary Depalma, Keystone UniCO golf committee.
phOtO prOViDeD
The Rotary Club of plymouth will be conducting its 13th annual Golf tournament on Sunday, June 9, at 8 a.m. at rolling pines Golf Course, Berwick. the cost is $85 and includes breakfast, golf, beverages and a post-tournament recognition dinner. those interested should call J.K. Karavis at 574-4246 or Budd OMalia at 814-3918. From left: rotarians Bob robine, Dave Yefko, ron Van Why, president eric Cheatley. the rotary Club of plymouth meets thursday nights at 6:30 at happy pizza, plymouth.
S P O R T S M L B S TA N D I N G S S TAT S
East Division Boston New York Baltimore Tampa Bay Toronto Central Division Detroit Cleveland Chicago Kansas City Minnesota West Division Texas Oakland Los Angeles Seattle Houston
AP PHOTO
AMERICAN LEAGUE Pct .604 .600 .549 .529 .423 Pct .592 .529 .490 .429 .417 Pct .615 .558 .451 .431 .288 GB WCGB 3 4 1 9 7 GB WCGB 3 1 5 3 8 6 8 7 GB WCGB 3 8 5 9 6 17 14 L10 6-4 5-5 5-5 6-4 5-5 L10 7-3 3-7 6-4 1-9 2-8 L10 5-5 9-1 8-2 2-8 4-6 Str L-1 L-2 W-1 W-3 L-1 Str W-2 L-5 L-1 L-7 W-1 Str L-3 W-4 L-1 W-2 L-1 Home 17-12 15-9 11-12 17-10 14-16 Home 17-8 15-10 13-11 10-14 9-13 Home 15-7 14-10 12-13 13-11 9-21 Away 15-9 15-11 17-11 10-14 8-14 Away 12-12 12-14 11-14 11-14 11-15 Away 17-13 15-13 11-15 9-18 6-16
W 32 30 28 27 22 W 29 27 24 21 20 W 32 29 23 22 15
L 21 20 23 24 30 L 20 24 25 28 28 L 20 23 28 29 37
Toronto Blue Jays shortstop Maicer Izturis, top, forces out Atlanta Braves Freddie Freeman, bottom, at second base then turns the double play to get Braves catcher Evan Gattis at rst during third inning interleague baseball action in Toronto on Tuesday.
___ NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division Atlanta Washington Philadelphia New York Miami Central Division St. Louis Cincinnati Pittsburgh Chicago Milwaukee West Division Arizona San Francisco Colorado San Diego Los Angeles
W 31 26 25 19 13 W 34 33 31 20 19 W 30 28 28 22 21
L 20 25 27 29 39 L 17 19 20 30 30 L 22 23 24 28 28
Pct .608 .510 .481 .396 .250 Pct .667 .635 .608 .400 .388 Pct .577 .549 .538 .440 .429
L10 8-2 4-6 5-5 4-6 2-8 L10 7-3 8-2 7-3 3-7 3-7 L10 6-4 4-6 6-4 4-6 4-6
Str Home Away W-3 14-8 20-9 W-2 20-7 13-12 L-1 18-9 13-11 W-2 10-14 10-16 L-3 12-16 7-14 Str W-3 L-1 W-1 L-2 W-1 Home Away 16-12 14-10 19-9 9-14 16-9 12-15 13-12 9-16 13-15 8-13
Nationals 9, Orioles 3 Washington ab r h bi ab r h bi McLoth lf 3 0 1 0 Span cf 4 0 1 1 Machd 3b 3 0 1 0 Lmrdzz 2b 4 1 1 0 Markks rf 4 0 0 0 Zmrmn 3b 4 1 2 0 A.Jones cf 4 0 0 0 LaRoch 1b 3 3 2 4 C.Davis 1b 4 2 2 1 Dsmnd ss 4 1 1 0 Wieters c 4 0 1 1 TMoore lf 4 1 1 2 Hardy ss 4 1 3 1 Berndn rf 4 1 2 2 YNavrr 2b 3 0 0 0 KSuzuk c 4 1 3 0 Patton p 0 0 0 0 Karns p 1 0 0 0 Valenci ph 1 0 0 0 Duke p 0 0 0 0 Gasmn p 1 0 0 0 Koerns ph 1 0 0 0 Pearce ph 1 0 0 0 Storen p 0 0 0 0 McFrln p 0 0 0 0 Clipprd p 0 0 0 0 ACasill ph-2b 1 0 0 0 JSolano ph 1 0 0 0 Abad p 0 0 0 0 Totals 33 3 8 3 Totals 34 913 9 Baltimore 010 200 000 3 Washington 300 400 02x 9 DP--Baltimore 2, Washington 2. LOB--Baltimore 5, Washington 3. 2B--Wieters (13), Span (9), Desmond (15). HR--C.Davis (17), Hardy (10), LaRoche 2 (10), T.Moore (2), Bernadina (1). SB-McLouth (16). S--Karns. IP H R ER BB SO Baltimore Gausman L,0-2 4 8 7 7 1 0 McFarland 2 1 0 0 0 0 Patton 2 4 2 2 0 1 Washington Karns 4.1 5 3 3 2 3 Duke W,1-1 1.2 0 0 0 0 0 Storen 1 1 0 0 0 1 Clippard 1 2 0 0 0 0 Abad 1 0 0 0 0 1 Umpires--Home, Tom Hallion; First, Ron Kulpa; Second, Mike Estabrook; Third, Phil Cuzzi. T--2:44 (Rain delay: 1:21). A--35,664 (41,418). Baltimore
This date in baseball Compiled By PAUL MONTELLA,By The Associated Press 1916 Christy Mathewson defeated the Boston Braves 3-0 for the New York Giants 17th consecutive road win. 1922 The U.S. Supreme Court ruled organized baseball was primarily a sport and not a business, and therefore not subject to antitrust laws and interstate commerce regulations. The suit had been brought by the Federal Leagues Baltimore franchise. 1928 Bill Terry hit for the cycle to lead the New York Giants to a 12-5 win over Brooklyn at Ebbets Field. Terry became the first player in major league history to include a grand slam as part of the cycle. 1942 New Yorks Lefty Gomez self-described as the worst-hitting pitcher in baseball banged out four hits while pitching a 16-1 four-hitter against Washington. 1946 In a reverse integration role, Edward Klep became the first white to play in the Negro leagues in a game played in Grand Rapids. Klep pitched seven innings for the Cleveland Buckeyes against the American Giants in his debut with the Negro American League team. 1956 Dale Long went hitless for the Pirates, ending his major league record streak of home runs in eight consecutive games. The Brooklyn Dodgers beat Pittsburgh, 10-1. 1965 Philadelphias Richie Allen hit a 529-foot home run over the roof of Connie Mack Stadium off Chicagos Larry Jackson in the Phillies 4-2 victory. 1976 Houstons Joe Niekro was the winning pitcher and hit a home run off his brother, Phil Niekro. The Astros beat the Atlanta Braves 4-1. It was the only home run hit by Joe in his 22-year major league career. 1990 Oaklands Rickey Henderson broke Ty Cobbs 62-year-old American League stolen base record, but the Toronto Blue Jays still beat the Athletics 2-1. Hendersons 893rd steal came in the sixth inning. 2000 Oakland second baseman Randy Velarde turned the 10th unassisted triple play in regular-season history during a 4-1 loss to the New York Yankees. With runners on first and second in motion, Shane Spencer hit a line drive to Velarde who caught the ball, tagged out Jorge Posada (running from first) and stepped on second to beat Tino Martinez. 2002 Roger Clemens recorded the 100th double-digit strikeout game of his career, fanning 11 in seven innings against Chicago. Nolan Ryan (215) and Randy Johnson (175) were the others to have 100 double-digit strikeout games. 2002 In an article in Sports Illustrated magazine former NL MVP Ken Caminiti stated that about 50 percent of current major league players used some form of steroids. 2003 Colorado, behind Todd Heltons three home runs and Ron Belliards five hits beat the visiting Los Angeles Dodgers 12-5. Helton added a single and drove in six runs. 2010 Philadelphias Roy Halladay threw the 20th perfect game in major league history, beating the Florida Marlins 1-0. It was the first time in the modern era that there were a pair of perfect games in the same season. Halladay faced three Marlins pinch-hitters in the ninth. Mike Lamb led off with a long fly ball, Wes Helms struck out, and Ronny Paulino to hit a grounder to third for the 27th out. Halladay struck out 11 and went to either 3-1 or 3-2 counts seven times, twice in the games first three batters alone. Todays birthdays: Trevor Rosenthal 23; Jerry Hairston Jr. 37.
BOSTON Cliff Lee pitched eight innings of four-hit ball and Jonathan Papelbon earned his rst save at Fenway Park as a Red Sox opponent on Tuesday night, leading the Philadelphia Phillies to a 3-1 victory over Boston. Michael Young and Domonic Brown homered for the Phillies, and Erik Kratz singled in the tiebreaking run in the seventh inning to snap Bostons four-game winning streak. Lee (6-2) allowed a rst-inning run and then retired 22 of the next 23 batters to win his fourth consecutive decision. He struck out eight to match his season high and walked none. Ryan Dempster (2-6) allowed two runs on six hits and three walks, striking out four in seven innings for Boston. Papelbon pitched a perfect ninth for his 10th save. The Red Sox closer from 2005-11 including their 2007 World Series title he entered to a chorus of boos and without the theme song Shipping up to Boston he used for much of his career here. But he retired the Red Sox in order, pumping his st in celebration after getting David Ortiz on a grounder to the right side of the shifted ineld to end the game. That was all the support Lee needed on a night when he again helped the Phillies stop a losing streak. Philadelphia had lost two straight, including Monday nights 9-3 Red Sox victory in the opener of the twogame interleague series. Lee is 5-1 this season in eight starts following a Phillies loss. The teams now head to Philadelphia for a two-game series at Citizens Bank Park. Young cleared the Green Monster in the top of the rst, but the Red Sox tied it when Jacoby Ellsbury led off the bottom half with a single, stole second and then scored on Dustin Pedroias single. Both pitchers settled down, and it was still 1-all when John Mayberry Jr. singled to lead off the seventh, Freddy Galvis bunted him to second and Kratz singled him home. Braves 7, Blue Jays 6, 10 innings TORONTO Brian McCann hit two home runs, including a solo shot in the 10th inning that lifted the Atlanta Braves over the Toronto Blue Jays 7-6 on Tuesday. McCann and rookie Evan Gattis hit back-to-back homers off Ramon Ortiz in the sixth, giving the Braves a 6-5 lead. The Blue Jays tied it on J.P. Arencibias RBI double in the seventh. McCann connected for a leadoff drive in the 10th against Thad Weber (0-1) for his sixth home run. It was McCanns rst multihomer game of the season and the ninth of his career. Cory Gearrin (2-1) pitched one inning for the win. Craig Kimbrel celebrated his 25th birthday by nishing for his 16th save in 19 chances. Rockies 2, Astros 1 HOUSTON Michael Cuddyer had three hits, including an RBI single in the ninth inning that gave the Colorado Rockies a 2-1 win over the Houston Astros in interleague play on Tuesday. Troy Tulowitzki doubled off Houston closer Jose Veras (0-4) to start the ninth and advanced
to third on a wild pitch. Cuddyer followed with his single, which sailed just out of reach of leaping third baseman Matt Dominguez. Tulowitzki had an RBI single in the rst. Chris Carter tied it in the fourth with an RBI grounder. Cardinals 4, Royals 1 KANSAS CITY, Mo. Carlos Beltran hit a two-run homer against his former team, rookie Tyler Lyons made another dazzling start and the St. Louis Cardinals beat Kansas City 4-1 on Tuesday night for the Royals 10th consecutive home defeat. The only two hits that Lyons allowed over seven innings were to Billy Butler a two-out RBI double in the rst inning and a bloop single in the seventh. Otherwise, the left-hander shut down an anemic Kansas City offense to improve to 2-0 in his week-old major league career. Trevor Rosenthal pitched the eighth inning in a driving rain for St. Louis, and Edward Mujica breezed through a perfect ninth for his 16th save of the season. Matt Carpenter and Matt Holliday added solo homers in the sixth off the Royals Ervin Santana (3-5) as the Cardinals (34-17) improved to a major league-best 20-9 on the road. Reds 8, Indians 2 CINCINNATI Xavier Paul singled home a pair of runs in the rst inning, and the Cincinnati Reds completed a twogame home sweep of the Cleveland Indians with an 8-2 victory on Tuesday night that was free of any up-and-in acrimony. The intrastate rivals headed to Cleveland for two more games. The Indians lead the alltime series 42-41. The Reds have won 14 of their past 17 games overall, leaving them with the second-best record in the majors at 33-19. Cleveland has dropped ve straight, matching its season high. Mat Latos (5-0) handled a slumping lineup, allowing one run in 6 1-3 innings. Pauls two-run single put the Reds up 3-0 in the rst against Zach McAllister (4-4). Two Reds were hit by a pitch, but went to rst without complaint or umpires warning. Rays 7, Marlins 6 ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. Desmond Jennings drove in the winning run with a two-out single in the bottom of the ninth inning Tuesday night, lifting the Tampa Bay Rays to a 7-6 victory over the Miami Marlins. The Rays came back from an early 4-0 decit and won their third in a row. Miami lost its seventh straight game. Nationals 9, Orioles 3 WASHINGTON Adam LaRoche homered twice and drove in four runs, and the Washington Nationals enjoyed a rare offensive outburst at the expense of the Baltimore Orioles in a 9-3 victory Tuesday night. LaRoche, Tyler Moore and Roger Bernadina connected off Orioles rookie Kevin Gausman (0-2). LaRoche added a solo shot in the eighth off Troy Patton. It added up to Washingtons highest-scoring performance since a 10-3 win over Miami on April 15. The Nationals hadnt scored more than seven runs in 29 games since April 25.
INTERLEAGUE Mondays Games Baltimore 6, Washington 2 Detroit 6, Pittsburgh 5 Cincinnati 4, Cleveland 2 Houston 3, Colorado 2, 12 innings Minnesota 6, Milwaukee 3 St. Louis 6, Kansas City 3 Tampa Bay 10, Miami 6 Arizona 5, Texas 3, 1st game Oakland 4, San Francisco 1 Seattle 9, San Diego 0 Toronto 9, Atlanta 3 Chicago Cubs 7, Chicago White Sox 0 N.Y. Mets 2, N.Y. Yankees 1 Boston 9, Philadelphia 3 L.A. Dodgers 8, L.A. Angels 7 Arizona 5, Texas 4, 2nd game Tuesdays Games Atlanta 7, Toronto 6, 10 innings Colorado 2, Houston 1 Baltimore at Washington, 7:05 p.m. Pittsburgh at Detroit, 7:08 p.m. Cincinnati 8, Cleveland 2 Tampa Bay 7, Miami 6 Philadelphia 3, Boston 1 N.Y. Yankees at N.Y. Mets, 7:10 p.m. St. Louis 4, Kansas City 1 Chicago Cubs at Chicago, ppd., rain Minnesota at Milwaukee, 8:10 p.m. San Francisco at Oakland, 10:05 p.m. L.A. Angels at L.A. Dodgers, 10:10 p.m. San Diego at Seattle, 10:10 p.m. Wednesdays Games Chicago White Sox (Joh.Danks 0-0) at Chicago Cubs (Feldman 4-4), 2:20 p.m. Boston (Lackey 3-4) at Philadelphia (K.Kendrick 4-3), 7:05 p.m. Cincinnati (Arroyo 5-4) at Cleveland (Masterson 7-3), 7:05 p.m. Rockies 2, Astros 1 Houston r h bi ab r h bi Fowler cf 1 0 0 BBarns cf 4 0 0 0 Arenad 3b 0 1 0 Altuve 2b 3 0 0 0 CGnzlz lf 0 1 0 Corprn c 3 1 1 0 Tlwtzk ss 1 2 1 JMrtnz lf 4 0 2 0 Cuddyr rf 0 3 1 Carter 1b 4 0 0 1 Helton 1b 0 0 0 C.Pena dh 3 0 0 0 WRosr dh 0 1 0 Pareds rf 2 0 0 0 Torreal c 0 0 0 Dmngz 3b 3 0 0 0 LeMahi 2b 0 0 0 RCeden ss 3 0 2 0 Totals 2 8 2 Totals 29 1 5 1 Colorado 100 0000012 Houston 000 1000001 DP--Colorado 2, Houston 3. LOB--Colorado 7, Houston 5. 2B--Tulowitzki (13), Cuddyer (12), J.Martinez (10). SB--Cuddyer (4). CS--Altuve (3), C.Pena (1). IP H R ER BB SO Colorado J.De La Rosa 7 5 1 1 2 4 Belisle W,2-2 1 0 0 0 0 0 R.Betancourt S,11-12 1 0 0 0 0 2 Houston Lyles 7 6 1 1 3 3 W.Wright 1 0 0 0 0 2 Veras L,0-4 1 2 1 1 1 1 HBP--by J.De La Rosa (Altuve, Corporan). WP-Veras. Umpires--Home, Tim McClelland; First, Marvin Hudson; Second, Bob Davidson; Third, Lance Barrett. T--3:05. A--11,974 (42,060). Colorado ab 2 4 4 4 4 3 4 3 4 32 Rays 7, Marlins 6 Tampa Bay ab r h bi 5 0 0 0 Zobrist 2b-rf 5 1 2 0 Joyce rf 4 1 1 1 RRorts ph-2b 3 3 2 0 KJhnsn lf 4 1 2 3 Longori 3b 4 0 1 1 Loney 1b 4 0 2 1 Scott dh 4 0 0 0 DJnngs cf 4 0 0 0 Loaton c SRdrgz ph JMolin c YEscor ss 37 610 6 Totals
Detroit (Ani.Sanchez 5-4) at Pittsburgh (A.J.Burnett 3-5), 7:05 p.m. N.Y. Mets (Hefner 0-5) at N.Y. Yankees (D.Phelps 3-2), 7:05 p.m. Washington (Zimmermann 8-2) at Baltimore (Tillman 4-2), 7:05 p.m. Tampa Bay (Ro.Hernandez 2-5) at Miami (Koehler 0-2), 7:10 p.m. Toronto (Rogers 1-2) at Atlanta (Medlen 1-5), 7:10 p.m. Arizona (McCarthy 2-3) at Texas (Grimm 4-3), 8:05 p.m. Milwaukee (Estrada 4-2) at Minnesota (Deduno 0-1), 8:10 p.m. Kansas City (Mendoza 1-2) at St. Louis (Lynn 7-1), 8:15 p.m. Houston (Bedard 0-2) at Colorado (Chatwood 3-0), 8:40 p.m. L.A. Dodgers (Capuano 1-3) at L.A. Angels (Weaver 0-1), 10:05 p.m. Seattle (J.Saunders 3-5) at San Diego (Stults 4-4), 10:10 p.m. Oakland (Milone 4-5) at San Francisco (Lincecum 3-4), 10:15 p.m. Thursdays Games Arizona at Texas, 2:05 p.m. Chicago White Sox at Chicago Cubs, 2:20 p.m. Seattle at San Diego, 3:40 p.m. Oakland at San Francisco, 3:45 p.m. Boston at Philadelphia, 7:05 p.m. Cincinnati at Cleveland, 7:05 p.m. Detroit at Pittsburgh, 7:05 p.m. N.Y. Mets at N.Y. Yankees, 7:05 p.m. Washington at Baltimore, 7:05 p.m. Tampa Bay at Miami, 7:10 p.m. Toronto at Atlanta, 7:10 p.m. Milwaukee at Minnesota, 8:10 p.m. Kansas City at St. Louis, 8:15 p.m. Houston at Colorado, 8:40 p.m. L.A. Dodgers at L.A. Angels, 10:05 p.m. Cardinals 4, Royals 1 Kansas City ab r h bi ab r h bi MCrpnt 2b-3b 3 2 2 1 AGordn lf 3 1 0 0 Beltran rf 4 1 2 2 AEscor ss 4 0 0 0 Hollidy dh 4 1 2 1 L.Cain cf 4 0 0 0 Craig lf 3 0 1 0 Butler dh 3 0 2 1 MAdms 1b 4 0 0 0 Hosmer 1b 3 0 0 0 Freese 3b 4 0 1 0 MTejad 3b 3 0 0 0 Kozma ss 0 0 0 0 Francr rf 2 0 0 0 Jay cf 4 0 0 0 Lough ph-rf 1 0 0 0 T.Cruz c 3 0 0 0 AMoore c 2 0 0 0 Descals ss-2b 3 0 0 0 Kottars ph-c 1 0 0 0 EJhnsn 2b 3 0 0 0 Totals 32 4 8 4 Totals 29 1 2 1 St. Louis 200 0020004 Kansas City 100 0000001 DP--Kansas City 3. LOB--St. Louis 3, Kansas City 2. 2B--Butler (9). HR--M.Carpenter (4), Beltran (11), Holliday (7). SB--M.Carpenter (1). IP H R ER BB SO St. Louis Lyons W,2-0 7 2 1 1 1 5 Rosenthal H,15 1 0 0 0 0 2 Mujica S,16-16 1 0 0 0 0 1 Kansas City E.Santana L,3-5 7.1 7 4 4 2 5 Coleman 1.2 1 0 0 0 0 Umpires--Home, Joe West; First, David Rackley; Second, Andy Fletcher; Third, Rob Drake. T--2:07. A--27,833 (37,903). St. Louis
Miami Pierre dh Polanc 3b Dietrch 2b Ozuna rf Coghln lf Ruggin cf Dobbs 1b Hchvrr ss Mathis c
Totals
ab 4 3 1 5 5 5 5 4 3 1 0 4 40
r h bi 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 2 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 2 3 0 2 3 1 1 2 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 3 2 716 7
Miami 013 001 010 6 Tampa Bay 002 102 011 7 Two outs when winning run scored. DP--Miami 1. LOB--Miami 5, Tampa Bay 10. 2B-Ozuna (8), K.Johnson (6), Scott (2), De.Jennings (12), Lobaton (5), Y.Escobar (10). 3B--Dietrich (1), Coghlan (3). HR--Coghlan (1). SB--Ruggiano (7). SF--Joyce. IP H R ER BB SO Miami Slowey 5.1 8 4 4 0 4 Webb BS,1-1 .2 1 1 1 1 0 Da.Jennings 1 1 0 0 0 0 M.Dunn L,1-1 BS,1-2 1.2 5 2 2 1 1 Qualls 0 1 0 0 0 0 Tampa Bay Hellickson 5.1 7 5 5 1 3 J.Wright 1.2 1 0 0 0 1 Jo.Peralta 1 2 1 1 0 0 Rodney W,2-2 1 0 0 0 0 1 Qualls pitched to 1 batter in the 9th. WP--Jo.Peralta. Umpires--Home, Hunter Wendelstedt; First, Alan Porter; Second, Jerry Layne; Third, Greg Gibson. T--3:25. A--13,876 (34,078).
Phillies 3, Red Sox 1 Boston r h bi ab r h bi Revere cf 0 2 0 Ellsury cf 4 1 1 0 MYong 3b 1 1 1 JGoms lf 4 0 0 0 Rollins ss 0 0 0 Pedroia 2b 4 0 1 1 Howard 1b 0 1 0 D.Ortiz dh 4 0 0 0 DYong dh 0 1 0 Napoli 1b 3 0 0 0 DBrwn lf 1 1 1 Nava rf 3 0 1 0 Mayrry rf 1 1 0 D.Ross c 2 0 0 0 Galvis 2b 0 0 0 Drew ss 3 0 0 0 Kratz c 0 2 1 Iglesias 3b 3 0 1 0 Totals 3 9 3 Totals 30 1 4 1 Philadelphia 100 000 101 3 Boston 100 000 000 1 DP--Boston 1. LOB--Philadelphia 8, Boston 3. HR--M.Young (2), D.Brown (11). SB--Revere (9), Ellsbury (16). S--Galvis, D.Ross. IP H R ER BB SO Philadelphia Lee W,6-2 8 4 1 1 0 8 Papelbon S,10-10 1 0 0 0 0 1 Boston Dempster L,2-6 7 6 2 2 3 4 Breslow 1 0 0 0 0 2 Tazawa 1 3 1 1 0 2 Umpires--Home, Todd Tichenor; First, Dale Scott; Second, Bill Miller; Third, CB Bucknor. T--2:30. A--33,463 (37,499). Philadelphia ab 5 5 3 4 4 4 4 2 3 34
Reds 8, Indians 2 Braves 7, Blue Jays 6, 10 innings, Atlanta Toronto ab r h bi ab r h bi JSchafr cf 5 2 2 1 MeCarr dh 5 0 1 0 Smmns ss 5 1 3 0 Bautist rf 4 3 2 1 Heywrd rf 4 0 0 0 Encrnc 1b 5 1 1 1 FFrmn 1b 5 1 3 1 Arencii c 5 1 3 1 Gattis c 4 1 1 1 DeRosa 3b 3 1 1 2 McCnn dh 5 2 2 2 Lind ph 0 0 0 0 Uggla 2b 4 0 0 0 Kawsk pr 0 0 0 0 JFrncs 3b 3 0 1 0 ClRsms cf 5 0 1 1 CJhnsn ph 1 0 0 0 MIzturs ss 4 0 1 0 R.Pena 3b 1 0 0 0 Bonifac 2b 4 0 0 0 RJhnsn lf 5 0 0 0 Gose lf 4 0 2 0 Totals 42 712 5 Totals 39 612 6 Atlanta 310 002 000 17 Toronto 400 100 100 06 E--Simmons (2), Encarnacion (1), Bautista (3). DP--Atlanta 2, Toronto 1. LOB--Atlanta 8, Toronto 8. 2B--J.Schafer (2), Simmons (9), Bautista (11), Encarnacion (8), Arencibia 2 (11), DeRosa (5). HR--J.Schafer (2), Gattis (12), McCann 2 (6), Bautista (12). SB--Kawasaki (7). CS--Col.Rasmus (1). S--Bonifacio. IP H R ER BB SO Atlanta Maholm 6 10 5 5 1 3 Varvaro BS,2-2 .1 2 1 1 1 0 Avilan 1.2 0 0 0 1 1 Gearrin W,2-1 1 0 0 0 0 0 Kimbrel S,16-19 1 0 0 0 1 1 Toronto Morrow 2 4 4 2 0 2 R.Ortiz 3 5 2 2 1 1 Loup 1 0 0 0 0 1 Cecil 2 1 0 0 1 4 Delabar 1 1 0 0 1 1 Weber L,0-1 1 1 1 1 0 1 R.Ortiz pitched to 3 batters in the 6th. WP--Delabar. Umpires--Home, John Tumpane; First, Jim Reynolds; Second, Toby Basner; Third, James Hoye. T--3:18. A--45,224 (49,282). Cleveland Cincinnati ab r h bi ab r h bi Bourn cf 4 0 2 1 Choo cf 3 1 2 0 Kipnis 2b 4 0 0 0 Cozart ss 5 1 3 1 ACarer ss 5 0 0 0 Votto 1b 4 1 2 1 Swisher 1b 4 1 1 0 Phillips 2b 4 2 2 0 CSantn c 4 0 1 0 Bruce rf 5 0 1 1 MrRynl 3b 3 0 0 0 Paul lf 4 1 3 2 Brantly lf 4 0 1 1 Simon p 1 0 0 0 Stubbs rf 4 1 1 0 Mesorc c 5 1 2 0 McAlst p 2 0 0 0 Hannhn 3b 5 1 2 1 R.Hill p 0 0 0 0 Latos p 3 0 0 0 Allen p 0 0 0 0 MParr p 0 0 0 0 Raburn ph 0 0 0 0 LeCure p 0 0 0 0 Shaw p 0 0 0 0 DRonsn ph-lf 1 0 1 1 SBarns p 0 0 0 0 Albers p 0 0 0 0 Aviles ph 1 0 1 0 Totals 35 2 7 2 Totals 40 818 7 Cleveland 000 0100102 Cincinnati 300 00041x8 E--C.Santana (3). LOB--Cleveland 10, Cincinnati 12. 2B--Choo (12), Cozart (11), Bruce (17), Hannahan (1). SB--Stubbs (6), Votto (2). IP H R ER BB SO Cleveland McAllister L,4-4 5.1 10 3 3 1 6 R.Hill 0 0 0 0 1 0 Allen .2 0 0 0 0 1 Shaw .1 5 4 4 0 1 S.Barnes .2 1 0 0 0 0 Albers 1 2 1 1 0 3 Cincinnati Latos W,5-0 6.1 5 1 1 4 7 M.Parra H,2 .1 0 0 0 0 1 LeCure H,8 .1 0 0 0 0 1 Simon 2 2 1 0 0 2 R.Hill pitched to 1 batter in the 6th. HBP--by McAllister (Phillips), by S.Barnes (Choo). WP--McAllister, S.Barnes. PB--Mesoraco. Umpires--Home, Chad Fairchild; First, Jeff Kellogg; Second, Eric Cooper; Third, Paul Schrieber. T--3:28. A--28,812 (42,319).
