LNP: April 10, 2016: News Presentation
LNP: April 10, 2016: News Presentation
LNP: April 10, 2016: News Presentation
A chilly prom
The local prom season continued
Saturday night with Manheim
Township High Schools big event.
Look for photos on Page B2 and at
LancasterOnline.com/prom.
TM
n $2.00 n LANCASTERONLINE.COM
UNDECIDED
ELECTION 2016
EDUCATION
Governor
uses own
formula
on funds
KNEWHOUSE@LNPNEWS.COM
Governors formula
Greece 65 years ago, Fokas explained his lovehate relationship with the billionaires presidential campaign while shopping Wednesday
at Park City Center.
With Pennsylvanias April 26 primary right
around the corner, thousands of county residents, like Fokas, are starting to pay close attention to the race. From Trumps comments
on women to his and other candidates goal of
Pictured above, clockwise from top left: Brianna Kinard, 21, of York; Dario Bernardini, 61, of
East Hempfield; Robert Watkins, 52, of Lancaster; Gus S. Kouros, 73, of Manheim Township;
Ashley Lutz, 23, of Marietta; and Sam Fokas, 83, of East Hempfield Township.
SUNDAY MAGAZINE
TRANSPORTATION
TIM BUCKWALTER
TIM BUCKWALTER
TBUCKWALTER@LNPNEWS.COM
ALSO INSIDE
INDEX
CLASSIFIEDS........... CL1
LIVING......................... B1
LOTTERY................... A2
REAL ESTATE..........RE1
SPORTS....................... C1
TRAVEL.....................B10
TV WEEK..................TV1
MONEY........................ D1
NATION & WORLD...A21
OBITUARIES...........A24
PERSPECTIVE............E1
BUDGET, page A6
47 33 H
TBUCKWALTER@LNPNEWS.COM
TODAY'S WEATHER
ON A SERVE CARD
AFTER WE FILE YOUR TAXES.
ROADS, page A8
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1-800-234-1040
A2
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
PENNSYLVANIA LOTTERY n
SUNDAY,
APRIL 3
Here are the winning Pennsylvania and Powerball lottery numbers for the week starting April 3.
MONDAY,
APRIL 4
TUESDAY,
APRIL 5
WEDNESDAY,
APRIL 6
THURSDAY,
APRIL 7
FRIDAY,
APRIL 8
SATURDAY,
APRIL 9
DAY PICK 2
6-9
7-7
7-8
8-5
7-5
9-8
9-5
DAY PICK 3
6-8-6
6-4-6
0-9-3
0-5-1
2-9-7
9-8-4
7-3-5
DAY PICK 4
3-7-1-7
7-9-5-5
9-8-8-5
3-5-9-5
6-0-5-2
6-1-5-5
1-7-4-6
DAY PICK 5
3-1-4-3-9
4-8-5-8-3
8-6-0-3-1
5-8-8-0-4
0-2-7-6-0
5-2-7-1-0
8-0-6-4-9
03-07-08-15-23
04-06-12-13-21
10-11-16-17-22
03-06-07-19-30
06-12-20-22-28
09-12-17-20-30
02-05-07-11-14
TREASURE HUNT
NIGHT PICK 2
1-1
6-0
3-9
2-4
3-4
3-9
4-1
NIGHT PICK 3
8-0-6
8-6-4
7-2-1
1-0-8
3-5-2
1-9-0
0-4-1
NIGHT PICK 4
2-3-6-6
9-0-0-3
6-0-0-2
1-5-6-3
2-5-1-3
6-1-8-2
2-8-2-5
NIGHT PICK 5
8-5-9-0-7
2-0-7-7-7
4-8-5-0-6
3-2-2-1-4
6-7-9-9-2
1-9-2-4-5
9-8-9-0-2
08-11-15-26-34
03-07-11-14-35
06-16-17-23-35
02-14-17-29-38
02-06-32-40-42
05-08-13-19-42
07-16-17-23-35
13-45-52-53-57
MEGABALL: 10
MEGAPLIER: 5
04-28-49-60-65
POWERBALL: 25
POWERPLAY: 2
31-38-52-65-71
MEGABALL: 15
MEGAPLIER: 3
14-22-23-41-61
POWERBALL: 09
POWERPLAY: 3
CASH 5
07-23-24-42-44-46
MATCH 6
CASH4LIFE:
05-26-32-36-58
CASH BALL: 4
CASH4LIFE
POWERBALL &
MEGA MILLIONS
06-11-12-24-43-44
CASH4LIFE:
02-11-32-50-54
CASH BALL: 2
Through the
Viewfinder
CONTACT US
General info: 291-8811, P.O. Box
1328, Lancaster, PA 17608
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LOCAL
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Catching up
on the news
A3
CHARITY
HOME PRICES
n Home prices in the
county jumped an
exceptional 6.3 percent
in February, compared
to an year earlier, a data
firm reported Tuesday. It
was the largest increase
in 10 years, close to the
national increase of 6.8
percent. Statewide, the
rise was 3.7 percent.
DEBATE NIGHT
BUZZ
CUTS
FOR A
CAUSE
OFFICE OPEN
n Democratic socialist
KILLER DENIED
n Judge Donald Totaro
CHARGE
DISMISSED
n A felony perjury
SALE PENDING
n A real estate agent
SOUGHT
n Columbia police
released a video to
enlist the public in
helping to identify a
person and vehicle
seen near the scene of
Mondays early morning
shooting of a 21-yearold Lancaster man in
an apartment in the
first block of North
Ninth Street in the
borough. The victim is
recovering from multiple
gunshot wounds to the
abdomen.
FATAL CRASH
n Geno R. Crivelli,
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LOCAL
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
WEATHER
1.
2.
5.
4.
3.
CASEY KREIDER | STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
6.
Winters last gasp drops April snow; forecaster says temperatures will be near 70 by next weekend
RYAN ROBINSON
RROBINSON@LNPNEWS.COM
Most of Lancaster
County got 1 to 3 inches
of snow in a rare April
storm Saturday morning, but that should be
the last hurrah of this
winter.
Thats according to
Millersville
University meteorologist Eric
Horst.
Temperatures
will
drop into the low to mid20s Saturday night, he
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There were some reports of icy, snow-covered roads Saturday
morning, but not many
traffic accidents occurred.
Snowfall amounts varied, but less fell in eastern Lancaster County
than in the west.
Less than an inch fell
in Columbia. Millersville got just over an
inch. Horst measured
2 inches at his Manheim Township home,
and the same amount
fell in Rothsville.
I suspect somewhere
in Solanco may have had
3-plus inches as well
as spots in eastern Lancaster County, he said.
There may end up being
up to 6 inches reported
in a few high-elevation
spots. He said 6-8 inches
of snow fell north of the
Pennsylvania Turnpike
in Lebanon and Dauphin counties.
After the snow, a heavy
freeze was to follow
most of Saturday night
and the low will challenge the record of 22
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A5
CRIME
Daniel
Eric Frey
was committed to
Lancaster
County
Prison on
$750,000
bail.
RROBINSON@LNPNEWS.COM
Serious condition
The father, Carl Frey,
76, was stabbed nine
times in the neck, back
and wrist. He was in serious condition at Lancaster General Hospital
on Saturday, a nursing
supervisor said.
The stepmother, Patricia Lee, 59, was cut several times on her right
hand and had ligament
damage, the complaint
states. She was treated
and released from the
hospital, police said.
City police Officer Ben
Bradley saw Daniel Frey
standing on the sidewalk, holding a knife in
his right hand, after the 5
p.m. stabbing.
Frey was covered in
blood, the complaint
stated. The knife was a
Black Label folding knife
with a 3.5-inch blade.
Frey tossed the knife
away as Bradley ap-
Police, fire and EMS units responded to the double stabbing in the 300 block of Winthrop Drive.
puncturing tires on 21
vehicles near his apartment March 24.
Police said they found
Frey holding a folding
knife shortly before 1
oclock that morning
near West Chestnut and
North Pine streets after
being called there about
someone stabbing tires.
Witnesses identified
Frey, and police found
tires on 21 vehicles had
been punctured, resulting in about $2,800 in
damage.
Frey was charged with
21 counts of criminal
mischief, and also disorderly conduct for allegedly yelling on a porch
in the 100 block of North
Pine Street and refusing
police orders to go inside.
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A6
FROM PAGE A1
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Commissions
formula
The fiscal code would
have distributed new education dollars through
a formula developed by
a bipartisan legislative
commission last year.
Under the code, most
Lancaster County school
districts would see significantly more money
this year than they would
see under Wolfs formula: in total, $8.1 million
versus $3.6 million.
The difference underscores the reason the
commission was created,
said Sen. Lloyd Smucker,
a Republican from West
Lampeter Township, in
a press release Thursday.
A distribution methodology based on evidence and data was our
goal, to keep politics,
randomness and unpredictability out of the
equation, the release
read in part.
Several
Lancaster
County school leaders
also said that the commissions formula is the
way to go.
We feel strongly that
the bipartisan formula
that was crafted was a
reliable and predictable
means to drive dollars to
schools based on student
need, said Matt Przywara, chief financial and
Considering a
lawsuit
The state Department
of Education began distributing
remaining
2015-16 funds to districts last week using the
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We feel
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the bipartisan
formula that
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was a reliable
and predictable
means to drive
dollars to
schools based on
student need.
Matt Przywara, Chief financial
and operations officer School
District of Lancaster
$128,108
1.8%
$285,385
4.0%
COLUMBIA
$269,970
4.2%
$256,182
3.9%
$50,167
1.5%
$454,988
13.1%
CONESTOGA VALLEY
DONEGAL
$140,787
2.0%
$267,005
3.8%
ELANCO
$82,650
2.0%
$213,868
5.1%
ELIZABETHTOWN
$171,256
2.0%
$315,214
3.6%
EPHRATA
$136,422
1.5%
$396,515
4.3%
HEMPFIELD
$247,514
2.0%
$463,825
3.7%
$71,829
1.8%
$230,069
5.9%
L-S
LANCASTER
$1,233,306
2.2%
$3,139,320
5.6%
MANHEIM CENTRAL
$104,258
1.6%
$196,877
2.9%
MANHEIM TOWNSHIP
$80,744
1.6%
$461,095
9.1%
OCTORARA
$281,004
4.7%
$245,260
4.1%
PENN MANOR
$211,449
1.9%
$409,657
3.6%
$59,721
2.3%
$124,306
4.7%
SOLANCO
$146,679
1.5%
$306,924
3.1%
WARWICK
$177,051
1.8%
$348,732
3.6%
PEQUEA VALLEY
TOTAL
$3.6 M
$8.1 M
Friday.
Jay Himes, executive
director of the Pennsylvania
Association
of School Business Officials, said he expects
legislators to push additional legislation to
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A8
FROM PAGE A1
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Continued from A1
The investigation of
last Sundays accident
continues. Federal railroad officials confirmed
this week that Amtrak
workers were not following basic safety rules
prior to the collision.
The numbers
Most of Pennsylvanias
train-related deaths get
much less media attention than those incidents.
On Monday night, for
example, a person was
struck and killed by a
train in Allegheny Coun-
Connect with us
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& Instagram at:
Traino, 42.
Its clear that cars are
more dangerous, she
said, but were just so
car-centric that most
people dont dwell on
that risk.
Caitlin Lam, 27, said
she feels fine riding the
train, but added that the
Keystone Line between
Philadelphia and Lancaster seems a bit safer
than the north-south
line that runs through
Philadelphia.
I think that corridor
is known for being a bit
more dangerous, Lam
said.
Jack Knauer, 26, noted
that there are curves on
the north-south track
through Philadelphia.
Out here, its basically
a straight shot through
farmland, he said.
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PENNSYLVANIA
TRAFFIC DEATHS
n 2015: 1,200
n 2014: 1,195
n 2013: 1,208
n 2012: 1,310
n 2011: 1,286
n 2010: 1,324
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Faith &
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FROM PAGE A3
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
A9
Lancaster police Sgt. Bill Hickey and his sons, 8-year-old Joseph, left, and 9-year-old
Benjamin, right, got their heads shaved Saturday.
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24897A
FROM PAGE A1
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Immigration and
foreign policy
Jessica King, a 31-yearold secretary from Peach
Bottom, said the next
presidents approach to
national security is important to her.
At Goods Store in
Quarryville, the registered Republican said
she expects to support
Trump, having been
drawn by his promise of
building a wall to keep
out illegal immigrants
from Mexico paid for
by the southern neighbor.
But its this same bold
rhetoric that is also
pushing most of the na-
tional electorate 70
percent, according to an
AP-GfK poll this week
away from Trump.
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Sitting with Fokas at
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who also emigrated from
Greece and worked for
30 years at Armstrong
World Industries, said
hes a registered Democrat who would vote for
Trump in November because hes going to fix
immigration.
We have so many million people here, and
they work and they make
their money and send it
back to their countries.
They dont pay taxes,
Kouros, 73, of Manheim
Township said, emphasizing that he came to
the country legally 48
years ago.
I work all my life and
I never get anything, but
these people, they get so
much free.
Peach Bottom resident
Cory Wiggins considers himself a die-hard
Republican, but the
53-year-old
maintenance worker is up in
the air about whom to
support. Wiggins doesnt
agree with all that
Trump has said, but I
like the fact that hes not
owned by anybody.
For 23-year-old Marietta resident Ashley
Lutz, Trumps candidacy
is ridiculous, but stricter immigration policies
may be worthwhile.
I think the fact that
there was an ISIS member found in Harrisburg,
that scares me, Lutz said
of the December arrest
of 19-year-old Jalil Ibn
Ameer Aziz. So in some
ways it could be a good
thing, but then everybody compares (Trump)
to Hitler, and thats kind
of how it seems.
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Voters: Leanings
Continued from A10
Education
Education was also on
the minds of potential
voters this week.
Dario
Bernardini,
working Wednesday in
the Manheim Township
Public Library, said that
as a professor at American University, he and
his students naturally
have been concerned
with the costs of higher
HEALTH
Jobs and
economy
As he visited the Neptune Diner with a friend
Wednesday,
Rakee
DaSilva, 27, of Lancaster
city, said Bernie Sanders
populist economic message has resonated with
him.
Im thinking this guy
is going to help me, as
someone who earns less
than $15 an hour, the
cook said as he ate corn
chowder. I like how he
portrays himself.
While both Sanders
and Trump have attracted lower-income voters
in the primaries, the Vermont senators push to
raise the minimum wage
and break up the power
of Wall Street resonated
with more than a few local voters.
People are doing
bad. People are trying
to make it, said Robert Watkins, 52, a city
resident taking a break
from his job at Park City
Center. Watkins hadnt
decided whom he would
vote for but knew he
wouldnt vote for any of
the Republican candidates.
We got a little push
with Obama trying to
straighten things out
with the health care and
everything, and still the
Republicans are trying
to fight it, Watkins said
of the GOP stance that
raising the minimum
wage would hurt businesses. Are they for the
people, or are they for
the rich people?
Paul Murray, 20, a junior studying psychology at Franklin & Marshall College, said at the
mall that while he still
needs to get clarity on
some of the specific issues, Sanders economic
stances seem to make
sense.
I think there are times
when its appropriate
for the government to
step in and regulate (the
economy), like the general concept of minimum
wage, said Murray, who
is as yet undecided.
A11
HEATHER STAUFFER
HSTAUFFER@LNPNEWS.COM
Im thinking
this guy is going
to help me, as
someone who
earns less than
$15 an hour.
Rakee DaSilva, of Lancaster,
on Bernie Sanders.
education.
His students are looking at loans theyll be
paying off for decades,
and there are real fears
of not finding a goodpaying job, he said. And
while Sanders has had
his fair share of critics for
proposing tuition-free
college, Bernardini, 61,
of East Hempfield Township, said he thinks the
money could be found in
the federal budget.
I think Sen. Sanders is
addressing more of those
concerns with more of a
significant change than
Secretary (Hillary) Clinton, where she would
just have more of an incremental change, Bernardini said.
Troy Richardson, a
human services worker
from Lancaster Township, said improving education was a top issue
for him, and hes tentatively, probably now
leaning toward Sanders.
The registered Democrat said hed like to see
reforms to the student
loan system.
Its America, so education should be a top
priority for everybody,
Richardson said at Neptune Diner.
or visit lancastermedicalcenters.com/seniorcircle.
Senior Circle is an
initiative of Tennessee-based Community
Health Systems Inc., a
for-profit company that
operates almost 200
hospitals in 29 states,
including the sister facilities in Lancaster.
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on Twitter at
LancasterOnline
for breaking news
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A12
LOCAL
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
CRASH
A minivan crashed
through a sign shortly after 3 p.m. Saturday, then
struck a pole at 2626
Lincoln Highway E.
One person in the
minivan was injured, according to officials at the
scene.
The Dodge Grand Caravan was traveling west
when it crossed over the
eastbound lane, crashed
through a large sign before striking a pole. Initial radio reports from
Lancaster County-Wide
Communications indicated a passenger in the van
had suffered a leg injury.
Traffic in the area was
slowed around the crash
scene while firefighters
from Ronks, Gordonville
Ambulance and East
Lampeter police worked
the scene.
Follow us on Twitter at
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WHO DO YOU WANT
TO SELL YOUR H OUSE?
Firefighters and other emergency personnel check out a minivan that left Lincoln Highway East in East Lampeter
Township on Saturday and crashed through a sign and into a pole, injuring one person.
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An eastern Lancaster
County woman had two
young children living in
unsanitary conditions
with illegal drugs within
their reach, police alleged.
Amy Lynn Geisel,
26, of 6231 North St. in
Salisbury Township, was
charged Thursday with
two counts of endangering the welfare of children.
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Lancaster
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Drug Task Force members discovered the conditions of Geisels home
when they tried to serve
a warrant there Aug. 19,
2015, state police Trooper Nelson Renno said in
a criminal complaint.
A 3-year-old boy and a
5-year-old girl were living in unsanitary conditions in a home in
complete disarray.
Drug task force members found a purse containing
methamphetamine, marijuana and
drug paraphernalia on
the floor of a bedroom
that was accessible to
the children, the complaint stated. A used
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Possible abuse
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Rodney E. Brenneman, M.D.
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AT SPOOKY NOOK SPORTS
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LOCAL
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
HISTORY
DRUG ABUSE
SBALDRIGE@LNPNEWS.COM
forum looks
at Armenia
TIM STUHLDREHER
TSTUHLDREHER@LNPNEWS.COM
Opioids are
the most
common
prescription
drug found
in overdose
deaths.
for more than a decade and are using
them with many other
medications as well.
Doctors suggested a
warning sign of addiction is when a patient
calls and wants an
early prescription or a
partial prescription of
opioids.
We now know the
danger of long-term
opioid use, especially
when combined with
benzodiazepines,
said Dr. Joseph Troncole, an addiction
specialist who was
one of the presenters.
Benzodiazepines are
anti-anxiety
drugs
with brand names like
Xanax, Ativan, Valium
and Klonopin.
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To open an M&T Select CD, customer must have or open a MyChoice Premium Checking, M&T Select, M&T Select With Interest, Employee M&T Select With Interest or Power Checking account.
The minimum deposit required to open the account is $1,000 of money not already on deposit at M&T Bank. The maximum deposit is $1,000,000 per customer. After the CD is opened,
the minimum balance to obtain the advertised APY is $1.00. APYs stated are accurate as of March 2, 2016. A penalty may be imposed for early withdrawal. Fees could reduce earnings
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COVER
PHOTO
for the Mothers Day Tribute!
The Mothers Day Tribute willll be
published in LNP on Mothers
s
Day (Sunday, May 8). Help
us chose the local mother
for your
favo
and her children who will
photo fr rite
be featured on the cover!
om
VOTE
Visit LancasterOnline.com/
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APRIL 1
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LOCAL
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
ELECTION 2016
A15
PUBLIC WORKS
GOP candidates
Playground, pool due for makeovers
City seeks grant for Longs Park project, fixes Reservoir Park wading pool
for 13th District
to debate Monday
DAN NEPHIN
DNEPHIN@LNPNEWS.COM
Connect
with us
Democrats. Paulson is
unopposed for his partys nomination.
Martin, a former county commissioner from
West Lampeter Township, and Demme, an
East Lampeter Township supervisor and head
of Demme Learning, appeared together at a debate in Paradise Township in late January.
Rice, an attorney from
West Lampeter Township, did not attend.
The Willow Valley
Communities Cultural
Center is located at 900
Willow Valley Lakes
Drive in Willow Street.
The moderators are
Barbara Hough Roda,
executive editor of LNP,
and Tom Baldrige, president and chief executive
officer of the chamber.
The 13th District
covers Lancaster city;
Christiana, Millersville,
Quarryville and Strasburg boroughs; and Bart,
Colerain,
Conestoga,
Drumore, East Drumore,
East Lampeter, Eden,
Fulton, Lancaster, Leacock, Little Britain,
Manheim, Manor, Martic, Paradise, Pequea,
Providence, Sadsbury,
Salisbury, Strasburg, Upper Leacock and West
Lampeter townships.
Reservoir Park
wading pool
Workers renovating
Reservoir Parks wading
pool found it was built
on unsuitable fill, which
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Thomas R. Westphal, MD
Thursday, April 14, 2016 at 6:00pm
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LOCAL
Police log
AGGRAVATED
ASSAULT
n LANCASTER: Amy L.
Man is wanted in
shoplifting at Kmart
RYAN ROBINSON
RROBINSON@LNPNEWS.COM
on Thursday, West
Lampeter Township
police said.
Police ask anyone
with information to
call township police
Cpl. Jeremy Schroeder at 464-2421.
Tipsters also may
call Lancaster City/
County Crime Stoppers at 1-800-3221913 or anonymously
text LANCS plus your
message to 847411
(TIP411).
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LOCAL
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
A17
ELECTION 2016
CRIME
TKNAPP@LNPNEWS.COM
Connect
with us
LancasterOnline
Court decisions
amendment question
to increase the mandatory retirement age for
judges. Two weeks ago,
the state Supreme Court
declined a request to alter the wording, and it
will be on the ballot.
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A18
GOVERNMENT
Roll call
n Tightened security on
WASHINGTON
n Federal aviation
n Upgraded check-in,
baggage security: The
Senate on April 7 voted,
91 for and five against,
to require tighter airport
security at check-in
counters, baggage-claims
other nonsecure locations
outside of Transportation
Security Administration
screening areas. Under the
amendment to HR 636
(above), the TSA would
step up its deployment of
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Asked about their
opinion of Obama more
generally, those surveyed were more likely
to give him a positive rating than any of the candidates for president, Republican or Democrat.
Terry Trudeau, 66, said
he preferred Obama to
all of them running for
the White House.
One of the qualities I
like is hes been able to
work with other countries and make deals,
Trudeau said, citing
Obamas climate change
pacts with China as
an example. Donald
Trump will never be able
to do that. He would try
to bully them.
Obamas numbers remain modest.
Compared with his
predecessors,
hes
well above Republican
George W. Bush, who
had about a 30 percent
approval rating at this
point in his presidency,
but below Democrat Bill
Clintons roughly 60 percent, according to polls
conducted by Gallup.
Still, where each of those
second-term presidents
largely sat on the sidelines during the races
to replace them, Obama
is poised to stay in the
game.
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LOCAL
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
A19
SHELLHAMMER, Zachary
J., 16, son of Chris and Erica
(Sandoe), Ephrata, April 5.
LAWRENCE, Thelma
(Streett), 96, Quarryville,
March 26.
TODAYS OBITUARIES
Todays obituaries can be found on pages A24-A27.
Denver, April 4.
WHISLER, Robert H. Jr., 71,
Gap, April 6.
WHITE, E. James, 92, April
7.
WINEBARGER, Stephen
W., 60, Strasburg, April 6.
WASSON, Cheryl E.
(Hershey), 57, Paradise,
April 2.
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MarketPulse
BROKER RULES
The government issued new rules
for brokers that may change the
kinds of investments they
recommend to people with
retirement accounts. The Labor
Department guidelines will require
the brokers to act as fiduciaries,
meaning they must put their clients
best interests above all. That could
push them to recommend
less-risky investments, and they
may have to disclose conflicts of
interests like fees that could affect
their investment advice. Critics say
investors lose billions of dollars a
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LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Dow industrials
Nasdaq
-1.30% (wkly)
s 4-wk. 2.11%
s YTD 0.87%
s 4-wk. 2.15%
t YTD -3.13%
-1.21% (wkly)
s 4-wk. 1.26%
s YTD 0.18%
19,000
MON
TUES
WED
THUR
5,400
FRI
-1.68% (wkly)
-1.82% (wkly)
s 4-wk. 1.43%
s YTD 2.05%
-22.75
-47.86
76.78
-72.35
2.32
MON
TUES
WED
THUR
FRI
$1,000
5,000
17,000
4,800
16,000
4,600
s 4-wk. 0.90%
t YTD -3.40%
52-WEEK
HIGH
LOW
18351.36 15370.33
Nasdaq composite
4,200
Close: 17,576.96
1-week change: -215.79 (-1.2%)
YTD
1YR
CHG %CHG MO QTR%CHG %CHG
17806.38
17484.23
17576.96
-215.79
-1.2
7929.74
7623.89
7736.28
-151.49
-1.9
10234.17
10004.77
10119.68
-100.28
-1.0
11254.87
8937.99
NYSE Comp.
5231.94
4209.76
Nasdaq Comp.
4921.51
4831.49
4850.69
-63.85
-1.3
2134.72
1810.10
S&P 500
2074.02
2033.80
2047.60
-25.18
-1.2
1551.28
1215.14
S&P MidCap
1451.63
1411.12
1427.22
-24.37
-1.7
22537.15 18462.43
Wilshire 5000
21349.01
20927.61
21071.24
-153.08
-0.7
Russell 2000
1119.41
1088.56
1097.31
-20.37
-1.8
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s
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s
s
s
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s
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Handheld gaming
devices
$3 billion
4%
Console
games
22%
Mobile
games
41%
$18.5 billion
$34.8 billion
Computer
games
34%
$29 billion
Handheld gaming
devices
-30%
-3%
Fidelity
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FrankTemp-Franklin
Metropolitan West
PIMCO
Vanguard
* - annualized
*$@999985| -11.8
-0.2
(*^$!9997651| -8.9
-3.1
(((*&^%$@!954321| -2.9
+0.2
((((%$!91| -2.6
+2.1
((&^#!9986531| -7.0
-0.5
(((#99532| -5.4
-3.4
99999542| -13.2
REITs
1,049
-1.3
1,035
0.2
High-yield bonds
Investment-grade bonds
Emerging-market stocks
Technology stocks
Oil
S&P 500
Copper
European stocks
AmBalA m
CapIncBuA m
CpWldGrIA m
FnInvA m
GrthAmA m
IncAmerA m
InvCoAmA m
WAMutInvA m
Income
IntlStk
Stock
Contra
500IdxAdvtg
IncomeA m
TotRetBdI
TotRetIs
500Adml
InstIdxI
InstPlus
InstTStPl
IntlStkIdxAdm
IntlStkIdxIPls
MuIntAdml
PrmcpAdml
TotBdAdml
TotIntl
TotStIAdm
TotStIIns
TotStIdx
WelltnAdm
ABALX
24.18
CAIBX
57.40
CWGIX 43.00
ANCFX 50.71
AGTHX 40.27
AMECX 20.63
AIVSX
34.24
AWSHX 38.80
DODIX
13.50
DODFX 34.42
DODGX 155.53
FCNTX 96.47
FUSVX 72.38
FKINX
2.10
MWTIX 10.86
PTTRX
10.21
VFIAX 188.98
VINIX
187.12
VIIIX
187.13
VITPX
45.88
VTIAX
23.80
VTPSX
95.17
VWIUX
14.46
VPMAX 101.12
VBTLX
10.94
VGTSX 14.23
VTSAX
50.73
VITSX
50.73
VTSMX 50.71
VWENX 64.31
$500
1,035
0.5
1,023
-3.2
1,015
-1.1
1,006
-2.8
1,005
-0.8
973
-4.9
970
2.6
966
-1.9
959
-2.0
954
-2.8
$1,000
Celator Pharmaceut
CPXX
Educational Devel
EDUC
13.62
-2.3
+18.3
Energy Recovery
ERII
10.97
+6.1
+16.3
SPI
5.53
...
-22.9
Internet Gold-Golden
IGLD
13.78
+2.2
-11.4
Oclaro Inc
OCLR
5.26
-4.2
+24.1
Alexco Resources
AXU
1.08 +12.5
+43.0
Natural Alternat
NAII
13.66
+0.7
+24.4
GSV
1.17
+6.4
+17.0
Skyline Cp
SKY
8.65
-2.8
+73.0
NeoPhotonics Corp
NPTN
13.96
-0.4
+15.7
MediciNova Inc
MNOV
8.25
+4.4
+41.3
GigPeak Inc
GIG
2.90
+6.6
+12.8
Netlist Inc
NLST
1.34
-4.3
-6.3
MaxLinear Inc
MXL
18.31
-1.7
+5.6
LOXO
25.27
-9.7
+23.5
Hawaiian Holdings
HA
48.20
+4.7
+6.3
Sophiris Bio
SPHS
1.48
+2.1
-22.9
FPRX
44.48
+7.2
+32.7
Lexicon Pharma
LXRX
13.11
+5.0
+16.6
%RTN
1YR
+477.7
+238.0
+202.9
+173.7
+171.4
+167.9
+162.6
PE YLD
dd
...
23
2.6
dd
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
+159.5
...
...
19
...
+145.3
...
...
dd
...
+140.5
cc
...
dd
...
73
...
dd
...
+155.4
+143.7
+123.8
+123.1
+122.0
+121.8
+121.3
+120.7
+119.7
+115.9
cc
...
dd
...
15
...
dd
...
...
dd
...
IndustryRankings
$CHG ---------- PERCENT RETURN ---------1WK 1WK 1MO 1YR RANK 5YRS* RANK
-0.06 -0.2
-0.02
...
-0.15 -0.3
-0.38 -0.7
-0.21 -0.5
-0.06 -0.3
-0.13 -0.4
-0.35 -0.9
+0.03 +0.2
-0.27 -0.8
-2.35 -1.5
-1.07 -1.1
-0.85 -1.2
...
...
+0.03 +0.3
+0.02 +0.2
-2.21 -1.2
-2.18 -1.2
-2.18 -1.2
-0.55 -1.2
-0.09 -0.4
-0.39 -0.4
+0.07 +0.5
-0.55 -0.5
+0.03 +0.3
-0.05 -0.4
-0.60 -1.2
-0.61 -1.2
-0.60 -1.2
-0.25 -0.4
PERCENT CHANGE
1WK 1MO 1QTR
INDUSTRY
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
LocalFunds
NAV
0.2 %
-2.0
Performance benchmarks: industries - sectors of the Standard & Poors 500 index; international
stocks - MSCI indexes; bond returns - Barclays Capital and BofA Merrill Lynch Indexes.
Source: FactSet Data through April 7
AP
TICKER
1-week
... today is percent
worth change
1,132
$0
(((($#@!9421| -2.7
+3.0
115%
FUND
Commodities
$1,167
28%
Mobile
games
COUNTING CALORIES
Subway says it will start posting
calorie counts on its menus around
the country Monday. It has 27,000
stores in the U.S. Some other
FAMILY
chains, including McDonalds and
American
Funds
Panera Bread, have posted that
information for a few years. The
2010 health care overhaul required
major chain restaurants to start
displaying that information, but the
regulation has been delayed
repeatedly and its still not clear
when it will go into effect.
+0.9
console
games
Computer
games
Bonds
Gold
Utilities stocks
CLOSE
LOW
6403.31
943.09
8953.18
1296.00
HIGH
INDEX
Dow Jones industrial average
Stocks
Close: 4,850.69
1-week change: -63.85 (-1.3%)
4,000
Derby
4,400
COMPANY
Russell 2000
5,200
18,000
14,000
AP
S&P mid-cap
StocksRecap
15,000
-1.21% (wkly)
S&P 500
+2.8
+3.1
+3.2
+3.8
+4.4
+2.9
+3.9
+3.3
+2.0
+1.3
+2.6
+4.0
+3.6
+1.9
+1.2
+1.6
+3.6
+3.6
+3.6
+3.6
+2.4
+2.3
+1.3
+4.1
+1.4
+2.4
+3.7
+3.7
+3.7
+2.8
+2.2
-1.5
-6.9
+0.9
-1.8
-0.5
-0.2
+0.3
+0.4
-22.1
-6.6
-0.1
+0.5
-7.6
+1.3
+0.3
+0.5
+0.5
+0.5
-1.7
-12.4
-12.3
+4.3
-2.2
+1.9
-12.4
-1.8
-1.8
-1.9
+0.3
1
1
3
1
2
1
2
1
4
5
4
1
1
5
2
4
1
1
1
2
3
3
1
2
1
4
3
3
3
1
Technology
Industrials
Utilities
Consumer Goods
Health Care
DJ Total Market index
Consumer Services
Basic Material
Oil & Gas
Telecommunications
Financials
6.
7.
1 HHHHI 8.
9.
1 HHHHI
10.
2 HHHII
3 HHHII
3 HHHII
1 HHHII
Computer Hardware
2 HHHII 3D Systems
DDD
1 HHHHI Mercury Systems
MRCY
2 HHHHI RadiSys Corporation
RSYS
4 HHIII Computer Services
2 HHHII Datalink Corporation
DTLK
2 HHHHH Science Applic Intl
SAIC
NTCT
1 HHHHH NetScout Systems
3 HHHII Software
SQ
1 HHHHH Square Inc
APIC
3 HHHHI Apigee Corp
CALD
1 HHHHH Callidus Software
1 HHHHH Electronic Office Equipment
Pitney Bowes
PBI
1 HHHHH
Internet
2 HHHHI
Envestnet Inc
ENV
4 HHIII
Rackspace Hosting
RAX
4 HHIII
Boingo Wireless
WIFI
2 HHHHI Semiconductors
1 HHHHH Inphi Corp
IPHI
2 HHHII NeoPhotonics Corp
NPTN
5 HHHII GigPeak Inc
GIG
2 HHHHI Telecomm. Equipment
2 HHHHI Ruckus Wireless
RKUS
AFOP
2 HHHHI Alliance Fiber Opt
OCLR
1 HHHHH Oclaro Inc
+9.2
+6.3
+5.7
+9.7
+10.3
+7.7
+10.3
+10.9
+3.9
+0.5
+9.8
+11.2
+11.4
+4.2
+5.0
+3.7
+11.4
+11.4
+11.4
+10.9
-0.1
...
