Académique Documents
Professionnel Documents
Culture Documents
TM
n $2.00 n LANCASTERONLINE.COM
POLICE LAWSUITS
STATE BUDGET
Protracted
stalemate
continues
EXCESSIVE
FORCE?
SAM JANESCH
SJANESCH@LNPNEWS.COM
ANTI-VIOLENCE VIGIL
Cooperation
key to make
the city safe
This Lancaster Safety Coalition video still, provided by Steve Widdowsons lawyer, shows city police arresting Widdowson in March 2014. Widdowson later sued police and the city claiming excessive force. The case was settled out of court
and Widdowson was paid $150,000.
GIL SMART
THE PAYOUTS
GSMART@LNPNEWS.COM
2.4m
Total payouts
from all Lancaster
County lawsuits
RELATED .
CONTENT
1.1m
Total payouts
in the City of
Lancaster alone
900k
Largest single
payout in a
settlement
YEARLY BREAKDOWN
$1,000,000
JEFF HAWKES
JHAWKES@LNPNEWS.COM
$957,000
800,000
600,000
$368,000
400,000
$395,500
$2,850
200,000 $0
0
Year 05 06 07 08 09 10
Number of
settlements
11
12
13
14
15
0 2 4 3 3 3 3 1 3 5 3
VIGIL, page A6
POLITICS
ALSO INSIDE
INDEX
CLASSIFIEDS........... CL1
LIVING......................... B1
LOTTERY................... A2
MONEY........................ D1
NATION & WORLD...A17
OBITUARIES...........A20
PERSPECTIVE............E1
DONORS, page A4
REAL ESTATE..........RE1
SPORTS....................... C1
TRAVEL.....................B10
TV WEEK..................TV1
68 45 H
TODAY'S WEATHER
A2
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
PENNSYLVANIA LOTTERY n
SUNDAY,
OCT. 4
MONDAY,
OCT. 5
Here are the winning Pennsylvania and Powerball lottery numbers for the week starting Oct. 4
TUESDAY,
OCT. 6
WEDNESDAY,
OCT. 7
THURSDAY,
OCT. 8
FRIDAY,
OCT. 9
SATURDAY,
OCT. 10
DAY PICK 2
1-7
3-7
6-5
5-5
9-6
8-5
8-2
DAY PICK 3
5-8-7
8-9-1
2-8-3
2-0-3
1-6-0
2-4-1
5-4-8
DAY PICK 4
3-2-3-4
8-5-9-2
5-7-1-6
5-6-6-1
0-7-7-8
4-1-5-1
2-3-5-4
DAY PICK 5
6-4-7-6-0
1-5-0-5-9
5-6-5-9-7
6-2-0-9-1
2-0-6-2-5
4-6-7-5-5
3-3-2-9-7
20-24-25-27-30
02-03-13-26-28
01-07-12-15-21
02-16-18-22-27
05-13-16-24-25
01-02-04-09-22
06-09-25-26-29
TREASURE HUNT
NIGHT PICK 2
5-7
1-9
4-3
1-4
5-3
2-9
9-6
NIGHT PICK 3
9-9-2
7-8-8
9-6-7
4-2-8
2-7-8
5-4-1
1-7-1
NIGHT PICK 4
9-0-0-7
3-1-8-8
0-8-7-8
5-1-7-1
9-8-2-9
4-9-4-1
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NIGHT PICK 5
2-8-6-1-2
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4-5-6-8-8
8-8-8-5-5
7-6-4-8-0
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6-5-8-0-7
13-24-28-33-40
11-27-29-32-40
08-12-17-20-35
05-08-25-31-35
14-17-30-36-42
19-21-33-35-36
01-04-08-32-36
17-58-63-64-66
MEGABALL: 13
MEGAPLIER: 3
18-30-40-48-52
POWERBALL: 09
POWERPLAY: 3
08-09-21-63-75
MEGABALL: 14
MEGAPLIER: 4
12-27-29-43-68
POWERBALL: 01
POWERPLAY: 2
CASH 5
09-14-16-29-33-34
MATCH 6
CASH4LIFE:
08-20-34-41-43
CASH BALL: 03
CASH4LIFE
POWERBALL &
MEGA MILLIONS
04-15-21-23-39-49
CASH4LIFE:
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CASH BALL: 02
CONTACT US
General info: 291-8811, P.O. Box
1328, Lancaster, PA 17608
Newsroom: Tips, stories and
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CORRECTIONS
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THE
METHOD
Nikon D700
camera with a
70-200mm lens
at 120mm, 1/250,
f/3.2 in ISO 1600.
Shot in color
and converted
to black and
white in Adobe
Photoshop.
To learn more
about the
classes at
Deaf & Hard of
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bit.ly/LNPDHHS
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LOCAL
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Catching up
on the news
ANOTHER
SHOOTING
CRIME
COMMUNITY
TOM KNAPP
TKNAPP@LNPNEWS.COM
BUDGET IMPASSE
n Gov. Tom Wolf put a
PEACE DISRUPTED
n No one appeared to
VIOLENCE ON
CAMPUS
n Two unrelated shootings
at universities in Arizona
and Texas on Friday left
two students dead and
four injured, continuing a
skein of campus violence
following last weeks
rampage at an Oregon
community college that
killed nine. The shooter
in the Texas Southern
University slaying remains
at large. In the Northern
Arizona University attack,
an 18-year-old freshman
has been charged with
first-degree murder and is
in custody.
OPEN/CLOSED
COLUMBUS DAY
n City Hall: open
n County Courthouse:
closed
n State offices: closed
n Federal offices: closed
n RRTA: regular service
n State liquor stores:
most open (some with
alternate hours)
n Mail: no regular delivery
n Banks: some closed
n Schools: no classes
GOVERNMENT
CALENDAR
n Government Calendar,
Two teens
charged in
conspiracy
to rob taxis
HEALTHCARE
COSTS
A3
t was a day of music, dance and food with a Latin American flair Saturday as hundreds of people of all ages gathered in Lancasters Longs Park for the Festival Latinoamericano. The event was presented by the Latin American Alliance. Those attending watched salsa and Native American dancing and listened to musicians
including a steel drum group, a Colombian balladeer and an all-female mariachi band.
Clockwise from top: members of Nanticoke Lenni-Lenape perform Native American
ceremonial dances as a crowd watches; a performer with a Puerto Rican music and
dance ensemble holds her skirt while dancing on stage; guests wait to order food at a
stand; children hold out their arms and twirl to the music. See more from Saturdays
Festival Latinoamericano in a photo gallery at LancasterOnline.
NONPROFIT
MWRIGHT@LNPNEWS.COM
on King in Lancaster
Saturday to help launch
the Yarra Lynn Hatfield
Foundation, members of
Hatfields inner circle expressed confidence shed
be glad good is being done
in her name.
With every fiber of my
being, Hatfields longtime friend Nikki Bethea
told the group, I refuse
to remember my friend
as a victim. There was
nothing that said victim
about her. Ever.
Yarra was fierce and
confident. She carried
herself with an unparalleled dignity. To my way
of thinking, to allow her
legacy to end at victim
would be an insult to the
life she led, Bethea added.
Bethea, the foundations creator, said once
money has been raised
for the nonprofit foun-
HOW TO HELP
n Learn more: bit.ly/YarraFoundation
n Donations: Yarra Lynn
Hatfield Foundation, P.O.
Box 1012, Lancaster, PA
17608-1012.
n Email: nikki@
ylhfoundation.org.
fall sale
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A4
FROM PAGE A1
entitlement programs.
While such measures
would help protect their
own wealth, the donors
describe their embrace
of them more broadly, as
the surest means of promoting economic growth
and preserving a system
that would allow others to
prosper, too.
Republican candidates
have struggled to improve their standing with
Hispanic voters, women
and African-Americans.
But as the campaign unfolds, Republicans are far
outpacing Democrats in
exploiting the world of
super PACs, which, unlike candidates own campaigns, can raise unlimited sums from any donor,
and which have amassed
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Small circles
Like most of the ultrawealthy, the new donor
elite is deeply private.
Very few of those contacted were willing to
speak about their contributions or their political
views. Many donations
were made from business
addresses or post office
boxes, or wound through
limited liability corporations or trusts, exploiting
the new avenues opened
up by Citizens United,
which gave corporate entities far more leeway to
spend money on behalf of
candidates. Some contributors, for reasons of privacy or tax planning, are not
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Roll Call
WASHINGTON
House
n To continue Benghazi
n Planned Parenthood
investigation: By a vote of
242 for and 184 against, the
House on Oct. 7 approved
a GOP measure (H Res
461) to establish a select
House committee to pursue
allegations that the Planned
Parenthood Federation of
America has engaged in
misconduct if not illegality
with its abortion practices
and supply of aborted fetal
tissue to medical researchers.
A yes vote was to establish
a committee to investigate
Planned Parenthood.
Voting yes: Meehan, Pitts
retroactively on Oct. 3.
A yes vote was to send the
bill to the Senate.
Voting yes: Meehan, Pitts
n Background checks
Senate
n Fiscal 2016 military
A5
to advance a House-passed
bill (HR 2028) that would
appropriate $35.4 billion
for energy, water and
nuclear-safety programs
in fiscal 2016. Democrats
objected to the bill in an
effort to force removal the
sequesters spending caps
from domestic programs,
just as the GOP majority
has lifted caps from 2016
defense spending. In part,
the bill provides $12.3 billion
for securing the U.S. nuclear
arsenal, $5.6 billion for
Army Corps of Engineers
public-works projects and
$5.1 billion for cleaning up
former nuclear-weapons
production sites.
A yes vote was to advance
the bill.
Voting yes: Toomey
Voting no: Casey
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A6
FROM PAGE A1
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Vigil: Shootings
when you see that kid tomorrow on your street
... say a word of encouragement, and expect a
return.
Later Saturday night,
Lamont
Alexander,
grieving the 2011 slaying of his stepson,
Brandon Lamar Seals,
joined about 40 carrying
candles and marching
through the southeast to
promote non-violence.
These rallies, vigils
and marches work, Alexander said, because
they change minds. We
affect the inner guide inside us.
With his stepsons slaying unsolved, Alexander
said he hopes people begin cooperating with law
enforcement.
Some think they can
take the law into their
own hands, he said. We
cannot allow that type
of mentality to resonate
Continued from A1
HEARING
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CONNECTIONS
David Martin speaks as Yvette Brown holds up a sign during a peace vigil in Penn Square in Lancaster on Saturday. Two peace vigils were held in response to the many
shootings and stabbings in the city and the suburbs.
Cooperate
with police
Earlier
Saturday,
Mayor Gray said shootings victimize the entire
community.
We feel less safe. We
feel less trusting of others, he said. We fall on
stereotypes about people of different ethnic
and racial backgrounds,
of different manners
of dress, and we do it
Connect with us
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We reserve the right to limit quantities. Not responsible for typographical or pictorial errors.
A8
FROM PAGE A1
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Continued from A1
Partisan divide
The governors failed
compromise plan represented a smaller increase
in taxes than he originally
proposed. It called for
increasing the personal
income tax from 3.07 to
3.57 percent, initiating a
severance tax on Marcellus Shale natural gas drillers and providing some
LUXURY
VINYL TILE
Emergency
funding
considered
Madonna said he
thinks crunch time
will come for schools in
November when they
will really start to feel
the pressure of withheld
state and federal funds.
In an effort to get funding to schools and social
service agencies, Republicans pushed a $11.2 billion stopgap spending bill
through the Legislature
ASSOCIATED PRESS
OPENING OCTOBER 20
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LNP | LANCASTER, PA
A9
NONPROFIT
Connect
with us
State budget
Continued from A8
Fast,
Affordable,
Convenient,
Easy
expectations.
While the impasse
continues in its fourth
month, and the real next
step in negotiations is
still unclear, some lawmakers, like Rep. Bryan
Cutler, R-Peach Bottom,
are getting frustrated.
Ive
been
somewhat frustrated that we
havent been able to find
a resolution yet, Cutler said. I completely
understand the frustration of the citizens of the
county.
LancasterOnline
OPEN HOUSE
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 17
10 A.M. - 4 P.M.
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CABBAGE &
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Cauliflower
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Tomatoes
Peppers - 3/$1.00
Eggplant - 2/$1.00
---- While Supplies Last ----
www.thecornwagon.com
Open Mon-Sat 8:00am;
Closed Sunday
www.masonicvillages.org
717-394-4242
LPOCARSONLINE.COM
Open for
everyone.
Masonic Villages
on Facebook
5K Run/Walk
&
for Kids
Saturday, October 31
Woodward Hill Cemetery
& Lancaster County Central Park
Proceeds benefit the Lancaster Family YMCA and Woodward Hill Cemetery
29
Fees
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lesser value
lb.
Maximum 4
10 lb. bags per shopper
Additional quantities 39 lb.
Frying Chicken
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Serving
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BUY 1
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Save $1.70 lb.
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Beef Bottom
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Rohrerstown
Lititz
Lancaster
FROM PAGE A1
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
31 settlements
since 2005
The case was one of
dozens across Lancaster
County over the past
10 years in which a police department paid to
settle claims of excessive
force. In all, the people
who have sued local police have been paid at
least $2.4 million, an
LNP analysis of court records found.
Since 2005, there have
been at least 31 suits
settled. Most of the suits
had been filed in federal
court, alleging the use of
excessive force. Settlements typically state
that the facts of a case
remain in dispute and
payment is not to be considered an admission of
liability.
Twenty-one of the settled cases involved city
police; another 10 involved police elsewhere
in the county. Police prevailed in several other
ANALYSIS
Your rings
dont fit
anymore?
Local lawsuits:
What we found
LNP inquiries yield facts and
figures on police settlements
GIL SMART
GSMART@LNPNEWS.COM
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LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Lawsuits: Police
Continued from A10
Six-figure
city cases
The
second-largest
payout over the past decade was a $350,000 settlement between Lancaster city and four men
who claimed city officers
including Corll used
excessive force to break
up an off-campus party
near Franklin & Marshall College in 2004.
One plaintiff in that
case, Joshua E. Karoly,
said in his lawsuit he was
tackled by police who
then stomped his face
into the ground several
Settlements
Continued from A10
times. He claimed he
was punched, kicked and
then denied medical attention while coughing
up blood. He required
surgery for his injuries,
he claimed in the federal
lawsuit.
Several phone and
email messages left for
Karoly were not answered.
The third-largest payout was a $200,000 set-
A11
NOW
THROUGH
10/23/15
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LANCASTER OFFICE
1697 Oregon Pike
Lancaster, PA 17601
(717) 945-6938
CAMP HILL/
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836 Market St. (Rear)
Lemoyne, PA 17043
HERSHEY OFFICE
1128 Cocoa Avenue
Hershey, PA 17033
(717) 533-7000
Sean Mark
3 years in a row!
A12
Lawsuits: Police
Continued from A11
Taking care
of the problem
Large settlements are
usually paid by a municipalitys insurer, but
Lancasters
business
administrator, Patrick
Hopkins, noted the city
has a $25,000 deductible
per lawsuit.
The cost of the citys
liability insurance has
risen slightly, accord-
tional violations.
Citing previous lawsuits against the same officer is one way lawyers
would try to prove that,
said Yoder, a partner
with the firm of Gibbel
Kraybill & Hess.
If you have one officer
that tends to rough people up, that puts municipalities in a quandary,
he said. In a lawsuit you
can say, You guys were
on notice. He did this
before. You may have
disciplined him, but you
should have fired him.
Its a tough situation
for a municipality, Yoder said. But they have
an obligation to take care
of the problem.
Hard to fire
problem officers?
But some law enforcement experts say its virtually impossible to get
rid of problem officers.
The difficulty of firing
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
SENTENCED
TOM KNAPP
TKNAPP@LNPNEWS.COM
A 29-year-old man
will serve up to seven
years in state prison for
keeping a large collection of child pornography at his Mount Joy
home.
Eugene R. Hess III,
of East Donegal Street,
was sentenced to a 1.5to 7-year prison term
and will be required
to register under Megans Law, according
to a statement issued
Thursday by the Lancaster County District
2760 Old Philadelphia Pike, Bird-in-Hand Bird-in-Hand.com Call-ahead Seating (717) 768-1550
Attorneys office.
Hess pleaded guilty to
several felony counts after police in November
2014 found more than
500 images depicting
child pornography
mostly preteens on a
computer and cellphone
at his home, the DAs office said.
Connect
with us
Eugene R.
Hess III
BRIAN CALABRESE, DO
MELANIE RICE, CRNP
NAJAMUZ ZAMAN, MD
He was sentenced
Wednesday by Lancaster
County President Judge
Dennis Reinaker.
Hess also faces additional charges after police said he was found to
have digital files depicting child pornography
on a memory stick used
with a Sony PlayStation.
Police said he downloaded and shared videos and images of child
porn at a home in the
200 block of Marietta
Avenue, according to
newspaper records.
LancasterOnline
GOT INS?
K
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Pick Your Own!
1.25
25-MONTH CD
717-872-1554
www.countrybarnmarket.com
%*APY
unioncommunit ybank.com
Visit one of our conveniently located Branch Offices to experience our friendly service.
Centerville 301 Centerville Road, Lancaster, 717-735-3871
Columbia 921 Lancaster Avenue, Columbia, 717-684-6872
Columbia 10 South 18th Street, Columbia, 717-684-5619
Elizabethtown 1275 South Market Street, Elizabethtown, 717-367-9652
Ephrata 1759 West Main Street, Ephrata, 717-733-9930
Hempfield 190 Stony Battery Road, Landisville, 717-898-3531
Lancaster 38 East Roseville Road, Lancaster, 717-581-0948
*Minimum deposit of $500.00. The interest rate will be in effect for 25 months. Penalty for early withdrawal. APY (Annual Percentage Yield) is accurate as of date of publication and is subject to
change without notice. Not available as a municipal certificate of deposit. Member FDIC.
66
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2029520
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Extra Large
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$ 49
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Fresh Veal Cutlets
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2031210
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GREAT PRICES
EVERY DAY
Gevalia or
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buy 1, get 1
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$ 99
Progresso Vegetable
Classics Soup
3/$10
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88
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Barilla Pasta
88
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or Rising Crust Pizza
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ue
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2028222
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or Roast
$ 99
/lb.
Meatballs
2028374
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/lb.
Fresh
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$ 49
/lb.
Fresh Anjou, Bartlett or
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2028920
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All these great advertised prices are available when you use your BONUSCARD! Some items not available in all stores. All minimum spend requirements must be met after all discounts and coupons have been subtracted from order.
LOCAL
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
COURTS
Plaintiffs: Douglas R.
Hiltner, Christopher M.
White, Joshua E. Karoly
and Matthew J. Arrow
Department:
Lancaster City
Settlement
date:
2008
Amount: $350,000
Allegations:
Plaintiffs claimed they were
subjected to excessive
force and police brutality while being arrested
following the raid of a
party near Franklin &
Marshall College.
Plaintiff:
Ramona
Silva
Department:
Lancaster City
Fernanda
in Black, Grey, or Red
Plaintiff:
Gregory
Bush
Department:
Lancaster City
Settlement
date:
2009
Amount: $82,000
Allegations: Bush refused to allow police to
take his picture and alleged that officers forcibly smashed his face into
a concrete driveway, and
that he required hospital
treatment as a result.
www.rbshap.com
Cfor the
ARE
Caregiver
Event
Join us
Tues., October 27
Time: 6:00 p.m.
Wolfe Auditorium,
Brethren Village
Regular Sticky Walnut Sticky
Cinnamon Buns
BUY 2 GET 1
FREE
Plaintiff:
Elisaura
Sands-Reyes
Department:
Lancaster City
Settlement date: 2011
Amount: $70,000
Allegations: Claimed
excessive force after
police threw her to the
ground face-first, causing her to break a tooth;
said she was incarcerated for nearly a month
Brethren Village
All day
Dansko
Comfort
Plaintiff:
Franklin
Vega
Department: Columbia
Settlement
date:
2010
Amount: $70,000
Allegations: Claimed
illegal arrest and use of
excessive force after he
was shocked with a stun
gun through an open
window after refusing to
come outside or let police into his residence.
Plaintiff:
Ashley
Young
Department:
Lancaster City
Settlement date: 2013
Amount: $55,000
Allegations: No information available
Plaintiff: Stuart V.
Judd
Department:
Lancaster City
Settlement date: 2011
Amount: $50,000
Allegations:
Judd
claimed unlawful arrest
and incarceration after
he was arrested for suspicion of bank robbery
and spent 34 days in jail
before the charges were
withdrawn at a preliminary hearing.
717.413.9229
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Many places offer digital mammograms, but only Lancaster General Health
offers the expertise and convenience you deserve. Schedule a same or nextday appointment and have your mammogram read by a board-certified
radiologist who specializes in breast imaging. And, with MyLGHealth, some
results may be viewed online in just a few hours.
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Willow Lakes Outpatient Center
Lancaster General Health Center Parkesburg
Lancaster General Health Center Lebanon
(Opening in November)
Denture Relines
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N OW I S W H E N
TOO GOOD
TO BE TRU E
B ECOM E S
TRUE
Starting at
monthly plan
premiums
Lancaster
Homewood Suites
200 Granite Run Dr.
10/15, 11/19, 10:00 a.m. & 1:00 p.m.
East Petersburg
Financial Network Agency
2013 State St.
10/17, 10/24 & 11/7, 9:30 a.m.
Manheim
Hampton Inn
2301 Strickler Rd.
10/20, 11/4, 10:00 a.m.
Lancaster
DoubleTree by Hilton
2400 Willow St.
10/21, 11/10, 10:00 a.m.
Ephrata
Ephrata Public Library
550 S Reading Rd.
10/27, 11/10, 10:00 a.m.
Aetna Medicare is a PDP, HMO, PPO plan with a Medicare contract. Our SNPs also have contracts with State Medicaid
programs. Enrollment in our plans depends on contract renewal. See Evidence of Coverage for a complete description
of benefits, exclusions, limitations and conditions of coverage. Plan features and availability may vary by location.
There is no obligation to enroll. This information is not a complete description of benefits. Contact the plan for more
information. Limitations, copayments, and restrictions may apply. Benefits, formulary, pharmacy network, provider
network, premium and/or copayments/coinsurance may change on January 1 of each year. You must continue to pay
your Medicare Part B premium. A salesperson will be present with information and applications. For accommodation
of persons with special needs at sales meetings, call 1-877-385-2831 (TTY 711). Cost sharing for members who get
Extra Help is the same at preferred and network pharmacies. Other pharmacies/physicians/providers are available
in our network. The Formulary, pharmacy network, and/or provider network may change at any time. You will receive
notice when necessary. Other Providers are available in our network. The Part B premium is covered for full-dual
members. All persons eligible for Medicare may receive a complimentary gift card with no enrollment obligation. Not
to exceed more than one gift card per person during annual election. Void outside of the United States and D.C. and
where prohibited. Cannot be replaced if lost, stolen, damaged or expired. Offer valid while supplies last.
Y0001_4002_5747_FINAL_7432 accepted 09/2015
MarketPulse
LA SEGURIDAD?
Greeces debt tragedy gave
Europe a bad reputation, but the
region may have actually been
getting safer for bond investors.
Few European companies are
defaulting on their debt as the
regions economy continues to
make slow progress. The
European default rate fell to 1.9
percent in September for
corporate debt, down from 2.1
percent in August, according to
Standard & Poors. Thats lower
than the U.S. default rate, which
rose in September to 2.5 percent,
its highest level since 2013.
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Money&Markets
Extra
+3.7%
week
+4.0%
-4.1%
MO
week
+2.0%
YTD
304.06
13.76
MON
TUES
19,000
122.10 138.46
WED
33.74
THUR
5,400
FRI
week
+2.8%
73.49
-32.91
42.79
19.64
19.68
MON
TUES
WED
THUR
FRI
4,600
INDEX
Dow Jones industrial average
4,200
Nasdaq composite
4,400
Close: 17,084.49
1-week change: 612.12 (3.7%)
18351.36 15370.33
+4.1%
-0.7%
week
MO
YTD
SMALL-CAP
+4.6%
+0.7%
week
-3.3%
MO
YTD
HIGH
LOW
17110.88
16502.10
17084.49
+612.12
+3.7
8281.80
7882.88
8253.16
+379.52
+4.8
10400.15
10035.86
10361.27
+387.71
+3.9
11254.87
9509.59
NYSE Comp.
5231.94
4116.60
Nasdaq Comp.
4841.38
4711.79
4830.47
+122.69
+2.6
2134.72
1820.66
S&P 500
2020.07
1954.33
2014.89
+63.53
+3.3
1551.28
1269.45
S&P MidCap
1444.76
1388.54
1442.46
+56.38
+4.1
Wilshire 5000
21205.74
20453.86
21157.55
+703.69
+3.4
Russell 2000
1168.75
1115.81
1165.35
+51.24
+4.6
1040.47
1.1%
-5.3
High-quality
U.S. bonds
Hedge
funds
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
t
s
t
t
t
t
t
t
-4.1
|97431 +3.3
-9.7
|9875 +4.6
-4.4
|732 +0.7
+2.0
|9999961 +13.0
-2.1
|99654321 +5.7
-0.7
|99996432 +10.6
-2.4
|997521 +5.9
-3.3
|99996432 +10.6
$60
50
2014
2015
Price change
SCTY
YTD
1-YR
2-YR^
Estimates
2,000
TICKER
American Funds
AmBalA m
CapIncBuA m
CpWldGrIA m
FnInvA m
GrthAmA m
IncAmerA m
InvCoAmA m
WAMutInvA m
Income
IntlStk
Stock
Contra
500IdxAdvtg
IncomeA m
IntlInstl
TotRetBdI
TotRetIs
GrowStk
500Adml
HltCrAdml
InstIdxI
InstPlus
IntlStkIdxIPls
MuIntAdml
TotBdAdml
TotIntl
TotStIAdm
TotStIIns
TotStIdx
WelltnAdm
ABALX
24.39
CAIBX
57.44
CWGIX 45.14
ANCFX 51.34
AGTHX 43.70
AMECX 20.67
AIVSX
35.88
AWSHX 39.59
DODIX
13.46
DODFX 40.00
DODGX 170.99
FCNTX 100.57
FUSVX 71.06
FKINX
2.21
HAINX
64.79
MWTIX 10.84
PTTRX
10.53
PRGFX 55.43
VFIAX 186.00
VGHAX 91.78
VINIX
184.19
VIIIX
184.20
VTPSX
101.49
VWIUX
14.18
VBTLX
10.77
VGTSX 15.17
VTSAX
50.52
VITSX
50.53
VTSMX 50.50
VWENX 66.04
Fidelity
Fidelity Spartan
FrankTemp-Franklin
Harbor
Metropolitan West
PIMCO
T Rowe Price
Vanguard
* - annualized
NAV
10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20
$CHG ---------- PERCENT RETURN ---------1WK 1WK 1MO 1YR RANK 5YRS* RANK
+0.51
+1.85
+1.75
+1.67
+1.12
+0.62
+1.42
+1.40
+0.04
+2.20
+6.13
+1.77
+2.28
+0.10
+3.21
-0.03
...
+1.00
+5.94
-0.80
+5.89
+5.89
+4.80
-0.02
-0.05
+0.71
+1.66
+1.67
+1.66
+1.49
European stocks
4.3
1,003
5.5
994
4.7
991
1.8
990
4.3
975
6.0
966
2.7
High-yield bonds
Asian stocks
Small-cap stocks
Gold
Utilities stocks
Oil
Emerging-market stocks
Copper
+2.1
+3.3
+4.0
+3.4
+2.6
+3.1
+4.1
+3.7
+0.3
+5.8
+3.7
+1.8
+3.3
+4.7
+5.2
-0.2
...
+1.8
+3.3
-0.9
+3.3
+3.3
+5.0
-0.1
-0.4
+4.9
+3.4
+3.4
+3.4
+2.3
$500
957
2.8
928
10.5
909
6.4
829
1.7
$1,000
COMPANY
Aoxing Pharmaceut
AXN
1.66 +10.7
-2.4
EGLE
6.03
+5.6
-9.5
Eagle Pharmaceutical
EGRX
68.06
-8.3
-19.7
CRHM
3.12
-1.3
-17.7
Anacor Pharma
ANAC
115.06
-10.2
-18.5
Voltari Corp
VLTC
6.92
+0.7
-15.8
Ziopharm Oncology
ZIOP
10.92 +11.4
+2.8
ContraVir Pharma
CTRV
2.87 +36.0
-13.0
Gen Employment
JOB
5.95
-4.0
-5.6
InVivo Therapeutics
NVIV
8.81
+2.0
-16.4
Exelixis Inc
EXEL
5.99
+1.3
+1.3
Anthera Pharma
ANTH
6.12
-2.7
-23.8
iRadimed Corp
IRMD
26.48
+2.8
+7.6
Advaxis Inc
ADXS
11.07
+1.3
-32.9
Heron Therapeutics
HRTX
25.72
-7.1
-32.2
REPH
11.43
-4.8
-32.3
Abiomed Inc
ABMD
83.63
-7.4
-12.5
EDAP TMS
EDAP
4.10
-4.9
-7.9
NHTC
35.55
+6.9
+30.2
IMH
18.18
+8.9
+8.0
%RTN
1YR
+720.7
+631.7
+437.0
+418.0
+374.5
+333.8
+319.0
+285.3
+282.5
+279.1
+277.4
+270.4
+269.8
+256.8
+254.4
+248.1
+245.5
+243.3
+223.5
+216.4
PE YLD
dd
...