Diamondbacks 5, Rangers 4 Arizona ab r h bi ab r h bi Andrus ss 4 0 1 0 GParra rf 2 1 1 0 DvMrp lf 4 0 0 0 C.Ross rf 2 0 0 0 Brkmn 1b 2 2 1 0 Gregrs ss 4 2 2 3 Morlnd pr-1b 0 0 0 0 ErChvz 3b 3 0 0 1 Beltre 3b 4 2 2 0 Kubel lf 4 0 1 0 Przyns c 3 0 2 2 MMntr c 4 1 1 0 Gentry cf 4 0 0 1 Pollock cf 4 0 1 0 LMartn rf 3 0 0 0 Hinske 1b 3 0 0 0 LGarci 2b 4 0 1 0 Prado ph 0 0 0 0 Darvsh p 3 0 0 0 Pnngtn 2b 4 0 2 1 Kirkmn p 0 0 0 0 Cahill p 2 0 0 0 JeBakr ph 1 0 1 0 Nieves ph 1 1 1 0 Frasor p 0 0 0 0 MtRynl p 0 0 0 0 R.Ross p 0 0 0 0 Ziegler p 0 0 0 0 Totals 32 4 8 3 Totals 33 5 9 5 Texas 010 102 0004 Arizona 200 000 0215 One out when winning run scored. E--Pennington (3), G.Parra (3). DP--Arizona 1. LOB--Texas 6, Arizona 5. 2B--Beltre (14), M.Montero (5). 3B--Gregorius (2), Kubel (1). HR-Gregorius (4). SB--Pollock (6). S--Andrus. SF-Pierzynski, Er.Chavez. IP H R ER BB SO Texas Darvish 7.2 7 4 4 0 14 Kirkman .1 0 0 0 0 0 Frasor L,0-1 .1 1 1 1 0 1 R.Ross 0 1 0 0 1 0 Arizona Cahill 8 7 4 3 2 4 Mat.Reynolds .2 0 0 0 1 0 Ziegler W,2-1 .1 1 0 0 0 0 R.Ross pitched to 2 batters in the 9th. WP--Cahill. Umpires--Home, Vic Carapazza; First, Quinn Wolcott; Second, Gary Cederstrom; Third, Chris Conroy. T--2:43. A--23,622 (48,633). Texas
NEW YORK Joba Chamberlain was activated from the disabled list Tuesday by the New York Yankees, and injured inelders Mark Teixeira and Kevin Youkilis might not be far behind. Chamberlain was back in the bullpen for the second Subway Series game against the New York Mets after missing a month with a strained muscle on his right side. To make room on the roster, left-hander David Huff was designated for assignment. Teixeira and Youkilis both got ve at-bats Tuesday during an extended spring training game in Florida, then headed out to begin their rehab assignments Wednesday with Double-A Trenton. Yankees manager Joe Girardi said its possible both could be ready to rejoin the team after two games in Trenton. That would make them available for the start of a three-game series against rival Boston that begins Friday. The Red Sox entered Tuesday with a one-game lead in the AL East over New York. Teixeira has been sidelined since early March by a right wrist injury. Youkilis has missed almost 30 games with a lumbar spine sprain. Huff had just been added to the roster Sunday, one day after he was claimed off waivers from Cleveland. He pitched in one game for the Yankees, allowing one run in one inning against Tampa Bay. Before getting hurt, Chamberlain had been used primarily in the seventh inning, a role that has since been lled nicely by other relievers such as Shawn Kelley and Preston Claiborne. Everybodys throwing the ball well, so just to be able to be in the mix with those guys down there, its been fun to watch. And now to be a part of it, its going to be even better, Chamberlain said. Ive been in every situation, so theres not going to be any situation that catches me off guard, and I think thats my advantage. Obviously, whatever inning it is and whatever situation, Im going to be ready to go and look forward to it. Girardi said he plans to use Chamberlain the way he did before the injury. I anticipate Joba getting there. Well see how we use him right away, Girardi said. Sometimes when a guy comes back from an injury you kind of want to kind of work him back slowly, but well see what the opportunity is. In other injury news, Andy Pettitte threw 75 pitches during a ve-inning simulated game, his rst game-type action since going on the 15-day disabled list May 17 because of a strained muscle in his upper back. If he feels ne Wednesday, the lefthander could return to the big league rotation early next week. Third baseman Alex Rodriguez, coming back from hip surgery in January, has resumed taking on-eld batting practice as he moves into his fourth week of baseball activities. Eduardo Nunez, who had been lling in at shortstop for injured Derek Jeter, was kept off the eld as he tries to heal a strained muscle on his left side. Nunez felt discomfort during batting practice Saturday and was shut down. Girardi said right-hander Michael Pineda was throwing well at extended spring training but was taken out of the game because of a cracked nail. Pineda, an All-Star as a rookie in 2011, is coming back from right shoulder surgery that sidelined him all of last season. He has not pitched for the Yankees yet after being acquired from Seattle in a trade after the 2011 season.
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OMAHA, Neb. A heartbreaking loss to end the 2012 season was all North Carolinas baseball team needed for motivation. The Tar Heels (52-8) turned last years disappointment into the best regular season in program history and a sweep through the Atlantic Coast Conference tournament. Now theyre the No. 1 seed in this years NCAA tournament. But for all the success, coach Mike Fox said, they know theyre assured of nothing in the NCAAs. The Tar Heels learned that lesson when a bad-hop grounder over second baseman Tommy Coyle produced the goahead run in a home loss to St. Johns in a 2012 regional nal. Its been that gnawing thing in the pit of your stomach, a bad feeling that never really goes away, Fox said Monday. Its a sinking, bad feeling. You can use that to motivate you or just to work a little bit harder. Its the way baseball is. It can change on one swing and one pitch. NCAA tournament selection committee chairman Dennis Farrell said North Carolina was awarded the No. 1 seed over Vanderbilt. Farrell said the difference between the teams bodies of work is so minuscule that he couldnt even point to the deciding factor. It really is kind of a marriage of art and science, he said. We get a lot of data put in front of us. We get advice from regional advisory committees. At the end of the day its a vote of 10 committee members. The tournament opens Friday with 16 four-team, double-elimination regionals. Best-of-three super-regionals will be held next week, with those winners moving to the College World Series in Omaha. The national seeds behind North Carolina and Vanderbilt, in order, are: Oregon State, LSU, Cal State Fullerton, Virginia, Florida State and Oregon. The Tar Heels open against Canisius (42-15), which is in the tournament for the rst time after winning the MAAC postseason title. Vanderbilt (51-9) looked to have a good shot at earning the No. 1 seed after winning a record 26 regular-season games in Southeastern Conference play. The Commodores feature pitcher Tyler Beede, who is unbeaten in 14 decisions. The SEC led all conferences with a record-tying nine bids. The ACC has eight, and the Pac-12 and Sun Belt have four apiece. Arizona (34-21) wont get a chance to defend its national title. The Wildcats were left out of the tournament for the rst time in four years. Miami (36-23) is in the tournament eld for the 41st straight year, extending its own record. Along with Canisius, rst-time participants will be Bryant, Central Arkansas, Savannah State and South Dakota State. Bryant, from Smitheld, R.I., made it in its rst year of eligibility since moving from Division II.
Spectators sit under an umbrella on center court as matches were delayed because of the rain at the French Open on Tuesday.
AP PHOTO
days if she goes the distance. Among the winners Tuesday were 2010 French Open runner-up and 2011 U.S. Open champion Sam Stosur, who beat 42-year-old Kimiko DateKrumm of Japan 6-0, 6-2. It was spitting a little bit when we went out there, Stosur said. You think, Oh, are we going to start or are we not? Lucky for me, I was able to nish the match before this last downpour came. Another Australian, Bernard Tomic whose father was barred from Roland Garros after being accused this month of head-butting Tomics hitting partner stopped because of a torn right hamstring while trailing Victor Hanescu 7-5, 7-6 (8), 2-1. Three other men retired during matches: No. 28 Florian Mayer (right thigh), Alejandro Falla (stomach problems), Simone Bolelli (right wrist).
Rees is the most experienced quarterback. He started 12 of 13 games in 2011, when Notre Dame went 8-5, and played key roles in four victories last season when Golson either struggled or was injured. But part of the reason Rees lost the starting job last season was he threw 14 interceptions and lost ve fumbles in 2011. Kelly said Rees knows what he needs to do to start, and knows he cant be turning the ball over. He was a huge part of our undefeated season. Hes going to be a part of this season as well. He knows what we expect of him on a day-to-day basis, he said. But he also added that no one who throws interceptions is going to keep the job long. Hendrix has played in eight games the past two seasons, completing 23-of-44 passes for 304 yards with two interceptions and one touchdown. Hes also rushed the ball 33 times for 203 yards. Kelly said he liked what he saw from Zaire in the spring. Were very encouraged and believe he has an opportunity to have a great future, but its really too early to tell, he said. Kelly said he expects Golson to be back in 2014, but said its too early to say whether he will be the starter. Golsons former coach at Myrtle Beach High School, Mickey Wilson Jr., had similar thoughts, saying the QBs hometown fans have faith in him. We believe he will learn from this and continue to grow as a young man both on and off the eld, he said in an email. Kelly said no other schools have contacted Notre Dame about the possibility of Golson transferring. He also said he didnt try to contact Gunner Kiel, one of the top-rated quarterbacks coming out of high school a year ago, who transferred from Notre Dame to Cincinnati at the end of the spring semester.
NfL
IRVING, Texas Anthony Hargrove trudges through mundane conditioning drills while the Dallas Cowboys conduct more spirited offseason workouts on the same elds. The nine-year veteran defensive end is still getting into practice shape because he sat out the 2012 season after he was among four players suspended in the New Orleans bounty scandal. Hargrove never actually lost his right to play because his eight-game ban was appealed, reduced and eventually vacated. But he says the phone never rang after Green Bay released him in training camp last year. Maybe it was the specter of a suspension hanging over him. Or maybe it was missing the entire 2008 season over a violation of the leagues substanceabuse policy. Maybe Im an enigma for trouble, Hargrove said. Im es. If wrestling is reinstated in September, that will defeat the IOCs original goal of bringing in a new sport. Wrestling, a sport with a tradition dating to the ancient Olympics, has gone through a major upheaval since it was dropped by the IOC in February. Lalovic was elected FILA president, women and athletes were brought into decisionmaking roles, and the sport adopted a series of rule changes designed to make wrestling more fan-friendly and easier to understand. Among the changes, matches will consist of two 3-minute sessions instead of three 2-minute periods, and scoring will be cumulative instead of the previous best-of-three system.
trying to get past this three-year thing where I can maybe get ve years in the league without losing a year. The 29-year-old Hargrove rst wanted to break the football cycle when it became clear another opportunity wasnt coming quickly. He spent a
couple of months caring for mentally challenged adults at a group home, doing everything from cooking and cleaning to teaching basic life skills. The look in his eye and the carefully chosen words say Hargrove certainly didnt think he was treated fairly by NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell, but his choice for something to do away from the game made acceptance a little easier. Its easy to feel bad for yourself because so much stuff happens to you, said Hargrove, who lost his mother to AIDS at age 9 and never had a relationship with his father. But when youre able to sit down with someone whos much less fortunate than you are, life denitely comes in place. You understand, Hey, my life isnt that bad. Hey, at least I can get up and I can walk every day. After an appeals panel threw out Goodells suspensions just before the 2012 season started, the commissioner restored a full-season ban for linebacker
Dallas Cowboys Jason Hatcher (97) talks with teammate Anthony Hargrove (99) as players walk off the eld at the teams training facility Tuesday in Irving, Texas. Hargrove is getting another shot with the Cowboys after sitting out a season for his alleged role in the New Orleans bounty scandal.
AP PHOTO
Jonathan Vilma and a four-game suspension for defensive end Will Smith. Goodell cut Hargroves ban to seven, but it amounted to just a pair of games because he was given credit for ve games missed as a free agent. Linebacker Scott Fujitas suspension was reduced from three games to one. Two months later, all the
suspensions were vacated by former Commissioner Paul Tagliabue, who found fault with everyone from Goodell to the players. The way last year unfolded, nothing was surprising from anyone, responses from anything, Hargrove said. Im putting it behind me. Im trying to move forward, and thats all I can do at the end of the day.
WRESTLING
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B I D D I N g f o R 2 0 2 0 o LY M P I c S
ST. PETERSBURG, Russia (AP) Sports bidding for inclusion in the 2020 Olympics. Baseball-Softball Now united as the World Baseball Softball Confederation (WBSC) after IOC vote defeats in 2005 and 09. Then, both ran for inclusion as separate Olympic sports. Bid proposes separate mens baseball and womens softball events of eight teams each, played as back-to-back six-day tournaments. With 296 total athletes, would add substantially to the overall Summer Games quota compared to other bidding sports. Both were last played at 2008 Beijing Games having gained full medal status at the 1992 Barcelona Games (baseball) and 1996 Atlanta Games (softball). Both were dropped from the 2012 program in a 2005 vote, then failed to be readmitted four years later when IOC members chose golf and seven-a-side rugby. Baseball previously criticized for not delivering top players to the Olympics. Unlike the NHLs concession to the Winter Games, MLB commissioner Bud Selig says the season wont be stopped to free players for the Sum-
or sports to recommend to the IOC general assembly for a nal vote Sept. 8 in Buenos Aires, Argentina. The IOC board will likely select three or four nalists. Wrestling, squash and karate have been cited as strong contenders. Mens baseball and womens softball, which have been off the program since the 2008 Beijing Games, have merged into a single federation to improve their chances. The addition of wrestling to the mix has not gone over well with all the sports, who feel that it is overshadowing the contest and reducing their own chanc-
mer Games. Karate Another third-time candidate after missing out in the 2005 and 09 IOC votes. Came very close in 2005 when, along with squash, just failed to get support from two-thirds of IOC members in the nal round. Four years later, golf and seven-a-side rugby were voted on to the 2016 Rio de Janeiro Games program. Roller Sports Like karate and squash, roller sports is back for a third consecutive bid. Olympic proposal features only inline skating speed races where athletes reach speeds up to 37 mph. Sports Climbing First-time bidder that proposes an event combining the three disciplines of speed climbing, lead climbing and bouldering. Squash Looked like the clear favorite until February, when wrestling joined this contest after being dropped by the IOC board as a core sport in Olympic program. Just missed Olympic status in 2005 and then in 09, when golf and seven-a-side rugby were voted on.
Wakeboarding A rst-time candidate hoping to prot from the IOCs wish to appeal to young athletes and audiences. Bid proposed by the International Waterski and Wakeboard Federation, founded in 1936 and now with almost 100 member countries. World championships held since 2000. Wrestling Strong contender after the original Olympic sport was stunningly rejected in February. The IOC board had been predicted to drop modern pentathlon from the core program at the 2020 Summer Games. Even the ofcial IOC website acknowledges with the possible exception of track and eld, wrestling is recognized as the worlds oldest competitive sport. Governing body FILA reacted quickly to the IOC snub, which was seen as punishing complacent leadership as well as failings with the freestyle and Greco-Roman disciplines. Wushu Another martial art, though wushu is proposing the noncombat artistic discipline for Olympic approval. A likely outsider that would perhaps have a stronger chance going by its better known name of kung fu.
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PHOENIX One of the most popular Phoenix Suns players from the franchises past will guide the team to an uncertain future. At the news conference on Tuesday announcing his hiring as Suns coach, Jeff Hornacek spoke at length about his readiness for the job and the inuences that will guide him. Ive always felt that Ive been a coach, he said. My dad was a coach, so Ive been around basketball since I was 5 years old. Hornacek played the rst six of his 14 NBA seasons with the
Suns. He was traded to Philadelphia in the Charles Barkley deal, then went to Utah, where he found great success as the backcourt teammate of John Stockton. Hornacek retired from playing to spend more time with his family, then eased into coaching, rst as a shooting instructor in Utah, then since 2011 as a full-time assistant with the Jazz. His coaching style, he said, would be heavily inuenced by his days playing for Cotton Fitzsimmons in Phoenix and Jerry Sloan in Utah. He went through a whos who list of the best Suns play-
ers in the past, from Gar Heard to Walter Davis, Alvin Adams, Kevin Johnson, Barkley and Steve Nash.
ATLANTA The Atlanta Hawks hired longtime Spurs assistant Mike Budenholzer as their head coach, giving the team another link to San Antonios championship tradition. General manager Danny Ferry called on his past experience with San Antonio to select Budenholzer to replace Larry Drew as coach. Drews contract expires in June following three seasons as coach.
Los Angeles Kings defenseman Slava Voynov, foreground, of Russia takes the puck away form San Jose Sharks center Logan Couture during the rst period in Game 7 of the Western Conference seminals Tuesday in Los Angeles.
AP PHOTO
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Miami Heats Dwyane Wade puts up a shot against Indiana Pacers George Hill, right, and Roy Hibbert during the rst half Tuesday in Indianapolis.
AP PHOTO
LOS ANGELES Justin Williams scored two goals in the second period, and the Los Angeles Kings advanced to kINgS the Western Conference nals with a 2-1 ShARkS victory over the San Jose
California series, and the fthseeded Kings barely rode their home-ice advantage to victory in their rst potential elimination game in the last two years. Antti Niemi stopped 16 shots, and Dan Boyle scored early in the third period for the Sharks, who fell just short of their third trip to the conference nals in four years.
ing to fend off Miamis continual comebacks. But with Indiana leading 8172 early in the fourth, Miami answered with a 14-2 run that gave the Heat an 86-83 lead. Indiana tied the score on Paul Georges three-point play and erased the Miami lead by closing the game on a 16-6 run. Indiana was in desperation mode and it showed. Bodies crashed to the ground all night. An angry George uncharacteristically smacked the oor after being called for a foul in the third quarter, leading to a technical foul on coach Frank were going to play. It wont be easy to remain in the rhythm that the Spurs used to drive repeatedly to the basket and pick apart Memphis on the pick-and-roll. Trying to keep that rhythm and stay in shape over the next week will not be fun, Bonner said. But this is where all the experience Duncan, Ginobili and Parker have with coach Gregg Popovich will come into play. I cant say weve all been there before, but our three leaders have been in the nals multiple times, and theyre going to lead the way, Bonner said. That they have. The Spurs won the NBA title each of their previous four trips to the nals, and their win over Memphis improved them to 11-1 in closeout games since the 2007 postseason. Nobody in the NBA has been to the playoffs more than
Vogel. And the defense did a far better job against James and his high-scoring teammates. James nished 8 of 18 from the eld. But the Pacers did not get rattled. Instead, they answered every challenge Miami posed. When Miami used a 9-0 run to take a 60-54 lead early in the third quarter, Indiana answered immediately with a 10-0 run to regain the lead. When James committed an offensive foul with 2 seconds left in the third quarter, his rst turnover since the end of Game 2, the Pacers got a buzzer-beating 3 from Stephenson to make it 77-70. San Antonios current 16-year streak, and only the Detroit Red Wings in the NHL have had more consecutive postseason berths (22). Duncan and Popovich have been together for all of those 16 years, the longest in the NBA. Nobody currently in the league has won more games than Duncan, Ginobili and Parker, and their 458 wins have them fth all-time in the league as a trio.
DUNCAN
Continued from Page 1B
to Oklahoma City, and speculation is picking up on whether this might be Duncans nal season in the NBA. I think everybody on the team, we really wanted to do it for him, Parker said. The Spurs now wait for Miami or Indiana to come out of the East after they swept two of their three opponents in the West. The Spurs took advantage of a three-day break in the conference nals to come into Memphis and beat a team that had lost only once on its home oor since Feb. 8. They could use some time off between games after a physical series with the Grizzlies. The Spurs helped clamp down on Zach Randolph and Marc Gasol with Duncan, Tiago Splitter, Matt Bonner and Boris Diaw all taking turns pushing the Grizzlies away from their favorite spots on the oor in disrupting their high-low game. It worked quite well the Spurs outscored Memphis in the paint in the nal three games. Randolph, who averaged at least 18 points in the rst two playoff series, averaged only 11 against San Antonio. I know our bigs, they have a lot of bruises, Parker said. So its going to be great to rest. I know Timmy and Manu (Ginobili), theyre going to love the rest, and were going to regenerate and get ready for whoever
DENVER Patrick Roy carefully contemplated the Colorado Avalanches sales pitch as he sank putts on a golf course in Florida. New team President Josh Kroenke was in his group, along with former teammate-turnedexecutive Joe Sakic, and they were teeing up an opportunity Roy simply couldnt turn down. Not again. Four years ago, the team asked him to come on board as coach. The Hall of Fame goalie just wasnt ready. This time around, the deal was sweetened a chance to coach and have a say in hockeyrelated decisions. He couldnt pass up this chance, agreeing last week to a four-year deal with a mutual option for a fth season. I was afraid in 2009, that maybe I missed one of best opportunities of my life, Roy said at his introductory news conference Tuesday. Here I am in
2013, same opportunity. I truly feel that sometimes, the biggest mistake were making as a coach is you want to go too fast. The ery goaltender has mellowed since his retirement a decade ago. Well, as much as he can anyway. Roy has been serving as coach and general manager for the
Quebec Remparts of the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League over the last eight seasons, which he feels has prepared him for taking over as a rst-year NHL coach. But theres this hanging over his head: The stigma that great players dont make great coaches.
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IN BRIEF Wal-Martpleadsguiltyforwaste
Wal-Mart Stores Inc. will pay $81 million after pleading guilty to criminal charges the company dumped hazardous waste across California, a company spokeswoman said Tuesday. Wal-Mart entered the plea in San Francisco federal court to misdemeanor counts of negligently dumping pollutants from its stores into sanitation drains across the state, spokeswoman Brooke Buchanan said. As part of the plea, the company will pay the substantial ne that also will cover charges in Missouri. The plea agreements announced Tuesday end a nearly decade-old investigation involving more than 20 prosecutors and 32 environmental groups.
Tiffany & Co. reported a 3 percent increase in rst-quarter net income, fueled by solid sales improvement across the regions, particularly in Asia. The results, announced Tuesday, beat Wall Street expectations, and its shares briey rose to their highest level in almost two years in morning trading. Tiffany is a barometer of luxury spending so the latest results show the resilience among afuent shoppers despite economic challenges around the globe. Still, the company stuck to its prot outlook for the year, citing a weaker yen as well as ongoing weak sales in the North America region. The high-end jewelry company known for its blue boxes earned $83.6 million, or 65 cents per share, for the period ended April 30. Thats up from $81.5 million, or 64 cents per share, a year ago. Excluding costs tied to staff and occupancy cuts, earnings were 70 cents per share. This easily beat the 53 cents per share analyst expected.
Lance Armstrong drinks during the seventh stage of the Tour de France from Tournus to Station des Rousses in 2010. Nike Inc. is cutting ties with the Livestrong cancer charity. The move by the sports company ends a nine-year relationship that helped the foundation raise more than $100 million and made the charitys signature yellow wristband an international symbol for cancer survivors.
Ap file photo
The hoopla surrounding the return of Arrested Development on Netixs Internet video service has dissolved into a letdown on Wall Street. Netixs stock fell more than 6 percent in afternoon trading Tuesday as investors reacted to critics mixed reviews of the rst new Arrested Development episodes since the Fox broadcast network canceled the series seven years ago. Netix Inc. released all 15 episodes of the resurrected Arrested Development at the same time early Sunday. Analysts insist its still too early to tell whether Arrested Development will be a hit or a op. GAS PRICES
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AUSTIN, Texas Nike, which helped build Lance Armstrongs Livestrong cancer charity into a global brand and introduced its familiar yellow wristband, is cutting ties with the foundation in the latest fallout from the former cyclists doping scandal. The move by the sports shoe and clothing company ends a relationship that began in 2004 and helped the foundation raise more than $100 million, making the charitys bracelet an international symbol for cancer survivors. But the relationship soured with revelations of performance-enhancing drug use by Armstrong and members of his U.S. Postal Service team.
vorship programs. Armstrong, who started the charity in 1997 as the Lance Armstrong Foundation, was pushed off the board of directors in October and the organization later changed its formal name to Livestrong. In a statement, Livestrong ofcials said the foundation is deeply grateful to Nike. Together, we created new, revolutionary ways of thinking about how non-prots fuel their mission and were proud of that, the foundation said. A Nike spokesman did not immediately return a telephone message seeking comment. Armstrong declined comment, noting he no longer has a relationship with Livestrong or Nike.
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NEW YORK The founder of an online currency transfer business was indicted in the United States along with six other people in a $6 billion money-laundering scheme described as staggering in its scope, authorities said Tuesday. Arthur Budovsky is the founder of Liberty Reserve, a Costa Rica-based website long favored by cybercrime scammers. He was arrested in Spain on Friday. A defendant identied as Budovskys partner, Vladimir Kats, was in custody in New York. Authorities say the network proDOW 15,409.39
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gotten gains, he said. The coin of the realm was anonymity, he said. It was the opposite of a know-your-customer policy. In a statement, Costa Rica police conrmed that Budovsky had been arrested in Spain on money laundering charges and that several premises linked to his company had been raided. A notice pasted across Liberty Reserves website Tuesday morning said the domain has been seized by the United States Global Illicit Financial Team. Attempts to reach Liberty Reserve by phone and email were not immediately successful.
WASHINGTON Americans are more condent in the U.S. economy than at any point in the past ve years, thanks to surging home values, a brighter job market and record-setting stock prices. Stock averages on Tuesday extended the years explosive rally. Further gains in consumer condence could help the economy withstand the effects of higher taxes and federal spending cuts that kicked in this year. Spending by consumers drives about 70 percent of economic growth. Consumer condence jumped in May to 76.2, the Conference Board, a private research group, said Tuesday. That was up from a reading of 69 in April and is the highest level of condence since February 2008, two months after the Great Recession ofcially began. A separate report Tuesday showed that U.S. home prices jumped 11 percent in March compared with a year ago, the sharpest 12-month increase since April 2006. Prices rose year over year in all 20 cities in the Standard & Poors/Case Shiller home price index. The reports helped fuel a rally on Wall Street. Traders were also encouraged by gains in overseas markets, especially in Japan and Europe. The Dow Jones industrial average was up about 95 points in midafternoon trading. Broader stock indexes also rose. The Dow has rocketed 18 percent this year. Surging stock prices and steady homeprice increases have allowed Americans to regain the $16 trillion in wealth they lost to the Great Recession. Some economists have said the increase in home prices alone could boost consumer spending enough to offset a Social Security tax increase thats reduced paychecks for most Americans this year. Thomas Feltmate, an economist with TD Economics, said cheaper gas has also helped consumers shrug off the higher Social Security tax. And the Conference Board survey said consumers are also more optimistic about the next six months. That should translate into greater consumer spending, substantial growth in hiring and faster economic growth in the second half of 2013, Feltmate said. The economy has added an average of 208,000 jobs a month since November. Thats well above the monthly average of 138,000 during the previous six months. The job growth has helped reduce the unemployment rate to a fouryear low of 7.5 percent.