+5.1
+12.6
+3.9
-0.1
+10.8
+10.8
+10.7
+8.4
RATING
2.7
2.4
2.1
1.9
1.7
1.3
1.0
0.9
0.9
0.0
-0.9
-2.0
-1.4
-1.9
-0.8
1.0
-1.2
-1.9
-1.4
2.2
-2.3
-2.6
8.0
10.6
13.5
9.3
1.7
6.4
4.9
12.1
11.2
14.7
0.9
%RTN
1YR
(((*%#@|6 0.8
((*&^%#@854321| -3.9
(((*%#@|981 9.4
(((*%#@|87531 5.2
((&%$@965421| -7.7
((*&^$#@864| -4.1
(((&^!6531| -1.3
(*$#!994| -12.7
9998532| -22.4
(((*%#@|9654321 7.8
((&^$@!96421| -7.3
4.8
+36.6
+17.7
+16.9
4.7
+18.3
+13.5
+12.5
3.2
+36.3
+26.4
+25.4
3.1
+3.1
1.5
+16.9
+13.7
+10.9
1.1
+22.6
+15.7
+12.8
-0.4
+39.7
+38.5
+24.1
11.6
+88.5
+16.6
+77.1
9.9
+34.4
+18.8
-15.3
5.3
+33.8
+14.6
-1.8
12.5
+12.5
6.2
+7.7
+5.3
+25.7
7.4
+43.2
+59.2
-1.7
10.6
+46.0
+34.0
+59.4
(^%$#!7651| -14.2
&%@!97543| -43.5
(*^$#@!|87543 +27.5
(*^$#@!|998751 +90.2
(*64321| -5.9
*&^$#872| -24.3
(*^$#@!|543 +3.5
^$#@!98| -48.0
(*^$#@!|752 10.3
(*^$#@!| 0.0
(*^$#@!| 0.0
(*^$#@!|94 +33.0
(&%$@753| -10.6
(&^%$6532| -6.8
(*^$#@!|865321 22.9
%$#!9851| -50.2
9864321| -53.9
(&^$#@7| -8.1
(*$6321| -4.9
(*^$#@!|99864 +85.1
(*^$#@!|9996 +143.7
(*^$#@!|9996 +123.8
(&%$#@75| -10.1
(*^$#@!|731 +8.7
(&%#@754| -11.1
(*^$#@!|9996 +167.9
Local Stocks
TICKER
AT&T Inc
Air Products
Alcoa Inc
Applied Indl Tch
Armstrong World Inds
Bco Santander SA
Bon Ton Store
CNH Indl NV
Campbell Soup
Carpenter Tech
Clarcor Inc
Costco Wholesale
Donegal A
Donnelley RR & Sons
Exelon Corp
Frontier Comm
Fulton Financial
GlaxoSmithKline PLC
Harley Davidson
Henry Schein Inc
Hershey Company
Intl Paper
Johnson & Johnson
Kellogg Co
Kroger Co
L-3 Communications
M&T Bank
Merck & Co
52-WK RANGE
FRIDAY $CHG %CHG
%CHG %RTN RANK %RTN
LOW
HIGH CLOSE 1WK 1WK 1MO 1QTR YTD 1YR 1YR 5YRS* PE Yld COMPANY
T
30.97
APD 114.64
AA
6.14
AIT
35.55
AWI
31.13
SAN
3.69
BONT 1.10
CNHI
5.67
CPB
44.60
CRS
23.99
CLC
44.13
COST 117.03
DGICA 12.69
RRD
12.07
EXC
25.09
FTR
3.81
FULT 11.48
GSK
37.24
HOG 36.36
HSIC 126.17
HSY
82.41
IP
32.50
JNJ
81.79
K
61.13
KR
27.32
LLL
101.11
MTB 100.08
MRK 45.69
9 39.72
8 153.93
4 14.29
9 45.21
5 52.61
2 7.79
2 7.67
2 9.72
0 65.48
5 45.42
6 66.99
7 169.73
6 15.82
6 20.22
9 35.95
4 7.50
5 14.59
4 48.45
4 62.96
9 173.57
5 102.56
4 56.49
0 109.84
0 78.10
7 42.75
7 131.36
3 134.00
7 61.70
38.50
142.52
9.37
43.51
41.62
4.13
2.04
6.26
64.21
34.21
56.13
151.65
14.28
16.18
34.70
5.25
12.94
41.55
44.62
167.99
91.81
40.22
109.10
77.25
37.99
119.41
108.86
55.36
-0.07 -0.2
-2.79 -1.9
-0.26 -2.7
-0.61 -1.4
-0.07 -0.2
-0.20 -4.6
-0.20 -8.9
-0.34 -5.2
-0.64 -1.0
-0.53 -1.5
-1.62 -2.8
-6.60 -4.2
0.51 3.7
-0.31 -1.9
-0.96 -2.7
-0.22 -4.0
-0.45 -3.4
1.21 3.0
-7.04 -13.6
-4.91 -2.8
-1.90 -2.0
-0.75 -1.8
-0.09 -0.1
-0.61 -0.8
-0.33 -0.9
0.87 0.7
-3.56 -3.2
1.66 3.1
s
s
t
s
s
t
t
t
s
s
s
t
t
t
t
t
t
s
t
t
t
s
s
s
t
s
t
s
s
s
s
s
s
t
s
s
s
s
s
t
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
t
s
t
s
11.9
9.5
-5.1
7.5
5.0
-15.2
-2.9
-8.5
22.2
13.0
13.0
-6.1
1.4
9.9
25.0
12.4
-0.5
3.0
-1.7
6.2
2.8
6.7
6.2
6.9
-9.2
-0.1
-10.2
4.8
23.7
-3.4
-30.6
3.9
-14.0
-41.2
-70.0
-22.4
42.3
-12.0
-13.6
0.8
-4.5
-11.3
7.6
-22.0
7.6
-6.1
-26.4
19.9
-6.4
-23.1
11.9
20.8
-0.1
-3.4
-10.1
0.1
1
2
4
2
3
4
5
4
1
3
3
2
2
3
1
4
1
3
4
1
3
4
1
1
2
2
3
2
9.2
11.3
-11.1
7.7
4.6
-9.6
-26.3
...
16.1
-2.1
6.1
17.3
4.1
1.9
1.1
-1.2
5.4
6.4
4.4
19.4
12.7
9.7
15.5
9.9
26.9
11.4
7.0
13.7
17
22
16
17
43
...
...
78
28
27
21
29
15
17
13
...
15
...
12
29
22
15
18
29
18
17
15
26
5.0
2.4
1.3
2.6
...
8.5
9.8
2.2
1.9
2.1
1.6
1.1
3.8
6.4
3.6
8.0
2.8
5.9
2.8
...
2.5
4.4
2.7
2.6
1.1
2.2
2.6
3.3
TICKER
52-WK RANGE
FRIDAY $CHG %CHG
%CHG %RTN RANK %RTN
LOW
HIGH CLOSE 1WK 1WK 1MO 1QTR YTD 1YR 1YR 5YRS* PE Yld
NWBI
11.77 7 14.11
PNC Financial
PNC
77.67 2 100.52
PPL Corp
PPL
29.18 0 38.30
Patterson Cos
PENN
Penney JC Co Inc
JCP
6.00 7 11.99
Pfizer Inc
PFE
28.25 6 36.46
RAD
SHLD
Skyline Cp
SKY
2.17 9
Supervalu Inc
SVU
3.94 2 12.00
12.51 6 20.23
5.88 6
9.47
14.05 1 44.72
9.47
TE Connectivity Ltd
TEL
51.70 5 71.47
Tanger Factory
SKT
29.46 9 37.01
Tegna Inc
TGNA
21.11 2 33.40
Tyson Foods
TSN
37.24 0 68.30
UGI Corp
UGI
31.51 0 41.06
Univrsl Corp
UVV
45.61 6 58.89
Urban Outfitters
Verizon Comm
VZ
38.06 9 54.49
WalMart Strs
WMT
56.30 5 81.39
Weis Mkts
WMK
37.14 6 50.09
WFC
44.50 2 58.77
Windstream Hldgs
WIN
4.42 4 13.24
YRCW
6.25 2 21.37
13.26
81.82
-0.36
-3.47
37.40
-0.79
16.93
-0.01
44.94
-1.41
-2.6
s -1.0
16.9
6.7
-4.1
t -14.2
-9.7
7.4
20 4.2
11 2.5
-2.1
9.6
23.0
1 13.3
16 4.0
-3.0
s -0.6
-5.2
7.9
20 2.1
-0.1
5.7
8.6
1 14.8
10.02
-0.61
...
...
-5.7
s 50.5
10.4
1 -21.9
...
...
-0.17
8.2
8.02
0.7
-2.9
2 12.8
19 3.7
-2.1
2.3
-9.6
3 50.2
50
...
-3.0
t -29.7 -66.4
5 -23.1
...
...
-2.8
s 143.3 141.0
1 -15.6
...
...
-4.8
t -20.4 -53.9
5 -9.1
...
-1.0
s -4.9 -11.3
3 14.4
10 2.1
-1.4
s 10.7
6.7
1 10.2
16 3.6
-0.6
t -11.1 -19.1
4 17.1
10 2.5
0.0
s 27.7
77.5
1 29.2
20 0.9
-1.4
s 19.7
21.1
1 15.3
22 2.3
-5.7
18.4
-3.85 -11.2
s -4.8
7.5
16 4.0
s 33.8 -30.1
4 -0.3
17
-2.4
s 12.9
1 10.7
12 4.3
-1.4
s 11.0 -13.6
8.0
15 2.9
-2.7
s -0.2
5.0
20 2.7
-2.8
t -13.4 -10.1
3 10.7
11 3.2
3.8
s 22.2 -30.7
4 10.0
31 7.6
-0.8
t -36.9 -45.2
5 -55.5
...
32.50
14.45
8.65
5.40
61.43
36.20
22.68
68.11
40.42
53.39
30.44
52.18
68.06
44.21
47.07
7.87
8.95
2.46
-0.45
-0.25
-0.27
-0.62
-0.51
-0.13
0.02
-0.58
-3.22
-1.26
-1.00
-1.22
-1.38
0.29
-0.07
10.8
-7.6
...
...
Notes on data: Total returns, shown for periods 1-year or greater, include dividend income and change in market price. Three-year and five-year returns annualized. Ellipses indicate data not available. Price-earnings ratio unavailable for closed-end funds and companies with net losses over
prior four quarters. Rank classifies a stocks performance relative to all U.S.-listed shares, from top 20 percent (1) to bottom 20 percent (5).
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
A21
Nation&World
FOR THE LATEST UPDATES, GO TO LANCASTERONLINE.COM
In brief
BANGLADESH
Al-Qaida says it
At left, Daniel Perez, who is of Dominican descent, cheers Democratic presidential candidate, Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt.,
during a campaign event Saturday in the Bronx. At right, supporters of Republican presidential candidate Ohio Gov. John
Kasich cheer as he finishes speaking during a campaign event Saturday at a community center in Greece, N.Y.
CAMPAIGN 2016
HONOLULU
Ex-leader named in
laundering probe
Argentinas state news agency is reporting that a federal prosecutor has
asked that former President Cristina
Fernandez be investigated in a money
laundering probe.
Telam reported Saturday that Guillermo Marijuan made the formal request to Judge Sebastian Casanello,
who is overseeing an investigation
that involves a businessman with close
ties to Fernandez. Under Argentine
law, such a request is the precursor to
charges.
BISMARCK, N.D.
Keystone pipeline
ready for restart
TransCanada Corp. said Saturday
that it has completed repairs to its Keystone Pipeline, a week after the pipeline oozed thousands of gallons of Canadian crude into a South Dakota field.
A spokesman for the Calgary-based
company said the pipeline was expected to be restarted on Saturday. Its still
not clear what caused a breech, which
the company described as a small
leak.
IRAN
Opposition leader
demands a trial
An Iranian opposition leader who
has been under house arrest since 2011
has asked President Hassan Rouhani
to lobby for an open trial.
Mehdi Karroubi says he wants to
publicize fraud in the 2009 presidential election, in which Mahmoud Ahmadinejad defeated Karroubi and another prominent opposition figure to
secure a second term. The election was
marred by allegations of fraud and was
followed by massive protests.
JACKSON, MISS.
Sanders win
On the Democratic side, Bernie
Sanders picked up another win in
Wyoming but it did nothing to
help him gain ground in the delegate chase.
Sanders, who has now won seven of the last eight state contests,
called Wyoming a beautiful, beautiful state, and told reporters the
vote there was part of a shift in support in his direction since the campaign left the Deep South.
Now that we are in the second
half of this campaign, we are going
to state after state which I think
have a more progressive outlook,
Sanders said. We are in this race
to win.
Keeping up his tussle with Trump
HASTERT CHARGES
ASSOCIATED PRESS
NATION/WORLD
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
EUROPE ATTACKS
Lebanon, PA
GUN SHOW
Lebanon Expo Center
Easy travel
Abrini was a childhood
friend of Brussels brothers Salah and Brahim Abdeslam, both suspects in
the Paris attacks, and he
had ties to Abdelhamid
Abbaoud, the Paris attackers ringleader who
died in a French police
raid shortly afterward.
Brahim
Abdeslam
blew himself up in the
Paris bombings while
Salah Abdeslam was arrested in Brussels on
March 18 four days
before the attacks there
after a four-month
manhunt.
Abrinis fingerprints
and DNA were found not
only in a Renault Clio
used in the Paris attacks
but also in an apartment
in the Schaerbeek neighborhood of Brussels that
was used by the airport
bombers.
Abrini was also believed to have traveled to
Syria, where his younger
brother died in 2014 in
the Islamic States Francophone brigade.
One European security
official told The Associ-
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Its a lot of
people who
make their
living based
on proximity
to power, if
not access,
so theyre
threatened.
Barry Bennett,
campaign consultant
Philadelphia
Organizers of the
Democratic convention
in Philadelphia also are
supposed to raise $64
million; in January, former Pennsylvania Gov.
Edward Rendell said the
host committee had $14
million in pledges and
$19 million in the bank.
Four years ago, the committee fell short and had
to sidestep a self-imposed ban on corporate
donors.
Spokeswoman Anna
Adams-Sarthou
declined to give updated
figures, saying fundraisers are hitting all of our
benchmarks.
On the Republican
side, some of the big donors to the 2012 convention have so far stayed
out. Charles Koch declined to comment about
whether he will help underwrite the 2016 convention.
STATE
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
INFRASTRUCTURE
ASSOCIATED PRESS
SENATE CANDIDATES
ASSOCIATED PRESS
HARRISBURG
The three Democrats
running for a chance
to unseat Republican
U.S. Sen. Pat Toomey
in the fall election
took questions from
an audience of college
students on the campus of Penn State University on Saturday
night as they vie for
undecided voters and
millions of dollars in
TV ads pour into the
race.
The hour-long debate between John
Fetterman, Katie McGinty and Joe Sestak
at WPSU in State College gave the candidates opportunities to
answer questions on
issues including how
to improve education,
job losses.
Sestak also said fair
trade deals are possible if done right for
instance,
intellectual
property must be protected, he said but
McGinty and Fetterman
were more resolute in
their rejection of trade
deals. McGinty, who also
supports a $15 an hour
minimum wage, said the
nation needs to put its
energy into improving
its own workers.
Fetterman, the youngest of the candidates at
46, brought out laughter
at regular intervals from
the student audience. At
one point, asked why hes
the best candidate of the
three to beat Toomey,
Fetterman said, Ive got
about 9 inches and 150
pounds on him, for starters.
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OBITS
A24 SUNDAY,
A24 SUNDAY,
APRIL 10, APRIL
2016 10, 2016
Deaths
Reported
Albright, Dorothy
Jane
92, wife of William F.
Albright, Jr. April 6,
2016. Charles F. Snyder, Jr. Funeral Home
& Crematory, 5605100
Bursa, Jean
89, wife of Frank Bursa.
April 7, 2016. Charles F.
Snyder, Jr. Funeral
Home & Crematory,
560-5100
Chorazy, Lorri A.
54, of Lancaster. April
5, 2016. Charles F. Snyder Funeral Home &
Crematory, 872-5041
Corcoran (Hanley),
Donna Marie
78, of Lancaster. April
8, 2016. Charles F. Snyder
Funeral Home & Crematory, 393-9661
Crivelli, Geno R.
65, husband of Deborah B. (Dusek) Crivelli,
of Bowmansville. April
7, 2016. Klee Funeral
Home & Cremation
Services, Inc., 610-7779955
Davis, C. William
87. April 7, 2016.
DeBord Snyder Funeral Home & Crematory,
Inc., 394-4097
Dickey, Billy
88, of Sammamish,
WA. April 3, 2016
Doyle, Sharon G.
62, wife of Hoyt J.
Doyle, of Conestoga.
April 7, 2016. Melanie
B. Scheid Funeral
Directors & Cremation Services, 872-1779
Frey, Pauline M.
82, of Millersville.
April 5, 2016. Andrew
T. Scheid Funeral
Home, 397-8298
Giangiacomo, Tina
Marie (Acker)
58, wife of Michael
Giangiacomo, of Reading. April 7, 2016.
Edward J. Kuhn
Funeral Home, Inc.,
610-374-5440
Greiner, William N.
Jr.
74, husband of Jane M.
(Antes) Greiner, of
Lancaster. April 7,
2016. Charles F. Snyder Jr. Funeral Home
& Crematory, 5605100
Hess, J. Robert
85, husband of Evelyn
J. (Sangrey) Hess. April
8, 2016. Reynolds
Funeral & Cremation
Services, Inc., 7863272
Kline, Lloyd W.
84, husband of Alison
W. Macindoe, of
Newark, DE. March 31,
2016. Clyde W. Kraft
Funeral Home, 6842370
Martinez, Luz Maria
65, of Lancaster. April
7, 2016. The Groffs
Funeral & Cremation
Services Inc., 3945300
Mateer, Evelyn Pittinger
85. April 8, 2016. Buch
Funeral Home, Inc.,
665-4341
Mittelman, Salome
69, of Coatesville. April
6, 2016. Wilde Funeral
Home, 610-857-5551
Pomroy, H. Marshall
Husband of Marilyn
W. Pomroy. April 9,
2016. Sheetz Funeral
Home, Inc., 653-5441
Smith, Sue Ellen
74, wife of Clyde J.
Smith, of Juniper Village, Mount Joy.
March 18, 2016. Clyde
W. Kraft Funeral
Home, Inc., 684-2370
Snyder, Robert L.*
84, husband of Linda
Fullerton, of Columbia. April 7, 2016.
Charles F. Snyder Jr.
Funeral Home & Crematory, 560-5100
White, E. James
92. April 7, 2016. Bachman Funeral Home,
687-7644
* No Obituary appears
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Obituaries
Sue Ellen
Smith
Services
Today
Hunt, Ruth M.
Salem Bible Church,
590 Voganville Rd.,
New Holland, 2 PM.
Beck Funeral Home
Immel, Alice Clara
Susquehanna Valley
Nursing and Rehabilitation Center, 745 Old
Chickies Hill Rd.,
Columbia, 3 PM.
DeBord Snyder Funeral Home & Crematory,
Inc.
Landis, Sylvia May
(Flowers)
Charles F. Snyder, Jr.
Funeral Home & Crematory, 3110 Lititz
Pike, Lititz , 2 PM
Nafziger,
Mary
Emma
Landis Homes West
Bethany Chapel, 1001
East Oregon Road,
Lititz, 4 PM. Shivery
Funeral Home, Inc.
Sharon G.
Doyle
OTHER OBITUARIES
ON PAGES A25,
A26 & A27
tion provided to them by families. It does not accept obituaries from individuals. Obituaries and related materials,
submitted to LNP Media
Group, Inc. may be edited for
style, policy or legal reasons,
and they become the property
of LNP Media Group, Inc.
YOURE INVITED!
717.560.5100
preplan@SnyderFuneralHome.com
www.SnyderFuneralHome.com
Downtown Lancaster
Lititz Pike
Millersville
Spacht-Snyder Lititz
Supervisor/Pre-Planning
Specialist
OBITS
A25 SUNDAY,
LNP
| LANCASTER,
PA APRIL 10, 2016
Evelyn
Pittinger
Ma
ateer
t
Luz Lucy
Maria
Martinez
Obituaries
Dorothy Jane
Albright
Dorothy
Jane
Albright, 92, formerly of
W. Roseville
Rd., passed
away o n
Wednesday,
April
6,
2016 at the
Me n n o n it e
Home.
She was the
wife of William
F. Albright, Jr.,
with whom she
celebrated 64 years of
marriage this past May
12th. Born in Lancasterr,
she was the only child
of the late J. Frank and
Rose Gigl Heidlauf.
She graduated in
P.
June, 1941 from J.P
McCaskey High School
and was employed at
RCA in the Accounting
department after graduation for 16 years, became a homemaker for
many years and then
returned to work at St.
Joseph Hospital in the
Data Processing department for 14 years before
retiring.
Mrs.
Albright
was a parishioner of
St. J ohn Neumann
Catholic Church. She
was a former mem ber of the Carousel
Dance Club and the St.
Joseph Hospital Junior
Auxiliaryy. In her later
years, she was a member of St. Anne and St.
John Neumann Senior
Citizens group, the
Silver Threads. She enjoyed golf and was an
avid bridge player.
She is survived, in addition to her husband,
by her 3 sons: Thomas B.
husband of Lecia Rogers
Albright of Spotsylvania,
VA,
A David J. husband of
Rebecca Albright of St.
Louis, MO, and Andrew
husband of K elly
Albright of Manheim.
She is also survived
by her granddaughter,
Katharine L. Albright of
Chattanooga, TN.
Friends will be received on Monday, April
11, 2016 from 10-11AM
at St. John Neumann
Catholic Church,
60 1 E. Delp Rd.,
L a n c a st e r, PA , 1 76 01
with the Mass to follow
at 11AM. Interment will
be private in St. Joseph
New Catholic Cemeteryy.
In lieu of owers, please
make contributions in
Dorothy s memory to
the St. John Neumann
Building Fund at the
above church address.
To send an online condolence, please visit
SnydeerrFuneralHo
ome.com
OTHER OBITUARIES
ON PAGES
A26 & A27
H. Marshall Pomroy
H. Marshall Pomroy
(Marty) passed away
pe acef ull y
on April 9,
2016 at his
h o m e .
Marshall
was born in
Dover, New
J ersey in
1933. He graduated from
Rockaway High
School in June
1951. He then attended
the
A cadem y
of
Advanced Traffic in New
Yo
ork Cityy. He served in
the United States Army
with the 314 Ordinance
Group for the 8th Army
in Korea and received
his honorable discharge
in April of 1961. Upon
completion of his civic
dutyy, he graduated from
Elizabethtown College,
and earned his Masters
degree from Penn State
University. Marshall
was a Certiffiied Public
Accountant working in
public accounting for
several years. He was an
As soc iat e P rof ess or
Emeritus
at
Elizabethtown College,
where he taught in the
business department for
35 years. He was a member of the AsharaCasiphia Masonic Lodge
No. 551. Marshall was
very active in his church,
the First Presbyterian
Church of Mount Joy,
where he served as treasurer for 25 years. He
also served as an Elder,
on the Board of Deacons,
and as a Sunday school
tea cher .
Marshall
coached girls softball
for the M ount Jo y
Athle
t tic Association for
many years. He enjoyed
working in his yard, vacationing in Maine, and
was a model railroad en-
thusiast, belonging to
the Train Collectors
Association (TCA). He
also enjoyed time with
his grandchildren.
He was predeceased
in death by his daughter
Jill P. Reed, his sister
Patricia Sanagorski, and
his parents Harold M.
and Ruth M. Pomroy. He
is survived by his wife
Marilyn W. Pomroy, son
Keith E. Pomroy, daughter-in-law Katie Pomroy,
daughter Kay E. Pomroy,
son-in-law Steven Reed,
and grandchildren
Douglas M. Irwin, Eric
E. Sevareid, and
Alexandra K. Sevareid.
A Fun eral S ervice
honoring Marty s life
will be held at the First
Presbyterian Church of
Mount Joy, 7 Marietta
Avenue, Mount Joy on
Thursday, April 14, 2016
at 11 AM. Family and
friends will be received
at the Sheetz Funeral
Home, Inc., 16 East Main
Street, Mount Joy on
Weednesday, April 13,
2016 from 6 PM to 8 PM
and again on Thursday
at the church before the
service from 10 AM to 11
AM. Interment will folfol
low at Mount Tunnel
Cemetery. In lieu of
owers, memorial contributions may be made
to the First Presbyterian
Church of Mount Joy, 7
Marietta Avenue, Mount
Joy, PA 17552 or Hospice
and Community Care,
685 Good Drive, Box
4125, Lancas ter, PA
17604.
To send an online
condolence, please visit
www .shee tzfuneral home.com
Sheetz
Funeral Home, Inc.
Mount Joy
Salome
Mittelman
1946-2016
She is survived by
two children; Alyson,
wife of Robert Stone
of Sherman Oaks, CA
and Edward Mittelman
and wife Angela of
Coatesville, two grandchildren; Wyatt Caln
Stone and Caroline
Salome Stone and
three siblings; Samuel
Smoker, Mary Ellen
Marsh and Leon
Smoker.
Memorial services
will be held on Saturday,
April 23, 2016 at 11am
from the Wilde Funeral
Home, 434 Main St.,
Parkesburg, PA with visitation from 10 to 11am.
Online condolences
can be posted at www.
wildefuneralhome.com
Salome Mittelman,
69, of Coatesville, passed
away on Wednesday,
April 6, 2016 at the
Brandywine Hospital.
She was the wife of the
late Alan P. Mittelman
who died in 2013. Born
in Coatesville, she was
the daughter of the late
Norman Smoker and
Mary Werntz Smoker.
Salome was an area
resident all her life and
a 1964 graduate of the
Coatesville High School.
She was employed at
the Coatesville VAMC
retiring in 2001 with 40
years of service.
Lloyd W. Kline
Llo yd W. Kline,
Newark, DE, 84 years
old, died
T h u r s d a y,
March 31,
2016, after
long treatment for a
lymphoma.
H e taught high
school English for
thirteen years, firs
i t in
Pennsylvania, then in
Delaware. Later career
paths followed in writing, editing, and publishing until his retirement in 1996.
Lloyd held bachelor
and master degrees in
English from Franklin
and Marshall Colleg e
and the Bread Loaf
School of English at
Middlebury College, and
a doctorate in education
from the University of
Massachusetts.
A native of Lancaster
County, Llo yd w as
the son of Lloyd and
Daisy Warfel Kline.
He is survived by two
sis ters Vivian K.
Spiese, Cones toga,
PA, and E v elyn K.
Rodkeyy, Columbia, PA;
A
by his wife, Alison W.
Macindoe, Newark, DE
and their two daughters, Peri and Cailey
Macindoe; by his former wife, Regina V.
Kline, Landenberg, PA
A,
and their two children,
J e n n i f e r K . Z i e g e r,
Coatesville, PA, and
Jeffrey Kline, Corvallis,
OR; b y J ennifer s
companion,
Brian
Frank ow skyy, and by
her sons, Zacharyy, Kyle,
and Jacob Zieger; and
by Jeffrey s compan ion, Laurie Houston,
and their son Ellis in
Corvallis.
Llo yd considered
himself fortunate in
friends and familyy. Gifts
in his memory may be
directed to Columbia
Education Foundation,
PO Box 548, Columbia,
PA 17512.
A celebration of
Lloyds life will be held
on Sunday, May 29 at
1:00 p.m. in the picnic
pavilion at River Park,
Columbia. To sign the
guest book, visit
spicermullikin.com
717-665-4341
( 7 1 7 ) 3 9 4 - 4 0 9 7 | w w w. D e B o r d S n y d e r. c o m
Sharon Weaver
Lititz, PA
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OBITS
A26 SUNDAY,
A26 SUNDAY,
APRIL 10, APRIL
2016 10, 2016
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Obituaries
C. William Davis
v
C. William Davis, 87
7,
formerly of Lancaster,
passed away
April 7, 2016
at Masonic
Villages. He
was the loving husband
of the late
B e t t y
(Gerhart)
Davis.
Born
in
Christiana, PA
A.,
he was the son of the late
Joseph M. and Dorothy
L. (Chalfant) Davis.
H e w as recruited
from J..P
P. McCaskey High
School, during WWII, by
the U.S. Navy and was
one of the few chosen
ships for the World
o ld
Tour tra v eling the
globe later being classified
i
as Shellback for
crossing the equator at
the 180th meridian dateline. He served 8 years in
the Navyy, enlisting twice
and was classied RD2
(Ra darm an S eco nd
Class) during WWII and
the Korean Waar. During
this time, he proudly
serv ed on the USS
Thomas, USS Wo
ood, USS
Carmick, USS Greene
and USS Coates. He
earned the following
medals while serving in
the Navy: WWII Victoryy,
Good Conduct, China
Service,
J apanese
Occupation Awards and
King
Neptune
Certif icate. He later
taught Class A Radar
School at Norfolk Naval
Base. H e w as then
awarded his high school
diploma in 2002 in an
initiative to pay tribute
to veterans of WWII.
Bill was employed by
Alcoa Aluminum where
he worked for 35 years.
He was a member of
Masonic Lodge # 43 F. &
A.M.,
L a n c a s t e r,
Millersville
V.F.W.,
Lititz American Legion
Post #56 and served as
commander of AMVETS
Post #19.
In his spare time, he
(717) 394-4097
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OTHER OBITUARIES
ON PAGE A27
Pauline M. Frey
Pauline M. (Miller)
Frey, 82, of Millersville,
went to be with the Lord
on Tuesday, April 5, 2016
at her home. Wife of the
late Jay V. Frey, she was
a long-time resident
of Manor Township.
Pauline and Jay had celebrated thirty-ve years
of marriage at the time
of his death in 1987.
Born June 26, 1933,
in Rapho Twp., she was
the daughter of the late
Martin K. and Pauline
(Musser) Miller of
Mount Joy. She was an
alumna of East Donegal
High School, Class of
1951, and a member of
Faith Bible Fellowship
Church, Lancaster.
Pauline was devoted
to her family and poured
out her life in love and
service to others. Her
hearts desire was that
everyone she knew
would come to know
Jesus Christ and follow
Him.
It was her great joy
to play piano and sing
praises to God. As a
young girl she began
singing trio with her
sisters -- a practice that
continued her whole
life. When she and her
husband Jay were raising children, the Frey
Family was frequently
invited to sing in local
churches. Through the
years Pauline played
piano for congregational singing at Central
Manor Church of
God, LCBC, Lancaster
Fellowship, and most
recently at Faith Bible
Fellowship. Her ministry of music also took
her on a regular circuit
of rest homes in the area.
In earlier years
Pauline and her husband loved traveling to
foreign and domestic
destinations, enjoying vacations in Brazil,
Germany,
Mexico,
Antigua, Hawaii, and
across the U.S., as well as
mission trips to Haiti.
Pauline was a corporation member at
Lancaster Bible College
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OBITS
A27 SUNDAY,
LNP
| LANCASTER,
PA APRIL 10, 2016
Geno R. Crivelli
Donna Marie
Corcoran (Hanley)
Donna
Corcoran,
Marie
78 , of
Lancas ter ,
PA, passed
away peacefully
on
April
8,
20 16 ,
at
Hospice and
Community
Care, Mt. Joy.
She was the
wife of the late
La wrence P.
Corcoran with whom
she shared 58 years of
marriage.
Donna was born and
raised in Pawtucket, RI.
She was the daughter of
the late Dr. Francis
Hanley and Doris
Hanley (Dumican). She
graduated high school
from Elmhurst Academy
and attended college at
Pembroke Colleg e in
P ro v i de n ce , R ho d e
Island.
Donna enjoyed playing bridge with her
friends. Donna was a
great athlete and loved
playing golf and tennis
for most of her life. She
was an active member at
Bent Creek Country
Club and enjoyed telling
the story of her hole in
one. Donna was also a
loyal Penn State fan and
loved watching their
football games. After
raising her familyy, she
worked for Boyd Wilson
Company in Lancaster,
PA,
A for 15 years, at both
the Olde Hick ory
Racquet Club, as well as
the Golf course.
Donna w as mos t
proud of her family and
is survived by the families of her four sons and
one daughter: Kevin E.
C or co ra n o f La k e
Charles, LA, and his children Starr, Colin, Ashlee,
Obituaries
Jean Bursa
William N.
Greiner Jr.
William N. Greiner,
Jr., 74, of Lancaster,
PA, passed
away o n
T h u r s d a y,
April
7,
2016
at
home with
his familyy.
He was
the husband
of
J ane
M.
(Antes)
Greiner,
with whom
he
celebrated
49
years of marriage this past
March. Born
in Lancasterr, he was the
son of the late William
N., Sr. and Margaret R.
Geiter Greiner.
Bill h ad work ed
as safety director for
Lancaster Leaf Tobacco
for over 25 years.
A pr ou d v e t er an
of the United States
Marine Corps, he served
as a lance corporal from
1959 to 1963.
He loved to golf, was
a member of Riverside
Camping Assn., and enjoyed spending time on
his computer, but his
greatest love was his
familyy, espec ially his
two great granddaughters.
In addition to his
wife, Jane, he is survived by his son, Ronald
W. Greiner of Lancaster;
his granddaughters
D a p h n e N. m a r r i e d
to David Minkus and
Margaret M. Greiner;
his great granddaught ers Reb ek ah J. an d
Madelyn M. Minkus; his
brother Bruce (Georgia)
Greiner Sr. of Lancaster
and his sister, Barbara
Wise of Columbia. Bill
was also a father gure
to his brother-in-law
Steven P. Antes. He was
preceded in death by
his sister, Jean Greiner
and his brotherr, Richard
Greiner.
Family and friends
wi ll b e re cei v ed on
Wednesday, April 13,
2016 from 10-11AM at
Calvary Church, 1051
Landis Valley Rd.,
Lancaster, PA,
A with the
Memorial Service to follow at 11AM. Interment
will be in Indiantown
Gap National Cemetery
on Thursday, April 14,
2016 at 10:30AM. In lieu
of owers, please make
contributions in Bills
m e m o r y t o Ho s p i c e &
Community Care, 685
Good Drive, Box 4125,
Lancaster, PA 176044125 or Water
a
Street
Mission, 210 S. Prince
St., Lancaster, PA 17603.
To send an online condolence, please visit
SnydeerrFuneralHo
ome.com
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ASSOCIATED PRESS
Two lives on
different paths
tragically collide
EMILY SCHMALL
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Refuse to believe
M 3
More than a
funeral service,
its about
sharing a life.
Mark C. DeBord
e | @
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Living
n SEND STORY TIPS & INFO TO: JON FERGUSON, 291-8839, JFERGUSON@LNPNEWS.COM
Lancaster
Rock box
North Museum finds its
fluorescence
n Entertainment, page B4
Janele Hoerner
sits in the corner
of the family living room where
her son finds
comfort playing
the cello, which
can be seen in
the background.
HEALTH
SOUL OF A SON
Maytown moms book details familys journey coping with childs autism
KIMBERLY MARSELAS
LNP CORRESPONDENT
Forgiving
After the violent showing with
his great-grandmother, who
was uninjured and forgiving,
the Hoerners consulted several
developmental specialists. Gracins symptoms were in some
AUTISM, page B3
GENEALOGY
ENEGLEY@LNPNEWS.COM
B2
LOCAL
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Restaurant inspections
The Pennsylvania
Department of Agriculture,
866-366-3723, uses a
risk-based inspection
reporting process for
restaurants and other food
handlers.
Ellas Place, 825 S. Market
St., Elizabethtown, followup, March 21. Potential
rodent harborage areas on
the exterior of the building
in Dumpster corral area
due to heavy leaf and
cardboard accumulations.
General Sutter Inn, 14 E.
Main St., Lititz, March 21.
Food handler wearing a
bracelet. Chlorine chemical
sanitizer residual detected
in the final sanitizer
rinse cycle of the lowtemperature sanitizing
dishwasher was 0 ppm,
and not 50-100 ppm as
required. Service company
arrived at the time of
inspection. Deeply scored
Bain Marie cutting boards
not resurfaced or discarded
as required. Kitchen floor
under line equipment
needs cleaning an
accumulation of food and
grease. Paint chipping
off wooden storage room
shelves. Management
states that they will
change to wire shelving
rather than repaint.
Grease accumulation on
hood baffles over kitchen
grill section.
J & B Hotel, 26 E. State
St., Quarryville, complaint,
March 21. No violations.
Our One Stop, 550 E. High
St., Elizabethtown, March
21. Drain line is directed
into three-compartment
sink from ceiling area.
Line should be installed
in another location or
into plumbing below
sink. Trash receptacle
(Dumpster) outside
the food facility, not
in immediate use, is
not covered properly.
Ceiling tiles are missing
or damaged in rear ware
washing room. Hand wash
sink at front counter does
not have hand wash sign.
Restroom is not supplied
with single-use towels.
Toilet room does not have
a self-closing door. Rear
man door to facility is
deteriorating and is not
tight fitting at the bottom.
Quarryville VFW Post
3575, 1653 Holtwood Road,
Holtwood, opening, March
21. Two lights in kitchen
area not shatterproof or
shielded.
Everest International
Grocery, Gifts & Jewelry,
1621 Columbia Ave., Soaps
and dish detergent for
retail sale displayed on
shelving above coconut
slices and cooking oil.
Boxes of peppers, bananas,
and potatoes stored
directly on the floor in the
back storage area, rather
than six inches off of the
floor as required. Entrance
door to the outside,
located in the food facility
is self-closing and is being
propped open; corrected
twice within the same
inspection.
residue on can-opener
blade from previous day.
Some food remnants
(including cilantro) in
sanitizer compartment of
three bay sink indicating
food equipment and
utensils are not being
rinsed properly. Metal
inserts stored wet in a
manner that does not
allow air drying (wet
nesting). Re-wash and
sanitize before using. Soap
was not available at the
handwash sink in front,
closest to kitchen door.
Sack of onions stored
directly on the floor in
walk-in cooler rather than
six inches off of the floor
as required. Deeply scored
chicken cutting board on
front line and two stored
green boards in kitchen not
resurfaced or discarded as
required. The green cutting
boards may no longer be
used. Hood baffles have an
accumulation of grease.
Nickel Mine Health Foods,
2123 Mine Road, Paradise,
March 31. Food facility
person in charge not able
to provide documentation
that bread and frozen
chicken are from an
approved source; items
removed from sale. Cartons
of eggs from small flocks
not labeled properly with
date of lay and name of
store and location.
Papa Johns Pizza, 1054B
Lititz Pike, March 31. Deeply
scored onion cutting board
not resurfaced or discarded
as required. Employee
aprons hanging on hooks in
bathroom.
Showalter Concessions No.
1, 207 Tomahawk E Drive,
Conestoga, follow-up,
March 31. No violations.
Spring House Brewery, 209
Hazel St., March 31. Grease
encrusted in outside hood
exhaust fan. Grease is
running down the wall
below the exhaust fan.
Outdoor grill area does not
have overhead protection.
Cafe One Eight, 18 W.
Orange St., March 30. No
violations.
INSPECTIONS, page B3
$2 OFF $5 OFF
Featuring Pizza,
Sandwiches, Salads,
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EVERY MO
NDAY
Starting at 9:30
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FRESHFARMSLANCASTER . COM
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between Certified Carpet and the Dollar Store Mon-Th 11-8, Fri 11-9, Sat 11-8
LOCAL/ADVICE
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Continued from B1
Perspective
Hoerner says she
wrote the book to help
provide
perspective
and hope for other
parents facing new
autism-spectrum di-
Inspections
Continued from B2
in brownish-tan liquid
which has an off odor;
repeat violation from 2015.