...
...
dd
...
87
...
dd
...
dd
...
dd
...
dd
...
20
...
...
...
dd
...
dd
...
85
...
...
...
dd
...
dd
...
30
...
37
...
15
0.5
...
IndustryRankings
LocalFunds
FUND
1.9
1,003
1,000
FAMILY
1,006
3,000
-0.1
1,011
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 Oct. 8
AP
Oct. 8
$56.48
Price
rice
change
ange
4.5 %
$ 1,014
$0
4,000
S&P
500
1-week
... today is percent
worth change
Technology stocks
SolarCity (SCTY)
40
Commodities
S&P 500
Mixed forecast
The rooftop installer SolarCity said this month that it will
start making its own solar panels, ones able to produce
up to 40 percent more power than standard panels. That
should hearten investors who grew concerned after the
company bought a panel maker called Silevo last year
and announced it would build a giant manufacturing plant
in Buffalo.
The worries arose because SolarCity had previously
left the low-margin business of making panels to others,
typically manufacturers in China, and focused instead on
financing and installing systems. Sven Eenmaa, an
analyst at Stifel, says the level of efficiency makes it more
likely SolarCity will reach its target for reducing costs of
its systems by 2017, as production in Buffalo ramps up.
Thats key because a generous federal solar subsidy is
scheduled to fall by two-thirds at the end of 2016, making
home installations more costly. Eenmaa notes there is still
execution risk as SolarCity gets its plant online, but if it
achieves targets for efficiency and cost, there is plenty of
growth ahead.
Bonds
REITs
1296.00
YTD
1YR
CHG %CHG MO QTR%CHG %CHG
CLOSE
Stocks
Investment-grade bonds
7452.70
22537.15 19160.13
Close: 4,830.47
1-week change: 122.70 (2.6%)
9310.22
AT&T Inc
Air Products
Alcatel-Lucent
Alcoa Inc
Applied Indl Tch
Armstrong World Inds
Bco Santander SA
Bon Ton Store
CNH Indl NV
Campbell Soup
Carpenter Tech
Clarcor Inc
Costco Wholesale
Donegal A
Donnelley RR & Sons
Exelon Corp
Frontier Comm
Fulton Financial
GlaxoSmithKline PLC
Harley Davidson
Henry Schein Inc
Hershey Company
Intl Paper
Johnson & Johnson
Kellogg Co
Kroger Co
L-3 Communications
M&T Bank
+2.0%
Russell 2000
Derby
4,800
52-WEEK
HIGH
LOW
COMPANY
-2.1%
S&PYTD
400
$1,000
5,000
17,000
AP
MO
5,200
18,000
14,000
+3.3%
MID-CAP
StocksRecap
15,000
-1.4
+2.6%
MO
LARGE-CAP
S&P 500
Nasdaq
+0.2%
YTD
16,000
SMART STRUGGLES
The smart money is struggling too.
Hedge funds, which invest for
wealthy families, pension funds
and other big investors, fell in
September for the fourth straight
month, according to Hedge Fund
Research. These funds are
supposed to handle rocky markets
better than traditional stock and
bond funds because they use more
exotic strategies. Some hedge
funds try to take advantage of
small discrepancies in prices
around merger deals, for example.
Others buy bonds of companies in
bankruptcy. While hedge funds
have held up better than traditional
stock index funds this year, theyre
still down for the year as a group.
Dow industrials
+3.2
+4.7
+3.3
+1.9
+2.8
+2.3
+3.8
+6.7
+1.8
+8.4
+3.5
+1.9
+3.6
+3.8
+4.8
+3.9
-0.1
...
+3.3
-6.2
+2.5
+1.9
+2.3
+9.4
+3.9
+6.6
+3.3
-3.9
+2.0
...
+0.3
+1.6
+0.4
+1.5
+1.2 +14.1
+3.9
+6.7
-3.2 +15.7
+3.9
+6.7
+3.9
+6.7
+4.1
-1.5
+1.0
+2.1
+0.5
+1.8
+4.0
-1.6
+3.4
+7.0
+3.4
+7.0
+3.4
+6.9
+3.0
+4.1
1
1
4
2
3
4
4
2
5
5
4
2
2
5
4
2
2
1
2
2
2
2
4
2
2
4
2
2
2
2
+10.5
+7.2
+7.9
+12.3
+13.1
+8.9
+12.1
+13.0
+3.6
+5.0
+13.7
+13.8
+13.9
+6.7
+4.2
+4.6
+3.2
+15.8
+13.9
+20.8
+13.9
+14.0
NA
+3.7
+2.9
+2.8
+13.9
+13.9
+13.8
+9.8
1
1
3
3
3
2
3
1
2
2
1
2
1
1
3
1
3
1
1
2
1
1
2
4
5
1
1
2
1
RATING
HHHHI
HHHII
HHHII
HHIII
HHHII
HHHII
HHIII
HHHHI
HHHHI
HHHII
HHHHI
HHHHH
HHHHI
HHIII
HHHII
HHHHH
HHHHI
HHHHI
HHHHI
HHHHI
HHHHI
HHHHI
HHIII
HHHHI
HHHII
HHHII
HHHHI
HHHHI
HHHHI
HHHHH
PERCENT CHANGE
1WK 1MO 1QTR
INDUSTRY
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
8.2
1.2
3.5
7.4
5.7
3.6
3.3
2.5
2.7
2.4
-0.2
10.1
6.5
5.5
4.3
3.9
2.9
2.3
1.7
1.5
-1.1
-4.3
-6.1
2.1
1.0
-8.7
-1.8
-0.2
-3.4
-1.7
-4.6
-5.4
-10.1
%RTN
1YR
9983| -18.4
((*#|753 2.4
((*#|975321 9.8
(^$#975321| -9.8
((*#|95421 8.1
((*#|965432 9.1
((*#|87531 6.1
((*#|998531 18.9
((*#|87421 5.8
(*$#@876531| -7.0
((*#|9731 9.3
2.4
IGLD +11.6
EGHT +5.9
VG
+3.4
ALSK +11.3
CNSL
+8.1
BCE
+2.5
HCOM +8.4
STRP
-1.0
TU
+2.0
GNCMA +8.4
CBB
+8.9
1.8
ORBC +17.2
RCI
+5.0
GSAT +13.1
SHEN +4.3
ATNI
+6.8
USM
+5.0
SPOK +5.7
IRDM +11.6
NTLS
+0.3
TMUS
-2.7
SBAC +4.6
-1.0
+22.7
+12.0
+8.8
+7.4
+7.0
+6.9
+4.8
+4.1
+4.0
+2.2
+1.5
-1.7
+15.1
+11.7
+10.5
+8.5
+5.8
+5.6
+3.9
+0.8
-0.1
-0.5
-0.8
-5.6
+75.2
+0.6
+22.8
+14.4
+1.1
+2.0
-10.1
+32.9
-5.0
-0.4
-5.3
-1.3
+1.2
+7.5
-6.9
+25.9
+14.9
+0.4
+2.4
-18.0
+92.8
+1.5
-5.5
*^@751| -8.1
*&^%#|531 +2.1
*&^%#|9764 +36.0
*&^%#|999765321 +88.7
*&^%#|99865421 +69.9
&^$#!832| -13.4
*&^%#|63 +3.6
&@!865| -17.6
*&^%#|9998764 +161.7
*&%#@!5431| -2.9
*&^%#|997 +57.6
*&%#54321| -3.1
*&^%#|7631 10.1
*&^%#|643 +4.4
*&^$@42| -1.0
*#@76431| -10.9
*&^%#|998765 +75.2
*&^%#|9851 +40.1
*&^%#|754321 +9.5
*&^%#|963 +29.2
87653| -24.4
&%$85421| -15.5
*&^%#|9764321 +36.7
*&^$#!321| -0.7
Local Stocks
52-WK RANGE
FRIDAY $CHG %CHG
%CHG %RTN RANK %RTN
TICKER LOW
HIGH CLOSE 1WK 1WK 1MO 1QTR YTD 1YR 1YR 5YRS* PE Yld COMPANY
T
30.97
APD 118.20
ALU
2.28
AA
7.97
AIT
37.09
AWI 44.00
SAN
5.11
BONT 2.89
CNHI 6.36
CPB 41.15
CRS 29.18
CLC 46.05
COST 117.03
DGICA 13.45
RRD 14.19
EXC 28.41
FTR
4.19
FULT 10.43
GSK 37.24
HOG 50.64
HSIC 109.34
HSY 82.41
IP
37.11
JNJ 81.79
K
58.83
KR
25.42
LLL 101.11
MTB 111.50
4
6
6
3
4
4
3
1
4
0
3
3
0
3
4
3
3
7
3
3
8
5
3
5
0
0
4
4
36.45
158.20
4.96
17.75
50.00
60.70
9.42
9.80
9.72
52.37
53.12
68.72
156.85
16.47
20.22
38.93
8.46
13.66
49.08
70.41
149.95
111.35
57.90
109.49
69.89
39.43
132.92
134.00
33.14
139.95
3.74
10.26
41.82
50.08
6.04
3.52
7.37
51.28
35.30
52.05
153.97
14.08
16.51
30.82
5.18
12.37
40.22
55.09
141.70
96.56
43.23
95.37
69.44
38.03
113.68
119.58
0.97
9.43
0.04
0.74
3.28
2.18
0.65
0.05
0.67
0.99
4.19
4.25
8.11
0.32
1.86
1.00
0.30
0.46
0.72
0.14
4.06
2.25
4.31
1.44
2.03
0.89
8.42
2.92
3.0
7.2
1.1
7.8
8.5
4.6
12.1
1.4
10.0
2.0
13.5
8.9
5.6
2.3
12.7
3.4
6.1
3.9
1.8
0.3
2.9
2.4
11.1
1.5
3.0
2.4
8.0
2.5
s
s
s
s
s
t
s
t
t
s
s
t
s
s
s
s
t
s
t
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
t
t -1.3 +1.0
s -3.0 +16.1
s 5.4 +45.5
t -35.0 32.6
s -8.3 4.6
t -2.0 3.4
t -27.5 26.6
t -52.5 54.4
t -8.6 0.3
s 16.5 +25.4
t -28.3 16.6
t -21.9 12.3
s 8.6 +25.0
t -11.9 5.1
t -1.8 +9.8
t -16.9 7.9
s -22.3 5.7
t 0.1 +17.5
t -5.9 4.7
t -16.4 1.9
t 4.1 +24.6
s -7.1 +5.7
t -19.3 4.6
t -8.8 3.7
s 6.1 +17.7
t 18.5 +44.3
t -9.9 +7.5
t -4.8 -+1.1
3
2
1
4
3
3
4
5
3
1
4
4
1
3
2
3
3
2
3
3
1
2
3
3
2
1
2
3
8.4
13.2
0.9
-3.4
8.0
11.9
-6.0
-18.8
...
9.9
1.4
6.8
21.7
4.4
3.8
-1.9
-1.9
7.9
4.7
13.3
19.0
16.7
17.7
11.3
9.4
30.0
12.9
11.7
33 5.7
28 2.3
... ...
16 1.2
15 2.6
37 ...
... 10.1
... 5.7
25 ...
23 2.4
24 2.0
18 1.7
29 1.0
14 3.8
12 6.3
11 4.0
... 8.1
15 2.9
... 6.2
15 2.3
26 ...
25 2.4
18 3.7
17 3.1
65 2.9
20 1.1
16 2.3
16 2.3
Merck & Co
Natl Penn Bcs
Nwst Bancshares Inc
PNC Financial
PPL Corp
Patterson Cos
Penn Natl Gaming
Penney JC Co Inc
Pfizer Inc
Rite Aid Corp
Sears Holdings Corp
Skyline Cp
Supervalu Inc
TE Connectivity Ltd
Tanger Factory
Tegna Inc
Tyson Foods
UGI Corp
Univrsl Corp
Urban Outfitters
Verizon Comm
WalMart Strs
Weis Mkts
Wells Fargo & Co
Windstream Hldgs
YRC Worldwide Inc
52-WK RANGE
FRIDAY $CHG %CHG
%CHG %RTN RANK %RTN
TICKER LOW
HIGH CLOSE 1WK 1WK 1MO 1QTR YTD 1YR 1YR 5YRS* PE Yld
MRK
NPBC
NWBI
PNC
PPL
PDCO
PENN
JCP
PFE
RAD
SHLD
SKY
SVU
TEL
SKT
TGNA
TSN
UGI
UVV
URBN
VZ
WMT
WMK
WFC
WIN
YRCW
45.69
9.17
11.52
76.69
29.18
39.28
10.50
5.90
27.51
4.42
19.08
2.17
6.75
51.03
30.30
20.75
37.02
31.54
38.30
27.89
38.06
61.50
38.61
46.44
4.42
11.90
3
8
9
6
5
6
9
0
7
4
3
2
2
5
5
5
0
5
7
2
5
2
4
5
2
4
63.62
12.80
13.30
100.52
38.14
53.07
20.23
10.09
36.46
9.47
48.25
4.30
12.00
73.73
40.80
33.40
46.04
39.74
58.89
47.25
51.73
90.97
51.91
58.77
17.10
25.40
50.95
12.00
13.05
89.82
33.03
46.77
18.80
9.79
33.24
6.28
25.61
2.50
7.58
61.80
34.85
26.20
46.33
35.42
51.74
31.22
44.16
66.69
43.07
52.14
6.61
16.39
0.81 1.6
0.15 1.3
0.20 1.6
1.66 1.9
-0.01 0.0
2.78 6.3
1.31 7.5
-0.13 -1.3
0.16 0.5
0.02 0.3
0.81 3.3
-0.25 -9.1
0.59 8.4
1.81 3.0
1.52 4.6
3.11 13.5
1.94 4.4
0.25 0.7
2.56 5.2
1.08 3.6
1.89 4.5
1.71 2.6
1.87 4.5
0.88 1.7
0.75 12.8
2.23 15.7
t
s
s
t
s
s
s
s
s
t
t
t
t
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
t
s
r
t
t
s
t -10.3 10.9
s 14.0 +31.6
s 4.2 +14.0
t -1.5 +10.6
s -2.0 +10.4
t -2.8 +15.8
s 36.9 +70.8
s 51.1 +28.1
t 6.7 +18.5
t -16.5 +27.1
s -22.3 -+3.2
t -38.3 31.7
t -21.9 13.3
t -2.3 +15.0
s -5.7 +6.0
t 2.6 +20.8
s 15.6 +14.0
t -6.7 +7.3
t 17.6 +28.4
t -11.1 12.6
t -5.6 5.2
t -22.3 11.8
t -9.9 +13.7
t -4.9 +4.8
s -48.7 38.5
s -27.1 5.3
4
1
2
2
2
2
1
1
2
1
3
4
4
2
2
1
2
2
1
4
3
4
2
2
5
3
10.0
15.8
8.2
13.0
9.4
11.7
21.3
-19.5
16.8
45.9
-12.2
-31.1
-6.5
17.3
10.0
22.0
26.0
15.0
9.1
-0.0
10.7
6.7
5.0
17.1
11.8
-59.6
15
16
18
12
11
21
...
...
24
24
...
...
10
13
34
6
14
25
17
18
18
14
20
13
...
71
3.5
3.7
4.3
2.3
4.6
1.9
...
...
3.4
...
...
...
...
2.1
3.3
2.1
0.9
2.6
4.0
...
5.1
2.9
2.8
2.9
9.1
...
Notes on data: Total returns, shown for periods 1-year or greater, include dividend income and change in market price. Three-year and five-year returns annualized. Ellipses indicate data not available. Price-earnings ratio unavailable for closed-end funds and companies with net losses over
prior four quarters. Rank classifies a stocks performance relative to all U.S.-listed shares, from top 20 percent (1) to bottom 20 percent (5).
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
A17
Nation&World
FOR THE LATEST UPDATES, GO TO LANCASTERONLINE.COM
In brief
AUSTIN, TEXAS
Officer recommends
no jail for Bergdahl
An Army officer is recommending
that Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl face a lowerlevel court martial and be spared the
possibility of jail time for leaving his
post in Afghanistan, his lawyer said
Saturday.
Defense attorney Eugene Fidell said
Lt. Col. Mark Visger has decided Bergdahls case should go to a military system similar to civilian courts that handle misdemeanor charges. It limits the
maximum punishment to reduction
of rank, a bad conduct discharge and a
short jail term, though that isnt being
sought, Fidell said.
HOUSTON
Texas shooting
victim identified
Houston police have identified the
student killed at Texas Southern Univeristy as 18-year-old Brent Randall, a
freshman who died Friday en route to
a hospital after being shot next to a student housing complex.
Another person was injured in Fridays shooting and hospitalized. It remains unclear whether that person is a
TSU student. Spokeswoman Jodi Silva
said two men were detained and police
are searching for a third person who
they believe was involved.
FLAGSTAFF, ARIZ.
Shooting victim
out of hospital
One of three Northern Arizona University fraternity members wounded
in a campus shooting had never met
the student suspected of opening fire
on the group, the victims mother said
Saturday while saying her son was out
of the hospital.
Nicholas Prato suffered a gunshot
wound to his neck in the early Friday
shooting but was released by the afternoon. Student Colin Brough was killed.
Two others, Kyle Zientek and Nicholas
Piring, remain hospitalized. Freshman
Steven Jones is charged with one count
of first-degree homicide and three
counts of aggravated assault.
HONOLULU
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Participants in a peace rally react as an explosion behind them Saturday in Ankara in an image made from video.
TURKEY
Police
shooting
justified
COLUMBUS,
Ohio
(AP) A white Cleveland police officer was
justified in fatally shooting a black 12-year-old
boy holding a pellet gun
moments after pulling
up beside him, according
to two outside reviews
conducted at the request
of the prosecutor investigating the death.
A retired FBI agent and
a Denver prosecutor both
found the rookie patrolman who shot Tamir Rice
exercised a reasonable
use of force because he
had reason to perceive
the boy described in
a 911 call as man waving
and pointing a gun as a
serious threat.
The reports were released Saturday night by
the Cuyahoga County
Prosecutors Office.
Lawyer Subodh Chandra said the Rice family
wants the officers held
accountable and the
reports add to the impression the prosecutors office has been on
a 12-month quest to
avoid it.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
A18
WORLD
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
BOKO HARAM
SYRIA
NDJAMENA, Chad
At least five suicide
bombers on Saturday
targeted a village in
Chad that is home to
thousands of Nigerians
who have fled Islamic
extremist violence, killing at least 36 people
and wounding about 50
others in what appeared
to be coordinated attacks, officials said.
Authorities blamed the
extremist Boko Haram
group from neighboring
Nigeria for staging the
attacks in the western
village of Baga Sola, ac-
INVESTIGATIONS
3.49 10
HOME EQUITY TERM LOAN
YEARS
% APR
FOR
KABUL, Afghanistan
(AP) Afghan President Ashraf Ghani has
appointed a team of investigators to look into
the circumstances leading to the Talibans brief
capture of the northern
city of Kunduz as well
Social Security
Disability & SSI
Tony Hopkins
Attorney
517-9637
unioncommunit ybank.com
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Ephrata 1759 West Main Street, Ephrata, 717-733-9930
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NATION
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
OREGON SHOOTING
A19
CAMPUS SHOOTINGS
LISA BAUMANN
ASSOCIATED PRESS
SEATTLE The
18-year-old college student singled out by the
shooter as the lucky
one to survive and deliver a package to law
enforcement has told his
story for the first time
about the massacre in
Roseburg, Oregon.
In a written statement
that was the most detailed account thus far
of the Oct. 1 shooting,
Mathew Downing said
Friday that when Christopher Harper-Mercer
entered the Umpqua
Community
College
classroom,
Downings
ears were ringing from
shots already fired, and
he thought what was happening couldnt be real.
He said the first thing
the shooter did was put his
backpack on the front desk
and pull out an envelope,
saying: There is a flash
drive in this and whoever
survives this should give it
to the police.
Downings account of
what came next coincides with relatives of
survivors who previously reported that HarperMercer looked at Downing and said, Hey kid
with the glasses, you are
the lucky one. I will not
shoot you if you give this
to the cops.
Downing said he stood
up then, and the shooter
pointed a gun at him.
This is the moment I
thought I was going to
die, Downing said.
Instead, the shooter
paused for a moment,
Downing said, and handed him the envelope.
Next, the shooter told
Downing to sit in the very
back seat and face him.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Karen Conley
Medicare and Health Insurance Agent
Adventure
Series
GET TO KNOW US! Your Local Agent Business Home Auto Life Health
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1979
36
YEARS 2015
3 Mi. E. of Lancaster
OPPORTUNITY KNOCKS:
MORTGAGE RATES AS LOW AS
3.375 3.315
%
INTEREST
RATE
%
APR1
7/1 ARM
Lancaster
APR = Annual Percentage Rate. Payment example: The initial payment on a 30-year $100,000 loan amount, 7/1 Adjustable-Rate Loan at 3.375% interest rate and 80%
loan-to-value (LTV) is $442.10 with $1,199 due at closing. The APR is 3.315%. Payment amount includes principal and interest; it does not include taxes and hazard insurance
premiums. The actual payment amount will be greater. The loan will adjust annually after the initial 7 years. The rate will be determined by adding a 2.25% margin to the one-year
LIBOR index in effect on the seven-year anniversary date. The loan will have a maximum adjustment of 5.00% on the first change date and a 2.00% maximum adjustment
annually thereafter. The maximum lifetime adjustment is 5.00%. Rate is variable and subject to increase after closing. Terms, conditions and fees are subject to change
without notice. All loans are subject to credit and property approval. This is not a commitment to lend. Interest Rate and APR are current as of 06/15/2015 but are subject to
change without notice.
NMLS #766529
York (East)
717.553.4976 717.430.0017
York (West)
717.430.0020
OBITS
A20 SUNDAY,
11, 2015
A20 SUNDAY,
OCTOBEROCTOBER
11, 2015
Deaths
Reported
Beiler, Bette Anne
82, of Boyertown.
October 8, 2015. The
Labs Funeral Home,
Inc., 610-273-3914
Davis, Paul R., Jr.
87, of Homestead Village, Lancaster, husband of Marguerite
Davis. October 8, 2015.
Buch Funeral Home,
Inc., 653-4371
Dunn, Evelyn M.
(Kachel)
87, of Lancaster. October 9, 2015. Andrew T.
Scheid Funeral Home,
397-8298
Eshleman,
James
Warren
92, husband of Linda
Eshleman, of Mount
Joy. October 7, 2015.
Sheetz Funeral Home
Inc., 653-5441
Getz, Ronald Lee
70, husband of Audrey
Smith Getz, of Florida.
September 18, 2015.
Elkin Funeral Service,
336-526-4460
Lin, Judy (Chu) P.Y.
86, of Lancaster. October 7, 2015. Charles F.
Snyder, Jr. Funeral
Home & Crematory,
560-5100
Mathews, Rita
94, of Luther Acres,
Lititz. September 27,
2015. Cremation Society of Pennsylvania
Inc., 800-720-8221
Miley, Jane B.
82, wife of Robert N.
Miley, of Lancaster.
October 6, 2015. Cremation Services of
Lancaster, 273-6283
Perez Santos, Harris
M.
20, of Lancaster. October 5, 2015. Andrew T.
Scheid Funeral Home,
397-8298
Rogers, Patricia A.
Brennan
79, wife of Leland C.
Rogers, of Hixson, TN.
October 5, 2015.
Hamilton
Funeral
Home & Cremation
Services, 423-531-3975
Rohrer,CharlesHager
86, husband of Sally
Rich Rohrer, of Lancaster. October 5, 2015.
The Groffs Family
Funeral & Cremation
Services,Inc.,394-5300
Scotten, Ricki Flynn
Husband of Annie
Scotten, of Brunnerville,Lititz.October
9, 2015.
Shirk,ShirleyM.
77, wife of Leon Shirk, of
East Earl. October 9,
2015.Groff-HighFuneralHome,354-0444
Smith, Donald L. Sr.
81, of Marietta. October 6, 2015. Clyde W.
Kraft Funeral Home,
Inc., 684-2370
Stapf , Wayne Eric
76, of South Market
Street, Elizabethville.
September 23, 2015.
Hoover-Boyer Funeral
Homes Inc., 362-8522
Stoltzfus, Marlin F.
3, son of Lena and
Chester Stoltzfus, of
Lykens Twp. October
9, 2015. James A. Reed
Funeral Home, 9917236
Wade, Vivian Mae
(Herman) *
70, wife of William
Wade, of Norwood.
October
9, 2015.
Charles F. Snyder, Jr.
Funeral Home & Crematory, 560-5100
Weiss,EdithW.
91, of New Holland.
October7,2015.Andrew
T. Scheid Funeral
Home,397-8298
* No Obituary appears
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Obituaries
Edith W.
We
eiss
Services
Today
Carpenter, M. Laverne
Conestoga
Valley
Church of Christ, 2045
Horseshoe Road, Lancaster, 5 PM. Spence
Funeral Services
Rita Mathews
April 15, 1921Sept. 27, 2015
OTHER OBITUARIES
ON PAGES A21, A22 & A23
Ronald
Lee Getz
Florida
Clawson-Jones,
Amanda Leigh
Buch Funeral Home,
21 Market Square,
Manheim, 1 PM
Peterman, Roy J.
Manheim Brethren in
Christ Church, 54
North Penryn Road,
Manheim, 4 PM. Buch
Funeral Home, Inc.
Sites, Sarah
First
United
Methodist Church,
corner of Duke and
Walnut Streets, Lancaster, 2:30 PM.
DeBord Snyder Funeral Home & Crematory
Warrick, Eugene S.
Silver Spring Baptist
Church, 4001 Marietta
Ave., Columbia, 6 PM.
ClydeW.KraftFuneral
Home, Inc.
IN LOVING MEMORY OF
DEE TRACY
10/11/1952 7/17/2011
Love always,
Your sisters
Patricia A. Brennan
Rogers, age 79, has this
date, October 05, 2015,
passed into
the Eternal
Kingdom of
our Lord.
Pat has finally been
relieved
from the
confused
world of
Alzheimers
for so much
long er than an yone
should have endured.
Pat has resided in
Hixson TN
N, since 1988.
She was born June 15,
1936 in Scranton, PA,
A
the daughter of Luc y
Ma y and Owen J.
Brennan.
Her elementary education began at the
Cathedral Chapel and
w as comple ted at
Technical High School
in Scranton, PA, graduating in 1954.
Pats adult adventure
began in 1955 when she
married Lee (Leland C.
Rogers) and they immediately moved to Idaho
Falls, Idaho where Lee
continued his Navy career and began his Navvyy
Nuclear career. They resided there for two
years, gaining a daughterr, Lecia Ann, in April of
1956. Then began a constant relocation, growing familyy, through the
fall
of
1957
at
Portsmouth NH/Kittery
Maine Naval Shipyard
until March 1959. A new
addition to the familyy,
Diane Jane, was born in
March of 1958, followed
by a temporary living
time in New London,
CT. The next two years,
from Aug 1959 to June
1961, at the Shipyard and
home in Pascagoula, MS,
continuing with moving
to San Diego, CA, Vaallejo,
CA for submarine ship
operations and maintenance from summer
1961 to Dec 1962 maintaining homes in those
areas. The next three
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Theodore J. Beck, Supervisor
More than a
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sharing a life.
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TM
OBITS
A21 SUNDAY,
LNP | LANCASTER,
PA OCTOBER 11, 2015
Obituaries
James Jim
Wa
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Eshleman
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Jane B. Miley
A21
Evelyn M.
(Kachel) Dunn
Evelyn M. (Kachel)
Dunn, 87, of Lancaster,
passed away
on Friday,
October
9, 2015 at
St. Annes
Retirement
Community. Born September 4,
1928, daughter of the
late Maurice and Emma
(Walters) Kachel. She
was married for 40 years
to the late L. James
Dunn, who passed away
in June 2007.