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Alliance Bernstein CoreOppA m 16.21 +.14 GlblRskAllB m15.57 -.01 American Cent IncGroA m 32.35 +.18 ValueInv 7.55 +.06 American Funds AMCAPA m 25.38 +.18 BalA m 22.81 +.07 BondA m 12.75 -.07 CapIncBuA m 57.18 +.02 CpWldGrIA m 41.61 +.19 EurPacGrA m 44.32 +.20 FnInvA m 47.26 +.32 GrthAmA m 39.58 +.30 HiIncA m 11.57 -.01 IncAmerA m 19.89 +.04 InvCoAmA m 34.96 +.17 MutualA m 32.67 +.09 NewPerspA m35.19 +.20 NwWrldA m 56.99 +.06 SmCpWldA m45.88 +.32 WAMutInvA m36.51 +.18 Baron Asset b 57.57 +.40 BlackRock EqDivI 22.51 +.10 GlobAlcA m 21.31 +.03 GlobAlcC m 19.78 +.03 GlobAlcI 21.43 +.04 CGM Focus 35.86 +.56 Mutual 32.61 +.22 Realty 32.22 +.05 Columbia AcornZ 34.73 +.33 DFA EmMkCrEqI 20.34 +.10
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CLOSE PVS. 3.31 3.29 1379.10 1386.80 1461.80 1451.90 22.18 22.48 756.80 726.05
John Hancock LifBa1 b 14.63 +.04 +8.3 LifGr1 b 14.95 +.08 +11.0 RegBankA m 16.66 +.15 +17.2 SovInvA m 18.10 +.08 +13.2 TaxFBdA m 10.36 -.03 +0.4 Lazard EmgMkEqtI d 19.64 +.08 +0.5 Loomis Sayles BdInstl x 15.54 -.04 +4.8 Lord Abbett ShDurIncA m 4.63 -.01 +1.0 MFS MAInvA m 24.98 +.18 +16.3 MAInvC m 24.07 +.18 +15.9 Merger Merger b 15.97 ... +0.9 Metropolitan West TotRetBdI 10.88 -.04 +1.3 TotRtBd b 10.88 -.05 +1.1 Mutual Series Beacon Z 15.52 +.12 +16.2 Neuberger Berman SmCpGrInv 22.44 +.35 +16.8 Oakmark EqIncI 31.28 +.17 +9.8 Intl I 24.27 +.16 +16.0 Oppenheimer CapApB m 47.72 +.26 +12.7 DevMktA m 36.47 +.14 +3.3 DevMktY 36.09 +.14 +3.1 PIMCO AllAssetI 12.67 -.05 +1.6 AllAuthIn 10.85 -.06 -1.3 ComRlRStI 6.19 -.02 -6.3 HiYldIs 9.78 -.01 +3.9 LowDrIs 10.42 -.04 0.0 TotRetA m 11.10 -.08 -0.3 TotRetAdm b 11.10 -.08 -0.3 TotRetC m 11.10 -.08 -0.6 TotRetIs 11.10 -.08 -0.2 TotRetrnD b 11.10 -.08 -0.3 TotlRetnP 11.10 -.08 -0.2 Permanent Portfolio 47.26 -.13 -2.8 Principal SAMConGrB m16.00 ... +11.1 Prudential JenMCGrA m 35.14 +.26 +12.5 Prudential Investmen 2020FocA m 17.61 +.09 +13.7 BlendA m 21.16 +.17 +14.8 EqOppA m 18.43 +.18 +16.2 HiYieldA m 5.82 -.01 +4.6 IntlEqtyA m 6.84 -.02 +8.9 IntlValA m 21.36 -.01 +7.2 JennGrA m 23.59 +.14 +13.0 NaturResA m 46.19 +.42 +2.4 SmallCoA m 25.91 +.25 +15.6 UtilityA m 13.57 -.03 +14.2
ValueA m 18.38 +.16 Putnam GrowIncB m 17.15 ... IncomeA m 7.27 -.01 Royce LowStkSer m 14.19 +.11 OpportInv d 14.28 +.24 ValPlSvc m 15.74 +.21 Schwab S&P500Sel d 26.04 +.16 Scout Interntl d 35.57 +.10 T Rowe Price BlChpGr 52.75 +.45 CapApprec 24.91 +.14 DivGrow 30.56 +.21 DivrSmCap d 20.65 +.31 EmMktStk d 33.93 +.11 EqIndex d 44.85 +.28 EqtyInc 30.88 +.17 FinSer 17.99 +.21 GrowStk 43.28 +.33 HealthSci 50.98 +.71 HiYield d 7.24 -.01 IntlDisc d 50.40 +.15 IntlStk d 15.25 +.06 IntlStkAd m 15.18 +.06 LatinAm d 37.14 -.26 MediaTele 60.73 +.22 MidCpGr 66.02 +.60 NewAmGro 40.56 +.29 NewAsia d 17.00 +.08 NewEra 44.91 +.32 NewHoriz 39.82 +.32 NewIncome 9.70 -.06 Rtmt2020 19.44 ... Rtmt2030 20.91 ... ShTmBond 4.82 -.01 SmCpVal d 44.88 +.48 TaxFHiYld d 11.95 -.03 Value 31.79 +.23 ValueAd b 31.44 +.23 Thornburg IntlValI d 30.00 +.12 Tweedy, Browne GlobVal d 26.09 +.16 Vanguard 500Adml 153.45 +.92 500Inv 153.43 +.92 CapOp 42.00 +.38 CapVal 13.58 +.12 Convrt 14.05 +.09 DevMktIdx 10.62 +.03 DivGr 19.71 +.09 EnergyInv 64.67 +.58 EurIdxAdm 65.26 +.31 Explr 94.94+1.19 GNMA 10.63 -.08 GNMAAdml 10.63 -.08 GlbEq 21.21 +.12 GrowthEq 14.01 +.09
HYCor 6.16 -.01 HYCorAdml 6.16 -.01 HltCrAdml 72.15 +.46 HlthCare 170.99+1.07 ITGradeAd 10.08 -.07 InfPrtAdm 27.48 -.26 InfPrtI 11.20 -.10 InflaPro 13.99 -.13 InstIdxI 152.48 +.93 InstPlus 152.49 +.93 InstTStPl 37.78 +.26 IntlExpIn 16.31 +.03 IntlStkIdxAdm 26.43 +.07 IntlStkIdxIPls 105.73 +.30 LTInvGr 10.40 -.22 MidCapGr 23.75 +.25 MidCp 26.65 +.14 MidCpAdml 120.97 +.62 MidCpIst 26.72 +.14 MuIntAdml 14.27 -.04 MuLtdAdml 11.12 -.01 PrecMtls 11.76 -.06 Prmcp 84.48 +.48 PrmcpAdml 87.65 +.50 PrmcpCorI 17.99 +.09 REITIdx 24.57 -.22 REITIdxAd 104.85 -.95 STCor 10.78 -.02 STGradeAd 10.78 -.02 SelValu 24.91 +.15 SmGthIdx 29.53 +.37 SmGthIst 29.59 +.37 StSmCpEq 25.83 +.35 Star 22.62 +.01 StratgcEq 25.80 +.21 TgtRe2015 14.30 ... TgtRe2020 25.80 +.03 TgtRe2030 25.84 +.08 TgtRe2035 15.73 +.06 TgtRe2040 26.03 +.11 TgtRe2045 16.34 +.07 Tgtet2025 14.86 +.02 TotBdAdml 10.87 -.07 TotBdInst 10.87 -.07 TotBdMkInv 10.87 -.07 TotBdMkSig 10.87 -.07 TotIntl 15.80 +.04 TotStIAdm 41.69 +.28 TotStIIns 41.70 +.28 TotStIdx 41.67 +.27 TxMIntlAdm 12.24 +.03 TxMSCAdm 36.77 +.48 USGro 24.30 +.13 USValue 14.21 +.10 WellsI 25.39 -.07 WellsIAdm 61.51 -.17 Welltn 37.49 +.06 WelltnAdm 64.75 +.09 WndsIIAdm 61.42 +.46 WndsrII 34.60 +.26 Wells Fargo DvrCpBldA f 8.06 +.02
Combined Stocks
Name Last Chg %YTD +.16 +3.7 -.57 +7.3 +.80 +23.0 ... +68.8 -2.44 +30.4 +.11 -1.0 +.09 +21.5 -.02 +17.9 -1.15 +9.1 +.89 +33.0 +.48 +28.0 +.29 +23.2 +2.12 +23.1 -.50 -.9 -3.71 -17.0 +.64 +23.8 +.71 +27.1 -.15 +13.2 +.09 +64.9 +.08 +4.7 +.48 +16.7 +.44+199.5 +.15 +47.8 +.80 +8.5 +.04 +10.2 +1.45 +25.2 -.23 +33.7 +.49 +59.8 +.11 +32.8 +.28 +47.9 +.15 +15.1 -.07 +53.0 +.55 +34.8 -.01 +12.9 -.20 +28.2 Name Last Chg %YTD +.21 +.12 -.02 -.13 -.20 +.98 +.36 +1.27 +.49 +.46 +.21 +.31 -.10 +.10 +.45 +.96 -.58 +.05 +.15 +1.20 +.11 ... -.04 +.03 +.54 -1.13 +.22 +.44 -.29 +.72 +.38 +.72 +.56 +.15 +.26 +31.4 -10.3 -3.8 +21.7 -5.2 +16.9 +21.6 +30.9 +19.0 +17.9 +18.6 +8.4 +5.4 +24.9 +17.3 +8.2 +12.7 -.1 +4.9 +33.9 +11.4 +20.5 +8.4 +21.3 +24.3 +6.2 -5.7 +26.7 +4.9 +8.9 +10.8 +24.6 +9.0 +24.7 +17.8 Name Last Chg %YTD -2.61 +.85 +.97 +.19 -1.29 +.34 -2.76 -.01 +.20 +.49 +.40 -.12 +.11 +.53 +.07 +.13 +.37 +.62 +.35 +1.12 +.86 +.39 +.07 +.05 +1.55 +1.04 +.44 +.83 +.48 +.15 +1.62 +.58 +.23 +.56 +2.06 +7.7 +6.7 +10.2 +11.7 +5.2 +77.4 -4.5 +55.4 +6.2 +18.0 +19.7 +30.5 +51.4 +12.4 +12.4 +21.5 +53.0 +23.3 +25.0 +15.4 +4.6 +36.5 +6.5 -41.2 +15.0 +29.4 +73.0 +29.1 +25.7 +33.5 +17.4 +.7 +15.9 +20.3 +8.5 Name Last Chg %YTD +.39 +.79 +.94 +1.45 +.79 +1.03 +.27 +.08 +1.02 +.06 +.31 +.14 +.05 +1.05 +.40 +.76 +.69 +.25 +.38 +.38 +.33 +.46 -.06 +.25 +.95 -1.00 +.46 +1.20 +.75 +.38 +.16 +.14 -.40 +.24 +.17 +23.8 +20.1 +25.0 +32.6 +25.0 +24.1 +15.9 +27.6 +23.8 +10.1 +32.7 +1.3 +5.9 +21.7 +10.6 +36.1 +16.8 +13.4 -1.8 +22.7 +15.7 +16.0 +33.2 -16.8 -.5 +20.0 +16.3 +31.3 +31.1 +29.3 +24.9 +22.6 +9.2 +24.3 +23.8 Name Last Chg %YTD +.08 -.28 +.10 +.49 -.03 -.32 +.84 +.93 -.18 -.10 +1.87 +.28 +.44 -.01 -.08 +.50 -.53 +.50 -.03 -.26 -.04 +.26 +.13 +.06 -.28 ... -2.50 +1.02 +.31 +1.13 +.18 +.22 +.10 +.97 +.21 -31.0 +11.3 +16.0 +22.6 +25.5 +8.8 +21.5 +6.9 +14.5 -5.6 +20.9 +33.1 +17.4 +10.3 +14.6 +16.2 +5.0 +2.8 +15.7 +12.6 +41.7 +6.2 +11.2 +25.5 +23.3 +83.0 +19.0 +17.7 +19.6 +5.4 +10.9 -1.6 -2.1 +27.3 +29.3 Name Last Chg %YTD +.74 +2.70 -.23 +.01 -.29 -.31 -.01 -.21 -.06 +.16 -.54 -.21 +1.75 +.98 +.93 +.29 +1.32 +1.01 +.07 +.93 -.08 +.05 +.93 +.72 +.04 +.40 -.13 +.06 +.42 -.27 -.20 +2.68 -.20 +.09 +.82 +8.8 +24.8 -37.6 +24.2 +84.6 +4.9 +39.4 +13.7 +28.2 +11.5 +5.9 +17.5 +43.6 +25.7 +41.1 +12.1 +20.2 +26.1 +10.1 +25.5 +17.7 -22.6 +17.0 -3.1 +9.3 +31.5 +12.7 +14.3 +27.4 +11.2 +2.3 +25.0 +10.0 +32.1 +5.5 AFLAC 55.11 AT&T Inc 36.18 AbtLab s 38.56 AMD 4.05 AlaskaAir 56.19 Alcoa 8.59 Allstate 48.82 Altria 37.07 AEP 46.56 AmExp 76.16 AmIntlGrp 45.17 Amgen 106.20 Anadarko 91.46 Annaly 13.92 Apple Inc 441.44 AutoData 70.49 AveryD 44.37 Avista 27.29 Avon 23.68 BP PLC 43.60 BakrHu 47.65 BallardPw 1.83 BarnesNob 22.31 Baxter 72.31 Beam Inc 67.30 BerkH B 112.28 BigLots 38.05 BlockHR 29.68 Boeing 100.11 BrMySq 47.68 Brunswick 33.49 Buckeye 69.46 CBS B 51.30 CMS Eng 27.52 CSX 25.30 CampSp 45.85 Carnival 33.00 Caterpillar 86.19 CenterPnt 23.43 CntryLink 37.07 Chevron 126.43 Cisco 23.89 Citigroup 51.79 Clorox 87.10 ColgPalm s 61.63 ConAgra 34.98 ConocoPhil 62.84 ConEd 58.56 Corning 15.76 CrownHold 43.18 Cummins 117.27 DTE 67.69 Deere 86.34 Diebold 32.10 Disney 66.69 DomRescs 57.73 Dover 79.19 DowChm 35.04 DryShips 1.94 DuPont 55.89 DukeEn rs 67.75 EMC Cp 23.87 Eaton 68.67 EdisonInt 47.42 EmersonEl 57.66 EnbrdgEPt 30.90 Energen 56.18 Entergy 69.50 EntPrPt 62.47 Ericsson 11.90 Exelon 32.04 ExxonMbl 92.38 FMC Cp s 64.48 Fastenal 52.10 FedExCp 96.53 Fifth&Pac 22.09 FirstEngy 39.86 Fonar 6.73 FootLockr 34.10 FordM 15.28 Gannett 21.56 Gap 40.52 GenCorp 13.85 GenDynam 77.87 GenElec 23.60 GenMills 49.11 GileadSci s 56.18 GlaxoSKln 53.59 Hallibrtn 43.37 HarleyD 56.35 HarrisCorp 51.23 HartfdFn 30.63 HawaiiEl 26.78 HeclaM 3.43 Heico 51.46 Hess 68.52 HewlettP 24.65 HomeDp 79.82 HonwllIntl 79.77 Hormel 41.68 Humana 80.55 INTL FCSt 17.54 ITW 70.46 IngerRd 57.71 IBM 207.78 IntFlav 82.37 IntPap 47.84 JPMorgCh 54.60 JacobsEng 56.44 JohnJn 87.61 JohnsnCtl 38.06 Kellogg 64.72 Keycorp 10.74 KimbClk 104.53 KindME 87.81 Kroger 34.54 Kulicke 12.14 L Brands 49.84 LancastrC 84.23 LillyEli 54.54 LincNat 35.24 LockhdM 107.75 Loews 46.20 LaPac 18.97 MDU Res 26.07 MarathnO 35.48 MarIntA 43.23 Masco 22.08 McDrmInt 9.17 McGrwH 54.40 McKesson 116.31 Merck 47.62 MetLife 43.24 Microsoft 35.02 MorgStan 24.73 NCR Corp 31.82 NatFuGas 62.17 NatGrid 62.74 NY Times 10.60 NewellRub 27.56 NewmtM 32.05 NextEraEn 77.02 NiSource 28.87 NikeB s 63.28 NorflkSo 77.61 NoestUt 42.52 NorthropG 82.10 Nucor 46.15 NustarEn 48.63 NvMAd 14.36 OcciPet 92.65 OfficeMax 12.99 Olin 25.35 ONEOK s 47.14 PG&E Cp 46.06 PPG 157.33 PPL Corp 30.06 PVR Ptrs 26.70 Pfizer 29.01 PinWst 57.41 PitnyBw 15.08 Praxair 116.22 PSEG 34.02 PulteGrp 22.79 Questar 24.37 RadioShk 3.88 RLauren 178.47 Raytheon 67.75 ReynAmer 49.57 RockwlAut 88.54 Rowan 34.68 RoyDShllB 69.79 RoyDShllA 67.50 Ryder 63.56 Safeway 23.39 Schlmbrg 75.40 Sherwin 191.90 SilvWhtn g 22.51 SiriusXM 3.59 SonyCp 20.67 SouthnCo 44.89 SwstAirl 14.27 SpectraEn 31.13 SprintNex 7.27 Sysco 34.98 TECO 17.75 Target 69.51 TenetHlt rs 46.64 Tenneco 44.15 Tesoro 62.16 Textron 27.80 3M Co 111.59 TimeWarn 60.29 UnilevNV 42.15 UnionPac 157.74 UPS B 86.75 USSteel 18.47 UtdTech 95.97 VarianMed 68.08 VectorGp 16.25 ViacomB 69.36 WestarEn 32.25 Weyerhsr 31.80 Whrlpl 129.61 WmsCos 36.40 Windstrm 8.47 Wynn 140.58 XcelEngy 29.37 Xerox 9.01 YumBrnds 70.03
IN SEASON: Snap, crackle, pop a few sugar snap peas into your mouth today
he calendar might not quite agree yet, but spring is on the outs, and summer is almost in. At least when it comes to seasonal fruits and vegetables, June says summer has arrived. What better way to greet it than with a plate full of sugar snap peas? Theyre cute and crisp and so much fun all on their own, but why not put some on the grill? If you ask me, the best way to enjoy sugar snaps is to line them up on a sheet of grill-safe foil, drizzle on a light coating of olive oil and a sprinkling of sea salt and toss the packet on the re. When the ends start to crisp and brown, add some Parmesan cheese shavings until hot and melty, and enjoy a few bites of pure bliss. Best of all? Ever read the nutritional information on a package of sugar snaps? Vitamins A, C, K and are abundant, and youll get potassium and iron, too. Sugars? Sure. Hence the name. But were talking natural, not processed, sugars, so who really cares? Sandra Snyder
Taste
timesleader.com
Ruth Corcoran prepared this chocolate panna cotta with port wine cherries at Cork Bar & Restaurant in Wilkes-Barre.
Candy is key for these siblings. Amanda McGurk, 8, reaches for gummy worms as her brother Jonathan waits his turn to top at sweetFrog.
GET YOURSELF SOME loco Yoco, 2450 Memorial Highway, Dallas, and 801 Wyoming Ave., West Pittston (Insalaco Shopping Center) sweetFrog, 2258 Highland Park Blvd., Wilkes-Barre Township Froyo Mania, 10 East Northampton St., WilkesBarre, near Movies 14 COMING SOON YoGo Factory, Gateway Shopping Center, Edwardsville Another loco Yoco at an undisclosed location FASHIONABLE FLAVORS local operators of frozen-yogurt stores know the tastes customers want most: Nanda Palissery, owner of loco Yoco in Dallas and West Pittston: Chocolate, vanilla, strawberry, cookies and cream and peanut butter Jim lane, operations manager for sweetFrog in Wilkes-Barre Township: Cake batter, cookies and cream, cheesecake, mango and tart Tom Truong, owner of Froyo Mania in downtown Wilkes-Barre: Chocolate, vanilla, strawberry, peanut butter and cookies and cream.
t looks like ice cream, especially when it comes out of self-serve wall dispensers in the traditional creamy twist. But frozen yogurt is often perceived as healthier than ice cream with its good bacteria, vitamins and minerals. And people feel healthier eating it. That might be part of the reason frozen yogurt is enjoying a resurgence across the country, with the Wyoming Valley no exception. Four new frozenyogurt businesses have opened in just under a year, and numbers ve and six are on the way. Plans are in place for a YoGo Factory, a national self-serve frozen-yogurt franchise, to open in the Gateway Shopping Center in Edwardsville next month, and a third location of Loco Yoco is in the works. It also might help that customers can now dispense their own favorite avors from chocolate and peanut butter to cake batter and cookie dough and add any of dozens of toppings blueberries, kiwi and other fresh fruit or what Theresa Vaccaro of Dallas calls the junk, toppers such as Reeses peanut butter cups, avored chips, sprinkles and the like.
See YOGURT, Page 3C
Fresh sweet cherries recently reappeared in our area grocery stores. We wont see our local cherries until midsummer, but these cherries are still delicious and worth a try. Fresh cherries are one of my favorite snacks; they also are great in recipes from salads and savory meat dishes to desserts. When selecting cherries, always look at the stems to nd the freshest product. If the cherries have been picked recently, the stems will be bendable. If the stems are brittle, the cherries are older and may be past the desirable stage. If you are cooking or baking with cherries, you will need to pit them. If you want to keep your cherries whole when pitting, you may want to invest in a cherry pitter; it enables you to pop the pit out of a whole cherry very easily. You can start by removing the stems and rinsing the cherries in cold water. If you dont have a pitter, you can use a toothpick or even a clean, opened paper clip to help loosen and remove the pit from the stem opening. Be careful because the juice does stain. If you are cooking your cherries into a sauce, it might be easier just to cut them in half and scoop out the pit. This chocolate panna cotta is perfect accompaniment to the delicious sweet cherries.
CHOCOLATE PANNA COTTA TOPPED WITH PORT WINE CHERRIES Makes six servings. Ingredients PANNA COTTA 2 cups heavy cream 1 cup whole milk 1/2 cup granulated sugar 1 envelope unavored gelatin 6 oz. quality chocolate (dark, bittersweet, milk or whichever you prefer) 1/2 teaspoon pure vanilla extract Pour the milk into a small bowl, sprinkle the gelatin on top and let sit for 5 or 10 minutes until the gelatin is softened. In a medium saucepan, combine the heavy cream and sugar over medium heat, whisking and bringing just to a simmer (do not bring to a boil). Remove from heat, add the chocolate and the vanilla and whisk until combined. Add the milk/ gelatin mixture and continue to whisk until everything is well blended. Divide mixture among six dessert cups (you can use martini glasses, or you can use custard cups and ramekins as molds). If you are molding with a cup,
See CHEFS CORNER, Page 5C
CHEFS CORNER
A twist of watermelon sorbet and vanilla is portioned out at Loco Yoco in Dallas.
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yogurt
Continued from Page 1C
Cereal is yet another option think old, sweet favorites such as Cinnamon Toast Crunch or Capn Crunch as well as nuts, including walnuts and almonds. Customers can even combine two avors with the middle lever of each machine as well. Cookies and cream and chocolate in the same cup? Thats chocolate-covered Oreo. Wait, didnt frozen yogurt come and go, enjoying a peak in the 90s before dropping off the map almost entirely? For the record, Kingston attorney Nanda Palissery points out his Loco Yoco in Dallas was the original when it opened 11 months ago, and he has since opened a second location in March in West Pittston. He is working on a third, but he wont disclose where. We were the rst in the area, he said. The frozen-yogurt model has been around for many, many years, Palissery added. It just hadnt reached here until we decided to (open). TCBY (The Countrys Best Yogurt) and ICBIY (I Cant Believe Its Yogurt), which introduced the country to frozen yogurt in the 80s, did have stores in the Northeast, and TCBY still has a location on the Scranton-Carbondale Highway in Dickson City. But Palissery said what hurt TCBY was customers could not apply their own toppings. He said the company has been changing its business model to self-serve. From a business perspective, its not as labor-intensive and its better for children, he noted. Self-serve shops, all the rage these days, also are colorfully decorated, adding to the allages appeal. Jim Lane, operations manager for sweetFrog in WilkesBarre Township, said the Richmond, Va.-based chain opened its store in the Walmart plaza along Highland Park Boulevard in August. Its a hub for business, he said. Im sure what attracted them to the area was the volume of business. He said the sweetFrog chain has about 200 stores, mostly in the southern and western United States, but they are spreading northward. But the business does more than sell frozen yogurt. A Christian-based company Frog stands for Fully Rely on
Its about the toppings, baby. Froyo Mania in Wilkes-Barre offers a wide range of fresh fruits to up the health factor of a cup of fro yo.
Tracey McGurk and her children Jonathan, 6, Ryan, 2, and Amanda, 8, enjoy a frozen-yogurt treat inside the pastel-colored sweetFrog in Wilkes-Barre Township.
God it also does fundraisers for nonprots such as Autism Speaks and the Childrens Miracle Network, and for individuals, Lane said. A fourth frozen-yogurt business, Froyo Mania, opened along East Northampton Street in downtown Wilkes-Barre on May 15. Tom Truong saw his shop as lling a void in Northeastern Pennsylvania. Im from Florida, said Truong, whose family owns frozenyogurt and other businesses there. Theres one on every corner there. Up here, people are not as familiar with it. But he said business has been good, especially after lunch and dinner. Customers have even used frozen yogurt as their main
meal, he said. (For nutritional advice on that trend, read on.) As do his competitors, he offers multiple avors from tart, a favorite, to strawberry, chocolate, peanut butter and cookies and cream, and a multiple-choice lineup of fruit and candy toppings. Customers can decide just how sweet and decadent and caloric they want their frozen yogurt meal. Toppings range from freshly cut fruits, such as strawberries, kiwi and mango, along with blueberries and blackberries, to candy, such as peanut butter cups, Sno caps and Gummy Bears, to cereal such as Capn Crunch and Cinnamon Toast Crunch. Another sought-after topper is popping pearls, colorful soft
pearls that, when chewed, release a burst of fruit juice. But, assuming a heavily topped treat, replete with candy or nuts, would frozen yogurt still qualify as healthy? Well, many shop owners and fro-yo fans like to point out that frozen yogurt is naturally non-fat or low-fat and often gluten-free. But nutrition experts will just as often counter that sugar content can still raise the calorie count quickly, even in plain yogurt. And toppings, of course, add even more to the numbers, with fruit delivering the least guilt and candy, nuts and granola the most. Yogurt fans also point to naturally occurring probiotics, which support the immune and
digestive systems, but, again, nutritionists often counter that such healthy bacteria often dont survive extreme temperatures and therefore wont last long enough to do the body good. Some shops are working on new techniques to make the good stuff last longer. In the meantime, healthy or not so much, takers apparently will still enjoy the new avors and the fun factor of the newly emerged help-yourself model. Loco Yoco in Dallas offers 10 avors; in West Pittston, 12, plus the twist combinations, which add ve more avor possibilities. Toppings total more than 30, including sauces, wafe cones, fresh fruit bought and sliced daily and, yes, popping pearls. For the lactose- and dairyintolerant or vegans, the businesses offer dairy-free sorbet, with avors such as key lime, mango or watermelon. Sugarfree frozen yogurt is another alternative. SweetFrog might top the
charts as far as avors go, offering 16 options and nearly 50 toppings. Terry OLeary of Drums, a regular there, likes to try various combinations. It just depends on whats there, she said. Her son Michael, of Hanover Township, said he prefers the sugar-free vanilla with kiwi and cherries on top. Theresa Vaccaro, who confessed an occasional giving-in to the junk, takes her young son and daughter to Loco Yoco in Dallas and likes the vanilla frozen yogurt with fresh fruit, though on Thursday she got a little crazy. I splurged, she said. Her choice toppings for the day? Peanut butter and toffee chips with her vanilla dessert. As for the little folks with her, 8-year-old Anthony said he likes cookies and cream with cookie-dough topping, while his sister, Gianna, 9, likes birthday-cake frozen yogurt with vanilla wafe topping.
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Ryan John Reedy, son of Cheryl and John Reedy III, Exeter, is celebrating his 11th birthday today, May 29. Ryan is a grandson of Nancy Sobeski and the late Anthony Jake Sobeski, West Pittston, and John Reedy Jr. and the late Carol Reedy, Pittston.
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Editors note: Please send news for this space by noon Friday to people@timesleader.com or by mail to Good Eats, The Times Leader, 15 N. Main St., Wilkes-Barre, PA 18711. To ensure accuracy, information must be typed or computer generated. THIS WEEK: May 29 to June 4 Halupki Sale, noon-2 p.m. Saturday, St. Michaels Church Society, Church and Winter streets, church hall, Old Forge. $1 each. Order by today. Call Sandra at 457-9280, Dorothy at 562-1434 or the church hall at 457-2875. Spaghetti and Pasta Dinner 4-6:30 p.m. every Thursday at St. Marys Antiochian Orthodox Church, 905 S. Main St., WilkesBarre. $7. Includes choice of ve pastas and ve sauces, salad and dessert. Take outs available. Call 824-1674 Thursdays. Sensational Buffet, 11 a.m.-6 p.m. Friday, Noxen United Methodist Church, Route 29, Noxen. All-You-Can-Eat Pasta Dinner, 4-7 p.m. Saturday, Osterhout Free Library North Branch, Community Room, 28 Oliver St., Parsons. Book sale, bake sale, basket rafe. Take outs after 3 p.m. $8 adults; $4 children younger than 8. Tickets at all library locations. 822-4600. Strawberry Social, 4-7 p.m. Saturday, Holy Cross Episcopal Church, 373 N. Main St., Wilkes-Barre. $6.50 adults; $3.25 children younger than 12. Hot dogs, wimpies, ice cream, strawberries, cake and beverages. Chicken Dinner, 4-6 p.m. Saturday, Wyoming United Methodist Church, 376 Wyoming Avenue, Wyoming. $9 adults; $5 children 5-12. Eat in or drive-through take out. Free delivery to local shut-ins. 693-2821. Hoagie Sale, 6:30-7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Loyalville United Methodist Church, Loyalville Road, church hall. Premium ham, salami, bologna and cheese. Tomatoes, lettuce, onion and dressing packaged separately. $5 each. Call 477-3521 by Saturday. Leave message with name, phone number, number of hoagies, with or without onions. Spaghetti Dinner Benet, 11 a.m.-3 p.m. Sunday, St. Anthony/ St. George Church, Park Avenue, Wilkes-Barre. Benets Angie Webby-Wrhel for complications from by-pass surgery. Monetary donations can be made to James Malia, Wells Fargo Bank, 451 Pierce St., rst oor, Kingston, PA 18704. Make checks payable to Spaghetti Dinner Fund. $8 adults; $5 children 10 and younger. Dine in or take out. All-You-Can-Eat Spaghetti Dinner, 2-6 p.m. Sunday, Blooming Grove Fire Department, 484 Route 739, Hawley. Benets the Ringus family, recent re victims. $10 adults; $6 children 4-11. Take outs available. Call Shirley at 570-685-1868. All-You-Can-Eat Breakfast, 8 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Sunday, St. Patrick Parish Center, 411 Allegheny St., White Haven. $8. 570-262-2894. Free Dinner, 5-6:30 p.m., every Monday, for those in need, Christian and Missionary Alliance Church, 317 Luzerne Ave., West Pittston.
The Kiwanis Club of Swoyersville recently hosted representatives from the Swoyersville Little League and Girls Softball League at a meeting. The club made its annual donation to the teams. The Kiwanis sponsors youth sports organizations and hosts many other community events. For more information contact Kathy at 283-1677. At the meeting, from left, first row, are Arianna Budzin, Keira Budzin, Brian Budzin and Sue Budzin, Girls Softball League, and Bob Featherstone and Michael Featherstone, Little League. Second row: Jack Tobias, president, Kiwanis Club.
Plymouth Township Fire Rescue Tilbury Station, 11 E. Poplar St., West Nanticoke, is hosting an open house from noon to 4 p.m. on Sunday. The public is invited to come see the re trucks, re safety trailer, Medic 25 and receive re safety tips. For more information email Plymouthtwprerescue@gmail.com or call 735-7899. From left: John Nash, chief engineer; Andy Novak, line chief; Shane Bardo, reghter; and Merrit Nash, line chief.
The Wilkes-Barre Academy Science Olympiad team recently qualied to compete at the state competition at Juniata College in Altoona. Teams competed in local competition at Penn State in order to qualify for state level. Students competed in many events including anatomy, disease detectives, battery buggy and many others to demonstrate their mastery of the subject. This is the eighth year that Wilkes-Barre Academy has ranked as a top 10 team. Participants, from left, rst row, are Olivia Zablocky, Isabella Greer, Neha Metgud, Katelynn Heller and Victoria Atkinson. Second row: Jenna Poor, Katelyn Vols, Matt Parsons, Mary Strunk, Hannah Gildea, Alyssa Reed, Gabby Serratore and Julia Insalaco. Third row: Biagio DApollonio, Raymond Wychock, Adam Rinehimer, Billy Weiss, Santo Insalaco and Josh Villarosa. Fourth row: Reed Karaska, Ben Rachilla, Megan Purcell and Eric Schramm. Also participating were Ian Barchock, Isabella Sobejano and Dominic Marchese.
The Auxiliary of the Meadows Nursing and Rehabilitation Center, Dallas, recently held a special luncheon meeting and installation of ofcers. New ofcers, from left, rst row, are Irene Transue, vice president, and Robert Law, president. Second row: Nelson Ashburner, treasurer; Norman Johnstone, secretary; and Pete Klein, second vice president.
Good Shepherd Academy students recently participated in the March Madness Reading Competition. Classes competed with each other by reading as many pages as they could during the month of March. The Middle States Steering Committee organized the event. Mrs. Loftus fourth-grade class placed at the top of the bracket. Participants, from left, rst row, are Abbigail Schultz, Madison Dewees, Sarah Skoronski, Peter Baxter, Meghan Moleski, Jordan Stochla and Adrianna Reilly. Second row: Matthew Spiccioli, Joshua Mayerski, Gary Sabulski, Anthony Giovinazzo, Christina Kurlanski, Matthew Williams, Matthew Albrecht and Xavier Evans. Third row: Kimberly Clocker, William Wasiakowski, Peter Koudary, Matt Carty, Jake Pizzolato, Kip Miller, Krista Biago, Hunter Grifth and Loftus.
In honor of National Nursing Home Week, St. Lukes Villa personnel and Del McDermott of the Friendly Sons of St. Patrick, along with several other members of the organization, began The St. Lukes Villa Courtyard Clean-Up Community Project 2013. The Friendly Sons participated in the weeding, landscaping and trimming of the retirement communitys award-winning garden courtyard. Lunch and refreshments were provided by The Villa. Some of the participants, from left, rst row, are D.J. McDermott. Second row: Brian Finnerty, Mike Bradshaw, Brian Bradshaw and Del McDermott.
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ment to people@timesleader. com or send it to: Times Leader Birthdays, 15 North Main St., Wilkes-Barre, PA 18711-0250. You also may use the form under the People tab on www.timesleader. com.
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wipe with a bit of vegetable oil before pouring in your mixture. Cover and chill for at least six hours or overnight. PORT WINE CHERRIES 1 pound fresh sweet cherries, stemmed and pitted (You also can use frozen.) 3/4 cup port wine 1/4-1/2 cup granulated sugar (based on sweetness of the cherries) If you are using frozen cherries, thaw before using. In a skillet, over medium high heat, combine the pitted cherries, port wine and sugar. I gauge the amount of sugar I use by the sweetness of the cherries; if the cherries are very sweet, I only use 1/4 cup of sugar; if they are not as sweet, I use a bit more sugar. Simmer until cherries are soft and the sauce has thickened 10 to 15 minutes. Remove from heat and let cherries cool. Refrigerate until serving. Putting it all together: When serving, if using a mold, place the mold in a pan of warm water and run a knife along the edges of the panna cotta, unmold onto your dessert dish. Once
The Meadows Nursing and Rehabilitation Center is planning its Market on the Pond, the auxiliarys largest fundraiser, from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. on June 15 on the center grounds, 4 East Center Hill Road, Dallas. The event will feature 120 vendors offering a variety of goods. The auxiliary is also sponsoring a bake sale and homemade lunch in the outdoor pavilion. Rain date is June 22. Rafe baskets are on display in the lobby and will also be available at the market. The community is invited to donate items. Acceptable donations include odds and ends (no clothing or broken items), soft and hardcover books (no magazines), handcrafted items, kitchen items, gently used odds and ends and plants. Donations can be brought to the lobby at the center from 9 a.m. to noon on June 1 and June 8. An auxiliary volunteer will be available to help. For other times, call the Community Services Ofce at 570-675-8600 ext. 115 or 195. Committee members, from left, rst row, are Camille Fioti, assistant director, Community Services, and Betty Sorchik, director, Community Services. Second row: volunteers Bob Law, Mary Wilkes, Sam Barbose, Norman Johnstone, Pete Klein, Lloyd Ryman, Gary Kirk, Mary Ann Finch and Nelson Ashburner.