Employee drinks stored in
the reach-in are not clearly
marked and segregated
from customer food. Soups
and pot-pie stored directly
on the floor in the walk-in
cooler, rather than six inches
off of the floor as required.
Commercially processed
refrigerated, ready to eat,
time/temperature control
for safety food, located
in the walk-in cooler and
the reach-in cooler, and
held more than 24 hours,
is not being marked with
the date it was opened.
Refrigerated ready to eat,
time/temperature control
for safety food prepared in
the food facility and held for
more than 24 hours, located
in the reach-in cooler, is
not being date marked.
Chili, a refrigerated, ready
to eat time temperature
control for safety food in
the reach-in cooler, was
date-marked by the facility,
but was beyond the seven
day use or sell by date
and requires discarding.
Torn rubber door gaskets
observed on the True
Temp reach-in cooling unit
and the True Refrigerator;
repeat violation from
2015. Cigarette and lighter
observed on top of the
freezer in the food prep
Therapists
Specialists connected
Gracin with all kinds of
therapists; too many,
in fact, for the mother
of three other small
children to schedule.
Hoerner chose to focus on those that would
best prepare Gracin for
school, including an
itinerant teacher who
provided play therapy
and behavioral therapy.
She resisted medicating her son, but
eventually consented
to prescriptions that
helped increase focus
and keep his violent
mood swings at bay.
His hyperactivity has
decreased with age,
and he now takes just
a single medication
for anxiety. Yoga poses
also help him find calm
when he is overstimulated.
Now 7 and in second
grade, Gracin is able to
follow classroom rules
in a regular education
setting in the Donegal
School District. Hoerner says he formed
a close friendship with
another boy who helps
him co-author books.
We have different
battles and struggles
now, but by giving him
the security and the
tools we have, things
are completely different than when he was
3, Hoerner says.
area; repeat violation
from 2015. Raw beef is
being stored on top of
cooked turkey in the
walk-in cooler. Raw
chicken stored above
beef in the walk-in
cooler. Raw shell eggs
are stored above bread
in the walk-in cooler.
Barbecue sauces clearly
marked refrigerate after
opening were held at
room temperature, in the
food prep area, rather
than 41F or below
as required; repeat
violation from 2015. Old
food residue on the can
opener blade; repeat
violation from 2015. The
third bowl of the three
compartment sink is
not draining. A gross
accumulation of a white
mildew-like substance
on all of the shelves of
the walk-in cooler. A
heavy accumulation of
black static dust on the
fan in the dish washing
area. Black static dust
on the fan guards of the
walk-in cooler and inside
the cooler itself. Food
facility has an original
certificate posted,
but the location is not
conspicuous for public
viewing. Facility does
not have procedures
for employees to follow
when responding to
an event involving
vomitus or fecal matter
discharge onto surfaces
within the facility.
deserve an apology.
However, this may call
upon your wife to be
the bigger person and
to understand this on a
visceral level: Your parents are deeply flawed.
She doesn't like them.
But does she understand
that in some ways, her
behavior mirrors theirs?
Can she manage to
tolerate occasionally
being with people she
doesn't like very much
in order for you to have
something of an integrated relationship with
your two families? She
doesn't seem willing to
try, and that's something
she really should work
on, because this estrangement seems most
painful for you.
AMY DICKINSON
ASK AMY
Births
Connect
with us
B3
PAULINO-NUNEZ, Aneley,
and Niky M. Zorrilla,
Lancaster, a son, at Women
& Babies Hospital, April 2.
HAUSCH, David C.
and Kristal (Heisler),
Coatesville, a son, at
Women & Babies Hospital,
Monday.
STAMBAUGH, Ruby,
and David L. Sourbeer,
Lancaster, a son, at
Women & Babies Hospital,
Wednesday.
KEENER, Aaron N.
and Sarah (Graybill),
Bainbridge, a son, at
Women & Babies Hospital,
Wednesday.
MAINELLO, Anthony P.
and Jade (Watts), Lititz, a
son, at Women & Babies
Hospital, Tuesday.
Facebook
Twitter
Instagram
LancasterOnline
If youre
p
planning a family,
you should also
plan on how to
protect them.
Let us help you find the right life insurance for you and your growing family.
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rebate form. 2016 Hunter Douglas. All rights reserved. All trademarks used herein are the property of Hunter Douglas or their respective owners.
B4
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Entertainment
SCIENCE
Hillary
Glenn is
shown with
minerals
glowing under
longwave
ultraviolet
light in
the North
Museums
Rock Box
exhibit.
RICHARD HERTZLER | STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER PHOTOS
Magic of fluorescence returns to visitors delight with new Rock Box exhibit
JANE HOLAHAN
IF YOU GO
JHOLAHAN@LNPNEWS.COM
Franklinite and Willemite rock shown in normal white light, left, and in longwave ultraviolet light, right.
HISTORY
JENELLE JANCI
UNSCRIPTED
Sweatshirt
Another one of my
favorite articles of
UNSCRIPTED, page B5
Exhibit depicts rural scenes featuring streams, houses and lots of cows
JANE HOLAHAN
JHOLAHAN@LNPNEWS.COM
Ken Hoak shows a book of prints at the Farm Redux exhibit at the Conestoga
Area Historical Society.
Inexpensive prints
At this time, inexpensive color
printing had become possible and
entrepreneurs began reproducing
EXHIBIT, page B5
IF YOU GO
n What: The Farm Redux.
n Where: Conestoga Area
ENTERTAINMENT
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
B5
Exhibit: Farm
Continued from B4
inexpensive prints of
farm life.
Hoak
hypothesizes
that people wanted to
recall their past lives and
these prints were a way
to visit the farm again
if only in their dreams.
The prints on display
date from the end of the
Civil War to World War I.
The artists are clearly
influenced by the French
Barbizon and Hudson
River School artists,
Hoak says. They were
commercial artists and
the level of their work
was about the same as
calendar art.
Most are unsigned.
And some look to be the
same painting sized or
cropped differently. A
specific subject or house
returns in several, sometimes on a different spot
in the print.
A couple is wearing
different clothes in two
paintings, though they
are in the exact same positions in each painting.
Things were recycled, Hoak says.
Either artists were
painting the same paintings in different ways or
businessmen were making many different prints
out of one painting.
Probably a little of both.
Cows were extremely
popular, Hoak says with
a laugh. There are lots of
cows drinking at streams
in these prints. Sheep
and horses are popular,
too.
Loved chickens
One of the few artists
in the exhibit who signed
his work is Ben Austrian,
who loved chickens. The
exhibit features a long,
horizontal print of a row
of chickens, called A
Yard of Chicks.
He also painted yards
of puppies, kittens, roses,
swallows, etc.
A chick from a different painting became the
model for the Bon Ami
Cleaner can, with the
words Hasnt scratched
yet.
A popular print would
be reframed in curved
glass. Prints were put
onto plates.
English pottery, in-
European
Some are clearly European thatched roof
in England, a mountain
scene in Germany
which appealed to immigrants.
Its all about nostalgia,
about a way of life that
was passing.
But at the time, homes
were being furnished
with more forward
thinking items and the
exhibit reflects that in
fragmented room settings.
There is a growing infatuation with Japanese
art, so people were buying bamboo furniture,
Hoak says. And houseplants were becoming
popular. Suddenly, furniture companies were
making plant stands.
Hoak has been collecting farm scenes for four
years. Its easy to see
why they were so popular in the second half of
the 19th century. The
world had changed rapidly, lives were displaced
and for some, the past
seemed perfect, cast in
an idyllic light.
They wanted that
world on their walls.
LancasterOnline
Total sense
The more I think
about it, though, Drake
covering These Days
makes total sense.
He may be a rapper,
but this is the man who
has inspired memes of
his face with fabric softener and plush toilet
paper that read The
softest in the game.
Hes built an image on
being sensitive, which
has earned him so many
female fans like myself.
If youre unfamiliar
with his repertoire,
heres a sampling of
some of my favorite
emotional Drake lyrics:
You leave me in the
morning, I dont see
her for months / But I
just hate sleeping alone,
ROBIN SPIELBERGS
AMERICAN TAPESTRY TRIO
Your rings
dont fit
anymore?
We can
fix that!
CONTEMPORARY
NAKEDEYE
ENSEMBLE
WITH GUEST
KATHLEEN
SUPOVE
RUDOLPH-STROHMAN QUARTET
-Liz Smith
NOW - APRIL
PRIL 30
510 Centerville Rd
Lancaster, PA 17601
B6
MOVIES IN REVIEW
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
REVIEW
DVDS
These DVDs are being
released Tuesday.
Standoff (R)
A troubled veteran
(Thomas Jane), gets a
chance at redemption
by protecting a 12-yearold girl from an assassin,
played by Laurence
Fishburne.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Whats playing
Heres whats playing in
Lancaster County this weekend.
10 Cloverfield Lane (PG-13,
105 minutes, horror) A woman
wakes up after a car accident
to find herself in a basement
with a survivalist and his
follower, who tell her she cant
leave because the world is
uninhabitable.
Alvin and the Chipmunks: The
Road Chip (G, 86 minutes,
animation) Alvin, Simon and
Theodore come to believe
that Dave is going to propose
to his new girlfriend in Miami
and then dump them. They
have three days to get to him
and stop the proposal, saving
themselves not only from
losing Dave but from gaining a
terrible stepbrother.
Batman v Superman: Dawn
of Justice (PG-13, 151 minutes,
superhero action) Batman
fears Superman is out of
control and the two do battle
with each other. While they
are fighting, a new threat
looms. Doomsday, created
by Lex Luthor, could destroy
Metropolis.
The Boss (R, 99 minutes,
comedy) Melissa McCarthy
plays a titan of industry who is
sent to jail for insider trading.
She comes out determined to
be Americas next sweetheart,
but plenty of people shes
crushed along the way arent
going to let that happen.
Kristen Bell, Peter Dinklage and
Kathy Bates are in the cast.
The Choice (PG-13, 100
minutes, romantic drama) A
serious medical student falls
for the perennial ladies man
next door. They marry and do
everything together until one
of them must make a gutwrenching choice all alone.
Daddys Home (PG-13, 96
minutes, comedy) Will Ferrell
plays an amiable guy who feels
the pressure when his stepkids
dad, played by Mark Wahlberg,
returns.
Deadpool (R, 108 minutes,
superhero action) The origins
story of Marvel Comics
unconventional antihero
Deadpool, who is Special
Forces operative/mercenary
Wade Wilson. Ryan Reynolds
stars.
Demolition (R, 100
minutes, drama/comedy) Jake
Gyllenhall stars as a successful
investment banker whose life
unravels after the death of his
wife in an accident.
The Divergent Series:
Allegiant (PG-13, 121 minutes)
After the revelations in
Divergent, Tris and Four must
go beyond the walls enclosing
Chicago for the first time in
their lives. New truths and a
STREAMING
affluent community in this
comedic spoof of the Purge
films.
Miracles from Heaven (PG,
109 minutes, faith-based
drama) Jennifer Garner stars
as a mother whose daughter is
dying of a rare disease. She is
fierce in finding a cure but then
her daughter experiences a
miracle.
My Big Fat Greek Wedding 2
(PG-13, 94 minutes, comedy)
After 14 years, the sequal finally
arrives. Nia Vardalos (who
wrote the script) returns with
the entire Portokalos clan,
along with a rebellious teenage
daughter.
The Revenant (R, 156
minutes, drama) Leonardo
DiCaprio stars as explorer
Hugh Glass, who is attacked
by a bear and left for dead
by members of his team.
Guided by his sheer will, he
survives a brutal winter to find
redemption and seek revenge
for those who betrayed him.
Inspired by a true story.
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
B7
Helpful tips
Physicians take acne seriously, as it can lead to self-esteem problems that can cause
depression and anxiety.
Excessive milk intake (3
times the recommended serving) correlates with worsening acne, however research
indicates that chocolate
consumption does not affect
acne. High-carbohydrate diets
have been shown to contribute
to acne as well as an elevated
Body Mass Index, so healthy
diet and healthy weight do
make a difference in skin appearance.
Sebaceous glands in the
skin have receptors for the
hormones released by the
body in response to stress. This
means that stressful times lead
to more oil production in the
skin and, thus, increased acne.
Scrubbing the skin creates
micro traumas to the pores
and increases the inflammatory response making
acne worse. Wash skin with
a sensitive-skin liquid face
cleaner twice a day, but avoid
scrubs, sponges or any type of
abrasive chemicals. Products
that remove oil from the skin
do so only temporarily and
have not been shown to be an
effective way to wash the skin.
Over-the-counter benzoyl
peroxide products work by
decreasing the number of bacterial colonies on the skin. The
OTC concentrations can cause
EMOTIONS
WELLNESS
FOTOLIA
COSMETICS
MORGUEFILE
Dr. Pia Fenimores advice: People will remember your smile more
than your acne.
www.LancasterOrtho.com
B8
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Food
Wrapping asparagus spears in paper-thin slivers of prosciutto, then roasting them at a high heat, adds a savory, crispy layer of flavor.
PROSCIUTTO-WRAPPED ASPARAGUS
ANN FULTON
Ingredients
n Asparagus (tough bottom ends snapped off)
n 1/2 piece of very thinly sliced prosciutto for each thick
spear of asparagus (you may also bundle several thin
spears)
Directions:
Preheat the oven to 450 degrees.
column? Check out her blog at fountainavenuekitchen.com or at facebook.com/thefountainavenuekitchen. She also welcomes email at ann@fountainavenuekitchen.com.
KARA NEWHOUSE
THE PRESS TABLE
KNEWHOUSE@LNPNEWS.COM
Notes
n Lightly greased foil may be used for easy cleanup. If
My other favorite
use for matcha is also a
breakfast food: overnight oats. I make this
when I know I wont
have much kitchen
time in the morning.
The recipe comes from
Amy Lyons, author of
the food blog Fragrant
Vanilla Cake, with some
of my own adjustments.
Honey and maple
WHERE TO FIND IT
Matcha is a powdered
green tea made from
high-quality leaves grown
in Japan. You can purchase
it at The Herb Shop at
Lancaster Central Market,
Teavana in Park City Center
or a variety of online shops.
FOOD
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
ENEGLEY@LNPNEWS.COM
Linda Bell
class.
Bell said she likes the
vibrant Lancaster neighborhood in which her
classes are now offered.
I loved the location
because its a few steps
from the downtown
(Central) Market, which
Im loving, she said.
To start, Bell is offering
classes mainly on Tuesdays to coincide with a
market day.
Classes cost $85 per
person and run from
5:30 to 8:30 p.m. In July,
Bell plans to add more
classes, including ones
on Friday.
Students can bring
their own wine or beer to
class, too.
Upcoming
classes,
from later this month
through June, include
pizza and ravioli workshops, an Asian appetizer
class and a knife-skills
course.
For information, visit
theculinaryclassroom.
com.
Ann Fulton
Continued from B8
asparagus.
When looking up
planting details for this
early spring perennial
recently, I came across
some interesting facts,
one of which reminded
me of this unusual recommendation.
Apparently, asparagus
is high in asparagine, an
amino acid, which acts
as a diuretic. Its also a
good source of folate,
which is widely recommended before and
during pregnancy.
Since Im not qualified to offer medical
advice, I thought Id pass
along some of the other
asparagus facts I came
across in my reading.
Some of the details are
instructive, from either
a historical or backyard
gardening perspective;
the others are simply
fun dinnertime trivia.
Asparagus was first
grown in Greece nearly
2,500 years ago. Ancient
Greeks and Romans believed asparagus helped
prevent bee stings and
relieve toothaches.
In the first century
B.C., Romans became
the first to preserve
asparagus by freezing it
in the Alps.
The top asparagusproducing states are
California, Washington
and Michigan. China,
however, ranks first in
world asparagus production, while Peru is
second and the United
States is third.
Asparagus is a
member of the lily family, which also includes
onions, leeks and garlic.
Asparagus wrapped in
prosciutto can be roasted
or grilled.
prefer pencil-thin
asparagus while others
favor plump spears, the
following recipe may be
adapted to enjoy either
way.
Wrapping the spears
in paper-thin slivers of
prosciutto, then roasting at a high heat, adds a
salty, savory, crispy layer
thats truly a treat (see
recipe on Page B8).
An extra quick step
in the cooking process
ensures the prosciutto
develops some crisp
edges before the asparagus is fully cooked.
Sources: modernfarmer.
com, livescience.com and
allasparagus.com
FARM TO TABLE!
Featured Homes
LANCASTER
$439,900==
Marco Sardi
mobile: 717-371-1994
office: 717.553.2500
marco.sardi@yahoo.com
Red Plum
KIND Bar is offering a $2 coupon
this week in todays
insert. In the line
of beauty products,
there is a $3 Covergirl lip or eye product and a $3 Herbal
Essences coupon.
There are also several high-value Seventh
Generation coupons
and a $2 ERA detergent coupon.
SmartSource
FRESH INGREDIENTS
LOCALLY SOURCED
ESTHER MARTIN
COUPON CUTTING MOM
Kitchen Remodel
YORK
$379,900
KELLERWILLIAMS
OF CENTRAL PA EAST
Rite Aid
Arm & Hammer
Toothpaste and Manual
Spinbrush are on sale
at Rite Aid this week for
$1.99. When you use the
$1 off two Arm & Hammer coupons from todays LNP SmartSource,
you will be paying $1.49
each.
Herbal Essences Hair
Products are two for
$6. Use the $3 off two
Herbal Essences coupon from todays Red
Plum and you will be
paying just $1.50 each.
Palmolive Dish Liquid
is on sale for 99 cents
and combined with the
$1 off two Palmolive
coupon from todays
LNP SmartSource, your
total will be only 49
cents each!
CVS
Todays flier includes
a Pick Your Best Deal
coupon that will save
you 20 percent off your
purchase of any regular
priced items.
Caress Body Wash is
Buy One Get One Free
this week. Score a great
B9
Walgreens
This week, Glade Air
Fresheners are priced
at two for $6. Use the
$1 off two Glade coupon from the March
20 LNP SmartSource
and pay $5. This purchase will then print
a $1 Register Reward,
which will bring your
total to just $2 per
Glade product.
Tena Serenity Pads
are priced at $11.99 and
when you add in the
$2 Tena coupon from
todays SmartSource,
you will pay $9.99, and
will then receive a $2
Register Reward that
will bring your total to
just $7.99.
Target
This week is a great
time to stock up on ink
for your printer, as all
HP ink is on sale this
week for Buy One Get
One 50 percent off.
This weeks ad includes a coupon for
$10 off a bedding and
bath purchase of $50 or
more.
Flonase is priced at
$13.99 this week, and
when you use the $2
Flonase coupon from
todays LNP Red Plum,
you will be paying
$11.99.
Nicks
BISTRO
the
Located ast ephines!
former Jo
BAR & G
BAR
GRIL
GR
GRILLE
ILLE
LE
((717) 604-1137
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Travel
TRAVEL SHOPPING
HISTORIC VENTURE
A quiet
space
to reflect
KELLI KENNEDY
ASSOCIATED PRESS
High-end
consignment
GLENN ADAMS
ASSOCIATED PRESS
1.
THRIFT BARGAINS
IN FLORIDA
From Chanel jackets to hard-to-find Hermes Birkin bags, Palm
Beach, Floridas upscale consignment stores have all the labels
you love, without the high prices
IF YOU GO
n Oklahoma City National
2.
3.
ASSOCIATED PRESS PHOTOS
n 1. A display of shoes, shirts and jackets are seen at the Encore Plus consignment store in
Boca Raton, Fla. The store organizes its large selection of high-end designer clothing, including Gucci, Roberto Cavalli, Chanel and Dior, by color. n 2. A variety of Hermes scarves and
bags are displayed at the Serendipity consignment store in Boca Raton, Fla. The snowbirds
paradise has a thriving high-end consignment market for its designers and ofter barely worn
castoffs. n 3. A pair of evening gowns are displayed at the Paradise Lost consignment store in
Palm Beach, Fla. The islands busy society calendar means twice-daily costume changes in a
land of labels that include Chanel, Hermes, Valentino, Gucci and Prada.
Fashionista
Palm
Beach, 298 S. County Road,
Palm Beach
The exquisite 1980s floorlength sequined white-andblack Chanel dress that greets
visitors at this Palm Beach
gem says it all.
The store specializes in
high-end womens vintage. Its
a must for fashion lovers, even
if you arent looking to buy.
Recent finds: an Armani
black mink coat with fox collar, $20,000, and an Oscar de
la Renta silk strapless lace
gown, $3,000.
The store has a large collection of Hermes Birkins and
designer shoes, plus fun accessories like black Chanel
kidskin gloves adorned with
pink stingray designs for $975,
a $600 Alexander McQueen
lacy knitted dress and a $650
Chanel slip dress.
Classic Collections, 118
N. County Road, Palm Beach
This store recently added
an entire room for Chanel,
including signature jackets
for around $1,250, plus shoes,
bags and jewelry. Recent finds
included a wide selection of
purses (including four Birkins); gowns by Oscar de la
Renta and Carolina Herrera;
plus vintage Krizia and Mary
McFadden.
Fine and costume jewelry,
including Tiffany, Cartier and
Chopard, set the store apart.
South Sea baroque pearls
were $11,900, a Van Cleef
& Arpels diamond and gold
necklace was $31,995 and a
Charles Krypell diamond ring
was $6,995. Theres wiggleroom to negotiate higher-end
jewelry prices.
Paradise Lost, 227 Sunrise Ave., Palm Beach
Paradise Lost has three
charming stores within walking distance. The high-end
BARGAINS, page B11
Stroll or bike along the promenade at Venice Beach in Los Angeles to take in all the sights.
TRAVEL
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
B11
ASSOCIATED PRESS
A variety of Louis Vuitton bags are seen at the Paradise Lost consignment store in Palm Beach, Fla.
Thrift store
bargains
Goodwill Embassy
Boutique, 210 Sunset
Ave., Palm Beach
There are lots of gems
at this small and wellcurated Goodwill boutique that takes castoffs
from the well-heeled
and from stores like
Brooks Brothers and
Saks.
Its not uncommon
to find new items with
original tags. Seen on a
recent visit:
Church Mouse,
374 S. County Road,
Palm Beach
This unique Palm
Beach landmark offers mens and womens
clothing. Its a great
place to pick up Maus
& Hoffman, a Brooks
EXCHANGE RATES
These foreign exchange selling rates, as of the close of
business March 6, apply only to the purchase of currency
amounting to $1,000 or less. These retail exchange rates
apply only to Fulton Bank and are furnished by the
International Services Department.
CURRENCY
RATE
U.S. $
0.8158
1.23
0.8171
1.22
1.126
0.89
0.1639
6.10
Euro (EUR)
1.2237
0.82
1.5143
0.66
0.009875
101.27
0.06094
16.41
0.129
7.75
0.736
1.36
1.5143
0.66
Swedish Kroner(SEK)
0.1316
7.60
IF YOU GO
Heres just a sampling of
Venice treasures:
n Beach House Brand,
1043 Abbot Kinney Blvd.;
beachhousebrand.com
n Blue Bottle Coffee,
1103 Abbot Kinney Blvd.;
bluebottlecoffee.com/
cafes/abbot-kinney
n Cows End Cafe,
34 Washington Blvd.;
thecowsendcafe.com
n G2 Gallery, 1503 Abbot
Kinney Blvd.; www.
theg2gallery.com
n Gjelina, 1429 Abbot
Kinney Blvd., plus GTA
(Gjelina Take Away) at
1427 Abbot Kinney Blvd.
n Gjusta, 320 Sunset
Ave.; gjusta.com
n Lemonade, 1661 Abbot
Kinney Blvd.; lemonadela.
com
n Tumbleweed and
Dandelion, 1502
Abbot Kinney Blvd.;
tumbleweed and
ddandelion.com.
WESTLAKETOURS
www.westlaketours.com
717-626-0272
Reflect
Continued from B10
Venice
Follow us on Facebook at
LancasterOnline
B12
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Books
N.Y. Times
best-sellers
Hardcover fiction
Hardcover nonfiction
WRITING
Charles Bock, whose latest novel is Alice & Oliver, poses at his home in New York. The death of Bocks wife and
her journals help shape the template for the novel.
Insight
The journals also gave Bock insight into the surprising ways his
wife had coped with her illness. In
one entry, he came across a passage that stunned him. Charles
is often miserable, she wrote. I
am not.
Bock knew that for the story to
work as a novel, it had to be more
than just a devastated husbands
tribute to his wife. Fictionalizing elements gave him some distance and helped him focus on
the structure and arc of the book.
He changed the time period it
takes place in the 1990s and
made Alice a fashion designer
and Oliver the head of a software
startup. To give the story a broader scope, he broke up the narrative with recurring case studies,
which feature compressed portraits of other people in the ward.
One of Bocks friends, the novelist Matthew Thomas, said writing the book took an obvious toll
on Bock, but it also gave him an
outlet for his grief.
He never insulated himself
DETAILS
n Alice & Oliver: A Novel
n By Charles Bock
n Random House
n 416 pages ($28)
Check it out!
The weather may be getting warmer, but you can still send chills up your spine with these new mystery novels. Find them on the new-book shelf at the Duke Street Library.
1. Murder On a Summers Day,
by Frances Brody. When the
India Office seek help in finding
Maharajah Narayan, last seen
hunting on the Bolton Abbey
estate, they call upon the expertise
of renowned amateur detective
Kate Shackleton to investigate.
2. All Things Cease to Appear,
by Elizabeth Brundage. Arriving
home to find his wife murdered
and their toddler left alone, art
history professor George Clare
is targeted by a relentless police
officer as dark community secrets
BOOKS
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Bookends
Aarons Books hosts
Courtney Sheinmel
Courtney Sheinmel, the author of several books
for kids and teens, including Edgewater, Positively, Sincerely, and the Stella Batts series for
young readers, will be at Aarons Books, 35 E.
Main St., from 3:30 p.m. to 5 p.m. Friday.
Her books have received numerous awards, including the Sequoyah Award and a National Parenting Publication Awards honorable mention.
Her books also have appeared on recommended
lists, including the New York Public Librarys
Stuff for the Teen Age, and the ABC Best Books for
Children.
In addition to writing, Sheinmel has served as
a national judge for the Scholastic Art & Writing
Awards, and she received a National Scholastic
Outstanding Educator Award for her work as a
writing instructor at Writopia Lab, a nonprofit
serving kids ages 8 to 18. She lives in New York
City.
For more information, go to aaronsbooks.com
or call 627-1990.
REVIEW
Library plans
blueberry sale
DETAILS
n Kill Em and Leave
n By James McBride
n Spiegel & Grau
n 256 pages ($28)
Bock
Diagnosed in
2009
They had been married for about four years,
living in a one-bedroom apartment in the
Gramercy Park neighborhood of Manhattan
with 6-month-old Lily,
when Colberts leukemia
was diagnosed in 2009.
After several rounds of
chemotherapy and radiation and two bone marrow transplants, Colberts cancer went into
remission in spring 2011,
but she remained frail.
The cancer returned, and
she died that year, at 41,
three days before Lilys
third birthday.
Bock told friends he
didnt expect to find romantic love again. But
two years ago he met the
writer Leslie Jamison at
Paragraph, the writing
space where they both
work. An email flirtation
developed after Bock
wrote to her to say how
moved he was by one of
her essays. Shortly after,
they started dating.
Bock brought Lily, who
wore a fox mask for the
occasion, to a reading
Jamison gave from
her book The Empathy Exams. Lily and
Jamison immediately
hit it off. A few months
later, at another literary event, Lily joined
Jamison onstage and
the two of them sang
Let It Go, the ballad
from Disneys Frozen. After an intense
courtship,
Jamison
and Bock were married in Las Vegas.
Lily started calling
Jamison Mommy.
They moved to Park
Slope about a year
ago, and settled into
a busy domestic routine of writing and
raising Lily. Bock recently read a draft of
Jamisons forthcoming book about addiction. Jamison offered
him feedback on Alice & Oliver.
The craftsman in
Charles, the part of
him thats so committed to thinking
about structure and
form and character,
really makes him
come alive, she said.
He wasnt just being
crushed by the weight
of the past.
Bock isnt letting
go of the past, either.
He has Colberts journals and papers for
Lily to read one day,
and photos of her in
her final months. In
one series of photos,
Colbert is sleeping,
bald and emaciated,
with Lily nestled by
her side. Both mother
and daughter look
completely content,
soothed to sleep by
each others presence.
B13
FILE PHOTO
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Showmanship
He sits down with Browns protege, the Rev. Al Sharpton, to whom
Brown imparted his hard-won lessons in showmanship, among them
Kill em and leave, the title of this
book. And he unearths a tangled
and tragic story, one rooted in
Browns personal history of growing up dirt-poor in a broken family in the segregated South and in
Americas vicious history of slavery
and racism.
Heroes emerge, including a
small-town reporter who has doggedly pursued the legal maneuvering surrounding Browns contested
estate, and villains abound, most
looking to make a buck.
REVIEW
DETAILS
n The Little Red
Chairs
n By Edna OBrien
n Little, Brown and
Company
B14
LOCAL
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
IN THE SPOTLIGHT
sity.
Baseball
background: Selected by the
Miami Marlins in the
fifth round (148th overall) of the 2008 Major
League Baseball draft
and played in the teams
organization before joining the Barnstormers.
The new position: Its
something of a bridge
connecting the front office, clubhouse and the
community. A key aspect
of the job will be to find
good outreach opportunities for fellow players.
If done well, that will
translate into long-term
support for the baseball
team.
MONDAY
MO
M
ONDAY & TU
TUESDAY
UESDAY
UES
SDAY 88PM
PM TOO 10
10PM
0PM
THURSDAY THRU SATURDAYY 8PM TO 10PM
AY 7PM TO 9PM
9
SUNDAY
Pete Andrelczyk, a pitcher and community relations representative for the Barnstormers, practices with children at Buchanan Park on Wednesday.
ter.
Musical act Id most
like to see on opening
night at Clipper Stadium: Simon & Garfunkel.
(This year its Chubby
Checker.)
A ballplayer whose
style of play I admire:
Pete Rose. Thats to say
nothing of Roses offfield antics. Everybodys
got their flaws. ... I just
try to find the good qualities in every single person and see if I can replicate those.
Im proud of this:
Playing for the U.S. baseball team in the World
Cup and Pan American
Games in 2011. It was
such a cool experience to
be able to go to Panama
and Mexico, and just be
$30 OR MORE
Monday:
Trending
is Remembrance Day
Whats hip
around the county
Tuesday:
Business
Local business
news & profiles
You may include a photo of your loved one, a special poem, or thought.
style $
style $
1 45
2 25
SARAH SMITH
IN LOVING MEMORY OF
JANE SMITH
k!
s Each Wee
Wednesday:
em
Half Price It
Food
This Week
50% OFF s
g
a
T
N
E
E
R
G
Re-Uzit Shop
of New Holland, Inc.
717-354-8355
Thursday:
Home &
Garden
Dine in
O
OR Take Out
Please print legibly. Include a self-addressed, stamped envelope for photo return.
BLOCK STYLE
1 2
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________
YOUR NAME _______________________________________________________
PHONE _______________________________
ADDRESS _________________________________________________________
OR CHARGE:
I, ________________________________, hereby authorize LNP MEDIA GROUP, Inc. to use the photograph/name/signature
submitted in conjunction with this ad placement. Furthermore, I hereby accept all responsibility for the use of the
likenesses and agree to defend, indemnify and hold harmless LNP MEDIA GROUP, Inc. from any and all actual or alleged
claims resulting from publication of the submitted photo(s) and/or advertisement(s).
MESSAGES, PHOTOS AND PAYMENT MUST BE RECEIVED BY NOON ON MONDAY, MAY 2, 2016.
A portion of each remembrance
will be paid by
Millersville ~ 717-872-5041
DAILY SPECIALS
EMPANADAS
LIKE US ON FACEBOOK
Open 7 Days a Week
717-392-5363
www.SnyderFuneralHome.com
LOCAL
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
AP ENTERTAINMENT WRITER
CASEY KREIDER | STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
Salem is an 8-month-old male cat available for adoption through Pet Pantry of Lancaster County.
Salem likes to
watch birds, TV
MJ MEINZER
LANCASTERCARES
Ireland peace
talks concluded as
negotiators reached a
landmark settlement to
end 30 years of bitter
rivalries and bloody
attacks.
N.W.A.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Cheap Trick
Chicago
Steve Miller
Deep Purple
Guaranteed
Pre-Season
SALE
Entire Selection of
In-Stock
Outdoor
Patio
Furniture
40
off
List Price
717-397-4718
*Guaranteed Lowest Prices is valid on our 2016 Collections of Winston, Hanamint & Telescope thru April 18, 2016.
Call Ahead
for Pickup
Italian Restaurant & Sports Bar
Daisy Ridley, 24
Delivery Now
Available!
B15
28 Beers on Tap Including a Large Selection of Craft Beers Gluten-Free Options Available Great Selection of Cocktails
40 West Orange Street, Lancaster
(Across from Prince St. Parking Garage on Orange St.)
717-490-6430
LAPIAZZAOFLANCASTER.COM
KITCHEN HOURS: Mon-Thurs 10am-10pm
Fri & Sat 10:30am-11pm | Sun 11am-10pm
BAR HOURS: Mon-Sat: 10am-2am | Sun 11am-2am
www.bayada.com/pediatrics
LA PIAZZA LANCASTER
EOE
Varicose veins,
aching, heaviness,
fatigue, and swelling
of your legs could be
signs of superficial
venous reflux disease.
A simple office procedure could be the answer
you've been looking for. Our procedures are
covered by most insurance plans, including Medicare.
FREE VEIN
SCREENINGS
Saturday, April 16 at 8:30 am
Lancaster Location only
VEIN CENTER
OF LANCASTER
WITH A PURCHASE
OF $20 OR MORE
LIMIT OF ONE
DESSERT EXPIRES 4/30/16
COUNTRY TABLE
RESTAURANT
www.countrytablerestaurant.com
Follow us on
Facebook
740 East Main Street
Mount Joy, PA 17552
717-653-4745
B16
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Celebrations
Contact Celebrations:
717.291.4957
celebrations@lnpnews.com
www.lancasteronline.com
Engagements
GarnerCarter
EberlyEckendorf
CirbaKlemer
GinterStoltzfus
HersheyLudman
EddingerFindley
Julianna
Eckendorf
and Joshua Eberly have
become engaged. Julianna is the daughter of
Kate and Joe Eckendorf
of Erie, PA. Joshua is the
son of Kathy and Gary
Eberly of Quarryville,
PA.
Julianna is a graduate
of Fairview High School
and Grove City College.
She is now employed by
John F. Long Elementary School of Phoenix, AZ, as a 3rd-grade
teacher.
Joshua is a graduate
of Solanco High School
and Grove City College.
He is now employed by
Todays Growth Consultant as a Website Monetization Specialist.
Both hiking enthusiasts, Joshua proposed
atop Camelback Mountain in Phoenix, AZ. A
June 2016 Wedding is
planned.
Mr.andMrs.Michael
Klemer of Landisville,
Pa. are pleased to announce the engagement
of their daughter, Laura
Klemer ,to John Cirba,
son of Mrs. Susan Cirba
and the late Mr. Lee Cirba of Binghamton, N.Y.
The bride-to-be graduated from Hempeld
High School in 2006
and the University Of
Pittsburgh in 2010 with
an accounting degree.
Laura currently is employed by PricewaterhouseCoopers as a campus Recruiter for the
NYC and Stamford, Ct.
offices. John graduated
from Chenango Valley
High School in 2005 and
Ithaca College in 2009
(MBA in 2010) and is in
Assurance practice at
PricewaterhouseCoopers. The couple resides
in Stamford Ct. The
wedding is planned for
May 14, 2016 in Old Saybrook, Ct.
Brittany
Ludman,
daughter of Kirk and
Phyllis Ludman of Willow Street, PA and Steven Hershey, son of
Colleen Felegy and the
late John Hershey of
Leola, PA, are happy to
announce their engagement. The couple began
dating in October of
2009, and got engaged in
Ocean City, MD, in July
of 2015.
Brittany is a 2007 graduate of Solanco High
School and a 2012 graduate of Millersville University. She will graduate with her Masters
from Edinboro University in May of 2016.
Steven is a 2006 graduate of Conestoga Valley High School and is
employed by Costco
Wholesale. He is also
currently serving in the
United States Marine
Corps.
Their
wedding
is
planned for August 7,
2016.
Hesss BBQ
Your complete catering service!
2635 Willow Street Pike Willow Street
717.464.3374
BRIDAL FASHIONS
Country Threads by Gail
Quality new and lovingly worn gowns
194 Doe Run Road Manheim
717.665.3711
Patricias Bridal Elegance
Patricias Bridal Elegance is a premier
bridal boutique that offers designer gowns,
custom gowns, redesigning heirloom gowns,
dressing the bride, and wedding day service.