Evelyn graduated
from J.P. McCaskey
High School in 1946.
She worked at Hamilton
Watch Company as an
Assembler for 15 years.
Evelyn was a member
of Emmanuel Lutheran
Church, Lancaster and
the AMVETS -Post
19 Ladies Auxiliary,
Lancaster for many
years. She loved music,
dancing and playing
cards.
Evelyn is survived by
her 5 children, Barbara
L., wife of William Arms
of New Providence,
Michael J. Childs of GA,
Sheri L. Childs of GA,
Cathy L., wife of Norm
Lightner of York, Vicky
M., wife of Richard
Denlinger of Lancaster;
one sister, L. Edythe
Martin; along with 10
grandchildren and 10
great-grandchildren.
Evelyns Celebration
of Life Memorial
Service will be held at
the Andrew T. Scheid
Funeral Home Sullivan
Home 121 South Prince
Street, Lancaster, PA
17603 (on-site parking with attendants) on
Wednesday, October 14,
2015 at 2PM (Visitation
1-2PM), Pastor Kurt
S. Strause officiating.
Interment will follow in the Conestoga
Memorial Park. In lieu
of flowers, Memorial
Remembrances can
be made in Evelyns
memory
to
St
Annes Retirement
Community,
3952
Columbia
Ave,
Columbia, PA 17512,
Hospice & Community
Care, www.hospiceandcommunitycare.org, Emmanuel
Lutheran Church, 540
West Walnut Street,
Lancaster, PA 17603,
or PA Coalition Breast
Cancer, 2397 Quentin
Road, Suite B, Lebanon,
PA 17042.
To submit an online condolence, visit:
scheidfuneralhome.com
397-8298
(717) CREMA
AT
TE
OTHER OBITUARIES
ON PAGES A22 & A23
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OBITS
A22 SUNDAY,
11, 2015
A22 SUNDAY,
OCTOBEROCTOBER
11, 2015
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Obituaries
Shirley M.
Shirk
Shirley M. Shirk, 77
7,
of 1288 Sheep Hill Rd.,
Eas t Earl
died peacefully
at
Hospice &
Community
Care
with family at her side on Friday,
October 9. Her husband
of 59 years, Leon Shirk,
survives.
Born in Earl Twp.,
she was the daughter of
the late Lester Wallace
a
and Erma Buzzard.
Shirley work
worked
ed in
various factories for
most of her life. She enjoyed puzzles, bluegrass
music, her familyy, especially the grandchildren,
and the family pets.
She w as a mem ber of Rancks United
Methodist Church.
In addition to her
husband, she is sursur
vived by four children:
Terri married to Adam
Casta, Baltimore, MD;
Judy married to Reed
Profffiitt, Trudy wife of
the late Bill Boleyy, and
Rodneyy married to Mary
( Winegardner) Shirk, all
of New Holland; seven
grandchildren; six great
grandchildren (and
one on the way); two
great-great grandchildren; and a brother Bill
Buzzard, New Holland.
She was preceded in
death by a granddaughter, Joni Patterson and
two brothers, Russell
Wallace and Norman
Buzzard.
He r f u n e r a l w i l l b e
held on Weednesda y,
October 14, 2015 at 11
a.m. at Rancks United
M e thodis t Church,
700 Ranck Rd., New
Holland. A viewing
will be held on Tuesday
from 6 8 p.m. at the
Groff-High Funeral
Home, 145 W. Main St.,
New Holland and at the
church on Wednesda
e
y
from 10 11 a.m. If desired, memorials may
be sent to Hospice &
Community Care, P. O.
Box 4125, Lancaster,
PA 17604-4125. Online
condolences ma y be
posted at www.groffeckenroth.com
Judy (Chu)
P.Y. Lin
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Bette Anne
Beiler
Marlin F.
Stoltzfus
Marlin F. Stoltzfus, 3,
of Lykens Twp., passed
away on October 9, 2015,
at the Hershey Medical
Center, Hershey.
He was born in
Lewisburg on October 6,
2012, a son of Lena and
Chester Stoltzfus.
Marlin is survived
by six brothers, Alvin,
M a t t h e w,
David,
Mervin, Raymond,
Michael Stoltzfus;
three sisters, Suzann,
Roseanna, Sadie Ruth
Stoltzfus; maternal
grandparents, David &
Suie Smucker; paternal
grandparents, Christian
& Amanda Stoltzfus.
He was preceded in
death by his paternal
grandmother, Lavina
Stoltzfus.
Funeral Ceremony
will be held on Monday,
October 12, 2015, at
9:00am EST, at his
residence.Interment
will take place in the
Fishers Lykens Valley
Cemetery.
James A. Reed
Funeral Home, Pillow is
in charge of the arrangements.
www.reedfh.com
OTHER OBITUARIES
ON PAGE A23
term as President. He
formerly was a member
of the Hamilton Club,
the Demuth Foundation
Board; the Lancaster
General Hospital Board
and the Conestoga
Chapter of American
Business Clubs.
Chas enjoyed all types
of sports throughout his
life. He was a catcher
on several American
Legion baseball teams
during his teenage years
and played football, basketball and baseball in
high school. He learned
to play golf and tennis at
a very early age.
Later in life he was
a member of the Birdwatchers, a golf group
that traveled to many
of the nations better
golf courses throughout
the 16 years of its existence. Chas was one of
four founding members
of the Court Jesters, a
local tennis group that
has been together for 47
years.
He began small game
hunting at age 12 and
always looked forward
to small game season
including pheasant,
rabbits, doves and his
favorite ruffed grouse.
He was a member of the
Shirttail deer camp for
all of its forty-nine years.
Chas was a lifelong
member of the First
Reformed
Church
where he served as a
deacon and chairman of
the nance committee.
While Chas was especially proud of his family and his children and
grandchildren, he will
best be remembered by
his many friends and
associates in Lancaster
for his warm and engaging personality, his good
nature and especially his
pleasant look that was
always highlighted by a
smile and a twinkle in
his eye.
The family wishes to
express their deepest
gratitude to the wonderful staff of Luther Acres
who provided compassionate care to Chas.
A Memorial Service
will take place Tuesday,
October 13, 2015 at 11:00
a.m. at First Reformed
Church, 40 East Orange
Street, Lancaster with
the Rev. Dana Schlegel
officiating. The family
will greet friends from
10:00 a.m. until the time
of the service. Private
family interment in
Greenwood Cemetery.
In lieu of flowers,
memorials in Charles
name may be sent to
First Reformed Church,
40 East Orange Street,
Lancaster, PA 17602.
Online condolences
may be posted on our
website:
www.thegroffs.com
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Harris M.
Perez Santos
Harris M. Perez
Santos, 20, of Lancaster,
p a s s e d
away on
Mo n d a y,
October 5,
2015. Born
September
1, 1995 in
Lancaster,
son of Gloria
Santos & the
late Miguel A.
Perez.
In addition to his
loving mother Gloria,
Harris is survived by
6 siblings; Carlos J.
De Jesus, Anthony
Ortiz, Juan Ortiz, Jose
Marcano, Glorivee
Martinez & Angi Reyes;
an uncle, Jose Quiros &
an aunt, Miriam Santos.
Harris Celebration
of Life Funeral Service
will be held at the
Residence, 302 Coral
Street, Lancaster, PA
17603 on Wednesday,
October 14, 2015 at
11AM (Viewings at the
Residence Tuesday
1PM-Wednesday 11AM),
Pastor Nick Policow ofciating. Interment will
follow in the Mellingers
Mennonite Cemetery,
East Lampeter Twp.
To submit an online condolence, visit:
scheidfuneralhome.com
Donald L.
Smith, Srr.
OBITS
A23 SUNDAY,
LNP | LANCASTER,
PA OCTOBER 11, 2015
Obituaries
Ricki Flynn
Scoot
Scotten
Wayne Eric
Stapf
JERRY PARR
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Since 1968
LEACOCK
COLEMAN
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Olga
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Womer,
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WOOD
STOVES
291-5555
A.
Klombers,
Lee
M.D.
Lancaster, Oct. 1.
PUTT, Elizabeth (Upchurch),
89, Palmyra and
Elizabethtown, Sept. 28.
REICHENBACH, Donald, 70,
Manheim, Oct. 6.
RHINIER, Jeffrey L., 60,
Lancaster, Oct. 3.
RIVERA RODRIGUEZ, Jorge,
80, Lancaster, Oct. 8.
ROBERTS, Clayton W., 98,
Lancaster, Oct. 2.
ROBERTS, Jeanie L., 59, York,
Oct. 5.
ROGERS, Helen K., 81,
Parkesburg, Oct. 4.
ROHRER, Charles H., 86,
Lancaster, Oct. 5.
ROTE, Andrew B., 87,
Lancaster, Oct. 3.
ROTH, Helen K., 94,
Lancaster, Oct. 3.
RUSH, Steven A., 62,
Lancaster, Oct. 1.
SAGEMUEHL, Hans W., 92,
Lititz, Sept. 23.
SALAMON, Ruth E., 92,
Mountville, Sept. 30.
SELBY, John N., 61, Lancaster,
Sept. 28.
SITES, Sarah, 78, Ephrata, Oct. 8.
STERNADEL, Stephen W., 53,
Gordonville, Oct. 2.
STEPHENS, Jean E., 91,
Bethlehem, Oct. 2.
STOLTZFUS, Benuel E., 70,
Honey Brook, Oct. 7.
STOLTZFUS, Crist L., 81,
Somerset, Oct. 1.
STOLTZFUS, John D., 86,
Honey Brook, Oct. 4.
STRAYER, James D., 71, Lititz,
Oct. 7.
SWARR, Keith R., 52,
Washington Boro, Sept. 25.
TORRES, Luz C., 59,
Lancaster, Oct. 1.
USNER, Kenneth E., 83,
Lancaster, Oct. 4.
WAGNER, Jeffrey A., 41,
Tremont, Oct. 4.
WALKER, Norman, 79,
Denver, Oct. 5.
WALTON, John L., 84,
Ephrata, Oct. 6.
WARRICK, Eugene S., 82,
Columbia, Oct. 9.
WEISS, Edith (Weller), 92,
New Holland, Oct. 7.
WEISS, Steven W., 41, New
Providence, Oct. 2.
WHITE, Richard C., 54,
Newburg, Md.
WILLETT, Ruth J. (Finlin),
Ephrata, Oct. 6.
WITMER, Michael Herbert,
39, Mt. Vernon, Mo., Oct. 5.
ZIMMERMAN, Josiah L.,
infant son of Kenneth and
Lorelle (Oberholtzer), Cantril,
Iowa, Oct. 2.
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Lancaster
k Entertainment, Page B4
WEDDINGS
Married
without
clergy
Some couples self-unite under
special marriage license; friends
sometimes serve as celebrants
KIMBERLY MARSELAS
LNP CORRESPONDENT
it official.
Members of the couples Friends meeting did the job, facing the pair and offering
them prayers of support instead of a formal sermon. Afterward, meeting members
signed a traditional Quaker wedding contract, written in calligraphy on stiff parchment.
In Pennsylvania, the law also lets those
who attend similar self-uniting ceremonies held in any religious setting to
vouch as official witnesses on locally issued marriage licenses.
Because of its Quaker roots, the state has
always offered residents the non-officiant
option. But some wedding experts say
modern clients are opting for the license
because it allows them to be creative about
exchanging vows in a time when fewer
people have a traditional church home.
Mary Ann Gerber, Lancaster Countys
register of wills and clerk of the Orphans
Court, says self-uniting licenses arent
advertised, but are available to those who
know to ask for them.
There is no additional paperwork, and
the license costs $60, the same as a regular
marriage license. Gerbers office does not
track the number of self-uniting licenses it
issues, but she says some are granted each
year.
After a three-day waiting period, the licenses are good anywhere in the state for
60 days.
Melissa Martin, wedding planner and
owner of Lancaster-based Stylish Occasions Wedding & Event Planning, says she
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B2
RESTAURANT INSPECTIONS
Restaurant inspections
The Pennsylvania
Department of Agriculture,
866-366-3723, uses a
risk-based inspection
reporting process for
restaurants and other food
handlers.
Friendly Mini Mart and Deli
at Ephrata Fair, 25 E. Main
St., Ephrata, Sept. 22. Raw
wood used in food prep
areas. No sign or poster
at hand-wash sink in the
prep area to remind food
employees to wash hands.
Hess Meats Inc. BBQ,
Ephrata Fair, Sept. 22. Pork
in bag stored in cooler
had internal temperature
of 56 degrees; voluntarily
discarded.
KT Banik Peanut Co., 19
Stoneridge Circle, Ephrata,
Sept. 22. Quaternary
testing tablets discarded
due to age, breakage and
appearance. A new bottle
of tablets was available.
appropriate sanitizer
concentration. Ice machine
deflector plate has a black
residue accumulation. Selfserve soda unit nozzles
have a black residue
accumulation. Walk-in
cooler condensing unit fan
covers have a static dust
accumulation. Plumbing
system not maintained in
good repair; water leaking
from drain handles at
three-compartment sink.
Heatherwood Retirement
Community, 3170
Horseshoe Pike, Honey
Brook, follow-up, Sept. 23.
No violations.
Karens Concessions
Smoothies, Main Street,
Ephrata, Sept. 22. No
violations.
Michaels Concessions,
Ephrata Fair, Sept. 22. Food
handlers not wearing hair
restraints.
Lampeter-Strasburg High
School, 1007 Village Road,
Lampeter, Sept. 23. Three
half-pints of milk offered
for sale with expired sellby date; discarded.
Michaels Concessions
Funnel Cake, Ephrata
Fair, Sept. 22. Spider
webs inside the hood
above funnel cake fryer.
No quaternary test strips
available to test the
concentration of sanitizer.
Plate behind light fixture
needs securing.
Our Mother of Perpetual
Help School, 330 Church
Ave., Ephrata, Sept.
22. Water bottles and
soda cans buried under
ice inside several Igloo
containers. Single-service
spoons not oriented
inside the pick container
with handles toward the
customer.
Papa Johns Slap Dough
Pizza, Ephrata Fair, Sept.
22. No violations.
St. Johns UCC, Ephrata
Fair, Sept. 22. No violations.
Stones Popcorn, Ephrata
Fair, Sept. 22. Food
employees in prep area
not wearing proper hair
restraints. Beverage
container tops submerged
in ice in consumer selfservice display container.
The Lords Fair Share,
Ephrata Fair, Sept. 22. No
violations.
The Onion Shack, Ephrata
Fair, Sept. 22. No violations.
Toms Famous Fried
Pickles, Ephrata Fair, Sept.
22. Carafe is being used for
washing hands; provide a
hand-washing container
with lever.
McDonalds No. 07213,
2358 Lincoln Highway E.,
Gap, Sept. 21. Food facility
does not have chlorine
sanitizer test strips or
test kit to determine
Married
Continued from B1
Married at
meeting
Legal precedent aside,
few of todays self-uniting ceremonies resemble
the Quaker ideal theyre
based upon.
Lane, of Lancaster
Township, has served
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
as a witness at several
Quaker weddings as a
member of the Lancaster Friends Meeting.
Though the meeting
has no hierarchy, those
who wish to marry within still get counsel and a
months-long opportunity to reflect on the commitment theyre making.
Both parties meet individually several times
with a specially appointed clearness committee,
whose members recommend marriage to a sec-
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ASK AMY
Births
AHMED, Angham Falih,
Lancaster, a daughter, at
Women & Babies Hospital,
Thursday.
CAMACHO, Zandra, and
Byron Johnson, Kinzers,
a daughter, at Heart
of Lancaster Regional
Medical Center, Monday.
EPLER, Christopher
and Katie (Farnsworth),
Ephrata, a daughter,
at Heart of Lancaster
Regional Medical Center,
Wednesday.
LANDIS, Chad S. and
Trisha (Martin), Manheim,
a son, at Women & Babies
Hospital, Wednesday.
MACE, Drew S. and
Jessica (Hunt), Lancaster,
a daughter, at Women &
Babies Hospital, Monday.
OSMOLINSKI, Brian J.
and Brenna (Caponigro),
Willow Street, a son, at
Women & Babies Hospital,
Thursday.
REDDINGER, Eric and
Daniela (Gillespie),
Lebanon, a son, at
Heart of Lancaster
Regional Medical Center,
Wednesday.
REYES, Ashley, and
Alexander Ortiz-Rivera,
Lancaster, a daughter, at
Women & Babies Hospital,
Thursday.
ROBEL, Jonathan T. and
Anne (McEllhenney),
Ephrata, a son, at Women
& Babies Hospital,
Thursday.
ROBINSON, Brian D. Jr.
and Ambyr (Goodwater),
Elizabethtown, a son, at
Women & Babies Hospital,
Tuesday.
SCHOENBERGER, Drew D.
and Courtney (Mitchell),
Lititz, a daughter, at
Women & Babies Hospital,
Thursday.
WAGAMAN, Matthew
W., and Angie Talarico,
Lancaster, a daughter, at
Women & Babies Hospital,
Tuesday.
Continued from B1
What if we
Sean Hennessey and
Michael Bridgman regularly sit down at one of
the pianos on their way
to the offices of MajorMega, the marketing
company they founded. They read about
two people competing
through playing piano
versions from a throwback video game and
something clicked.
We just started running with the idea of,
wow, Lancaster would
probably be open to
something cool, putting a cool twist on one
of these pianos, said
Bridgman.
The more they brainstormed, the more it
made sense. They both
were getting more and
more into vintage video
games and had opened
their office on North
Christian Street on First
Fridays for everyone to
play. They also made a
retro 8-bit game for Katy
Perrys producer. Plus,
they wanted to pivot
away from website design to create within the
Internet of things.
Were a company
in Lancaster. We love
these pianos, Hennessey said. We need
to tech one of these out
somehow.
Hacking a piano
This was a new kind of
project for Hennessey
and Bridgman. Theyve
made a website for Justin Timberlakes last
album, an interactive
timeline for Clippers
point guard Chris Paul
and other online projects since they started
the company three years
ago.
Marketings changing
rapidly with new technology as businesses try
new ways to capture our
waning attention spans.
The business partners
wanted to move into creating interactive, shareable experiences away
from the Internet, something like the piano.
We knew making this
piano that were not going to see a direct monetary return, Bridgman
said. But the reward
would be we would
prove to ourselves that
we could do this kind of
stuff, first of all and secondly, we can prove to
the world that we can
do it. And we dreamt of
getting featured on Reddit and all of these other
places for free PR and it
happened.
They picked a piano
donated for the Keys
program that would fit
the mechanics.
Then they had to make
it work.
A lot of this was MacGyvering,
Bridgman
said.
Their first challenge:
Record the piano without any feedback noise.
A
microphone
wouldnt work because
of the interference
sound. So they found
Helpinstill piano pickups online.
The next hurdle: con-
PRESENTS
TOM
COTTER
If laughter is the best medicine,
The breakout
star from
November 12 December 31
The hit that is a family
tradition live on stage
with singing, dancing
and all the fun you love!
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LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Entertainment
SCARY MOVIES
JANE HOLAHAN
UNSCRIPTED
Remembering
Jim Ruth:
patron, critic
and friend
Ten bone-chilling movies that dont rely on blood and guts to creep out people
JANE HOLAHAN
JHOLAHAN@LNPNEW.COM
JHOLAHAN@LNPNEWS.COM
Alfred Hitchcock is the master of suspense and did a great job of scaring moviegoers. So we thought it might be fun to
look at Hitchcocks five scariest movies.
1. Psycho (1960)
Janet Leigh is Marion Crane, a secretary who steals $40,000 from her bosss
client and flees town, looking to begin
Alfred
Hitchcock
HITCHCOCK, page B5
MUSIC
JJANCI@LNPNEWS.COM
IF YOU GO
Austin Criswell
MARK PONTZ
lowers.
His reach is arguably more
impressive when considering
his lack of musical training.
Criswell is self-taught in both
guitar and voice. He was never
in choir, band or any formal lesson environment.
I always just sang with the
ENTERTAINMENT
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
B5
the Sunday News. We were competitors, but Jim always got the story.
He was a friendly competitor,
though, and when we met at the
theater, wed talk.
After he retired 10 years ago, our
friendship blossomed. At least once
a week, Jim and I and other friends
would head to the movies or a show
or just get coffee and talk.
Wed take bus trips to New York to
see Broadway shows, always plotting out an interesting place to have
lunch before the show and letting
the energy of the city overwhelm us.
What amazing shows we saw:
Spring Awakening (thanks to Jonathan Groffs mom, Julie, who organized a bus trip); Next to Normal,
which blew us both away; Venus in
Fur; In the Heights, a revival of
one of Jims favorite shows; Sunday
in the Park with George; and most
recently, Hamilton.
We would talk and talk and talk
Hitchcock: Five
Continued from B4
Criswell
Continued from B4
in front of people.
He says he took his
moms
compliments
with a grain of salt
though, because moms
automatically have to
believe that their kids
are good.
It wasnt until age 16
when he performed at
an arts show at Boiling
Springs High School that
he realized he had something special. He says the
audience wanted him to
perform more after his
slot was over. But getting
there wasnt without its
trials: Criswell says stage
fright still plagues him
today.
Oh, I wanted to die,
Criswell says of what he
was feeling before his
first public performance.
I did not handle it well. I
still dont handle anxiety
very well. Im always terrified before a show.
He copes with it now
by making a playlist of
his set before a show, and
playing it on the car ride
there. He sings along
with it as a warmup.
I always know after
the first song Ill be alright, Criswell says. I
always just tell myself
to try to get through one
song and Ill be able to
handle it, then.
When Criswell performs at Tellus360, hell
treat audiences to a mix of
JOHN DERNBACH
DEPT OF MUSIC
ORCHESTRA, CONCERT
BAND, & WIND ENSEMBLE
Continued from B4
SUSTAINABILITY LECTURE
Jim Ruth
THEATRE
DEPT OF MUSIC
JAMES ARMSTRONG,
PERCUSSION
WORLD
B6
MOVIES IN REVIEW
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Whats playing
Ant-Man (PG-13, 117 minutes,
superhero) Paul Rudd stars
as superhero Ant-Man, whose
uniform lets him shrink in size but
still be incredibly strong.
Black Mass (R, 122 minutes,
drama) Johnny Depp stars as
Whitey Bulgar in the story of the
gangster working with the FBI.
DVDS
Coming Tuesday
(Shameik Moore) is
carefully surviving life in
a tough neighborhood in
Los Angeles while juggling
college applications,
academic interviews and the
SATs. A chance invitation to
an underground party leads
him into an adventure that could allow him to go from being a
geek, to being dope, to ultimately being himself.
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
B7
Question: I took my
10-year-old child to see
our pediatrician for a
sore throat. He did the
throat swab and it was
negative for strep, so we
got sent home to wait
and see if it gets better.
In the past we have had
to come back a couple of
days later, and then it was
strep or a sinus infection.
I do not understand why
the doctor didnt just put
him on antibiotics as a
preventative?
Answer: This scenario
is incredibly frustrating, both for parents and
health-care providers. It
puts them at odds with
each other, and it comes
down to communication.
When it comes to sickness, parents have one
goal: restoring their child
back to health as quickly
as possible. Health-care
providers share this goal
but we have a few other
factors to balance into
the equation, such as
avoiding side effects and
antibiotic resistance.
The rapid strep test
performed in doctors offices is very sensitive, if
done correctly, the test
comes with a 95 percent
or higher accuracy rate.
So it is safe to rely on
these results and not prescribe antibiotics. Only
about 20 percent of all
sore throats are caused
by bacteria; most of them
are viral and will not respond to antibiotics.
There were over 2 million illnesses last year
caused by antibiotic resistance. The best way
to combat this growing
problem is to stop using
Doctors need to be cautious when prescribing antibiotics though it can be tempting to see them as a cure-all,
overdependence can lead to a host of issues and lessen their effectiveness.
a nonessential antibiotic
could lead to harm.
Sometimes it seems
like health-care providers and parents are in opposition when it comes
to the need for antibiotics, but it does not have
to be that way. Statistics
suggest that up to 50
percent of all antibiotic
prescriptions are inappropriately prescribed.
Health care providers
are changing their habits, and you can help facilitate this change.
Remember the following four tips when you
feel the urge to ask for an
antibiotic:
Be reassured that
your
provider
has
checked your child and
he or she is not in danger.
Most viral infections
will go away with proper
rest and hydration, but
it may take seven to 10
days.
Call your provider
with any new or worsening symptoms, persistent fevers or pain.
Place value in the
importance of combating antibiotic resistance.
Studies suggest that parental request for an antibiotic frequently sways
a health-care providers
prescribing habits. So try
not to put your provider
in that situation unless
you feel very strongly
that an antibiotic is warranted. If a health-care
provider does prescribe
antibiotics for your
child, make sure you understand exactly what it
is for and how it should
be taken. If the need
for the antibiotic is not
certain, consider asking
your provider if he or she
is comfortable if you observe your child for a few
QUICK LOOK
n Only about 20
DRUGS
Kids feelings about marijuana at age 12 may predict future risk of drunken driving
KAREN KAPLAN
LOS ANGELES TIMES
LOS ANGELES A
new study of Los Angeles-area kids suggests a
specific way to reduce
the risk that they will
drive under the influence of alcohol or drugs
as teenagers challenge their positive beliefs about marijuana,
and start doing it as early as sixth grade.
Why? Compared to
12-year-olds who had
negative views of marijuana, 12-year-olds who
believed
marijuana
could help them relax or
was otherwise beneficial
were significantly more
likely to drive under
the influence when they
were 16. They were also
and 2013.
The researchers identified several factors
that seemed to predict
unsafe driving at age 16.
Those who had warmer, fuzzier ideas about
marijuana when they
were 12 (in sixth or seventh grade) were 63 percent more likely than
their peers to admit either driving under the
influence
themselves
or to ride with someone
who was under the influence, according to the
study.
In addition, 12-yearolds who felt most confident that they could
resist marijuana use
wound up being 89
percent more likely to
mix alcohol and drugs
with cars, motorcycles
29 Keller A
Ave. LLancaster
717-399-2020
4229 Oregon
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R.X. Hearing
Aid Service
B8
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Food
ever-so-subtle undertone of
sweetness. However, its complemented by the savory sausage and offset by the slightly
bitter kale. This dish strikes
me as both quintessential fall
and a little offbeat.
That said, dont save it for
cool autumn nights. This
nourishing, one-pot meal will
warm your soul all the way
through winter.
Kale is one of the few vegetables that can be enjoyed fresh
and often local throughout the coldest months of the
year. Whats more, a cup of
kale has only 33 calories and
supplies protein, fiber and a
wealth of vitamins and minerals.
I must confess, if Im lucky
enough to have leftovers of
this meal, I tend not to share.
They taste even better reheated for lunch the next day.
Despite the use of cider,
this all-in-one meal is hardly
sweet, yet the broth has a
uniquely delicious flavor.
A large pot may be used for
this recipe if you dont have a
wide-bottomed skillet with a
lid.
If the surface area of the pot
is smaller than the size specified below, you may wish to remove the lid at the end of the
cooking time and simmer off
some of the broth.
Its also OK to leave the mixture a little soupy. Just serve
it in a pasta dish or bowl with
some crusty bread to sop up
the flavorful liquid.
I adapted this recipe from
Iowa Girl Eats.
ANN FULTON
This sweet and savory skillet meal contains kielbasa, quinoa and kale.
Makes 4 to 6 servings.
n 2 tablespoons chopped
drained well
(optional)
CANDY
ELIZABETH KARMEL
ASSOCIATED PRESS
ASSOCIATED PRESS
BRITTLE, page B9
FOOD
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Brittle
ing!
Prized for their deep
nutty flavor, the seeds find
their way into desserts,
too. Black sesame paste is
used in fillings for mooncakes and is churned into
ice creams. I like to think
of the flavor as a lighter,
more refined peanut butter.
Here I make a black sesame sugar for my monkey bread. Use leftover
sugar as an alternative
topping to your cinnamon-sugar toast, over
oatmeal, or even on your
popcorn!
n Kosher salt
n Two 16.3-ounce cans
n cup honey
n Zest of a quarter of an
toasted
Continued from B8
Makes 16 servings
Black Sesame-Orange
Monkey Bread Muffins
peanuts
n 2 cups cooked, crumbled
apple wood-smoked bacon
n 1 teaspoon baking soda
Use about tablespoon
of the butter to coat a
rimmed baking sheet.
In a large, heavy saucepan
over medium-high,
combine the sugar and
corn syrup. Stir until
the sugar dissolves and
the mixture is bubbly
and slightly thick, 3 to 4
minutes. Add the ancho
COMPETITION
JKOPF@LNPNEWS.COM
2015
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Outdoor Dining
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Susquehanna Style
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Just eat.