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42 (DIGITAL) (PG-13) 10:45AM (1:50PM 4:40PM NOT ON SUN, 5/26/13) 7:35 BIG WEDDING, THE (DIGITAL) (R) 7:40PM 10:00PM CROODS, THE (DIGITAL) (PG) 11:05AM 1:45PM 4:25PM EPIC (3D) (PG) 12:15PM 2:55PM 5:40PM 8:20PM NEW MOVIE EPIC (DIGITAL) (PG) 10:55PM 1:40PM 4:20PM 7:00PM 9:40PM NEW MOVIE FAST & FURIOUS 6 (DIGITAL) (PG-13) 11:35AM 12:20PM 1:05PM 2:35PM 3:20PM 4:05PM 5:35PM 6:20PM 7:05PM 8:35PM 9:20PM 10:05PM NEW MOVIE GREAT GATSBY, THE (2013) (3D) (PG-13) 4:00PM 7:20PM 10:35PM GREAT GATSBY, THE (2013) (DIGITAL) (PG-13) 11:10AM 2:20PM 5:45PM 8:55PM HANGOVER PART III, THE (DIGITAL) (R) 10:35AM 11:15AM 11:55AM 12:35PM 1:15PM 1:55PM 2:25PM 3:15PM 3:55PM 4:35PM 5:15PM 5:55PM 6:35PM 7:15PM 7:55PM 8:25PM 9:15PM 9:55PM 10:25PM NEW MOVIE IRON MAN 3 (3D) (PG-13) 11:30AM 2:30PM 5:30PM 8:30PM IRON MAN 3 (DIGITAL) (PG-13) 11:00AM 2:00PM 5:00PM 8:00PM MUD (DIGITAL) (PG-13) 12:45PM 6:45PM PAIN & GAIN (DIGITAL) (R) 10:30PM PLACE BEYOND THE PINES, THE (DIGITAL) (R) 12:50PM STAR TREK INTO DARKNESS (3D) (PG-13) 10:30AM 1:30PM 3:00PM 3:45PM 4:30PM 7:30PM 9:00PM 9:45PM 10:30PM STAR TREK INTO DARKNESS (DIGITAL) (PG-13) 11:20AM 12:00PM 2:15PM 5:20PM 6:05PM 8:15PM
**Note**: Showtimes marked with a \\ indicate reserved seating. You must be 17 with ID or accompanied by a parent to attend R rated features.
*Fast & Furious 6 PG13 135 min (12:50), (1:30), (3:40), (4:20), 7:00, 7:20, 9:50, 10:10 Fast & Furious 6 D-Box PG13 135 min (12:50), (3:40), 7:00, 9:50 *Epic PG 110 min (12:30), (3:00), 7:10, 9:40 **Epic RealD 3D PG 110 min (1:15), (3:40), 7:40, 10:00 *The Hangover 3 R 105 min (12:45), (1:30), (3:00), (4:00), (5:15), 7:15, 7:40, 9:40, 9:55 Star Trek Into The Dark PG13 140 min (12:15), (12:40), (2:00), (3:30), (4:00), (5:00), 7:10, 7:20, 8:00, 9:55, 10:10. (No 8:00 Star Trek on 5/30) **Star Trek Into The Dark RealD 3D PG13 140 min (1:15), (4:15), 7:35, 10:20 **The Great Gatsby in RealD 3D PG13 150 min (12:45), (4:00), 7:15, 10:15 The Great Gatsby PG13 150 min (12:30), (3:40), 7:00, 10:00 Iron Man 3 PG13 140 min (12:45), (1:15), (3:45), (4:10), 7:00, 7:15, 9:50, 10:10 Special Events *After Earth - Thursday, May 30th PG13 - 110 min - 9:00PM Swan Lake Mariinsky Live - PG 195 min - Thursday, June 6th 2013 Walk-in 6:00PM, Show Start 6:30PM All Showtimes Include Pre-Feature Content
Avoid the lines: Advance tickets available from Fandango.com
Rating Policy Parents and/or Guardians (Age 21 and older) must accompany all children under 17 to an R Rated feature *No passes accepted to these features. **No restricted discount tickets or passes accepted to these features. ***3D features are the regular admission price plus a surcharge of $2.50 D-Box Motion Seats are the admission price plus an $8.00 surcharge First Matinee $5.50 for all features (plus surcharge for 3D features).
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The Sitter (5:45) Garden State (7:15) (R, 04) Zach Fast Five (PG-13, 11) Vin Diesel, MMAX (R, 11) Jonah Hill, Braff, Ian Holm. A disaffected actor finds a Paul Walker. Dom Toretto and company ramp up the action in Brazil. (CC) Max Records. (CC) soulmate in a quirky woman. (CC) Legendary (5:30) (PG-13, 10) Traffic (R, 00) Michael Douglas, Don Cheadle, The Borgias Cesare burns Constanzos SHO Patricia Clarkson, John Cena, Benicio Del Toro. The war on drugs brings many palace. (TVMA) casualties and few victories. Devon Graye. (CC) Pirates of the Carib- Starz Stu- The Haunted Mansion (PG, Jersey Girl (PG-13, 04) Ben Affleck, STARZ bean: The Curse dios Liv Tyler, George Carlin. (CC) 03) Eddie Murphy. (CC)
tv talk today
6 a.m. FnC FOX and Friends (n) 7 a.m. 3, 22 CBS This Morning The latest news. (n) 7 a.m. 16 Good Morning America (n) 7 a.m. 28 Today Khloe Kardashian; trends; steals and deals; Hal Spielman. (n) 7 a.m. Cnn Starting Point (n) 8 a.m. 56 Better Actor Chris ODonnell; nanny Jo Frost; a wedding-gift guide. (n) (TVPG) 9 a.m. 3 Anderson Live Adam Levine; the Doomsday Preppers ;
Andy Cohen. (TVG) 9 a.m. 16 Live! With Kelly and Michael Clive Owen; Khloe Kardashian-Odom; Il Volo performs. (n) (TVPG) 9 a.m. 28 Today Summer health hazards; Sara Peterson; swimwear; Alex Hitz. (n) 9 a.m. 53 Dr. Phil A young woman says, from the ages of 6 to 17, her father molested her and gave her drugs. (TV14) 9 a.m. FnC Americas Newsroom (n) 10 a.m. 16 The Ellen DeGeneres
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Confused teen who had sex with her boyfriend is now regretting it
Dear Abby: Im a 14-year-old girl who recently had sex with my boyfriend. It was the first time for both of us. A week and a half later, we had a big fight. Another problem is I am having a lot of feelings for his best friend, and he has feelings for me, too. I dont want to tell my boyfriend because I love him and dont want to lose him. I also dont want to ruin his friendship with the other guy. My boyfriend wants to have sex again, but I dont. I wish I could take it back. What can I do? Lost And Confused Dear Lost And Confused: Because
DEAR ABBY
ADVICE you had sex once does not mean you are compelled to do it again. Feeling as you do about the best friend is a strong sign that as much as you care for your boyfriend, you are not in love with him. If you are being pressured to have sex, its important for YOUR sake that you tell your boyfriend you feel it happened too soon, youre sorry you did it, and you have decided to wait until you are older to start again. It would be an intelligent move for you because your affections appear to be all over the map right now. I am also concerned because you
didnt mention whether you both used birth control. Its a sign of maturity when couples plan ahead and take precautions to avoid an unwanted pregnancy. (And yes, a girl CAN get pregnant the first time.) In fact, theres a word for teens who have sex on the spur of the moment and dont use birth control: Its PARENTS. Dear Abby: My friend is a compulsive talker. Chatty Cathy draws detailed descriptions of people I dont know and dont care about and lingers over past and current tribulations. I tolerate her behavior because shes a kind person, but she is oblivious to how much she dominates a conversation. Its like something compels her to fill every silence with monologue.
Her personal and work relationships suffer because of it. Its hard for her to hold a job, and she often becomes upset over this co-workers or that family members behavior. It is always the other persons failure, yet she is always in the center of the commotion. She has had a tough life, partly of her own making. If I try to send subtle cues of uninterest, she doesnt pick up on them and keeps talking and talking. I feel sorry for her. Is there anything I can do to help her, without seeming critical? Exhausted Listener in Hawaii Dear Exhausted: Not knowing your friend, I can only guess what drives her to talk compulsively. Some people do it because they feel
the need to prove to others how smart they are. Others do it out of nervousness or insecurity because they are uncomfortable with silence even if it is a momentary pause in conversation. Because her behavior has had a negative impact on her employability, the next time she mentions problems at work, it would be a kindness to suggest to her that, because its happening repeatedly, she discuss it with a psychologist. Thats not hurtful; its helpful.
To receive a collection of Abbys most memorable and most frequently requested poems and essays, send a business-sized, selfaddressed envelope, plus check or money order for $3.95 ($4.50 in Canada) to: Dear Abbys Keepers, P.O. Box 447, Mount Morris, IL 61054-0447. (Postage is included.)
UNIVERSAL SUDOKU
CRYPTOQUOTE
HOROSCOPE
BY HoLidAY MATHis
ARIES (March 21-April 19). Theres a time to think and a time to act. Today represents the latter. Instead of thinking about life and how it should work, make a move and see how it really does work. TAURUS (April 20-May 20). You may feel pangs of envy for the frolicking lightness of being that is youth, but you wouldnt want to go back there. Knowing what you know, theres too much to love about where you are now. GEMINI (May 21-June 21). The odds may be against completing the thing you wanted to do with this day, but youve never let numbers stop you before, and youre not about to start now. CANCER (June 22-July 22). Societys definition of whats acceptable is just not broad enough for you. Because your mind and heart are open, youll love deeper and experience greater highs and lows. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). If you put someone elses happiness and well-being before your own again and again, it may be because what makes you happiest is being strong enough to take care of those you love. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). Gossip is dangerous when its false and even more dangerous when its true. Avoid participating in the rumor mill. Get the real story from the first source or not at all. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). Desire changes you inside, and it changes the way the outside world feels to you, too. If you want very badly to accomplish something, it wont feel like work at all. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). You long ago decided to start living the life of your imaginings, but it has taken some time for reality to catch up. Dont forget to celebrate each bit that comes into being when it happens. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). You are extraordinary. People who hardly know you can see that in you. So can the people who love you, though theyve come to expect your extraordinary nature. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). Act not in spite of your fear but because of it. Your fear shows you where potential for greatness is hiding. It is a window shade over the window that has the very best view. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). Youre worried about getting tricked by a mirage. Is there something emerging on the horizon, or are you being tricked by the elements? The best way to play it is to keep traveling forward until you know for sure. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). You have it all under control, though you might have to tell your stomach. Feeling a little anxious about the future is a good sign that your plans are the right size for you just big enough to challenge and motivate you. TODAYS BIRTHDAY (May 29). You are vivacious, and youll live large this year. In matters of love, you look for freedom while someone wants your commitment. Youll come to a happy arrangement in July. In August, a strong male will influence the action. Your lucky numbers are: 3, 12, 39, 41 and 33.
GOREN BRIDGE
WiTH oMAr sHAriF & TAnnAH HirsCH PREVIOUS DAYS SOLUTION
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LEGAL NOTICE ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS WYOMING VALLEY WEST SCHOOL DISTRICT (WVW) WILL RECEIVE SEALED BIDS for Contract No. 1 - General Construction Work, an exterior concrete stair repair project at Wyoming Valley West High School, 150 Wadham Street, Plymouth Borough, PA 18651. Bids will be received at WVW Central Office, 450 North Maple Avenue, Kingston, PA 18704, prior to 2:00 PM, local time, on Wednesday, June 12, 2013, at which time and place said bids will be opened and read aloud. Online Procurement and Contracting Documents: Documents may be obtained on or after May 22, 2013 by contacting the Office of A+E Group J.V., and payment of a $25.00 non-refundable fee to the A+E Group J.V. Online access will be provided through the Architect's FTP site and to Prime Bidders only. Printed Procurement and Contracting Documents: Documents may be obtained on or after May 22, 2013 by contacting the Office of A+E Group J.V., and payment of a $100.00 non-refundable fee to A+E Group J.V. Examination of Procurement and Contracting Documents: Documents may be examined on or after May 22, 2013 at the Office of the A+E Group J.V., and at the Northeastern Pennsylvania Contractors Association, 1075 Oak Street, Pittston, PA 18640. Each bid, when submitted, must be accompanied by a Bid Security that shall not be less than ten percent (10%) of the amount of the Total Base Bid, a Noncollusion Affidavit of Prime Bidder, and Statement of Bidders Qualification. The successful Bidder will be required to obtain a Performance Bond and a Labor and Material Payment Bond. Refer to other bidding requirements described in Instruction to Bidders. Each bid must be submitted on the Bid Form provided. Bidders shall not alter this form in anyway. All Bidders must be registered on the A+E Group J.V.'s Bidders List. A Bidder must obtain Procurement and Contracting Documents from A+E Group J.V. or instruct A+E Group J.V. in writing to register the Bidder on the Bidders List. Attention is called to the provisions for Equal Employment Opportunity and the Wage Rate Requirements as set forth in the Non-Technical Specifications. No bid shall be withdrawn for a period of sixty (60) days subsequent to the opening of the Bids, without consent of Wyoming Valley West School District. Wyoming Valley West School District reserves the right to waive any informalities, irregularities, defects, errors or omissions in, or to reject, any or all bids, proposals, or parts thereof. All questions with regards to the Procurement and Contracting Documents, Bidders List, bid submission, etc. shall be directed in writing to the A+E Group J.V. BY ORDER OF THE BOARD JOANNE WOOD BOARD SECRETARY
570-301-3602
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110 Lost
LOST, Cat, Female, white 2 years old. Bright blue eyes, 3/4 deaf, skiddish, looks like a kitten, answers to Magic. Lost in Hanover Township. 570-829-0742
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NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that Letters of Testamentary have been granted in the Estate of Virginia Appel, Deceased, late of Dallas, Luzerne County, Pennsylvania, who died on March 21, 2013. All persons indebted to said Estate are required to make payment, and those having claims or demands to present the same without delay to the Executor, George J. Appel, PO Box 99 Harveys Lake, PA 18618. (570) 639-1382 ESTATE NOTICE Letters Testamentary in the Estate of Margaret M. Corgan, deceased, who died March 24, 2013, late of the Township of Fairview, Luzerne County, PA, having been granted, all persons indebted to said Estate are requested to makepayment and those having claims to present the same without delay to Catherine M. Corgan, Administratrix c/o William F. Burke, Esquire Burke Vullo Reilly Roberts 1460 Wyoming Avenue Forty Fort, PA 18704-4237
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that Letters Testamentary have been granted to Joseph Mikelski, Jr., Executor of the Estate of Joseph M. Mikelski, late of Plains Township, Luzerne County, Pennsylvania, who died on April 23, 2013. All persons indebted to said Estate are required to make payment and those having claims or demands to present the same without delay to the Executor c/o Robert S. Betnar, Esquire, Law offices of Robert S. Betnar, 126 South Main Street, Pittston, PA 18640.
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2003 Audi 225hp Coupe 87791 ................................. $11,990 2004 BMW 330Ci Convertible 80128..................... $13,499 2002 Chevy Corvette 19123 ....................................... $23,999 2011 Chevry Equinox 42062 ....................................... $18,888 2004 Chevy LS Ext. MiniVan 90840................................ $5,400 2006 Chrysler PT CRZR 63774 ................................... $6,999 2003 Dodge Ram 1500 quad 83805 ...................... $12,890 2007 Ford e350 pass 56256 ...................................... $13,999 2006 Ford XLT crew 4x4 72345................................ $17,999 2005 Ford Must GT Convertible 32500................. $18,999 2006 Ford Must V6 Convertible 110258 .................. $9,376 2007 Ford Must GT Coupe 32569............................ $18,498 2005 GMC Canyon Z85 crew 70275....................... $13,999 2005 Harley-Davis 1200 cc Other 10622 ................ $7,899 2011 Honda CR-Z EX 6M Coupe 5870.................... $16,650 2007 Hyundai Sant Fe SE 80013 .............................. $11,999 2010 Mazda CX-7 Grand 19752................................ $19,999 2012 Mazda 3i Sport Sedan 3963 .......................... $15,995 2003 Mercedes-B C230 Coupe 84555 ...................... $9,499 2008 Mercedes-B C300 Sedan 87884 ................... $17,999 2007 Mercedes-B CLK550 Convertible 45000 ... $26,999 2007 Mini Cooper S 46153........................................ $14,568 2005 Nissan 350Z Touring Convertible 27203... $18,999 2006 Nissan Frontier SE 75941................................ $14,999 2006 Pontiac Grand Prix 58656 .................................. $8,999 2003 Porsche Boxter S Convertible 26998.......... $24,998 2009 Subaru Impreza AWD 2.5i Wagon 54935 . $12,980 2009 Suzuki SX4 AWD SUV 30482 ............................ $12,999 2012 Volkswagen Beetle 2.5L 30751.................... $15,999 2012 Volkswagen Jetta SE 32392 .......................... $15,899 2010 Volkswagen Tiguan SE 22065........................ $17,599
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LEGAL NOTICE SEALED BIDS WILL BE RECEIVED BY THE BOARD SECRETARY OF THE PITTSTON AREA SCHOOL DISTRICT FOR: TAX ANTICIPATION NOTE $3,500,000.00 SPECIFICATIONS MAY BE SECURED FROM THE SECRETARYS OFFICE IN THE PITTSTON AREA SENIOR HIGH SCHOOL, 5 STOUT ST., YATESVILLE, PITTSTON, PA. BIDS WILL BE OPENED ON JUNE 4, 2013 AT 11:00 A.M. IN THE BOARD ROOM OF THE SENIOR HIGH SCHOOL. THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RESERVES THE RIGHT TO REJECT ANY OR ALL BIDS OR TO ACCEPT OR REJECT ANY ITEM OR ITEMS THEREOF. BY ORDER OF THE BOARD DEBORAH A. RACHILLA, BOARD SECRETARY ESTATE NOTICE LETTERS TESTAMENTARY have been granted to Eugene Edward Riley, 1164 Foster Avenue, White Haven, PA 18661, Executor of the Estate of Karen M. Riley, late of 1164 Foster Avenue White Haven, Pennsylvania, who died April 24, 2013. All persons indebted to said estate please make payment, and those having claims present same to: ATTORNEY RICHARD I. BERNSTEIN GIIULIANI & BERNSTEIN 101 W. Broad St. Suite 301 Hazleton, PA 18201
The Crestwood Board of School Directors has scheduled a special meeting on Thursday, May 30, 2013, at 6:30 p.m. at the Crestwood Secondary Complex, 281 S Mountain Blvd., Mountain Top, PA for the purpose of accepting /rejecting the tentative contract offer between the Crestwood School District and the Crestwood Educational Support Personnel Association; CoCurricular appointments of Boys Basketball Varsity Coach and Boys Varsity Wrestling Coach for the 201314 school year; addressing the request from the Greater WilkesBarre Chamber of Business and Industry; and addressing the facilities usage fee for the Wright Twp. Municipal Park Tennis Courts. Norb Dotzel Board Secretary
330
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LOST, miniature schnauzer, gray in color, with collar and ID. Answers to Abby. Last scene in Rice Township, Mountain Top. Reward Offered, if found call: 570-212-0954 570-868-3458
SAINT JUDE NOVENA May the sacred heart of Jesus be praised, adored & glorified throughout the world forever. St. Jude pray for us. St. Therese pray for us. C.O. THANK YOU ST. JUDE FOR PRAYER ANSWERED.
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FOUND CAT Small, friendly, Tabby Cat in Kirby Park, Wilkes-Barre. Believed to be house cat that lost its way. Please contact 570-905-2839
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Hiring All Positions (Experienced Floorhand to Driller) Rig for Marcellus Basin - Must Staff Immediately Two Year Rig Experience Required - work on triples preferred Benefits- Advancement Opportunities-Competitive Pay-401 K Program Bring Current Resume,Valid Drivers License, and 2 Forms of ID
MEETING NOTICE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, pursuant to Act 93 of 1998, that the Joint Operating Committee of West Side Career and Technology Center will hold a special meeting for general purposes on Tuesday, June 4, 2013, at 6:30 p.m. in the library of the school, 75 Evans St., Pringle Borough, Luzerne County, PA. If you are a person with a disability and desire to attend this meeting and require an auxiliary aid, service, or other accommodation, please contact the Office of the Administrative Director to determine how the school can best serve your needs. Elaine Pallone, Secretary LEGAL NOTICE The Wilkes-Barre Township Zoning Hearing Board will conduct a hearing upon the application of the following on June 11, 2013 at 6:00 PM in the Municipal Building located at 150 Watson Street, WilkesBarre Township. The public is invited to attend. Kingston Hotel Partners LP is seeking a height variance to construct a new hotel located at 879 Schechter Drive. The property is zoned B-2 Community Business. Thomas Zedolik Zoning/ Code Enforcement Officer
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LEGAL ADVERTISEMENT The Plains Township Board of Commissioners wishes to solicit bids for the sale of Real Estate which was part of the Laurel Line and acquired by the Township from the Luzerne County Redevelopment Authority. This property consists of approximately 0.54 acres of land and is more specifically described as follows: All that certain piece or parcel of land situate in the Township of Plains, County of Luzerne and Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, bounded and described as follows, to wit; Beginning at an iron pipe found in place being the intersection of the northeasterly line of Amsbury Street with the southeasterly line of Center Drive; Thence along said Center Drive, North 34 15' 16" East, two hundred thirty-eight and seven hundreds (238.07) feet to a point; Thence through the lands of Grantor herein (Plains Township) South 55 17' 11" East, one hundred and no hundredths (100.00) feet to an iron rebar set in place being the northeasterly line of said Amsbury Street; Thence along said Amsbury Street, North 56 21' 24" West, one hundred and no hundredths (100.00) feet to the point and place of beginning. The above described parcel contains 23,713 sq. ft. or 0.54 acres of land, more or less, Bids must be received in a sealed envelope marked Real Estate Bid and accompanied by a certified check for the full amount of the bid no later than June 10, 2013 at 10:00 A.M. at the Administrative Office, 126 North Main Street, Plains, Pennsylvania, 18705. Bids will be opened at the Commissioners Work Session on June 10, 2013 at 6:45 P.M. at the Fox Hill Firehouse, No. 2, 50 Second Street, Plains Township, Pennsylvania, 18702. Any bidders that were unsuccessful will have their certified check returned to the address provided within four (4) days after the opening of bids. Any bids received must be for the minimum bid amount of $2370.00. Any bid received for less than that amount shall automatically be rejected. Plains Township reserves the right to reject any and all bids. Stephen A. Menn, Esquire Solicitor, Plains Township 253 South Franklin Street Wilkes-Barre, PA 18701 570.270.3133
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TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale
Gold with tan cloth, only 32k. One year bumper to bumper warranty. IMPRESSIVE! $14,900
439
Motorcycles
451
FUN GETAWAYS!
Yankees/ Tampa Bay 6/23 OLD TIMERS DAY Island Hopping in New England 5 Day - 6/23-27 Phillies vs. Mets 6/23 Knoebels Park 6/26 9/11 Memorial with free time in NYC - 7/6 Boston/Salem & Gloucester 4 Day - 7/11-14 Taylor Swift Concert - 7/19 1-800-432-8069
NISSAN 09 ALTIMA S
Trucks/ SUVs/Vans
451
Trucks/ SUVs/Vans
343-1959
406
ATVs/Dune Buggies
4x4 utility ATV with OEM second seat. Extended wheelbase adds to stability. Runs & looks great. Only 155 miles. $5700 neg. 570-362-1216 570-574-3406
POLARIS`09
Looking for that special place called home? Classified will address Your needs. Open the door with classified!
409
TENENBAUMS TRAVEL
BE THE 1ST!
V-6, automatic nice, only 56,000 miles. MUST SELL! $2,750. OBO (570) 760-0511
CHEVROLET 97 LUMINA
CHEVROLET `08 IMPALA LT 20,600 miles, automatic, front wheel drive, all power, leather interior. $11,640 -570-852-1335
120,000 miles, clean car, Needs tires & brakes. Reduced to! $2,400 Neg. (570) 829-5023 (570) 706-0323
ceptor. Royal blue, ice cold air, all power, super condition, rust free. Body & interior in excellent condition. Not your average police car! Everthing is heavy duty. 116,000 miles, needs nothing. Fully serviced & is turnkey. Many Interceptors run well over 200,000 miles. Car very well maintained & should run well for many years to come. $4,995. 570-578-7886
AUDI S5 CONV. Sprint blue, black / brown leather int., navigation, 7 spd auto turbo, AWD 10 CHEVY IMPALA LT silver, V6, 50k miles 08 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX blue, auto, V6 07 PONTIAC G6 black, 4 cylinder 41,000 miles 07 BUICK LUCERNE CXL, silver, grey leather 06 CHEVY EQUINOX LT grey with alloys AWD 06 AUDI A8L grey, blue leather, navigation AWD 05 CHEVY MONTE CARLO LT white V6 05 AUDI A6 All Road. Green 2 tone, leather AWD 05 VW JETTA GLS grey, black leather, sunroof, alloys 04 CHEVY MALIBU LT Blue 03 SUZUKI AERO Silver, 5 speed 02 VW BEETLE GLS lime green 5 speed, 4 cylinder 73 PORSCHE 914 green & black, 5 spd, 62k miles.
11
www.acmecarsales.net
800-825-1609
lousgarage.com
825-3368
Blue. Excellent Condition Only 166 miles on the odometer. Only used 1 summer. Purchased new as a left over. Asking $6000. Bike is located in Mountain Top. Call Ed at 570-814-9922
KAWASAKI 10 VULCAN
1518 8th Street Carverton, PA Near Francis Slocum St. Park Auto, V6. NICE, NICE CAR! $3,995. Call for details 570-696-4377
FORD 02 TAURUS
4 door 2.4L SUV 4WD, Auto Everglade Metallic 101k Miles. Good Condition! Great Gas Mileage $9,500 Call 570-760-3946
TOYOTA 07 RAV4
lousgarage.com
825-3368
A busy progressive and expanding GM dealership is looking for an experienced Service Director. Not satisfied with the status quo. Our dealer principal thinks service first. Service runs our store, not the sales department. Salary, bonus and benefits negotiable and based on experience. All responses held in strict confidence. Please email all inquires to: gbmy36@outlook.com EOE
Service Director
570-696-4377
522
Education/ Training
GMC 03 ENVOY
Quality furniture: DIning room set, bedroom sets, mahogany table, wall units, sofa bed, recliners, refrigerator, patio furniture, much more. Plants and shrubs from a local landscaper. Depression glass, Fenton, crystal and more. Collectibles, household, linens, toys, tools, TORO XL320 RIDING MOWER. See web sites for detailed list and pictures.
auctionzip.com #4156, AU001433
Silver, black interior. 4 door sedan. Power windows and locks, CD. 104k highway miles. Runs excellent. $6800 negotiable. 570-578-9222
black, 4800 miles AWD 08 FORD EXPLORER EDDIE BAUER black, tan leather 4x4 08 JEEP PATRIOT SPORT black, 4 cyl. 5 speed 4x4 08 FORD EDGE SE white V6 AWD 07 DODGE 07 NITRO SXT sage green, 4x4, V6 07 GMC YUKON 4X4 DENALI black, 3rd seat, Navigation 07 DODGE CARAVAN SXT green, 4 door, 7 pass mini van 06 CHEVY EQUINOX LT grey, V6, AWD 06 HYUNDAI SANTA FE GLS grey V6 AWD 06 HONDA PILOT EX silver, 3rd seat, 4x4 06 CHEVY 1500
SILVERADO REG CAB
11
112K miles. Blue, 5 speed. Air, power windows/locks, CD/cassette, Keyless entry, sunroof, new battery. Car drives and has current PA inspection. Slight rust on corner of passenger door. Clutch slips on hard acceleration. This is why its thousands less than Blue Book value. $6,500 OBO. Make an offer! Call 570-592-1629
TOYOTA 04 CELICA GT
All EXCITING TEACHING Junk OPPORTUNITY Cars & Immediate part time instructor position for day and Trucks openevening program. Wanted HVAC-R Must have 3 plus
Highest Prices Paid In CA$H
FREE PICKUP years work experience in field. Teaching experience a plus but not required. Fax resume to (570) 287.7936 or send to Director of Education 166 Slocum Street Forty Fort PA 18704
One owner, super clean, V8, All options, 102,000 miles. $11,500, OBO 570-814-3666
42, Luxury, 350 CAT diesel. Original owner, 33,000 miles. 3 slides, 1 & 1.5 bath, washer/dryer, microwave, double door stainless refrigerator, automatic awning, home theatre, satellite & much more! Below retail. $95,000. 570-406-0502 Starcraft Travel Star Expandable Travel Trailer, 2010 24 feet immaculate, non-smoking, just inspected. 1 slide out, sleeps 8, loaded. $16,500 570-735-4721
Ladder rack, tool box, ONE OWNER. Bargain Price! $5,995 570-696-4377
570-574-1275
lousgarage.com 1518 8th Street Carverton, PA Near Francis Slocum St. Park
825-3368
3rd seat. AWD. One Owner. $4,995 Call for details 570-696-4377
White with tan. Only 19k! ABSOLUTELY BEAUTIFUL! One year bumper to bumper warranty. $15,990
HONDA 11 CIVIC LX
lousgarage.com
825-3368
lousgarage.com
825-3368
leather interior, all power, well maintained, regularly serviced. 25mpg highway. Asking $4,995, (570)639-1390
135
135
PUBLIC MEETING
PENNSYLVANIA DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
S.R. 0415, SECTION 350, SEGMENT 0090 BRIDGE OVER HARVEYS LAKE INLET HARVEYS LAKE BOROUGH LUZERNE COUNTY PLACE: HARVEYS LAKE BOROUGH BUILDING 4875 MEMORIAL HIGHWAY/SUITE 101 HARVEYS LAKE, PA 18618 JUNE 12, 2013 6:00 P.M.
black, V6, 4x4 06 JEEP GRAND CHEROKEE LAREDO, gold, V6 4x4 06 DODGE RAM 1500 QUAD CAB, Black, V8, 4x4 truck 06 CHEVY TRAILBLAZER LS, SILVER, 4X4 05 HYUNDAI TUSCON LX green, AWD 05 CHEVY TRAILBLAZER white, V6, 4x4 05 HYUNDAI TUSCON LX white, V6 4x4 05 DODGE DURANGO SXT blue, 3rd seat, 4x4 05 CHEVY COLORADO CLUB CAB grey 4x4 truck 05 CHRYSLER TOWN & COUNTRY TOURING, blue, 7 passenger mini van 05 MITSUBISHI ENDEAVOR XLS silver, V6, 4x4 05 MERCURY MARINER PREMIUM. White, tan leather AWD 05 FORD ESCAPE XLT Red, V6 4x4 05 TOYOTA SIENNA LE gold, 7 passenger mini van 05 HYUNDAI TUSCON LX green auto, AWD 04 JEEP GRAND CHEROKEE LAREDO silver V6, 4x4 04 CHEVY AVALANCHE LT green, grey leather, 4 door 4x4 truck 03 FORD EXPEDITION XLT silver, 3rd seat, 4x4 03 NISSAN PATHFINDER black V6 4x4 03 MITSUBISHI OUTLANDER XLS red, V6, 4x4 02 MERCURY MOUNTAINEER red, tan leather, 3rd seat, 4x4 02 MERCURY black, tan leather 3rd row seat awd 02 TOYOTA TUNDRA SR5 XCAB TRUCK white 4x4 01 DODGE DAKOTA CLUB CAB SPORT blue, V6, 4x4 truck 01 FORD RANGER REG CAB TRUCK white, V6 2WD 01 DODGE RAM 1500 QUAD CAB SLT 5.9 liter, brown, 8 box 4x4 truck 99 FORD F150 SUPER CAB, silver 4x4 truck
MOUNTAINEER PREMIER
06
Tan with tan leather & black top. Auto, 5-cylinder. Power top, Alloy wheels with new tires. Monsoon stereo, heated leather seats. 64,000 miles. $10,900 (570) 417-1993
VOLKSWAGEN `06
503
lousgarage.com
825-3368
Accounting/ Finance
451
Trucks/ SUVs/Vans
lousgarage.com
825-3368
VW 11 JETTA SE
EXTENDED CAB LS Runs great! 211,000 miles, 4x4, new windshield, alternator, front wheel studs, spark plug wires, ignition module, brakes, throttle body gasket, 3 oxygen sensors, fuel pump, tank, & filter. New tires with alloy rims. New transmission. $3,500, OBO. 570-793-5593
V6, automatic, 42,000 miles, oneowner. Loadedsunroof, heated leather seats, 6CD /Sirius/iPod integration, premium sound & more! All work performed by Kia dealer, have complete service records. Freshly serviced &detailed, inspected. till 6/14, Kia factory warranty in effect till 7/30/14, drive worry free! Looks and runs great. KBB $18,464, asking $15,995. Call/text 570-262-5265.