309 West King Street Lancaster
717.397.7664
Sonia Rose
Your grandmothers broach, your mothers
train any piece of jewelry, lace or fabric
can be transformed into a one-of-a-kind
bridal handbag for yourself or for your
entire wedding party!
50 N. Queen St. Lancaster
717.394.3700
BRIDAL REGISTRY
Endless Honeymoon
Let your guests give you something
memorable and specialYour honeymoon.
www.endlesshoneymoon.com
1.877.878.3768
The Registry at Boscovs
When you register, youll receive
Exactly What you Want and get Fabulous
Perks too!!
giftregistry.boscovs.com
1.800.284.8155
BRIDAL SHOWERS
A Tea Affair
A Perfect Place for your Bridal Shower
6 Sturgis Lane Lititz
717.626.1776
Sugar Plums & Tea
Plan your special occasion with us.
Bridal Shower Baby Shower
Anniversary Birthday
403 Bank Barn Lane Lancaster
717.394.9166
www.sugarplumsandtea.com
CATERING
CR Lapps
Catering for All Your Events! Weddings,
Picnics, Party Trays, Etc.
101 Fite Way Quarryville
717.786.1768
Encks Custom Catering
Celebrating is our business! Catering for
all occasions. Call about our Banquet
& Conference Center
244 Granite Run Dr. Lancaster
717.569.7000
Hinkles Restaurant
Quality Catering To Suit All Your Special
Occasions
Rehearsal Dinners
Bridal Showers
Bachelor & Bachelorette Parties
Call or Email Us at:
hinklesrestaurant@gmail.com 717.684.2888
Like us on Facebook hinklespharmacy.com
Scoops Ice Cream & Grille
Provide a family friendly atmosphere with
quality food for all to enjoy at both our store
and on our food trucks
312 Primrose Lane Mountville
717.285.2055
Weddings by JDK
Our commitment to excellence will provide
you with the most fulfilling wedding experience
imaginable. Our wedding expertise began
in 1987 and we take pride in continuing that
legacy today. Our full spectrum of services for
the bride include catering, event and floral
design, rentals and planning.
21 North Prince Street Lancaster
1 Bishop Place Camp Hill
717.730.4661
FAVORS
Wilbur Chocolate
Chocolate filled favor boxes and
wedding themed chocolate molds
48 N. Broad Street Lititz
717.626.3249
FLORAL DESIGN
Neffsville Flower Shoppe
Flower Designs from Ceremony to Reception
2700 Lititz Pike Lancaster
717.569.1801
www.neffsvilleflowershop.com
INSURANCE
Unruh Insurance Agency, Inc.
Life changes fast, make sure youre
protected
2350 N. Reading Road Denver
1344 Main Street East Earl
877.854.3309
www.unruhinsurance.com
INVITATIONS
Bookman Graphics
Custom-made wedding stationary,
including save the dates, invitations,
maps, program, thank yous and more.
601 South Broad Street Lititz
717.568.8246
lisabmears@mac.com
BookmanGraphics.com
LICENSE
Brimmers Licensing Service
Brimmers specializes in license and
notary services with convenient hours
and fast service, we guarantee your
satisfaction every time.
1354 Harrisburg Pike Lancaster & 3 other
convenient locations
717.394.9991
MATTRESS
American Sleep Center
Family owned and operated mattress store
focused on quality and customer satisfaction.
Call us for current sales & specials.
1957 Fruitville Pike Lancaster
717.560.0660
PHOTOGRAPHY
Shining Star Photo Booth
Special Memories Last Forever
Enchanted Photo Gazebos
Enclosed & Open Photo Booths
Dcor Lighting
Visit Our Website, Email Us or Call
info@shiningstarphotobooth.com
717.435.7682
REAL ESTATE
Anita Stoltzfus, Realtor, ASP, SRES
Kingsway Realty
1770 Oregon Pike Lancaster
717.587.6479
Kingsway Realty/Quality First Rentals/
Hometown Refurnishing
Buy, Rent or Furnish your home
830 Martin Avenue Ephrata
717.341.5081
RECEPTIONS OR
BANQUET FACILITIES
Double Tree Resort
Lancaster Willow Valley
Wedding Day Elegance in an
All-inclusive, Stunningingly Beautiful Setting
2416 Willow Street Pike Lancaster
800.369.9877
www.doubletreelancaster.com
Fireside Tavern Restaurant & Ballroom
Elegant Ballroom, Custom Cuisine, Ceremonies
& Receptions with outdoor courtyard area
1500 Historic Drive Strasburg
717.687.7979
Four Seasons Golf Course
Creating Truly Memorable Moments;
Perfect Setting for Wedding Receptions,
Rehearsal Dinners, Anniversary Parties
949 Church Street Landisville
717.898.0536
www.4seasonsbanquets.com
The Gathering Place
Gearing up for our 30th season of summer
weddings and many other banquets
From family reunions to class reunions.
6 Pine Street Mount Joy
717.653.5911
Hamilton Ballroom
Offers a one of a kind experience for
your special event and will guide you
through the entire planning process
941 Wheatland Avenue Lancaster
717.393.0668
The Iris Club
Weddings, Parties, Dances
and More at Affordable Prices
323 N. Duke Street Lancaster
717.394.7811
Lancaster Marriott at Penn Square
We now Pronounce your Wedding
Breathtaking!
Downtown Lancaster
717.239.1600
Meadia Heights Golf Club
Personalized, distinctive service in an
atmosphere of understated elegance.
402 Golf Road Lancaster
717.393.9761
www.meadiaheightsgolf.com/events
KreiderNye
Anniversaries
Hess 50th
TRANSPORTATION
Elite Coach
Nostalgic 20 Passenger Trolley &
25-56 Passenger Coaches, Perfect for
Guest Transportation
1685 W. Main Street Ephrata
800.722.6206
www.elitecoach.com
Red Lion Bus, Inc.
School Bus Shuttles
Take the Worry Out of Transporting Your
Wedding Guests
Contact Us For a Customized Event Quote
Kim Chronister at 717-244-4591, Ext. 105 or
email kchronister@redlionbus.com
WEDDING CAKES
Bird-in-Hand Bakery & Cafe
Our moist, homemade wedding cakes
are the perfect desserts for your special
day. From simple to elaborate, traditional
to contemporary, our accomplished cake
decorators will help you pick a design that
reflects your tastes, helping you create
memories to treasure forever.
2715 Old Philadelphia Pike Bird-in-Hand
717.768.1501
www.Bird-in-Hand.com
LIVING
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Celebrations
Anniversaries
Sauder 50th
Miller 60th
Possler 25th
Franz and Amber Amway Possler are celebrating their 25th wedding anniversary on
April 14th, 2016. They
were married in front of
family and friends in the
library of the Elks Club
on North Duke Street
Lancaster, P.A. in 1991.
They have a 17-year-old
son, Aron, who is their
pride and joy. Congratulations on 25 years!
Announce life's
milestones in
Celebrations
Let your extended family in
on the big secret: You're happily
engaged!
Tell your old schoolmates that
you finally married that special
someone.
Share the excitement of your
big anniversary!
Go to www.lancasteronline.com/
celebrations/create to place your
special announcement.
Scheirey 50th
Weddings
BourdeauGailor
Anniversaries
Donald and Sandra
(Donley) Scheirey, of
Lititz, celebrated their
50th wedding anniversary on April 9, 2016.
They were married April
9, 1966 at Salem Evangelical United Brethren
Church in Rothsville by
Rev. Robert Smethers,
Jr.
They are the parents of
two daughters: Deana,
married to David Good;
Dori, married to Jesse
Eckert. They have two
grandsons, Cooper and
Ty Eckert.
They enjoy spending
time with family and
their grandsons sporting events.
Congratulations on 50
years of marriage, mom
and dad! We Love you.
CELEBRATIONS
GUIDELINES
Haldeman
70th
If women are hidden behind their husbands in legal documents, more digging
can uncover facts and
clues.
Wilcox traced one
branch of her own
family to Killingworth,
Connecticut, the birthplace of
what would become
Yale University. She
searched the universitys special collections
and found a letter to
the sister of her ancestor from someone who
was courting her. The
young man wrote a
letter filled with worry
and apology. The sister must have forgiven
him because they later
married, Wilcox says.
But that letter uncovered something much
more than a wedding
date.
In another case, a
client didnt know the
name of an ancestors
wife.
Wilcox
tracked
down the store ledger
of a local shop from
the time and found a
purchase on his account by his wife,
Hannah.
And then there was
the time she looked
into an ancestors probate records. Wilcox
was looking for information on a particular
woman, Anna. Annas
daughter and son-inlaw died, leaving several children behind.
Wilcox found the sonin-laws probate records and discovered
a letter written on
behalf of Anna in the
file about who should
be appointed as the
childrens guardian.
Anna had signed other
documents with an X.
In this case, this
one time, she signed
her name, Wilcox
says.
These bits of information are out there.
They can take extra effort, but these details
are vital to our history.
Were the conduits
now, Wilcox says.
We all have stories
that have been told to
us. Even those little
bits should get passed
on.
FINDING
STORIES OF
THE WOMEN
IN YOUR
FAMILY TREE
n This years Lancaster
Family History
Conference will focus
on researching women
in genealogy.
n Here are some tips
from ancestry.com.
n For the websites full
tip sheet, visit bit.ly/
LNPwomenancestry.
1. Look for changes
in records between
entries. For example,
an 1855 Census record
shows a woman living
with her husband
and five children.
In the 1860 census,
the husband and the
youngest daughter
isnt listed, meaning
she lost a husband and
a child in five years.
2. Search local
newspapers for
information about
ancestors and to learn
what life was like at the
time.
3. Search city
directories can show
more information,
including occupation
and address.
4. Search local
historical societies or
libraries for diaries or
manuscripts from the
same time. These could
mention the people in
your search or give a
first-hand account of
life in the area at the
time period.
5. Vital records
can reveal details,
including maiden
names. These include
birth records, marriage
records and death
records.
6. Check siblings
records to uncover
missing information.
7. Obituaries can
reveal surviving
relatives and lead
further up the tree.
8. Military records
will have details about
family members.
9. Search court records
for all family members
to find information
about heirs and other
relatives.
10. Memorabilia and
living history. Ask
family members what
they know, read old
letters and check
things like the backs
of photographs or
old address books for
clues.
Lancaster Countys
First Annual
something used
Robert and Viola Haldeman of Manheim, PA,
were married on March
8th, 1946, at the Baptist
Church of Boonville,
IN. Robert was owner
and operator of Stuaffers cornmeal. He had
also worked part time
at Manheim Auto Auction. Viola helped with
the family business and
in raising their four children.
They are the parents
of Patricia Kapp (John)
of Mechanicsburg, PA,
Dennis (Carol) Haldeman of Leola, PA, Gary
(Sonda)
Haldeman
of Manheim, PA, and
Scott (Judy) Haldeman of Manheim, PA.
They have seven grandchildren and ve great
grandchildren.
Robert and Viola are
members of Chiques
Church of the Brethren.
The immediate family
celebrated this special
occasion on March 13th,
with church followed by
a meal at Pleasant View
Retirement
Community.
B17
$ 99
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per pound
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Short Cuts or Fresh Breaded Chicken - 9 to 12 ounce
selections
2 $5
sam
sam
e it
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6 $10
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Maiers Italian
Bread - 20 ounce
bu
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SA
more!
bu
VE
SA
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$ 88
Chips Deluxe, Oatmeal
Cookies or Sandies
y more
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10 $10
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3 $5
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y more
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4.77 97
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Summer Shandy
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6 count 12 ounce
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11
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is
Look outftohr
Friday
FRIDAY, APRIL 15
Fantastic Friday from 9AM to 9PM Friday, April 15 ONLY.
Sports
n SEND STORY TIPS & INFO TO: CHRIS OTTO, 291-8662, COTTO@LNPNEWS.COM
Fightins
win
The Phillies beat the Mets,
notching Phillys first victory
n Page C7
AP GOLF WRITER
MORE GOLF
SPIETH, page C4
MIKE GROSS
PENN STATE FOOTBALL
PSU coach
Limegrover back
in control of his life
Runners navigate a slush- and snow-covered course during Saturday mornings eighth annual Garden Spot Village marathon and halfmarathon in New Holland. Bryan Morseman was the mens overall winner and Jenny Bender was the womens overall winner. For more
coverage, see Page C6. And check out a gallery of 20 photos from the event on LancasterOnline.com.
Ward to speak
at LNP banquet
Local high school
athletes and
coaches will be
honored with
awards at the
inaugural event
STAFF REPORT
SPORTS@LNPNEWS.COM
Former
Pittsburgh
Steeler Hines Ward will
be the keynote speaker
for the inaugural LNP
High School Sports AllStar Awards banquet,
which will be held at
6 p.m. on Wednesday,
May 18, at Spooky Nook
Sports Complex.
At the banquet, top
student-athletes
and
coaches from across
the Lancaster-Lebanon
League during the 201516 school year will be
honored and receive
awards on stage from local sponsors.
Male and female Fan
Favorites will also be
honored at the event,
with voting for those
FLYERS 3, PENGUINS 1
AP SPORTS WRITER
Hines
Ward
PHILADELPHIA
With their ailing owner
watching from home,
the Philadelphia Flyers clinched a playoff
berth.
Wayne
Simmonds
scored two goals, Steve
Mason stopped 18
shots and the Flyers
beat the playoff-bound
Pittsburgh Penguins
3-1 on Saturday to earn
the No. 8 seed in the
Eastern Conference.
Its a great feeling,
rookie coach Dave
Hakstol said. Its a win
and playoff berth for
Mr. (Ed) Snider and
the unbelievable fans.
Snider, the 83-yearold franchise founder
and Hall of Fame executive, watched Lauren
Hart sing God Bless
America on FaceTime
as the teams longtime
anthem singer held out
her phone during her
ASSOCIATED PRESS
performance. She
blew kisses after the
song.
You get a little
emotional when you
start to think about
it, Flyers captain
Claude Giroux said.
We know hes happy we made the playoffs.
The Flyers win
eliminated Boston,
which lost to Ottawa 6-1 earlier in the
day. The Bruins lost
a tiebreaker to Detroit. Philadelphia
will meet top-seeded Washington in
the first round. The
Penguins, who are
the No. 3 seed in the
SPRING GAME
n What: Penn State Blue-White
C2
SPORTS
COLLEGE SCENE
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
SPORTS ON TV
COLLEGE SOFTBALL
Oklahoma at Baylor
CYCLING
UCI World Tour, Paris-Roubaix race
(same-day tape)
GOLF
www.funkconstruction.com
TIME
NETWORK
TIME
MLB
1pm
Pittsburgh at Cincinnati
ROOT
1pm
TCN
1pm
MASN
1:30pm
Miami at Washington
MASN2
1:30pm
ESPN
8pm
NETWORK
TIME
FS1
noon
FS1
2pm
NETWORK
TIME
Jamie Steele,
Ursinus head coach
NETWORK
1pm
MLB BASEBALL
Brian is really
a joy to coach,
always the same
guy every day.
He brings a
ton of energy
and has really
stepped up
his on-field
leadership this
year. We will
really miss him
next year in so
many ways.
3pm
NBC
Boston at Toronto
ence.
She has five doubles,
a triple, two home
runs, 13 runs scored
and 21 RBIs. She hit
her first collegiate
homer in a 3-2 loss to
Millsaps and her second in a 9-6 victory
over Keystone.
She had a triple and
two singles, scored a
run and knocked in
three in a 5-4 triumph
over Mary Washington.
Mengisteab
shines: Senior Naeb
Mengisteab (Conestoga Valley) captured
the 1500-meter run
to help the Kutztown
mens track team defeat East Stroudsburg
and Bloomsburg in a
tri-meet last Saturday
in Bloomsburg.
His
time
was
4:09.09. He also finished fifth in the 800
(2:04.95).
Meanwhile, Kutztown freshman Brady
Walton (McCaskey)
finished third in the
discus (121-6). He
was also fourth in the
javelin (133-08) and
sixth in the hammer
throw (110-07).
Longstaffs doing
the job: Seniors twin
sisters Avery and Kari
Longstaff, both former Cocalico athletes,
are key members of
the Temple womens
lacrosse team, which
is 8-3 overall and 0-1
in Big East Conference play after a tough
10-9 loss to No. 2 Florida last Saturday.
Avery, an attack,
has five goals and
three assists, while
Kari, a defender, has
12 ground balls, two
draw controls and six
caused turnovers.
Senior
Megan
Pinkerton (Manheim
Township) has 11
goals and four assists
for the Owls, while
sophomore Tori Yuko
(Manheim Township)
has a goal and an assist. Pinkerton had a
goal in the loss to the
Gators.
Fritz sparkles early: Freshman Brooke
Fritz didnt take long
to make a name for
herself with the East
Stroudsburg womens
lacrosse team.
Fritz
(Cocalico)
scored four goals and
picked up two assists
in her first college
game, a 15-0 victory
over West Virginia
Wesleyan.
She has 19 goals
and five assists for 24
points and had three
goals and two assists
in a 12-4 victory over
St. Thomas Aquinas
and three goals in a
16-7 triumph over
Georgian Court.
Last Saturday, she
had two goals as the
Warriors
defeated
Shippensburg
19-7
to lift their record to
11-2 overall and 6-2 in
PSAC play.
NBCSN
2pm
LNP CORRESPONDENT
3pm
TIME
TIME
GYMNASTICS
Ursinus mens lacrosse goalie Brian Neff, an Ephrata High School grad, has started 57
games in his four years with the Bears, including 10 this season.
ESPN2
NETWORK
CBS
TIME
NETWORK
BILL ARSENAULT
NETWORK
NBA BASKETBALL
Charlotte at Washington
NBA
noon
NBA
3:30pm
CSN/PH
5pm
Milwaukee at Philadelphia
NBA
7pm
NETWORK
TIME
TCN
1pm
NETWORK
TIME
NBCSN
8:30am
FS1
9:30am
NBCSN
11am
FS2
11:30am
ESPN
2pm
NHL HOCKEY
Philadelphia at N.Y. Islanders
SOCCER
Premier League, Leicester City at
Sunderland
Bundesliga, Borussia Dortmund at Schalke
ESPN
4pm
FS1
7pm
FS1
9:30pm
NBA
NETWORK
TIME
ESPN2
1pm
WRESTLING
NETWORK
TIME
NBCSN
10:30pm
SOCCER
Request to research
possible link between
dementia and injuries
ROB HARRIS
MLS ROUNDUP
SPORTS
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Local digest
C3
WILKES-BARRE/SCRANTON 4, HERSHEY 3
FIELD HOCKEY
n After an impressive and uninterrupted succession
MENS LACROSSE
n Sean Rogers scored five goals and handed out three
WOMENS LACROSSE
n Paige Moriarty finished with seven goals and three
KFREEMAN@LNPNEWS.COM
Bears goalie Dan Ellis makes the save on a penalty shot by Wilkes-Barre/Scrantons
Josh Archibald during the second period of Saturday nights game in Hershey.
NHL ROUNDUP
PAULA WOLF
WHEELCHAIR QUAARTERBACK
vision, he said.
She has the shooting range of a college
player, Lowry said,
and her knowledge of
the game for her age is
pretty amazing.
St. Leo the Great competes in the Lancaster/
York Area Girls Catholic Youth Organization
Basketball League and
finished second this
season in the Diocese
of Harrisburg tournament, he said.
Reeser, who will attend Lancaster Catholic
starting in ninth grade,
is the daughter of Jerry
and Deb Reeser, of
Intercourse.
In addition to starring for St. Leo, she also
plays AAU ball for the
Comets Girls Basketball
Club, facing competition from around the
country.
Sommer Reeser,
who lives and breathes
basketball, according to
her mother, first took
up the sport to follow
in the footsteps of her
older sister, Madison.
A big part of what
makes her daughter
successful is her fierce
commitment to getting
better, Deb Reeser said.
Sommer Reeser is
very coachable, her
mom said. She listens
and takes what they tell
her and practices it over
and over.
Ocean Spa
60/1 hr
$10 OFF Massage
$
consecutive loss.
Canadiens 5, Lightning 1: Alex Galchenyuk
and Max Pacioretty each
scored twice to reach the
30-goal mark and Montreal beat Tampa Bay.
Montreal missed the
playoffs for the second
time in nine years.
The Lightning open
the playoffs Wednesday
at home against Detroit.
Blue
Jackets
5,
Blackhawks 4 (OT):
Scott Hartnell scored a
power-play goal at 2:28
of overtime, and Columbusrallied to beat Chicago.
Hartnell finished with
two goals and two assists as Columbus (3440-8) closed its season
with four wins in five
games. Alexander Wennberg had a goal and
two assists for the Blue
Jackets, and Brandon
Saad added a goal and an
assist against his former
team.
YEAR
DAN MULLER
NO
HOUR LIMIT
RESIDENTIAL
$100.00 off
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eeks featured c
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SPORTS
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
100
1. Ian Harpel, Warwick, 10.7
2. Ethan Anspach, Elco, 10.8
2. Mackenzie Focht, Garden Spot,
10.8
4. Jamel Henry, McCaskey, 11.0
4. Prosper Eguzouwa, Solanco,
11.0
6. Andrea Bosia, Donegal, 11.2
6. Dashawn Edwards, Hempfield,
11.2
6. Drew Eshleman, Manheim Central, 11.2
6. Eric Hopkins, Solanco, 11.2
6. Carlos Lugo, McCaskey, 11.2
200
1. Ian Harpel, Warwick, 22.5
2. Ethan Anspach, Elco, 22.9
3. Austin Eldridge, Elco, 23.0
3. Mackenzie Focht, Garden Spot,
23.0
3. Darnell Lathon, Hempfield, 23.0
6. Javon McIntyre, Columbia, 23.1
6. Troy Miller, Solanco, 23.1
400
1. Frank Cullen, McCaskey, 51.1
2. Victor Suarez, Conestoga Valley,
51.4
3. Austin Eldridge, Elco, 51.5
4. Ian Harpel, Warwick , 51.7
4. Danell Lathon, Hempfield, 51.7
6. Javon McIntyre, Columbia, 52.6
800
1. Nathan Henderson, McCaskey,
1:58.8
2. Jesse Cruise, Cedar Crest,
2:00.78
3. Sam Mancuso, Garden Spot,
2:03.16
4. Derin Klick, Lebanon, 2:04.0
4. Zach Lefever, Ephrata, 2:04.6
5. Chris Hershberger, Ephrata,
2:05.7
6. Malachi Lyon, Penn Manor,
2:06.9
1,600
1. Nathan Henderson, McCaskey,
4:23.8
2. Jesse Cruise, Cedar Crest,
4:28.18
3. Sam Mancuso, Garden Spot,
4:34.19
4. Zach Lefever, Ephrata, 4:36.6
5. Brian Delany, Manheim Township, 4:39.2
6. Malachi Lyon, Penn Manor,
4:40.3
3,200
1. Nathan Henderson, McCaskey,
10:01.3
2. Nick Norton, Hempfield, 10:02.2
3. Ian Miller, Manheim Township,
10:14.7
4. Ian Lauver, Manheim Central,
10:14.9
5. Josh Rudd, Cedar Crest, 10:17.26
6. Nate Burkhart, Conestoga Valley, 10:20.1
110 HURDLES
1. Billy Cooney, Solanco, 14.5
2. Taraje Whitfield, Manheim
Township, 14.8
3. Aanyah Bermudez, Conestoga
Valley, 15.0
4. Luke Allwein, Cedar Crest, 15.4
5. Nathaniel Tadesse, Hempfield,
15.5
6. Eli Silvestrie, McCaskey, 15.7
300 HURDLES
1. Billy Cooney, Solanco, 40.6
2. Brady Stoner, Lampeter-Strasburg, 41.3
3. Nathaniel Tadesse, Hempfield,
41.4
4. Demetri Whitsett, Cocalico, 42.0
5. Aanyah Bermudez, Conestoga
Valley, 42.1
5. Drew Eshleman, Manheim Central, 42.1
5. Dylan Neslon, Manheim Central,
42.1
400 RELAY
1. McCaskey, 44.1 (Cullen, Lugo,
Silvestrie, Henry)
2. Penn Manor, 44.4 (McElheny,
Guerrero, Nina, Richardson)
3. Hempfield, 44.8 (Powers, Das.
Edwards, Tadesse, Dar. Edwards)
3. Manheim Township, 44.8
(Sharpe, Whitfield, Patterson, Bosquet)
5. Conestoga Valley, 45.0 (Humphreville, Bermudez, Barbon,
Miller)
6. Manheim Central, 45.3 (Nelson,
Barreto, Eshleman, hochstetler)
6. Solanco, 45.3 (Cooney, Eguzouwa, Hopkins, Miller)
1,600 RELAY
1. Manheim Township, 3:23.90
(Delany, Whitfield, Patterson, Horton)
2. McCaskey, 3:33.4 (Silvestrie,
Lugo, Weinstock-Collins, Henderson)
3. Hempfield, 3:36.2 (Powers, Yurchak, Tadesse, Lathon)
4. Conestoga Valley, 3:36.3 (Bermudez, Humphreville, Burkholder,
Suarez)
5. Elco, 3:40.1 (Gettler, Troutman,
R. Rolon, Eldridge)
6. Lancaster Catholic, 3:42.9
(Moore, A. Johnson, VonNeida,
Cavender)
3,200 RELAY
1. Manheim Township, 8:22.6
(Dorenkamp, Monohan, Deerin,
Delany)
2. Cedar Crest, 8:27.9 (Vukovich,
Royer, Wolfe, Cruise)
3. Hempfield, 8:29.1 (Titter, Groff,
Roeder, Yurchak)
4. McCaskey, 8:43.7 (Wallace,
Reyes, Jonz, Weinstock-Collins)
5. Conestoga Valley, 8:44.1 (Strickler, Brubaker, Burkhart, Daugherty)
6. Elizabethtown, 8:46.53 (Schlicher, Hoffmaster, Clemens, Esbenshade)
SHOT PUT
1. Dakota Leonhard, Northern Lebanon, 55-2.75
2. Tyler Hoag, Manheim Central,
54-10.4
3. Cain Resch, McCaskey, 53-8
4. Ben Viau, Manheim Township,
52-3.5
5. Abdul Saad, Cocalico, 48-11
6. Chris Kelly, Cedar Crest, 47-6
DISCUS
1. Tyler Hoag, Manheim Central,
173-0
2. Matt Vines, Northern Lebanon,
154-7
3. Ryan Atkinson, Penn Manor,
146-2
4. Chris Kelly, Cedar Crest, 146-2
5. Cain Resch, McCaskey, 145-3
6. Ben Viau, Manheim Township,
144-8
JAVELIN
1. Cain Resch, McCaskey, 190-4
2. Derek Adams, Manheim Central,
172-6
3. Noah McCardell, Solanco, 168-3
4. Josh Eidemiller, Lampeter-Strasburg, 166-2
5. Tyler Hoag, Manheim Central,
165-6
6. Eric Garner, Warwick, 164-8
LONG JUMP
1. Jose Barbon, Conestoga Valley,
22-2.75
2. Troy Miller, Solanco, 21-10
3. Kobe Gantz, McCaskey, 21-2
3. Taraje Whitfield, Manheim
Township, 21-2
5. Evan Horn, Cedar Crest, 20-9.75
6. Noah Shettel, Warwick, 20-8
1,600 RELAY
1. Manheim Township, 4:08.71
(Mason, Hummel, M. Newman,
German)
2. McCaskey, 4:15.0 (Tirado, Gibson, Flowers, Tejeda)
3. Warwick, 4:16.2 (Graybill,
White, Leakway, Williamson)
4. Conestoga Valley, 4:22.3 (Castranova, Grucelski, Dickson, Musser)
5. Lampeter-Strasburg, 4:28.3 (McClintock, Gard, Weaver, Pritchard)
6. Donegal, 4:30.7 (Maxwell, Slattery, Goodwill, Walker)
3,200 RELAY
1. Manheim Township, 9:47.35
(Mason, Side, Wilk, Gurdak)
4. Warwick, 10:13.8 (Parker,
White, Dickow, Shields)
2. Cedar Crest, 10:20.44 (B. Laliberte, Craun, Wuori, Peters)
3. Lampeter-Strasburg, 10:26.4
(Welchans, Gordley, Pritchard, McClintock)
5. Conestoga Valley, 10:54.9 (Snader, Dickson, Carvagal, Slingluff)
6. McCaskey, 10:56.5 (Boben, M.
Tejeda, Hopkins, R. Tejeda)
SHOT PUT
1. Emily Stauffer, Cocalico, 46-9
2. Aliyah Striver, McCaskey, 39-6
3. Steph Garner, Manheim Central,
35-0
4. Miranda Spangler, Cedar Crest,
34-9.5
5. Natasha Cruz, McCaskey, 33-2
6. Kristen Herr, Lampeter-Strasburg, 32-6.5
6. Hannah Weddle, Cedar Crest,
32-6.5
DISCUS
1. Emily Stauffer, Cocalico, 127-0
2. Kayla South, Cocalico, 117-10
3. Kristen Herr, Lampeter-Strasburg, 115-4
4. Steph Garner, Manheim Central,
106-11
5. Natasha Cruz, McCaskey, 105-4
6. Aliyah Striver, McCaskey, 105-0
JAVELIN
1. Heidi Strausbaugh, Manheim
Central, 137-2
2. McKenzie Hainley, Cocalico,
125-4
2. Kristen Herr, Lampeter-Strasburg, 119-1
3. Cayla Robinson, Solanco, 110-0
5. Aliyah Striver, McCaskey, 100-7
6. Allaura Bohan, Donegal, 100-5
LONG JUMP
1. Reagan Hess, Annville-Cleona,
17-4
2. Sarah Stackhouse, Penn Manor,
17-2
3. Jen Eberly, Solanco, 16-5
4. Steph Wahl, Cocalico, 16-2.5
5. Precious Reid-White, McCaskey,
15-10
6. Shuk Yee Irena Wong, Warwick,
15-10
TRIPLE JUMP
1. Precious Reid-White, McCaskey,
34-11.5
2. Kiki Jefferson, Lancaster Catholic, 34-11
3. Brittany Braun, Penn Manor,
33-11
4. Natalie Platon, Hempfield, 339.5
5. Megan Gingrich, Cocalico, 33-1
6. Sarah Stackhouse, Penn Manor,
33-1
HIGH JUMP
1. Trinity Bitting-Ellis, Warwick, 5-2
2. Sheridan McNeil, Warwick, 5-0
3. Kara Bachert, Elizabethtown,
4-10
3. Naomi Bronkema, Lancaster
Mennonite, 4-10
3. Alexandra Geib, Warwick, 4-10
3. Ariel Jones, Cedar Crest, 4-10
3. Sheridan McNeil, Warwick, 4-10
3. Alexis Mongeau, LampeterStrasburg, 4-10
3. Taylor Wiederrecht, Manheim
Central, 4-10
3. Faith Wenrich, Cedar Crest, 4-10
POLE VAULT
1. Carley Sheppard, Manheim Central, 10-0
2. Megan Heiges, Hempfield, 9-6
2. Mackenzie Horn, Manheim
Township, 9-6
3. Courtney German, Manheim
Township, 9-0
3. Brooke Meckley, Cocalico, 9-0
3. Kay Liebl, Ephrata, 9-0
3. Carena Nottoli, Hempfield, 9-0
TRIPLE JUMP
1. Juan Maldonado, Lebanon, 447.75
2. Noah Shettel, Warwick, 43-3.5
3. Jabin Joseph, Cedar Crest, 42-5
4. Mark Njenga, Ephrata, 41-9.5
5. John Maldonado, Lebanon, 416.75
6. Elias Lebron, Penn Manor, 41-5
HIGH JUMP
1. Troy Miller, Solanco, 6-2
2. Jose Barbon, Conestoga Valley,
6-0
2. David Martin, Hempfield, 6-0
2. John Wilson, Warwick, 6-0
2. Demetri Whitsett, Cocalico, 6-0
6. Carlos Pacheco, McCaskey, 5-10
POLE VAULT
1. Damian DiAngelis, Northern
Lebanon, 13-1
2. Jesse Brownstein, Lebanon, 12-6
3. Huy Luu, Lebanon, 12-0
3. Tyler Mengel, Northern Lebanon, 12-0
3. Connor Pavlik, Manheim Central, 12-0
6. Ethan Dionne, Hempfield, 11-6
6. Cody Seese, Warwick, 11-6
GIRLS
100
1. Sarah Klag, Hempfield, 12.2
2. Leah Graybill, Warwick, 12.4
2. Nesta Petit-Ton, Garden Spot,
12.4
4. Kay Liebl, Ephrata, 12.5
4. Alison Salvador, McCaskey, 12.5
6. Carena Nottoli, Hempfield, 12.6
200
1. Jennie Young, Ephrata, 26.5
2. Sarah Klag, Hempfield, 26.6
3. Alison Salvador, McCaskey, 26.7
4. Courtney German, Manheim
Township, 26.8
5. Erin Grucelski, Conestoga Valley, 27.0
6. Nesta Petit-Ton, Garden Spot,
27.12
400
1. Sarah Klag, Hempfield, 58.5
2. Meredith Newman, Manheim
Township, 1:00.5
3. Julia Mason, Manheim Township, 1:00.7
4. Alyssa Schriver, Penn Manor,
1:01.4
5. Makayla Miller, Penn Manor,
1:02.2
6. Anyzha Gibson, McCaskey,
1:02.3
800
1. Sydney Morgan, Ephrata, 2:25.1
2. Liana Tirado, McCaskey, 2:25.9
3. Nadine Eichenlaub, Ephrata,
2:26.6
4. Emily Peters, Cedar Crest, 2:26.7
5. Jasmine McClintock, LampeterStrasburg, 2:27.0
6. Kate Dickow, Warwick, 2:28.0
1,600
1. Issy Fife, McCaskey, 5:17.8
2. Lindsey Lord, Penn Manor,
5:23.1
3. Haley Schaller, Ephrata, 5:24.3
4. Liana Tirado, McCaskey, 5:25
5. Jasmine McClintock, LampeterStrasburg, 5:25.7
6. Kate Dickow, Warwick, :26
3,200
1. Jamie Zamrin, Cocalico, 11:38.0
2. Jordan Haberstroh, Columbia,
11:49.0
3. Cheyenne Hansen, Garden Spot,
11:50.49
4. Issy Fife, McCaskey, 11:52.4
5. Hannah Dieterle, Manheim
Township, 11:54.93
6. Siena Gates, Hempfield, 12:01.9
100 HURDLES
1. Nesta Petit-Ton, Garden Spot,
15.2
2. Billie Jo Bollinger, Manheim Central, 15.3
3. Jenevieve Eberly, Solanco, 15.9
4. Brittany Braun, Penn Manor,
16.0
4. Danielle Katelan, Hempfield,
16.0
6. Taylor Menser, Cedar Crest, 16.3
300 HURDLES
1. Billie Jo Bollinger, Manheim Central, 47.9
2. Kara Benedict, Hempfield, 48.1
3. Leah Sassaman, Manheim
Township, 48.4
4. Nesta Petit-Ton, Garden Spot,
48.44
5. Leah Sassaman, Manheim
Township, 48.8
6. Kiera Wells, Manheim Township,
49.8
400 RELAY
1. Penn Manor, 50.2 (Stackhouse,
Miller, Shriner, Washington)
2. McCaskey, 50.4 (Salvador, Acosta, Allen, Williams)
3. Manheim Township, 51.14
(Horn, Livingston, Williams, German)
4. Hempfield, 51.4 (Nottoli,
Katelan, Benedict, Klag),
5. Ephrata, 51.4 (Kay Liebl, Horst,
Young, Zakarov),
6. Warwick, 52.4 (S. Bouder, Castranova, K. Bouder, Grucelski)
C5
BOYS
Daniel K. Taylor
The
Attorney at Law
GOT GUNS?
Station
LIKE US facebook.com/ESPNRadio927
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C6
SPORTS
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
MGROSS@LNPNEWS.COM
The recruiting of
Taylor Funk has been,
among many things,
long.
When youre 6-foot-3
inches by middle school
and already a veteran of
the AAU circuit, you attract attention.
Funk said last week
that he remembered a
man representing a
boarding high school
very famous in national
hoop circles coming
up to him and his family
at a tournament and all
but insisting that Funk
had to come there, all expenses paid.
Funk was, if his memory is correct, in sixth
grade at the time.
I couldnt believe it,
he said.
He also said no.
Im happy where I
am.
Lately the attention
has been more appropriate and serious.
Funk is now a 6-foot8 junior for Manheim
Central with a face-thebasket, perimeter game.
Hes been a varsity starter for the Barons since
day one of his freshman
season.
He has scholarship offers from St. Josephs, La
Salle, Boston University,
Monmouth and Rider.
So he will play majorcollege hoops, and he
will go to college for free.
Beyond that, he said, I
want to play for a team
that passes the ball. You
look at a team like the
Spurs. They may not be
the most athletic in the
NBA, but they play together, and they win.