Two words that encapsulate
Anthony
Bourdains approach
to travel and appreciation of other cultures.
Want a better understanding of the
people and places
you visit? Find something to shove in your
mouth; it will be time
better spent than
studying traditional
guidebooks.
For the host of
CNNs Parts Unknown, its a philosophy. Its a career.
And to help you
approach the world
from a similar perspective,
Bourdain
is throwing out the
book on guidebooks,
rethinking that trusty
travelers crutch from
a gastronomic angle
to help you ... just eat.
Rice, Noodle, Fish
is the first guidebook
though the term
should be applied
somewhat loosely
to be published under
Bourdains partnership with travel and
food website Roads &
Kingdoms.
The book written
by Roads & Kingdoms
co-founder
Matt
Goulding is a deep
dive into Japans food
culture.
The book, which
comes out this month,
reads like more of a
travelogue with interviews and news-touse tidbits than a true
travel guide.
Sandwich
or Salad*
Clipper Magazine
AP FOOD EDITOR
Together
Visit ThomasBreakfastBattle.
com, and register via social
media or by creating a
username and password on
the site. Participants can
vote once a day, and voters
are entered in a contest to
win $10,000.
Outdoor Dining
J.M. HIRSCH
Friday:
HOW TO VOTE
2015
Guidebooks help
travelers learn about
other cultures food
FOOD BOOKS
so slightly smoking.
Immediately remove
from the heat and pour
onto a large plate to cool.
orange
ASSOCIATED PRESS
B9
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Travel
AIR TRAVEL
Follow
your
suitcase
American Airlines
adds free real-time
bag tracking
GREGORY KARP
CHICAGO TRIBUNE
Following a concert at the American WWII cemetery at Normandy, Lancaster Country Day School students visited Omaha Beach. From left to right
are Sara Kelly, Andrew Schlager, Derian Haas, Ryan Muzzio, teacher Heather Woodbridge, Emma Swartz, Lila Gibson, Kevin Hsu, Isaac Schlager.
EDUCATIONAL TRIP
LANGUAGE OF MUSIC
This summer, a group of eight Lancaster Country Day School choir and orchestra students
participated in the American Music Abroad European Tour to France, Germany and Austria
ANDREW SCHLAGER
SPECIAL TO LNP
France
The first day of our trip, and perhaps
the most poignant part of the trip, was
performing in the Normandy Ameri-
DESTINATION
RECREATION
Your fourth-grader is
your familys free pass
to our national parks.
The National Park
Service is giving passes to fourth-graders
and their families in
an effort to get kids
into the parks to experience the outdoors
and learn a little about
American history and
culture during the
2015-16 school year
(now through Aug. 31,
2016).
Families without a
fourth-grader must pay
$80 for the pass, unless
the family includes a senior citizen or member
of the military.
To get your free pass,
go to everykidinapark.
gov and have your
fourth-grader answer
a few questions about
outdoor adventures.
After that, youll get
a pass you can print
out and use or trade in
American Airlines in recent weeks has quietly added free real-time online luggage tracking for checked
bags, allowing customers to
determine where their bag
is from check-in counter
to baggage carousel pickup.
The service is useful not
only for curious travelers,
but in case a checked bag
hasnt arrived at your destination. Youll know right
away that your luggage is on
the wrong plane, and you
wont have to stand at baggage claim for an hour wondering if your bag will be
coming. Youll know it went
to Tokyo instead of Las Vegas and can seek help from
the lost-bag department.
Its something our customers have been asking for
a really long time, and were
excited to make this available to them, said American Airlines spokeswoman
Laura Nedbal.
Fliers can go to AA.com/
baggage, click on track
your bags and input a last
name and record locator
or bag-tag number. The
site will return information on six bag-scan touch
points, such as ticket counter check-in and loading on
and off the aircraft.
Tracking is also available on the mobile version
of the website, but not yet
on the American Airlines
mobile app. For members
of the airlines AAdvantage
frequent-flier program, the
baggage data is also available on their online profile.
There is no extra charge for
tracking.
A few other airlines, notably Delta Air Lines and
US Airways, which is now
merged with American, offer the service.
With ranger Kathy Kupper from the National Park Service at left, fourth-graders on
the grounds of Samuel W. Tucker Elementary School in Alexandria, Va., hold passes
that give them and their families free admission for one year to all national parks.
Engaging ideas
If youre still worried
that your kid may not
be excited about walking wooded trails or
studying Native American ruins, here are a few
ideas to get them engaged:
National
Parks
Passports: Amazon
and most national
park gift shops have
Seasonal
closing
Grand Canyon
National Park
schedules North
Rim closings
TRAVEL
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
B11
travelogue.
n Saturday, Nov. 14: Return to Sweden travelogue.
n Saturday, Dec. 12: Texas Highways and Byways
travelogue.
n Saturday, Feb. 13: Cuba: A Road Trip from Havanna to
Santiago travelogue.
n Saturday, March 5: The Highlands of Scotland
travelogue.
n Saturday, April 9: Englands West Country
travelogue.
All shows are at 7 p.m. at Garden Spot High School, New
Holland. Cost: $7 adults, $5 teenagers, free to children
under 13. Call Richard Eby, 354-7783.
PHOTOS COURSTESY OF ANDREW SCHLAGER
GEARS
LANCASTER CHAPTER
OF SCHOOL RETIREES
n Saturday, Dec. 5: New York City as you Please. Tour
EXCHANGE RATES
These foreign exchange selling rates, as of the close of
business Oct. 8, 2015, apply only to the purchase of
currency amounting to $1,000 or less. These retail exchange
rates apply only to Fulton Bank and are furnished by the
International Services Department.
CURRENCY
RATE
U.S. $
0.7773
1.29
0.8211
1.22
1.1048
0.91
0.1634
6.12
Euro (EUR)
1.2107
0.83
1.642
0.61
0.008929
111.99
0.06502
15.38
0.1322
7.56
0.7143
1.40
1.642
0.61
Swedish Kroner(SEK)
0.1313
7.62
Pass
Continued from B10
photosmultimedia/
multimedia.htm.
Teachers:
Fourthgrade teachers can also
download and print paper passes for each of
their students. All teachers can get free lesson
plans at nps.gov/teachers/index.htm.
For more information
on the program, visit
nationalparks.org/ook/
ekiap-signup.
SOURCE: ASSOCIATED PRESS
Germany
We left France for Hirschberg, Germany, and a
friendship concert performance with a local school.
Many of us had to share stands and music with the
students, whose English fluency ranged all over
the map. The conductors English was easier to pin
down: He spoke none.
Despite the fact that we couldnt understand the
conductors criticism and comments after our rehearsals, we all figured out what he wanted of us as
musicians.
The language barrier dissipated when we all began
using the language of music. It was a magical experience to be a part of during the rehearsal and performance.
Travelling south through Germany, we wended
our way through Bavaria. After lunch in Munich
and an outdoor concert with a choral group in
Kirchseeon, we ended our Germany journey in
Rosenheim, with all the LCDS students celebrating
the Fourth of July (not a big event for the Germans)
with a bowling tournament.
Austria
After falling in love with France and Germany, we
couldnt help but think about what wonders await-
it as lost. American in
July had a lost baggage
rate of about four bags
per 1,000 passengers,
ranking ninth of 13 U.S.
airlines, according to
data from the U.S. Department of Transportation.
Connect with us
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& Instagram at:
LancasterOnline
LancasterOnline
B12
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Books
N.Y. Times best-sellers
Fiction hardbacks
1. Come Rain or Come Shine, by Jan Karon.
(Putnam) Dooley, the adopted son of the Mitford
character Father Tim Kavanagh, marries his
childhood sweetheart.
2. Make Me, by Lee Child. (Delacorte) In his 20th
appearance, Jack Reacher takes on a missingpersons case.
3. The Girl in the Spiders Web, by David
Lagercrantz. (Knopf) Mikael Blomkvist and Lisbeth
Salander are back in this continuation of Stieg
Larssons Millennium series.
4. Go Set a Watchman, by Harper Lee. (Harper)
In the mid-1950s, a grown-up Jean Louise Finch
returns home to find that her adored father is not as
perfect as she believed.
5. All the Light We Cannot See, by Anthony Doerr.
(Scribner) The lives of a blind French girl and a
gadget-obsessed German boy before and during
World War II.
6. The Girl on the Train, by Paula Hawkins.
(Riverhead) A psychological thriller set in the
environs of London.
7. X, by Sue Grafton. (Marian Wood/Putnam) A
variety of Xs lead Kinsey Millhone onto the trail of a
cold case.
8. Fates and Furies, by Lauren Groff. (Riverhead) A
marriage viewed from two perspectives.
9. Purity, by Jonathan Franzen. (Farrar, Straus &
Giroux) A recent college graduate, a German Julian
Assange-like activist, an investigative reporter and
an heiress in flight from her past strive for integrity
and wrestle with secrets.
10. Devoted in Death, by J.D. Robb. (Putnam)
Lt. Eve Dallas races the clock to save a woman
kidnapped by a couple on a murder spree; by Nora
Roberts, writing pseudonymously.
11. The Nightingale, by Kristin Hannah. (St. Martins)
Two sisters in World War II France: one struggling
to survive in the countryside, the other joining the
Resistance in Paris.
12. The Scam, by Janet Evanovich and Lee
Goldberg. (Bantam) The FBI agent Kate OHare
and her con man partner, Nicholas Fox, pose as
gamblers in order to bring down a casino magnate
involved in money laundering.
13. The End Game, by Catherine Coulter and
J.T. Ellison. (Putnam) The FBI agent Nicholas
Drummond and his partner, Mike Caine, investigate
a violent environmental group with the help of the
CIA and Mossad.
14. Two Years Eight Months and Twenty-Eight
Nights, by Salman Rushdie. (Random House) In an
update of One Thousand and One Nights, a storm
unleashes mysterious abilities in a group of people
descended from a jinni.
15. Circling the Sun,, by Paula McLain. (Ballantine)
A novel by the author of The Paris Wife about
Beryl Markham, a horse trainer and aviatrix who was
raised in Kenya.
BOOK EVENT
STEPHEN KOPFINGER
LNP CORRESPONDENT
Nonfiction hardbacks
1. Killing Reagan, by Bill OReilly and Martin Dugard.
(Holt) The host of The OReilly Factor recounts the
events surrounding the attempted assassination of
President Ronald Reagan in 1981.
2. Why Not Me? by Mindy Kaling. (Crown
Archetype) More personal essays from the
comedian and actress.
3. Furiously Happy, by Jenny Lawson. (Flatiron)
A humorous treatment of the authors life with
depression and anxiety disorder.
4. Between the World and Me, by Ta-Nehisi
Coates. (Spiegel & Grau) A meditation on race in
America as well as a personal story by the national
correspondent of The Atlantic, framed as a letter to
his teenage son.
5. Being Mortal, by Atul Gawande. (Metropolitan/
Holt) The surgeon and New Yorker writer considers
how doctors fail patients at the end of life and how
they can do better.
6. The Wright Brothers, by David McCullough. (Simon &
Schuster) The story of the bicycle mechanics from Ohio
who ushered in the age of flight.
7. Plunder and Deceit, by Mark R. Levin. (Threshold
Editions) The talk-radio host urges young Americans
to resist the statist masterminds who, he says, are
burdening them with debt and inferior education.
8. Accidental Saints, by Nadia Bolz-Weber.
(Convergent) A comic turned pastor documents
encounters with grace.
9. 1944, by Jay Winik. (Simon & Schuster) A pivotal
year that saw D-Day, the liberation of Paris, Franklin
Roosevelts re-election and the Battle of the Bulge.
10. Killing the Messenger, by David Brock. (Twelve)
A former right-wing operative describes his
transformation and passionately defends Hillary
Clinton.
11. Modern Romance, by Aziz Ansari with Eric
Klinenberg. (Penguin Press) The comedian enlists a
sociologist to help him understand todays dating
scene.
12. The Art of Memoir, by Mary Karr. (Harper) The
author of The Liars Club offers instruction in
memoir writing.
13. Fast Girl, by Suzy Favor Hamilton with Sarah
Tomlinson. (Dey Street/Morrow) Bipolar disorder
drove a former Olympic runner to become a highpriced Las Vegas escort.
14. My Southern Journey, by Rick Bragg. (Oxmoor
House) More than a decades worth of essays about
the South, covering topics like football, fishing and
food.
15. Once in a Great City, by David Maraniss. (Simon
& Schuster) Detroit in 1963, the end of its boom and
the beginning of its collapse.
16. Dead Wake, by Erik Larson. (Crown) The last
Check it out!
Take the children in your life on a trip through time and space with these awesome new science fiction novels. Find
them in the childrens room of the Duke Street Library.
1. The Incredible Space Raiders
from Space by Wesley King. In
2156, Jonah is informed that he is
one of 200 children being trained
as The Incredible Space Raiders,
whose mission is to destroy the
Entirely Evil Things of the Dark
Zone, but there is more going on
than any of the children could
guess.
2. The Arctic Code by Matthew J.
Kirby. The Earth is in the grip of a
new Ice Age, and when 12-year-old
Eleanors scientist mother disappears
in the Arctic, Eleanor sets off on a
dangerous journey to find her and
BOOKS/LOCAL HISTORY
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Bookends
B13
Vote for
updated
books
new heroes
When is the last time
someone gave you the
opportunity to influence
the content of a book he
or she is writing?
Well, nows your chance.
And your input on the
book will eventually go
to a cause thats on everyones mind this month.
Voting has opened for a
new set of American heroes to be included in an
updated version of the
history and civics book for
children, 50 American
Heroes Every Kid Should
Meet, co-written by Millersville University Professor Dennis Denenberg.
Denenberg said last
week that he and his coauthor, Lorraine Roscoe,
recently learned Lerner
Publishing which released their book in 2001
and a revised edition in
2006 has agreed to reissue an updated version
of the book next year in
hardcover,
paperback
and e-book formats.
So Denenberg and
Roscoe are asking for the
publics help in choosing
10 new heroes for their
top-50 list.
They have a list of
nominees for which the
public can vote online
throughout October.
Once the new heroes
have replaced 10 of the
original public figures
profiled and quoted in
50 American Heroes
and the book is reissued,
Denenberg said, proceeds from sales of the
book will go to Dianas
Dreamers: Determined
to Defeat Breast Cancer.
The
endowment,
named for his late sister,
Diana Denenberg Durand, who battled breast
cancer for many years
before her death in 2007,
seeks to promote breast
cancer awareness among
students on college campuses. Denenberg set up
the endowment through
the Millersville University Foundation.
You can visit www.
vote4yourhero.com to
help choose the new heroes. The nominees are:
n Louis Armstrong,
legendary jazz trumpeter
n Arthur Ashe, tennis legend
and civil rights activist
n Ken Burns,
documentary filmmaker,
media innovator
n Dorothea Dix, champion
for humane treatment of
mentally ill patients
n Marian Wright Edelman,
educator, advocate for
childrens rights
n President Dwight
D. Eisenhower, who
commanded the Allied
Forces during World War II
n Bill and Melinda Gates,
technology innovator (Bill)
and humanitarians
n Jim Henson, puppeteer,
creator of the Muppets
n President Barack Obama
n Jesse Owens, Olympic
gold medal winner
n President Ronald
Reagan
n Alexandra Scott, founder
of Alexs Lemonade Stand
(cancer fundraiser)
n Supreme Court Justice
Sonia Sotomayor
n Steven Spielberg,
filmmaker, humanitarian
n Team Hoyt, father-andson athletes Dick and Rick
Hoyt.
n Danny and Marlo
Thomas, actors and and
humanitarians (St. Judes
Childrens Hospital)
n Mark Twain, author and
humorist
n Oprah Winfrey, TV host,
actress, entrepreneur, and
civil rights activist
n Louis Zamperini,
Olympic athlete, World
War II veteran and prisoner
of war
n Mark Zuckerberg,
Facebook founder
FLASHBACK LANCASTER
FILE PHOTO
In 1965, Catholic High graduate Laverne Meisky, of Lititz, was among 10 aquanauts taking part
in the Navys Sealab 2 experiment. He spent 15 days submerged in the Pacific Ocean.
two school groups of students and teachers. Upper Leacock and East Hempfield
pupils were among the first lucky groups of
high schoolers to make a tour of the building. These student staffers of school newspapers the Leolette and the Flash got
some tips from the pros.
In that same edition, the New Era reported on Missing boy James Durburow
of South Christian Street, who learned
man cannot live by pear alone. Early on
Wednesday, James disappeared after
breakfast, most likely to avoid going to
school, according to the story. His mother
reported him missing to the police. It was
discovered James was not missing at all,
but in fact hiding in his shack in their
basement, sustained only by a basket of
pears. By Thursday evening James surfaced looking for supper. He was relieved
when peach pie not pear was served
for dessert.
National Headline: U.S. Sends More
Troops to Hawaii
B14
LIVING
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
IN THE SPOTLIGHT
Education: Bachelors
degree in English/liberal
arts from Eastern Mennonite University, MBA with
a focus on environment,
equity and economics
from Bard College.
Words that describe
me best: Entrepreneurial,
persuasive, empathetic.
My first job was: Inventory and stocking
shelves at my mom and
step-fathers paint store.
Favorite thing about
my job: Working with a
team of fun, motivated and
inspired people; supporting beautiful businesses
and social enterprises that
are improving lives and
communities; walking to
work; but overall, the opportunity to implement
innovative things to impact
peoples lives and the community in positive ways.
The most challenging
aspect of my job: Turning my thoughts to other
things at the end of the day.
I work to fight poverty because: Everyone
deserves opportunity. We
have enough resources
to do better. I also work
to fight poverty because
I recognize the privilege Ive had as a white,
educated person with access to significant social
capital. I have to use that
privilege for change in
DNEPHIN@LNPNEWS.COM
Jessica
King poses
in her office
at Assets
Lancaster.
Shes been
named to
the mayors
poverty
commission.
RICHARD HERTZLER | STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
Open House
OCTOBER 1531
Box Office: 717-733-7966 www.ephrataperformingartscenter.com
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COME TO OUR
Open House
October 14 5-7pm
Affordable Tuition
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Special Hours Fri. 9-7 & Sat. 9-4
www.heritagedesigninteriors.com
LOCAL
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Dead men
walking
Shia LaBeouf
TODAY IN HISTORY
HUMANE LEAGUE OF
LANCASTER COUNTY
BIRTHDAYS
Danai Gurira
Marley, 10, left, and Bailey, 3, right, are bonded and seek
to be adopted together from the Humane League of
Lancaster County.
of Lancaster County,
2195 Lincoln Highway
East. Regular shelter
hours are 10 a.m.-5 p.m.
Sunday-Saturday. Many
of our available animals
can also be viewed online at humaneleague.
com. Call the League at
393-6551.
We would like to thank
everyone who came out
Saturday to make our
annual
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is Lancaster Countys only Lifecare at Home, Membershipbased program. This innovative, wellness-focused, long-term
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B16
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Celebrations
Engagements
Weddings
AbernathyMartin
Dorcas Martin and Nathan Abernathy have become engaged.
The daughter of Walter and Lorraine Martin,
Lititz, she is a graduate
of Mason Dixon Home
School Association. She is
employed as a hostess at
Lititz Family Cupboard.
The son of Patrick and
Teresa Abernathy, Meridian, Idaho, he was
home schooled and is a
graduate of the International ALERT Academy. He is employed
as an armored guard at
Karsten-Fox
BuckwalterMartin
Kelly Martin and Tyler
Buckwalter have become
engaged.
She is the daughter
of Doug and Denise
Martin, of Lancaster,
and is a graduate of
Conestoga Valley High
School.
He is the son of Tom
and Kelly Buckwalter,
of Denver. He is a graduate of Cocalico High
Oregon Dairy
Stunning, custom-made cakes. Perfect
for your occasion. From traditional,
to contemporary, to extravagant, to
whimsicalwell create a cake that you and
your guests will remember for years to come!
2900 Oregon Pike Lititz
717.656.2856
A Tea Affair
A Perfect Place for your Bridal Shower
6 Sturgis Lane Lititz
717.626.1776
HerzerHarnly
KelleyJones
GlackinMartin
Alyssa Martin and
Shane Glackin have become engaged.
She is the daughter of
Doug and Denise Martin of Lancaster. She is
a graduate of Conestoga
Valley High School and
is a nursing student.
He is the son of Marty
and Kristy Glackin of
Quarryville. He is a graduate of Solanco High
School and York College
of Pennsylvania.
BuryOrtiz
n Online:
bit.ly/LNPanniversaries
bit.ly/LNPengagements
bit.ly/LNPweddings
LancasterOnline
PRiMA Theatre
Live Entertainment and Lighting services for
your big day! Wherever and whatever youre
up to, PRiMA is ready for you!
19 N. Prince St. Lancaster
717.327.5124
Wilbur Chocolate
Chocolate filled favor boxes and
wedding themed chocolate molds
48 N. Broad Street Lititz
717.626.3249
Doug
Burkholder,
brother-in-law,
Akron, and Mike Morris,
Lititz.
The newlyweds were
introduced by a mutual
friend.
Facebook, Twitter
& Instagram at:
Smoker, Denver.
The couple met in
high school. They honeymooned in Cancun,
Mexico, and reside in
Reinholds.
CELEBRATIONS GUIDELINES
Connect with us
CR Lapps
Catering for All Your Events! Weddings,
Picnics, Party Trays, Etc.
101 Fite Way Quarryville
717.786.1768
399-6507
n By mail:
Celebrations Dept.
n Phone:
399-6607
Exceptional Weddings
Performing Ceremonies throughout Lancaster
& Chester Counties.
New Holland
717.419.7579
www.exceptionalweddings.org
Acorn Farms
We offer indoor & outdoor catering for
weddings, corporate events, picnics, and
other events in Lancaster, York, Harrisburg,
and surrounding areas.
3141 Mount Joy Road Mount Joy
717.653.6182
Country Barn Weddings
Two Restored Barns with Three
Venues & Seating for up to 400
Guests! Climate Controlled.
Featuring Farm to Fork Catering!
211 South Donnerville Rd.
Lancaster 717.872.1554
countrybarnwedding.com
n By fax:
Envy Studio
Our upscale urban-chic studios artistically
driven staff uses the buzz of the city as
inspiration to create red-carpet looks for hair,
nails and wedding styles that your friends
will envy!
24 W. King St. Lancaster
717.435.9343
Lancaster School
of Cosmetology
Pamper Your Bridal Party
50 Ranck Ave. Lancaster
717.299.0200
Elite Coach
Nostalgic 20 Passenger Trolley &
25-56 Passenger Coaches, Perfect for Guest
Transportation
1685 W. Main Street Ephrata 800.722.6206
www.elitecoach.com
For more information or to advertise on this page, please contact 717.291.8800 or email advertising@LNPnews.com
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
B17
Celebrations
Weddings
Anniversaries
Kaiser 60th
Smith-Wallen
Dawn Smith and Donna Wallen were married
July 18 by Holly Cellitti-Sidesinger at Breezy
View Overlook, Columbia.
Smith is the daughter
of Suzanne Smith, Hanover, and the late Alfred
Smith. She is a graduate
of Delone Catholic High
School and is employed
by Ametek.
Wallen is a graduate
of Susquehannock High
School and is employed
by Aerotek.
Smiths honor attendant was her mother,
Suzanne Smith. Ring
bearer was her grandson,
Corbin Koller.
Wallens honor attendant was her sister-in-law,
Sylvia
Frey, Red Lion. Flower girl was her granddaughter,
Brezlyn
Koller.
The couple live in Marietta.
Tesche-Trunk
James Tesche and Bethany Trunk were married
Sept. 19 by the Rev. Jim
Hamilton at the Grand
Canyon in Arizona.
The groom is a gradu-
County.
The couple live in
Muncy, Lycoming County. She is formerly of
Lancaster.
Marriages
The following have applied
for marriage licenses
in Lancaster County
Courthouse:
Michael Ryan Miller, 25, of
17 Willis Lane, son of Larry
L. and Phyllis K. Miller, and
Heather Elizabeth Snyder,
24, same address, daughter
of William R. and Carolyn
A. Snyder.
Sara Elizabeth Harbin, 50,
of 563 College Ave., Apt.
B201, daughter of Kenneth
E. Harbin and the late Sara V.
Harbin, and Ouida Lampert,
54, same address, daughter
of Mamie H. Rentz and the
late William W. Duke.
Donte Willard Milligan,
25, of 885 Oxford Ave.,
Phoenixville, son of
Sean M. Milligan and
Karen L. Robinson, and
Ckrisen Milfort, 25, same
address, daughter of
Sickner and Veronique C.
Milfort.
Benjamin Paul Neff, 40,
of 223 Fairview Road,
Manheim, son of Daniel
W. and Carol A. Neff,
and Julie E. Howe, 30,
of 355 Octorara Road,
Parkesburg, daughter of
Mary E. Howe and the late
Earl L. Howe.
James Michael
Burkholder, 30, of 317
Cobblestone Lane, son of
Gregory J. and Emily M.
Burkholder, and Leanne
Nicole Freels, 23, same
address, daughter ofJohn
R. Freels Jr. and Stephanie
A. Reddinger.
Travis William Cocker,
24, of 105 N. Hanover
St., Elizabethtown, son
of Don W. and Tracy L.
Cocker, and Erin Nichole
Morgan, 23, same address,
daughter of Richard A.
Morgan Jr. and Cathleen J.
Warble.
Evan Robert Ross, 21,
of 246 Cypress St.,
Bainbridge, son of Eric
H. and Amy R. Ross, and
Karissa Nicole Groff, 21,
same address, daughter of
Kevin E. and Beth A. Groff.
Richard Phidip David, 30,
of 1614 Noyes Drive, Silver
Spring, Maryland, son of
Thomas A. and Rachel M.
David, and Phuong Dai Phu
Hoang, 29, of 10422 44th
Ave., Beltsville, Maryland
daughter of Dai V. Hoang
and Phu T. Pham.
Linsey N. Musselman,
41, of 150 N. 7th St.,
Columbia, son of Joy A.
Vito and the late Dale E.
Musselman, and Karen
Marie Knighton, 67, same
address, daughter of the
late Clarence W. Knighton
and the late Cecelia C.
Knighton.
Pedro I. CamejoRodriguez, 36, of 727
Marietta Ave., son of Pedro
N. Camejo and Aidees
Rodriguez, and Julian
Quintrell Anderson, 27,
of 444 N. Queen St., son
of King D. Anderson and
Eleshia Kendricks.
Andrew Wayne Reddig,
24, of 25 Henry Drive,
New Providence, son of
Agnew W. III and Trudy
E. Reddig, and Amber D.
Mabie, 30, of 125 Dickens
Drive, daughter of Daniel
J. Mabie and Patricia R.
Knowlden.
Brandyn J. Keller, 27, of
230 N. Hanover St., Apt.
114, Elizabethtown, son
of John G. and Tabitha K.
Keller, and Crystal Marie
Webber, 25, same address,
daughter of Robert E. and
Mildred A. Webber.
Jason Dean Jenson, 35,
of 1185 Knights View
Road, Wrightsville, son of
Michelle A. Stephens and
the late Ricky D. Jenson,
and Nicole M. List, 35,
of 1710 Corporation St.,
Beaver, daughter of John
W. and Lisa K. List.
Paul A. Ginder, 37,
of 114 N. Poplar St.,
Elizabethtown, son of
Paul A. Sr. and Sherie
L. Ginder, and Shannon
Samantha Wilkins, 26,
same address, daughter of
Taylor 60th
hearts in high school
(Lancaster Catholic and
McCaskey) after being
introduced by a friend.
Their children are:
Kathleen, married to
John Zug, Florissant, Colorado; and Jeffrey, married to Priscilla Krause
Kaiser,
Downingtown.
Their four grandchildren
are: Leslie, Neal, Joseph
and Sarah. They have two
great-grandchildren.
Metz 50th
Cimini-Cerquozzi
Debra Cerquozzi and
Alex Cimini were married Sept. 17 by Gary
A. Whiteman in Montoursville,
Lycoming
Dougherty
50th
Jim and Dawn Dougherty, of Lancaster, were
married Oct. 9, 1965, at
St. Johns United Church
of Christ. They celebrated their 50 years of marriage with a dinner party
of family and friends at
the Eden Resort & Suites.
He is the founder of
Dougherty Office Supply and retired as assistant general manager of
Manheim Auto Auction.
She is the retired proprietor of Crowning Glory
Beauty Salon.