Part time. Experience with quickbooks. Duties include posting, vendor invoices, customer invoicing and checking account reconcillation. Call 675-7083
BOOKEEPER
Pre-pare salads, hoagies, etc. Full or part time. Weekends a must. Apply Within ANTONIOS 501 Main Street White Haven Shopping Center
KITCHEN HELP
V8, Automatic. Good Condition. 93,000 miles. Must Sell! $3,800 OBO. (570)760-0511
Collect cash, not dust! Clean out your basement, garage or attic and call the Classified department today at 570829-7130!
lousgarage.com
825-3368
Local apartment community is looking for a friendly and energetic person to join our team. Applicants must be dependable, well organized & capable of working independently. The right candidate must be creative, have previous sales experience, computer experience, and exceptional customer service/ people skills. Great Salary and vacation offered. Bilingual a plus. Please send resume to:
PLYMOUTH MANOR is currently hiring a part time Cook. Day Shift. Apply in person at: Plymouth Manor 129 Martz Manor Plymouth, Pa 18615
KINGSTON HEALTHCARE CENTER is currently hiring part time dietary aides shift. Apply in person at: Kingston Healthcare Center, 702 3rd Avenue Kingston, Pa 18704
Looking for the right deal on an automobile? Turn to classified. Its a showroom in print! Classifieds got the directions!
Property Manager
9 Beverly Drive, Edwardsville, PA 18704. EOE Eagleridge01@ comcast.net
Drivers wanted. Good pay, benefits. Plymouth location. Call Tony at 570-899-2121 penntech84th@ gmail.com
533
FORD `01 EXPLORER NISSAN 06 FRIONTIER SE CREW CAB SPORT TRAC Silver with tan cloth. Mint condition, runs
good. 138,000 miles. White. 4WD. $6,899, negotiable. 570-453-3358 2 wheel drive. 109K. SHARP TRUCK! $12,500
FULL TIME Building Maintenance Manager Experience required. Pool certification preferred, but not necessary. Salary commensurate with experience. Email to: resume@ odysseyfitness center.com
421
85hp Mercury outboard motor, new flooring and seats. Upholstery redone, runs excellent. Load Rider trailer & 2 canvas covers included. $2,500, 570-714-3300 570-675-8693
BAYLINER 88 CAPRI
lousgarage.com 1518 8th Street Carverton, PA Near Francis Slocum St. Park
825-3368
439
Motorcycles
AUTO SERVICE
DIRECTORY
468
Auto Parts
472
Auto Services
DATE: TIME:
THE PURPOSE OF THIS MEETING IS TO DISCUSS CONSTRUCTION DETAILS FOR THE UPCOMING BRIDGE PROJECT. HISTORIC AND ARCHAEOLOGICAL RESOURCES MAY BE PRESENT IN THE PROJECT AREA AND PUBLIC COMMENT REGARDING THE PRESENCE OF CULTURAL RESOURCES ANDTHE EFFECTOFTHE PROJECTONTHESE RESOURCES IS BEING SOLICITED. THE PUBLIC MEETING LOCATION IS ACCESSIBLE TO PERSONS HAVING DISABILITIES. ANY PERSONS HAVING SPECIAL NEEDS OR REQUIRING SPECIAL AIDS ARE REQUESTED TO CONTACT THE DEPARTMENT AT 963-3326 PRIOR TO THE MEETING EVENT IN ORDER THAT SPECIAL DISABILITY NEEDS MAY BE ACCOMMODATED.
WANTED!
lousgarage.com
825-3368
570-301-3602
only 2000 miles!! excellent condition!! Garage kept, 1916cc V-twin engine, manual 6 speed transmission, includes single seat, king and queen seat, cover, and sissy bar bag. $18,500 obo (570) 947-3501
LAW DIRECTORY
Dont Keep Your Practice a Secret!
BUMPER, rear 8898 Chevy full size pickup chrome, mint condition. $200. Lund sunvisor 8898 Chevy/GMC full size pickup with hardware $100. 570-655-3197
472
Auto Services
570-574-1275
Cars & Full Size Trucks. For prices... Lamoreaux Auto Parts 477-2562
19,500 miles, excellent condition, stage 1 air filter & racing map installed. Just inspected. $15,500 570-760-9003
WANTED
PAGE 4D
WEDNESDAY, MAY 29, 2013 533 Installation/ Maintenance/ Repair 542 Logistics/ Transportation 548 Medical/Health 551 Other 708
Full time Technician needed. Valid safety inspection, emissions & PA drivers licenses are required. Minimum 2 years experience preferred. Benefits include medical, vacation and holiday pay. Please send resume or apply in person at: Forty Fort Lube & Service 300 Pierce Street Kingston, PA 18704
AUTO TECHNICIAN
STK# 2285
MSRP $23,975
Lease For
Looking for the right deal on an automobile? Turn to classified. Its a showroom in print! Classifieds got the directions!
Logistics in Mountain Top, PA is seeking a CLASS A, DRY FREIGHT DRIVER Super Regional Position along with an assigned new, must see elite tractor. If you have 2 years verifiable experience, a professional attitude and want to drive and keep a clean truck, available for you is a very competitive benefit and wage package with flexible home time including Medical Benefits , Paid Holidays. For info contact; Brian @ 570-474-0850 Cell 570-592-3766 EOE
medical practice is seeking a business office manager. 3 to 5 years management experience required. Excellent working environment, with competitive salary, benefit package. Send resume to: The Times Leader BOX 4385 15 N Main Street Wilkes-Barre, PA 18711
break down staff for Scranton business. Mostly weekend and evening hours. Serious inquires only. Please call 570-342-7744
744
600 FINANCIAL
610 Business Opportunities
times with children. FCCY is looking for weekend & full time foster parents. fccy.org Call 1-800-747-3807 EOE
MSRP $33,540
Lease For
MSRP $36,515
Lease For
MSRP $36,955
Lease For
EXPERIENCED, Full Time HVAC Installers and helpers for residential and commercial. Must be dependable with good work ethics & communication skills.Benefits, 401K, AD&D Send Resume to: Yenason Mechanical, Inc. 132 Darling Street Wilkes-Barre, PA 18702 or e-mail to: yenasonmech@epix. net
STK# 2295
MSRP $42,360
Lease For
MSRP $33,030
Lease For
STK# 2286
company seeks EXPERIENCED, Full Time Plumbers and helpers. Must be dependable with good work ethics & communication skills. Send Resume to: Yenason Mechanical, Inc. 132 Darling Street Wilkes-Barre, PA 18702 or e-mail to: yenasonmech@ epix.net
We are seeking Independent Contractors (own business) to service our customers in the , Scranton/ Wilkes areas. The need for 2003 or newer Cargo Vans, or Box Trucks is necessary. Must be able to pass an MVA, Drug Test & Background Check. Qualified prospects will need a GPS unit and a working cell phone. To schedule an appointment, please call 1-800-220-1177
DRIVERS
Office is looking for enthusiastic Full Time Dental Assistant. Must be organized, people person, with excellent communication skills. If you are interested in joining our friendly team, please send resume to: Dr. David Spring 2935 Memorial Hwy Dallas, PA 18612
We are a 30 yr old Health & Wellness company expanding in the area. We are seeking highly motivated, energetic individuals to join our team as personal wellness coaches. NO experience necessary! Part time & Full time positions available. Please sent your information to: mosisan@aol.com
INTERSTATE PRODUCTS A Private Label Chemical Manufacturer. We offer a partnership program for sales minded people. This Opportunity will give you the chance to develop your own business with our help. We will design a complete program just for you with your Company Name and Private Label Program. Your sales ability is your ticket to financial freedom. Call (570) 288-1215
PLANET JR. ATTACHMENTS, including plows, cultivator, sweeps, harrows etc. 40 pieces $200. Old potato shovel $25. Log rolling tool, $40. Wheelbarrow with steel front wheel $25. 570-693-1918 SPOONS, collectors, (18) must take all, $35. 570-696-1927 VANITY, Antique with 3 mirrors and 6 drawers. Good condition. $75 570-446-8672 YEARBOOKS. Coughlin (30) 322000. GAR -(18)) 37-06, Meyers (15) 45-03, Pittston (6) 38-75, Plains, 6668, WVW (12), 19702000,Kingston (11) 32-56, Hazleton, (8) 40-61, Plymouth, 39-51, Hanover 51-74. Hazleton, 40-61, Nanticoke, 76, Dallas, 90-04, Luzerne, 46-51 Others available as well as colleges. Prices vary depending on condition. $20-$40 each. Call for further details 570-825-4721, 1 Margaret St., Plains, PA arthurh302@ aol.com
726
Clothing
BLOUSES, ladies, sizes 6, 8 and 10. $.50 each. JEANS, ladies, (3) size 2 petite, $3 each. TSHIRTS (20), boys, sizes 12 and 14, $.50 each. TSHIRTS (10), boys, Collared $1 each. 570-822-5560 BOOTS, womens hytest, size 10D, work steel toe boots $15. Mens Wolverine hytest steel toe safety work boots, size 8. $30. 570-678-5488 JEANS Architect relaxed fit 2 pairs of 36 waist denim shorts jeans new with tags both for $20. Perry Ellis 2 pair denim boot cut mens jeans 36 w x 30 l, new with tags $10 ea. 570-735 6638 PROM DRESSES, (3) medium size. $20. 570-825-1246 SHOES. Sandals, Flip Flops and Heels. Large variety call for details. Size 7. $10 each. 570-735-8220 WOMENS, pants and jeans (18), sizes 18-20. Jackets, (4) sizes L and XL. All in excellent condition. A must see! $20 for all. 570-655-1808
BEDROOM SUITE, $235, RECLINER, $39, DINING ROOM, $50, BLENDER, $10, ROCKING CHAIRS, $40 each, WARDROBE, large $35. Call for details 570-696-1410 570-760-5000 BEDROOM SUITE. Twin, carmel, nightstand, dresser. $650. 570-417-7170 CHAIRS, (2) Genuine leather, custom made recliners. Taupe color, like new. $550 each. 570-675-5046 CHAIRS. (6) green plastic, stackable. Excellent condition. $20 all. 735-6638 DESK, 54x24, two large file drawers, and five small drawers. $100. 570-472-9091 DESK, Mahogany desk with hutch top. $35. 570-822-5560 ENTERTAINMENT CENTER, 50 1/2Lx48 1/2Hx15 1/5D. Cherry in color, lots of space plus bottom storage. $35. 881-3455 ENTERTAINMENT CENTER, wooden, with glass stereo cabinet & storage. Excellent condition. Asking $85 OBO Call 570-239-6011 KITCHEN TABLES, retro, both for $100 OBO. 570-693-1918 LIFT CHAIR Pride Mobility medium lift chair 3 position fully reclining. Brand new. never used. Color tan. $500 call 287-4173 after 4pm
small, family oriented, general dental practice looking for Full Time Dental Assistant. Experience necessary. Pittston Area. Email resume: prevention301@ aol.com The Times Leader 15 N Main Street Box 4390 Wilkes-Barre, Pa 18711
554
Production/ Operations
710
Appliances
DRYER, gas. Kenmore. Good working condition. $100. OBO. 570-825-4031 REFRIGERATOR, 18 Cu.Ft. $65 OBO. 570-829-3483 REFRIGERATOR, for a camper, plug in or lighter, holds 12 cans. $20. STOVE, Pot Belly, old, $25. 570-836-2765 REFRIGERATOR. Mini, white 1.7 cu. ft. Excellent condition. $30. Call Jim 570-868-5450 or 267-253-9754 VACUUM, Kirby Classic, with rug renovator $50. OBO 570-693-1918
730
557
FAX AND COPIER, Panosonic, Flatbed. $20. 570-288-9936 LAPTOPS. (2) $120 and $135. Call for details and delivery. 570-654-0574 MONITER , HP, almost new, $10. PRINTER, HP, $15. 570-288-4847 PRINTER, Brother, all in one, wireless. $25. 570-825-2146
MSRP $28,880
538
Lease For
Janitorial/ Cleaning
STK# 2119
PET STORE Kennel Cleaner Mon-Sat 11-3 Apply in person Pet Wonderland Wilkes Barre
MSRP $31,350
Available Must Have Class A License & Good Driving Record. We Offer Top Wages and Benefits Package. Apply In Person and Ask For: Paul or Mike Falzone Towing Service, Inc. 823-2100
HEAVY DUTY WRECKER DRIVER/ TRUCK MECHANIC 2nd & 3rd Shifts
Opening For
assist manager. Duties will include recruiting, training & marketing. Will train. Call Mr. Scott (570)288-4532 E.O.E
700 MERCHANDISE
702 Air Conditioners
We Beat All Competitors Prices! Twin sets: $159 Full sets: $179 Queen sets: $239 All New American Made 570-288-1898
MATTRESS SALE
Mattress Guy
AIR CONDITIONER, Bryant. $30. 570-288-9936 AIR CONDITIONER, New, Kenmore. 10,000 BTU, in box and never opened. $175. 570-457-7854 AIR CONDITIONERS, (2). (1) Haier, 5,000 BTU. (1) Carrier 5,000 BTU. $30 each. Both in excellent condition. 570-825-4031 DUCTLESS air conditioner Fujitsu Model AOU18C1, 18,000 BTU, 7 years old, needs compressor. Inside & outside units for $150.570-825-3784
712
Baby Items
Shopping for a new apartment? Classified lets you compare costs without hassle or worry! Get moving with classified!
CRIB, Maple Sleigh style. Smoke and pet free. Excellent condition. $70, NEG. 570-287-2073
732
Exercise Equipment
TABLE, Japanese, 2X4 with inlaid glass figurines and a solid glass top. Mint condition. $125 570-829-3483 UMBRELLA, OUTDOOR. Pottery Barn, 9, wood frame, stone color, good condition. $20 570-855-2568
BOWFLEX. Ultimate, excellent condition, hardly used, non smoking home. $300. 540-6889 DUMBBELL SETS, Barbell, with bench press, leg exercise attachment. Very good condition $25. 570-288-5158 HARD CORE GYM, Plate loaded cable pulley machine; lat pull down, chest press, pec deck, leg ext, lower pulley for curling. $150. 570-868-6024 SPEED WALKER, with bilateral arm exerciser. $50 OBO. 829-3483 TREADMILL. Lifestyler. 2 years old, $100 570-709-1468 TREADMILL. Livestrong LS7.9T, like new. Programmable, ipod, connect with fans. $450 firm! 570-574-4781
Lease For
566
468
Auto Parts
468
Auto Parts
STK# 2298
MSRP $41,245
Lease For
STK# 2076
rjacobs@ CareGiversAmerica.com
551
Other
MSRP $40,335
Lease For
Call for Details (570) 459-9901 Vehicles must be COMPLETE!! PLUS ENTER TO WIN $500 CASH!!
DRAWING TO BE HELD LAST DAY OF EACH MONTH
DRIVE IN PRICES
STK# 2158
MSRP $23,980
www.wegotused.com
566 Sales/Business Development 566 Sales/Business Development
Person to serve as driver and assistant for Back Mountain gentleman. 3 days weekly. References essential. Please call 570.885.1364
ASSISTANT
Lease For
Food service company seeks a motivated team player with excellent customer relation skills and 5+ years experience to join our team in Wilkes Barre. Full Time Mon.-Fri. 5:30am-2:00pm. Duties include but not limited to preparation and serving of breakfast & lunch items. We offer a competitive salary and benefits. For consideration call 570.820.1446, EOE-M/F/DV
714
Bridal Items
708
WEDDING DRESS and veil, vintage. $50. GLOVES, (16) vintage $20. HATS, (8) vintage, $10 each. 288-9936
ATTENTION VENDORS Decorative/Seasonal/Accent Pieces for sale. Purchase separately or all. Call 675-5046 after 6PM
716
Building Materials
Old Toys, model kits, Bikes, dolls, guns, Mining Items, trains & Musical Instruments, Hess. 474-9544
DOOR like new, exterior, 2 sidelites, standard mull, 5/0x6/8. Right hand swing, prehung with deadbolt, gladiator steel, 6 panel $150. 570-817-5778 LOUVERED DOORS, 4 bi-fold, three, 6, 5 and 2-4. $100 all 570-822-1824. PRESSURE TREATED Wood pieces 2x8x6 average, 25 pieces $20. 570-693-1918 WROUGHT IRON RAILING, measures 92 from wall, small piece 39, tail to go down steps measures 42, covers 6 steps. Asking $195 for all. 881-3455
FORTY FORT
742
STK# 2161
MSRP $27,630
Lease For
STK# 2208
MSRP $54,515
Lease For
STK# 2254
Valley Chevrolet featuring our brand new, state of the art showroom & service complex with the regions largest inventory of new Chevrolets
BASEBALL CARDS, (100) 1991, Upper Deck, $3. (100) 1989 Topps $3. (100) 1991 Donruss $3. (100) 1993 Topps $3. (135) N.Y. Mets $4. Very nice for a youngster starting to collect. 570-313-5214 570-313-3859 DINING ROOM SET. Vintage, 11 piece Mahogany. Butterfly leaf in table. Photos avail. $950 570-735-4945 FOOD GRINDER, Sargent, with cutting blades. In good working condition. Over 100 years old. $25. 570-654-3755 SHOE REPAIR with stand, 2 pieces, $5. BRACE & BITS (2) $3 each. 823-6986
HIGH efficiency OUTDOOR WOOD FURNACE from Central Boiler burns less wood. 25 year warranty. B & C Outdoor Wood Furnaces LLC. 570-477-5692
26 Hughes Street Sat., June 1, 8-2 Snowblower, old mahagony desk, safe. Cheap, Cheap, Cheap!!!
744
LAUREL LAKES
720
Cemetery Plots/Lots
MSRP $49,180
Lease For
STK# 2188
Four grave plots plus stone, St. Vincents Cemetery. $3,400 1-813-817-5952
Cemetery Plots
BED FRAME, Oak, Queen, Brand new, with rails and foot board. Paid $550, selling for $375. BED FRAME, king size, $400. 570-690-3252 BED. Bunk. Black steel tube, twin over twin. Very good condition. $100. 570-654-7722
June 1 9 am - 2 pm. Rain Date June 8. Take Nuangola Exit 159. Turn right 1/4 mile past Travel Plaza and follow signs.
MSRP $63,030
VALLEY CHEVROLET
601 Kidder Street, Wilkes-Barre, PA
Please apply in person to: Blake Gagliardi, Sales Manager or Rick Merrick, Sales Manager
542
Lease For
Logistics/ Transportation
542
Logistics/ Transportation
542
Logistics/ Transportation
*Leases: 39 mos., 10,000/yr., Tier 1 Credit Approved, $2999 due @ signing. Payments plus tax. All Rebates Applied. See Dealer for Details.
leave message
542
Logistics/ Transportation
542
Logistics/ Transportation
542
Logistics/ Transportation
542
Logistics/ Transportation
542
Logistics/ Transportation
For 60 years, CDS has offered drivers opportunity, stability, and a balance between time at home and driving duties.
819954
CDS
transportation
758 Miscellaneous
TABLE, 4 rolling captains chairs, $150, MICROWAVE, 100 watt, $50, (3) wall prints, modern, $300 all or will separate, CHAIRS, light gray folding, $8 each, Dishes cups glasses, $20 all. 570-212-0432 TIRES (2) Winterforce snow. 75/70R / 13, mounted on 92 Geo Prizm rims. Like new, $100 for all. 570-825-8438 TIRES, (4) Good Year, for Wrangler AT/S. 265/70R17. 25,000 miles, lots of rubber. $200. 570-606-9882 TIRES. (4) Michelin Primacy MXV-4 tires. 1500 miles on each. $400 all. 570-735-3438 TRUCK CAP. fits Toyota Tacoma, Fiberglass, good condition. $150 570-675-7142 TYPE WRITER, Brother, electric, $5. BOOKS (15) paperbacks, $.50 each, (10) hardcover, $1 each. VASES, (10) glass, various sizes, $.50 each. SHEETS, double size, $.50 each. 570-822-5560 VIDEO NOW, and accessories. Personal video player for children 6 and up. Battery operated, new. $25. 570-696-1927 WARMERS, Towel, $50, Herbal Hand and feet, (2) neck (2) $45, STONE KIT, warm $30 570-740-1188
815
Dogs
POMERANIAN
AKC registered. 2 males. Shots & wormed 12 weeks $350-$400.
Puppies
HUNLOCK CREEK
DURYEA $339,900
570-864-2643
ROTTIES HUSKIES Yorkies, Chihuahuas Labs & More Bloomsburg 389-7877 Hazleton 453-6900 Hanover 829-1922 Teacup, CKC, 9 weeks. Non-shedding & hypo-allergenic, 1st shots. $700-$850. 570-436-5083 Over 36 Acres of trails and views. This meticulously maintained property features 2 Ranch Homes with Attached Garages, Detached 2-Car Garage, and ponds. Walk-out basement with coal burner. Additional 30.09 acres can be purchased. MLS#13-1889 $429,000 Call Cindy King 570-690-2689
www.cindykingre.com
YORKIE PUPS
788
Stereo/TV/ Electronics
5 CD PLAYER, Technics, MCS series, and a 3040 stereo graphic equalizer, both $65. 287-2760 ENTERTAINMENT CENTER, Sauder, $75. 570-288-4847 PICTURE SHOW, Brookstone, digital, new. $95. STEREO SYSTEM, Samsung, $135. 288-9936
YORKIE-BICHON PUPPIES
Signature Properties
NEW PRICE This 4 bedroom, 2 1/2 bath Cape Cod style home has so much to offer! Plenty of room for everyone. Master bedroom with walkin closet and full bath, family room with fireplace, recreation room with half bath in lower level. Hardwood floors on 1st floor, new windows, above ground pool. MLS #13-1109 $174,900 Tracy Zarola 574-6465
3 Crestview Drive Sprawling multilevel, well-constructed and continuously maintained. 5,428 sq. ft. of living space. Living room and formal dining room with two-way gas fireplace and hardwood flooring. Eat-in kitchen with island. Florida room with flagstone floor. 5 bedrooms, 4 baths, 2 half-baths. Lower level recroom with fireplace and wet bar leads to heated, in-ground pool. Beautifully landscaped twoacre lot. $525,000. MLS#13-1309 Call Joe Moore 570-288-1401
45 Old Grandview Ave. Immaculate 3 bedroom, 2 3/4 bath, attached 2 car garage, BiLevel is close to Dallas Area schools, shopping and 309/415. Each bedroom boasts double closets. Lower level family room with fireplace, and LL laundry. Landscaped, new roof, screened porch and patio. MLS#13-626 $200,000 Barbara Mark 696-5414
316 Raspberry Rd. Blueberry Hills Like new 2 story home with first floor master bedroom and bath. Inground pool on nice corner lot with fenced in yard. Sunroom, hardwood floors, 2 car garage, full unfinished basement www.atlas realtyinc.com MLS 13-610 Call Charlie 570-829-6200
S L
O D
754
696-0723 DALLAS 570-675-5100 IDCR registered, rare small ones, learn more at www.BabyThe Dog.info, or call 570-966-7323. $799 to $999. Mifflinburg, PA Guarantee. DALLAS
Smith Hourigan Group 696-1195 DRUMS DURYEA 1219 SOUTH ST Own this cozy 1/2 double for less than it costs to rent. $42,900 Ed Appnel 570-817-2500
LAWN MOWER. Riding, older Murray, 5 speed, needs repairs. Fix or use for parts. $100. (570) 256-7854
HANOVER
Beautiful home in a lovely setting in the Village of Orange. 2 or 3 bedrooms, 1st floor bedroom, hardwood flooring, large eat in kitchen, 1st floor laundry, 2nd floor cedar closet. Detached garage, barn style shed with loft, many upgrades. New furnace, kitchen floor & recently drilled private well & PIX plumbing. Dont wait, make this home yours & enjoy serenity on the back deck. $119,900 MLS# 13-283 Call/text Donna Cain 947-3824 or Tony Wasco 855-2424 A rare find in the Back Mountain. 4 bedroom 2 bath home. Close to everything on a quiet residential street. Hardwood flooring. Priced to sell at $119,900 MLS 13-1690 call Terry Eckert 570-760-6007
790
756
Medical Equipment
758 Miscellaneous
The Times Leader will accept ads for used private party merchandise only for items totaling $1,000 or less. All items must be priced and state how many of each item. Your name address, email and phone number must be included. No ads for ticket sales accepted. Pet ads accepted if FREE ad must state FREE. You may place your ad online at timesleader.com, or email to classifieds@ timesleader.com or fax to 570-831-7312 or mail to Classified Free Ads: 15 N. Main Street, WilkesBarre, PA. SORRY NO PHONE CALLS.
FREE AD POLICY
POOL ITEMS. (1) Hayward Aquabug, $60, (1) Hayward Extended cycle D.E. Pump & Filter. $225. 570-457-2441, ssmerdon@verizon.net, photos available. PUMP. Pool filter. Best Way Flow Clear, fits all types of easy set pools, 10 to 18. Model 58021, never used. $40 570-902-5598
835
PetsMiscellaneous
762
Musical Instruments
ORGAN, Lowrey Genie, includes bench with separate Casio keyboard. 34H, 21W. Perfect condition. FREE. 570-822-2633
770
Photo Equipment
CAMERA. Pentax 35mm SLR with extra zoom lens and accessories. $100 570-824-6156
WANTED JEWELRY
to occasionally care for my 11 year old Cockapoo. Will pay $25 per night. Responsible adults only, please, with dog experience. Call Cindy 973-229-6606 Yatesville
Ideal location in Hanover Township. Close to high school and shopping. This duplex offers a new furnace, newer roof, most replacement windows, large yard, garage with work area and offstreet parking for a great price. MLS# 13-757 $59,000 Call Cindy King 570-690-2689
www.cindykingre.com
570-696-0843 DALLAS
Signature Properties
Very nice 3 bedroom ranch in BEECH MOUNTAIN LAKES gated community. Large eat-in kitchen with dining area & tile floors. 2 modern baths & laundry room with tile floors. Freshly painted interior & owner is installing new wall to wall carpet in all 3 bedrooms. Home is heated by wood pellet stove in the basement. MLS #13-1935 $142,500 Call/text Donna at 947-3824 or Tony at 855-2424
570-654-1490
EXETER $69,900
570-675-5100
AVOCA $59,900
570-901-1020
DALLAS
772
570-301-3602
The Times Leader will accept ads for used private party merchandise only for items totaling $1,000 or less. All items must be priced and state how many of each item. Your name address, email and phone number must be included. No ads for ticket sales accepted. Pet ads accepted if FREE ad must state FREE. You may place your ad online at timesleader.com, or email to classifieds@ timesleader.com or fax to 570-831-7312 or mail to Classified Free Ads: 15 N. Main Street, WilkesBarre, PA. SORRY NO PHONE CALLS. AIR COMPRESSOR, for car. DC 12-volt. New in box. $10 570-655-2154
FREE AD POLICY
774
Restaurant Equipment
Newberry Estate The Greens 4,000 sq. ft. condo with view of ponds & golf course. Three bedrooms on 2 floors. 5 1/2 baths, 2 car garage & more. $425,000 MLS# 12-1480 Besecker Realty 570-675-3611
901-1020
DUPONT $59,900
1156 Wyoming Ave. Large home with 4 bedrooms, yard with detached 2 car garage, private yard. Home needs a little updating but a great place to start! www.atlasrealtyinc.com MLS 13-865 Call Colleen 570-237-0415
CA$H
$POT,
FOOD SLICER. Restaurant, commercial. New in box. $300, SCALE, commercial digital food weight, new in box. $50. 570-562-1801
WILKESBARREGOLD
(570)48GOLD8 (570)484-6538
L AW N T R A C T O R , Riding, $500, Bikes mens and ladies, $35 both, Pool Table 43x86 $100 570-655-1414 LIONS, pair concrete, flower box, half moon concrete bench, large basket, 3 piece wicker porch set, $35 all. ANTIQUES: Secretary desk, $150, Cedar Chest, $150, Ladies parlor chair, $50, China closet, $50. BED, adjustable single, $100, Rocker $50, Bassinet, White wicker, $50. All excellent. 883-4430 LUAN DOORS, oak stained, pre-hung. 30Wx80Hx1. Hardware included, $15. 570-814-8010 LUGGAGE, Atlantic, carry on 21x15H, Duffle bag, 20Wx12H, garment bag 23Wx43H. Pierre Cardin, 2 piece, Large piece, 20Wx9 1/2Dx28H, small carry on, 15 1/2Wx10Hx7, $25. VASE, Gorham, 14 Lady Anne $20. LAMP, wooden, hangs on the wall, nice for reading light $20. 570-288-8689 MISC. DISHES, fruit pattern, service for 8, plus serving pieces. Hardly used, $25. SHADES, roll up, natural color, great for indoor on sun rooms, like new. $8 BEDSPREADS, floral print, both with dustruffles, pillow shams and matching curtains. $25 each set. PLANT STAND, bronze, holds 4 plants. 570-654-3755 MUFFLER & bracket used for Cavalier 95-97. $10. Goodyear regatta 185-70-14 $20. Tire & wheel - P205-75r15 pair. fits Chevy S10 2000+. $45. Perrilli tire 215-60r15 $10. 991-2647 ROASTER, vintage, Kenmore. Workable, on stand. $15. MIRROR, beveled edge, 30x32. $8. 570-678-5488 RUG, Oriental with tassels, 6x9, $300, PLANT STAND, for 3 pots, tile inserts, $30. 570-814-5300 SEWING MACHINE, with cabinet, attachments, knee pedal $25. RUG RUNNERS, Green and bound, 2x14. $20 each or both for $35. 570-287-2760 TANNING BEDS 2 SUNVISION PRO 24S WOLF SYSTEMS. 570-735-2474 UMBRELLA, large for table. 7 1/2. new in box, navy blue. $30. 570-824-8563
902 William St. P lot in Corner Pittston E Twp., 2 bedrooms, N 1.5 baths, move in D condition. I gas furNewer nace N and hot water heater, G new w/w carpet in dining room & living room. Large yard. www.atlasrealtyinc.com MLS 13-767 Tom Salvaggio 570-262-7716
Nestled in the trees on a 1.5 acre corner lot. 4 bedroom, 2 bath home in Glendalough. MSL#13-693 $220,000 JOSEPH P. GILROY REAL ESTATE 288-1444 Call Brenda at 570-760-7999 to schedule your appointment
EXETER $89,900
334 Lidy Road 2 bedroom Ranch with a large yard, could be cute little home with TLC. www.atlasrealtyinc.com. MLS 13-2077 Call Charlie 570-829-6200
DALLAS
Three bedroom, all brick ranch, modern kitchen with all stain less appliances. 1 3/4 baths. Hardwood floors throughout, finished basement, attached one car garage, central air. $189,000 All calls after 5 p.m. 570-706-5014 DALLAS TWP.