Among high majors,
Funk admitted that Villanova would be my
dream school.
FILE PHOTO
Racers braved snowy conditions during Saturdays Garden Spot Village Marathon in
New Holland. Top photo, competitors leave the starting line. Second from top, the winner of the Womens Open Division and 11th overall, Jenny Bender, runs past snow covered trees. At bottom, Bryan Morseman, winner of the 8th annual marathon, is shown
crossing the finishing line.
FLURRY OF
FINISHERS
SPORTS@LNPNEWS.COM
soil moisture.
Improved Mailbox Markets: Its now even easier for
Visit us at LancasterFarming.com
SPORTS
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
C7
NATIONAL LEAGUE
HORSE RACING
RONALD BLUM
Exaggerator made
an impressive move
on a sloppy track in
rallying to win the
$1 million Santa
Anita Derby by 6 1/4
lengths, beating 7-5
favorite Mor Spirit in
their final showdown
before the Kentucky
Derby next month.
Ridden by Kent
Desormeaux,
Exaggerator ran 1 1/8
miles in 1:49.66 and
paid $8.80, $3.60 and
$2.80 at 3-1 odds on
Saturday. Trained by
Desormeauxs older
brother Keith, the
colt was next-to-last
early on in the ninehorse field.
Trained by Bob
Baffert, Mor Spirit
returned $2.80 and
$2.40. Uncle Lino was
another 2 1/4 lengths
back in third and paid
$5 to show.
Danzing
Candy,
who led going into
the clubhouse turn,
finished fourth as the
8-5 second choice under Mike Smith.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
MLB ROUNDUP
National League
Dodgers 3, Giants 2:
Madison Bumgarner hit
another home run off
Dodgers star Clayton
Kershaw, but both aces
were done by the time
Charlie Culberson hit a
go-ahead double in the
10th inning to lift Los
Angeles over San Francisco in a second straight
extra-inning game in the
rain.
American League
Red Sox 8, Blue Jays
4: Dustin Pedroia had
three hits and two RBIs,
Rick Porcello pitched six
innings to win his season
debut and Boston beat
Toronto.
Jose Bautista hit a pair
of two-run home runs,
his first two of the season, but the Blue Jays
lost their fourth straight.
Hanley
Ramirez
tripled home the tiebreaking run on a ball
that bounced over Bautistas head in the fifth.
Ramirez later scored on
a passed ball.
Yankees 8, Tigers 4:
CC Sabathia pitched into
the seventh inning in his
return for New York, and
Alex Rodriguez and Carlos Beltran homered in
the cold to lift the Yankees over Detroit.
Royals 7, Twins 0:
Ian Kennedy pitched
impressively into the
seventh inning in his
Kansas City debut and
the Royals hit their first
three home runs of the
season to beat the winless Minnesota.
White Sox 7, Indians 3: Avisail Garcia hit
a three-run home run
Interleague
Astros 6, Brewers 4:
Colby Rasmus hit two
home runs and a sacrifice fly to lead the Houston past Milwaukee.
Rasmus teed off on
Milwaukee starter Wily
Peralta (0-2) with a solo
shot in the third and a
two-run blast in the fifth
that landed near the top
row of the second-tier
bleachers in right.
SOURCE: ASSOCIATED PRESS
Exaggerator
earned
100 points in qualifying
for the May 7 Derby. Mor
Spirit earned 40 points.
Wood
Memorial:
Outwork lived up to his
name with a narrow victory in the $1 million
Wood Memorial at cold
and rainy Aqueduct on
Saturday and earned a
spot in the Kentucky
Derby in four weeks.
The victory by a head
over 81-1 long shot Trojan Nation was worth 100
Derby qualifying points
for Outwork, a 3-year-old
son of Uncle Mo trained
by Todd Pletcher and
owned by New Yorker
Mike Repole.
Ridden
by
John
Velazquez,
Outwork
raced second behind
Matt King Coal for most
of the 1 1/8-mile race,
then took over in the
stretch and held off a
strong challenge along
the rail from Trojan Nation, who came into the
race without a win but
earned 40 Derby points
to all but qualify.
Shagaf, the 9-5 favorite
NBA ROUNDUP
HIGH SCHOOL
SPORTS
HI NE S WAR D
Fast,
Affordable,
Convenient,
Easy
9.95
OIL CHANGE
conventional or
synthetic blend oil
& filter included
19.95 PA
INSPECTION
& EMISSIONS
Tax not included
Support local athletes and join us for LNPs High School Sports
All-Star Awards Banquet a ceremony and dinner for Lancaster
Countys best of the best in high school sports. The top coaches
and athletes in Lancaster County will be recognized on stage and
will receive awards from local sponsors.
Hines Ward,
Former Pittsburgh Wide Receiver
LancasterOnline.com/AllStar
717-394-4242
LANCASTERPREOWNED.COM
C8
BASEBALL
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Washington.....................................2
New York.........................................2
Miami..............................................1
Philadelphia.....................................1
Atlanta.............................................0
Cincinnati.........................................4
Pittsburgh........................................4
Chicago............................................3
Milwaukee.......................................2
St. Louis...........................................1
Los Angeles......................................4
San Francisco...................................4
Colorado..........................................2
Arizona............................................2
San Diego.........................................1
East Division
1 .667
2 .500 1-w
1
2 .333
1 11-w
4 .200
2 21-w
3 .000
2 21-w
Central Division
2-1
2-2
1-2
1-4
0-3
1 .800
1 .800
1 .750 1-w
3 .400
2 11-w
3 .250 21-w
2
West Division
4-1
4-1
3-1
2-3
1-3
2
2
2
3
3
.667
.667
.500
1
1
.400 11-w 11-w
.250
2
2
4-2
4-2
2-2
2-3
1-3
L-1
L-1
W-1
W-1
L-3
0-1
1-1
0-2
0-0
0-3
2-0
1-1
1-0
1-4
0-0
W-1
L-1
L-1
L-1
W-1
4-1
3-0
0-0
2-3
0-0
0-0
1-1
3-1
0-0
1-3
W-1
L-1
L-1
W-1
W-1
0-0
2-1
0-1
2-3
0-3
4-2
2-1
2-1
0-0
1-0
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Baltimore.........................................4
Boston.............................................3
New York.........................................3
Tampa Bay.......................................2
Toronto............................................2
Detroit.............................................3
Kansas City......................................3
Chicago............................................4
Cleveland.........................................2
Minnesota.......................................0
Seattle.............................................2
Houston...........................................2
Oakland...........................................2
Texas................................................2
Los Angeles......................................1
East Division
0 1.000
1 .750
1
2 .600 11-w 1-w
3 .400 21-w 11-w
4 .333
3
2
Central Division
4-0
3-1
3-2
2-3
2-4
1 .750
1 .750
2 .667
2 .500
1
1
5 .000 31-w 31-w
West Division
3-1
3-1
4-2
2-2
0-5
2
3
3
3
3
Fridays NL Games
N.Y. Mets 7............................ Philadelphia 2
San Diego 13.............................. Colorado 6
Pittsburgh 6............................. Cincinnati 5
St. Louis 7..................................... Atlanta 4
Arizona 3............................ Chicago Cubs 2
San Francisco 3..............L.A. Dodgers 2 (10)
Fridays AL Games
Detroit 4............................... N.Y. Yankees 0
Cleveland 7................. Chicago White Sox 1
Baltimore 6............................. Tampa Bay 1
Boston 8...................................... Toronto 7
Kansas City 4........................... Minnesota 3
Texas 7.................................... L.A. Angels 3
Oakland 3..................................... Seattle 2
Fridays Interleague Game
Milwaukee 6............................... Houston 4
.500
.400
.400
.400
.250
1-w 11-w
1-w 11-w
1-w 11-w
1
2
2-2
2-3
2-3
2-3
1-3
W-4
W-2
W-1
L-1
L-4
4-0
0-0
2-1
2-2
0-2
0-0
3-1
1-1
0-1
2-2
L-1
W-2
W-1
L-1
L-5
1-1
3-1
1-1
1-1
0-0
2-0
0-0
3-1
1-1
0-5
L-1
W-1
W-1
W-1
L-1
0-1
0-0
1-3
1-2
1-3
2-1
2-3
1-0
1-1
0-0
Saturdays NL Games
Cincinnati 5.............................. Pittsburgh 1
L.A. Dodgers 3............. San Francisco 2 (10)
Philadelphia 1............................ N.Y. Mets 0
Miami at Washington........................... ppd.
St. Louis at Atlanta...................................(n)
Chicago Cubs at Arizona..........................(n)
San Diego at Colorado.............................(n)
Saturdays AL Games
Boston 8...................................... Toronto 4
N.Y. Yankees 8............................... Detroit 4
Chicago White Sox 7................. Cleveland 3
Kansas City 7........................... Minnesota 0
Tampa Bay at Baltimore....................... ppd.
Texas at L.A. Angels.................................(n)
Oakland at Seattle...................................(n)
Saturdays Interleague Game
Houston 6............................... Milwaukee 4
Sundays NL Games
Philadelphia (Hellickson 0-0) at N.Y. Mets (Harvey 0-1), 1:10 p.m.
Pittsburgh (Locke 0-0) at Cincinnati (Melville 0-0), 1:10 p.m.
Miami (Koehler 0-0) at Washington (J.Ross 0-0), 1:35 p.m.
St. Louis (Wainwright 0-1) at Atlanta (W.Perez 0-0), 1:35 p.m.
L.A. Dodgers (Kazmir 1-0) at San Francisco (Cueto 1-0), 4:05 p.m.
Chicago Cubs (Arrieta 1-0) at Arizona (S.Miller 0-0), 4:10 p.m.
San Diego (T.Ross 0-1) at Colorado (Bettis 0-0), 4:10 p.m.
Sundays AL Games
Boston (S.Wright 0-0) at Toronto (Estrada 0-0), 1:07 p.m.
Tampa Bay (Odorizzi 0-0) at Baltimore (Worley 0-0), 1:35 p.m.
Cleveland (Tomlin 0-0) at Chicago White Sox (Quintana 0-0), 2:10 p.m.
Minnesota (Nolasco 0-0) at Kansas City (Volquez 1-0), 2:15 p.m.
Texas (M.Perez 0-0) at L.A. Angels (Weaver 0-0), 3:35 p.m.
Oakland (Bassitt 0-0) at Seattle (F.Hernandez 0-1), 4:10 p.m.
N.Y. Yankees (Tanaka 0-0) at Detroit (Verlander 0-0), 8:10 p.m.
Sundays Interleague Game
Houston (Keuchel 1-0) at Milwaukee (Nelson 0-1), 2:10 p.m.
NL BOXES
Phillies 1, Mets 0
Philadelphia AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Galvis ss...............4 0 0 0 0 1 .200
Hernandez 2b......4 0 2 0 0 1 .400
Herrera cf............4 0 1 0 0 2 .158
Franco 3b.............4 0 1 0 0 1 .286
Howard 1b...........4 1 1 1 0 2 .250
Gomez p..............0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Rupp c..................4 0 2 0 0 0 .250
Hunter lf..............3 0 0 0 0 0 .143
Bourjos rf.............3 0 1 0 0 0 .133
Velasquez p.........2 0 0 0 0 2 .000
Neris p.................0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Stumpf p..............0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
b-Goeddel ph.......1 0 0 0 0 1 .000
Hernandez p........0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Ruf 1b..................0 0 0 0 0 0 .167
Totals............... 33 1 8 1 0 10
New York
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Granderson rf......3 0 0 0 1 1 .063
Cabrera ss............4 0 2 0 0 0 .313
Cespedes cf.........4 0 0 0 0 3 .125
Duda 1b...............4 0 1 0 0 3 .286
Walker 2b............4 0 0 0 0 1 .250
Conforto lf...........4 0 0 0 0 1 .308
Flores 3b..............2 0 0 0 2 1 .000
dArnaud c............3 0 0 0 0 2 .083
B.Colon p.............2 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Robles p...............0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
a-De Aza ph.........0 0 0 0 1 0 .000
Bastardo p...........0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Familia p..............0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Totals............... 30 0 3 0 4 12
Philadelphia....... 000 010 000 1 8 0
New York............ 000 000 000 0 3 0
a-walked for Robles in the 7th. b-struck
out for Stumpf in the 8th.
LOBPhiladelphia 5, New York 7. 2B
Bourjos (2), A.Cabrera (1). HRHoward (2),
off B.Colon. RBIsHoward (3). SBDe Aza
(1). CSC.Hernandez (2).
Runners left in scoring positionPhiladelphia 3 (Velasquez, Rupp 2); New York 4
(N.Walker, Duda, Cespedes, Granderson).
RISPPhiladelphia 1 for 4; New York 0 for 5.
GIDPC.Hunter.
DPNew York 1 (N.Walker, A.Cabrera,
Duda).
Philadelphia IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Velasquez W, 1-0...6 3 0 0 3 9 99 0.00
Neris H, 1........ 2-e 0 0 0 1 1 13 0.00
Stumpf H, 1......1-e 0 0 0 0 0 3 40.50
Hernandez H, 2.1 0 0 0 0 2 19 10.13
Gomez S, 1-1... 1 0 0 0 0 0 6 0.00
New York
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Colon L, 0-1...... 6 5 1 1 0 7 90
Robles.............. 1 0 0 0 0 1 11
Bastardo.......... 1 0 0 0 0 1 10
Familia............. 1 3 0 0 0 1 17
Inherited runners-scoredStumpf
WPVelasquez.
T2:44. A37,083 (41,922).
1.23
0.00
0.00
0.00
1-0.
AL BOXES
Red Sox 8, Blue Jays 4
Boston
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Betts rf.................4 1 1 0 1 2 .158
Pedroia 2b...........5 1 3 2 0 0 .316
Bogaerts ss..........4 2 1 1 1 2 .222
Shaw 1b...............5 0 1 1 0 3 .357
Ramirez dh..........5 1 1 2 0 0 .389
Sandoval 3b.........4 0 0 0 1 3 .000
Holt lf...................5 1 1 0 0 3 .412
Castillo cf.............4 1 2 0 0 0 .500
Swihart c..............2 1 1 1 1 0 .143
Totals............... 38 8 11 7 4 13
Toronto
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Pillar cf.................4 0 0 0 0 2 .200
Donaldson dh......4 2 2 0 0 1 .280
Bautista rf............3 2 2 4 1 0 .316
Encarnacion 1b....4 0 1 0 0 0 .304
Tulowitzki ss........4 0 1 0 0 0 .143
Carrera lf..............3 0 0 0 0 2 .143
a-Colabello ph-lf..1 0 0 0 0 0 .083
Goins 2b..............3 0 0 0 0 1 .211
b-Martin ph.........1 0 0 0 0 1 .059
Barney 3b............4 0 1 0 0 0 .375
Thole c.................3 0 0 0 0 2 .143
c-Smoak ph..........1 0 0 0 0 1 .200
Totals............... 35 4 7 4 1 10
Boston................ 003 131 000 8 11 1
Toronto.............. 202 000 000 4 7 1
a-lined out for Carrera in the 8th. b-struck
out for Goins in the 9th. c-struck out for
Thole in the 9th.
ESandoval (1), Dickey (1). LOBBoston
8, Toronto 5. 2BPedroia (2), Bogaerts (2),
T.Shaw (2), B.Holt (2), R.Castillo (1), Donaldson (1). 3BH.Ramirez (1). HRBautista
2 (2), off Porcello 2. RBIsPedroia 2 (2),
Bogaerts (1), T.Shaw (1), H.Ramirez 2 (4),
Swihart (1), Bautista 4 (4). SBBetts (1),
Barney (2). SFSwihart.
Runners left in scoring positionBoston
6 (H.Ramirez, Betts, R.Castillo, T.Shaw 3);
Toronto 2 (Pillar, Thole). RISPBoston 3 for
14; Toronto 2 for 4.
Runners moved upPedroia, Bogaerts,
Goins.
Boston
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Porcello W, 1-0...6 7 4 4 1 7 105 6.00
Uehara............. 1 0 0 0 0 1 14 0.00
Ross Jr.............. 2 0 0 0 0 2 24 0.00
Toronto
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Dickey L, 1-1.... 5 8 7 6 2 9 101 8.10
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Leon................. 2 2 1 1 1 2 38 7.71
Biagini.............. 1 1 0 0 1 1 16 0.00
Osuna.............. 1 0 0 0 0 1 10 0.00
WPDickey. PBThole 2.
T2:48. A47,138 (49,282).
White Sox 7, Indians 3
Cleveland
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
R.Davis cf.............4 0 0 0 0 2 .143
Kipnis 2b..............4 0 2 0 0 2 .286
Lindor ss..............3 1 1 0 1 0 .333
Napoli 1b.............4 1 1 2 0 1 .231
Santana dh...........4 0 0 0 0 2 .286
Gomes c...............4 1 1 1 0 1 .214
Uribe 3b...............3 0 0 0 1 0 .071
Ramirez lf.............4 0 2 0 0 0 .385
Cowgill rf.............3 0 0 0 0 1 .000
Totals............... 33 3 7 3 2 9
Chicago
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Jackson cf............5 1 1 0 0 0 .278
Rollins ss..............5 1 1 0 0 1 .143
Saladino ss...........0 0 0 0 0 0 .500
Abreu 1b..............2 1 2 1 2 0 .333
Frazier 3b.............4 1 0 1 0 0 .167
Cabrera lf.............4 1 2 1 0 0 .238
Lawrie 2b.............4 0 1 0 0 0 .182
Av.Garcia dh.........4 2 2 3 0 1 .190
Avila c..................4 0 1 0 0 2 .231
Shuck rf................3 0 0 0 1 0 .000
Totals............... 35 7 10 6 3 4
Cleveland........... 000 002 100 3 7 3
Chicago.............. 001 100 50x 7 10 1
EUribe (2), R.Davis (1), Co.Anderson
(1), Lawrie (1). LOBCleveland 5, Chicago 7. 2BRollins (1). HRNapoli (2),
off Sale; Gomes (1), off Sale; Abreu (2),
off Co.Anderson; Av.Garcia (1), off B.Shaw.
RBIsNapoli 2 (3), Gomes (4), Abreu (4),
Frazier (5), Me.Cabrera (2), Av.Garcia 3 (3).
Runners left in scoring positionCleveland 2 (C.Santana, Cowgill); Chicago 4
(A.Jackson 2, Rollins, Lawrie). RISPCleveland 0 for 3; Chicago 3 for 13.
Runners
moved
upA.Jackson,
Me.Cabrera.
DPChicago 1 (Abreu).
Cleveland
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Co.Anderson.... 6 6 2 2 2 2 92 3.00
ShawL,0-1BS,1-1...2-e 4 5 5 1 0 32 27.00
McAllister........1-e 0 0 0 0 1 5 0.00
Chamberlain.... 1 0 0 0 0 1 14 0.00
Chicago
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Sale W, 2-0....... 7 6 3 3 2 6 107 3.86
Duke................ 0 1 0 0 0 0 2 13.50
Albers.............. 2 0 0 0 0 3 21 0.00
Duke pitched to 1 batter in the 8th.
Inherited
runners-scoredAlbers
1-0. IBBoff B.Shaw (Abreu). WP
Co.Anderson 2.
T2:43. A20,192 (40,615).
Yankees 8, Tigers 4
New York
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Ellsbury cf............5 0 1 3 0 2 .217
Gardner lf............4 0 2 0 0 1 .286
Rodriguez dh.......4 1 1 1 1 2 .214
Teixeira 1b...........4 0 0 0 1 1 .278
McCann c.............4 3 2 0 1 1 .467
Beltran rf.............4 2 2 2 0 0 .294
Hicks rf.................1 0 0 0 0 0 .143
Castro 2b.............4 1 2 0 1 0 .450
Gregorius ss.........4 0 1 2 0 0 .333
Torreyes 3b..........4 1 3 0 0 0 .800
Totals............... 38 8 14 8 4 7
Detroit
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Kinsler 2b.............4 1 1 1 1 0 .421
Upton lf...............4 0 1 0 0 1 .211
Cabrera 1b...........3 1 0 0 1 0 .313
Martinez dh.........3 0 0 0 1 1 .222
Martinez rf...........4 0 1 0 0 1 .313
McCann c.............4 0 1 2 0 1 .154
Iglesias ss.............4 1 2 0 0 1 .438
Aviles 3b..............4 1 1 0 0 0 .250
Gose cf.................2 0 0 0 1 2 .214
a-Castellanos ph..1 0 0 0 0 1 .385
Totals............... 33 4 7 3 4 8
New York............ 110 420 000 8 14 1
Detroit............... 000 200 200 4 7 0
a-struck out for Gose in the 9th.
EGardner (1). LOBNew York 9, Detroit
6. 2BUpton (3). 3BEllsbury (1). HRA.
Rodriguez (1), off Pelfrey; Beltran (2), off
Farmer. RBIsEllsbury 3 (4), A.Rodriguez
(2), Beltran 2 (4), Gregorius 2 (3), Kinsler
(5), J.McCann 2 (2). SBGardner (1). CS
Gardner (1). SFGregorius.
Runners left in scoring positionNew
York 5 (A.Rodriguez, Ellsbury 2, B.McCann
2); Detroit 4 (Aviles 2, Mi.Cabrera 2). RISP
New York 5 for 13; Detroit 2 for 9.
Runners moved upTeixeira, Beltran,
Kinsler. GIDPB.McCann, Upton.
DPNew York 1 (Sabathia, S.Castro,
Teixeira); Detroit 1 (Mi.Cabrera, J.Iglesias,
Kensing).
New York
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Sabathia W, 1-0...6 4 3 3 4 3 90 4.50
Yates............... 2-e 2 1 1 0 1 20 5.40
Shreve..............1-e 0 0 0 0 0 6 0.00
Betances.......... 1 1 0 0 0 3 26 0.00
Miller............... 1 0 0 0 0 1 8 0.00
Detroit
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Pelfrey L, 0-1.. 32-e 8 6 6 1 3 74 14.73
Farmer...........21-e 4 2 2 1 4 50 7.71
Kensing............ 2 2 0 0 2 0 33 3.38
VerHagen......... 1 0 0 0 0 0 12 0.00
Sabathia pitched to 1 batter in the 7th.
Inherited runners-scoredYates 1-1,
Shreve 1-0, Farmer 1-0. HBPby Farmer
(Gardner). WPSabathia, Yates, Pelfrey,
Farmer.
T3:20. A32,419 (41,297).
Royals 7, Twins 0
Minnesota
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Dozier 2b.............3 0 1 0 1 1 .176
Santana cf............3 0 0 0 0 0 .167
Buxton cf.............1 0 0 0 0 1 .133
Mauer 1b.............4 0 1 0 0 2 .294
Plouffe 3b............4 0 1 0 0 1 .150
Arcia rf-lf..............3 0 0 0 1 1 .000
Park dh................4 0 1 0 0 2 .231
Escobar ss............3 0 2 0 0 0 .444
b-Nunez ph..........1 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Rosario lf..............2 0 1 0 0 0 .200
a-Sano ph-rf.........2 0 0 0 0 1 .133
Suzuki c................3 0 0 0 0 0 .154
Totals............... 33 0 7 0 2 9
Kansas City
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Escobar ss............5 0 1 1 0 0 .278
Moustakas 3b......5 1 2 2 0 1 .250
Cain cf..................3 1 1 1 2 0 .231
Hosmer 1b...........4 0 0 0 1 1 .214
Morales dh..........4 1 1 1 0 3 .143
Gordon lf.............3 0 0 0 1 2 .154
Perez c.................3 2 1 0 1 0 .308
Infante 2b............4 1 1 0 0 1 .308
INTERLEAGUE
Astros 6, Brewers 4
Houston
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Altuve 2b.............5 1 1 0 0 1 .190
Springer rf............3 2 1 0 1 2 .150
Correa ss..............3 0 0 0 1 1 .350
Rasmus lf.............3 2 2 4 0 0 .357
White 1b..............2 1 1 2 1 0 .667
Gomez cf.............4 0 1 0 0 1 .250
Valbuena 3b.........4 0 1 0 0 0 .263
Castro c................3 0 1 0 1 0 .071
Fister p.................1 0 0 0 0 0 .000
a-M.Duffy ph.......1 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Neshek p..............0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Harris p................0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Giles p..................0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
c-Gonzalez ph......1 0 1 0 0 0 .143
1-Marisnick pr.....0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Gregerson p.........0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Totals............... 30 6 9 6 4 5
Milwaukee
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Santana rf............4 0 0 1 1 0 .200
Gennett 2b..........4 1 2 1 0 0 .412
Braun lf................4 0 0 0 0 2 .263
Lucroy c...............3 0 1 0 1 0 .278
Carter 1b.............4 0 0 0 0 4 .235
Nieuwenhuis cf....4 1 1 1 0 2 .286
A.Hill 3b...............2 0 0 0 0 0 .125
Boyer p................0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
b-Flores ph..........1 0 0 0 0 1 .100
Cravy p.................0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Capuano p...........0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Blazek p...............0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
d-Walsh ph..........1 0 0 0 0 1 .000
Peralta p..............1 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Rivera 3b..............3 1 2 0 0 1 .667
Villar ss................3 1 2 0 1 0 .385
Totals............... 34 4 8 3 3 11
Houston............. 201 030 000 6 9 0
Milwaukee......... 001 021 000 4 8 2
a-grounded out for Fister in the 6th. bstruck out for Boyer in the 6th. c-singled for
Giles in the 9th. d-struck out for Blazek in
the 9th.
1-ran for M.Gonzalez in the 9th.
ELucroy (2), Rivera (1). LOBHouston
4, Milwaukee 6. 2BLucroy (1), Rivera
(1). HRCol.Rasmus 2 (2), off W.Peralta
2; White (3), off W.Peralta; Gennett (3), off
Fister; Nieuwenhuis (1), off Neshek. RBIs
Col.Rasmus 4 (4), White 2 (9), Do.Santana
(3), Gennett (3), Nieuwenhuis (1). SBAltuve (3), Springer (1). SFister. SFCol.
Rasmus, White.
Runners left in scoring positionHouston 2 (Altuve 2); Milwaukee 2 (A.Hill,
Do.Santana). RISPHouston 2 for 6; Milwaukee 1 for 7.
Runners moved upDo.Santana, Villar.
GIDPAltuve 2.
DPMilwaukee 2 (Gennett, Villar, Carter), (Villar, Carter).
Houston
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Fister W, 1-0..... 5 5 3 3 2 6 86 5.40
Neshek H, 1..... 1 1 1 1 0 2 18 4.50
Harris H, 1........ 1 1 0 0 0 1 15 3.86
Giles H, 2......... 1 0 0 0 0 1 14 10.13
Gregerson S, 2-2.1 1 0 0 1 1 21 0.00
Milwaukee IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Peralta L, 0-2..41-e 7 6 6 4 4 87 10.80
Boyer............ 12-e 0 0 0 0 0 20 0.00
Cravy............. 12-e 1 0 0 0 1 13 0.00
Capuano......... 2-e 1 0 0 0 0 16 4.50
Blazek............. 2-e 0 0 0 0 0 1 0.00
Inherited runners-scoredBlazek 1-0.
T3:10. A28,127 (41,900).
April 10
1913 President Wilson threw out the
first ball as the Senators edged the New
York Yankees 2-1 in Washingtons home
opener. Walter Johnson allowed an unearned run in the first inning, but did not
yield another run for 56 consecutive innings.
1959 Chicagos Nellie Fox, who went
5-for-7, hit a 14th-inning opening day home
run off Don Mossi to beat Detroit, 9-7. The
White Sox second baseman did not homer
in 623 at-bats the previous season.
1962 The Houston Colt .45s, in the first
major league game played in Texas, beat
the Chicago Cubs 11-2 before 25,000. Roman Mejias led Houstons offense with two
three-run homers.
1969 Tommy Agee of the New York
Mets hit a home run into the upper deck in
Shea Stadiums left field. It was the longest
home run to reach the seats in the history
of the stadium.
1982 Under icy conditions, the Cleveland Indians opened the season at Municipal Stadium with an 8-3 loss to the Texas
Rangers before 62,443 fans. Five hundred
tons of snow had to be removed from the
field; the game-time temperature was 38
degrees, with a wind chill of 17.
1990 Bostons Wade Boggs tied a major league record for a nine-inning game by
drawing three intentional walks.
2000 Cincinnatis Ken Griffey Jr. became the youngest player to hit 400 career
home runs when he connected in the Reds
7-5 loss to Colorado.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
The Rays and Orioles will attempt to complete the abbreviated 2-game series today, using their scheduled starters
DAVID GINSBURG
AP SPORTS WRITER
BALTIMORE A
miserable April night
at Camden Yards ended
with the seemingly inevitable postponement
of a game between the
Tampa Bay Rays and
Baltimore Orioles.
The Orioles were seeking to match the best
start in their history,
5-0 in 1970. They ended
up settling for being the
lone remaining unbeaten team in the majors.
A makeup date was
not immediately an-
weather.
Steve Pearce was slated to bat fifth and play
first base for Tampa
Bay in what was going
to be his first game at
Camden Yards since he
left the Orioles for the
Rays during the offseason.
Pearce came to Baltimore in 2012 and was a
key contributor to the
2013 AL East champions.
Always could count
on him, Showalter said.
Hes a big part of lot of
the improvements we
made.
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
C9
Outdoors
FISHING
Above, Colton Grove, 13, of Elizabethtown, poses with the golden rainbow trout he caught April
2 at Little Chiques Creek. Inset, Colton Grove, left, and his brother Abijah, 11, of Elizabethtown,
caught nice limits of trout opening day on Little Chiques Creek.
GOOSE HUNTING
PREILLY@LNPNEWS.COM
2015-16 season.
The agency maintains
about two dozen blinds
inside the controlled
area at Middle Creek.
They are located next
to ponds and in fields
where ducks and geese
gather.
Hunting from the
blinds is only allowed a
couple days a week during the open duck and
goose seasons.
Hunters can win the
Calendar
The Outdoors Calendar items below are
just a few of the activities this week from
throughout Lancaster County and beyond.
To read the full calendar online, go to
bit.ly/calendarA9. To submit calendar
items, email: preilly@lnpnews.com; call
575-3039; or send to Ad Crable, PO Box
1328; Lancaster, PA 17608-1328
TODAY
n Hike for the public: Led by Lancaster
MONDAY
THURSDAY
TUESDAY
n Trap shoot practice: Southern Lancaster
County Farmer-Sportsmens Association.
From 1-8:30 p.m.; $4.
WEDNESDAY
FRIDAY
SATURDAY
n Exelons Muddy Run Park Nature Camp
UPCOMING
n Conewago Rod and Gun Clubs National
Lancaster Scene
If your organization wishes to have an item in the
LANCASTER SCENE column of the LNP Sunday sports
print section, as well as its weekly online listings, send
a note to the LNP sports department, P.O. Box 1328,
Lancaster, PA 17608. Items can run for up to three
consecutive weeks and will not be repeated after that
period. The email address is sports@lnpnews.com. The
fax number is 481-7327. Items must be mailed, faxed or
emailed by Thursday to be included in the column.
BASKETBALL
Lancaster YMCA Outdoor
Basketball League, located
at Strasburg Jaycee Park,
will open competition
May 18. Games are played
weekly on Thursdays
from 6 to 10 p.m. A and B
divisions are offered for
balanced competition.
Season runs through Aug.
11 and is 10 games and
playoffs. The league fee is
$225 per team. To register,
contact Deric Hafer at
Dhafer@lancasterymca.org.
The L-S Lady Pioneers
Youth Basketball Camp for
Lampeter-Strasburg girls
entering grades 3-8 will
be held June 21-23 from
9 a.m. to noon. The camp
will be run by the L-S high
school coaching staff with
help from the 2015 L-S
high school players. There
will be daily skill stations,
competitions and games.
The deadline to register
is June 10. All campers
will receive a T-shirt.
Contact Coach Fink at
awf85@netzero.com for a
registration form.
The L-S Pioneers
Basketball Summer Camp
for boys will be held June
13-16 at the high school
competition gym. The
session for boys entering
grades 7-11 is 8 a.m. to
noon, and the session for
boys entering grades 3-6
is 1 to 5 p.m. All campers
receive a free camp T-shirt.
There will be team and
individual competitions,
daily prizes, instruction
by L-S coaching staff
and varsity players, daily
breakdown stations on
all individual skills, team
concepts and team play.
Registration deadline is
May 26. Contact Coach
Achille for a registration
form at john_achille@lspioneers.org.
Boys Basketball Camp
at Lancaster Mennonite
School will be held July
11-14 for grades 4-10. For
more information, visit
lancastermennonite.org or
contact Coach Groff at 5174498. There is an early bird
discount for applications
before May 31.
COACHING
OPENINGS
The Hempfield athletic
department has an
opening for a head varsity
field hockey coach.
Interested candidates
must apply online at
hempfieldsd.org. If you
have any questions, contact
the Hempfield Athletic
Office at hsdathletics@
hempfieldsd.org.
Lancaster Catholic has
openings for head girls
volleyball and field hockey
coaches for the fall of 2016.
Contact Rich Hinnenkamp
at rhinnenkamp@lchsyes.
org or 509-0316 Proper
clearances are required.
Lancaster Mennonite
School has openings for
the following coaching
positions: varsity field
hockey head coach, junior
high field hockey coach,
junior high girls soccer
coach and junior high
girls volleyball coach.
Interested and qualified
persons should send a
resume via email to Jared
Yoder, Athletic Director,
Lancaster Mennonite
School (yoderja@
lancastermennonite.org).
Lancaster Country Day
School has an opening for
a head girls varsity soccer
coach this fall. A successful
candidate will have prior
coaching experience.
Submit a resume, cover
letter and two references
to Austen C. Hannis,
CMAA, Lancaster Country
Day School, 725 Hamilton
Road, Lancaster PA 17603
or via email at hannisa@
lancastercountryday.org.
Deadline to apply is April 11.
The Lampeter-Strasburg
Athletic Department has
vacancies for a boys junior
varsity soccer coach and a
girls junior varsity soccer
coach. Qualified candidates
should have previous
playing and/or coaching
experience. Interested
candidates should submit
a letter of interest, resume,
clearances (PA criminal, PA
CYCLING
The Lancaster Sunrise
Rotary Club will have its
annual Ride For Literacy
on May 14. Riders may
choose between three
leisure routes 10, 21 or
43 miles or combine
rides to enjoy the longer
challenge of a metric
century. All rides begin
and end at Manheim
Township Community
Park, located about
one mile west of Route
501 on East Petersburg
Road, Lancaster. The
event will be held rain or
shine. To register, visit
lancastersunriserotaryofpa.
com or active.com/
lititz-pa/cycling/races/
ride-for-literacy-2016. The
registration fee is $30 and
includes a T-shirt if you
sign up before April 20.
Riders may also register
at the park the day of the
race for $35. All riders
should check in at Manheim
Township Community
Park between 7 and 9 a.m.
Helmets and closed-toe
shoes are required. All
riders must return to the
park no later than 2 p.m.
Lunch for riders will be
provided at the park.
FIELD HOCKEY
Sutters Brigade Field
Hockey Club is conducting
a tryout for U16 and U19
teams to compete in the
National Field Hockey
Festival in West Palm
Beach, Florida, from Nov.
24-26. The tryout will be
held from 11 a.m. to 1:30
p.m. April 17 at Lanco
Field House. Check-in
and registration will be
from 10:30 to 11 a.m. For
information, contact Bob
Derr at bderrhockey@
windstream.net.
FOOTBALL
Junior Tornado midget
football signup for children
ages 7- 14 will be held
from 6 to 7:30 p.m. April
22 at Lancaster Recreation
Center, 525 Fairview Ave.
Fee is $90. For more
information, contact Al
McCain at 690-6044 or
Elliott McNeil at 341-8123.
GOLF
The Lancaster County
Junior Golf Tour offers
a summer-long series
of competitive golf
tournaments for boys and
girls ages 9 through 18 and
still enrolled in school
high school graduates are
not eligible. Registration is
underway. Visit lcjgt.com
for more information or to
register.
Lancaster Family YMCA
Golf Tournament will
be held May 16 at Bent
Creek Country Club in
Lititz. Playing a shamble
format, a shotgun start will
take place at 12:30 p.m.
Fee is $175 per person or
$650 per foursome, and
includes greens fee, cart,
box lunch and reception.
This rain or shine event is
nonrefundable. Registration
SPORTS
deadline is May 6. The
funds raised support
the Ys commitment
to providing preschool
programming to children
in need in Lancaster city.
For more information,
visit lancasterymca.org/
programs/golf-tourn-2016.
The American Business
Club (AMBUCS), in
conjunction with the
Occupational Development
Center, will host its 10th
annual Charity Golf Outing
on May 16 at Four Seasons
Golf Course, 949 Church
St., Landisville. Registration
begins at 11:30 a.m., with
a shotgun start at 12:30
p.m. Dinner will follow at
4:30 p.m. The scramble
format tournament costs
$100 per person, and
includes a round of golf,
cart, dinner and prizes.
For more information
about sponsorships or
registration, contact Harry
Loshnowsky at 314-1147 or
Cheryl Swain at 397-4269,
ext. 16.