BRIGHTON
PANDORA
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11 Hyundai Sonata. $18,692
11 Mazda 3.......... $15,896
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Ford Fusions
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VW Jettas
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Nissan Muranos
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Nissan Xterras
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2014 Juke SL
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$18,808*
Nissan Cubes
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Sports
n SEND STORY TIPS & INFO TO: CHRIS OTTO, 291-8662, COTTO@LNPNEWS.COM
Cream rises
What we learned from
Week 6 of L-L football
n Page C2
PHILADELPHIA
EAGLES
Brees
success
inspired
Kelly
Wasnt scared off
by Bradfords
2 ACL surgeries
ROB MAADDI
Above, Penn State quarterback Christian Hackenberg dives for the end zone on a 5-yard touchdown run in the fourth quarter against Indiana
on Saturday in Beaver Stadium in State College. Below, Nittany Lions wide receiver DaeSean Hamilton catches a 39-yard touchdown pass
from Hackenberg in the second quarter.
Blazers Stillman
takes AA crown
Holds off Catholics Lauren Bird;
both will advance to Regionals
ON THE AIR
Chicagos Cubs
squeeze Cards
AP SPORTS WRITER
EAGLES, page C8
LIONS, page C4
CUBS 6, CARDINALS 3
R.B. FALLSTROM
Saturdays effort by
the Nittany Lions,
Page C4
n PSU-Indiana
statistics, Page C4
n Defense thrives
on sudden changes,
Page C4
n Hackenberg has
banner day under
center, Page C4
n Keegan-Michael
Key adds some levity
for the Lions, Page
C5
n Photo gallery and
postgame video from
Saturdays game
at Beaver Stadium,
LancasterOnline.
com
PHILADELPHIA
KEVIN FREEMAN
MORE BASEBALL
KFREEMAN@LNPNEWS.COM
ASSOCIATED PRESS
STILLMAN, page C3
C2
SPORTS
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
SPORTS ON TV
EQUESTRIAN
NETWORK
TIME
NBCSN
3:30pm
NETWORK
TIME
LPGA Tour:
Sime Darby LPGA Malaysia (tape delay)
GOLF
12pm
GOLF
1pm
NBC
1pm
GOLF
3:30pm
MLB PLAYOFFS
NETWORK
TIME
MLB
4pm
FS1
8pm
MOTOR SPORTS
NETWORK
TIME
NBCSN
6:30am
NETWORK
TIME
WJZ-13,
WHP-21
1pm
FOX
1pm
CBS
4:25pm
NBC
8:20pm
NETWORK
TIME
NHL
7pm
NETWORK
TIME
ROOT
12pm
Euro Qualifying:
Northern Ireland at Finland
FS1
12pm
BTN
1pm
Euro Qualifying:
Republic of Ireland at Poland
ESPN
2:30pm
FS1
2:30pm
NETWORK
TIME
ESPN
8:30pm
NETWORK
TIME
BTN
3pm
NETWORK
TIME
ROOT
2:30pm
GOLF
NFL
Cleveland at Baltimore
Above, John Burnsides rise at quarterback has given McCaskey an offensive boost. Below, Jamal McCaskell and the
Penn Manor attack were short-circuited by turnovers in Friday nights loss to the Red Tornado.
NHL
SPORTS@LNPNEWS.COM
GAME OF THE
WEEK POLL
postponed on Friday
when a power outage
from a thunderstorm hit
Ephrata and War Memorial Stadium.
Annville-Cleona improved to 4-2 overall
and 1-2 in Section Three.
Ephrata remains winless through six games.
Womens college:
North Carolina at Florida State
WNBA FINALS
Game 4: Minnesota at Indiana
COMMENTARY
SOCCER
SPORTS STAFF
Montreal at Ottawa
To WPIAL: Fight
power with power
District should preserve grid tradition
KEVIN GORMAN
PITTSBURGH TRIBUNE-REVIEW
SPORTS
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
C3
Local digest
EQUESTRIAN
n Lancasters Emma Ecklin qualified for the CP National
Horse Show in Lexington, Kentucky. Shes one of 15
riders in the Junior Hunter 33 competition, being held
Oct. 29-30.
FIELD HOCKEY
n Freshman Aliza Mizak scored the games lone goal
Capitals right wing T.J. Oshie (77) loses his footing during Saturday nights game against the Devils.
NHL
Continued from C1
overall and first for Bloomsburg as it beat beat PSUSchuylkill, 15-50. Neiswender clocked a 27:06.
MENS GOLF
n After the second round of the Bank of Tennessee
MENS SOCCER
n No. 1 Franklin & Marshall dominated McDaniel 5-0 in
WOMENS SWIMMING
n Junior Emily Cameron (Warwick) won three events
Saturday to help Georgia beat North Carolina 152-148
and capture its 95th straight home victory. Cameron,
a 12-time high school All-American, captured the 100and 200-meter breaststrokes in 1:03.07 and 2:14.26
respectively. She also took first in the 200 IM with a time
of 2:01.14.
NASCAR
Joe
Gibbs
Racing headed into the
event trying to reclaim
some of the momentum seized by reigning
Sprint Cup champion
Kevin Harvick, who
won last week at Dover
to keep his title defense
intact. JGR drivers Denny Hamlin and Matt
Kenseth won the first
two races in the opening
round of the Chase for
the Sprint Cup championships.
Ski &
Board
Shop
Saturday & Sunday October 17th & 18th
Details: www.skitunesPA.com
717-684-6949 2531 Ironville Pike Columbia, PA 17512
CUSTOM BOOT FITTING / EQUIPMENT LEASING
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C4
Indiana...................7
Penn St...................7
0
12
0
0
0 7
1029
First Quarter
Second Quarter
Fourth Quarter
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
PSU
22
32-154
266
22-40-0
32
7-44.3
1-1
3-30
35:35
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
RUSHINGIndiana, Diamont 11-38, Redding 13-32,
A.Wilson 5-12, Rodriguez 2-6, Majette 1-4, Cameron 1-(minus 13). Penn St., Scott 8-57, M.Allen 8-45, Hackenberg 9-21,
Thompkins 2-11, Thomas 2-9, B.Johnson 2-6, McSorley 1-5.
PASSINGIndiana, Diamont 9-17-0-90, Cameron 6-16-165. Penn St., Hackenberg 21-39-0-262, McSorley 1-1-0-4.
RECEIVINGIndiana, Ri.Jones 5-59, Paige 3-15, Griffith
2-31, Fuchs 1-20, Corsaro 1-13, Redding 1-7, Cobbs 1-5,
Westbrook 1-5. Penn St., Godwin 4-41, Lewis 3-39, Ky.Carter
3-30, Scott 3-21, Hamilton 2-49, Polk 2-46, Gesicki 2-21,
M.Allen 2-15, Garrity 1-4.
PENN STATE REPORT CARD
Continued from C1
Penn State defensive end Carl Nassib sacks Indiana quarterback Danny Cameron,
causing a fumble in the fourth quarter on Saturday afternoon at Beaver Stadium.
Signaling success
for Hackenberg
QB has solid day in air, on ground
STAFF REPORT
SPORTS@LNPNEWS.COM
DPUGLIESE@LNPNEWS.COM
STATE COLLEGE
Sudden changes.
Talk to members of
the Penn State defense
or head coach James
Franklin and its a phrase
you will hear a lot.
We spent a lot of time
talking about and handling sudden change
situations like that and
I thought our guys responded extremely well
to that, Franklin said.
Those sudden change
plays came on a pair of
key series in the first
quarter of Saturdays
29-7 win over Indiana.
Following a 12-yard
touchdown run from
Hoosiers quarterback
Zander Diamont, Indiana surprised the homecoming crowd at Beaver
Stadium by going for
and recovering an onside
kick. When Penn State
finally got the ball back,
the Nittany Lions turned
it right over on a fumble
from Mark Allen.
But Indiana couldnt
capitalize on either occasion, punting the ball
away despite starting
the first drive with the
ball on its own 49 and
the second spotted at
the PSU 48.
It was significant in
the game, Franklin said
about the stops. That
could have been a situation where they gained
some momentum, making some plays after that,
and I thought our guys
responded really well.
We got to a point in the
game where field position was swinging, we
werent punting real well
Penn State defensive end Garrett Sickels sacks Indiana quarterback Zander Diamont
during the first half on Saturday at Beaver Stadium.
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
C5
JOHN WALK
LIZI ARBOGAST
STATE COLLEGE
In the early goings of
Penn States football
season, true freshman
Brandon Polk has established himself as a speed
runner.
When Polk gets the ball
in open space, theres a
good chance hes going
far. Through the first
five games of the season,
Polk had amassed 116
yards on a mere eight
attempts, giving him a
team-high average of
14.5 yards per carry.
But on Saturday, in a
29-7 victory over Indiana, Polk proved that hes
more than just a runner.
He didnt rush the
ball at all on Saturday,
but he did have a pair
of catches, including a
39-yarder that went for
his first career receiving
touchdown.
Obviously, we all see
that the guy can flat-out
run, Penn State coach
James Franklin said.
He needs to continued
to develop on the mental
aspect of the game. But
the more things he gets
confident with so that
we can expand his role,
then you become less
predictable offensively.
Polks first touchdown of his career came
against Buffalo when he
scored a 22-yard rushing TD. Penn States
more expanded playbook made the offense
successful, and Franklin hopes to utilize Polk
more and more.
I do think that the
speed sweeps as well as
the fake speed sweeps,
it gives the defense
pause, Franklin said.
Hes got such speed,
and hes so sudden with
his movements that if
youre not sound, hes
gonna get the edge on
you. Hes just gotta continue to grow. And as
long as he knows what
hes doing and he is com-
JWALK@LNPNEWS.COM
CHAMBERSBURG
PUBLIC OPINION
Actor, writer, comedian and Penn State graduate Keegan-Michael Key leads
the Lions fans in a We Are chant during a stoppage in play at Beaver Stadium on Saturday. Key was the grand marshall in Friday nights homecoming
parade.
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C6
BIG TEN
OSU shakes
off Maryland
Ohio State coach Urban Meyer used Cardale
Jones to start drives
and J.T. Barrett to finish them, as the Buckeyes pulled away in the
second half Saturday
against Maryland, 49-28
Jones
threw
two
touchdown passes, Barrett scored three times
and the top-ranked
Buckeyes (6-0, 2-0 Big
Ten), who havent met
enormous expectations
this season, scored 28
unanswered points in
the second half to put
away the Terrapins in
what may have been
Maryland coach Randy
Edsalls final game.
Ezekiel Elliott had two
short TD runs, Joey Bosa
recorded a sack and several pressures and the
Buckeyes extended the
nations longest winning
streak to 19. Ohio State
has won 26 straight regular-season conference
games.
Maryland quarterback
Perry Hills ran for 170
yards and two TDs, but
threw two picks in the
fourth as the Terrapins
tried to mount a comeback.
Michigan 38, Northwestern 0: Jehu Chesson returned the opening kickoff 96 yards for
a touchdown and No.
18 Michigan scored on
offense and defense to
build a four-touchdown
lead by halftime over No.
13 Northwestern.
The Wolverines (5-1,
2-0 Big Ten) have won
five straight since their
opening loss at Utah under coach Jim Harbaugh,
building momentum going into a showdown at
home next week against
No. 4 Michigan State.
Panthers hold
off Cavaliers
WILL GRAVES
AP SPORTS WRITER
sailed wide.
It is very frustrating,
but thats just a testament to this teams
character, Johns said.
The game was never
over for us. We were
fighting until the end.
Nate Peterman threw
for 222 yards and two
scores for Pitt. Qadree
Ollison added one on
the ground as the Panthers improved to 4-1
for the first time since
2009 and 2-0 in the
ACC.
Hopefully
now
well get some respect
around the country and
people will start noticing this is a different
team than we had in the
past, tight end Scott
Orndoff said.
Pitt never trailed and
appeared on the verge
of an early blowout but
needed a late stand to
preserve its best start in
six years.
I think weve learned
how to win, coach Pat
Narduzzi said.
Narduzzi
stressed
he wouldnt allow his
team to get to high after an emphatic road
triumph at Virginia
Tech last week. The
Panthers
certainly
came out sharp, racing to a quick 17-3
lead. Peterman hit
Orndoff for a 37-yard
touchdown pass on
games fifth play, Chris
James ripped off a 48yard sprint to set up
a 4-yard scoring run
by Ollison later in the
first quarter and the
Panthers appeared to
be in firm control.
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
TOP 25
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Texas running back DOnta Foreman escapes a tackle by Oklahoma cornerback Jordan
Thomas in the first half Saturday in Dallas.
REGIONAL
PSAC
Shippensburg 44,
Lock Haven 34: Andrew Smith rushed
for 125 yards and two
scores and Ryan Zapoticky threw for 350
yards and two scores to
lead the Raiders (4-2,
2-1 PSAC East) to victory against winless Lock
Haven. The Eagles (06, 0-3) kept the game
close with 13 fourthquarter points and 370
yards passing and four
touchdowns by Caleb
Walton.
West Chester 44,
Kutztown 14: The
Rams (4-2, 3-0 PSAC
East) built a 27-0 halftime lead behind the
strength of Pat Moriatys
arm. The West Chester quarterback threw
for 437 yards and five
touchdowns, including
a 62-yard strike to open
the scoring. Kutztown
(3-3, 2-1) managed 280
total yards.
East Stroudsburg 69,
Cheyney 7: Matt Soltes
threw seven touchdowns and completed
28of 37 passes for 419
yards as the Warriors (33, 2-1 PSAC East) struck
Centennial
Gettysburg 45, McDaniel 17: The Bullets
(5-0, 4-0) compiled 552
yards of total offense,
including 184 yards
rushing by Kyle Wigley.
Gettysburg broke open a
close game the Bullets
led, 17-10, at halftime
by scoring 28 straight
second-half
points
against the Green Terror
(0-5, 0-4).
Muhlenberg
27,
Susquehanna 24: Nick
Palladino threw a 17yard touchdown pass to
Ryan Delaney with 5:19
left to lift the Mules (32, 2-2) over the Crusaders (2-3, 1-3).
Moravian 31, Ursinus 3: Moravian (4-1,
3-1) scored the games
first 17 points. Chris Negron rushed for a gamehigh 154 yards and two
scores against Ursinus
(2-3, 1-3).
Johns Hopkins 41,
Juniata 5: The Blue
Jays (5-0, 4-0) scored 24
straight points to open
the game against the Eagles (1-4, 0-4).
MAC
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
C7
Outdoors
Calendar
HUNTING
Flintlock and archery deer hunters are invited to apply for two special deer hunts at Middle Creek Wildlife Management Area this season.
The Game
Commission is
hoping to boost
the success
rates among
goose hunters
at Middle Creek.
2 archery/flintlock opportunities
scheduled at Middle Creek
final approval to a new rule that limits goose hunters to one bird per season inside Middle Creek's controlled
hunting area.
Hunters were selected by lottery
drawing last month for the predetermined hunting dates at Middle Creek
during the upcoming, fall Canada
goose season, which runs from Nov.
14-28 and Dec. 19-Jan. 20 in and
around most of Lancaster and Lebanon counties.
Hunters who shoot the one goose
allowed at Middle Creek on any given
day will not be allowed to return to
hunt for the rest of the season.
Previously, hunters could return
time and again to hunt from unoccupied blinds, since the blinds rarely
are filled every day they are open for
hunting throughout the season.
They still will be allowed to do that,
so long as they don't shoot a goose.
Once they do that, they're done for
the season.
Middle Creek used to be a mecca for
honker-hunting enthusiasts in southeast Pennsylvania. But its reputation
has been rusting over the past 20 years.
Despite efforts and regulations
aimed at boosting resident goose
numbers at Middle Creek over the
past decade, the success rate among
hunters using the blinds there has
plummeted to an all-time low that's
been swirling around the 10-percent
mark the past couple of years.
"Implementing a season limit is
among the changes aimed at increasing hunter success and resident goose
populations," the Game Commission
states in a news release.
WNBA FINALS
AP BASKETBALL WRITER
INDIANAPOLIS
best-of-three series.
The Lynx are the only
other team over .500 in
elimination games over
that span, going 3-2 according to STATS.
Minnesota knows that
its going to be tough
close out the series. Especially on Indianas
homecourt. The first
three games have been
decided by a total of 15
points. Most of the stats
C8
NFL
DAN MASSEY
FANTASY SPORTS
Daily fantasy
sports come
under the
microscope
often players were included in lineups nationwide, won big in a DraftKings contest. Choosing
players who are owned
in fewer leagues is an
advantage in such a large
contestant pool, and
having that information
offers those owners a
discernible edge. Both
companies have since
prohibited their employees from playing
daily fantasy sports, yet
absent legislation, there
are bound to be loopholes, given the lack of
stringent insider-trading
regulations.
Despite some states
having banned DFS,
most states allow it,
including Pennsylvania
and all of its bordering
states. The groundswell for challenging
the legality of daily
fantasy is likely to take
a while, meaning any
national legislation
outlawing DFS would
hardly be immediate.
The real problem of
DFS, according to its detractors, is the predatory
nature of the businesses
involved. John Q. Fantasy Player will almost
never win because he
probably enters just one
or two lineups per day as
part of his daily fantasy
diversion. Furthermore,
he has assuredly not
done near the research
that the professionals
have.
Unfortunately, for
the novice daily fantasy
players, they are largely
nave to the level of their
competitors, leaving the
amateurs in a position
where only a great deal
of luck will result in
substantial winnings.
Smaller winning
pools are attainable,
though a certain
threshold must be
reached in order to
make a withdrawal of
winnings. Additionally, so-called matching contributions, the
advertised amount deposited into a player's
account by the company at initial setup,
may generally not
be withdrawn. That
match is exclusively
an enticement for a
player to insert more
lineups and play more
frequently.
Amateur daily fantasy players realize that
participating in a oneday or one-week league
is akin to playing the
lottery. There is a reasonable opportunity to
win $10 or $20 and next
to no chance of claiming the life-changing
monetary prizes.
Because no amount
of skill in someone who
invests a couple hours
a week can overcome
the throng of players
who devote their entire
livelihood to these
enterprises, those who
plays daily fantasy as a
hobby should do it for
the enjoyment of the
process, not based on
a belief in having the
acumen necessary to
win big. The truth is,
they simply won't.
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Cincinnati Bengals running back Jeremy Hill (32) reacts after scoring a touchdown against the Kansas City Chiefs,
last Sunday in Cincinnati.
NFL PREDICTIONS
BASEBALL
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Chicago Cubs Jorge Soler watches his two-run home run during
the second inning of Game 2 in baseballs National League Division
Series against the St. Louis Cardinals Saturday in St. Louis.
a laugh.
Though none of the runs
were earned in the second,
Garcias first postseason start
since 2012 was a disaster.
The Cubs capitalized when
Garcia blew a play on a safety
squeeze by Hendricks. The
pitcher hesitated instead of
throwing home with a very
good chance of cutting down
the run, then made a wild, flatfooted throw to first for an error.
I didnt even see it, Hendricks said. I put my head
PAULA WOLF
WHEELCHAIR QUARTERBACK
No surprise that
Hamels trade paid
off for Rangers
Has watching the Texas
Rangers vault themselves into
the postseason after the Cole
Hamels trade caused me to
have second thoughts about
the deal?
Not at all.
And I say that even knowing Texas gave up nothing off
its 25-man roster to acquire
Hamels. Im even fine with
the Phils having included
lefty flame-throwing reliever
Jake Diekman, whos pitched
superbly for the Rangers, in
the trade.
The Phillies, of course,
didnt have to part with
Hamels, but if they wanted
to expedite the rebuilding
National League
All games televised by TBS
St. Louis 1, Chicago 1
Friday, Oct. 9
St. Louis 4................................... Chicago 0
Saturday, Oct. 10
Chicago 6.....................................St. Louis3
Monday, Oct. 12: St. Louis (Wacha 17-7) at
Chicago (Arrieta 22-6), 4:37 or 6:07 p.m.
x-Tuesday, Oct. 13: St. Louis (Lynn 12-11) at
Chicago (Hammel 10-7), 4:37 or 8:07 p.m.
x-Thursday, Oct. 15: Chicago at St. Louis,
4:37 or 8:07 p.m.
New York 1, Los Angeles 0
Friday, Oct. 9
New York 3............................ Los Angeles 1
Saturday, Oct. 10
New York at Los Angeles..........................(n)
Monday, Oct. 12: Los Angeles (Anderson
10-9) at New York (Harvey 13-8), 8:07 or
8:37 p.m.
x-Tuesday, Oct. 13: Los Angeles at New
York, 8:07 p.m.
x-Thursday, Oct. 15: New York at Los Angeles, 8:07 p.m.
DIVISION SERIES
(Best-of-5; x-if necessary)
American League
Kansas City vs. Houston
Thursday, Oct. 8
Houston 5............................... Kansas City 2
Friday, Oct. 9
Kansas City 5...............................Houston 4
Sunday, Oct. 11:: Kansas City (Volquez 139) at Houston (Keuchel 20-8), 4:10 p.m.
(MLBN)
x-Monday, Oct. 12: Kansas City at Houston, 1:07 p.m. (FS1)
x-Wednesday, Oct. 14: Houston at Kansas
City, 8:07 (FS1)
Toronto vs. Texas
Thursday, Oct. 8
Texas 5 ........................................ Toronto 3
Friday, Oct. 9
Texas 6..........................................Toronto 4
Sunday, Oct. 11: Toronto (Estrada 13-8) at
Texas (Lewis 17-9), 8:10 p.m. (FS1)
x-Monday, Oct. 12: Toronto (Dickey 1111) at Texas (Holland 4-3), 1:07 or 4:07 p.m.
(FS1)
x-Wednesday, Oct. 14: Texas at Toronto,
4:07 or 8:07 p.m. (FS1)
POSTSEASON GLANCE
GAME TWO
Cubs 6, Cardinals 3
Chicago
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Fowler cf..............5 1 2 1 0 0 .222
Soler rf.................2 1 2 2 2 0 1.000
Denorfia rf...........1 0 0 0 0 1 .000
Bryant 3b.............4 0 0 0 0 1 .000
Rizzo 1b...............3 1 0 0 1 1 .000
St.Castro 2b.........4 0 2 0 0 0 .286
A.Jackson lf..........4 1 0 0 0 2 .000
M.Montero c.......3 1 0 1 1 1 .000
Hendricks p..........1 1 0 1 0 1 .000
T.Wood p..............1 0 0 0 0 1 .000
d-Shwrbr ph.........1 0 0 0 0 1 .500
Cahill p.................0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Rondon p.............0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Russell ss.............3 0 0 1 0 0 .167
Totals............... 32 6 6 6 4 9
St. Louis
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Carpenter 3b.......4 1 1 1 0 2 .143
Piscotty rf............4 0 1 0 0 3 .375
Holliday lf.............4 0 0 0 0 0 .125
Heyward cf..........4 0 1 0 0 0 .250
Peralta ss.............4 0 0 0 0 1 .000
Moss 1b...............2 0 0 0 0 2 .000
c-Rynlds ph-1b.....2 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Molina c...............3 0 1 0 0 1 .167
Wong 2b..............3 1 1 1 0 1 .333
Garcia p...............0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Lynn p..................0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
a-Jay ph...............1 0 0 0 0 1 .000
Villanuv p.............0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
b-Grichuk ph........1 1 1 1 0 0 .333
Maness p.............0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Wainwrght p........0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
e-Garcia ph..........1 0 0 0 0 0 .000
J.Broxton p...........0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
C9
Totals............... 33 3 6 3 0 11
Chicago.............. 051 000 000 6 6 0
St. Louis.............. 100 020 000 3 6 2
a-struck out for Lynn in the 3rd. b-homered for Villanueva in the 5th. c-flied out for
Moss in the 7th. d-struck out for T.Wood in
the 8th. e-grounded out for Wainwright in
the 8th.
EJai.Garcia (1), Wong (1). LOBChicago 5, St. Louis 3. 2BFowler (1), Soler (1).
HRSoler (1), off Jai.Garcia; M.Carpenter
(1), off Hendricks; Wong (1), off Hendricks;
Grichuk (1), off Hendricks. RBIsFowler
(1), Soler 2 (2), M.Montero (1), Hendricks
(1), A.Russell (1), M.Carpenter (1), Wong
(1), Grichuk (1). SBA.Jackson (1). SHendricks, A.Russell.
Runners left in scoring positionChicago
3 (Rizzo, Hendricks, St.Castro); St. Louis 1
(Jh.Peralta). RISPChicago 1 for 9; St. Louis
0 for 1.
Chicago
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Hendricks...... 42-e 4 3 3 0 7 66 5.79
Wod W 1-0....21-e 1 0 0 0 2 28 0.00
Cahill H 1......... 1 0 0 0 0 2 8 0.00
Rondon S 1-1... 1 1 0 0 0 0 15 0.00
St. Louis
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Garcia L 0-1...... 2 4 5 0 1 2 45 0.00
Lynn................. 1 1 1 1 1 2 24 9.00
Villanueva........ 2 0 0 0 1 0 23 0.00
Maness..........11-e 1 0 0 1 1 28 0.00
Wainwright... 12-e 0 0 0 0 3 18 0.00
Broxton............ 1 0 0 0 0 1 15 0.00
Inherited runners-scoredWainwright
2-0.
T2:57. A47,859 (45,399).
2016.
If anything, Hamels
success in Texas is
vindication of what
Phils fans were saying
when the club was
shopping him:
He is a true ace
in the prime of his
career, under contract for several more
seasons at less than
market value, and
some of the packages
teams were rumored
to be offering for him
were an absolute joke.
So the Rangers
deserve credit for
going after Hamels in
a serious way serious enough that they
were willing to part
with the quality and
quantity of prospects
the Phillies were
looking for.
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SPORTS
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
ALLEY NOTES
Perfect games were rolled by Brian Hess and
John Mertz III at Leisure; and Jim Dinicola and
Andy Bobetsky at Dutch.
High series (800, men; 700, women) were rolled
by Marvin Keider (803) at Dutch, and Dennett
Rittenhouse (716) at Leisure.
Young
bowler
Cole Snavely, who
rolls for
Warwick
High
School,
carries a
206 average and
has some
solid
insights
into what
makes up
a perfect
team.
BARRY DECKER
ROLL EM
Warwicks
Snavely:
Tips on a
great team
The 2015-16 bowling
season promises to be
filled with the excitement of young talent
mixed with veteran
prowess. It will contain perfect scores and
games that are perfect
because of the satisfaction the sport provides.
And, once again, the
Roll Em column will
attempt to include some
of those moments that
make the sport special.
One of the young
bowlers who adds to
the quality of the game
is Warwick junior Cole
Snavely.
Packing a 206 average, this kegler helped
to propel his team to the
2014 USBC championship and a runner-up
finish in the 2015 team
tourney.
For Snavely, team
is a critical part of the
game. And he offered six
components of the perfect one, which apply to
the essence of all teams.
1. Team: You have
teammates for a reason,
he said, so you should
never feel as though you
have to carry the team. It
should be high fives and
fist bumps start to finish,
good day or bad.
2. Love: Going into
my third year of high
school bowling, I have
built up bonds with my
teammates. Treat your
teammates as siblings,
and together you can go
anywhere.
3. Fun: You have to
be able to laugh during
a competition; and have
a free mind that doesnt
overthink the game.
4. Have life: Get loud
and make sure that
every other team in
the house knows that
your team is there to
go after the title. Having life keeps everyone
in a comfortable mood,
which makes getting up
and throwing a good ball
much easier.
5. Integrity: Theres no
need to slam your fist on
the ball return after a bad
shot. Realize what you did
wrong, make the spare,
and move on to the next
frame.
6. Goals: Make them
realistic, but dont be
afraid to aim high. You
have to believe that you
have a chance to be successful before you can be
successful.
Background: The son
of Susan and Dean Snavely, Cole is a part-time
employee at Oregon
Dairy.
Leagues/averages:
Saturday Morning Juniors 198; scholastic 206.
High scores: Single
288, (January, 2015);
series 726, (12/24/14).
Greatest moment in
the sport: Winning the
2014 SnowRoller tournament as a member of
my Warwick bowling
team.
Proudest achievements: 2014 USBC team
tournament championship; 2015 USBC team
tournament runner-up;
Pepsi district qualifier
2013, 2014, 2015; Lancaster-Lebanon League
singles championship/
Eastern regionals
singles championship
qualifier as freshman
and sophomore.
Favorite bowling
center: 222 Dutch
Lanes.
Type of bowling
ball: Game Breaker 2
Gold.
Persons who taught
me the most are:
Shawn Whitymer,
who helped me in the
Saturday Morning
Juniors program; and
Donna Snyder, who
showed me that simple
mechanics and spares
make the difference.