DALLAS
DUPONT $84,895
May 28 - $ 1,376.50 We Pay At Least 80% of the London Fix Market Price for All Gold Jewelry
WilkesBarreGold.com or email us at wilkesbarregold@ yahoo.com
BEAR CREEK Priced to sell on West Center Hill Rd. 3 bedroom, 2 bath home with finished basement. MLS# 13-770 REDUCED TO $129,900 JOSEPH P. GILROY REAL ESTATE 288-1444 Call Brenda at 570-760-7999 to schedule your appointment REDUCED 2691 Carpenter Rd. Magnificent raised ranch on estate setting. Total finished four bedroom, 2 bath home. This house features hardwood floors throughout. Finished basement with working fireplace. Large deck with swimming pool, two car detached garage set on 2.4 acres. MLS# 12-3158 $277,900 Dave Rubbico, Jr. 885-2693
206 Cedar St. Neat and tidy one story Ranch home with large unfinished basement which could make a great family room. Rear carport for off street parking. Low maintenance home with 5 rooms, 3 bedrooms. www.atlasrealtyinc.com MLS 13-1914 Colleen Turant 570-237-0415
All shots, neutered, tested,microchipped 824-4172, 9-9 only KITTENS. FREE 4 need good home. On sold food and litter box trained. 570-256-7854 KITTENS. FREE to a good home. 2 black (1 male, 1 female) 2 calico (1 male & 1 females). 8 weeks. Litter trained and eating on their own. 570-328-2316 KITTENS. FREE. Orange tabby, litter trained. Centermoreland. 570-333-0966
570-574-1275
AWNING FRAME. 12x20 metal for a porch canvas awning. Excellent condition. $100 OBO 570-696-1304 BAR STOOLS, (4) $30. MIRROR SET, decorative, 5 width. $20. 570-836-2765 BEER CANS, $.25 each. SODA CANS, $.25 each. BOTTLES, $.50 each, all very old. RECORDS, 13 country western $1 each. MIXES RECORDS (30) 33 1/3, Tom Jones, Andy Williams, Herb Albert. $1 each. BEER OPENER (20) $.50 each. IRONS (5) old, electric $1 each. GRINDER for meat, $3. BEER CANS, Dale Earnhardt (10) $.25 each. YEARBOOK, Kings College, 1965, $15. TAMPER, made from rail road tracks, $5. 570-823-6986 CANOPY. Quik Shade. Instant, 10x10. Like new with wheeled carrying case. $60 570-899-3606 DOG FENCE. Wireless. New in box. $150. 570-693-4219
117-119 Park St. off Hanover Street (Double Side x Side) A great Double Block house, in good condition, great investment opportunity, separate utilities 2 bedrooms each side, Vinyl siding, gas heat, hot water baseboard, Large lot, new fencing some appliances. "THIS IS AN ESTATE, NO SELLERS DISCLOSURE". HOUSE BEING SOLD IN "AS IS CONDITION", ALL TEST, INSPECTIONS, are for informational purposes only. Shown to qualified buyers. Need extra notice to show, tenant occupied one side. Call for appointment and any other questions. Capitol Real Estate John Vacendak Broker 570-735-1810
Spaciously satisfying from the open kitchen/eating area, impressive. Fireplace in great room to an expanded family room, you will enjoy life more in this picturesque 4 bedroom in Laurel Brook Estates. MLS#13-1587 $395,000 Arlene Warunek 570-714-6112
Find Something? Lose Something? Get it back where it belongs with a Lost/Found ad! 570-829-7130
DALLAS
137 Lidys Road P Large 4 bedE room, 2 story N home with new D chimroof and I in April ney liner 2013. N Plenty of G living space for the price. www. atlasrealtyinc.co m MLS 13-215 Call Charlie 570-829-6200
$89,900
EXETER
BEAR CREEK
DALLAS
16 Westminster Dr. You CAN judge a book by its cover! Attractive both inside and out with many upgrades and all of the must haves. Such as hardwood floors, modern kitchenbaths, lower level rec room for additional living space and so much more! Lovely rear concrete patio with above ground pool MLS 13-1373 $189,900 Jay A. Crossin Extension 23 CROSSIN REAL ESTATE 570-288-0770 DALLAS 570-696-6400 DRUMS
19 Thomas St. 4 bedroom, 2 bath with 2 car garage on quiet street. Super yard, home needs TLC, being sold AS IS. www.atlasrealtyinc.com. MLS 13-317 Call Tom 570-262-7716
EXETER
780
Televisions/ Accessories
TELEVISION (2), (1) magnavox, TV, 21, color, remote control. (1) Phillips, color, 22 with remote, $50 each, both in excellent condition. 825-4031 TV Hitachi 51 Digital Projection HDTV. Model 51F59A Stand & TV are single unit. Excellent picture quality. $400 Gary 570-760-8847
DALLAS
815
Dogs
6650 Bear Creek Blvd. A well maintained custom built two story home, nestled on two private acres with a circular driveway. Three bedrooms, large kitchen with center island, Master bedroom with two walk in closets, family room with fireplace, a formal dining room. $275,000 MLS#13-1063 Call Geri 570-862-7432 Lewith & Freeman 696-0888
176 Davenport St. 4 bedrooms, 1 bathroom. Huge detached garage & workshop. Oversized lot on a quiet street. Home needs TLC. Make an Offer! MLS #13-615 $75,000 Mark Nicholson 570-696-0724
424 Simpson St. Good condition Cape Cod. 3 bedroom, 1 full bath in quiet neighborhood. For more info and photos visit: www.atlas realtyinc.com MLS 12-4357 Brian Harashinski 570-237-0689
784
Tools
FENCE CLAMPS, (20) Galv, $.10 each. WRENCHES, (25) very old, $.25 each. CAR JACKS (2) $3 each. BATTERY CABLES, $3 each. TORCH, Kerosene, $5. PIPE, Galv, $3. WHEELS (50) for stroller, wagon, lawn mower, FREE. 570-823-6986 SAW Delta miter $75, Delta table saw $100. Craftsman router 1.5 HP with table $125. Workmate bench $10 All for $300. 417-2653
2 males, 14 weeks, $250 each. Excellent hunting stock and pets. AKC registered. 570-407-0725 570-333-4550
BEAGLE PUPPIES
Perrins Marsh 106 acres, Approximately, 80 acres of water and 26 acres of land with ranch home and pole barn. Full gas lease transfers with property. Partially located in Wyoming and Luzerne Counties. Truly a rare find! MLS# 12-3026 $419,000 Call Cindy King 570-690-2689
www.cindykingre.com
Signature Properties
FOR SALE BY OWNER 9 Westminster Dr. 4 bedroom brick ranch. 2,800 sq. ft. Totally renovated. 2 1/2 car garage. Low taxes, corner lot. See ZILLOW for details. $274,000. Call 570-878-3150
DALLAS
570-675-5100
2 bedroom ranch, completely remodeled, with extra 50 x 100 building lot included. $75,000. 570-299-5415
WEST PITTSTON
19 Glen Riddle Lane Peaceful surroundings overwhelm the senses when you step foot on this lovely property. Tudor style 2 story with 4 bedrooms and 2.5 baths, family room with fireplace. Accessible outdoor deck from kitchen, family room Basement area can be finished off for additional living space. MLS 13-1818 $284,500 Jay A. Crossin Extension 23 CROSSIN REAL ESTA ESTATE 570-288-0770
362 Susquehanna Avenue Completely remodeled, spectacular, 2 story Victorian home, with 3 bedrooms, 1.5 baths, new rear deck, full front porch, tiled baths & kitchen, granite countertops. All cherry hardwood floors throughout, all new stainless steel appliances & lighting. New oil furnace, washer/dryer in first floor bath. Great neighborhood, nice yard. $174,900 (30 year loan, $8,750 down, $739/month, 30 years @ 3.25%) NOT IN FLOOD Call Bob at 570-654-1490
PRICE REDUCTION! BEECH MTN. LAKES Charming 3 bedroom, 2 bath 1,800 sq. ft. home with lower level office, family room & laundry. Propane fireplace, 2 car garage. Quiet cul-de-sac, right near lake. MLS# 13-916 $164,500 Dana Distasio 570-715-9333
226 Church St. Large 2 story with 3 bedrooms and 2 full baths. Extra large room sizes, stained glass and natural woodowork. Not flooded in 2011. MLS #13-190. For more information and photos visit atlasrealtyinc.com. Call Charlie 829-6200
Town Home Clean maintained, end unit with large corner lot. laminate floors in dining room, ceramic tile floors in kitchen and baths. New LG front loading steam washer, back up generator system. $1,500 cash at closing. $117,900. 570-262-0486
MOUNTAINTOP
PAGE 6D
EXETER TWP.
HARDING $249,900
LAFLIN $254,900
NEW PRICE Stately brick 2 story, with in ground pool, covered patio, finished basement, fireplace & wood stove. 3 car attached garage, 5 car detached garage with apartment above. MLS #11-1242 $499,000 Call Joe 613-9080
WARRIOR RUN
1426 Wyoming Ave. You will fall in love with the grand Victorian with magnificent entry foyer, modern kitchen with new counter tops, enclosed 3 season side and rear porch. Renovated large front porch, off street parking and so much more! Property could also be Professional office in home use. MUST SEE MLS 12-3604 $199,900 Jay A. Crossin Extension 23 CROSSIN REAL ESTA ESTATE 570-288-0770
Always wanted an investment property but didn't know where to start??? Look no further! 5 unit!! Everything is updated in great condition. Beautiful apts, fully rented. This opportunity lets you buy, sit back & collect the rents. 2011 new roof, vinyl siding, cellulose insulation, refurbish staircase, 2012 new carpet, stove & fridge in 3 apts, the list goes on. Dont miss out. $109,999 MLS #12-3868 Cal/text Tony at 855-2424 or Donna @ 947-3824
BIG BASS LAKE REDUCED $120,000. This large Chalet has a full kitchen on the ground floor with full bath. Great for two families to share, or in-laws quarters. In Big Bass Lake Community with indoor & outdoor pools, club house, gym & lakefront beaches. Conveniently located near Rts. 380, 435 & 307. Call Tom cell 516-507-9403
Shopping for a new apartment? Classified lets you compare costs without hassle or worry! Get moving with classified!
901-1020
Custom built colonial two-story. 4 bedrooms, 4 baths, two vehicle garage. View of the Wyoming Valley. Located on a dead end, private street, just minutes from the Wyoming Valley Country Club, Hanover Industrial Park, & public transportation. Sun room, family room with wood burning fireplace, hardwood floors on 1st & 2nd floors, 1st floor laundry room & bathroom. Central cooling fan. Lower level recreation room with bar, lots of closets & storage, coal/wood stove, office/5th bedroom & bath. MLS #12-4610 PRICE REDUCED TO $269,900 Louise Laine 283-9100 x20
1385 Mt. Zion Rd. Great country setting on 3.05 acres. Move in condition Ranch with 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, inground swimming pool, hardwood floors. Finished basement with wet bar. 2 car garage, wrap around driveway. For more info and photos visit: www.atlasrealtyinc.com MLS 12-2270 Call Tom 570-262-7716
30 Pine Street 4 bedroom contemporary with a very happy open floor plan. Plenty of natural light and high quality finishes. Nestled in a private setting. The beautiful in ground pool even has its own cabana with a full bath. This home also features natural cedar exterior and a two car garage. $347,000. MLS# 13-1330 Mark Nicholson 570-696-0724
HARDING
689 R. WestminP private ster Very E 2 bedroom home located on N 1.48 acres. CenD tral air, I screened in porch, N 1.5 baths,G large living/dining room, extra 1 story building could be converted into 2 car garage. 16x8 screened in porch, fresh paint. www.atlas realtyinc.com. MLS 13-1622 Call Charlie 570-829-6200
24 Fordham Road Great Split Level in Oakwood Park, Laflin. 13 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 2 1/2 baths. 2 car garage and large corner lot. Lots of space for the large or growing family. www. atlasrealtyinc.com MLS 13-452 Call Charlie 570-829-6200
(LARKSVILLE) Sun., June 2nd 1p to 4p. 34 Allen Dr. Move In Condition, 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, newly painted, new carpeting throughout, 3 season patio, 16 x 34 in-ground pool,tel. 570-3017291, $144,900. also on Zillow.com
OPEN HOUSE
LAFLIN
522
Education/ Training
522
Education/ Training
522
Education/ Training
Great 1 story ranch with nice backyard. 3 bedrooms, 1 bath with large living room and eat it kitchen. MLS #13-1754 $62,000 Call Dave, Jr. 885-2693
283-9100
every hour on the hour from 10 am to 3 pm. Interested applicants encouraged to stop at the facility and bring their resume. Each hour, we will be conducting information sessions on our mission and values, the programs we offer, and the type of youth we serve. A brief question and answer period will follow, along with the ability to complete an application for employment. MAYS provides specialized treatment service to adjudicated and dependent males and females, 12-21 years of age. Positions Available Include: Youth Service Specialists Both Full And Part Time Part Time Overnight Supervisor
MAYS offers outstanding career opportunities for qualified candidates. Benefits package for full time employees include health, vision, dental and life insurance, tuition assistance, short and long term disability, 401K retirement, and paid time off. All candidates must be at least 21 years of age, have a valid PA Drivers license, submit to pre-employment drug testing, be free of communicable diseases, obtain criminal, federal and child abuse clearances and be able to effectively manage youth in a residential setting. MAYS is an equal opportunity employer and appreciates the benefits of a diverse workforce.
(MAYS) Manager & Operator of the PA Child Care Facility in Pittston Township
Doyouneedmorespace? A yard or garage sale in classified is the best way tocleanoutyourclosets! Youre in bussiness with classified!
HANOVER TWP.
Rubbico Real Estate 826-1600 HANOVER TWP. NEW LISTING! Like new townhome. 3 bedrooms, 2.5 bath; two-story townhome featuring a two-story Great room, hardwood flooring throughout, gas fireplace, granite tops, stainless steel appliances, maple glazed cabinets in the kitchen and a two-car garage. MLS #13-1960 $245,000 Maribeth Jones 696-6565
310 LOCKVILLE RD. Restored 2 story colonial on 2.23 acres. Open family room to kitchen. original hardwood, bar, pool, new furnace with central air. Five car garage and much more. Perfect serene setting on corner lot. www.atlas realtyinc.com MLS# 12-3496 A MUST SEE! REDUCED $259,900 Call Nancy Bohn 570-237-0752
HARVEYS LAKE 184 Rock St. P brick Spacious Ranch E with 3 bedrooms, N large living room with D fireplace. 3 I large baths, Florida room N with AC. Full finG ished basement with 4th bedroom, 3/4 bath, large rec room with wet bar. Also a cedar closet and walk up attic. www. atlasrealtyinc.co m MLS 12-3626 Call Charlie 570-829-6200
201 N. Highland Dr. (Off Yatesville Rd. from 315 by Oblates.) Owner re-locating out of state, must sell this quality-built two story with 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, TV room off kitchen, full basement, large deck. Convenient location, close to major highways, close to high school. This is a lovely family hole. A Must See Home! MLS#12-273 GO TO THE TOP... CALL
PRICE REDUCED! OAKWOOD PARK If you like comfort & charm, youll love this sparkling 4,100 + sq. ft. 5 bedroom, 4 bath two story traditional home in perfect condition in a great neighborhood. Nothing to do but move right in. Offers formal living & dining rooms, 1st floor family room with fireplace, granite countertops in kitchen & baths, lower level recreation room with fireplace & wet bar. MLS #13-549 Only $324,900 Call Barbara Metcalf 570-696-0883
R. 1104 Springbrook Cape Cod home with endless possibilities. 3-4 bedroom, 1 bath, central air, plenty of storage. Enclosed porch, garage with carport. Situated on 3 lots. Directions: 181, Exit 180 Moosic (Rt. 11) L. onto 502, straight 1/2 mile. Turn R onto 8th St., up hill, turn left, house 3rd on right. www.atlasrealtyinc.com MLS 13-607 Call Keri Best 570-885-5082
MOUNTAIN TOP
570-696-3801
209 Constitution Avenue Meticulously maintained 4 bedroom, 2 story, vinyl sided, 5 year old home situated on a generous lot. Large, modern kitchen, 3 baths, 1st floor family room, 2 car garage, deck and soooo much more! MLS #11-2429 $269,900 Call Florence Keplinger @ 715-7737
570-288-7481
548 Medical/Health
548 Medical/Health
Smith Hourigan Group 474-6307 HANOVER TWP. 10 DAVID ROAD This brick beauty on a corner lot boasts 4 bedrooms, 2 full & 2 half baths, a spacious, modern kitchen with granite island & counters, family room with fireplace, media room, living room, formal dining room, finished lower level with pool table & powder room, in ground pool, sunporch, central air, 3 bay carport + 2 car garage - Wyoming Valley Country Club, Hanover Industrial Parks & Rte. 81 access nearby. $330,000 Call Pat today @ 570-287-1196
CNA
(FT, PT Available!)
OPEN HOUSE Sun., June 2nd, 1-3 PRICE REDUCED! 22 Wood Street Nice cottage with lake rights, close to the public boat dock. New kitchen & living room ceilings & insulation just completed. Enjoy this place during the Summer months or year round. Recently updated with new roof & floors. MLS# 12-3820 $64,900 Pat Doty 394-6901
KINGSTON $139,900
& RN
(Per Diem Only) Now Hiring For All Shifts! (Certification/License Req.) *Competitive Pay Rates* Great Facility & Opportunity For Growth Jump Start Your Career Today! Contact 877-339-6999 x1 for information Email resumes to Jobs@horizonhrs.com Subject line: ATTN -BirchwoodOr apply in person at: 395 Middle Rd Nanticoke, PA 18634
Extraordinary quality built 4000+ sq. ft. Home - rear yard with stone patio backs up to the 8th Fairway of the Wyoming Valley Country Club! Custom cherry eatin kitchen with island, formal living, dining & family rooms have custom hardwood floors, 1st floor family room has Vermont Stone fireplace & wet bar, 1st floor Master Suite has his & her dressing rooms & powder rooms opening to a tiled master bath with jetted tub & separate tiled shower. Second floor has 3 additional bedrooms with walk in closets, 2 full baths & large attic, gigantic lower level family room has stone fireplace, seated bar area with sink & mirrored backsplash, workout area & powder room. Stunning landscaping with an indoor & outdoor speaker system, oversized 2 car garage & underground sprinkler system. $395,000 Call Pat today @ 570-287-1196
129 S. Dawes Ave. Three bedroom, 2 bath cape cod with central air, new windows, doors, carpets and tile floor. Full concrete basement with 9' ceilings. Walking distance to Wilkes Barre. Electric and Oil heat. MLS #123283. For more information and photos visit www.atlasrealtyinc.com. Call Tom 570-262-7716
111 Laflin Road Nice 3 edroom, 1.5 bath Split Level home with hardwood floors, 1 car garage, large yard and covered patio in very convenient location. Great curb appeal and plenty of off street parking. Rt. 315 to light @ Laflin Rd. Turn west onto Laflin Rd. Home is on left. For more info and photos visit: www.atlas realtyinc.com MLS 12-2852 Keri Best 570-885-5082
16 KARIN DRIVE Well cared for, spacious Split Level home on a corner acre lot. Featuring 3 bedrooms, 1 1/2 modern baths, formal dining room, modern kitchen. Huge family room with a wet bar & propane fireplace, glass & screened enclosed back porch & 2 car garage. MLS# 13-1004 $ 184,900 Call Florence Keplinger 814-5832
HARDING $214,900
205 Lakeside Drive 3 bedroom 3 bath, Lake Front Cape Cod with very spacious rooms. Central air, first floor master bedroom and oversized dock with boatslip. Home also features a two car garage. There is a sewer hookup. Permit already in place for the Lakeshore. Build your boathouse this summer! $ 480,000 MLS# 12-1362 Mark Nicholson Or Buz Boback 570-696-0724
Large 4 bedroom with master bedroom and bath on 1st floor. New gas furnace and water heater with updated electrical panel. Large lot with 1 car garage, nice location. www.atlasrealtyinc.com. Must be sold to settle estate MLS 13-294 Call Charlie 570-829-6200
64 Center St.
KINGSTON
JENKINS TWP.
533
533
533
Lewith & Freeman Real Estate, Inc. 570-696-6400 HARVEYS LAKE 605 Apple Tree Rd Beautiful. Over 1 acre setting for this all brick, 2 bedroom Ranch, 2 car attached garage and 3 car detached. Modern kitchen with center island and granite countertops, modern tile bath with seated shower, central air, gas fireplace, sun porch, full basement. This could qualify for 100% financing through a rural housing mortgage. www.atlasrealtyinc.com MLS 13-1729 Lu Ann 570-602-9280
Ken Pollock Nissan, the areas most progressive dealer, is looking for an:
184 State Route 29 Nice charming home in Harveys Lake. Open eat in kitchen, 2 bedrooms, 1 1/2 bath and a nice large private lot. Home also offers a 2 car detached garage. Home is just waiting for your personal touch. $142,900 MLS#13-1787 Call/text Donna Cain 947-3824 or Tony Wasco 855-2424
NEW PRICE Absolutely Beautiful! Move right in to this elegant 2 bedroom, 2 full bath condo, located out of the flood zone. Hardwood floors, new carpet, granite & stainless kitchen, airy loft, private rear deck, lots of light, tons of storage, tastefully decorated, and low HOA fees! $229,000 Call Christine @ 332-8832
80 James St. This stately 4 bedroom, 1.5 bath Kingston home has the WOW factor! Meticulously well cared for with old world touches throughout. Like a stained glass window, built ins and tiled fireplace in living room. Kitchen is modern eat in with washer/dryer closet for convenience. Large front porch, rear deck and detached garage. MLS 13-1761 $289,000 Jay A. Crossin Extension #23 CROSSIN REAL ESTA ESTATE 570-288-0770
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MOUNTAINTOP
10 Fairfield Drive Exceptional & spacious custom built cedar home with open floor plan and all of the amenities situated on 2 lots in picturesque setting. Create memories in this 5 bedroom, 4 bath home with 18 ceiling in living room, gas fireplace, granite kitchen, large 2 story foyer, huge finished lower level for entertaining with bar/full kitchen & wine cellar. Inground pool & hot tub. Directions: Rt 315 to Laflin Rd., right onto Oakwood Dr., right onto Fordham Rd, left onto Fairfield Dr., home is on the right. www.atlas realtyinc.com MLS 12-4063 Call Keri Best 570-885-5082
NEW LISTING! 181 Prospect Rd. Delightful 1800+/sq. ft. bi-level. 3 bedrooms, modern kitchen with granite counters & island, stainless steel appliances. Hardwood in kitchen & dining room. 3 updated baths. Large deck off the kitchen & lower level family room with woodburning fireplace, wet bar & sliders to screened patio. Central air, supplemental coal stove, 2-car garage & half acre level lot. For more details go to: w w w. p r u d e n t i a l realestate.com & enter PRU7W7A3 in the Home Search. Listed at $219,900. MLS#13-1494. Mary Ellen Belchick 696-6566, Walter Belchick 696-2600 ext. 301.
613-9080 LAFLIN
LAFLIN $109,000
696-2600
MOUNTAIN TOP
Or apply in person at Ken Pollock Nissan 229 Mundy Street Wilkes-Barre, PA 18702
An affordable double priced right for the savvy investor or live-in owner. This double block has 6 rooms each side, brand new kitchens, updated baths, separate utilities, yard & off street parking from rear alley. Only $59,900! Call PAT today @
HUNTINGTON TWP.
570-901-1020 WIKLES-BARRE
Immaculate Cape Cod in the country with a beautiful view. Three bedrooms, Florida room & eat in kitchen. MLS #13-1664 $159,900 Ken Williams 542-8800 Five Mountains Realty 570-542-2141
Former Holy Trinity Church. Open main floor with choir loft and basement facilities room. Parking for 30+ vehicles and detached garage. $117,500. MLS#13-1292 Call Jeff Cook
3 bedroom Bi-Level situated on lovely lot with formal dining room, lower level family room with gas fireplace, central air, conveniently located to interstates & Casino. A must see! MLS #13-1100 $199,000 Marie Montante 881-0103
147 Haverford Drive Nicely kept 2 bedroom, 1.5 bath townhome in desirable neighborhood. Great looking family room in lower level. Spacious rooms with plenty of closets. Outdoor patio with pavers and trees for privacy. Carpet, tiled kitchen counter and AC unit are ALL NEW! Move in condition. www. atlasrealtyinc.com MLS 13-909 Call Terry 570-885-3041
288-9371
WAYNE COUNTY QUIET, PEACEFUL LOT ON PRIVATE, NON-MOTORBOATING LAKE; YEAR ROUND, GREAT RETIREMENT OR VACATION PROPERTY; SEE DETAILS AND PICTURES AT: LAKEHOUSE.COM AD# 275333 OR CALL JIM 570-785-3888 $269,900 TAXES LESS THAN $2,500.
316 Cedar Manor Drive Bow Creek Manor. Meticulously maintained 4 bedroom, 3 1/2 bath, 2 story on almost 1 acre. Master bedroom suite. Two family rooms. Two fireplaces. Office/den. Central vac., security system. Many extras. Large deck overlooking a private wooded yard. 3 car garage. $345,000 MLS# 13-1360. Ask for Bob Kopec Humford Realty, Inc. 570-822-5126.