The 2016 LVC Football
Alumni & Friends Golf
Outing is set for May 13
at Fairview Golf Course in
Quentin. The tournament
will be a shotgun start
at 1 p.m. in a fourperson scramble format.
Registration and lunch will
be from 11:30 a.m. to 12:30
p.m. Cost is $90 per player,
or $360 per foursome,
which includes lunch,
greens fees and cart, and
dinner. Hole sponsorships
are available at $100, and
nongolfers may attend
lunch and dinner for $30.
Register or become a
sponsor by contacting
assistant coach Vince
Pantalone at pantalon@
lvc.edu or 867-6259, or
head coach Joe Buehler at
buehler@lvc.edu or 8676274.
The 2016 Lancaster County
Summer Tour Travel
League season is underway
at Four Seasons Golf Club.
The league plays different
courses in Lancaster
County each Monday
through Oct. 24. All tee
times begin at 8 a.m. For
more information or to sign
up, contact Craig Hall at
875-1915.
The 2016 Kiwanis Cup
Invitational Match Play
Championship will be
played June 11 at Royal
Manchester Golf Links.
The two-person team
charity event supports
the care and treatment
of the critically ill and
mentally and/or physicallychallenged children
through Camp Lady
Bug programs and the
Childrens Miracle Network
Childrens Hospital at
Hershey Medical Center.
Team registration and
sponsorship forms are
available by contacting Dr.
Dale Treese at 367-9144
or cdtreese@centurylink.
net. Only 64 team slots are
available, and the deadline
for registration is the
middle of May.
Crossgates Golf Clubs
Summer Junior Golf
Program will be held
every Tuesday from June
14 to Aug. 2. A one-hour
group clinic starts at 9:30
a.m. and is followed by
nine holes of golf. Cost is
$150 per player. Open to
boys and girls ages 10-17.
Visit crossgatesgolf.com/
junior-clinics/ for more
information or to print
a registration form. For
questions, call the pro shop
at 872-4500.
Crossgates Golf Club will
host a new 18-hole ladies
league on Wednesday
mornings with an 8:30
a.m. shotgun start. $30
per week includes $5 prize
money. The league will
start April 6. For more
information, call the pro
shop at 872-4500.
Crossgates Golf Club will
once again host a mens
18-hole senior league. It will
play on Thursday mornings
with an 8:30 a.m. shotgun
start, and is open to golfers
ages 55 and older. $30
per week includes $5 prize
money. League handicaps
will be established. Play
from the gold tee markers.
The league opens April 7.
For more information call
the pro shop at 872-4500.
The 23rd annual LANCO
Annie Baileys Two-Man
Scramble will be held April
30 at Crossgates Golf Club
in Millersville, with a 1 p.m.
shotgun start. This is a
gross stroke play event.
Flights will be based on
team handicap and all
handicaps will be verified
by LANCO prior to play. All
play will be from the blue
tees. The overall champion
can come from any flight.
LIFEGUARDING
The Lancaster County
Department of Parks &
Recreation is accepting
applications for various
lifeguarding positions for
the 2016 Summer Season.
For more information visit
lancastercountyparks.org
or web.co.lancaster.pa.us/
Jobs.aspx?CID=98.
Manheim Township
Recreation and Park
Planning Department is
offering American Red
Cross certification in
lifeguarding. Participants
must be 15 years of
age before class ends.
Course includes pretest
screening, pool skills,
CPR and first aid. The
course runs Tuesdays and
Thursdays from April 12
through May 5 from 6 to 9
p.m. For information and
registration procedures, call
290-7180 X 3100.
PICKLEBALL
Manheim Township Rec will
host the fifth annual Spring
Pickleball Tournament
at Overlook Activities
Center. Mens and womens
doubles will be April 30,
and mixed doubles on May
1. Age classifications are
25-44, 45-49 and 60+.
Tournament format will be
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
either double-elimination
or round-robin, based
on number of total team
registrations. $20 per/
team. Registration forms
available at the Manheim
Township Recreation
& Park Planning office,
Stauffer Mansion, 1241
Lititz Pike, Lancaster, or
by emailing hnorton@
manheimtownship.org.
Registration deadline is
April 25.
REC CENTERS
Hempfield Rec Center,
950 Church St., Landisville,
offers instructional,
group exercise and
sports programs for
all ages. Opportunities
include aquatics, fitness,
lifeguarding, personal
training, sport-specific
training, tennis, wellness
and special events. For
more information, visit
hempfieldrec.com or call
898-3102.
Lampeter-Strasburg
YMCA, 800 Village
Road, West Lampeter
Township, offers a variety
of leagues and programs.
Call 464-4000 or visit
lancasterymca.org.
Lancaster Rec offers
instructional, exercise and
recreational programs. Call
392-2115, ext. 147, or visit
lancasterrec.org.
Manheim Township
Recreation Department
offers a selection of sports
leagues and programs. Call
290-7180, ext. 3100, or visit
manheimtownship.org.
Masonic Life Center,
Elizabethtown, has fitness
programs, pool classes and
swim times. For details,
visit masonicvillagespa.
org (click on Elizabethtown
under Location).
Southern End Community
Association SECA in
Quarryville, offers a wide
variety of recreational,
exercise, sports programs
and leagues. Call 806-0123
or see secarec.org.
YMCA at New Holland,
123 N. Shirk Road, offers
personal fitness class and
programs, swim instruction,
league and a wide variety
of programs for youth,
adult and seniors. Visit
lancasterymca.org.
Town Square Health Club
in Manheim offers land and
water exercise activities.
Call Haley Brumbach at
664-6306.
RUNNING
The Lancaster Road
Runners Club invites
runners of all ages and
abilities to participate in
its spring fun runs, held
throughout the area every
Tuesday evening at 6:15
p.m. This week the club will
be at Ephrata High School.
For more information,
contact Ed at 875-0133.
Information about
Thursday evening and
Sunday morning trail runs
can also be found on the
club website, lrrclub.org.
The 12th annual New
Holland Farmers 5K will be
held at 8:30a.m. April 16.
Featuring chip timing, the
cost is $25 on event day.
Registration starts at 7 a.m.
Top 3 overall cash prize as
well as commemorative
age group awards. Also
featured is a free kids
half-mile race after the 5Ks
conclusion. The race is one
of three in the 2016 Trifecta
Race Series. Register for
all three (Farmers, Shoe
Fly, Ox Trot) for $50.
Trifecta registrations must
be received by April 16.
Overall Trifecta male/
female winner receives
$100. Visit GSrunning.
org for details. For more
information, contact Brent
at coachwatkins2003@
hotmail.com or 351-0403.
SHOOTING
Gentlemen MC Sportsmen
will have a block shoot on
from 1 to 5 p.m. April 16 at
the groups clubhouse, 937
Lancaster Pike, just south
of Buck Motorsports Park
on Route 272. 12 gauge
only, 32-inch max barrel
length (with choke). No
one under 12 years of age.
Any questions, call Mike at
344-7587.
The Milton Grove
Sportsmens Club will hold
a trap shoot from 12:30 to 3
p.m. April 10. Sporting clays
also available after 3 p.m.
Young shooters welcome,
shotguns available. $3 per
round, bring your own
shells. The club is located
east of Elizabethtown on
Milton Grove Road, north
of Elizabethtown Road. For
SOCCER
Penn Legacy Soccer Club
is expanding its coaching
staff. Interested coaches
should contact Director of
Coaching Seamus Donnelly
at seamus@pennlegacy.
org.
Penn Legacy Soccer Club
will hold open tryouts
for U9 through U19 boys
and girls travel teams.
Tryouts run the month
of April through early
May. To register or to get
additional information, visit
pennlegacy.org and click
on Travel/Premier. You
can also email us at travel@
pennlegacy.org.
SOFTBALL
GEARS is accepting teams
for its Womens Fastpitch
Softball League. League
play will start June 2 and
continue through the
middle of August with 6:30
and 8 p.m. game times
on Sundays, Tuesdays
and Thursdays at the
E-town Community Park
Softball Field, on Mount
Joy Street, Elizabethtown.
The league consists of a
12-game schedule with
playoffs. Registration
deadline is May 20.
Minimum 9/maximum
20 player roster. League
fee is $375 per team. For
additional information visit
GetintoGEARS.org or call
John Myers at 367-0355.
SWIMMING
Ephrata Rec Center is
running a six-week preteam clinic, Little Ripplers,
on Wednesdays beginning
April 13, from 4:15 to 5
p.m. Children must be
able to swim a half-length
of the pool unassisted.
Program is designed for
children ages 3-5 and will
work on learning the four
competitive strokes. For
more information or to
register contact Cindy Drob
at 738-1167 x-112 or cdrob@
ephratarec.com.
The Millersville University
Swimming program will
hold summer sessions for
its learn-to-swim clinic,
and registration is now
open. Six sessions will be
held during May and June.
Information and online
registration can be found
at millersvilleathletics.
com under Camps/
Swimming and at
marauderaquaticclub.org
under Lessons/Clinics.
For more information,
contact Kyle Almoney at
kalmoney@millersville.edu.
Marauder Aquatic
Club is holding a Jump
Start program to help
competitive swimmers
ages 5-18 get ready for
summer swimming. Various
levels are offered based
on ability. Must have prior
competitive swimming
experience. Black, Black
Elite and Gold levels begin
April 11, and Beginner/
Novice levels begin April
25. The program runs
until the end of May. Visit
marauderaquaticclub.org
for more info. Questions?
Contact Jillian Almoney
at marauderaquaticclub@
gmail.com.
The Conestoga Sharks
summer swim team has
opened registration for
the Summer 2016 season.
Those 18 and younger
who can complete at least
the length of the pool (25
meters) without stopping
are invited to join. Visit
conestogaswimteam.
org/ for more info and to
register. All registration
is done online, and a
discounted rate is available
if registering by May 1.
Questions can be directed
to Head Coach Jillian
Almoney at mrs.almoney@
gmail.com.
WRESTLING
The Rubicon Wrestling
Camp will be held at the
Solanco HS Wrestling
Complex from June 13-16,
from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. daily.
Tentative clinicians for
this years camp include
Dan Neff, Ronnie Perry,
Andrew Alton and Messiah
coach Bryan Brunk. Lunch
is provided, and the
cost is $125 per wrestler.
Eligibility is grades 5-12
unless special permission
is obtained. Maximum
number is 35 wrestlers. For
more information, contact
John Little at johnflittle@
comcast.net or john_little@
solanco.k12.pa.us, or visit
Solancowrestling.org.
SPORTS
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
BARRY DECKER
ROLL EM
ALLEY NOTES
392 (Pinbelles).
HIGH SCORES
CLEARVIEW LANES
DAN MASSEY
FANTASY SPORTS
tournaments.
Favorite bowling
center: Leisure Lanes.
Type of bowling ball:
Columbia disruption.
Persons who taught
LEISURE LANES
C11
proach.
Great teams have:
Members who want to
have fun, not just with
their own team, but with
the other bowlers in the
league.
Bowling has helped
him: Find patience when
things arent going well.
Interest in the sport
began: When he was
born.
Since my whole family has bowled for so long
its a Brooks tradition,
and it runs in my blood,
he said.
Secret to success:
Listening to what his
grandfather and father
tell him about fixing
what hes doing wrong,
and making spares
especially when hes not
bowling well.
Other bowlers would
describe him as: Competitive and easy going.
Long-term goal: Bowl
with his father as long as
he can.
He enjoys: Coaching a
travel baseball team for
13-year-olds.
This is my chance
to give back to another
sport that I had fun playing, he said.
C12
than I should.
But he weighed 415 pounds,
and he wasnt having much
fun.
He had a 61-inch waist. He
suffered from sleep apnea,
sciatica in his lower back and
leg, and enough joint paint
that he was gobbling six to 12
Advils a day.
I just thought this is how
its going to be, he said.
He tried all the diets, famous
and less so. Nothing worked.
Since the issue of an (apparently) undisciplined man in a
profession requiring worldclass discipline kept coming up, he twice underwent
psychological evaluations.
It was finally determined
that Limegrover was, in the
clinical sense, morbidly
obese. The standard diet-andexercise formula wouldnt be
enough.
He started, reluctantly, to
consider gastric bypass surgery, a procedure that divides
the stomach into two chambers, bypasses the duodenum
where most calories and
nutrients are absorbed and
in effect forces the body accept fewer calories.
Limegrover learned that
Charlie Weis had undergone
the surgery in 2002. Weis
rushed into the surgery, which
was done just three weeks
after winning a Super Bowl as
the New England Patriots offensive coordinator, went into
a coma and nearly died.
By 2012 the procedure had
been refined and could be
done laparoscopically.
If it involved cutting me
open from stem to stern, I
probably wouldnt have done
it, he said.
The preparation was rigorous, required Limegrover to
get down at 375 pounds at
most, and took months.
Limegrover made himself
exercise, and got down to 351.
He gave Kill, his boss, a PowerPoint presentation on the
procedure.
If you were going to play
Jeopardy, hes going to win,
Kill told the Minneapolis
Star-Tribune. He probably
could tell you more about that
Flyers
Continued from C1
Ward
Continued from C1
ceptions.
Wards community outreach
includes the Hines Ward
Helping Hands Foundation,
Pearl S. Buck International,
Hines Ward Helping Hands
Korea Foundation, The Caring Foundation, Cystic Fibrosis Foundation, Salvation
Army, Make a Wish Foundation, Childrens Hospital of
Pittsburgh and Take a Player
to School.
He is currently a studio analyst for NBCs Football Night
in America.
SPORTS
SOFTBALL
SCHOLASTIC
FRIDAYS LATE BOXES
SECTION ONE
McCaskey.............. 303 000 0 6 8 1
Cedar Crest............ 341 001 x 9 13 1
M. Vasquez and K. Lloyd; M. Gable and E.
Spang. SO-BB: Vasquez 2-4; Gable 9-0.
Warwick................ 003 010 0 4 4 0
Manheim Twp....... 000 000 0 0 3 5
A. Herr and J. High; R. Gearhart and B.
Rinier. WPA. Herr. LPR. Gearhart. SOBB: A. Herr 10-0; R. Gearhart 9-1.
JV Score: Warwick 14, MT 3
SECTION TWO
Solanco................. 320 001 0 6 13 4
Elizabethtown....... 200 300 2 7 12 3
K. Burger, H. Phillips (2) and B. Borcky; L.
Allison and N. Baker. WPL. Allison. LPH.
Phillips. SO-BB: , K. Burger 1-1, H. Phillips
4-4; L. Allison 4-0.
JV: Solanco 15, E-town 9
L-L LEAGUE
League
Overall
W L
W L
SECTION ONE
Hempfield.................... 3 0
3 1
Penn Manor................. 2 1
4 2
Cedar Crest.................. 2 1
3 1
Warwick....................... 1 2
2 4
Manheim Twp............. 1 2
3 4
McCaskey.................... 0 3
0 4
SECTION TWO
Garden Spot................ 3 0
5 1
Elizabethtown.............. 2 1
4 2
Solanco........................ 2 1
3 2
Ephrata........................ 1 2
2 4
Conestoga Valley......... 1 2
2 4
Lebanon....................... 0 3
0 5
SECTION THREE
Lampeter-Strasburg..... 3 0
7 0
Manheim Central......... 3 0
4 3
Donegal....................... 2 1
4 2
Northern Lebanon....... 1 2
2 4
Elco.............................. 0 3
1 3
Cocalico....................... 0 3
0 5
SECTION FOUR
Annville-Cleona........... 3 0
4 1
Pequea Valley.............. 2 0
4 1
Lancaster Catholic....... 2 1
2 3
Columbia..................... 0 2
0 4
Lebanon Catholic......... 0 1
0 3
Lanc. Mennonite......... 0 3
1 4
ROAD RACES
GARDEN SPOT VILLAGE
FULL MARATHON
Mens Overall
1st Bryan Morseman, 30, Bath, N.Y.,
2:39:39; 2nd Justin Shane, 34, New York,
N.Y., 2:55:53; 3rd David Petersheim, 21,
Christiana, Pa., 2:59:55.
Womens Overall
1st Jenny Bender, 23, Hatfield, Pa.,
3:18:27; 2nd Hannah Smith, 28, Philadelphia, Pa., 3:35:35; 3rd Sheena Wells, 32,
Bethlehem, Pa., 3:35:28.
Mens Grand Masters (50+)
1st Jeff Smucker, 50, Centre Hall, Pa.,
3:07:33; 2nd Mike Smith, 57, Lebanon,
Pa., 3:28:50; 3rd Keith Straw, 61, Malvern, Pa., 3:32:15.
Womens Grand Masters (50+)
1st Kelly Dworak, 53, Carlisle, Pa.,
3:41:13; 2nd Laurie Kimsal, 50, Mt. Kisco,
N.Y., 4:04:56; 3rd Cathy Hopkins, 55, St.
Catherines, Ontario, Canada, 4:42:41.
HALF MARATHON
Mens Overall
1st Eric Dyson, 26; Downingtown, Pa.,
1:17:07; 2nd Ben Zook, 33, Gordonville,
Pa., 1:21:13; 3rd Russell Burns, Morgantown, Pa., 1:21:23.
Womens Overall
1st Brooke Magni, 33, Lancaster, Pa.,
1:32:17; 2nd Julie Halteman, 23, Lancaster, Pa., 1:34:44; 3rd Cayla Schultz, 23,
Ephrata, Pa., 1:36:37.
Mens Grand Masters (50+)
1st Timothy Rehman, 53, York, Pa.,
1:30:12; 2nd Michael Gerhart, 50, East
Earl, Pa., 1:33:29; 3rd James Krupa, 50,
Pottstown, Pa., 1:33:43.
Womens Grand Masters (50+)
1st Kathy Pride, 55, Danville, Pa.,
1:53:59; 2nd Linda Pegg, 53, Danville, Pa;
1:54:32; 3rd Becky Michaelian, 53, Mechanicsburg, Pa, 1:55:49.
HORSE RACING
PENN NATIONAL RACING
The live racing program for Saturday evening was cancelled due to the recent snow
storm. Live racing is scheduled to resume
Wednesday evening, April 13, with post
time at 6:00 pm.
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
MLS
EASTERN CONFERENCE
W L T Pts GF GA
Montreal.................3 2 0 9 8 5
Philadelphia............3 2 0 9 7 5
Orlando City...........2 1 2 8 9 6
New England..........1 1 4 7 6 8
D.C. United.............1 2 3 6 7 9
New York City FC.....1 1 2 5 7 7
Toronto FC..............1 2 2 5 5 5
Chicago...................1 1 2 5 5 5
New York................1 4 0 3 4 11
Columbus...............0 3 2 2 3 7
WESTERN CONFERENCE
W L T Pts GF GA
Sporting K.C............4 1 0 12 7 3
FC Dallas.................3 1 1 10 8 6
Real Salt Lake..........2 0 2 8 8 6
Los Angeles.............2 1 1 7 7 3
Colorado.................2 1 1 7 3 2
San Jose..................2 1 1 7 5 5
Vancouver...............2 3 1 7 6 10
Houston..................1 2 1 4 11 8
Portland..................1 2 1 4 6 9
Seattle....................1 3 0 3 3 5
NOTE: Three points for victory, one point
for tie.
Fridays Game
Philadelphia 2...................... Orlando City 1
Saturdays Games
Montreal 2............................... Columbus 0
New England 1........................ Toronto FC 1
D.C. United 4.......................... Vancouver 0
Sporting Kansas City 2.............. New York 0
San Jose at FC Dallas............................... (n)
Colorado at Real Salt Lake...................... (n)
Sundays Games
Seattle at Houston............................ 4 p.m.
Chicago at New York City FC............. 7 p.m.
Portland at Los Angeles............... 9:30 p.m.
Wednesday, April 13
Colorado at Sporting Kansas City. 8:30 p.m.
FC Dallas at Portland................. 10:30 p.m.
New York at San Jose................. 10:30 p.m.
Friday, April 15
Los Angeles at Houston.................... 7 p.m.
Saturday, April 16
Toronto FC at D.C. United................. 5 p.m.
Montreal at Chicago......................... 5 p.m.
New York City FC at Columbus.... 7:30 p.m.
New York at Colorado....................... 9 p.m.
Philadelphia at Seattle.................... 10 p.m.
Vancouver at Real Salt Lake............ 10 p.m.
San Jose at Portland.................. 10:30 p.m.
United 4, Whitecaps 0
Vancouver................................ 0 0 0
D.C. United............................... 1 3 4
First half1, D.C. United, Espindola 2,
39th minute.
Second half2, D.C. United, Espindola 3,
54th. 3, D.C. United, Saborio 1 (Acosta), 88th.
4, D.C. United, Saborio 2 (Acosta), 90th+.
GoaliesVancouver, David Ousted; D.C.
United, Travis Worra.
Yellow CardsFroese, Vancouver, 65th;
Franklin, D.C. United, 70th.
RefereeJorge Gonzalez. Assistant RefereesJeff Muschik. Jose da Silva. 4th OfficialGeoff Gamble. A14,088 (45,596).
Lineups
VancouverDavid Ousted, Tim Parker,
Kendall Waston, Jordan Harvey, Andrew Jacobson, Russell Teibert (Kianz Froese, 61st),
Marco Bustos (Kekuta Manneh, 46th), Fraser Aird, Cristian Techera, Blas Perez (Erik
Hurtado, 67th), Masato Kudo.
D.C. UnitedTravis Worra, Steve Birnbaum, Bobby Boswell, Taylor Kemp, Sean
Franklin, Lamar Neagle, Nick DeLeon, Marcelo Sarvas, Chris Rolfe (Luciano Acosta,
77th), Fabian Espindola (Alvaro Saborio,
79th), Patrick Nyarko (Rob Vincent, 86th).
GOLF
TRANSACTIONS
BASEBALL
American League
LOS ANGELES ANGELS Selected the
contract of RHP A.J. Achter from Salt Lake
(PCL). Optioned RHP Cam Bedrosian to Salt
Lake (PCL).
OAKLAND ATHLETICS Selected the
contract of LHP Eric Surkamp from Nashville (IL). Optioned OF Andrew Lambo to
Nashville. Transferred RHP R.J. Alvarez to
the 60-day DL. Extended their player development contract with the Stockton (Cal)
through the 2020 season.
National League
LOS ANGELES DODGERS Placed OF Carl
Crawford on the 15-day DL. Recalled INF
Micah Johnson from Oklahoma City (PCL).
SAN DIEGO PADRES Activated LHP
Brad Hand. Placed RHP Tyson Ross on the
15-day DL, retroactive to April 5.
SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS Agreed to
terms with 1B Brandon Belt on a five-year
contract from 2017-21.
HOCKEY
National Hockey League
CAROLINA HURRICANES Signed C Nicolas Roy to a three year, entry-level contract.
DALLAS STARS Reassigned LW Curtis
McKenzie to Texas (AHL).
NASHVILLE PREDATORS Recalled D
AHL
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
W L OL SL Pct Pts GF GA
x-Hershey..... 40 20 5 7 .639 92 246 210
x-W-B/Scran..... 42 25 4 1 .618 89 223 192
Providence.... 37 22 9 4 .604 87 223 193
Bridgeport.... 39 26 4 3 .590 85 204 205
Portland........ 39 26 5 2 .590 85 205 198
Hartford........ 39 30 3 0 .563 81 192 191
Lehigh Val..... 32 33 4 3 .493 71 203 213
Springfield.... 25 39 3 5 .403 58 187 254
North Division
W L OL SL Pct Pts GF GA
Toronto......... 51 15 5 1 .750 108 282 185
x-Albany........ 43 19 8 2 .667 96 202 163
x-Utica.......... 36 24 8 4 .583 84 214 202
Syracuse....... 32 27 10 4 .534 78 207 228
St. Johns....... 30 32 8 3 .486 71 198 233
Rochester..... 33 35 2 1 .486 69 191 233
Binghamton.... 29 37 6 1 .445 65 195 235
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Central Division
W L OL SL Pct Pts GF GA
x-Milwaukee.... 46 21 3 2 .674 97 214 178
x-Gr. Rapids.... 44 25 1 1 .634 90 230 176
x-Lake Erie.... 39 21 6 5 .627 89 194 177
x-Rockford.... 37 21 9 5 .611 88 197 198
Charlotte....... 36 29 3 5 .548 80 209 217
Chicago......... 30 34 5 3 .472 68 182 218
Manitoba...... 24 40 4 5 .390 57 169 240
Iowa.............. 23 39 4 5 .387 55 158 212
Pacific Division
W L OL SL Pct Pts GF GA
y-Ontario...... 42 18 4 1 .685 89 182 131
x-San Diego.... 37 22 3 2 .617 79 193 187
Texas............. 38 25 7 3 .589 86 260 234
San Jose........ 30 24 8 3 .546 71 183 180
Stockton....... 30 29 2 2 .508 64 179 198
Bakersfield.... 28 27 7 2 .508 65 196 211
San Antonio.... 31 34 8 0 .479 70 201 227
x-Clinched Playoff Berth
y-Clinched Divisional Title
NOTE: Two points are awarded for a
win., one point for an overtime or shootout
loss.
Saturdays Games
Manitoba 5................................ Rockford 1
St. Johns 3............................... Utica 2 (OT)
Syracuse 3............................ Toronto 2 (SO)
W-B/Scranton 4.......................... Hershey 3
Hartford 6............................... Springfield 2
Milwaukee 6.............................. Charlotte 3
Providence 6............................... Portland 1
Bridgeport 6....................... Lehigh Valley 4
Binghamton 2............................... Albany 1
Lake Erie at Rochester.............................(n)
Iowa at San Antonio................................(n)
San Jose at Texas.....................................(n)
Grand Rapids at Chicago..........................(n)
Ontario at Bakersfield..............................(n)
San Diego at Stockton.............................(n)
Sundays Games
Milwaukee at Charlotte.................. 12 p.m.
Utica at St. Johns........................ 2:30 p.m.
Hartford at Portland......................... 3 p.m.
Rockford at Manitoba....................... 3 p.m.
Toronto at Albany............................. 3 p.m.
Hershey at W-B/Scranton............ 4:05 p.m.
Lehigh Valley at Bridgeport.............. 5 p.m.
Rochester at Lake Erie...................... 5 p.m.
Providence at Springfield................. 5 p.m.
San Diego at Stockton...................... 7 p.m.
Penguins 4, Bears 3
OFF-TRACK WAGERING
MASTERS
Saturday
At Augusta National Golf Club
Augusta, Ga.
Purse: TBA (Last year: $10 million)
Yardage: 7,435; Par: 72
Third Round
a-amateur
Jordan Spieth....................... 66-74-73213
Smylie Kaufman................... 73-72-69214
Bernhard Langer.................. 72-73-70215
Hideki Matsuyama............... 71-72-72215
Jason Day............................. 72-73-71216
Dustin Johnson.................... 73-71-72216
Danny Willett....................... 70-74-72216
Lee Westwood..................... 71-75-71217
Soren Kjeldsen..................... 69-74-74217
Brandt Snedeker.................. 71-72-74217
Daniel Berger....................... 73-71-74218
Rory McIlroy........................ 70-71-77218
Justin Rose........................... 69-77-73219
Angel Cabrera...................... 73-73-73219
J.B. Holmes.......................... 72-73-74219
Louis Oosthuizen................. 72-77-71220
Matt Kuchar......................... 75-73-72220
Billy Horschel....................... 70-77-73220
Emiliano Grillo..................... 71-75-74220
Paul Casey........................... 69-77-74220
Jimmy Walker...................... 71-75-74220
Chris Wood.......................... 72-73-75220
Bill Haas............................... 75-74-72221
Charley Hoffman................. 71-77-73221
Matthew Fitzpatrick............ 71-76-74221
Jamie Donaldson................. 74-72-75221
Brooks Koepka..................... 73-72-76221
a-Bryson DeChambeau........ 72-72-77221
Kiradech Aphibarnrat.......... 72-72-77221
Danny Lee............................ 68-74-79221
Scott Piercy.......................... 70-72-79221
Rafa Cabrera-Bello............... 74-73-75222
Davis Love III........................ 73-73-76222
Webb Simpson.................... 77-72-74223
Adam Scott.......................... 76-72-75223
Harris English....................... 74-73-76223
Shane Lowry........................ 68-76-79223
Patrick Reed......................... 76-73-75224
Anirban Lahiri...................... 76-73-75224
Keegan Bradley.................... 74-73-77224
Bernd Wiesberger............... 73-72-79224
Troy Merritt......................... 74-71-79224
Kevin Kisner......................... 77-72-76225
Victor Dubuisson................. 73-76-76225
Henrik Stenson.................... 72-75-78225
Kevin Streelman.................. 71-75-79225
Sergio Garcia....................... 69-75-81225
Bubba Watson..................... 75-75-76226
Hunter Mahan..................... 73-75-78226
Justin Thomas...................... 76-73-78227
Larry Mize............................ 76-73-78227
Martin Kaymer..................... 74-75-79228
Thongchai Jaidee................. 72-76-81229
Ian Poulter........................... 69-78-82229
Cameron Smith.................... 74-73-82229
a-Romain Langasque........... 74-73-83230
Kevin Na.............................. 72-74-85231
W-B/Scranton........................ 3 1 0 4
Hershey................................. 1 1 1 3
1st Period1, W-B/Scranton, Simon 23
(Kostopoulos, Guentzel), 9:01. 2, W-B/
Scranton, Rowney 22 (Kostopoulos, Guentzel), 11:40. 3, Hershey, OBrien 7 (Sill, Lewington), 12:08. 4, W-B/Scranton, Simon 24
(Archibald, Jeffrey), 17:39. Penalties-Parent
Wbs (tripping), 6:20; Sill Her (hooking),
14:03.
2nd Period5, W-B/Scranton, Burton
2 (McNeill, Andersen), 3:23. 6, Hershey,
Camper 9 (Stanton, Barber), 7:15. Penalties-Erixon Wbs (hooking), 8:20; Ness
Her (cross-checking), 11:22; McNeill Wbs
(cross-checking), 13:50; Prow Wbs (highsticking), 16:07; Andersen Wbs (roughing),
20:00; Mitchell Her (goaltender interference, roughing), 20:00.
3rd Period7, Hershey, C. Bourque 29
(Djoos, Stephenson), 6:04 (PP). PenaltiesErixon Wbs (delay of game), 4:14; Simon
Wbs (double minor - high-sticking), 8:31.
Shots on GoalW-B/Scranton 7-6-5-18.
Hershey 6-10-8-24.
Power Play OpportunitiesW-B/Scranton 0 of 3; Hershey 1 of 7.
GoaliesW-B/Scranton, Foster 3-3-1 (24
shots-21 saves). Hershey, Ellis 25-11-2 (12
shots-8 saves); Peters 15-8-5 (6 shots-6
saves). A-10,612.
BOWLING
DUTCH
BUMPERS
Jeffrey Moore......................... 83-110193
Mason Muckle.......................... 73-93166
Miles Sweigert.......................... 82-77159
Bailey Sweigert......................... 59-78137
ZOO
Nick Sweigart................. 170-144-146460
Kaleb Sweigart................. 99-136-134369
Jocelyn Sweigart............ 104-108-127339
COED
Cody Sciscione............... 200-154-215569
Drew Wolf..................... 166-138-187491
Brady Wiggins................ 158-187-132477
Tessa Pasker..................... 147-122-98367
Haley Jack........................ 146-89-120355
Victoria Thompson........ 100-129-123352
SATURDAY SENIORS
Cole Snavely.................. 222-267-184673
Tyrus Current................. 226-233-211670
Jared Bigley................... 209-202-226637
Tony Lutz....................... 212-225-197634
Andie Gribble................ 206-212-212630
Lee Enck......................... 192-193-234619
Ben White...................... 258-176-185619
Allison Hresko................ 183-206-226615
Paige Boyd..................... 202-182-223607
LEISURE
FUNTIME MIXED
Ron Smith...................... 232-226-257715
SCOREBOARD
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
SPORTS SLATE
BASEBALL
COLLEGIATE
Franklin & Marshall at Johns Hopkins (2),
12:30 p.m.
Lock Haven at Millersville (2), 1 p.m.
Elizabethtown at Juniata (2), 1 p.m.
Lancaster Bible at Gallaudet (2), 1 p.m.
GOLF
COLLEGIATE MEN
Millersville at Edwin B. Cottrell Invitational, Exton, Pa., All day.
COLLEGIATE WOMEN
Millersville at Edwin B. Cottrell Invitational, Exton, Pa., All day.
Franklin & Marshall at Lady Dutchmen Invitational, Lebanon Country Club, 10:30 a.m.
LACROSSE
COLLEGIATE WOMEN
Millersville at Edinboro, 1 p.m.
ROWING
COLLEGIATE MEN AND WOMEN
Franklin & Marshall at Knecht Cup, West
Windsor, N.J., All day.
RUGBY
BOYS U19
Club D2 White
Hempfield at Dauphin, TBD
Warwick at Narberth, TBD
Chambersburg at Elizabethtown, TBD
Coventry at Carlisle, TBD
SOFTBALL
COLLEGIATE
East Stroudsburg at Millersville (2), 1 p.m.
Elizabethtown at Juniata (2), 1 p.m.
McDaniel at Franklin & Marshall (2), 2 p.m.
TENNIS
COLLEGIATE MEN AND WOMEN
Susquehanna at Elizabethtown, 1 p.m.
TRACK AND FIELD
COLLEGIATE WOMEN
Millersville at Bill Butler Invitational,
West Chester, Pa., 3 p.m.
NBA
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
W
L Pct GB
y-Toronto....................53 26 .671
x-Boston.....................47 33 .588 61-w
New York....................32 48 .400 211-w
Brooklyn.....................21 58 .266 32
Philadelphia................10 69 .127 43
Southeast Division
W
L Pct GB
x-Atlanta.....................48 32 .600
x-Miami......................46 33 .582 11-w
x-Charlotte..................46 33 .582 11-w
Washington................38 41 .481 91-w
Orlando......................34 45 .430 131-w
Central Division
W
L Pct GB
y-Cleveland.................56 23 .709
x-Detroit.....................43 37 .538 131-w
Indiana........................42 37 .532 14
Chicago.......................39 40 .494 17
Milwaukee..................32 47 .405 24
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Southwest Division
W
L Pct GB
y-San Antonio.............65 14 .823
x-Memphis..................42 38 .525 231-w
Dallas..........................41 38 .519 24
Houston......................38 41 .481 27
New Orleans...............30 50 .375 351-w
Northwest Division
W
L Pct GB
y-Oklahoma City.........54 25 .684
x-Portland...................43 37 .538 111-w
Utah............................39 40 .494 15
Denver........................33 47 .413 211-w
Minnesota..................27 52 .342 27
Pacific Division
W
L Pct GB
z-Golden State............71
9 .888
x-L.A. Clippers.............51 28 .646 191-w
Sacramento................31 48 .392 391-w
Phoenix.......................22 58 .275 49
L.A. Lakers...................16 63 .203 541-w
x-clinched playoff spot
y-clinched division
z-clinched conference
Fridays Games
New York 109................... Philadelphia 102
Orlando 112............................... Miami 109
Charlotte 113........................... Brooklyn 99
Toronto 111............................... Indiana 98
Boston 124......................... Milwaukee 109
Detroit 112......................... Washington 99
New Orleans 110................ L.A. Lakers 102
Dallas 103............................... Memphis 93
Denver 102......................... San Antonio 98
L.A. Clippers 102..................... Utah 99 (OT)
Saturdays Games
Phoenix 121..................... New Orleans 100
Atlanta 118............................... Boston 107
Golden State 100.................... Memphis 99
Cleveland at Chicago...............................(n)
Oklahoma City at Sacramento.................(n)
Minnesota at Portland.............................(n)
Sundays Games
Charlotte at Washington................ 12 p.m.
Dallas at L.A. Clippers.................. 3:30 p.m.
L.A. Lakers at Houston................. 3:30 p.m.
Utah at Denver................................. 5 p.m.
Milwaukee at Philadelphia............... 5 p.m.
Orlando at Miami............................. 6 p.m.
Brooklyn at Indiana.......................... 6 p.m.
Golden State at San Antonio............ 7 p.m.
Toronto at New York.................... 7:30 p.m.
Mondays Games
Atlanta at Cleveland......................... 7 p.m.
Milwaukee at Orlando...................... 7 p.m.
Washington at Brooklyn.............. 7:30 p.m.
Charlotte at Boston..................... 7:30 p.m.
Houston at Minnesota...................... 8 p.m.
Chicago at New Orleans................... 8 p.m.
L.A. Lakers at Oklahoma City............ 8 p.m.
Dallas at Utah................................... 9 p.m.
Sacramento at Phoenix.................. 10 p.m.
Hamilton 4-12 4-4 13, Frazier 5-14 0-2 11. Totals 39-95 15-20 100.