I like high school
bowling because:
You build an irreplaceable bond with your
teammates and make
friends from teams
across the state.
Bowling has helped
me: Cope with stress
and undesirable events
in my life; as well as
make friends and learn
to trust.
My interest in the
sport began: When my
parents registered me
in the bumper bowling
league at five years old.
I think other bowlers would describe
me as: Someone who
can be a leader.
My long-term bowling goal is: To bowl at
the collegiate level.
The funniest thing
that has happened to
me in bowling was:
Filling an entire game
with nine spares with
every pin I left being a
10 pin.
People would be
most surprised to
learn that: I am shy.
When Im not bowling (which is rare),
I: Hang out with best
friends or listen to
music.
Extracurricular activities include: Cross
country and bowling.
n To recommend a subject
for the column, contact
Barry Decker at deckrunner@aol.com or 786-2620.
HIGH SCORES
CLEARVIEW LANES
LEISURE LANES
ROCKY SPRINGS
GOLF ROUNDUP
SPORTS
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Lancaster Scene
If your organization wishes to have an item in the
LANCASTER SCENE column of the LNP Sunday sports
print section, as well as its weekly online listings, send
a note to the LNP sports department, P.O. Box 1328,
Lancaster, PA 17608. Items can run for up to three
consecutive weeks and will not be repeated after that
period. The email address is sports@lnpnews.com. The
fax number is 481-7327. Items must be mailed, faxed or
emailed by Thursday to be included in the column.
ATHLETIC
FIELDS
The Lancaster County
Department of Parks &
Recreation is accepting
athletic field rentals
through October for soccer,
softball and Little League
baseball. Options to renters
are weekday and weekend
rentals, and lit fields.
For more information,
call (717) 299-8215 or
(717) 299-8220, or visit
the Park Office at 1050
Rockford Road, Lancaster;
additional information is
available online at www.
lancastercountyparks.org.
BASEBALL
The Rock Sports Academy
11U Baseball Travel Team
is looking for a couple of
players to complete its
roster for the 2016 season.
Interested players or those
seeking more information
should contact tina.
rocksports@gmail.com.
Spooky Nook Sports is
hosting four upcoming
baseball events:
The travel baseball
program will have a final
tryout from noon to 3 p.m.
Nov. 14 for anyone who
missed the August tryouts.
The season will start in
January and conclude in
late July.
The Fall Big League
Hitting Clinic is slated for
6-7:30 p.m. Oct. 14. Pro
player Travis Garcia will
teach players stance, swing
and finish to raise their
average.
The Fall Big League
Pitching Clinic is slated for
6-7:30 p.m. Oct. 21. Former
Lancaster Barnstormer
Ross Peeples will teach
mechanics.
November baseball
workouts will be held every
Tuesday in November with
current pro player Zach
Shank. The program will
include stations for players
to work on pitching,
throwing, hitting and
fielding. Minors (ages 7-11)
will work from 6-7:30 p.m.
and Majors (ages 12-13)
will work from 7:30-9
p.m. To register or for
more information, contact
Troy Steffy at baseball@
nooksports.com.
BASKETBALL
The Penn State Harrisburg
Coaching Clinic will be held
from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Oct.
25. Boys and girls coaches
are welcome. Speakers
include: Brett Reed,
Lehigh; Mike Deane, James
Madison; Jesse Agel, NJIT;
Jim Fenerty, Germantown
Academy; Bryan
Goodman, Binghamton;
Joe Crispin, Rowan;
and James McCarthy,
Towson. All will present
live demonstrations with
players. A $75 fee admits
a staff of four people, with
lunch included. For more
information, contact Don
Friday at dsf15@psu.edu.
The Hempfield Youth
Association has opened
online registration for
the 2015-16 Intramural
Basketball Season.
Hempfield School District
residents may access
information regarding
the program and initiate
registration by going to
www.hyasports.countmein.
com. It is recommended
that the Information
pages be reviewed prior
to registration in order to
understand changes new
to this season. Of particular
note is the new Intro to
Basketball Clinic series
being made available to
Grade 1 and 2 children.
The Southern End
Community Association
in Quarryville is accepting
registration for a 5-on-5
mens winter basketball
league (30 and over).
Games will be played at
and registration
procedures, call 290-7180
ext. 3100.
COACHING
OPENINGS
Manheim Central is
seeking to fill the following
coaching positions in the
near future: head senior
high boys and girls track
and assistant softball.
Prospective candidates
should have updated
clearances and can apply
online at the school district
website. Details available
from Athletic Director
George Derbyshire at 6648429.
Columbia High School
is accepting applications
for head varsity boys
basketball coach. The
candidate must have a
strong basketball coaching
background, and extra
consideration will be
given to candidates with
experience as a varsity
assistant or head junior
high coach. Will be in
charge of schools entire
boys basketball program.
Candidates should send a
letter of application and
coaching resume to Jim
Rhoads, Athletic Director,
Columbia High School, 901
Ironville Pike, Columbia,
PA 17512. To be hired, the
candidate must have all
necessary clearances.
The Elizabethtown Area
School District is seeking
qualified candidates for
vacancies including: junior
high head and assistant
wrestling coaches, girls
varsity head lacrosse
coach, assistant varsity
swimming coach and
assistant varsity track
coach. Visit www.
etownschools.org for
details.
Lancaster Mennonite
School has openings for
the following coaching
positions: junior high girls
basketball head coach, JV
boys volleyball head coach
and varsity track and field
head coach. Interested and
qualified persons should
send a resume and letter of
interest via email to Jared
Yoder, Athletic Director,
Lancaster Mennonite
School (yoderja@
lancastermennonite.org).
Conestoga Valley School
District is accepting
applications for the
head boys lacrosse and
head baseball coaching
positions. Interested and
qualified persons should
send a resume and letter
of interest via email to Zac
Kraft, Athletic Director,
Conestoga Valley High
School (zac_kraft@
conestogavalley.org) by
Oct. 23.
Elco seeks to fill several
positions, including: junior
high wrestling coach,
head indoor track coach,
assistant indoor track
coach, JV baseball coach
and JV softball coach. If
interested, send a letter
of interest and resume
to Douglas M. Bohannon,
Director of Athletics, Elco
High School, 180 Elco Drive,
Myerstown, PA 17067.
The Lampeter-Strasburg
Athletic Department has
the following coaching
vacancies for the 201516 school year: assistant
swimming coach and
assistant girls lacrosse
coach. Qualified candidates
should have previous
playing and/or coaching
experience. Interested
candidates should submit
a letter of interest, resume,
clearances (PA criminal, PA
child abuse, FBI criminal),
and references to: Branden
Lippy, Director of Athletics,
Lampeter-Strasburg
School District, PO Box
428, Lampeter, PA 17537.
Positions open until filled.
EOE.
LIFEGUARDING
An American Red Cross
training session, with online
components, will be held
be the Hempfield Area
Rec Commission on Nov.
27-29. A lifeguard skills
pre-test, to be held Nov.
13 from 7 to 9 p.m., is a
prerequisite. Participants
must attend all classes
and successfully complete
all skills and written
testing. Preregistration
is required by Nov. 6.
Class times and other
POLO
Lancaster Polo Club
closes its season Sunday,
Oct. 11 at Forney Field on
Church Street in Rothsville
(between Lititz and
Brownstown, two blocks
south off Route 772).
This week features the
George Pucak Memorial/
Patron Appreciation Day.
Gates open at 1 p.m. and
matches start at 2:30
p.m. Admission is $5,
and children under 12 are
admitted free. Tailgating
welcomed. For more
information, visit www.
lancasterpolo.org.
REC CENTERS
Brightside Opportunity
Center, at 515 Hershey Ave.,
Lancaster, offers a variety
of programs for all ages,
and a diverse population.
Yoga, a nutritionist,
fitness, personal trainers,
basketball, Zumba and Soul
line dancing are among
the available programs. To
register call (717) 509-1342
or come in.
Ephrata Rec Center, 130 S.
Academy Dr., offers a wide
variety of programs for
all ages including sports,
fitness, wellness, aquatics
and special events. For
more information visit
www.ephratarec.com or
call (717) 738-1167.
Greater Elizabethtown
Area Recreation &
Community Services offers
programs and activities
for all ages. Registration is
accepted online at www.
GetintoGEARS.org, by
phone (367-0355) or fax
(367-4138) with a Visa or
MasterCard credit card, and
by walk-in or mail-in at 600
E. High St., Elizabethtown
17022. Registration is on
a first-come, first-served
basis.
Hempfield Rec Center,
950 Church St., Landisville,
offers instructional,
group exercise and
sports programs for
all ages. Opportunities
include aquatics, fitness,
lifeguarding, personal
training, sport-specific
training, tennis, wellness
and special events. For
more information, visit
www.hempfieldrec.com or
call (717) 898-3102.
Lampeter-Strasburg
YMCA, 800 Village Road,
RUNNING
The Lancaster Road
Runners Club Invites
runners of all ages and
abilities to participate in
its spring fun runs, held
throughout the area
every Tuesday evening
at 6:30 p.m. We will be
at Trio Bar, 3707 Marietta
Ave., Columbia this week.
For more information,
contact Fred at 8080151. Information about
Thursday evening and
Sunday morning trail runs
can also be found on the
club website, www.lrrclub.
org.
The HARC 5K Glow
Run will be held at 7:30
p.m. Oct. 24, starting
at Georgelis Law Firm
Stadium, 200 Stanley
Dr., Landisville. The final
day for early registration,
and a guaranteed shirt is
Oct. 11. Late registration
continues from Oct. 12 to
19, then on site the day
of event. The cost is $25.
Packet pickup and raceday registration will be
held from 6 to 7:15 p.m.
at the Hempfield football
field. Details, entry forms
and online registration
are available online at
www.hempfieldrec.com/
glowrun5k/. Runners and
spectators are encouraged
to wear costumes that
can be seen in the dark.
For more information
or to volunteer, contact
race director Jeff Book at
jbook@hempfieldrec.com
or 898-3102, ext.36.
The Relay For Life Fall
Fun Run & Food Truck
Event will be held Oct.
25 at Clipper Magazine
Stadium, 650 N. Prince St.,
Lancaster. A 5K and 1-mile
run/walk will begin at
9:30 a.m., and be followed
by a food truck event. To
register by Oct. 23, visit
www.relayforlife.org/
lancaster5kpa . Race-day
registration will also be
available at the stadium
beginning at 8:30 a.m.
Cost is $30 for the 5K,
$20 for the 1-miler. For
more information, contact
Stephanie Delp at 717-3973745 or Stephanie.delp@
cancer.org.
New Holland Boy Scout
Troop 48 will hold a
5K/10K run/walk with a
half-mile kids fun run on
C11
SKIING
The Lancaster Ski Club
invites the public to attend
the sixth annual Central PA
Ski Expo on Oct. 23 from
6 to 9 p.m. at Highlands
of Donegal (Groffs
Farm Restaurantand
Golf Course), 650
Pinkerton Road, Mount
Joy. Attendees will have
the opportunity to meet
mountain reps and tour
operators and enjoy free
admission, music and food.
First-time members to join
the Lancaster Ski Club will
get $5 off membership
fee. For more information,
email Brian Leatherman at
bcleatherman@gmail.com.
SOCCER
The Penn Legacy Soccer
Clubs U17 and U19 boys
teams need a few more
field players to fill out their
rosters for the upcoming
Fall/Winter/Spring seasons.
There will be a tryout
at 7 p.m. Oct. 18 at the
Hempfield High School
Quad Fields. If you are
interested in trying out for
one of these teams, contact
Mike Logan at logan@
pennlegacy.org.
SOFTBALL
The Lancaster Lady
Stormers are looking for
girls ages 16-18 who want
to improve their skills and
play competitive softball
for the roster of an 18U
team. Contact coach Steve
Smith at 717-201-2760 or
bluejitney2@aol.com for
more information.
VOLLEYBALL
WRESTLING
The Solanco Youth
Wrestling Program will
have its annual signups
from 6 to 7 p.m. each
Wednesday in October at
the Solanco High Wrestling
Complex, adjacent to the
high school football field.
Wrestlers may also register
online at Solancowrestling.
org.
The Rubicon Wrestling
Club will hold the Solanco
Open Wrestling Room
from 6 to 7:15 p.m. each
Wednesday in October
at the Solanco High
Wrestling Complex,
adjacent to the high school
football field. These open
workout sessions will
include technique and live
wrestling, plus strength
and agility drills. For more
information, email john_
little@solanco.k12.pa.us.
Signups for the Ephrata
Recreation Center youth
wrestling program will take
place Oct. 24 and Oct. 31
from 9 to 11 a.m. at the Rec.
Program is for children
in grades K-6. It is only
necessary to attend one of
the registration dates.
C12
Marauders lose,
now 0-6 this fall
Millersville was beaten Saturday at home
by PSAC East co-leader Bloomsburg
JOEL SCHREINER
LNP CORRESPONDENT
Bloomsburgs mastery of
the Marauders continues.
The Huskies ran their streak
to 16 straight over Millersville
University football with a 4120 win Saturday evening at
Biemesderfer Stadium.
Joe Parsnik ran for three
touchdowns for the Huskies,
who remain tied at the top
of the PSAC East with a 3-0
mark (4-2 overall).
Bloom rushed for 236 yards
on 41 carries. While that is the
lowest total in the last four
games, the Marauder defense
has now given up 1,257 yards
during that span. On this day,
conversely, the MU offense
only rushed for 26 yards on
23 carries.
With the lack of offensive production early in the
game, I think that put an
undo amount of stress on the
defense in terms of the number of plays they played and
I think that took a toll on our
defensive linemen, for sure,
said Marauder coach Greg
Breitbach.
Millersville
quarterback
J.J. Paige completed 24-of-35
passes and two touchdowns,
while throwing a season-high
250 yards. His three-yard TD
pass to Tyler Zilen in the second quarter cut the Bloom
lead to 17-7 and was MUs first
touchdown in the first half of
a game since the second week
of the season.
The Marauders (0-6, 0-3)
finished with 276 total yards,
their second-highest output
of the season.
We were at least able to
move the football a little bit,
Moore, Capoferri
in Class AAA final
L-L League singles and doubles finalists
were set in all brackets on Saturday
STAFF REPORT
SPORTS@LNPNEWS.COM
TENNIS
SPORTS
GOLF
PGA
PRESIDENTS CUP
Saturday
At Jack Nicklaus Golf Club Korea
Incheon, South Korea
Yardage: 7,380; Par: 72
UNITED STATES 9 1/2, INTERNATIONAL 8 1/2
Foursomes
United States 2, International 2
Louis Oosthuizen and Branden Grace,
International, def. Patrick Reed and Rickie
Fowler, United States, 3 and 2.
Bubba Watson and J.B. Holmes, United
States, halved with Adam Scott and Marc
Leishman, International.
Bill Haas and Matt Kuchar, United States,
halved with Sang-moon Bae and Hideki
Matsuyama, International.
Dustin Johnson and Jordan Spieth, United
States, def. Jason Day and Charl Schwartzel,
International, 1 up.
Fourballs
United States 2, International 2
Louis Oosthuizen and Branden Grace,
International, def. J.B. Holmes and Bubba
Watson, United States, 1 up.
Phil Mickelson and Zach Johnson, United
States, def. Adam Scott and Anirban Lahiri,
International, 3 and 2.
Sang-moon Bae and Hideki Matsuyama,
International, def. Jimmy Walker and Chris
Kirk, United States, 6 and 5.
Patrick Reed and Jordan Spieth, United
States, def. Jason Day and Charl Schwartzel,
International, 3 and.
CHAMPIONS
SAS CHAMPIONSHIP
Saturday
At Prestonwood Country Club
Cary, N.C.
Purse: $2.1 million
Yardage: 7,240; Par: 72
Second Round
Kenny Perry.............................. 68-68136
Joe Durant................................ 69-68137
Lee Janzen................................ 70-68138
Bernhard Langer....................... 65-73138
Tom Lehman............................. 68-71139
John Riegger............................. 67-72139
Jeff Maggert............................. 73-67140
Kevin Sutherland...................... 68-72140
Scott Dunlap............................. 67-73140
John Cook................................. 72-69141
Michael Allen............................ 71-70141
Paul Goydos.............................. 70-71141
Loren Roberts........................... 70-71141
Billy Andrade............................ 74-67141
David Frost............................... 69-72141
Fred Funk.................................. 71-71142
Jeff Hart.................................... 71-71142
Woody Austin........................... 72-70142
Grant Waite.............................. 73-69142
Steve Jones............................... 71-71142
Colin Montgomerie.................. 70-72142
Chien Soon Lu........................... 73-69142
Mike Goodes............................ 74-68142
Brad Faxon................................ 69-73142
Olin Browne.............................. 68-74142
Stephen Ames.......................... 72-71143
Sandy Lyle................................. 73-70143
Tom Byrum............................... 74-69143
Wes Short, Jr............................. 70-73143
Joey Sindelar............................ 70-73143
Duffy Waldorf........................... 68-75143
Gary Hallberg............................ 72-72144
Russ Cochran............................ 71-73144
Corey Pavin............................... 73-71144
Peter Senior.............................. 73-71144
Scott McCarron......................... 75-69144
Neal Lancaster.......................... 69-75144
Gene Sauers............................. 67-77144
Brian Henninger....................... 72-73145
Scott Verplank.......................... 71-74145
Mark Wiebe.............................. 73-72145
Skip Kendall.............................. 74-71145
P.H. Horgan III........................... 74-71145
Greg Kraft................................. 68-77145
Kirk Triplett............................... 70-76146
Tom Pernice Jr........................... 74-72146
Bart Bryant............................... 69-77146
Scott Parel................................ 76-70146
Hale Irwin................................. 72-75147
Jay Delsing................................ 73-74147
Mark Brooks............................. 71-76147
Marco Dawson......................... 70-77147
Mark Calcavecchia.................... 70-77147
Esteban Toledo......................... 74-73147
Scott Hoch................................ 75-72147
Steve Lowery............................ 75-72147
Rod Spittle................................ 68-79147
Gil Morgan................................ 70-78148
Tom Kite.................................... 74-74148
Dick Mast.................................. 75-73148
Bob Tway.................................. 78-70148
Jesper Parnevik......................... 73-76149
Wayne Levi............................... 75-74149
Roger Chapman........................ 77-72149
Jerry Smith............................... 72-78150
Jay Don Blake............................ 72-78150
Jeff Sluman............................... 71-79150
Jim Thorpe................................ 74-76150
Mike Hulbert............................ 75-75150
Craig Stadler............................. 73-78151
Carlos Franco............................ 76-76152
Hal Sutton................................. 71-82153
Steve Pate................................. 76-77153
Tommy Armour III..................... 78-75153
Bob Gilder................................. 79-74153
Tom Purtzer.............................. 78-79157
Bobby Wadkins......................... 79-78157
Nolan Henke............................. 81-88169
Ian Woosnam................................... 75-WD
John Huston...................................... 74-WD
LPGA
MALAYSIA
Saturday
At Kuala Lumpur Golf and Country Club
Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
Purse: $2 million
Yardage: 6,260; Par 71
a-amateur
Jessica Korda....................... 69-67-65201
Stacy Lewis.......................... 72-66-65203
Ha Na Jang........................... 67-65-71203
Lydia Ko............................... 71-65-68204
Shanshan Feng.................... 66-69-69204
Xi Yu Lin............................... 65-68-71204
Mika Miyazato..................... 68-69-68205
I.K. Kim................................ 68-68-69205
Amy Yang............................. 67-68-70205
Inbee Park........................... 68-66-71205
Yani Tseng............................ 66-68-71205
Ryann OToole..................... 72-66-68206
Haru Nomura....................... 71-65-70206
Morgan Pressel.................... 71-73-63207
Caroline Masson.................. 71-69-67207
Jaye Marie Green................. 69-71-67207
Ariya Jutanugarn.................. 71-67-69207
Catriona Matthew............... 70-68-69207
Michelle Wie....................... 66-72-69207
Chella Choi........................... 66-69-72207
Alison Lee............................ 65-69-73207
Anna Nordqvist.................... 71-67-70208
Mirim Lee............................ 73-71-65209
Gerina Piller......................... 73-69-67209
Eun-Hee Ji............................ 70-68-71209
Pornanong Phatlum............. 69-69-71209
Wei-Ling Hsu........................ 73-68-69210
Mi Hyang Lee....................... 69-71-70210
Candie Kung......................... 69-68-73210
Hee Young Park.................... 71-72-68211
a-Aditi Ashok....................... 70-73-68211
Karine Icher......................... 70-72-69211
Charley Hull......................... 74-66-71211
Azahara Munoz.................... 71-67-73211
So Yeon Ryu......................... 68-69-74211
Julieta Granada.................... 70-72-70212
Danielle Kang....................... 72-68-72212
Lexi Thompson.................... 71-69-72212
Brittany Lang....................... 73-66-73212
Sandra Gal........................... 68-71-73212
Minjee Lee........................... 69-66-77212
Austin Ernst......................... 75-70-68213
Kris Tamulis.......................... 72-72-69213
Paula Creamer..................... 73-70-70213
Mo Martin........................... 74-68-71213
Mariajo Uribe...................... 74-68-71213
Q Baek................................. 68-72-73213
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
LANCASTER
MEADIA HEIGHTS
TRANSACTIONS
BASEBALL
American League
TORONTO BLUE JAYS Added RHP Ryan
Tepera to the post season roster.
FOOTBALL
National Football League
DALLAS COWBOYS Placed RB Lance
Dunbar injured reserve. Signed WR Vince
Mayle from the practice squad.
DENVER BRONCOS Released FB James
Casey.
OAKLAND RAIDERS Signed S Tevin McDonald. Released S Taylor Mays.
SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS Released CB
Shareece Wright. Signed G Andrew Tiller
from the practice squad.
HOCKEY
National Hockey League
BUFFALO SABRES Placed G Robin Lehner on injured reserve. Recalled G Nathan
Lieuwen from Rochester (AHL). Activated
G Linus Ullmark from injured reserve and
loaned him to Rochester. Loaned D Jake
McCabe to Rochester.
American Hockey League
ALBANY DEVILS Announced G Ken Appleby was reassigned to Adirondack (ECHL).
ECHL
MANCHESTER MONARCHS Released
Fs Dmitry Antipin and John McGinnis, and
D Alex Baskakov from their tryout agreements. Waived D Mark Adams.
SOUTH CAROLINA STINGRAYS Signed F
Maxime Sauve to the training camp roster.
Released D Kyle Shapiro and F Jordan Reed
from their tryout agreements.
COLLEGE
HOFSTRA Announced mens senior
basketball F-C Ibrahim Djambo will miss the
fall semester to attend to a family matter in
his home country of Mali.
NFL
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
East
W L T Pct PF PA
New England....... 3 0 0 1.000 119 70
N.Y. Jets................ 3 1 0 .750 95 55
Buffalo................. 2 2 0 .500 110 92
Miami.................. 1 3 0 .250 65 101
South
W L T Pct PF PA
Indianapolis......... 3 2 0 .600 99 113
Tennessee............ 1 2 0 .333 89 77
Jacksonville.......... 1 3 0 .250 62 107
Houston............... 1 4 0 .200 97 135
North
W L T Pct PF PA
Cincinnati............. 4 0 0 1.000 121 77
Pittsburgh............ 2 2 0 .500 96 75
Baltimore............. 1 3 0 .250 93 104
Cleveland............. 1 3 0 .250 85 102
West
W L T Pct PF PA
Denver................. 4 0 0 1.000 97 69
Oakland............... 2 2 0 .500 97 108
San Diego............. 2 2 0 .500 96 110
Kansas City.......... 1 3 0 .250 100 125
NATIONAL CONFERENCE
East
W L T Pct PF PA
Dallas................... 2 2 0 .500 95 101
N.Y. Giants............ 2 2 0 .500 102 82
Washington......... 2 2 0 .500 78 79
Philadelphia......... 1 3 0 .250 78 86
South
W L T Pct PF PA
Carolina............... 4 0 0 1.000 108 71
Atlanta................. 4 0 0 1.000 137 93
Tampa Bay........... 1 3 0 .250 72 117
New Orleans........ 1 3 0 .250 86 104
North
W L T Pct PF PA
Green Bay............ 4 0 0 1.000 113 71
Minnesota........... 2 2 0 .500 80 73
Chicago................ 1 3 0 .250 68 125
Detroit................. 0 4 0 .000 66 96
West
W L T Pct PF PA
Arizona................ 3 1 0 .750 148 73
St. Louis............... 2 2 0 .500 74 89
Seattle................. 2 2 0 .500 87 71
San Francisco....... 1 3 0 .250 48 110
Thursdays Game
Indianapolis 27......................... Houston 20
Sundays Games
Chicago at Kansas City...................... 1 p.m.
St. Louis at Green Bay....................... 1 p.m.
Buffalo at Tennessee........................ 1 p.m.
Seattle at Cincinnati.......................... 1 p.m.
Washington at Atlanta...................... 1 p.m.
Jacksonville at Tampa Bay................ 1 p.m.
New Orleans at Philadelphia............ 1 p.m.
Cleveland at Baltimore..................... 1 p.m.
Arizona at Detroit........................ 4:05 p.m.
Denver at Oakland....................... 4:25 p.m.
New England at Dallas................. 4:25 p.m.
San Francisco at N.Y. Giants......... 8:30 p.m.
Open: Carolina, Miami, Minnesota, N.Y.
Jets
Mondays Game
Pittsburgh at San Diego............... 8:30 p.m.
Thursday, Oct. 15
Atlanta at New Orleans............... 8:25 p.m.
Sunday, Oct. 18
Kansas City at Minnesota................. 1 p.m.
Miami at Tennessee.......................... 1 p.m.
Washington at N.Y. Jets..................... 1 p.m.
Arizona at Pittsburgh........................ 1 p.m.
Cincinnati at Buffalo......................... 1 p.m.
Chicago at Detroit............................. 1 p.m.
Denver at Cleveland......................... 1 p.m.
Houston at Jacksonville.................... 1 p.m.
Carolina at Seattle....................... 4:05 p.m.
Baltimore at San Francisco.......... 4:25 p.m.
San Diego at Green Bay............... 4:25 p.m.
New England at Indianapolis....... 8:30 p.m.
Open: Dallas, Oakland, St. Louis, Tampa
Bay
Monday, Oct. 19
N.Y. Giants at Philadelphia........... 8:30 p.m.
TENNIS
SCHOLASTIC GIRLS
At Conestoga Valley
SINGLES
FLIGHT ONE
Class AAA
K. Moore, MT, d. A. Hagino, Hemp, 2-6,
7-5, 6-1; T. Capoferri, L-S, d. S. Rathmell,
McC, 6-4, 6-4; J. Darkey, MT, d. A. Farmer,
Don, 6-1, 6-3; G. Strunk, CC, d. S. Glover,
Coc, 6-1. 6-2.
Class AA
M. Andersson, NL, d. S. Nye, Elco, 6-0,
6-0; A. Hitz, AC, d. L. Riehl, 6-3, 6-1; I.
Midcap, LC, d. K. Shuey, NL, by default; N.
Bronkema, LMH, d. Ellie Cubbison, LC, 6-2,
5-7, 6-3.
FLIGHT TWO
S. Capoferri, L-S, d. K. Logar, Coc, 5-7, 6-4
(10-6); S. Klag, Hemp, d. K. Hartman, CC,
7-5, 6-3.
FLIGHT THREE
K. Donell, Hemp, d. T. Golub, CC, d. 6-1, 6-3;
M. Herzog, Don, d. L. Good, Coc, 6-1, 6-3.
FLIGHT FOUR
L. Jackson, Hemp, d. L. Rettew, L-S, 6-0,
6-2; B. Titi, Coc, d. C. Kitsock, MT, 6-4, 6-4.
DOUBLES
FLIGHT ONE
Class AAA
C. Mann and K. Moore, MT, d. C. Kitsock
and B. Kelly, MT, 6-2, 6-2; A. Hagino and S.
Klag, Hemp, d. J. Darkey and L. McBride,
MT, 6-1, 6-7 (7-5), (10-6).
Class AA
A. Hitz and E. Lerchen, AC, d. M. Andersson and K. Shuey, NL by default; L. Riehl and
R. Donecker, PV, d. S. Nye and K. Stubblebine, Elco, d. 1-6, 7-6 (7-3), (10-8).
FLIGHT TWO
L. Good and B. Titi, Coc, d. J. Stolzfus and
A. Horst, GS, 8-0; M. Herzog and A. Wivell,
Don, d. L. Weaver and C. Scala, 8-3.
FLIGHT THREE
C. Aitken and S. Cheng, CC, d. A. Bucks
and A. Frey, Don, 8-5; N. Brenner and J.