PITTSTON $64,900
OPEN HOUSE Sunday, May 19th, 1pm-3pm 46 Red Maple Ave. Located in a quiet community this home offers many amenities including large yard, deck, central air & shed with electric. Inside you will find a bright kitchen open to dining room, updated full bath, spacious family/rec room & office. Newer roof & gutters top off this great property. Directions: South on Main, past church Rd. intersection, left on Red Maple. MLS#13-1650 $187,000 Call Jim Banos 570-991-1883 for appointment Coldwell Banker Rundle Real Estate 570-474-2340 MOUNTAINTOP
1210 S. Hanover St. Large 3 bedroom 1 bath home with a big yard. Possible off street parking in the back off the alley. This home has replacement windows on the second floor and awnings over the windows. This will be a great home with a little TLC. MLS# 13-2093 $65,900 John Polifka 570-704-6846 FIVE MOUNTAINS REALTY 570-542-2141
62 Pine St. Enjoy the warm weather in this 3 bedroom, 1 bathroom home with great curb appeal, sunroom and patio. New roof and newer windows. (Traveling N. on Main St. Pittston turn R. onto Pine St., home is on left) MLS 13-1897 Call Keri Best 570-885-5082
''Busy People Compatible''. Enjoy the daily convenience of living in the vicinity of what's happening ''Woodcrest Estates''. Move in ready, finished lower level, relax on rear deck with view of Mohegan Sun. MLS#13-1110 $120,000 Arlene Warunek 570-714-6112
20 Nittany Lane Affordable 3 level townhome features 2 car garage, 3 bedrooms, 3.5 baths, lower level patio and upper level deck, gas fireplace, central air and vac and stereo system www.atlasrealtyinc.com MLS 13-871 Call Colleen 570-237-0415
NANTICOKE
PITTSTON $89,900
1472 S. Hanover St. Well maintained bi-level house features 2 bedrooms, 1 3/4 baths, recreation room with propane stove. Wall to wall, 3 season porch. Professionally landscaped yard. Storage shed, new appliances, ceiling fans. Close to LCCC. $153,900. Call 570-735-7594 or 570-477-2410
Inviting home with 90 of lakefront & beautiful covered dock. Huge great room opens to kitchen & features handsome stone fireplace, custom built-ins & long window seat offering great views of the lake. First floor master walks out to beautiful 3 season porch which is also lakefront. Two large upstairs bedrooms can hold a crowd. Huge laundry/pantry made for entertaining. MLS# 11-2958 $299,000 Rhea Simms 570-696-6677
NEW LISTING! Spacious brick ranch home boasts 3 large bedrooms, 1.5 baths. New carpet in bedrooms & living room. New flooring in kitchen. Large deck with above ground pool. Recently installed new roof, furnace & water heater. MLS# 13-1887 $120,000 Christine Pieczynski 696-6569
Lovely four square home with great curb appeal. Beautiful chestnut woodwork throughout from the two way staircases, French doors from foyer & built in bookcases separating the living & dining rooms. Relax on the flagstone front porch. MLS#13-2038 $205,000 Arlene Warunek 570-714-6112
Beautiful 4 bedroom, 3 bath. Enjoy the amenities of a private lake, boating, basketball courts, etc. The home has wood floors and carpeting throughout. French doors in the kitchen that lead you out to the large rear deck for entertaining. The backyard has 2 utility sheds for storage MLS 12-1695 NEW PRICE $174,900 Call Karen Coldwell Banker Rundle Real Estate 570-474-2340
43 Richmont Ave. Worth more than listed price, this 3 bedroom, 2 bath Cape Cod home has central air, hardwood floors, fenced yard, above ground pool, modern kitchen and baths. www.atlasrealtyinc.com MLS 13-789 Tom Salvaggio 570-262-7716
SHAVERTOWN $197,500
17 Stoney Creek Plains, PA 18702 Welcome Home'' Located in the quiet development of Mill Creeks Acres, this home is situated in the hub of shopping, dining and entertainment. The hospital & major highway access are within a few minutes drive. The center foyer welcomes you into the living room complete with gas fireplace. Eat in kitchen is perfect for family gatherings. MLS#13-915 $ 220,000
WILKES-BARRE $174,900
Search No More! This five-year old home is exquisitely designed. Every room has gorgeous details & lots of upgrades. The landscape is breathtaking & the location could not be better. This home truly stands out in every way! MLS# 13-1359 $374,900 Robert Altmayer 570-793-7999 Rundle Real Estate 570-474-2340 NANTICOKE
57 Dewitt St. Cute Cape Cod with 3 bedrooms, vinyl replacement windows, Pergo flooring and walk up attic. Put this one on your list. www.atlas realtyinc.com MLS 13-1038 CALL CHARLIE 570-829-6200
PITTSTON $114,900
60 Vonderheid St. Well maintained traditional colonial minutes from the cross valley in a quiet neighborhood. 7 rooms with 3 bedrooms and 2 baths, fireplace, large yard, & deck. Kitchen and bathrooms recently rennovated and MORE! Call Andy 570-762-4358 SHAVERTOWN
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PITTSTON
115 Hemlock St. Lots of updates in this roomy Cape Cod in a desirable neighborhood. Large eat in kitchen with new flooring. Finished basement with theater/rec room. Large level yard. Priced to sell! MLS 12-4231 Call Kevin Sobilo 570-817-0706
MULTI-FAMILY Two houses for the price of one! Two story in front & double-wide in rear. Great for 2 families or investor opportunity. Off street parking & NOT in flood zone. MLS #13-970 $148,000 Call Cindy King Today! 570-690-2689
www.cindykingre.com
Signature Properties
SWOYERSVILLE STEEPLECHASE PRICE REDUCED 3 unit, centrally located. Off street parking, yard, newer roof & furnace, replacement windows, vinyl siding, sheds, deck, sun rooms, laundry hook-ups. 1st floor has 2 bedrooms, eat-in oak kitchen, foyer, living, dining & laundry rooms. Pantry, deck, heated sunroom. 2nd floor has living room, eat-in kitchen, 2 bedrooms, sunroom, full bath & porch. MLS #12-3580 $89,900 Call Ron Kozak 570-817-1362 WAPWALLOPEN 359 Pond Hill Mountain Road
PRICE REDUCED! Mt. Zion Road. Single family two story - a place for kids! Four bedrooms & bath upstairs. 1st floor has formal dining room, living room, family room & laundry room. Master bedroom & bath added to the 1st floor. Good sized kitchen. 2,126 sq. ft. total on 1 acre. Wyoming Area School District. MLS # 13-700 $119,900 Call Ruth K. Smith 570-696-5411
570-675-5100
245 East Ridge St. Great home in move in condition. Modern kitchen & bath, dining room, living room, 3 bedrooms, Appliances, detached garage in rear of lot. Aluminum siding. $74,900 Shown by appointment CAPITOL REAL ESTATE Call listing agent for additional info 570-735-1810 John Vacendak Broker 570-735-1810 570-823-4290
328 S. Main St. 3 story Victorial with 10 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, 2 car garage with newer driveway. Central air, large yard. www.atlasrealtyinc.com MLS 13-1073 Call Tom Tom 570-262-7716
PITTSTON $114,900
NANTICOKE
265 Kirmar Parkway. 3 bedroom Cape Cod style home on large lot with off street parking. 1st floor master bedroom, 2 season sunroom, partial finished basement, fenced yard, lots of storage, large modern eat in kitchen. MLS 13-1077 $89,900 ANTONIK & ASSOCIATES, INC. Patricia Lunski 570-735-7497 NANTICOKE
67 Carroll St. The WOW factor! Move right in and enjoy this renovated home with no worries! 3 bedrooms with lots of closet space. 2 full baths including a 4 piece master bath with custom tile work, open floor plan with modern kitchen with island, corner lot with off street parking and nice yard. Come and take a look! www.atlasrealtyinc.com MLS 13-863 Call Colleen 570-237-0415
Room for all your needs! 4 bedroom home offers living & dining rooms AND an extra room for whatever you need. Separate laundry room on 1st floor, new carpeting in 3 bedrooms, new water heater in 2010, new Bath Fitter tub/shower. Recently re-graveled driveway, nice sized outdoor storage shed & plenty of off street parking. MLS #13-360 $95,000 Call/text Donna at 947-3824 or Tony at 855-2424
PLAINS 39 Slope St For sale by owner, 3 bedrooms, 1 1/2 baths, modern eatin kitchen, large deck, off street parking on a 50 X 150 lot, nice neighborhood, all appliances included. Asking $92,000 call 310-1697 for appointment
PLAINS
901-1020 PITTSTON
PITTSTON $134,900
PRICE REDUCTION Lots of room to breathe in this spacious 2 story with an open floor plan. New gas furnace, replacement windows, dual zone heat. First floor is updated, 2nd floor needs modernizing. MLS #13-405 $90,000 Call Arlene Warunek 570-714-6112
FOR SALE BY OWNER 2 bedroom, 1 bath single family home for sale in a quiet neighborhood, out of flood zone with low tax rates. Move in ready with many recent updates including new furnace (2007), electrical, new windows, roof, & updated kitchen, appliances & washer/dryer included. Great starter home. $69,500. For more information or to set an appointment call Greg at 570-954-3712
50 Grandville Drive Outstanding 3 bedroom, 2 1/2 bath townhouse out of the flood zone. Formal dining room, family room, master bedroom suite, private guest suite also on upper level. Central air and central vacuum. Deck, garage + many extras. Freshly painted and carpeted, so move right in! PHFA financing $5,200 down, monthly payment $797. interest rate of 4%. $172,000. MLS # 13-195. Ask for Bob Kopec Humford Realty Inc 570-822-5126 SWOYERSVILLE
4 bedroom home features a great yard with over 2 acres of property. Situated across from a playground. Needs some TLC but come take a look, you wouldnt want to miss out. There is a pond at the far end of the property that is used by all surrounding neighbors. This is an estate and is being sold as is. No sellers property disclosure. Will entertain offers in order to settle estate. MLS 11-962 $49,900 Call Karen Coldwell Banker Rundle Real Estate 570-474-2340
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70 N. Meade 3BR, P 1 bath in move in condiE new tion with N box, electric water heater, D and plumbing. I Off street parkN for 3 ing in rear cars, Ggood credit and your house, taxes & insurance would be under $400/month. MLS #12-3900. For more information and photos visit www.atlasrealtyinc.com. Call Tom 570-262-7716
105 Plymouth Ave. This lovely Bi-level home features 3 bedrooms, 1 and 1/2 bathrooms, in ground pool with pool bar and deck, central air. Hardwood floors, gas fireplace, finished lower level, fenced in yard and 2 year garage with ONE YEAR HOME WARRANTY. (directions: Old RIver Road to Dagobert, at 2nd stop sign turn R onto Plymouth Ave. Home is on left in 2nd block) www.atlas realtyinc.com MLS 13-2144 Keri Best 570-885-5082
WILKES-BARRE $72,900
WEST WYOMING
WILKES BARRE PRICE REDUCED $49,900
35 Hillard St. STOP WASTING MONEY!! If you are paying more than $600/month rent you need to look at this house. Your mortgage, taxes and insurance could be less!!! Ask me how! Move in condition 3 bedroom home with nice yard, modern kitchen and 1st floor laundry. For more info and photos visit: www.atlas realtyinc.com MLS 12-1655 Colleen Turant 570-237-0415
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124 School St. (quiet street off W. Center) Dont wait! Giving to realtor on 6/1/13 which will increase the price. 3 bedroom, 1.5 bath on .20 acre lot, new window and roof. Look for sale by owner signs. 570-313-5571 SHICKSHINNY LAKE
288-6654
Smith Hourigan Group 570-696-1195 15 High St. Well kept newly remodeled, 2 story home, with modern kitchen, central air, new triple pane replacement windows and custom made blinds for each window. Home is in move in condition, with plaster walls and design ceilings, plus much, much more. A MUST SEE! MLS 13-1088 Fred Mecadon 570-817-5792
Very well cared for 3 bedroom home in move in condition. Large eat in kitchen, nice yard, freshly painted bedrooms with new carpet. Newer windows. Not Flooded www.atlasrealtyinc.com MLS 13-2032 Colleen Turant 570-237-0415
332 W. 8th St. Out of Flood Area 8 rooms, 2 baths, family room with gas stone, fireplace and flagstone floor. Oak, hardwood floors and slate foyer. Newer windows, custom made drapes. All appliances, 1st floor laundry. Gas heat, large cedar closet. Very clean large full concrete basement. Exterior stone front and back and vinyl siding. Concrete driveway with multiple parking in back. Professional landscaping, nice yard. Move in Ready! a Must See! $165,000 570-693-0560 WHITE HAVEN
735 N. Washington Street Spacious 2 story, 3 bedrooms with 2 ca detached garage, good starter home, needs TLC. MLS #12 3887. For more information and pho tos visit www.atlasre altyinc.com. Call Tom 570-262-7716
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WILKES-BARRE $87,500
WILKES-BARRE $52,900
WILKES-BARRE
NEW LISTING 260-262 E. Green Street Double Block Plenty of parking with paved back alley. Close to LCCC. New roof installed in 2007 along with a kitchen & bath update in #260. MLS #13-694 $65,900 Call Dana Distasio 570-715-9333
PITTSTON $182,000
NANTICOKE
25 Swallow St. Grand 2 story home with Victorial features, large eat in kitchen with laundry, 3/4 bath on first floor, 2nd bath with claw foot tub, lots of closet space. Move in ready, off street parking in rear. MLS 12-3926 Call Colleen 570-883-7594
Lake Front Property at Shickshinny Lake! 4 Bedrooms, 2.75 baths, 2 kitchens, living room, large family room. 2 sunrooms, office & laundry room. Two car attached garage with paved driveway, above ground pool, dock & 100' lake frontage. $375,000 MLS #12-860 Kenneth Williams 570-542-2141
247 Lehigh St. Cozy 2 story move right in, gas heat, central air, 3 bedrooms, 1 bath. www.atlasrealtyinc.com MLS 13-1510 Tom Salvaggio 570-262-7716
Former Blessed Sacrament Church, Rectory and paved parking lot. 4,372 Sq. ft. Church, 1,332 Sq. Ft. Rectory. Parking for +/-40 vehicles. Three adjacent lots, for one price: $130,000 MLS#12-4116 Call Jeff Cook
Beautiful 3 bedroom home tucked away on your own 46 acre retreat. This property offers a pond, stream, 2 decks & a screened in porch. Home offers 2 1/2 baths + 1st floor master bed room with deck. updated kitchen & skylights. Dont pass this amazing opportunity by. Call for your showing today. MLS#13-995 $299,900 Call/text Donna 947-3824 or Tony at 855-2424
61 Puritan Lane Are you spending more than $400/mo on rent?? Owning this home could cost you less! With 3 bedrooms and a fenced in yard, this home makes a perfect place to start your homeownership experience. Ask me how! MLS #12-1823. For more information and photos visit www.atlasrealtyinc.com. Call Colleen 570-237-0415
Best of both worlds...Commercial space plus 2-3 bedroom home complete with detached garage and off street parking with yard. Home has been nicely remodeled with 1 3/4 baths, hardwood floors, move in condition. Commercial space is 14x26 with endless possibilities. www. atlasrealty inc.com MLS 13-982 Call Colleen 570-237-0415
901-1020
944
PLAINS TOWNSHIP
FOR SALE BY OWNER 3 bedroom ranch, 1 1/2 baths, large eat in kitchen. Family & sun rooms. Finished basement with laundry room 1.5 car garage. Lots of storage & closet space. New roof service panel & newer appliances Hardwood floors & vinyl siding. 1 mile from Wyoming Valley Mall & VA Hospital. Easy access to I-81 & 315. $177,900 (570)824-6533 Have you always dreamed of owning a lakefront home? Don't miss the opportunity to own this stunning 3,000 sq. ft. 3 bedroom, 3 bath home w/100' lakefront with dock. Offers attractive Florida room with vaulted ceiling overlooking the lake, plus formal living room with fireplace, dining room, family room with fireplace, den & 2 car garage. Power boat for water skiing & jet skiing permitted. MLS# 13-310 $339,900 Call Barbara Metcalf 570-696-0883
Commercial Properties
944
Commercial Properties
944
Commercial Properties
944
Commercial Properties
944
Commercial Properties
Modern, well maintained 4 bedroom home in move in condition. Covered patio, in ground pool, private fenced yard, ductless air, vinyl siding. Immaculate! MLS# 13-534 $159,900 Call Ann Marie Chopick 570-288-6654
69 Curtis St. Spacious 3 bedrooms home, rebuilt in 1980 with 2 full baths and a 3/4 master bath. Private pool area with brand new liner, 2 car garage with 1/2 bath and full 2nd story for hobby room, etc. Located at the end of dead end street, affords lots of privacy. www.atlasrealtyinc.com MLS 13-2079 Call Charlie 570-829-6200
PLAINS $57,500
13 Warner St. Move in ready starter home with off street parking, fenced yard, and a large deck! MLS 13-1862 Kevin Sobilo 570-817-0706
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Full Service Leases Custom Design Renovation Various Size Suites Available Medical, Legal, Commercial Utilities Parking Janitorial Full Time Maintenance Staff Available
570-696-3801
PAGE 8D
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com 909 Income & Commercial Properties 909 Income & Commercial Properties 909 Income & Commercial Properties 909 Income & Commercial Properties 912 Lots & Acreage
DALLAS
WILKES-BARRE $99,900
WYOMING
NANTICOKE
KINGSTON
PITTSTON $129,900
SWOYERSVILLE
77 Schuler St. NOTHING to do but move right in! This home has everything you need...3 bedrooms, 2.5 baths, large fenced in yard, screened in porch, off street parking, quiet neighborhood. Home recently remodeled inside & out. www.atlas realtyinc.com MLS 13-467 Call Colleen 570-237-0415
Former Holy Trinity Rectory. 5 bedroom, 4 1/2 baths. Large living room/dining room. 1st and 2nd floor Sunroom. Cedar closet. Plenty of storage space. Many possibilities. $130,000 MLS#13-1294 Call Jeff Cook
WILKES-BARRE 242 Park Ave. Vacant and ready for You! Large 2 story, 3 bedroom, 2 baths gas heat, front porch, close to GAR high school. Call Ainslie 570-954-5097 MLS#12-3383. NEW price $29,900 GO TO THE TOP... CALL
Nicest part of Wyoming, within walking distance of 10th Street Elementary School. 3 levels of living space, great family home with new above ground pool & deck. 4 bedrooms, 2 full baths, finished lower level. Master suite with new full bath and large walk in closet. New windows entire house. NEVER FLOODED! Very deceiving, must see! Motivated seller, Reduced Price $173,000 570-885-6848
Working restaurant with 2-Unit Apartments for additional income. Restaurant includes all commercial restaurant equipment, tables and chairs. Space features take-out area and additional dining room with seating for approx. 30. Side lot can hold up to approx. 6 cars with expansion. Each Apartments rents for $475/per month. MLS#13-1900 $129,900 Call Cindy King 570-690-2689
www.cindykingre.com
Great opportunity for this 2,900 sq. ft. professional office building in high traffic area. Last used as a veterinary clinic, but is easily adapted for other uses. See how this space can be used for you! Open entry space, individual offices, full basement for storage, central air, and gas heat. Parking for 12 cars. MLS-12-416 $339,000 Call Rhea for details 570-696-6677
224 William St. Are you a hairdresser or barber? Need a space for an in home business? This might be just what youre looking for. Well maintained 4 bedroom home with salon (previously a barber shop for 60 years). Very well established, high visibility location and additional home with 3 bedrooms currently rented to a tenant. Must be sold as one package. www.atlasrealtyinc.com MLS 13-216 Call Charlie 570-829-6200
Great investment property. On corner lot. Close to all major highways & conveniences. Bring all offers. 1 unit needs to be updated & you are all done. MLS #13-1983 $160,000 Call Pat Doty at 570-394-6901
VACANT LAND 3.5 acre wooded lot - ideal for a single family home. Buyer can use own builder and must provide septic & well. MLS#13-1145 $99,000 Call Rhea Simms for details 570-696-6677 for details.
Build your new home in a great neighborhood. Convenient location near highways, airport, casino and shopping DIRECTIONS Rt 315 to laflin Rd; make left off Laflin Rd onto Pinewood Dr. Lot is on corner of Pinewood Dr. and Hickorywood Dr. MLS 13-23 atlas realtyinc.com Call Keri Best 570-885-5082
570-696-3801 DALLAS
570-696-2468
NEW PRICE $89,000 Charming Cape Cod style home with nice curb appeal. Located on a tree lined street near parks, schools & shopping. Deceptively large with 4 bedrooms, two baths, fireplace in the living room, 2 car garage, corner lot. Needs some updating, but has great potential. MLS#13-1295 Karen Ryan 283-9100, ext. 14
YATESVILLE $139,900
Signature Properties
570-675-5100
PITTSTON
341 Wyoming Ave. 3 story Victorian home located in a high exposure area. Has all the lovely signature woodwork of a grand VIctorian of yesteryear! Can be restored for use as a residential home or a landlord investment. Currently subdivided into multiple office spaces and 2 apartments. MLS 12-617 $149,000 Jay A. Crossin EXT. 23 CROSSIN REAL ESTATE 570-288-0770 KINGSTON 30 E. Poplar St. Multi - Family 5 apartments and a 2 car garage, all rented. Off street parking for 8 cars. Great investment. www.atlasrealtyinc.com MLS 13-680 Tom Salvaggio 570-262-7716
570-288-7481
WILKES-BARRE
283-9100 WILKES-BARRE
OWNER FINANCING 251 North Madison. $57,000. $411.21/month, or $52,000, all cash. 831-214-2463
YATESVILLE $69,900
MUST SEE!
1255 Laurel Run Rd. Bear Creek Twp., large commercial garage/warehouse on 1.214 acres with additional 2 acre parcel. 2 water wells. 2 newer underground fuel tanks. May require zoning approval. For more info and photos visit: www.atlas realtyinc.com MLS 12-208 Call Charlie 570-829-6200
68 William St. Great investment property with 3 units and separate utilities. Each unit has 2 entrances and washer hook up. Roof is 5 years old. For more info visit: www.atlas realtyinc.com. MLS 12-1897 $69,900 Call Tom 570-262-7716
VIEWMONT ACRES All this 2.8+ acre lot needs is your vision for your dream home. Located in a quiet country setting, this partially cleared lot has a great view of the mountains. Septic is already on site and ready for Spring building. MLS #13-1705 Only $65,000 Call Barbara Metcalf 570-696-0883
zoned R-3 for townhouse or could be used for single family building lots (with approval). Public water and sewer available. www.atlas realtyinc.com MLS 13-1389 Call Charlie 570-829-6200
KING OF THE MOUNTAIN! Truly a 360 degree view from the highest point of this property. 48.49 acres to be sold as one parcel. Build your dream house here or buy and sub-divide. Will require well and septic system. Just minutes from Highway 315, near the Casino but very private. www.atlas realtyinc.com MLS 12-4142 Only $149,000 Call Charlie 570-829-6200
SHAVERTOWN
32 acres, wooded & cleared. Well, 6 room older house, currently rented. No Realtors. 570-675-2572 LEHMAN 9 Acres on Lehman Outlet Road. 470 front, over 1,000 deep. Wooded. $125,000. Call Besecker Realty 570-675-3611
LAKE TOWNSHIP
570-696-3801
Call Now! Build your dream home on this 1 acre building lot in established Back Mountain sub-division. Beautiful views! Underground utilities, public sewer & private well. MLS #12-3546 $75,000 Christine Pieczynski 696-6569
WEST SIDE
696-2600
PRICE REDUCTION Charming 1,000+ sq. ft. 2 bedroom, 1/1/2 bath with separate driveway on a quiet street. Lower level was finished for former business - has separate entrance, 1/2 bath & electric baseboard heat (not included in total sq. ft). MLS #13-1592 $49,000 Dana Distasio 570-715-9333
9 Pittston Ave P home 2 story E located in a very N privet setting. 3 bedrooms, 1.5 D baths and I workshop attached N to living space, G great for home business or the hobbyist. Low taxes, great community. Garage has 1 detached space and 1 built in. www.atlas realtyinc.com MLS 13-1009 CALL CHARLIE 570-829-6200
WILKES-BARRE 166 Jones St. Nice 3 bedroom single. Gas heat, off-street parking. Convenient location. Affordable! $33,900 Towne & Country R.E. Co. 735-8932 or 542-5708 WILKES-BARRE
Motivated Sellers! Features 3 bedrooms, 1 3/4 baths, off street parking, landscaped fenced yard. Tiled kitchen & baths. Hardwood in family room, living room & master bedroom. Custom built closets in master bedroom. New insulation throughout home. Must See! MLS #13-1693 $114,000 Call Evelyn Hogan 262-5956
93 Main St. Four units. 3 residential and one storefront.Great corner location, flood damaged home being sold as is. For more info visit: www.atlas realtyinc.com MLS 12-1948 Call Tom 570-262-7716
64-66 W. Dorrance 3 units, off street parking with some updated carpets and paint. $1500/month income from long time tenants. Washer/dryer hookups on site. MLS 11-3517 $99,900 Jay A. Crossin Extension 23 CROSSIN REAL ESTA ESTATE 570-288-0770 KINGSTON
Well established meat and deli store with large variety of specialty items for sale. Homemade sausage, porkettaprosciutto, to mention a few. Owners will sty on to teach. give recipes and contacts. Also a newly remodeled apartment above store and 4 car garage to help pay the mortgage. MLS 13-535 For an appointment call: Fred Mecadon 570-817-5792
Well established Italian Restaurant on the West Side with seating for 75. Business only includes good will, all furniture and fixtures, all kitchen equipment and delivery van for $150,000. Building sold separately. Restaurant on 1st floor and 2 bedroom luxury apartment on 2nd floor for $250,000. www.atlasrealty inc.com MLS 12-3433 Call Charlie
2.12 acres of commercial land in a prime Back Mountain location. Ideal spot to build an office or professional building. Corner wooded lot. Water, electric & gas available to be run to site. Call Rhea for details MLS#12-4281 570-696-6677 $249,900
30 Mile Views 2 Acres $39,900 7 Acres $89,900 Estate Sized Properties Priced To Sell, #1 School District In Northeastern Pa. Finance with Only 10% Down. Call 570-245-6288 MOUNTAIN TOP
Doyouneedmorespace? A yard or garage sale in classified is the best way tocleanoutyourclosets! Youre in bussiness with classified!
SHAVERTOWN Beautiful 1 acre building lot located in established back Mountain sub-division. Buy now and start building your dream home in the spring. Lot has underground utilities, public sewer and private well. MLS #13-137 $62,400 Christine Pieczynski 696-6569
DALLAS WILKES-BARRE
696-2600 SHICKSHINNY 23+/- acres of wooded land and farmland with barn in good condition and a nice travel trailer. Well on property. MLS#12-2572 $115,000 Ken Williams 542-8800 Five Mountains Realty 542-2141 SHICKSHINNY 26 acres of mostly open land for a beautiful homesite near Shickshinny Lake. MLS #12-3394 $130,000 Ken Williams 542-8800 Five Mountains Realty 542-2141 SHICKSHINNY LAKE
EDWARDSVILLE
WILKES-BARRE
46 Alexander Street Large double block with lots of potentional. Quiet neighborhood, off street parking, 3 bedroom each side and large rooms. 48 hours noticed required to show. $75,000 MLS# 13-1278 Call/text Donna Cain 947-3824 or Tony Wasco 855-2424
603 Willowcrest Dr. Super end unit townhouse, no fees. 2 bedrooms, 3 baths, central air, electric heat, cathedral ceiling with skylights. Large family room with propane stove and its own ductless air. MLS 13-482 Call Tom 570-262-7716
Landmark location ready for new life. Formerly used as a restaurant, can be converted into anything! Full bar area, & kitchen, multiple cool storage areas. Living & office space also available. Parking lot included. MLS#13-874 $109,900 Call Dave, Jr. 885-2693
7 Hoyt St. Nice duplex zoned commercial, can be used for offices as well as residential. All separate utilities. New carpeting and fresh paint throughout + unit 2 has new flooring in kitchen and bathroom. Keep apartment space or convert to commercial office space. Adjacent lot for sale by same owner MLS#08-1872 MLS 11-217 $79,900 Jay A. Crossin Extension 23 CROSSIN REAL ESTA ESTATE 570-288-0770 NANTICOKE
PLYMOUTH $52,900
Everything is Ready! Just bring your business to this great location with over 15,000 sq. ft. of parking space. The building is equipped for fast food, restaurant, pizza, carry-out, etc. Will rent with option to buy. Excellent opportunity for the right party! $269,000 Call Ruth @ 570-696-1195 or 570-696-5411
BROWN MANOR VACANT LAND Attention builders! Six lots available in subdivision - ranging from .4 to 1.3 acres each. Access to public sewer & water. MILS#13-1144 $212,000 Call Rhea Simms for details 570-696-6677
MOUNTAIN TOP
909
169 Gardner Ave. Big Family wanted!! Great 5 Bedroom, with 2.5 baths, very well kept, move right in. Outside was total updated, New furnace and hot water heater too!!! MLS #13-1342 $125,000 Call Dave, Sr. 881-7877 570-901-1020 WILKES-BARRE
LEASE SPACE
Need to rent that Vacation property? Place an ad and get started! 570-829-7130
WILKES-BARRE
37 Flick Street Nice 2 possibly 3 bedroom home with a large driveway and garage. This home has a newer kitchen and a full bath with laundry area on the 1st floor. There is a nice yard and deck for your outside enjoyment. There is a newer furnace and roof also. Come and check it out. MLS# 13-2103 $45,000 John Polifka 570-704-6846 FIVE MOUNTAINS REALTY 570-542-2141
Kingston Koral Complex Great for Wellness Center Businesses. Custom leases are available. 4300SF Warehouse Space available, can be divided and are built to Suit. MLS#12-3041 Call Cindy 570-690-2689
www.cindykingre.com
Looking for the right deal on an automobile? Turn to classified. Its a showroom in print! Classifieds got the directions!
HANOVER TWP.
Newly remodeled, immaculate office building. 1,600 sq. ft, central air, plenty of parking, abundant storage areas, h a n d i c a p p e d accessible. MLS #13-667 $79,900 Dana Distasio 570-9333
New Listing! Affordable for you!. Set back off Main st., this double block has had many updates. Unit #1: formal dining room 2 bedrooms, 1 bath and deck. Unit #2: spacious open floor plan, large living room, formal dining room, genuine hardwood floors, 4 bedrooms with new carpeting, 1.5 baths, lots of closet space and enclosed balcony. MLS 13-1176 Michele Hopkins 570-540-6046
570-696-3801 DALLAS TOWNSHIP 63 acres with about 5,000 roadfront on 2 roads. All Wooded. $385,000. Call Besecker Realty 570-675-3611
PITTSTON $129,900
SWEET VALLEY 3.8 acres, zoned B2 commercial with home & pond. Priced for quick sale. High traffic area Located at the intersection of Rt. 118 & Main Road. $89,000 Call Richard Long 406-2438
VACANT LAND 1.19 acres in nice Back Mountain location. Septic & well will be required. Seller will provide perc test on this parcel. MLS#11-268 $59,500 Call Rhea Simms for details 570-696-6677
61 +/- Acres Nuangola $88,000 46 +/- Acres Hanover Twp. $69,000 Highway Commercial KOZ Hanover Twp. 3+/Acres 11 +/- Acres Wilkes-Barre Twp. Acreage Zoned R-3 Sugar Notch Lot $11,800 See Additional Land for Sale at: www.earth conservancy.org Call: 570-823-3445 HANOVER TWP Slope St. Nice building lot with utilities available. Ideal home site. Affordable at $12,900 TOWNE & COUNTRY RE CO 570-735-8932 570-542-5708 HARVEYS LAKE
Price Reduction
EARTH CONSERVANCY
LAND Outstanding building lot located in premier development. 220' of usable waterfront on the lower ice lake, water views, private .75 acre lily pond. Partially clear ed with mature forsythia bushes & dogwood trees. I would love to take you on a guided walk around this lovely property! $225,000 Call Christine @ 332-8832
Build your dream home on this attractive 1.2 acre level lot with lake privileges. Priced to sell. HOA FEE IS $140 YEARLY. MLS#13-40 $50,000 Call Barbara Metcalf 570-696-0883
1 mile south of L.C.C.C. Established developement with underground utilities including gas. Cleared lot. 100 frontage x 158. $35,000. Lot 210 frontage 158 deep on hill with great view $35,000. Call 570-736-6881
570-696-3801 DALLAS
675-4400 COMMERCIAL LEASE 8,500 sq. ft. building $4,000/month, tenant pays utilities. Building Ready for many uses. Owner will build to suit. Custom Leases Available. Property has 5 garage bays, office space & plenty of parking and fenced side yards. Heated with restrooms. unlimited potential. MLS #13-63 Call Today! Cindy King 570-690-2689
www.cindykingre.com
570-675-4400
HUNTINGTON MILLS Great Old 80 Acre Farm, Location Next to Northwest High School with approx. 35 acres of fields & 45 acres wooded. Small pond, barn, old farmhouse with out buildings (in poor condition - little or no value) plenty of road frontage. MLS #13-807 $319,500 Call Richard Long 406-2438
79 Maxwell Street Single family home. 6 bedrooms, 1.5 bathroom, quiet neighborhood, well maintained, Large modern eat in kitchen, laundry area on 1st floor. All appliances. Gas baseboard heat (3 zones), concrete basement, 2 wall air conditioning units. New roof, fenced yard, large shed, 2 space carport $87,000 Call 570-696-4701 570-578-9041
3 1.5 baths, fully carpeted, 2 story, out of flood zone. Finished basement with wet bar, laundry room with new washer and dryer, cedar closet, 2 storage rooms, plus shower and sink. Large eatin kitchen, plus formal dining room, new sidewalks, new roof, inground pool, outdoor building with kitchen and storage room. Offered at $139,000 570-693-2124
WYOMING bedrooms,
224 William St. Are you a hairdresser or barber? Need a space for an in home business? This might be just what youre looking for. Well maintained 4 bedroom home with salon (previously a barber shop for 60 years). Very well established, high visibility location and additional home with 3 bedrooms currently rented to a tenant. Must be sold as one package. www.atlasrealtyinc.com MLS 13-216 Call Charlie 570-829-6200
Shopping for a new apartment? Classified lets you compare costs without hassle or worry! Get moving with classified!
WILKES-BARRE Owner Retiring Turn Key Night Club For Sale. Two full bars, game area. Four restrooms. Prime Location!!! Creative financing Available $80,000, Dave Rubbico, Jr. 885-2693
Level Lot 100 x 135, located on broad street. $30,000 570-604-1553 ROSS TWP.
PITTSTON
VACANT LAND Buildable .378 acre lot on Carverton Road. Public sewer & water. Choice of builder. MLS#13-1143 $42,500 Call Rhea Simms 570-696-6677 for details.
570-696-3801
RETIREMENT COMMUNIRubbico Real Estate 826-1600 Only eight lots left. Custom design you home the way you want it. Call 570-675-1300
TY
DALLAS G
Just Reduced! Don't miss this one! Partially cleared lot ready for you to build your home. It has the sewer permit already. Waiting for you to add the finishing touches to it. Great price!! MLS# 13-1291 $7,950 Call Pat Doty 394-6901
G IN D N E P
CHOICE LOCATION A most unique & desirable lakefront property. This is an opportunity to purchase a centrally situated lot with an unmatched view of this beautiful lake. If you are looking for that special building site, this is it! MLS# 11-1269 $159,900 Call Dale Williams Five Mountains Realty 570-256-3343 WILKES-BARRE Partly Vacant Lot
REENBRIAR
Beautiful 40 acre wooded parcel on both sides of the road. MLS#12-2239 $200,000 Call Ken Williams 570-542-8800 Five Mountains Realty 570-542-2141 SWOYERSVILLE 100 x 150, cleared, surveyed level building lot. Utilities are available. $24,900. Call: 570-288-4899
Lot #13, E. Thomas St. Approximately, 0.57 acre. MLS#12-2800. $20,000 Call Jeff Cook
570-675-4400
Signature Properties
570-675-5100
696-2468
WEDNESDAY, MAY 29, 2013 PAGE 9D 941 Apartments/ Unfurnished 941 Apartments/ Unfurnished 941 Apartments/ Unfurnished 941 Apartments/ Unfurnished 941 Apartments/ Unfurnished 941 Apartments/ Unfurnished 941 Apartments/ Unfurnished
3 bedroom split level in lovely neighborhood. Two lower levels have been re novated due to flood of 2011. New electrical/plumbing /heat. New carpet in living & family rooms. Kitchen features Corian countertops & stainless appliances. Open concept on main level with garage level family room, laundry & storage. Nice size backyard. Come take a look! $130,000 Call Christine @ 332-8832
Build your new home here. 2 new developments, prices range from $35,000 to $39,900. Public water sewer & gas available. NOT in flood zone. Lot sizes range from 50x100 to 80x105. www.atlas realtyinc.com CALL CHARLIE 570-829-6200
Includes tanning bed, beauty salon station, massage and microdermabrasion station. Ready to run your own little business and comes with a cliental list! $25,000 Give us a call! Call before 5 p.m. 570-287-0091 After 5 p.m. 570-908-9719 Serious Inquires Only.