Phoenix................... 32 23 30 36 121
New Orleans............ 22 25 20 33 100
3-Point GoalsPhoenix 10-25 (Teletovic
4-8, Goodwin 3-5, Price 1-2, Tucker 1-3,
Booker 1-3, Budinger 0-1, Jenkins 0-3), New
Orleans 7-21 (Douglas 3-6, Ennis 2-6, Frazier
1-3, Hamilton 1-4, Cunningham 0-1, Babbitt
0-1). Fouled OutNone. ReboundsPhoenix
57 (Len 11), New Orleans 50 (Babbitt 9). AssistsPhoenix 27 (Booker 5), New Orleans
19 (Frazier 7). Total FoulsPhoenix 25, New
Orleans 26. TechnicalsPerkins. A16,932
(16,867).
AVG
29.9
28.7
28.1
27.1
25.0
25.0
24.3
23.6
23.6
23.3
22.4
22.4
21.9
21.4
21.2
21.1
21.0
20.9
20.8
20.6
PCT
.701
.616
.607
.580
.560
.559
.542
.540
.529
.522
AVG
14.8
13.8
11.9
11.8
11.6
11.0
11.0
10.5
10.3
10.3
AVG
11.7
10.4
10.2
9.9
8.7
7.5
7.5
6.8
6.8
6.7
EASTERN
LEAGUE
Eastern Division
W L Pct. GB
Binghamton (Mets)..........1 0 1.000
Hartford (Rockies).............3 1 .750 -1-w
Portland (Red Sox)............2 1 .667
Trenton (Yankees).............1 1 .500 1-w
Reading (Phillies)..............1 2 .333 1
New Hampshire (Jays)......0 1 .000 1
Western Division
W L Pct. GB
Akron (Indians).................2 0 1.000
Harrisburg (Nationals)......2 0 1.000
Erie (Tigers).......................1 1 .500 1
Richmond (Giants)............1 3 .250 2
Altoona (Pirates)...............0 2 .000 2
Bowie (Orioles).................0 2 .000 2
Saturdays Games
Hartford 5........................ Richmond 1 (G1)
Richmond 4........................ Hartford 0 (G2)
Portland 6.................................... Reading 2
Erie at Trenton............................ ppd.(rain)
Akron at Bowie........................... ppd.(rain)
New Hampshire at Binghamton..... ppd.(rain)
Harrisburg at Altoona................. ppd.(rain)
Sundays Games
Harrisburg at Altoona....................... 1 p.m.
Erie at Trenton.................................. 1 p.m.
New Hampshire at Binghamton.. 1:05 p.m.
Portland at Reading..................... 1:35 p.m.
Akron at Bowie............................ 2:05 p.m.
INTERNATIONAL
LEAGUE
North Division
W L Pct. GB
Syracuse (Nationals).........2 0 1.000
Pawtucket (Red Sox).........2 1 .667 1-w
Rochester (Twins).............1 1 .500 1
Scran./W-B (Yankees).......1 1 .500 1
Buffalo (Blue Jays)............1 2 .333 11-w
Lehigh Valley (Phillies)......0 2 .000 2
South Division
W L Pct. GB
Gwinnett (Braves).............3 0 1.000
Durham (Rays)..................2 1 .667 1
Charlotte (White Sox).......1 2 .333 2
Norfolk (Orioles)...............0 3 .000 3
West Division
W L Pct. GB
Toledo (Tigers)..................1 0 1.000
Columbus (Indians)...........0 0 .000 1-w
Indianapolis (Pirates)........0 0 .000 1-w
Louisville (Reds)................0 1 .000 1
Saturdays Games
Buffalo 3................ Pawtucket 1 (1st game)
Pawtucket 4............... Buffalo 3 (2nd game)
Durham 3................................... Charlotte 2
Gwinnett 11................................. Norfolk 5
Louisville at Toledo..................... ppd.(rain)
Indianapolis at Columbus........... ppd.(rain)
Lehigh Valley at Syracuse............ ppd.(rain)
Scranton/W-B at Rochester........ ppd.(rain)
Sundays Games
Indianapolis at Columbus.... 1:05 p.m. (G1)
Buffalo at Pawtucket................... 1:05 p.m.
Gwinnett at Norfolk..................... 1:05 p.m.
Louisville at Toledo.............. 1:35 p.m. (G1)
Scranton/W-B at Rochester......... 1:35 p.m.
Indianapolis at Columbus.... 3:35 p.m. (G2)
Louisville at Toledo.............. 4:05 p.m. (G2)
Charlotte at Durham......... 5:05 p.m. Lehigh
Valley at Syracuse....................... ppd.(rain)
TENNIS
ATP WORLD TOUR
F&M 9, McDaniel 0
F&M 9, Haverford 0
LCDS 6, Lampeter-Strasburg 1
NHL
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
y-Florida........ 82 47 26 9 103 239 203
x-Tampa Bay....82 46 31 5 97 227 201
x-Detroit........ 82 41 30 11 93 211 224
Boston........... 82 42 31 9 93 240 230
Ottawa........... 82 38 35 9 85 236 247
Montreal........ 82 38 38 6 82 221 236
Buffalo........... 82 35 36 11 81 201 222
Toronto.......... 82 29 42 11 69 198 246
Metropolitan Division
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
z-Washington...80 55 17 8 118 247 190
x-Pittsburgh...82 48 26 8 104 245 203
x-N.Y. Rangers...82 46 27 9 101 236 217
x-N.Y. Islanders...81 45 26 10 100 230 211
x-Philadelphia....81 40 27 14 94 209 216
Carolina......... 82 35 31 16 86 198 226
New Jersey.... 82 38 36 8 84 184 208
Columbus...... 82 34 40 8 76 219 252
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Central Division
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
x-Dallas.......... 81 49 23 9 107 264 228
x-St. Louis...... 81 49 23 9 107 223 196
x-Chicago....... 82 47 26 9 103 235 209
x-Nashville..... 81 41 26 14 96 226 212
x-Minnesota..82 38 33 11 87 216 206
Colorado........ 82 39 39 4 82 216 240
Winnipeg....... 81 34 39 8 76 211 236
Pacific Division
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
x-Los Angeles...81 48 28 5 101 222 191
x-Anaheim..... 81 45 25 11 101 216 192
x-San Jose...... 81 45 30 6 96 240 210
Arizona.......... 81 35 38 8 78 209 244
Calgary........... 82 35 40 7 77 231 260
Vancouver...... 81 30 38 13 73 187 240
Edmonton...... 81 31 43 7 69 200 241
x-clinched playoff spot
y-clinched division
z-clinched conference
NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for
overtime loss.
Fridays Games
Columbus 4................................... Buffalo 1
Saturdays Games
Ottawa 6....................................... Boston 1
N.Y. Rangers 3............................... Detroit 2
Philadelphia 3.......................... Pittsburgh 1
Anaheim 5................................. Colorado 3
Montreal 5.............................. Tampa Bay 2
Florida 5...................................... Carolina 2
New Jersey 5................................ Toronto 1
Columbus 5.......................... Chicago 4 (OT)
Calgary 2................................. Minnesota 1
Buffalo 4...................... N.Y. Islanders 3 (OT)
Washington at St. Louis.......................... (n)
Nashville at Dallas.................................. (n)
Edmonton at Vancouver......................... (n)
Winnipeg at Los Angeles........................ (n)
Flyers 3, Penguins 1
Pittsburgh.............................. 1 0 0 1
Philadelphia.......................... 1 1 1 3
First Period1, Pittsburgh, Bonino 9
(Hagelin, Kessel), 11:57. 2, Philadelphia,
Simmonds 31 (Voracek, Giroux), 18:57.
PenaltiesLovejoy, Pit (holding stick), 4:42.
Second Period3, Philadelphia, Simmonds 32 (Gostisbehere, Streit), 16:58.
PenaltiesSheary, Pit (embellishment),
13:25; N.Schultz, Phi (slashing), 13:25; Voracek, Phi (holding stick), 13:43.
Third Period4, Philadelphia, Bellemare
7, 19:02 (en). PenaltiesSestito, Pit, minor-major-game misconduct (interference,
fighting), 2:28; VandeVelde, Phi (roughing),
2:28; Mouillierat, Pit (hooking), 14:08.
Shots on GoalPittsburgh 10-4-519.
Philadelphia 14-13-936.
Power-play opportunitiesPittsburgh 0
of 1; Philadelphia 0 of 3.
GoaliesPittsburgh, Murray (11 shots-11
saves), Zatkoff 4-7-1 (17:25 first, 24-22).
Philadelphia, Mason 23-19-10 (19-18).
RefereesEric Furlatt, Graham Skilliter.
LinesmenDerek Amell, Steve Miller.
Senators 6, Bruins 1
Ottawa.................................. 0 4 2 6
Boston................................... 1 0 0 1
First Period1, Boston, Pastrnak 15
(Marchand, Talbot), 5:04.
Second Period2, Ottawa, Neil 5 (Paul,
Dzingel), 1:42. 3, Ottawa, Z.Smith 24 (Karlsson, Claesson), 5:54. 4, Ottawa, Puempel
2 (Varone, Robinson), 8:39. 5, Ottawa,
Zibanejad 21 (Hoffman), 10:00.
Third Period6, Ottawa, Pageau 19,
11:33 (en-sh). 7, Ottawa, Z.Smith 25
(Pageau), 14:29 (en-sh).
Shots on GoalOttawa 17-12-736.
Boston 10-12-1840.
GoaliesOttawa, Hammond. Boston,
Gustavsson. A17,565 (17,565). T2:37.
Detroit.................................. 0 1 1 2
N.Y. Rangers........................... 1 0 2 3
First Period1, N.Y. Rangers, Boyle 10
(Kreider), 16:24.
Second Period2, Detroit, Sheahan 14
(Datsyuk, Green), 6:42 (pp).
Third Period3, N.Y. Rangers, Hayes 14
(McIlrath, Lindberg), 14:22. 4, N.Y. Rangers,
Lindberg 13 (Fast, Klein), 17:24 (en). 5, Detroit, Abdelkader 19 (Richards, Zetterberg),
18:26.
Shots on GoalDetroit 8-16-933. N.Y.
Rangers 7-7-620.
GoaliesDetroit, Howard. N.Y. Rangers,
Raanta. A18,006 (18,006). T2:31.
Sabres 4, Islanders 3
Buffalo.................................. 0 2 1 1 4
N.Y. Islanders......................... 0 1 2 0 3
First PeriodNone.
Second Period1, N.Y. Islanders, Mayfield 1 (Cizikas, Bernier), 2:03. 2, Buffalo,
Moulson 8 (Eichel, Reinhart), 5:10. 3, Buffalo, Rodrigues 1 (R.OReilly, Deslauriers),
17:57.
Third Period4, N.Y. Islanders, Quine 1
(Kearns), 2:07 (sh). 5, Buffalo, Gionta 11
(Fasching, Gorges), 5:57. 6, N.Y. Islanders,
Tavares 33 (de Haan), 13:34.
Overtime7, Buffalo, Gionta 12 (Pysyk,
Rodrigues), 2:45.
Shots on GoalBuffalo 7-7-11-126.
N.Y. Islanders 6-10-8-024.
GoaliesBuffalo, Ullmark. N.Y. Islanders,
Gibson. A14,811 (15,795). T2:29.
SCORING LEADERS
Through April 8
GP G
Patrick Kane, Chi...............81 44
Jamie Benn, Dal................81 41
Sidney Crosby, Pit.............80 36
Joe Thornton, SJ...............81 19
Erik Karlsson, Ott..............81 16
Johnny Gaudreau, Cgy......78 30
Joe Pavelski, SJ..................81 37
Blake Wheeler, Wpg.........81 25
Evgeny Kuznetsov, Was.....80 20
Artemi Panarin, Chi..........79 28
Brent Burns, SJ..................81 27
Vladimir Tarasenko, StL....79 39
Tyler Seguin, Dal...............72 33
Anze Kopitar, LA................80 25
1 tied with 69 pts.
A PTS
59 103
47 88
49 85
62 81
65 81
48 78
40 77
51 76
56 76
46 74
47 74
34 73
40 73
48 73
COLLEGIATE
ICE HOCKEY
FROZEN FOUR
At Amalie Arena
Tampa, Fla.
Semifinals
Thursday, April 7
Quinnipiac 3..................... Boston College 2
North Dakota 4..............................Denver 2
Championship
Saturday, April 9
North Dakota 5........................ Quinnipiac 1
C13
LACROSSE
COLLEGIATE MEN
McDaniel............................... 2 2 1 3 8
Franklin & Marshall............... 4 2 2 1 9
McDaniel Scoring: Z. Monzo 2, J. Lawrence, T. McNichol, H. Caufield , R. Breed,
J. Payne, M. Long.
Franklin & Marshall Scoring: S. Rogers 5,
M. Rama, M. Bossidy, M. Wasik, W. Rhudy.
McDaniel Assists: J. Lawrence 2, M. Long.
Franklin & Marshall Assists: S. Rogers 3,
M. Rama 2, H. Rice, B. Kenavan.
SOG: M 17; F&M 20.
Saves: ME. Ritchie 11; F&MT. Moore 9.
COLLEGIATE WOMEN
Elizabethtown.......................... 2 4 6
Goucher................................... 1 4 5
Elizabethtown Scoring: D. Robidoux 3, K.
Thompson, A. Stang, A. McLamb.
Goucher Scoring: L. Pirrung 2, J. Franklin
2, K. DeMaio.
Elizabethtown Assists: K. Thompson.
Goucher Assists: D. McCreary 2, J.
Borucki 2.
SOG: E 15; G 9.
Saves: EA. Kopytko 4; GB. Den Boer 9.
Franklin & Marshall................ 12 8 20
McDaniel.................................. 3 2 5
Franklin & Marshall Scoring: P. Moriarty 7, G. Frank 4, A. Mergner 2, G. Saliba
2, N. Delinsky, C. Jackson, M. Hughes, B.
ODonnell, Y. Baker.
McDaniel Scoring: E. Brownawell 3, M.
Quinn, S. Barbeito.
Franklin & Marshall Assists: G. Frank 3,
P. Moriarty 3, G. Saliba 3, N. Delinsky, C.
Kolva, T. Freud, C. Jackson, A. Mergner, A.
Saliba, M. Hughes, B. ODonnell.
McDaniel Assists: M. Quinn.
SOG: F&M 26; M 8.
Saves: F&MD. Harrington 8, K. Hardt 0;
MK. Johnson 6.
Lancaster Bible......................... 9 4 13
Keuka....................................... 2 5 7
Lancaster Bible Scoring: M. Kemrer 7,
H. Thompson 2, R. Kelley 2, A. Wesner, K.
Moran.
Keuka Scoring: K. Neuberger 3, S. Forshay
2, M. Gosson 2.
Lancaster Assists: A. Wesner, M. Kemrer,
C. Benson, R. Kelley.
Keuka Assists: K. Neuberger.
SOG: LB 23; K 12.
Saves: LBN. Statuti 5; KA. Thayer 10.
SCHOLASTIC BOYS
NONLEAGUE
Bethel Park............................ 4 1 1 0 6
Warwick................................ 3 0 0 1 4
Bethel Park Scoring: N. Bussard 3, Z. Ferris 2, R. Knorka.
Warwick Scoring: A. Wenger 2, E. Crawford 2.
Bethel Park Assists: N. Bussard, R. Knorka, A. DiPrampero.
Shots: BP 17; W 30.
Saves: BPn/a 17; WS. Lipko 7.
BOXING
FIGHT SCHEDULE
April 15
At Turning Stone Resort & Casino, Verona, N.Y. (SHO), Nikolay Potapov vs. Stephon
Young, 10, bantamweights.
April 16
At Manila, Philippines, McJoe Arroyo vs.
Jerwin Ancajas, 12, for Arroyos IBF junior
bantamweight title.
At Barclays Center, Brooklyn, N.Y. (NBC),
Errol Spence Jr. vs. Chris Algieri, 12, welterweights; Krzysztof Glowacki vs. Steve Cunningham, 12, for the WBO World Cruiserweight title; Marcus Browne vs. Radivoje
Kalajdzic, 10, light heavyweights.
At Foxwoods Resort Casino, Mashantucket, Conn. (SHO), Gary Russell Jr. vs. Patrick
Hyland, 12, for Russells WBC World featherweight title; Jose Pedraza vs. Stephen
Smith, 12, for Pedrazas IBF super featherweight title.
April 23
At Los Mochis, Mexico, Carlos Cuadras
vs. Richie Mepranum, 12, for Cuadras WBC
World super flyweight title.
At the Forum, Inglewood, Calif. (HBO),
Gennady Golovkin vs. Dominic Wade,
12, for Golovkins WBA Super World-IBFinterim WBC middleweight titles; Roman
Gonzalez vs. McWilliams Arroyo, 12, for
Gonzalezs WBC flyweight title.
April 29
At Trump Taj Majal, Atlantic City, N.J.,
Jonathan Guzman vs. Daniel Rosas, 12, IBF
junior featherweight eliminator.
April 30
At TBA, Russia, Denis Ledebev vs. Victor
Emilio Ramirez, 12, for Ledebevs IBF and
WBA Super World cruiserweights title.
At the DC Armory, Washington D.C.
(SHO), Badou Jack vs. Lucian Bute, 12, for
Jacks WBC World super middleweight title;
James DeGale vs. Rogelio Medina, 12, for
DeGales IBF super middleweight title.
At StubHub Center, Carson, Calif. (FOX),
Victor Ortiz vs. Andre Berto, 12, welterweights.
C14
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Lancaster Weather
TODAY
MONDAY
47
33
TUESDAY
60
50
REGION
LANCASTER
Cold with sun mixing with
clouds today. High 45 to 49.
Winds west-southwest 6-12
mph. A shower tonight; rising
temperatures late. Low 31 to 35.
35
30
12 AM 3
9 NOON 3
9 12 AM
Brownstown
Columbia
County Park
Ephrata
Flory Mill
Manheim
Mount Joy
Smoketown
Truce
Below
Flood
4.54
36.52
12.46
12.48
4.14
2.69
500
NATION
Absent
Low
Absent
Low
Minneapolis
53/30
Denver
66/39
Atlanta
65/48
Houston
78/66
Chihuahua
82/45
-10s
Rain
Showers
-0s
0s
Snow
10s
Flurries
20s
Ice
30s
Cold Front
40s
50s
Warm Front
60s
70s
80s
HONDRUAUTO.COM
100s
49/34/pc
77/59/pc
58/52/c
68/55/c
56/49/c
49/32/r
52/32/r
51/29/pc
74/57/pc
83/53/c
56/38/pc
63/46/sh
84/70/s
68/56/sh
67/55/sh
72/48/sh
79/68/pc
58/52/c
83/61/s
63/56/c
75/59/pc
58/35/r
70/49/c
65/53/c
70/58/sh
MANHEIM
E-TOWN
Mt. Joy
Lancaster
7 time winner!
2016 FORD FUSION
N
M ..................................$23,995
MSRP
HHONDRU DISCOUNT ............ -$1,500
RRebate................................ -$1,450
CCompetitive Lease Conquest.... -$500
FFord Bonus Cash ............... -$1,000
STK#16F206
32
AVAILABLE
$159
$19,545
$139
2016 FORD
STK#16F623
YOUR PRICE
$19,650
**36 mo
$0 Security Deposit
$2,599 Due At Signing
Tax, Tags, License & $134 Doc fee extra
2016
FORD F150 S/C 4X4 XLT
STK#16F313
K#16F313
LEASE FOR
LEASE FOR
$289
$17,499
**36 mo
$0 Security Deposit
$2,799 Due At Signing
Tax
Tax, Tags
Tags, License & $134 Doc fee extra
MSRP ..................................$16,060
HONDRU DISCOUNT ................-$365
Factory Rebate.....................-$1,000
Competitive Lease Rebate ......-$500
STK#16F166
YOUR PRICE
$34,750
72
AVAILABLE
$1,000 REBATE
0% AVAILABLE
$32,535
665-3551
29
AVAILABLE $0 Security Deposit
MSRP ..................................$43,500
HONDRU DISCOUNT ............ -$4,000
Factory Rebate.................... -$2,750
Competitive Lease Rebate ..... -$500
Ford Bonus Cash................. -$1,500
$299
YOUR PRICE
MSRP ..................................$36,485
HONDRU DISCOUNT ............ -$2,000
Factory Rebate....................... -$950
Competitive Lease Rebate .. -$1,000
EXPLORER 4X4
YOUR PRICE
21
AVAILABLE
**36 mo
$0 Security Deposit
$2,800 Due At Signing
Tax, Tags, License & $135 Doc fee extra
MSRP ..................................$21,385
HONDRU DISCOUNT .............-$1,386
Factory Rebate.....................-$2,000
Competitive Lease Rebate ......-$500
MSRP ..................................$24,175
HONDRU DISCOUNT ............ -$1,676
Factory Rebate.................... -$1,450
Competitive Lease Rebate ..... -$500
Ford Bonus Cash................. -$1,000
LEASE FOR
YOUR PRICE
LEASE FOR
47/34/r
65/48/pc
46/39/s
50/39/s
47/38/s
36/33/sn
45/41/sf
50/39/r
60/43/pc
81/66/t
66/39/c
49/38/s
83/71/s
65/55/sh
67/56/sh
69/55/pc
78/66/s
48/41/s
80/61/pc
50/39/s
66/57/t
48/44/pc
67/47/sh
64/53/c
54/44/s
89 at McAllen, TX
-11 at Grand Marais, MN
Harrisburg
Congratulations
Hondru Ford!
STK#16F511
High:
Low:
110s
Hi/Lo/W
90s
MON
Hi/Lo/W
SATURDAY EXTREMES
Miami
80/70
Monterrey
89/61
T-storms
Anchorage
Atlanta
Atlantic City
Baltimore
Boston
Buffalo
Cleveland
Chicago
Charlotte
Dallas
Denver
Harrisburg
Honolulu
Las Vegas
Los Angeles
Nashville
New Orleans
New York
Orlando
Philadelphia
Phoenix
Pittsburgh
Salt Lake City
San Francisco
Wash., D.C.
Washington
54/44
Kansas City
75/45
MON
Hi/Lo/W
71/55/sh
89/66/pc
63/46/c
70/66/pc
89/62/s
52/43/r
63/47/pc
77/69/t
75/50/s
59/45/pc
85/54/s
53/36/c
83/72/pc
61/44/t
91/78/s
67/52/s
85/75/sh
75/63/s
58/40/pc
48/28/r
TODAY
New York
48/41
Chicago
50/39
Hi/Lo/W
70/52/t
92/69/c
66/41/s
69/63/pc
93/71/s
49/44/c
61/43/pc
77/71/sh
78/57/sh
56/49/pc
82/52/pc
67/44/c
81/71/pc
61/48/pc
92/77/s
65/47/pc
86/74/pc
79/60/pc
69/49/c
32/29/sn
NATION
Montreal
35/28
Toronto
32/29
El Paso
76/52
$179
Athens
Baghdad
Beijing City
Bermuda
Cairo
Dublin
Frankfurt
Hong Kong
Jerusalem
London
Mexico City
Moscow
Nassau
Paris
Rio de Janeiro
Rome
San Juan
Sydney
Tokyo
Toronto
Harrisburg
49/38
Los Angeles
67/56
TODAY
MON
Sunrise
6:34 a.m. 6:33 a.m.
Sunset
7:39 p.m. 7:40 p.m.
Moonrise
9:08 a.m. 9:59 a.m.
Moonset
11:37 p.m.
none
First
Full
Last
New
LEASE FOR
WORLD
Winnipeg
32/16
San Francisco
64/53
STK#16F495
Scranton
45/36
Detroit
42/38
Sunshine
Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Seattle
65/47
6.86
TODAY
Billings
56/33
Grasses
Trees
Weeds
Mold
POLLEN
RIVER STAGES
Susquehanna
at Harrisburg
at Marietta
Conestoga
at Lancaster
at Conestoga
300
POP: 10%
0.47
N.A.
0.31
0.31
0.31
0.39
0.31
N.A.
N.A.
POP: 10%
Altoona
45/37
Yesterdays readings
Main Pollutant
Particulates
Particulates
55
Ozone
32
POP: 5%
Williamsport
Punxsutawney
46/37
Wilkes-Barre
41/38
45/37
State College
42/36
Butler
44/38
Todays forecast
PRECIPITATION
65
44
Plenty of sunshine
Bradford
37/30
Oil City
38/35
AIR QUALITY
Source: www.atmos.millersville.edu/~wic
63
39
POCONOS
Cold with sun mixing with clouds
today. High 37 to 41. A brief
shower or two tonight. Low 30
to 34.
60
37
Partly sunny
Erie
39/35
DELAWAREMARYLAND
Mostly sunny today. Cold in the
south and central parts; warmer
in the Maryland panhandle. High
45 to 53.
TEMPERATURE
Lancaster
39/30
Ephrata
38/29
New Holland
40/33
Lancaster (last year)
42/38
Normals for the day
61/39
Year to date high
79 on April 1
Year to date low
5 on Feb. 14
PRECIPITATION
24 hours ending 7 p.m.
0.23
Month to date
1.61
Normal month to date
0.99
Month to date departure
+0.62
Year to date
10.73
Normal year to date
9.85
Year to date departure
+0.88
Greatest Apr. total
9.26 (1983)
Least Apr. total
0.39 (1985)
POP: 10%
ALMANAC
40
56
32
POP: 70%
WEDNESDAY
51
31
POP: 55%
POP: 20%
24 mo
$0 Security Deposit
$4,400 Due At Signing
Tax, Tags, License & $135 Doc fee extra
YOUR PRICE
$14,195
LEASE FOR
36 mo
$0 Security Deposit
$2,459 Due At Signing
Tax, Tags, License & $135 Doc fee extra
$129
Tax, tags, lic, $135 Doc Fee extra. All lease payments include all red carpet lease rebates. Lease payments also include competitive lease conquest rebate which is when customers that currently lease a non-ford/lincoln/mercury motor company car, suv or light duty truck will receive conquest cash towards the
purchase or lease of an eligible new vehicle. Not all buyers will qualify. Availability includes in stock, transit, and scheduled production units Available units include in stock, in transit, and balance to schedule units. *0% AVAILABLE IN LEIU OF OTHER REBATES. All prices good until 5/2/2016 (Not responsible for typos)
ALL 2015 CHEVROLET NEW CAR INVENTORY IS 15% OFF MSRP!!! ENDS 4/18/2016
2015 CHEVY
MSRP ..................................$16,145
HONDRU DISCOUNT ............ -$1,550
15% OFF MSRP ................... -$2,422
SPARK LT
STK#15C357
YOUR PRICE
$12,173
2016 CHEVY
STK#16H011
LEASE FOR
$
139
MO
22 CRUZES
AVAILABLE
EQUINOX FWD
LEASE FOR
$
STK#16H014
199
13 EQUINOX
AVAILABLE
MO
MALIBU LT 13 MALIBUS
STK#16H166
AVAILABLE
YOUR PRICE
$16,178
2016 CHEVY
TRAVERSE AWD LT
36 mo
$0 Security Deposit
$2,500 Due At Signing
Tax, Tags, License & $135 Doc fee extra
Includes Competitive Lease Cash
199
MO
269
2 GREAT
LOCATIONS!
367-6644 OR 1-877-924-6644
SILVERADO LT 4X4
LEASE FOR
$
299
MO
YOUR PRICE
MO
YOUR PRICE
$23,995
LEASE FOR
$
LEASE FOR
$
STK#16C148
YOUR PRICE
24 mo
$0 Security Deposit
$0 Due At Signing
Tax, Tags, License & $135 Doc fee extra
Includes Competitive Lease Cash
UP TO
42 MPG
2016 CHEVY
2016 CHEVY
MSRP ..................................$19,810
HONDRU DISCOUNT ............... -$511
15% OFF ............................. -$2,971
CRUZE LIMITED
ITED
$34,995
$23,931
YOUR PRICE
$36,806
24 mo
36 mo
OVER 50
24 mo $0 Security Deposit
$0 Security Deposit
$0 Security Deposit
SILVERADOS
$1,750 Due At Signing
$3,500 Due At Signing
$2,700 Due At Signing
Tax, Tags, License & $135 Doc fee extra
Tax, Tags, License & $135 Doc fee extra
Tax, Tags, License & $135 Doc fee extra
AVAILABLE
Includes Competitive Lease Cash
Includes Competitive Lease Cash
Includes GM Lease Loyalty Cash
All leases are 10,000 mi/yr. All lease payments are plus tax Tax, tags, license & $135 doc fee not included. All leases require first payment at delivery. GM Competitive Lease Cash, must be leasing a 1999 or newer non GM vehicle to qualify. GM Lease Loyalty, must be leasing a 1999 or newer GM vehicle. Must have approved credit to
qualify. Prices are subject to change weekly. Trade Assist must be a 1999 or newer passenger car, truck or suv. Available units includes in stock, in transit and balance to schedule units. Chevrolet Loyalty Cash is for customers who currently own or lease a 1999 or newer Chevrolet passenger car or light duty truck.
Chevy Conquest Cash must be a non-GM 1999 or newer passenger car or light duty truck to qualify. Residency restrictions apply. All incentives are good until 4/18/2016.
MSRP ..................................$22,790
MSRP ..................................$38,345 2016 DODGE
2016 RAM 1500
2016 DODGE
HONDRU DISCOUNT ............... -$577
DISCOUNT ............ -$1,846
LEASE FOR HONDRU
Chrysler Capital Bonus .......... -$500
Rebate ................................ -$4,000
MSRP ..................................$21,990
Rebate ................................ -$2,500
Chrysler Capital Bonus ................ -$500
STK#16D094
HONDRU DISCOUNT ............... -$543 STK#16D010
MO
Rebate ................................ -$2,750
QUAD CAB
EXPRESS
STK#16D295
189
X 36 MO
82 RAMS
AVAILABLE
2016 JEEP
MSRP ..................................$28,715
HONDRU DISCOUNT ............... -$513
YOUR PRICE
$25,202
LEASE FOR
194
MO
X 36 MO
21 CHEROKEES
AVAILABLE
JOURNEY SE
YOUR PRICE
CARAVAN SE
$31,999
$18,697
10 JOURNEYS
AVAILABLE
2016 JEEP
137
X 36 MO
YOUR PRICE
$19,213
YOUR PRICE
MSRP ..................................$19,865
HONDRU DISCOUNT ............... -$366
Rebate ................................ -$3,500
Chrysler Capital Bonus ................ -$500
YOUR PRICE
$15,499
LEASE FOR
142MO
18 Grand
Caravans, and Town
& Countrys Available
X 36 MO
2016 JEEP
2015 JEEP
WRANGLER
UNLIMITED SPORT
GRAND CHEROKEE
LAREDO 4X4 STK#15D683
STK#16D359
MSRP ..................................$31,470
HONDRU DISCOUNT ............... -$794
LEASE FOR
LEASE FOR
256
X 36 MO
38 WRANGLERS
YOUR
PRICE
AVAILABLE
MO
$30,676
367-6644 OR 1-877-924-6644
RT. 230 ELIZABETHTOWN
261MO
X 36 MO
MSRP ..................................$34,990
HONDRU DISCOUNT ............ -$2,208
REBATE ............................... -$2,000
YOUR PRICE
$30,782
16
AVAILABLE
Money
n SEND STORY TIPS & INFO TO: TIM MEKEEL, 481-6030, TMEKEEL@LNPNEWS.COM
RENOVATION
MICHELLE SINGLETARY
THE COLOR OF MONEY
Financial
documents:
Which to toss,
which to save
WASHINGTON Recently, I wrote about my
annual financial spring
cleaning ritual and implored you to join me in
purging.
Amber in Indiana sent
me a note that fits into
a feature I started this
year called Ask Away.
She wasnt sure what
documents to destroy.
She wrote: I work in
a factory and have never
been good with financial
things. How do I know
what is considered important or not important? I read how you had
kept making files you
didnt need, and I think
I may have created that
problem myself. I have
a file of all mine and my
husbands paycheck
stubs, a file on every
prescription my family
and I have had. I have
files of rent from the day
we moved in 10 years
ago. I have kept all of my
bank statements and my
utility bills. Help.
Like Amber, there was
a time when I couldnt
throw out a lot of financial documents for fear
that I may need them
one day. I was paranoid
that a creditor would
claim I didnt pay what
I owed, so I held on to
receipts for decades.
But you can let go of a
lot of documents. And
doing so will free you
of all that paper and,
perhaps, worry.
Paycheck stubs. At
tax time, youll get a W-2
form, so no need to keep
the stubs after that. Your
final stub will also have a
years worth of information. If you like, you can
just keep those year-end
stubs, especially if youre
unsure youll be able
to retrieve the records
should you need to
prove income for, say, a
home purchase.
Prescriptions.
Keep medical information for at least a year in
case there is a dispute
about payment. I dont
throw out my familys
medical documents
that detail treatment
for any major surgeries,
procedures or chronic
illnesses.
Rent receipts. If
youre paying cash for
rent, certainly keep
those receipts. But you
probably dont need
them after a year. If
youre paying with a
check, youll have proof
of payment from your
bank statements.
Bank statements.
At year-end and at tax
time, banks provide
lots of information for
the previous year. Once
you get those statements, you can shred
the monthly ones. And
please do shred them.
Utility bills. Unless you need these for
business/home-office
tax deductions, you can
shred them at the end of
the year.
As for other common
documents:
Debt-payoff statements. If you fell behind
on a debt but have
settled it or later paid it
in full, keep the proof
SINGLETARY, page D2
FLOORED
TMEKEEL@LNPNEWS.COM
A few years ago, Pittsburgh International Airport officials decided to replace the dated, noisy
tile floor in its airside terminal.
But they wanted the floor to be
more than just something to walk
across.
They wanted the surface to
proclaim to arriving passengers,
Wow. This is Pittsburgh.
And now they have a floor that
emphatically delivers that message, thanks in large part to the
Manheim branch of Roman Mosaic & Tile.
Roman Mosaic spent 16 months
installing a unique, boldly colorful floor made of terrazzo, a mix of
crushed marble and epoxy resin.
Carnegie Mellon University
art professor Clayton Merrell
designed the floor, which depicts
the dome of the sky, complete
with clouds and flight paths. He
named it The Sky Beneath Our
Feet.
Making the floor distinctively
Pittsburgh are five silhouettes of
Steel City landmarks on the horizon including Heinz Field,
PNC Park and the Cathedral of
Learning that grace the floors
perimeter.
The $4 million floor, completed
in October, was selected in March
as the National Terrazzo & Mosaic Associations Job of the Year.
The project turned out even
better than I had hoped, Merrell
said. Im really pleased with the
way it looks. Its pretty glorious.
This was a once-in-a-lifetime
opportunity, I believe, said Jonathan MillerShank, Roman Mosaic foreman. Not many buildings get that elaborate with a
terrazzo design.
The floor covers 69,000 square
feet more area than a football
field in the airside terminal.
The terminal is one of the airports busiest areas, with boarding gates, concourses and dozens
of stores and restaurants.
Some 8 million passengers a
year will walk across The Sky
Beneath Our Feet.
Were really proud of the floor,
said Bob Kerlik, the airports vice
president of media relations. We
think its emblematic of where
were headed as an airport.
Kerlik said the terrazzo floor
project is the latest in a string
of improvements to the airport,
AIRPORT, page D2
Photos, from top: The Manheim branch of Roman Mosaic & Tile installed this terrazzo floor at
Pittsburgh International Airport; Roman Mosaic
foreman Jonathan MillerShank kneels by a helicopter in the finished terrazzo floor; during the
installation, orange paint outlines clouds and flight
paths in what will become the airports new floor;
Roman Mosaics Tracy Carner glues a zinc strip that
will help separate colors of the floor.
n Cost: $4 million.
CHAD UMBLE
WHATS IN STORE
n Address: 25 W.
Owner Daniel Falcon stands at the bar in Old San Juan Latin Cuisine and
Rum Bar in downtown Lancaster at 25 W. King St., inside Hager Mall.
D2
MONEY
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Whos News
Continued from D1
Jessica Peiffer
n American Heritage
that (job) site, said Doug Wilczek, the Manheim branchs operations manager.
The terrazzo layer was a slim
3/8 of an inch thick. Once the
terrazzo dried, Roman Mosaic
used diamond-tooth grinders
to smooth it, removing less than
1/16 of an inch, MillerShank said.
Then the final step was taken
polishing.
Reaching that final step usually
isnt as complex as it was in Pittsburgh, project officials said.
It was the most complicated
job Ive done, said MillerShank,
who joined Roman Mosaic in
1998.
The number of colors, templates and square feet werent the
only challenges.
The airport setting posed its
own issues.
All the workers including
about a dozen Roman Mosaic
employees from Lancaster and
Lebanon counties and their
equipment had to be cleared by
airport security every day.
Other twists were necessitated
by the location of the job.
The workers addressed only a
small area at a time, dividing the
project into 60 phases, so each
business in the center of the floor
and around its edges could stay
open for the duration of the project.
Likewise, the workers left half
of the areas elevators, up escalators and down escalators accessible to the public all day, every day.
The craftsworkers also faced
restricted schedules. They could
work only overnight, from 8 p.m.
to 5 a.m., to minimize the impact
on businesses and passengers.
They did get reinforcements,
though.