Winters, Coc, d. S. Glick and G. Heinrich,
PV, 8-3.
SCOREBOARD
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
SPORTS SLATE
TENNIS
COLLEGIATE WOMEN
Gwynedd Mercy at Millersville, 2 p.m.
HORSE RACING
PENN NATIONAL RESULTS
1st$17,100,6f
1A-Pohda Pohda (Whitney).......12.80,4.40,3.40
3-Ohdu Ohdu (Rodriguez A.)........ 3.40,3.00
6-Doctor Action (Herrera J.)................. 5.40
Also Ran: Valiant Knight, Dr Wiz, Unlawfuls Image, Sir Lionhearted. Late Scratches:
Citation Star, Mr. Abundance, Burden of
Proof. Race Time: 1:12.88. Exacta (1-3) Paid
$22.20; Superfecta (1-3-6-2) Paid $34.49;
Trifecta (1-3-6) Paid $44.75.
2nd$14,800,6f
9-Mane Meal (Cruise)......... 12.80,6.80,3.60
8-Five Cents (Garcia F.)................. 3.80,2.20
7-Red Pond (Rodriguez E.).................... 2.20
Also Ran: Deputy Cavalier, Bayott, Sawdust, Money Machine, Chicanery, One
Time Richie. Late Scratches: May Day Cash,
The Count. Race Time: 1:11.72. Daily Double (1-9) Paid $128.00; Exacta (9-8) Paid
$28.50; Superfecta (9-8-7-2) Paid $26.06;
Trifecta (9-8-7) Paid $27.95.
3rd$33,300,6f
3-Its a Journey (Rodriguez).... 12.20,9.60,7.20
6-Miss Moneyhenny (Whitney)..... 13.40,6.40
5-Wilma Lynn (Flores J.)..................... 11.00
Also Ran: Find the Money, Clever Again,
Thriller Diller, Untold Secrets, Ribbon,
Sweetest Melody. Late Scratches: Behrniks
Bank, Her Divineness. Race Time: 1:13.
Daily Double (9-3) Paid $178.20; Exacta (36) Paid $71.30; Superfecta (3-6-5-2) Paid
$324.56; Trifecta (3-6-5) Paid $285.50; Pic
3 (1-9-3) Paid $357.50.
4th$19,000,6f
9-Cumberland Gap (Potts)..... 18.60,8.00,4.60
6-Mr Monster (Wolfsont A.)....... 11.00,4.60
3-This Guns for Hire (Rodriguez A.)...... 2.40
Also Ran: S. S. Minnow, Chilean Brothers,
Imperfect, Alpha Wolf, Tax Package, Special
Flyer. Race Time: 1:11.04. Daily Double (39) Paid $181.20; Exacta (9-6) Paid $99.40;
Superfecta (9-6-3-4) Paid $120.27; Trifecta
(9-6-3) Paid $252.60; Pic 3 (9-3-9) Paid
$249.65; Pic 4 (1-9-3-9) Paid $3,167.25.
5th$18,000,1 1/16m
5-Omarvelous (Herrera)..... 14.40,3.80,2.60
1-My Son Ernie (Rodriguez A.)...... 2.80,2.20
6-Fiendfyre (Wolfsont A.)..................... 3.00
Also Ran: R Ks Bobkat, Danny Ocean, Casual Creeper (IRE), Spiked. Late Scratches:
Honors. Race Time: 1:45.69. Daily Double
(9-5) Paid $153.20; Exacta (5-1) Paid
$14.30; Superfecta (5-1-6-8) Paid $25.68;
Trifecta (5-1-6) Paid $33.90; Pic 3 (3-9-5)
Paid $312.05.
6th$33,300,6f
9-Ugottahaveheart (Potts).... 4.20,3.60,2.60
5-A Lil More A J (Ramirez J.)......... 4.00,3.00
4-Shiny Finish (Rodriguez A.)................ 2.40
Also Ran: Kazillionaire, Downhill Dale,
One Diego, Resurrection Bay, Joker Man.
Late Scratches: Chasbo. Race Time:
1:09.76. Daily Double (5-9) Paid $21.20;
Exacta (9-5) Paid $9.10; Superfecta (9-5-48) Paid $14.09; Trifecta (9-5-4) Paid $12.50;
Pic 3 (9-5-9) Paid $59.20.
7th$10,500,1m
4-Witten Valley (Cora D.)...... 4.60,3.00,2.20
6-Smokin Aces (Hernandez J.)...... 3.60,2.40
7-Winking Dixie (Herrera J.).................. 2.80
Also Ran: Magic Milford, Bold Side,
Kowboy Love, Queens Indian. Race Time:
1:43.11. Daily Double (9-4) Paid $7.20; Exacta (4-6) Paid $7.60; Superfecta (4-6-7-5)
Paid $6.41; Trifecta (4-6-7) Paid $7.35; Pic 3
(5-9-4) Paid $19.20.
OFF-TRACK WAGERING
NBA
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
W
L Pct GB
New York......................1
0 1.000
Philadelphia..................2
1 .667
Toronto.........................2
1 .667
Brooklyn.......................1
1 .500
1-w
Boston..........................0
0 .000
1-w
Southeast Division
W
L Pct GB
Charlotte.......................2
0 1.000
Atlanta..........................2
0 1.000
Washington..................1
1 .500
1
Orlando........................1
2 .333 11-w
Miami...........................0
2 .000
2
Central Division
W
L Pct GB
Indiana..........................2
1 .667
Chicago.........................2
1 .667
Milwaukee....................0
1 .000
1
Cleveland......................0
2 .000 11-w
Detroit..........................0
2 .000 11-w
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Southwest Division
W
L Pct GB
Memphis......................1
0 1.000
Houston........................1
1 .500
1-w
New Orleans.................1
1 .500
1-w
San Antonio..................0
1 .000
1
Dallas............................0
2 .000 11-w
Northwest Division
W
L Pct GB
Oklahoma City..............1
0 1.000
Utah..............................2
1 .667
Denver..........................2
1 .667
Portland........................1
1 .500
1-w
Minnesota....................0
2 .000 11-w
Pacific Division
W
L Pct GB
Phoenix.........................2
0 1.000
Sacramento..................2
1 .667
1-w
L.A. Clippers..................1
1 .500
1
Golden State.................1
1 .500
1
L.A. Lakers.....................0
3 .000 21-w
Fridays Games
New York 115................... Washington 104
Atlanta 103........................ New Orleans 93
Phoenix 101.................................... Utah 85
Saturdays Games
Philadelphia 97........................ Brooklyn 95
Chicago 114........................ Minnesota 105
Detroit at Milwaukee...............................(n)
Portland at Sacramento...........................(n)
Sundays Games
Clippers vs. Charlotte at Shenzhen, China.....1:30 a.m.
Orlando vs. Houston at Hidalgo, TX... 8 p.m.
Mondays Games
Memphis vs. Cleveland at Columbus, OH.....7 p.m.
Philadelphia at New York............. 7:30 p.m.
Minnesota at Toronto.................. 7:30 p.m.
San Antonio at Miami.................. 7:30 p.m.
New Orleans at Chicago................... 8 p.m.
Portland at Utah............................... 9 p.m.
FOOTBALL
COLLEGIATE
SATURDAYS SCORES
EAST
Albright 62......................................Wilkes 9
American International 14.......... Stonehill 6
Amherst 24.............................Middlebury 7
Becker 14............................ NY Maritime 13
Bentley 19............................. St. Anselm 14
Bloomsburg 41...................... Millersville 20
Bowie St. 17............................... Chowan 14
Brown 25................................Holy Cross 24
Buffalo St. 29....................... Cortland St. 21
CCSU 35........................................Bryant 33
Carnegie-Mellon 56.......... Bethany (WV) 35
Castleton 34...........................Mount Ida 14
Charleston (WV) 42............ West Liberty 37
Clarion 36.................................Edinboro 23
Columbia 26.................................Wagner 3
Concord 63........................ Virginia-Wise 21
Dartmouth 35.....................................Yale 3
Delaware Valley 18.................Stevenson 15
Duke 44............................................Army 3
Duquesne 53............Alderson-Broaddus 18
East Stroudsburg 69....................Cheyney 7
Fitchburg St. 23...................Worcester St. 0
Fordham 48.................................... Penn 45
Framingham St. 35............... Westfield St. 7
Frostburg St. 37........... William Paterson 19
Gannon 16............................Mercyhurst 13
Georgetown 38...........................Lafayette 7
Harvard 40.....................................Cornell 3
Husson 46...............................Anna Maria 7
Indiana (Pa.) 47....................... Seton Hill 10
Ithaca 47................................... Hartwick 19
James Madison 51...................... Towson 30
Kean 35................. Christopher Newport 10
LIU Post 27.............................Merrimack 24
Lebanon Valley 56............. FDU-Florham 14
Lehigh 21...................................Bucknell 10
Maine 39................................Albany (NY) 7
Penn St. 29................................... Indiana 7
Pittsburgh 26.............................. Virginia 19
Princeton 44............................... Colgate 20
Rhode Island 20......................... Delaware 0
Rochester 24............... Merchant Marine 17
S. Connecticut 21...............................Pace 7
Sacred Heart 26................Robert Morris 13
Shepherd 48........................ Glenville St. 31
Shippensburg 44................... Lock Haven 34
Slippery Rock 56..............California (Pa.) 21
Springfield 35.............................. Hobart 13
St. John Fisher 34............. Morrisville St. 29
St. Lawrence 24................................. RPI 21
Temple 49.....................................Tulane 10
Trinity (Conn.) 29........................Hamilton 4
Tufts 43..................................... Bowdoin 24
Utica 22.................................. Brockport 19
Virginia Union 66.................Lincoln (Pa.) 27
W. Connecticut 46......... Mass. Maritime 39
W. Virginia St. 32.........Notre Dame Coll. 29
WPI 29...................................Union (NY) 21
Wake Forest 3................... Boston College 0
Washington & Jefferson 55.......Grove City 7
Wesley 45...........................College of NJ 14
Wesleyan (Conn.) 24..................... Colby 21
West Chester 44...................... Kutztown 14
Westminster (Pa.) 49.........................Thiel 6
William & Mary 38...................Villanova 16
Williams 16.................................... Bates 14
SOUTH
Appalachian St. 37...................Georgia St. 3
Charleston Southern 37......Monmouth (NJ) 7
Chattanooga 31............................Furman 3
Clemson 43.........................Georgia Tech 24
Coastal Carolina 24............. Presbyterian 17
Davidson 14......... Kentucky Wesleyan 7, OT
FIU 52.............................................UTEP 12
Grambling St. 37..............Alabama A&M 14
Hampton 21.......................... Delaware St. 7
Jacksonville 41............................ Stetson 14
LSU 45..............................South Carolina 24
Marist 13................................. Campbell 10
Mississippi 52.................. New Mexico St. 3
Mississippi St. 45............................. Troy 17
Morehead St. 34........................... Butler 21
Morgan St. 42.......................Savannah St. 3
Murray St. 34........................Austin Peay 18
NC A&T 27............................... Norfolk St. 3
NC Central 27..................... Florida A&M 24
Rice 27.............................................. FAU 26
Richmond 27................................... Elon 14
Samford 49.......................................VMI 13
South Florida 45....................... Syracuse 24
Tennessee 38..............................Georgia 31
The Citadel 39............................ Wofford 12
UConn 40..........................................UCF 13
UT Martin 28.....................Tennessee St. 14
W. Carolina 24.............................Mercer 21
W. Kentucky 58.......... Middle Tennessee 28
MIDWEST
Akron 47...............................E. Michigan 21
Baylor 66....................................... Kansas 7
Bowling Green 62........................ UMass 38
Dayton 13............................... San Diego 12
Drake 34...................................Valparaiso 7
E. Illinois 33..........................SE Missouri 28
Idaho St. 37.......................North Dakota 31
Iowa 29......................................... Illinois 20
Michigan 38........................ Northwestern 0
Minnesota 41..............................Purdue 13
N. Dakota St. 31.......................... N. Iowa 28
N. Illinois 59................................. Ball St. 41
Notre Dame 41............................... Navy 24
Ohio 34................................ Miami (Ohio) 3
Ohio St. 49...............................Maryland 28
Toledo 38...................................... Kent St. 7
W. Illinois 40......................South Dakota 21
W. Michigan 41............... Cent. Michigan 39
Wisconsin 23........................... Nebraska 21
SOUTHWEST
Cent. Arkansas 43............Houston Baptist 7
Portland St. 66....................... North Texas 7
Prairie View 45............................... MVSU 6
Stephen F. Austin 28..............Nicholls St. 24
Texas 24..................................Oklahoma 17
Texas Tech 66..............................Iowa St. 31
Tulsa 34..................... Louisiana-Monroe 24
FAR WEST
Arizona 44............................... Oregon St. 7
E. Washington 42................. Cal Poly 41, OT
Nevada 35.......................... New Mexico 17
Weber St. 24...................... Montana 21, OT
SCHOLASTIC
SATURDAYS SCORES
Annville-Cleona................0 28 7 0 35
Ephrata.............................0 0 7 14 21
Scoring
A-CW. Langan 13 run ( kick)
A-CA. Barr 51 pass from N. Myers ( kick)
A-CC. Hoch 40 punt return ( kick)
A-CC. Hoch 53 pass from A. Fox ( kick)
A-CM. Wagner 2 run ( kick)
E 15 run ( kick)
E 16 pass from ( kick)
E 20 pass from ( kick)
Statistics
A-C
Eph
First downs................................ 15
17
Rushes-Yds..........................37-202
30-103
Passing yards........................... 124
165
Passes....................................5-5-0
11-28-3
Punts-Avg.................................0-0
4-36
Fumbles-Lost............................2-2
0-0
Penalties-Yards.......................3-29
4-25
L-L LEAGUE STANDINGS
Section One
League
Team
W
L
Manheim Township.....3
0
Wilson.........................3
0
Hempfield....................2
1
Conestoga Valley.........2
1
Cedar Crest..................1
2
McCaskey....................1
2
Warwick.......................0
3
Penn Manor.................0
3
Section Two
League
Team
W
L
Solanco........................3
0
Manheim Central.........3
0
Lampeter-Strasburg.....2
1
Cocalico.......................2
1
Garden Spot................1
2
Lanc. Catholic..............1
2
Lebanon.......................0
3
Elizabethtown..............0
3
Section Three
League
Team
W
L
Elco..............................3
0
Northern Lebanon.......2
0
Donegal.......................2
1
Annville-Cleona...........1
2
Pequea Valley..............1
2
Columbia.....................0
3
Ephrata........................0
3
Overall
W
L
5
1
5
1
5
1
3
3
2
4
2
4
1
5
0
6
Overall
W
L
6
0
5
1
4
2
3
3
3
3
2
4
1
5
0
6
Overall
W
L
3
3
6
0
3
3
4
2
3
3
0
6
0
6
Cedar Crest..................0 0 12 0 12
Manheim Township.....7 7 0 7 21
Scoring
MTR. MacDonald 32 pass from E. Benjamin (Rodenberger kick)
MTJ. Stutz 44 interception return
(Rodenberger kick)
CCR. Ferreira 46 pass from E. Horn
(pass failed)
CCR. Ferreira 71 pass from E. Horn
(pass failed)
MTN. Seprinski 2 run (Rodenberger
kick)
Statistics
CC
MT
First downs..................................10
24
Rushes-Yds............................. 29-51 46-240
Passing yards.............................226
146
Passes.................................... 8-18-3 13-24-0
Punts-Avg.............................. 2-38.5
4-30
Fumbles-Lost..............................1-0
2-0
Penalties-Yards........................ 5-63
5-35
SECTION TWO
Manheim Central.........7 10 0 3 20
Lancaster Catholic.......0 13 0 0 13
Scoring
MCK. Kegarise 5 run (D. Adams kick)
MCD. Camacho 78 run (D. Adams kick)
LCZ. Sailsman 54 pass from J. Scott (D.
Corrigan kick)
LCZ. Sailsman 20 interception return
(kick failed)
MCFG, Adams 43
MCFG, Adams 45
Statistics
MC
LC
First downs..................................10
10
Rushes-Yds........................... 37-234 28-169
Passing yards...............................61
179
Passes.................................... 6-12-1 21-27-1
Punts-Avg............................ 3-37.33 3-29.33
Fumbles-Lost..............................1-0
2-1
Penalties-Yards........................ 8-65
6-30
SECTION THREE
Donegal.......................0 6 14 12 32
Elco.............................6 14 7 7 34
Scoring
ET. Horst 46 pass from J. Martin (kick
failed)
ED. Stoops pass from J. Martin (Miller
kick)
DA. Dimeler 43 run (kick failed)
ERolon 15 run (Miller kick)
DT. Shirk 65 pass from D. Mohr (kick
failed)
ED. Stoops 5 pass from J. Martin (Miller
kick)
DA. Dimeler 7 run ( run)
DC. Woods 52 pass from D. Mohr (kick
failed)
EA. Olsen 10 pass from J. Martin (Miller
kick)
DM. Marshall 2 run (run failed)
Statistics
Don
Elco
First downs..................................14
16
Rushes-Yds........................... 39-199 34-211
Passing yards.............................168
156
Passes...................................... 3-7-2 15-22-4
Punts-Avg................................. 4-30
5-28.6
Fumbles-Lost..............................1-1
1-0
Penalties-Yards........................ 2-10
6-46
NONLEAGUE
Williams Valley...............13 0 0 0 13
Northern Lebanon...........0 0 0 16 16
Scoring
WVJ. Wolfgang 35 pass from N. Rodichok (P. Mini kick)
WVA. Hand 78 pass from N. Rodnick
(kick failed)
NLC. Teasdale 20 pass from I. Wengert
(pass from )
NLL. Funck 9 pass from I. Wengert
(pass from )
Statistics
WV
NL
First downs................................ 12
14
Rushes-Yds..........................33-115
43-136
Passing yards........................... 166
136
Passes..................................7-18-2
11-23-0
Punts-Avg...............................4-34
4-24.5
Fumbles-Lost............................2-1
2-1
Penalties-Yards.........................4-6
5-45
SOCCER
COLLEGIATE MEN
Elizabethtown........................ 0 1 1
Merchant Marine................... 0 0 0
E-town Scoring: J. Light (64:53).
E-town Assists: G. Waso.
Corners-Shots: E-town 2-12; MM 4-8.
Saves: E-townR. Barrera 5; MMC.
Maier 5.
McDaniel................................ 0 0 0
Franklin & Marshall................ 2 3 5
F&M Scoring: C. Tenbrook (15:36), C.
Niggeman (38:24), U. Okolie (54:37), J.
Tonelli (81:17), D. Martin (84:26).
F&M Assists: R. Fincher 2, B. Wild.
Corners-Shots: McDaniel 2-1; F&M 6-26.
Saves: McDanielN. Over 7, M. Hanyon
0; F&MT. Britton 1, J. Gotlib 0.
California (Pa.)........................ 0 0 0
Millersville............................. 1 1 2
MU Scoring: J. Vazquez (18:55), J. Burns
(47:49).
MU Assists: J. Torres-Groover, J. Vazquez.
Corners-Shots: Cali. 4-13; MU 5-17.
Saves: Cali.L. Exner 7; MUK. Orner 6.
Lancaster Bible....................... 1 2 3
Gallaudet............................... 0 1 1
LB Scoring: J. Groff 2 (17:45, 89:14), E.
Bills (80:09).
GU Scoring: C. Baer (70:14).
LB Assists: N. Grimley, J. Groff, J. Jordan.
Corners-Shots: LB 6-23; GU 2-6.
Saves: LBJ. Bosque 2; GUE. Setzer 9.
COLLEGIATE WOMEN
Susquehanna.......................... 0 1 1
Elizabethtown........................ 1 1 2
Susq. Scoring: G. Juckes (77:24).
E-town Scoring: M. Dwyer (39:05), K. Cerankowski (87:54).
Susq. Assists: K. McKenna.
E-town Assists: L. Hoagland, S. Nester.
Corners-Shots: Susq. 2-8; E-town 7-25.
Saves: Susq.J. Slocum 8; E-townD.
Robidoux 2.
Haverford............................... 1 1 2
Franklin & Marshall................ 0 0 0
Haverford Scoring: J. Haller (33:21), G.
Mathis (53:38).
Haverford Assists: A. Dekle.
Corners-Shots: Haverford 5-11; F&M 3-5.
Saves: HaverfordK. Prescott 1, A. Weiner 0; F&MS. Johnson-Finn 2.
California (Pa.)........................ 1 1 2
Millersville............................. 0 0 0
Cali. Scoring: F. Scenna (4:45), A. Greenstein (56:03).
Cali. Assists: D. Kearns.
Corners-Shots: Cali. 3-21; MU 5-17.
Saves: Cali.M. Jayes 9; MUS. Wolfe
10.
Lancaster Bible....................... 1 1 2
Gallaudet............................... 0 0 0
LB Scoring: M. Dionne (9:49), K. Webster
(79:23).
Corners-Shots: LB 16-26; GU 1-1.
Saves: LBK. Scheuing 1; GUJ. Livengood 14.
SCHOLASTIC BOYS
FRIDAYS LATE BOX
TRI VALLEY
Lanc. Country Day.................. 1 0 1
East Juniata............................ 0 0 0
LCD Scoring: M. Weinstock-Collins
(21:21).
LCD Assists: M. Lane.
Corners-Shots: LCD 3-9; EJ 11-12.
Saves: LCDP. Price 5; EJC. Sheaffer 2.
SCHOLASTIC GIRLS
NONLEAGUE
Lanc. Country Day.................. 2 3 5
W. Shore Christian.................. 2 1 3
Lancaster Country Day Scoring: A. Schlageter (28:38), C. Kleintop (18:05, 46:00), M.
Ernst (50:08), S. Schlageter (51:45).
West Shore Christian Scoring: W. Verna
(31:19, 35:55, 51:29).
Lancaster Country Day Assists: C. Kleintop, S. Eynon.
Corners-Shots: LCD 5-29; WSC 0-7.
Saves: LCDA. Jaramillo 5; WSCH.
Heintzelman 8.
C13
Ottawa.........................0 3 1 0 5
Toronto........................0 2 2 0 4
Ottawa won shootout 2-1
First PeriodNone. PenaltiesBoyes,
Tor (hooking), 19:00.
Second Period1, Ottawa, Turris 3 (Karlsson, Stone), :46 (pp). 2, Ottawa, Chiasson 1
(Zibanejad, Wiercioch), 3:38 (pp). 3, Ottawa, Michalek 1 (Karlsson, Turris), 4:56 (pp).
4, Toronto, Lupul 1, 7:05. 5, Toronto, Bozak
1 (Phaneuf), 14:33. PenaltiesChiasson,
Ott (elbowing), 1:31; Gardiner, Tor (hooking), 2:46; Parenteau, Tor (illegal check to
head minor), 4:04; Bozak, Tor (slashing),
7:41; Wiercioch, Ott (interference), 16:43.
Third Period6, Toronto, Holland 1 (Parenteau, Phaneuf), 3:18 (pp). 7, Ottawa,
Stone 1 (Hoffman, Karlsson), 8:59. 8, Toronto, Winnik 1 (Boyes, Spaling), 16:12.
PenaltiesMethot, Ott (clipping), 3:08;
Hunwick, Tor (tripping), 6:25; Boyes, Tor
(hooking), 14:00; Chiasson, Ott (roughing),
15:14; Phaneuf, Tor (high-sticking), 15:14.
OvertimeNone. PenaltiesZibanejad,
Ott (hooking), 2:11.
ShootoutOttawa 2 (Turris NG, Ryan G,
Hoffman G), Toronto 1 (Parenteau G, Bozak
NG, Lupul NG).
Shots on GoalOttawa 10-10-11-233.
Toronto 16-5-13-741.
Power-play opportunitiesOttawa 3 of
6; Toronto 1 of 4.
GoaliesOttawa, Anderson 2-0-0 (41
shots-37 saves). Toronto, Reimer 0-0-1 (3329).
RefereesFrancois St. Laurent, Kevin
Pollock. LinesmenBrian Murphy, David
Brisebois.
Capitals 5, Devils 3
New Jersey............................ 2 0 1 3
Washington........................... 2 0 3 5
First Period1, Washington, Chimera 1
(Williams, Carlson), 12:04 (sh). 2, Washington, Orpik 1 (T.Wilson, Chimera), 14:32. 3,
New Jersey, Henrique 1 (Tlusty, Palmieri),
14:54. 4, New Jersey, Gelinas 1 (Stempniak, Cammalleri), 17:40 (pp). Penalties
Kuznetsov, Was (hooking), 10:24; Collins,
Was (holding), 16:34.
Second PeriodNone. PenaltiesGelinas, NJ (cross-checking), 14:39; Stempniak,
NJ (holding), 15:01.
Third Period5, Washington, Ovechkin
1 (Niskanen), 6:33. 6, Washington, Johansson 1 (Ovechkin, Carlson), 12:44 (pp). 7,
Washington, Niskanen 1 (Williams, Orlov),
17:07 (en-pp). 8, New Jersey, Cammalleri 1,
18:39. PenaltiesSchlemko, NJ (holding),
3:34; Carlson, Was (holding), 8:33; Henrique, NJ (hooking), 11:48; Stempniak, NJ
(high-sticking), 15:22; Palmieri, NJ (roughing), 19:13; Laich, Was (roughing), 19:13.
Shots on GoalNew Jersey 11-5-824.
Washington 6-11-1027.
Power-play opportunitiesNew Jersey 1
of 3; Washington 2 of 5.
GoaliesNew Jersey, Kinkaid 0-1-0 (26
shots-22 saves). Washington, Holtby 1-0-0
(24-21).
RefereesJean Hebert, Brad Watson.
LinesmenMichel Cormier, Mike Cvik.
VOLLEYBALL
NHL
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Detroit............2 2 0 0 4 8 3
Montreal.........2 2 0 0 4 7 3
Tampa Bay......2 2 0 0 4 7 3
Ottawa............2 2 0 0 4 8 5
Florida............1 1 0 0 2 7 1
Toronto...........3 0 2 1 1 5 12
Buffalo............2 0 2 0 0 2 7
Boston............2 0 2 0 0 4 10
Metropolitan Division
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
N.Y. Rangers....3 3 0 0 6 12 6
Washington....1 1 0 0 2 5 3
N.Y. Islanders...1 0 0 1 1 2 3
Philadelphia....2 0 1 1 1 3 10
Pittsburgh.......1 0 1 0 0 0 3
Carolina..........2 0 2 0 0 4 6
New Jersey.....2 0 2 0 0 4 8
Columbus.......2 0 2 0 0 4 9
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Central Division
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Winnipeg........2 2 0 0 4 9 3
Nashville.........2 2 0 0 4 4 1
Dallas..............1 1 0 0 2 3 0
St. Louis..........1 1 0 0 2 3 1
Minnesota......1 1 0 0 2 5 4
Chicago...........2 1 1 0 2 5 5
Colorado.........1 0 1 0 0 4 5
Pacific Division
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
San Jose..........1 1 0 0 2 5 1
Vancouver.......1 1 0 0 2 5 1
Arizona...........1 1 0 0 2 4 1
Anaheim.........0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Calgary............1 0 1 0 0 1 5
Edmonton.......2 0 2 0 0 1 5
Los Angeles.....2 0 2 0 0 2 9
NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for
overtime loss.
Fridays Games
Winnipeg 3............................ New Jersey 1
N.Y. Rangers 4.......................... Columbus 2
Detroit 4...................................... Toronto 0
Chicago 3..................... N.Y. Islanders 2 (OT)
Arizona 4............................... Los Angeles 1
Saturdays Games
Ottawa 5.............................. Toronto 4 (SO)
Tampa Bay 4................................. Buffalo 1
Montreal 4.................................... Boston 2
Florida 7................................ Philadelphia 1
N.Y. Rangers 5.......................... Columbus 2
Washington 5........................ New Jersey 3
Detroit 4..................................... Carolina 3
Nashville 2............................... Edmonton 0
St. Louis at Minnesota.............................(n)
N.Y. Islanders at Chicago..........................(n)
Dallas at Colorado...................................(n)
Calgary at Vancouver.............................. (n)
Pittsburgh at Arizona...............................(n)
Anaheim at San Jose................................(n)
Sundays Games
Montreal at Ottawa.......................... 7 p.m.
Mondays Games
Tampa Bay at Boston........................ 1 p.m.
Winnipeg at N.Y. Islanders................ 1 p.m.
Columbus at Buffalo......................... 3 p.m.
Florida at Philadelphia...................... 7 p.m.
Vancouver at Anaheim................... 10 p.m.