& trash included. 2 bedrooms, 2nd floor. Coin-op washer\/dryer. Appliances included. $625/month references, security deposit & lease. No smoking. No pets. Available Immedia t e l y . Call 570-760-4830
Clean & bright 3 bedroom apartment. Heat, water, garbage & sewer included with appliances. Off street parking. No pets, non smoking, not section 8 approved. References, security, first and last months rent. $725/month 570-852-0252
KINGSTON 1st Floor, recently renovated, 2 bedrooms, with washer & dryer hook-up, $650 per month, plus utilities, water and sewer included. Off street parking. 570-443-0770
KINGSTON
613-9080
938
Looking for the right deal on an automobile? Turn to classified. Its a showroom in print! Classifieds got the directions!
Apartments/ Furnished
1 bedroom, living room and kitchen. Fridge & stove. Off street parking. $600 a month + electric, security and references. 570-287-1029 or 570-262-0496
PRINGLE
KEN POLLOCK APARTMENTS 41 Depot Street Low and Moderate Income Elderly Rentals Include: * Electric Range & Refrigerator * Off Street Parking * Community Room * Coin Operated Laundry * Elevator * Video Surveilance Applications Accepted by Appointment 570-736-6965 8:00 a.m. - 4 p.m. TDD Only, 1-800-654-5984 Voice Only, 1-800-654-5988 Handicap Accessible Equal Housing Opportunity
GLEN LYON
Spacious 2 bedroom, 2nd floor, washer/dryer hookup in kitchen, no pets. $600/month + utilities, 1st, last & security. TRADEMARK REALTY GROUP 570-954-1992
HANOVER TWP.
27 First Ave. Large 5 room apartment, 2 bedrooms, 1.5 baths, kitchen appliances, washer/dryer in half bath. 2nd floor. No pets. $850/month + utilities. 570-288-5600 or 570-479-0486
KINGSTON
floor, 2 bedrooms, elevator, carpeted, entry system. Garage. Extra storage & cable TV included. Laundry facilities. Air Conditioned. Fine neighborhood. Convenient to bus & stores. No pets. References. Security. Lease. No smokers please. $785 + utilities. Call. 570-287-0900 KINGSTON Recently remodeled 1st floor apartment with 1 bedroom, 1 bath & electric heat. Off street parking. No pets. Credit check & security deposit required. $575/month. Call Nicole Dominick @570-715-7757
AVAILABLE 2ND FLOOR UNIT! 1 bedroom apartments for elderly, disabled. Rents based on 30% of ADJ gross income. Handicap Accessible. Equal Housing Opportunity. TTY711 or 570-474-5010 This institution is an equal opportunity provider & employer. 3 bedroom, all appliances included. No pets, no smoking. $650/ month + 1st, last & security. 570-578-8580
PITTSTON Modern 2 bedroom apartment with gas heat. New deck. $525 month plus utilities. Conveniently located. No Pets. No Smoking. Call Rae 570-714-9234
NANTICOKE
PLAINS
TRUCKSVILLE MANOR APARTMENTS 170 Oak Street Low and Moderate Income Elderly Rentals Include: *Electric Range & Refrigerator *Off Street Parking *Coin Operated Laundry Applications Accepted by appointment 570-696-1201 8a.m. - 4p.m. TDD only, 1-800-654-5984 Voice Only, 1-800-654-5988 Handicap Accessible Equal Housing Opportunity
TRUCKSVILLE
wall to wall carpet, appliances, Lake rights. Off street parking. No pets. Lease, security and references. 570-639-5920
962
Rooms
S TO P S TAY S AV E
MELODY MOTEL
FOR SALE This is a 2008 Park Model in beautiful Eagle Lake. Walk to the pool, tennis courts & basketball courts. This is the most beautiful Community in the Pocono's. Swim in the huge pool or lay in the sand at one of the lake front beaches. Call Tom 516-507-9403
Short or long term Excellent Neighborhood Private Tenant Parking $600 includes all utilities. No pets. 570-822-9697
WILKES-BARRE
HANOVER TOWNSHIP
2nd floor apt. 1 bedroom. Country setting. Off street parking. $450 mo plus security & utilities. (570) 574-1910
HUNLOCK CREEK
570-842-2300
941
Apartments/ Unfurnished
Wilkeswood Apartments
1 & 2 BR Apts 2 & 3 BR Townhomes
www.liveatwilkeswood.com
2 and 3 bedroom mobile homes for sale. Newly renovated, move in condition, located in Country Crest Mobile Home Park. Lot rent $307. Homes start at $20,000. Call 717-439-7716
HUNLOCK CREEK
Fully furnished, 1st floor, 1 bedroom, all appliances and most utilities included. Secure, private off street parking. Historic building is non smoking/no pets. Base rent $700/mo. Security, references required. View at houpthouse.com 570-762-1453
1st floor, 3 bedrooms, wall to wall carpeting central air, eat in kitchen with appliances. Off street parking. Bonus dryer! Heat & cooking gas included. Tenant pays electric & water. $640 plus security. No Pets. 570-814-1356
55 Main Street 2nd floor, 1 bedroom. Stove, refrigerator, water, heat, garbage stickers included. $450/ month + $400 security. 570-654-9520
INKERMAN
E. W alnut St. 2nd floor. Located in quiet neighborhood. Kitchen, living room, dining room, sunroom, bath, 3 bedrooms; 2 large & 1 small. Lots of closets, built-in linen closet & hutch. Hardwood & carpeted floors. Fireplace. Storage room. Yard. Washer / dryer, stove / fridge. Heat and hot water included. 1 year lease + security. $950 570-283-4370 KINGSTON 317 N. Maple Ave. 2 story 2 bedroom, 1.5 bath @ $850. + utilities. Central heat & air, washer/dryer in unit, on site parking. 1 mo. security
KINGSTON
LEXINGTON VILLAGE 2 bedroom, 1 bath apartments. Refrigerator, stove, dishwasher & washer/dryer provided. Attached garage. Pet friendly. Water, sewer & trash included. 59 Agostina Drive 570-735-3500
NANTICOKE
EATON TERRACE
wall, off-street parking, coin laundry, water, sewer & garbage included. $495/month + security & lease. HUD accepted. 570-687-6216 or 570-954-0727
Job Seekers are looking here! Where's your ad? 570-829-7130 and ask for an employment specialist
1 bedroom, 1 bath, living room, kitchen, 2nd floor, off street parking. Clean & neat. $425/month. New carpeting throughout, refrigerator & stove included. Available immediately. Call Steve (570) 468-2488
PITTSTON
570-262-6947
3 bedrooms, 1.5 bath, no pets. $850 + utilities, 1st month, last month + security deposit. Call 570-417-3427
HANOVER TWP.
Near Kingston Corners. 2nd floor, newly remodeled, 4 rooms, bath, laundry room. Walk up attic, water, sewer & parking. No pets. No smoking. $525 & $575 + utilities. 570-288-9843
It's that time again! Rent out your apartment with the Classifieds 570-829-7130
First floor, 3 bedroom, paint, stove, fridge, w/d hookup. OSP $625 + utilities 570-814-0843
Vine Street, 1 bedroom, rent based on 30% of income, off street parking. Refrigerator, stove, carpeting and utilities included. 542-2500 287-9661 Ext. 232 Luzerne County Housing Authority Equal Housing Opportunity.
SHICKSHINNY
KINGSTON
2 bedroom, 2nd floor. All appliances. Deck. $475 month + utiliTIES & SECURITY garbage included. (570) 735-6170
bedroom with appliances. No Pets. No Smoking. $500 a month. Includes heat and water. 570-693-2148 570-430-1204
HANOVER INDUSTRIAL PARK Remodeled 1 or 2 bedroom. Fridge, stove, eat in kitchen. Sewer, water & garbage paid, electric by tenant. $450/mo + lease & security. 570-301-8200
bedrooms. Includes all utilities, parking, laundry. No pets. From $390 to $675. Lease, security & references. 570-970-0847
1 bedroom apartment. Tenant supplies own fridge. $525/month, all utilities included. First, last & 1/2 month security. No pets. Call Manager at 570-825-8997
WILKES-BARRE
941
Apartments/ Unfurnished
CALL AN EXPERT
Professional Services Directory
Building & Remodeling 1054 Concrete & Masonry 1093 Excavating 1135
FIND OUT HOW TO BECOME A MEMBER OR CALL FOR A QUALIFIED CONTRACTOR
B.P. Home Repairs 570-825-4268 Brick, Block, Concrete, Sidewalks, Chimneys, Stucco. New Installation & Repairs Demolition, Excavating, Dozing, Driveways. Call Chris 570-574-5018
570-822-2711
WILKES-BARRE
COUNTRY ILLAGE ESTATES 1991 REDMOND 14 x 80, 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, set up in Park, but can be moved. Vinyl siding, new windows, metal roof, appliances included. New kitchen & bathroom floors. Must See! Must Sell! $18,000 570-333-4232
ORANGE V
Demunds Road 2 bedroom apartment. Near Misericordia University. Off street parking. $650. Pets OK. Call 704-975-1491
DALLAS
1006
1024
1165
Lawn Care
1252
STUDIO, 1 & 2 BEDROOMS Equipped Kitchen Free Cable Wall to Wall Carpeting
2 bedroom, clean, needs no work. remodeled throughout. Minutes from I-81 and PA Turnpike. $9,500 570-471-7175 610-767-9456
APARTMENTS 1075 Memorial Hwy. Low & Moderate Income Elderly Rentals Include: *Electric Range & Refrigerator *Off Street Parking *Community Room *Coin Operated Laundry *Elevator. *Video Surveilence Applications Accepted by Appointment 570-675-5944 8 a.m. - 4 p.m. TDD Only, 1-800-654-5984 Voice Only, 1-800-654-5988 Handicap Accessible Equal Housing Opportunity DALLAS MEADOWS APARTMENTS 220 Lake St. Housing for the elderly & mobility impaired; all utilities included. Federally subsidized program. Extremely low income persons encouraged to apply. Income less than $12,450. 570-675-6936, TDD 800-654-5984 8 am-4 pm, Mon-Fri. EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY HANDICAP ACCESSIBLE DALLAS: BI-LEVEL 2 bedroom apt. Clean and freshly painted. Refrigerator and gas stove. Off street parking. $575 a month includes trash and sewer. Security deposit and references. NO pets. Call 570-947-1981.
DALLAS HI-MEADOWS
1099
1015
Appliance Service
Building Industry Association Of NEPA 411 MAIN ST., KINGSTON, PA 18704 Contact: Janet Campis www.bianepa.com
All phases of masonry & concrete. Small jobs welcome. Senior discount. Free estimates. Licensed & Insured 288-1701/655-3505
D. PUGH CONCRETE
SPRING SALE: Discounts on wood, vinyl, chain link, aluminum and more! Call today for a FREE ESTIMATE! 570-602-0432
ACTION FENCE
ALWAYS READY HAULING Property & Estate Cleanups, Attics, Cellars, Yards, Garages, Construction Sites, Flood Damage & More. CHEAPER THAN A DUMPSTER!! SAME DAY SERVICE Free Estimates 570-301-3754
GARDEN TILLING
Call 328-2755
1195
Movers
Roofing Specialists 27 Years Experience Licensed & Insured. 709-9 9180 570-7
FRANK J. CONSTRUCTION
570-287-3331
GUTTER CLEANING
570-823-2776
Monday - Friday, 9 a.m. - 1 p.m.
Set up in park. 2 bedrooms 1 bath. No pets. $8,000. $3,000 down, owner will finance 570-851-2245
941
Apartments/ Unfurnished
941
Apartments/ Unfurnished
Why Spend Hundreds on New or Used Appliances? Most problems with your appliances are usually simple and inexpensive to fix! Save your hard earned money, Let us take a look at it first! 30 years in the business. East Main Appliances 570-735-8271 Nanticoke
1039
Chimney Service
We Do Clean Outs, Basements, Attics, Garages & Trash Removal. Free Estimates. Wilkes-Barre & Surrounding Areas. 570-266-9364
KARPOWSKI HAULING
BestDarnMovers Moving Helpers Call for Free Quote. We make moving easy. BestDarnMovers.com 570-852-9243
1204
Your Roofing Specialist Free Estimates No Payment til Job is 100% Complete 570-829-0239 570-824-6381 Roof Repairs & New Roofs. Shingle, Slate, Hot Built Up, Rubber, Gutters & Chimney Repairs. Year Round. Licensed/Insured FREE Estimates *24 Hour Emergency Calls*
GILROY Construction
J.R.V. ROOFING
A-1 1 ABLE CHIMNEY Rebuild & Repair Chimneys. All types of Masonry. Liners Installed, Brick & Block, Roofs & Gutters. Licensed & Insured 570-735-2257
1132
Handyman Services
A & N PAINTING SPRING SPECIAL $100 + materials for average size room. 18 years experience Exterior Painting, Power washing, Deck Staining. 570-820-7832
All Types.
Repairs.
or just want to freshen up your home or business? Let us splash your int./ext. walls with
some vibrant colors!
1024
www.EastMountainApt.com
822-4444
www.GatewayManorApt.com
288-6300
Roofing, siding, gutters, insulation, decks, additions, windows, doors, masonry & concrete. Insured & Bonded.
Stainless Liners. Cleanings. Custom Sheet Metal Shop. 570-383-0644 1-800-943-1515 Call Now! CHRIS MOLESKY CHIMNEY SPECIALIST New, repair, rebuild, liners installed. Cleaning. Concrete & metal caps. Small masonry jobs 570-328-6257
570-313-2262
New Roofs & Repairs, Shingles, Rubber, Slate, Gutters, Chimney Repairs. Credit Cards Accepted FREE ESTIMATES! Licensed-Insured EMERGENCIES
570-288-6709
Jim Harden
1135
cleaning attics, cellar, garage, one piece or whole Estate, also available 10 & 20 yard dumpsters.655-0695 592-1813or287-8302 AAA CLEANING A1 GENERAL HAULING Cleaning attics, cellars, garages. Demolitions, Roofing & Tree Removal. Free Est. 779-0918 or 542-5821; 814-8299
Int/ Ext. painting, Power washing. Professional work at affordable rates. Free estimates. 570-288-0733
M. PARALIS PAINTING
McManus Construction Licensed, Insured. Everyday Low Prices. 3,000 satisfied customers. 570-735-0846
SPRING ROOFING
1297
Tree Care
570-606-8438
ALL OLDER HOMES SPECIALIST 825-4268. Remodel / Repair Windows and Doors
1042
GARAGE DOOR
CLEANING SERVICE
Available 7am-Noon Call 570-233-1953 Connies Cleaning 15 years experience Bonded & Insured Residential Cleaning GIFT CERTIFICATES AVAILABLE! 570-430-3743 Connie does the cleaning!
Sales, service, installation & repair. FULLY INSURED HIC# 065008 CALL JOE 570-735-8551 Cell 606-7489
Affordable Senior Apartments Income Eligibility Required Utilities Included! Low cable rates; New appliances; Laundry on site; Activities! Curbside Public Transportation
2 basement for storage. Private entrance with rear yard. All new appliances included. Washer/dryer, sewer included. Pets considered. $500/ month + 1 month security. Call 570-606-7884 between 9am & 9pm or Call 570-256-7837 before 9am & after 9pm
CORNERSTONE
Roofing Siding Carpentry 40 yrs experience Licensed & Insured PA026102 Call Dan 570-881-1131 www.davejohnson remodeling.com Baths/Kitchens Carpentry A to Z
CONSTRUCTION
1069
Decks
A CLEAN HOUSE IS A HAPPY HOUSE! ALL KINDS OF HAULING & JUNK REMOVAL SPRING CLEAN UP!
LAWN CUT? LEAVES RAKED? GENERAL YARD WORK? MULCHING? Responsible Senior student. Mountain Top, White Haven, Drums & Conygham area.
NEED HELP
Serra Painting Book Now For Spring & Save. All Work Guaranteed Satisfaction. 30 Yrs. Experience Powerwash & Paint Vinyl, Wood, Stucco Aluminum. Free Estimates You Cant Lose! 570-822-3943
APEX TREE AND EARTH Tree removal Pruning, Stump Grinding, Hazard Tree Removal, Grading, Drainage, Lot Clearing.Insured. Reasonable Rates
apextreeandearth.com
Serving Wyoming Valley, Back Mountain and Surrounding areas.
570-550-4535
DEB & PATS CLEANING SERVICE We Are Bonded & Insured Free Estimates
570-793-4773
Secured Senior Building for age 62 & older. YOU regulate heat & air conditioning Laundry Room Access Community Room/Fully equipped kitchen 24 Hour Emergency Maintenance Garage & off street parking Curbside public transportation
Equal Housing Opportunity Handicap Accessible
1st floor, 1 bedroom apartment in convenient location. New carpeting, appliances included, off-street parking. Includes all utilities, internet & cable. No smoking, No pets. Security & lease. $690/month. (570) 578-1728 Newly remodeled 1 bedroom. New kitchen & bath. All new appliances, including washer & dryer. $500 + utilities. Call 570-881-0320
We build any type, size and design. Sunrooms and 4 season rooms All concrete work. 570-899-1110
1336
Window Cleaning
570-819-0681
Shedlarski Construction H I
Licensed, insured & PA registered. Kitchens, baths, vinyl siding & railings, replacement windows & doors, additions, garages, all phases of home renovations. Free Estimates 570-287-4067
OME MPROVEMENT SPECIALIST
1054
1078
Dry Wall
Specializing in All Types of Masonry. Stone, Concrete Licensed & Insured Free Estimates Senior Discount 570-702-3225
Hanging & Finishing Textured Ceilings Licensed & Insured Free Estimates
MIRRA DRYWALL
570-675-3378
TREE/SHRUB REMOVAL REMOVAL DEMOLITION Estate Cleanout Free Estimates 24 HOUR SERVICE SMALL AND LARGE JOBS! 570-823-1811 570-239-0484 A.S.A.P Hauling Estate Cleanouts, Attics, Cellars, Garages, were cheaper than dumpsters!. Free Estimates, Same Day! 570-855-4588
TOUGH BRUSH & TALL GRASS Mowing, edging, mulching, shrubs & hedge shaping. Tree pruning. Garden tilling. Spring Clean Ups. Leaf removal. Weekly & bi-weekly lawn care. Fully Insured Free Estimates 570-829-3261
1213
pjswindowcleaning.com
*DRIVEWAYS *PARKING LOTS *ROADWAYS *HOT TAR & CHIP *SEAL COATING Licensed and Insured. Call Today For Your Free Estimate
1165
Lawn Care
1084
Electrical
GLEN LYON
570-970-6694
Motorcycle for sale? Let them see it here in the Classifieds! 570-829-7130
SLEBODA ELECTRIC Master electrician Licensed & Insured Service Changes & Replacements. Generator Installs. 868-4469
AFFORDABLE LAWN SERVICES Greater Pittston Area. Mowing, Mulching & Deck Washing. Call 570-885-5858 or 570-954-0438 for Free Estimate
570-474-6329
Lic.# PA021520
WEDNESDAY, MAY 29, 2013 941 Apartments/ Unfurnished 941 Apartments/ Unfurnished 941 Apartments/ Unfurnished 944 Commercial Properties 950 Half Doubles 953 Houses for Rent
KINGSTON 153 Gates Avenue. 3 bedroom townhouse, with 2 baths, one car garage. Mint condition for $1,100/month + security & one year lease. No pets. MLS#13-1595 Call Jill Hiscox 696-0875
Apartments/ Unfurnished
WILKES-BARRE
WILKES-BARRE
425 S. FRANKLIN ST.
For lease. Available immediately, washer/dryer on premises, no pets. We have studio, 1 & 2 bedroom apartments. On site parking. Fridge & stove provided. 24/7 security camera presence & all doors electronically locked. 1 bedroom - $450. 2 bedroom - $550. Water & sewer paid 1 month security deposit. Email obscuroknows@ hotmail.com or Call 570-208-9301 after 9:00 a.m. to schedule an appointment
apartments. Starting at $440 and up. References required. Section 8 OK 570-357-0712 WILKES-BARRE
Wood floors, parking, no pets, short term OK. $425, all utilities included. 570-826-1934 WILKES-BARRE TOWNSHIP 2.5 bedrooms, 1 bath, washer/dryer, off-street parking, no pets, no smoking, small yard. $550 per month + utilities. Security & references. Call (570)760-1329
Carpet, tile bath, new appliances, washer/dryer, hook up, sewer, parking by front door. $650 + utilities, security & lease. No smoking, no pets. 570-693-0695
WYOMING
944
Commercial Properties
Collect cash, not dust! Clean out your basement, garage or attic and call the Classified department today at 570829-7130!
WILKES-BARRE
2 bedroom, 1 bath apartment near General Hospital. No Pets. $525 + utilities, first, last + security deposit. 570-417-3427 264 Academy St. 1.5 bedrooms, newly renovated building. Washer & dryer available. $650/mo. includes heat, hot water & parking. 646-712-1286 570-855-4744
WILKES-BARRE
439 S. Franklin St. Two apartments available. (1) 1 bedroom, hardwood floors, A/C, marble bath. security system, laundry, off street parking. $675 (1) Unique studio. Sun porch, hardwood floor, security system and laundry. Off street parking. $550 570-821-5599
HISTORIC WHEELMAN
Huge 3-4 bedroom, with heat included, 3rd floor, great views from private balcony, near Wilkes & downtown. $850/month. Pets OK Call 570-798-7051
900 Sq. Ft. STORE RETAIL SPACE Will be vacant as of January 1, 2013 200 Spring St. Wilkes-Barre Great for a Barber Shop! Call Michael at 570-239-7213
3002 N. Twp Blvd. Medical office for rent on the Pittston By-Pass. Highly visible location with plenty of parking. $1,800 sq. ft. of beautifully finished space can be used for any type office use. $1,750/ mo. plus utilities. MLS 13-098 Call Charlie 570-829-6200
3 bedrooms, kitchen, living room, dining room, basement. $595/month. No pets. Call 570-824-4899 or 570-239-4340
696-3801
COURTDALE
SWOYERSVILLE NEW LISTING Busy, high visibility location. Body shop, garage, car lot. Situated on over 1 acre with 9,000 sq. ft. of Commercial Space. $389,900 Call Joe 613-9080
$695/month. New bath, kitchen, living & dining rooms, 2 & 1/2 bedrooms. Water, sewer & recycling included. Gas fireplace. New flooring, ceiling fans. Washer/ dryer hook up. Lease & security. Call after 6 pm. 570-332-3562
KINGSTON
MOUNTAIN TOP Recently remodeled home with 3 bedrooms, 1 1/2 baths, washer/dryer. Full unfinished basement with workshop. Gas heat. No smoking. No pets. Credit check & security deposit required. 1 year lease. $1,150/ month. Call Nicole Dominick 570-715-7757
MONEY
MORE
SAVE
613-9080
WILKES-BARRE
SAVE MONEY THIS YEAR! 113 Edison Street Quiet neighborhood. 2 bedroom apartments available for immediate occupancy. Heat & hot water included. 1 Bedroom $550 2 Bedroom $650. Call Jazmin 570-822-7944
LAFAYETTE GARDENS
WILKES-BARRE
OFFICE SPACE 5,000 sq. ft. with parking lot. Office, 1,000 sq. ft. with 2,000 sq. ft. warehouse. Off I-81, Exit 165. Call 570-823-1719 Mon. through Fri. 7 am to 3 pm.
WILKES-BARRE WAREHOUSE/
Convenient location in quiet residential neighborhood. Heat, utilities and outside maintenance by tenant. No Pets or Smoking. 1 month security, 1 year lease
Looking for the right deal on an automobile? Turn to classified. Its a showroom in print! Classifieds got the directions!
Single home. 3 bedrooms 1.5 baths, newly panted. Stove, dishwasher, 1 car off street parking, full basement. $700/mo, plus oil, hot water, heat,electric, sewer. Security required. Available June 15 954-7849
WEST PITTSTON
rooms. Only one quiet apartment below. Has stove, refrigerator, washer & dryer. All windows are newer vinyl thermal pane. Steel insulated entry doors with deadbolts. Excellent privacy. Small back porch. Water & sewer included. Close to town & bus stop. $525/month + heat & electric. (570) 650-3803
2nd floor, 2 bedroom, eat in kitchen w/appliances Shared yard and back porch. Heat, hot water and water included. Tenants pay electric and cooking gas. $545 plus security NO PETS (570)814-1356
www.cindykingre.com
Signature Properties
570-675-5100
PARK AVENUE 2nd floor, 1 bedroom. Water included. $500 + utilities, security & lease. No pets. 570-472-9494 LUZERNE RENTALS Available Now! 1 Bed, 2 Bed, and 3 Bed $550, $600, $650, $725 and $900. 570-901-1020 option 4.
WILKES-BARRE
Rte. 315 2,400 Sq. Ft. 1,200 Sq. Ft. Professional office space. Will divide office / retail Call 570-829-1206
DOLPHIN PLAZA
BEST $1 SQ. FT. LEASES YOULL EVER SEE! Warehouse, light manufacturing. Gas heat, sprinklers, overhead doors, parking for 30 cars. Yes, that $1 sq. ft. lease! We have 9,000 sq.ft., 27,000 sq.ft., and 32,000 sq. ft. Can combine. There is nothing this good! Sale or Lease Call Larry @ 570-696-4000 or 570-430-1565
WILKES-BARRE
with 2 full baths, includes Stove, Fridge, Washer & Dryer. Sewer and garbage also included. $750. a month. $40 application fee. 570-736-6068
washer/dryer hookup. Front and side porch, 2 car garage. Sewer and garbage included. No Pets. $600. a month + security. Call (570) 655-5156 PLAINS Cozy, modern 2 bedroom, nice yard, quiet street, $525 plus utilities, lease, security. No pets 570-332-1216
3 bedroom, 1 1/2 bath Townhouse $700/month+ utilities. 1 month 1/2 security. No Pets 570-647-5053
WILKES-BARRE
950
Half Doubles
447 S. Franklin St. 1 bedroom with study, off street parking, laundry facility. Includes heat and hot water, hardwood floors, appliances, Trash removal. $580/mo Call (570) 821-5599
WILKES-BARRE
BLANDINA APARTMENTS Deluxe 2 bedroom. Wall to wall carpet. Some utilities by tenant. No pets. Non-smoking. Elderly community. Quiet, safe. Off street parking. Call 570-693-2850
WYOMING
Newly remodeled 120 sq. ft. All utilities included, except phone. Paved parking. $200/month. Lease. 1 month free! Call 570-602-1550 for details
3 bedrooms, living, dining, kitchen + large rec. room. Just painted, brand new bath & stove + washer/dryer & refrigerator. Great yard & neighborhood. Plenty of parking. $600/ month + utilities. 570-735-2694. ASHLEY 1/2 double, 3 bedrooms, modern, new paint and carpet. $550 + utilities. security, references lease. No pets. 570-332-1216 Listed is a beautiful half double in a very desirable residential environment only 5 minutes from the Cross Valley and close proximity to all public amenities including employment, shopping and schools. The first floor features a spacious dining room and living room with French doors leading to a sunroom. The kitchen includes all appliances or, bring your own! In addition, there is a laundry room and powder room to the rear of the kitchen. There are 3 bedrooms and a full bath on the second floor with lots of storage on the third floor. It has a nice hedge lined yard with flagstone patio and off-street parking for 2 cars (one outside and one in the garage!). The house has new sidewalks, new roof, vinyl siding/ windows and a recent driveway. No Pets/Smoking. Not approved for section 8. $800/ month + Utilities/ Security Deposit/ and References Required. 570-287-2157 After 3 PM
3 bay garage, new roof & new garage doors. Over 1,200 sq. ft. $395/month. Call 570-881-0320
20-25 hours per week, Weekends and Holidays a must. Pleasant personality and ability to handle a fast-paced environment, working with customers on the telephone on incoming and outgoing calls.
18 PIERCE STREET KINGSTON Available immediately. 1 to 4 rooms $250 month to $600 month includes all utilities, parking, trash removal. 570-371-8613
OFFICE SPACE
FORTY FORT
LUXURY DUPLEX This beautiful, completely renovated 2 bedroom luxury apartment could be yours! All new high end amenities include: hardwood floors, gorgeous maple kitchen cabinets with granite countertops & stainless steel appliances. Spacious great room with gas fireplace. Tile bath, stacked washer/dryer. Large screened-in porch. Many large, convenient closets. Central A/C. New gas heating system. Huge attic for storage. Must See! $1,000 + utilities, lease & security. NO PETS, NO SMOKING 570-793-6294
PLAINS
Clean, 2 bedroom, duplex. Stove, hookups, parking, yard. No pets/no smoking. $475 + utilities. 570-868-4444 WYOMING 84 Fifth Street. 2 bedrooms, 1.5 baths, off street parking, nice yard. Mint condition $850/month + 1 year lease & security deposit. Call Jill Hiscox 696-0875
WILKES-BARRE
696-3801
JENKINS TOWNSHIP
Please send cover letter and resume to: jmccabe@civitasmedia.com or to: Jim McCabe The Times Leader 15 N. Main St. Wilkes-Barre PA 18711
A Civitas Media Company An Equal Opportunity Employer
Lease Space Available, Light manufacturing, warehouse, office, includes all utilities with free parking. I will save you money!
puter room, gas heat, all appliances included. No Pets, no smoking. $650 plus utilities and security. Available June 1. After 6pm 570-474-5989
HEATHER HIGHLANDS
962
Rooms
KINGSTON HOUSE
Nice, clean furnished room, starting at $340. Efficiency at $450 month furnished with all utilities included. Off street parking. 570-718-0331
Large 1/2 double, 3 bedroom, 1 1/2 baths, full attic & basement. New appliances including dishwasher & washer/dryer. New paint & carpets. Gas heat. Front & rear yards. $750/month + utilities. (570)881-0320
PLYMOUTH
In a matter of weeks, you can shave hundreds of dollars off your grocery bill just by clipping The Sunday Times Leader coupons. Grab your scissors and join the coupon craze!
HARVEYS LAKE
315 PLAZA
1,750 SQ. FT. & 2,400 SQ.FT OFFICE/RETAIL 2,000 FT. Fully Furnished With Cubicles. 570-829-1206
551
Other
551
Other
551
Other
551
Other
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY
Would you like to deliver newspapers as an Independent Contractor under an agreement with
Recently remodeled, 4 bedrooms, 1 full bath, living room, dining room, off street parking. Washer and Dryer hookups. New flooring. $950 plus security. 570-650-0010
FORTY FORT
Includes white colonial kitchen, center island, all appliances, 2 glass / windowed enclosed porches, gas fireplace, 1.5 baths & more. 2 YEAR SAME RENT $900/month + utilities. NO PETS/ EMPLOYMENT VERIFICATION.
HOUSE BEAUTIFUL
EDWARDSVILLE
829-5000
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HANOVER TOWNSHIP
Cute Cape Cod style, in beautiful setting, 2 miles off Harveys Lake. Sits on 9 acres with beautiful yard. 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, w/d. $700 plus electric. Call Ron 570-881-8493
HARVEYS LAKE
HANOVER TWP
7 Regina Street, 3 bedrooms 1 bath, large living room, off street parking, washer and dryer included. Garbage and Sewer included. $750 plus utilities.
Looking for the right deal on an automobile? Turn to classified. Its a showroom in print! Classifieds got the directions!
3 bedroom, all appliances, finished lower level, garage. $1,050/month + utilities & security. No pets. 570-675-3712.
timesleader.com
KINGSTON
570-765-4474