Roman Mosaic employees invited Merrell who had never
worked with terrazzo until this
project to join them in gluing
zinc strips in place and pouring
terrazzo. So on two evenings he
did.
They were very gracious about
it, he said. They made me feel
like I was doing a good job.
Bankruptcies
Ronald L. and Vicki J
Hossler, 100 block of
South Broad Street, Lititz.
Chapter 13.
Jennifer L. Pannebecker,
first block of Dosch Lane,
East Earl. Chapter 7.
Calendar
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 13
n Society for Marketing Professional Services
Marisa Seubert
Property Management,
a division of Berkshire
Hathaway HomeServices
Homesale Realty, has
promoted Jessica Peiffer
and hired Marisa Seubert
and Lori Lintner.
Peiffer, of Mount Joy,
has been promoted to
operations manager of the
Elizabethtown office. Hired
in 2013, she most recently
was office manager. Peiffer
has an associate degree
from University of Phoenix.
Seubert has been hired as
marketing communications
manager. Seubert, of
Lancaster, most recently was
marketing coordinator at
Lori Lintner
Walter J. Senkowski
Chad Baker
n Millersville University
Conlan Swope
WHO TO EMAIL
Singletary
Continued from D1
n michelle.singletary@
washpost.com
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
D3
Technology
SECURITY
AP TECHNOLOGY WRITER
Use encryption
Much to the FBIs displeasure, iPhones running at least
ASSOCIATED PRESS
iOS 8 offer full-disk encryption by default. That means that the information stored on the phone cant be extracted by authorities or by hackers
and read on another computer. If the
phone isnt unlocked first, any information obtained would be scrambled
and unreadable.
With Android, however, you typically have to turn that on in the settings.
Googles policy requires many phones
with the latest version of Android, including its own Nexus phones, to offer
encryption by default. But, according
to Google, only 2.3 percent of active
Android devices currently are running
that version.
KIM KOMANDO
CYBER SPEAK
Restart
OK, this step is obvious.
However, some people
think they have to pull the
computers power plug
or flip the switch on the
power strip. Instead, simply hold the computers
power button for 5 to 10
seconds and it will restart
with less disruption than
a complete power loss.
There are a few things
that can happen next
when your computer
comes back on. Lets look
at the three most typical
ones and what you should
do next.
1. Computer starts
If the computer starts
up fine, immediately
back up your important
information in case a
serious problem is on
the way. Otherwise,
you could find yourself
scrambling through
more complicated ways
to get files off a dead
computer.
Then use the computer
as normal until it freezes
again, although it might
not. If the computer does
freeze again, then keep
reading for more steps
to take.
2. Computer asks
you how to boot
While restarting, the
1.75
3. Computer
freezes again
FREEZE, page D6
to help you thrive. Our eagerness to help businesses like yours is why
M&T is a leading SBA lender2 in the country and why weve been recognized
by Greenwich Associates for excellence in small business banking.3
To take advantage of this great rate today, visit any M&T Bank branch,
call 1-866-281-9441, or visit mtb.com/promorate.
Basic software
troubleshooting
An occasional or consistent computer freeze
could be the result of a
program acting up. Use
the keyboard shortcut
CTRL + SHIFT + ESC
to open Windows Task
Manager and then select
the Performance tab.
In Windows 8.1 and 10,
you might need to click
the More details link
at the bottom of the Task
Manager to see it.
Start using your computer as normal, but keep
an eye the CPU, memory
D4
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Spending Well
Talking Points
ECONOMIC VIEW
NOAM SCHEIBER
and IAN LOVETT
A STATE GAMBLE A law signed by Gov. Jerry Brown will raise the minimum hourly pay to $15 by 2022. Some say the
rise could have a negative effect in smaller cities. A Skechers center in Moreno Valley, outside Los Angeles.
In moving to raise the statewide minimum wage to $15 by 2022, California is going well beyond previous
efforts to raise the wage floor in recent decades. Because typical wages vary widely from high-cost San
Francisco and San Jose to cities like Fresno and Merced, where the median wage is much lower, many
economists are concerned that the measure may lead to job loss in places where the minimum wage will be
relatively close to what the typical worker is expected to earn.
Ratio of minimum wage to median wage in 2022
Rough consensus among economists sympathetic to minimum wage increases:
BELOW 50% (mostly beneficial)
CITY
Redding
Fresno
$20.31
74%
Chico
Merced
$20.31
74
Chico
$21.23
71
Bakersfield
$21.44
70
Redding
$22.02
68
Stockton
$22.77
66
Los Angeles
$24.78
61
San Diego
$25.38
59
Sacramento
$26.51
57
44
San Jose
40
Sacramento
San Francisco
San Jose
MEDIAN WAGE
IN 2022
(PROJ.)
Stockton
Merced
Fresno
Bakersfield
CALIFORNIA
Los Angeles
San Diego
$37.34
DEBORAH L. JACOBS
When our only child started college in September, my husband
and I embarked on our own semester abroad.
To pay for it, we rented our
Brooklyn townhouse for three
months and rented smaller quarters in rural France. A favorable
conversion of the dollar against
the euro lowered our cost of living.
As our base, we chose the Loire
Valley, about two hours southwest
of Paris. We would shop in openair markets, cook with seasonal
ingredients and communicate
with people in their own language.
After searching HomeAway,
VRBO and Airbnb, we rented a
cottage in Amboise. It sounded
idyllic and would cost $9,000 for
three months. A liquid market for
short-term rentals is making people much more flexible in their
Wandering in France,
staying in villages and
eating local food.
filled with moldy food and a smell
of mildew in the living room. In
response to our complaints, the
American owners wired a refund.
Somewhat shellshocked, we
abandoned the idea of spending
three months in one place and
charted a more itinerant journey.
Our second rental was a rambling, five-bedroom Victorian
in Le Puy-Notre-Dame, a tiny
Loire Valley village surrounded
by vineyards. At $106 a night via
Airbnb it was our best travel deal,
and we stayed an extra week.
Although it was charming, we
felt like caretakers at times, unclogging a drain and getting an
electrician to fix a tripped circuit.
We left as the family arrived to
celebrate the grape harvest.
Ready for warmer weather and
a change of scene, we drove 500
miles south and west, to Basque
Country to stay in Sare, a onestreet village five miles from the
Spanish border. There we were
tenants at a 17th-century mansion
that once belonged to shipbuilders. Furnished with antiques, it
had views of fall foliage and grazing livestock. Although it cost $175
per night, it was still within our
budget. We stayed for six weeks.
After a morning of writing, I
would join my husband for an excursion walking on the beach
A TASTE OF
BASQUE
COUNTRY
DEBORAH L. JACOBS
The couples
stay in Sare,
a one-street
village near the
Spanish border,
was extended to
six weeks. They
were tenants in
a 17th-century
mansion filled
with antiques
and family
heirlooms for
$175 a night.
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
D5
ABBY GOODNOUGH
A commitment to
pay for one anothers
medical expenses.
SAN ANTONIO When Chris
Doyle learned his health insurance deductible would climb to
$10,000 last year, he and his wife,
evangelical Christians, spent a
couple weeks just praying, he
said.
Then they opted out of insurance altogether, joining something
called a health care sharing ministry, which requires members to
help cover one anothers major
medical costs as they come up.
While such nonprofit ministries
have been around for decades, interest in them has grown since
the Affordable Care Act passed
in 2010, largely because the law
exempts members from the requirement to have health insurance or pay a yearly fine.
Samaritan Ministries International, which Mr. Doyle and his
wife, Sarah, joined last winter,
plays matchmaker, assigning
member families to help pay the
medical bills of other members.
The money is mailed directly to
the families in need, often with
notes of support or in the case
of one family here, strawberry
stickers and a drawing of an ele-
Insurers
Penalize
Renters
YOUR MONEY
ANN CARRNS
What does owning a home have
to do with car insurance? Quite
a bit, when it comes to the rates
consumers pay for auto coverage.
Consumers pay about 7 percent
more on average for annual car
insurance premiums if they rent
their home rather than own it, according to the Consumer Federation of Americas analysis.
Quotes for auto insurance premiums for renters in Louisville,
Ky., averaged 13 percent more
than those for homeowners,
while one insurer in that market,
Farmers Insurance, quoted a rate
that was 47 percent higher.
J. Robert Hunter, the federations insurance director, said the
analysis showed how insurers
use of nondriving criteria like
homeownership can penalize lower-income consumers, even if they
have pristine driving records.
Nationwide, renters have a
median income of about $28,000,
compared with about $63,000 for
homeowners, according to Federal Reserve data cited by the federation. The federation has done
analyses of factors used to set car
insurance premiums and objects
to the use of nondriving criteria,
like credit scores and college de-
FAITH IN OTHERS Chris Doyle, with his wife, Sarah, and two children, opted
Simple Tools
To Create
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To be the next big YouTube star,
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with these simple devices. You
can always upgrade later when
you become famous.
2
CARL RICHARDS
PHOTOS BY TONY
CENICOLA/THE NEW
YORK TIMES
GREGORY SCHMIDT
CARL RICHARDS
Q&A
TECHNOLOGY
SKETCH GUY
D6
MONEY
Freeze
Continued from D3
Basic hardware
troubleshooting
A computer that freezes
both in normal mode and
Safe Mode, or with another
operating system, can often
indicate a problem with
your computers hardware.
It could be your hard drive,
an overheating CPU, bad
memory or a failing power
supply. In some cases, it
might also be your motherboard, although thats a rare
occurrence.
Usually with hardware
problem, the freezing will
start out sporadic, but increase in frequency as time
goes on. Or it will trigger
when the computer is working hard, but not when youre
doing more basic things.
Fortunately, you can run
some checks and see if thats
the case.
Use a program like
CrystalDiskInfo to check
your hard drives S.M.A.R.T.
data for signs of impending failure. A program like
SpeedFan can tell you if your
computer processor is overheating, or if the voltages are
fluctuating, which might be a
problematic power supply.
If you want to go more
in-depth, you can grab a
diagnostic CD like FalconFours Ultimate Boot CD. It
has plenty of other tools for
checking out your computer, including MemTest
for putting strain on your
computers RAM to see if its
working OK.
PENN
COLLEGE
3:1
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Whats in Store
Continued from D1
Vendor market in
Kinzers
Mustard Seed Markets, a
vendor mall featuring a variety
of handmade items, has opened
along Route 30 in Kinzers.
The 5,800-square-foot market at 5015 Lincoln Highway
East has 16 vendors, including
ones selling candles, signs,
clocks, furniture, dog treats,
jewelry and cat accessories.
More vendors soon may be
added.
Mustard Seed Markets is
owned by Mike Marion and
several other
members of
his family
who have been in the gift industry since 1996 and recently
moved here from Missouri.
The Marions also sell their
own lines of products at the
market: Old Glory Candle, Art
Prints Media and Bountiful
Harvest Home Fragrances.
MUSTARD SEED
MARKETS
n Address: 5015 Lincoln Highway
E., Kinzers.
n Phone: 717-442-7982.
n Online: mustardseedmarkets.
com
Sheetz in Manheim
development
Work is slated to begin in the
next couple weeks on Penn
Towne Center, a commercial
development along Route 72
across from Manheim Auto
Auction whose first tenant
will be a Sheetz convenience
store.
The 6,490-square-foot
Sheetz will be built on the east
side of Route 72, across from
the Auction Road intersection.
A Sheetz representative did
not respond to a phone message seeking information about
when the store might open.
Altoona-based Sheetz has 12
locations in Lancaster County.
In subsequent planned
phases of construction, a
shopping center will be built
on the rest of the 16.26-acre
site, with plans showing a
bank, restaurant, 100-room
hotel and a 35,500-squarefoot retail strip.
Although brands and tenants have not been set for
most of the spaces, a spokesman for project developer
Blackford said the firm has
talked to three hotels and six
restaurants.
As part of the project, a traffic signal will be installed at
the Route 72/Bucknoll Road
intersection.
Correspondents
Justin
Stoltzfus and Rochelle A. Shenk
contributed to this report.
Lancaster County retail and restaurant news, runs every Sunday. If you
have news tips, contact LNP staff
writer Chad Umble at 291-8718 or
cumble@lnpnews.com.
lab-to-lecture ratio
220+
a national
leader in
applied
technology
education
________________________________________________________
_________________________________
________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________
www.pct.edu Williamsport, PA
________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________
Mail to: LNP Customer Service, PO Box 1328, Lancaster, PA 17608-1328
or Email: customerservice@LNPnews.com
Perspective
Start a
conversation May
20 or 21 about
your ideas for
our community.
Then share those
ideas with the
Lancaster County
Community
Foundation so
it can make the
community better.
TRACY CUTLER
SPECIAL TO LNP
CUTLER, page E4
DOYLE McMANUS
STUART WESBURY
SPECIAL TO LNP
Contested or brokered
If no candidate achieves the
vote threshold stated above,
the convention is described as
a contested convention. The
candidates vie with one another
to attract uncommitted delegates
to vote for them on the first ballot. If sufficient uncommitted
delegates vote for a candidate and
bring that candidates votes to the
needed threshold or greater, that
candidate wins on the first ballot.
If no candidate achieves that
threshold on the first ballot,
the convention then becomes a
brokered or open convention.
As many ballots as are necessary
for a candidate to reach the stated
threshold are then cast. It could
take days.
We should remember that this
was the process in 1860, and it
resulted in the nomination of
Abraham Lincoln for president.
Lincoln did not have the greatest
number of delegates votes on the
first ballot. In fact, he received
only 102 votes, with
WESBURY, page E4
E2
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Opinion
Beverly R. Steinman
Robert M. Krasne
Suzanne Cassidy
Chairman Emeritus
Executive Editor
In our words
Transparency needed
in Manheim Township
THE ISSUE
In 2011, the Manheim Township school board told residents that the district
faced a $4 million-plus budget deficit. The board voted to cut spending on
programs, freeze teacher pay and raise property taxes. In fact, the district
ended that year with $3 million to spare (and without dipping into its
reserves). In every year since, as LNP reported last Sunday, the pattern
repeated itself: Officials project substantial deficits, raise taxes on property
owners, and hold off on restoring program and staffing cuts. As a result, the
school district more than tripled the $7 million it had in reserves in 2011; by
the end of 2015, it was holding on to $25 million one of the largest balances
among the 16 school districts in the county, records show.
Questionable cuts
In Manheim Township, art, music, library
and physical education instruction were
slashed in the elementary schools.
Teachers agreed to a two-year pay freeze.
And taxpayers were asked to pay more and
more for education that was, at the elementary
level especially, increasingly inadequate.
Parents agonized over the cuts to art, music,
library and physical education. They presented
research showing how crucial arts and music
instruction was to academic performance, and
how essential it was for youngsters to begin developing skills that would stay with them their
whole lives.
They beseeched the school board to restore
full-year instruction in art and music, and former Superintendent John Nodecker was listening to their pleas.
But not until this year, after Nodecker resigned, and all hell broke loose including a
community revolt against school board President Bill Murry did the administration move
to restore programs.
about how physical activity improves academic performance, and helps to keep childhood
obesity in check.
At the center
The bigger issue here, though, is transparency a word the school board seems to have
trouble grasping.
An audio recording obtained by LNP revealed
that the board had conspired to circumvent
the Sunshine Act, the states open-meetings
law. That led Lancaster County District Attorney Craig Stedman to launch an investigation
thats still ongoing.
And emails requested by LNP under the
Right-to-Know Law showed that a search firm
began working to find superintendent candidates to replace Nodecker before a public vote
was held to approve such a firm and even before any public discussion was held on whether
a firm ought to be hired (in the end, a different
firm won the job).
Not good.
Not good at all.
Dismissive attitude
This school board, presided over by Murry,
has betrayed the trust of its constituents.
It strikes us as cavalier to unnecessarily raise
the property taxes of homeowners, some of
whom were surely senior citizens and others
struggling to make ends meet.
And were wondering how Murry could look
parents square in the eye and still resolve to
short their kids, all the while socking away millions of dollars in the districts reserves.
Just how offhand was Murry about all of this?
In an email exchange between Murry and
Nodecker that was obtained by LNP, the school
board president stated he was OK with raising
taxes for this current budget year despite an
unheralded surplus and a few million fudged
into the budget.
Nodecker held his ground on a no-tax-increase budget and the board, including Murry,
acquiesced.
Stunningly, it was the first budget in 10 years
not to include a tax increase. And now, district
officials are warning of needing to raise taxes
yet again, to address a budget deficit of nearly
$1.7 million.
We understand that other school districts put
money away in reserves, but Manheim Township has done it while crying poor and raising
property taxes. We also understand why state
Auditor General Eugene DePasquale will conduct a special and extensive audit of Manheim
Townships financial practices.
Money shouldnt be fudged into school district budgets. The realities of those budgets
shouldnt be fudged, either, when taxpayers
are being asked for more of their hard-earned
money.
Someone, and we imagine it will be the auditor general and perhaps the district attorney, has to introduce the Manheim Township
school board to the concept and practice
of transparency.
LNP Editorial Board: Suzanne Cassidy; Barbara Hough Roda; Tom Murse, content editor;
Alex Geli, editorial writer; Mara Creswell McGrann and Stuart Wesbury, community members
CHARLES
KRAUTHAMMER
THE WASHINGTON POST
Trumpites. If we come
to Cleveland with a mere
plurality of delegates,
fairness demands that
our man be nominated.
This is nonsense. If
you cannot command or
cobble together a majority, you havent earned
the party leadership.
John Kasich makes
the opposite case. Hes
hanging on in case a
deadlocked convention eventually turns
to him, possessor of the
best polling numbers
against Clinton. After
all, didnt Lincoln come
to the 1860 convention
trailing?
Yes, and so what?
The post-1968 reforms
abolished the system
whereby governors,
bosses and other party
poo-bahs decided things.
In the modern era, to
reach down to the No.
3 candidate a distant
third who loses 55 of 56
contests or to parachute in a party unicorn
who never entered the
race in the first place
would be a radical affront
to the democratic spirit
of the contemporary
nominating process.
A parachute maneuver
might be legal, but it
would be perceived as
illegitimate and, coming
amid the most intense
anti-establishment
sentiment in memory,
imprudent to the point
of suicide.
Yet even without
this eventuality, party
suicide is a very real
possibility. The nominee
will be either Trump
or Cruz. How do they
reconcile in the end?
Its no longer business; its personal. Cruz
has essentially declared
that he couldnt support someone who did
what Trump did to Heidi
Cruz. He might try to
patch relations with
some Trump supporters is Chris Christies
soul still for sale? but
how many could he
peel away? Remember:
Wisconsin has just
demonstrated Trumps
unbreakable core.
And if Trump loses
out, a split is guaranteed.
In Trumps mind, he
is a winner. Always. If
he loses, it can only be
because he was cheated.
He constantly contends
that hes being treated
unfairly. He is certain to
declare any convention
process that leaves him
without the nomination
irredeemably unfair. No
need to go third party.
A simple walkout with
perhaps a thousand followers behind will doom
the party in November.
In a country where
only 25 percent feel
were on the right track
and where the leading
Democrat cannot shake
the challenge of a onceobscure dairy-state
socialist, youd think the
Republicans cannot lose.
Youd be underestimating how hard they
are trying.
OP-ED/LETTERS
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Transparency on
tax hikes needed
I have no children in the
Manheim Township School
District, but as a retired public school educator and Manheim Township resident and
taxpayer, I have been following the school districts situation closely.
I moved to Lancaster five
years ago from Delaware,
where school property tax increases must be approved by
a public referendum. While
that process is sometimes
challenging, perhaps if it were
the case here we would be
provided with more transparency.
Jake Zeigler
Manheim Township
LETTER POLICY
n LNP has established guidelines for submitting election-related
letters in advance of the April 26 primary. Any letter concerning
a candidate must be received no later than Tuesday, April 19; is
limited to 200 words; and will be published before Friday, April
22, barring an extraordinary circumstance.
Democrats have
pulled same tricks
Reading George Bergeys letter, Republicans must obey
Constitution, April 3, condemning Republicans about
the SCOTUS appointee, since,
over the past 200 years, this
procedure has been faithfully
followed by every administration and by Congress, I suppose he has obviously never
heard of the Biden Rule.
Bergey taught me something. I never knew Biden was
a Republican.
Jeff Kipp
West Earl Township
Bernie Sanders: A
hopeful candidate
I remember the 1960s. I remember those times when
a whole generation demonstrated for peace and the end
of the Vietnam War. When
young boys, putting their lives
at risk, boarded buses with
elderly black men and women to demonstrate for racial
equality. When women fought
for equal rights. Riots, demonstrations, sit-ins.
Op-ed paints an
inaccurate view
Capitalism made this country great.
However, Stuart Wesbury
(Look at both sides of the
coin involved in paying higher wages, Sunday LNP, March
13) thinks low-wage jobs are
filled by teenagers and senior
citizens wanting to pay for
weekend fun or to supplement retirement income.
He goes on to say very few
of lower-wage workers are
sole family supporters. Gee, I
Fitting musical
salute for GOP
Its too bad Lesley Gore isnt
around to sing, Its my party,
and Ill cry if I want to, cry if
I want to, cry if I want to. You
would cry too if it happened to
you at the Republican Convention!
Ed Diller
West Lampeter Township
E3
In politics, all
sides are dark
From your March 15 headline Dark side of politics, one
might be tempted to infer that
you are actually so deluded as
to believe (or so propagandaoriented as try to have your
readers believe) that there is
really such a thing as a notdark side of politics. Surely
you did not intend to imply
so patently absurd and ridiculous a thing as that, did you?
James D. Lawrence
Mount Joy
LESLIE GATES
SPECIAL TO LNP
Department of Education.
Because the right
of parents to simply
refuse the test is lesser
known (likely because of
Pennsylvanias provision for parents to opt
out for religious reasons in the state school
code), districts may not
be aware of this option
or prepared to respond
to these requests.
However, the districts
unfamiliarity with this
process does not excuse
them from accepting
your refusal and excusing your child from the
test.
The schools testing
coordinator is required
to code the test as do
not score, regardless of
whether the students
parents opted him or her
out of the test for religious reasons or based
on their 14th Amendment rights. The student
does not receive a zero,
as is sometimes believed.
Instead, the test is not
scored at all and does not
affect the scores for the
school.
E4
PERSPECTIVE
Cutler
MATT MYLIN
MATTERS OF FAITH
Scripture must
penetrate heart to build
firm foundation for life
Continued from E1
of corruption in other
countries. And corruption is one of the main
drivers of instability and
terrorism around the
world, including the rise
of groups such as Islamic
State.
Corruption is a
radicalizer because it destroys faith in legitimate
authority, Secretary of
State John F. Kerry said
in a speech earlier this
year. No one knows
that better than violent
extremist groups, who
regularly use corruption
as a recruitment tool.
Corruption also robs
poorer countries of
money for economic
development. One respected research group,
Global Financial Integrity, estimates that corruption costs developing
countries at least $1.1
trillion a year more
than all the foreign aid
and direct investment
they receive from the
rest of the world.
Theres no easy fix.
Nobodys suggesting
that corruption can be
eliminated. But there
are at least two things
the United States can
do to make it harder
for foreign investors to
evade taxes or conceal
the proceeds from corruption.
Wesbury
Continued from E1
Wide open
It is important to
understand that if no
candidate receives the
vote of 50 percent plus
one of the delegates, the
election process is wide
open. No candidate is
assured of continued
support of his or her
initial delegates. (State
rules vary, but most
delegates are released
from their commitment
after the first ballot.)
At this point, delegates are free to vote
for any candidate, and
electioneering and
negotiations take place.
Delegates originally
committed to a specific
candidate may now vote
for any candidate. In
essence, the number
of a candidates initially dedicated voters
becomes irrelevant. The
voting process simply
starts all over again,
from a point of zero
votes for any and all
candidates.
It is also important
to note that convention rules govern who
is able to be a candidate
in an open/brokered
convention. These rules
can be and frequently
are changed for different circumstances.
For example, in 2016,
rules could be enacted
to allow all current
Republican presidential
candidates to run: Ted
Cruz, John Kasich and
Donald Trump.
ENVISIONING
CONVENTION
Envisioning A
a CONTESTED
contested convention
Julys Republican convention in Cleveland could become a contested affair for the first time in
decades if no candidate can garner a majority of delegates to secure the nomination.
First ballot
Second ballot
Repeat as needed
Republicans convene
without any
candidate
having at
least 1,237
delegates (half
of the 2,472 total delegates
plus one).
Convention delegates
come in two types:
Bound, or obligated to
vote according to their
state primary or caucus
results; and
Unbound, or able to vote
their personal preference
regardless of who won
their state.
KASIC
H
McManus
TRUMP
munity Foundation is to
champion this extraordinary community. To
do our work and best
serve our community,
we need to hear from
people across Lancaster
County. The themes and
topics we collect will
help inform where we go
next.
We are working with
CRUZ
Every time our family goes to the beach for vacation, we love to build some kind of sand sculpture. Maybe its a castle or some unidentifiable
creation, but nonetheless, its a labor of love, and
we usually post a picture of it on Instagram.
Without fail, however, we build too close to the
tide. Eventually a big wave comes sailing over our
work of art, washing it back to a smooth, sandy
beach. Although theres always a sense of disappointment, I realize the power of the waves is
always stronger than the foundation of our sand
structure.
The foundation is the most important part of
any building. It doesnt need to be beautiful, but
the strongest material is critical to holding secure
the weight of the structure. Without a solid
foundation, a building is susceptible to any wave
or storm that may come and if strong enough
cause it to collapse.
Similarly, our lives must be built on a solid
foundation, because the storms of life will most
definitely come. But how do we build a solid foundation in our lives?
In Luke, chapter 6, Jesus describes what its like
when a person comes to him, listens to his teaching, and then follows it. He continues by saying
that the person is like one who builds a house,
digs deep, and lays the foundation on solid rock.
When the flood waters rise and break against that
house, it stands firm because it is well built. We
can learn so much from this word picture.
One of my favorite parts of being a pastor is
helping people discover what it means to be a
follower of Jesus. Its more than just believing in
God. Being a true disciple of Jesus requires surrendering our lives and our desires and choosing
to follow his teachings. Being faithful to his teachings will lead us to truth, and the truth is what
sets us free.
When we choose this path of coming to Jesus
listening to his word and then following it he
promises that our lives will be built on solid rock.
This is important because we know that life can
throw us curve balls. It can sting when we face
disappointments or hardships. Although it may
hurt, we wont break.
The Book of Proverbs was written hundreds
of years before Jesus walked the earth, giving us
similar wise advice. Listen carefully to my words.
Dont lose sight of them. Let them penetrate
deep into your heart, for they bring life to those
who find them, and healing to their whole body
(Proverbs 4:20-22). In other words, listening to
the word of God and reading the word of God will
deposit these truths of the Scripture deep into
our hearts.
Why is it so important to let the Scripture penetrate our hearts? Because our heart is our foundation. All of life flows out of our heart. Proverbs
4:23 continues, Guard your heart above all else,
for it determines the course of your life.
Imagine the impact on our lives if we let the
words of the Scripture penetrate our hearts.
When we experience disappointments, we will
respond in love rather than in anger. When we
face difficulties like a wave crashing over our
hopes, we will experience peace rather than
worry. When we walk through a dark valley, well
be wrapped securely in his love instead of being
gripped by fear.
The depth of our foundation will hold us when
the wind and waves come. The sobering reality
is that either we have a foundation or we dont.
There is no middle ground. If we dont intentionally build our lives on the foundation of Scripture,
we wont have any foundation.
Jesus says that anyone who hears and doesnt
obey is like a person who builds a house without a
foundation. When the floods sweep down against
that house, it will collapse into a heap of ruins
(Luke 6:49).
Each of us has the opportunity to put this into
practice and experience the peace that comes
from a solid foundation that lasts for a lifetime.
Continued from E1
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Note: The
powerful Rules
Committee,
composed of
delegates from
each state, can
set the threshold for
victory, making it easier
or harder for a candidate
to win. Each convention
sets its own rules, and
changes must be
approved by a majority of
the convention.
93% bound
7% unbound delegates
Insiders candidates
who have made
inroads with state party
officials and built
loyalty among
delegates benefit
the most here, while
those without strong
state operations are at
a disadvantage.
73% unbound
27% bound
Important
considerations
If nominee selection
occurs in an open or
brokered convention, an
intelligent person would
expect that the delegates
would be influenced by a
number of factors. They
include:
The number of votes
each candidate won during the primaries.
The portion of the
state vote won.
How many crossover (non-Republican)
votes were cast for each
candidate.
Whether a candidates support came
from only a narrow
segment of the voting
population, with no support from other voter
segments.
The potential of the
candidate to transfer
delegates from another
candidate to himself or
herself.
Rule-makers could
allow someone who
won no states or a
member not even
running for president
to become the
nominee, though this is
considered unlikely.
80% unbound
20% bound
OPINION
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
E5
Sunday Conversation
JONAH GOLDBERG
SYNDICATED COLUMNIST
MARTIN SCHRAM
TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE
E6
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
generation
BY,
FOR
AND
ABOUT
TEENS
FRESH TAKES
Twitter:
@PromPics
n Do away with all your
Eleven seniors
from Lititz
Christian School
spent a week
at the Word
of Life Bible
Institute campus
in Toalmas, Hungary, and had the
chance to visit
a gypsy school
and the Hungarian Parliament
building.
ERIKA ECHTERNACH, 17, PHOTO
Strengthening bonds,
building new ones
ERIKA ECHTERNACH, 17
GNEXT@LNPNEWS.COM
10-SECOND
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MISS
CONGENIALITY
n must see | don't see | just rent
Sweeney Todd:
The Demon
Barber of Fleet
Street
n must see | don't see | just rent
THE LIST
READ
by Maggie Stiefvater
n If you're still going through
"The Hunger Games" withdrawal,
"The Scorpio Races" is exactly
the read you need. Most do not
survive the annual Scorpio Races,
but the reward almost makes the
risk worth it. Puck Connolly's dire
situation forces her to enter the
race though she has little training
and experience. Life continues to
throw curves Puck's way as she
begins working with the returning
champion, Sean Kendrick, and
the two fall in love. If they live
through race day, the results will
determine their futures.
Erika Echternach, 17
LISTEN
Celtic Thunder
n Although they share some
WATCH
Allegiant
in theaters
n The action scenes and script of
this movie make it successful. In
the film, Tris and Four escape the
factionless group to go beyond the
wall that encompasses Chicago.
They must leave their family and
make difficult choices in order to
find a peaceful solution for everyone.
With a battle impending, Tris and
Four struggle with the decision
on who to trust for survival. Tris
ultimately must make a life-changing
choice that tests her courage,
sacrifice and allegiance. People who
like the Divergent series will really
be fans of this sequel.
Sneha Mittal, 16
PUZZLES/BRIDGE
Bridge Results
nThe Friday Morning Duplicate Bridge
Puzzle No. 1
COLLECTION OF
SHADES
Puzzle No. 2
su l do l ku
@ Puzzles by Pappocorn
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For the solutions to the puzzles, please see next page.
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PUZZLES/HOROSCOPE
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
57 Increases, with to
ACROSS
1 ____-Town (sobriquet 59 No worries
in many a Kanye West 62 Look from Scrooge
song)
63 Sally
4 To Kill a Mockingbird 66 Tell
theme
68 Bubbling
10 Get heavily (into)
70 24-note tune
14 Distinctive Harry Potter 71 Quattros and TTs
feature
73 I had nothing to do
18 Overactors
with it
20 Hebrew for my Lord 75 Olympic sprinting
21 Period for reflection
champion Devers
and recharging
77
Oh, boo-hoo!
23 With 113-Across,
79
Overly ingratiating
heard but disregarded
81
Senior project
or a hint to
85
Some Ivy Leaguers
interpreting the Across
answers with circled 86 Would you consider
this suggestion?
letters
88 Nutritional figs.
25 Gallant type
90 Roman statesman
26 ____ Dei (prayer)
known as the
27 Baldwins 30 Rock
Censor
co-star
91 Given the signal
28 Clean-air org.
92 Label for a suit?
29 Mayan food staple
30 Browser navigation
93 Some Johnny Hart
aids
panels
31 Common query from 96 Not true?
one about to leave the 98 Outlaws
house
99 Out of control
35 The left, informally
100 Comment to the not36 Meditate (on)
yet-convinced
37 Modern surgical aid 105 Mountain goat
38 Come-____
106 Politico with the
39 ____-surfing
autobiography An
40 Show wear
American Son
41 Arcade-game sound
107
The Engineers of the
43 Nicknames
N.C.A.A.
46 Indignant reply when
108
Disneylands Main
someone withholds
Street, ____
information
109
____ rima (meter
49 Contract part
of Dantes Divine
53 P.M. after and before
Comedy)
Churchill
54 Carson who won the 111 Former name for
Syracuse athletes
2001 T. S. Eliot Prize
113 See 23-Across
for Poetry
117 Rustic backyard
55 Come on be
plaything
daring
35 General of the
Resistance in The
Force Awakens
36 Doctrines
40 Awesome
41 Unlikely to be talked
out of
42 Sight seers
44 Makes dim, as the
42-Down
45 Fifth-century pope
who was the first to be
called the Great
47 One waiting in
Waiting for Godot
48 Sweaters, e.g.
50 Layer of the 42-Down
51 Slip (through)
52 Slips up
55 Duke Ellingtons All
____ Soon
56 Sacha Baron Cohen
persona
58 Aphorisms
60 El ____ Real
61 Symbols on old
manuscripts
63 Not for prudes
64 Energy field, of sorts
65 Tennyson work
67 Jabber
69 Post-menorah-lighting
treats
72 Branded
74 Impeccably
76 Rumor has it
78 Oscar ____, star of
Inside Llewyn Davis
80 Facilities often referred
to by their first letter
82 2010s California
Gurls or 1996s
Macarena
83 Goal of having no
unread emails
84 Lake Oahe locale:
Abbr.
86 Actress Blanchett
THURCC
Check out the new, free JUST JUMBLE app
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97 Loom
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99 Looks out for?
101 Dialogue
102 Calc figures
103 And I ____
104 Accustomed
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P E D E S T A L
APRIL 10, 2016
E L S
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B S F O R Y O U
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R E N E
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C N B C
K E R T O D A Y
I M P E D E R S
N A I L E D I T
NO. 0327
The Answers
ARIES
TAURUS
VIRGO
Pressure builds, as
GEMINI
LIBRA
Tonight: Togetherness.
CANCER
LEO
Emphasize
SCORPIO
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SAGITTARIUS
(Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
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CAPRICORN
(Dec. 22-Jan. 19))
Honor what is
AQUARIUS
(Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
You could be
PISCES
Puzzle No. 2
Puzzle No. 1
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BORN TODAY
Actor Omar Sharif (1932),
actor Steven Seagal (1952),
publisher Joseph Pulitzer
(1847)
Answer :
18
TULAWN
CKROTE
DUPLEX
WALNUT
CRUTCH
CURSOR ROCKET
INCOME
His memory of the huge auto
salvage yard he once owned
was a
SOURRC
PUXDEL
NO. 0403
1
WRECKCOLLECTION
MECNIO
JUMPING TO CONCLUSIONS
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
15 (16)
Next Week:
Recycling
Meet
the
Winners
Honor books
Mini Fact:
photo courtesy
Greenwillow Books
photo courtesy
Dial Books for
Young Readers
Resources
On the Web:
bit.ly/1TkRutl
gws.ala.org
At the library:
Sophie Blackall
Matt de la Pea
The Newbery
Medal, first
awarded in
1922, was the
worlds first
childrens
book award.
Try n Find
Mini Jokes
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Eco Note
One of the best sources
of renewable energy is
the sun. The wind is another energy
source that will last forever. To learn
more about energy sources and what
you can do, visit www.eia.gov/kids. Talk
about energy with your family, friends,
teachers and classmates.
What to do:
1. Make gelatin according to directions using 1 1/2 cups boiling water and 1/2 cup orange
juice for each package.
2. Pour gelatin into two 8-by-8-inch pans, one for each flavor. Refrigerate 4 hours or until
set. When gelatin is set, cut into squares in pan.
3. Layer ingredients equally in 4 dessert glasses in this order: lemon gelatin, 1/4 cup
whipped topping, grapes, orange gelatin, 1/4 cup whipped topping, sliced bananas.
Makes 4 desserts.
SER
QUI FREE
SS
BET
IN
LT
RAIS
PHA
FO
ZER
CO
ERA
IL
AL
RN
adapted with permission from The New 50 Simple Things Kids Can Do to Save the
Earth by The Earthworks Group, Andrews McMeel Publishing (andrewsmcmeel.com)
For later:
The Mini Page 2016 Universal Uclick
Youll need:
1 (0.3-ounce) package sugar-free
orange gelatin
1 (0.3-ounce) package sugar-free lemon
gelatin
1 cup orange juice
2016 Blue Ox Technologies Ltd. Download the app on Apple and Amazon devices.
Gelatin Parfait
Cooks Corner
Teachers:
For standards-based activities to
accompany this feature, visit:
bbs.amuniversal.com/teaching_guides.html