Panthers 7, Flyers 1
Philadelphia.......................... 0 1 0 1
Florida................................... 4 1 2 7
First Period1, Florida, Trocheck 1 (Jokinen, Mitchell), 1:23. 2, Florida, Bjugstad 1
(Ekblad, Huberdeau), 4:55 (pp). 3, Florida,
Smith 1 (Pirri, Trocheck), 5:46 (pp). 4, Florida, Jokinen 1 (Trocheck), 6:46. Penalties
Laughton, Phi (tripping), 4:37; Raffl, Phi
(hooking), 5:25; White, Phi, major (fighting), 15:51; Thornton, Fla, major (fighting),
15:51.
Second Period5, Florida, Jagr 1 (Barkov), :33. 6, Philadelphia, Streit 1 (Giroux,
SCHOLASTIC GIRLS
NONLEAGUE
FIELD HOCKEY
SCHOLASTIC
NONLEAGUE
Oley Valley................................3 2 5
Ephrata.....................................0 3 3
OV Scoring: M. Kline 2 (10:56, 1st; :36,
2nd), H. Beers (13:11, 1st), B. Gilbert
(27:12, 1st), O. Trace (16:24, 2nd).
OV Assists: B. Heffner.
Ephrata Scoring: M. Mahlandt 3 (7:22,
2nd; 10:24, 2nd; 23:49, 2nd).
Ephrata Assists: J. Truskey, A. Sensenig,
M. Fagan.
Corners-Shots: OV 3-10; E 9-12.
Saves: OVR. Levan 9; EH. Schnettler
4, C. Weaver 0.
Conestoga Valley.......................0 0 0
Manheim Central.......................2 1 3
MC Scoring: J. Wolgemuth 2 (20:26, 1st;
30:00, 1st), L. Hartzler (33:46, 2nd).
MC Assists: S. Ober 2, T. Wiederrecht.
Corners-Shots: CV 2-1; MC 8-5.
Saves: CVC. Spotts 2; MCE. Beamesderfer 1.
AHL
Saturdays Games
Toronto 3.......................... Manitoba 2 (SO)
Bridgeport 4........ Wilkes-Barre/Scranton 1
St. Johns 3.................................. Hartford 1
Hershey 5............................... Springfield 1
Binghamton 4............................... Albany 1
Syracuse 4........................... Lehigh Valley 3
Rochester 2...................................... Utica 1
Milwaukee at Chicago.............................(n)
Charlotte at Iowa.....................................(n)
San Antonio at Texas...............................(n)
Ontario at Bakersfield..............................(n)
Grand Rapids at San Diego......................(n)
Rockford at Stockton...............................(n)
Sundays Games
Portland at Providence................ 3:05 p.m.
St. Johns at Bridgeport.................... 5 p.m.
Charlotte at Iowa.............................. 6 p.m.
Mondays Games
No games scheduled
Tuesdays Games
Springfield at Bridgeport.................. 7 p.m.
BOWLING
ROCKY SPRINGS
FRIDAY NIGHT THUNDER
Robin Heiney................. 223-254-223700
Justin Hertzler............... 213-255-231699
C14
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Lancaster Weather
TODAY
MONDAY
68
45
TUESDAY
73
55
REGION
LANCASTER
Mostly sunny and pleasant today.
High 66 to 70. Winds southwest
4-8 mph. Mainly clear tonight;
patchy fog late. Low 43 to 47.
Winds light and variable.
9 NOON 3
9 12 AM
Brownstown
Columbia
County Park
Ephrata
Flory Mill
Manheim
Mount Joy
Smoketown
Truce
Grasses
Trees
Weeds
Mold
Feet
Below
Flood
3.61
34.34
13.39
14.66
3.71
1.95
500
Ozone
9
38
Atlanta
74/57
Houston
90/68
T-storms
-10s
Rain
-0s
Showers
0s
Snow
10s
Flurries
20s
30s
$20,495
37 ESCAPES
AVAILABLE
40s
50s
60s
Warm Front
70s
80s
100s
YOUR PRICE
102 at Fullerton, CA
28 at Angel Fire, NM
110s
XLT 4X4
STK# 16F163
MSRP ................................34,265
HONDRU DISC ....................-1,225
FACTORY REBATE ..................-500
COMPETITIVE LEASE REBATE -500
YOUR PRICE
717-665-3551
$32,040
$19,760
REGISTER HERE
**39 Month
to win a
reen TV.
**36 Months
SIGN & GO FOR
$0 Security Deposit
$0 Security Deposit
You can submit your name w every test drive.
$369
40
Due
at
Signing
$0 Due At Signing
No purchase necessary.
Tax,Tag,Lisc & $134 Doc Fee Extra Tax, Tags, License & $134 Doc fee extra
MSRP .................................. 37,905
...................................$29,615
HONDRU DISC ......................-3,000
2015 FORD MSRP
HONDRU DISC ......................-$1,620
FACTORY REBATE .................-3,000
FACTORY
REBATE ................. -$1,000
F-150 CASH CERTIFICATE ....-1,000
COMPETITIVE LEASE REBATE .. -$500
FORD CREDIT BONUS CASH ....-750
STK#15F760
FORD PACK DISC .....................-750
YOUR PRICE
COMPETITIVE LEASE REBATE ..-500
$14,395
$199
High:
Low:
ALL LOCATIONS
$15,000 PRIZE
Stk#15F854
49/37/sh
47/38/c
74/57/pc 76/61/pc
68/53/s
71/61/s
69/47/s
74/57/s
68/53/s
74/56/s
65/54/s 72/53/pc
72/54/s 74/53/pc
76/59/s 71/46/pc
70/52/pc 76/57/pc
95/73/s 93/60/pc
84/45/s
74/45/s
71/45/s
75/56/s
90/77/sh 89/75/pc
92/70/s
93/71/s
92/68/s 91/72/pc
75/52/s 82/52/pc
81/61/pc 85/67/pc
70/56/s
74/61/s
87/66/c 85/65/pc
70/51/s
74/59/s
99/75/pc 101/77/pc
70/50/s 74/54/pc
73/48/s
77/52/s
74/57/pc
78/62/s
71/53/s
75/60/s
90s
YOUR PRICE
29 FUSIONS
AVAILABLE
**39 mo
$0 Security Deposit
$0 Security Deposit
Tax, Tags, License & $134 Doc fee extra
MSRP ................................ $19,090
HONDRU DISC ....................-$1,195
FACTORY REBATE ...............-$1,250
FORD CREDIT REBATE ...........-$750
STK#15F876
Focus Owner Loyalty Retail Direct Offer ..-$1,500
Cold Front
Ice
MON
Hi/Lo/W
SATURDAY EXTREMES
Miami
87/72
Monterrey
88/64
HONDRUAUTO.COM
YOUR PRICE
Washington
71/53
Kansas City
84/59
El Paso
86/63
$259
Detroit
72/54
Chicago
76/59
Denver
84/45
Chihuahua
83/58
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.
Los Angeles
92/68
MON
7:12 a.m.
6:31 p.m.
6:45 a.m.
6:31 p.m.
Last
TODAY
Hi/Lo/W
New York
70/56
Toronto
70/53
MON
Hi/Lo/W
80/66/pc
95/68/s
73/50/s
82/77/sh
93/72/s
55/42/pc
54/35/pc
77/72/r
85/62/pc
58/43/pc
77/48/pc
41/29/pc
84/77/pc
59/38/pc
87/72/s
71/54/s
90/80/s
86/63/pc
74/55/pc
70/51/pc
NATION
Montreal
65/52
Billings
69/41
Hi/Lo/W
82/68/t
94/67/pc
72/48/s
79/75/pc
90/72/s
58/45/pc
56/37/s
75/69/r
85/65/pc
59/43/pc
76/51/pc
38/30/c
86/76/pc
61/43/pc
85/72/pc
70/50/pc
91/80/sh
81/64/t
71/58/r
70/53/s
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
71/45
Winnipeg
76/42
San Francisco
74/57
STK# 16F068
WORLD
Scranton
69/49
Minneapolis
82/56
Absent
Absent
Low
Moderate
TODAY
Sunrise
7:11 a.m.
Sunset
6:32 p.m.
Moonrise
5:49 a.m.
Moonset
6:01 p.m.
New
First
Full
Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Seattle
65/51
7.29
Partly sunny
Williamsport
Punxsutawney
70/43
Wilkes-Barre
68/48
70/47
State College
67/46
NATION
TODAY
Bradford
64/46
POLLEN
RIVER STAGES
POP: 20%
POP: 30%
Altoona
69/46
N.A.
N.A.
0.00
0.04
0.00
0.35
0.00
0.00
N.A.
Susquehanna
at Harrisburg
at Marietta
Conestoga
at Lancaster
at Conestoga
300
Yesterdays readings
Main Pollutant
Particulates
Ozone
POP: 10%
Butler
68/48
Todays forecast
PRECIPITATION
55
36
Mostly sunny
Oil City
69/46
AIR QUALITY
Source: www.atmos.millersville.edu/~wic
58
38
POCONOS
Mostly sunny and pleasant today.
High 62 to 66. Mainly clear tonight;
patchy fog late. Low 46 to 50.
63
43
Plenty of clouds
Erie
69/54
DELAWAREMARYLAND
Mostly sunny and pleasant today.
High 64 to 73. Tonight: a starry
night. Low 44 to 53. Plenty of
sunshine tomorrow.
TEMPERATURE
Lancaster
64/47
Ephrata
66/46
New Holland
64/47
Lancaster (last year)
58/43
Normals for the day
67/45
Year to date high
93 on Sept. 9
Year to date low
-2 on Feb. 20
PRECIPITATION
24 hours ending 7 p.m.
0.00
Month to date
1.78
Normal month to date
1.02
Month to date departure
+0.76
Year to date
34.22
Normal year to date
32.95
Year to date departure
+1.27
Greatest Oct. total
8.39 (1932)
Least Oct. total
0.00 (1963)
POP: 25%
ALMANAC
80
70
60
50
40
12 AM 3
64
45
POP: 60%
WEDNESDAY
71
47
POP: 10%
POP: 0%
EDGE
$9,000
OFF
24
AVAILABLE
**39 mo
$0 Security Deposit
$0 Security Deposit
Tax,Tags, License & $134 Doc fee extra
$26,495
YOUR PRICE
$28,905
84 F-SERIES
AVAILABLE
*39 MOS
$0 Security Deposit
$0 Due at Signing
Tax, Tags, License & $143 Doc fee xtra
$299
Tax, tags, lic, $134 Doc Fee extra. All lease payments include all red carpet lease rebates. Lease payments also include competitive lease conquest rebate which is when customers that currently lease a non-ford/lincoln/mercury motor company car, suv or light duty truck will receive conquest cash towards the purchase or lease of an eligible new vehicle. Not all buyers will qualify. Availability includes in stock, transit, and scheduled production units. Available units include in stock, in transit, and balance to schedule units. *0% AVAILABLE IN LEIU OF OTHER REBATES. All prices good until 10/31/2015. (Not responsible for typos)
2015 CHEVY
SONIC
Stk# 15C153
14 SONICS
AVAILABLE
MSRP......................................$18,085
HONDRU Disc ............................-$933 2015 CHEVY
GM Select Model Bonus Cash -$1,000
GM Consumer Cash .................. -$500 CRUZE
GM Bonus Cash .........................-$500 Stk # 15H243
2015 CHEVY
MALIBU
13 MALIBUS
Stk# 15H324
AVAILABLE
YOUR PRICE
$15,152
Lease for
$159 MO
17 CRUZES
AVAILABL
MSRP..............................$23,160
HONDRU Disc.....................-$815 2015 CHEVY CAMARO
GM Select Model
Stk#15C181
Consumer Cash...............-$3,474
ALL
2015 %
10
CAMAROS
CAMARO'S
24 mo
X 72 MO.
$0 security deposit
AVAILABLE
$267 due at signing
g License, & $134 doc fee extra.
Tax,Tags,
cludes Competitive Lease Cash
$19,458
$21,465
6 TRAX
AVAILABLE
179
MO
MSRP.....................................$22,510
HONDRU Disc............................-$593
GM Competitive Lease Cash -$1,500
GM Select Model Bonus Cash..-$1,000
GM Bonus Cash...........................-750
GM Bonus Cash...........................-500
GM Consumer Cash ....................-500
Stk# 15C350
$10,000
OFF!!!!
24 mo
$0 security deposit
$0 due at signing
Tax, Tags, License, & $134 doc fee extra.
Includes Competitive Lease Cash
4 Corvettes Available
2-Z06's Available
COSTCO
Member Pricing
Available
$18,871
UP TO
42 MPG
2 GREAT
LOCATIONS!
367-6644 OR 1-877-924-6644
YOUR PRICE
YOUR PRICE
YOUR PRICE
MSRP............................$26,305
HONDRU Disc................... -$894
GM Select Model
Consumer Cash........... -$3,946
MSRP ............................$48,600
Package Disc ....................-$750
HONDRU Disc .................-$1,665
GM Select Model Bonus Cash ..-$2,250
GM Customer Cash.......... -$1,500
GM Down Payement Assist -$1,000
GM Bonus Cash .................-$1,000
GM Bonus Cash .....................-$750
GM Lease Loyalty Cash ......-$500
2015 CHEVY
EQUINOX LT STK#15C327
665-2466 OR 877-597-3551
RT. 72
MANHEIM
LEASE FOR
MSRP ...........................$28,400
189
MO
YOUR PRICE
$23,495
36 mo
$0 security deposit
YOUR PRICE
$1100 due at signing
YOUR PRICE
Tax, Tags, License, & 13 EQUINOXS
$134 doc fee extra.
AVAILABLE
Includes Competitive Lease Cash
All leases are 10000 mi/yr. All Lease payments are plus tax Tax, tags, license & $134 doc fee not included. All leases require first payment at delivery. GM Competitive Lease Cash, must be leasing a 1999 or newer non GM vehicle to qualify. GM Lease Loyalty, must be leasing a 1999 or newer GM vehicle. Must have approved credit through GM Financial to qualify.
Prices are subject to change weekly. Trade Assist must be a 1999 or newer passenger car, truck or suv. Available units includes in stock, in transit and balance to schedule units. Down Payment Assist requires financing through Ally, GM Financial, or WFDS. All incentives are good through 10/31/2015.
LEASE FOR
QUAD CAB
$
EXPRESS STK#15D220 X 36 MOMO
277
$17,667
MSRP............................. $36,925
Hondru Disc ....................-$2,943
Rebate ............................-$2,500
Chrysler Capital Bonus ......-$500
2015 DODGE
DART SXT Stk#15D198
YOUR PRICE
MSRP......................$21,730
Rebate .................... -$2,500
Hondru Disc ............... -$417
STK # 15D070
YOUR PRICE
$29,991
LEASE FOR
345
MO
X 36 MO
$0 Due at Signing
Inc lease loyalty/conquest
Taxes, tags, license, doc extra
5 CHALLENGER'S
AVAILABLE
MSRP...............................$27,290
Hondru Disc .....................-$1,042
Rebate ............................ - $3,750
Chrysler Capital Bonus ....... -$500
YOUR PRICE
$21,998
$18,813
$0 Due at Signing
Inc lease loyalty/conquest
Taxes, tags, license, doc extra
2015 CHRYSLER
200 LIMITED
16 PATRIOT'S
AVAILABLE
YOUR PRICE
LEASE FOR
286
MO
X 36 MO
$20,999
$0 Due at Signing
Inc lease loyalty/conquest
Taxes, tags, license, doc extra
LEASE FOR
LEASE FOR
371
MO
X 36 MO
with $0 due
at signing!
367-6644 OR 1-877-924-6644
RT. 230 ELIZABETHTOWN
48 Grand
Caravans, and Town
& Countrys available
9 DARTS
AVAILABLE
YOUR PRICE
$30,982
73 RAMS
AVAILABLE
$38,600
YOUR PRICE
$30,559
27 WRANGLERS
AVAILABLE
$0 Due at Signing
Inc lease loyalty/conquest
Taxes, tags, license, doc extra
246
MO
X 36 MO
Stk#15D015
7 200's
AVAILABLE
MSRP...............................$25,105
HONDRU Rebate .............. -$3,500
Chrysler Cap Bonus ............-$500
HONDRU Discount ...........-$1,616
$0 Due at Signing
Inc lease loyalty/conquest
Taxes, taggs, license, doc extra
YOUR PRICE
$19,489
*** tax, tags, lic, doc of $134 extra. Available units include in stock and production units. + Ram lease = 36 mo, 10k mi yr. includes lease loyalty/conquest rebate ++ Wrangler lease = 36 mo, 10k mi yr. includes lease loyalty/conquest rebate +++ Chrysler 200 lease = 36 mo, 10k mi yr. includes lease loyalty/conquest
rebate +++Patriot lease = 36 mo, 10k mi yr. inc lease loyalty/conquest rebate/lease payments do not include tax, tags, lic, doc fees. Available units include in stock, in transit, and balance to schedule units. ++++ Challenger lease = 36 mo, 10k mi yr, inc. lease loyalty/conquest rebate. *Prices good until 11/2/2015.
Money
n SEND STORY TIPS & INFO TO: TIM MEKEEL, 481-6030, TMEKEEL@LNPNEWS.COM
RETAIL
MICHELLE SINGLETARY
THE COLOR OF MONEY
Get up close
and personal
with your
finances
Every so often, my
husband and I review
our finances and revise
our goals. We dig deep
into the numbers, which
often results in a reduction in our spending, an
increase in our savings,
or both. Sometimes
things are going so well
that no changes are
needed.
With our current work
schedules, the start of
a new school year, and
volunteer ministry
work, we havent been
able to complete our
budget re-examination
process, which takes
several hours.
As we live in this incomplete state of analysis, Ive been uneasy
because I always like to
have a current birds-eye
view of our finances.
So when people tell me
its hard to budget, I get
it. I understand budgeting can take a backseat
to life. Or maybe youve
never felt you needed a
written budget. But then
life happens, which was
the case with this reader:
Over decades, our alternative to a household
budget has been to not
spend money whenever possible, which
has worked out OK. But
now we are making less
income and maybe need
to get scientific, but
cant stand the thought
of writing down every
penny we spend over the
next two months as the
first step in creating a
budget. Can you suggest
something easier?
After reading the
question, I immediately
thought of Kermit the
Frog and his signature
lyric, Its not easy being
green.
Our financial lives
are not easy. We could
wonder what its like
to be something we are
not multimillionaires
who dont have to keep
a spending journal. We
could, and many do, kind
of, sort of, think things
are going OK financially.
But as I often tell folks,
your financial life might
appear to be good until
its not. And its at that
point you realize how
quickly things can go
bad because you didnt
know your true financial
picture.
So no, I dont know of
an easier way to budget
other than the painstaking, time-consuming,
mind-numbing and frustrating process of getting
up close and personal
with your numbers.
I do, however, have
some suggestions on
how to get started on a
household budget:
Gather everything.
Know where you stand
before you put together
a plan.
Your budget process
should start with pulling
together your financial
statements from the
previous year. With a
12-month look back of
your bank statements,
for example, you can see
patterns. At the start of
the school year, we tend
to eat out more because
we are rushing to backto-school meetings or
SINGLETARY, page D2
Diane McConnell, store owner, shows items for sale in the Poor Little Rich Girl Consignment Boutique in Foxshire Plaza on Fruitville Pike.
Change of careers
The popularity of the consigning business motivated Melanie
Boodis Stoycos to leave her job
in the corporate world and open
her own boutique, Twice Found,
in 2013.
LOCAL
CONSIGNMENT
SHOPS
n 25+ in Lancaster
County
n One-third of them
open 3 years or less
n Sell clothes,
furniture, household
items
CONSIGNMENT, page D2
CHAD UMBLE
WHATS IN STORE
The former Giant to Go in Richmond Square along Fruitville Pike has been converted to
a Turkey Hill Minit Market.
4,000-square-foot Giant
to Go along Oregon Pike
opened in May 2011.
Along with a Giant gas
station on Centerville
Road, the Giant to Go
locations supported
the companys reward
program through which
customers could earn
discounts on gas.
A spokeswoman for
Giant previously said
closing the Giant to Go
properties was part of an
ongoing assessment of
its stores.
D2
BUSINESS
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Consignment: Shopping
Whos News
Continued from D1
fraction of the original price. And although consignment items are used,
most consignment stores have strict
policies about what they will and will
not accept.
Most of the items you would not be
able tell they arent brand new, Boodis
Stoycos says. There are many times
we receive brand-new items with the
original price tag still attached.
Kendig says sometimes customers
have to overcome the stigma they may
have associated with buying used
clothing, but once they do, theyre
hooked.
We often laugh and say, Welcome
to the dark side, because we already
know how great shopping consignment can be, she says.
Environmental benefits
Along with saving money, consignment shops offer consumers a way to
help the environment, says Sites.
Consignment shopping is one more
way we can all recycle, she says. By
giving used clothing a second chance,
were keeping those items out of landfills. It also cuts down on the demand
for new clothing to be made, which will
hopefully cut down on the use of sweat
shops.
Kendig agrees, adding, We also help
keep your closets, attics, basements
and garages from turning into your
own personal mini landfills.
Not only do consignment stores offer a bargain for the buyer, but they
also offer a way for consumers to make
money as well, says Heather Groff,
owner of Miracles Consignment Shop
in Lancaster.
Consigning takes the legwork out of
selling items yourself, she says. Simply bring in your clean items and we do
the pricing, hanging, selling work for
you. Consignors receive 40 to 50 percent of the money their items sell for
in the shop. Our consignors are paid
with cash or can spend their credit in
the store. They love being able to spend
money they earned on selling their
items to purchase next seasons wardrobe.
McConnell says we all have items in
our closets that arent worn regularly,
but have value.
You literally have cash sitting in
your closet, she says. A special occasion dress that was only worn once, a
pair of jeans that dont fit anymore, a
sweater that was a gift that you really
didnt like these are perfect for consigning.
Consignment shop owners also tout
the benefits their stores give to the
community whether its providing
recycled clothing for others or boosting the local economy.
Consignment shopping supports
small business. A healthy main street
community equals healthy neighborhoods, says Kendig. We also create
flexible family-friendly jobs in our own
neighborhood.
Many of Kendigs consignors are
nonprofit organizations, she says, with
proceeds from sales going to organizations including Relay for Life or the
Manheim Central School Districts social services fund.
The pay-it-forward factor is endless, she says. Community involvement is one of our core values.
That sentiment is echoed by McConnell, who notes that her store often donates unsold clothing to local charities
and churches.
Additionally, consignment shop
owners say they work hard to make
customers feel welcome and to provide
a unique shopping experience, from
personal shopping help to community
nights.
We like to partner with other local businesses such as Thorn Hill
Vineyards who supports our Winesday event, says McConnell. Every
Tuesday, Oct. 13
n Lancaster SHRM
breakfast meeting, at
the Farm & Home Center,
1383 Arcadia Road, 7:30
a.m. Speaker: Jim Hoy,
on Financial Stuff for HR
Pros. Cost: registered
members $20, guests and
non-registered members
$25. Registration and
information via www.
lancastershrm.org.
Thursday, Oct. 15
n Free business
roundtable by
Elizabethtown Area
Chamber of Commerce
and SCORE of LancasterLebanon, at Trellis Place,
7:30 a.m. Speaker: Kris
Bradley, on Pros and
6 TIPS FOR
SUCCESSFUL
CONSIGNING
If you want to consign,
consider these six tips for
getting the most out of your
unwanted items:
Presentation is
Make an appointment, if
Calendar
cons of Facebook versus
a website for business.
Space is limited;
registration required
by emailing info@
elizabethtowncoc.com.
Tuesday, Oct. 20
n Lancaster Chamber
Thursday, Oct.
22
n Lancaster County
Friday, Oct. 23
n Free executive lecture
series, at Elizabethtown
Colleges Hoover Center
room 212, 11 a.m. Speaker:
Scott Conary, president of
Carrboro Coffee Roasters
and representative of
World Coffee Events.
Preregistration required
via Sharon Kain at kains@
etown.edu or 361-1270.
Joshua D.
Cohen
Sheila V.
ORourke
Michael A.
Kelly Jr.
Nicole B.
LaMar
Nancy A.
Ward
Robert G.
Urban Jr.
n Nancy Arboleda
WHO TO EMAIL
Bankruptcies
Here is a list of Lancaster
County bankruptcies
recorded in U.S.
Bankruptcy Court, Eastern
District of Pennsylvania,
Reading, Sept. 28-Oct. 5.
Arcadio Rosario Jr., 300
block of Snyder Hollow
Road, New Providence.
Chapter 13.
Lester Hanes Jr. and Lori
Jayne Guyton, first block
of Red Oak Drive, Lititz.
Chapter 13.
of Chamberlain Lane,
Millersville. Chapter 13.
Buildtrend Construction,
LLC, 200 block of Black
Oak Drive. Chapter 7.
Lauralene L. Rowland,
500 block of Hilldale Road,
Holtwood. Chapter 7.
Christopher S. Rankin,
1300 block of Brenneman
Road, Manheim. Chapter 7.
Singletary: Do a budget
Continued from D1
dont see.
Create a spreadsheet,
use a notepad, buy
budget software, I dont
really care. Just put your
budget in writing. My
husband and I use an
Excel spreadsheet and
set up a projector and
screen in our dining
room to make it easier
to go over the numbers
together.
Create a spending
journal. You cant move
forward unless you look
back.
Once youve created
your budget, spend a
month recording every
penny you spend. Upon
review, you may be
surprised at how much
money you waste.
Its not easy to budget, but if you do, youll
appreciate all the green
youll hopefully be able
to see and save.
n michelle.singletary@
washpost.com
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
D3
Technology
VENTURE
SOCIAL MEDIA
Twitter
launches
Moments
to curate
tweets
RACHEL LERMAN
THE SEATTLE TIMES
SEATTLE Entrepreneur
Dan Shapiro has a long history in the high-tech industry.
He founded Sparkbuy, a pricecomparison site, was CEO
of Google Comparison and
launched photo-sharing service PhotoBucket.
But his most rewarding
work, he says, has involved
creating tangible things that
people can touch and feel.
It was building my diningroom table, Shapiro said. It
was creating a bookcase for my
mom.
His new company is most
definitely tangible but with
a twist.
Shapiros enterprise, Glowforge, enables other people
designers, small-business
owners, hobbyists, parents
to create things with a 3-D
laser printer that can sit on a
small desk. The small machine
uses a laser to cut through
pretty much any type of material and engrave on surfaces
even on laptops.
The 14-person Glowforge
team apprehensively made
the printer available for preorders at Glowforge.com.
If it didnt raise at least
$100,000, it couldnt even
partner with a factory to
manufacture the device. If it
didnt raise at least $1 million,
it would know something was
wrong with its predictions.
Glowforge hit the $1 million
mark in the first 12 hours. As
of last week, eight days after
the campaign launched, it had
raised $5.35 million and the
number was still climbing.
Its kind of blowing my
mind, Shapiro said.
This may not have happened
five years ago, when 3-D printing was something individuals
rarely could access, and Etsy,
an e-commerce site with artisan handmade products, was
gaining steam.
KIM KOMANDO
CYBER SPEAK
Stop Facebook
targeted ads
and tracking
If you browse the Internet at all, youve definitely run into targeted
ads. For example, youll
be looking at a product
on one site, and then see
an ad for it right away
on another site. Weve
seen situations where a
YouTube video will play
an ad for the site you
just opened in another
browser tab. Creepy!
Lets look at how it
works and how you can
stop it.
How it works
Most websites get
their ads from ad networks. Each ad network
puts a bit of code called
a cookie on your
computer. When you
visit one of the member
sites, the site recognizes
the cookie and lets the
ad network know where
you are so it can send
you personalized ads.
Even worse, the member sites share what you
do on their sites to build
a database of what you
like and dont like, or
even specific items you
looked at. This makes it
easier for the ad net-
Dan Shapiro founded Glowforge, which makes 3-D laser printers for designers. Hes holding a recycled cardboard lamp made with the printer.
Making is a
high form of
engagement.
Dale Dougherty,
Maker Faire founder
Easier devices
Since 2009, when MakerBot burst onto the scene with
a small, easy-to-use device,
3-D printing has caught on.
Learning complicated software and programs are no longer required to operate such
machines, and prices have
become realistic for small
MORE ONLINE
Find your
dream home
today!
TRACEY LIEN
Twitter is on a feature
launch roll, with the social
network releasing a Moments feature Tuesday,
which curates and promotes popular tweets.
The feature, which is now
available both on the desktop and mobile versions of
the platform, appears as
a tab between a users notifications and messages.
When users click or tap on
the tab, theyre shown a list
of Moments, which are a
curated selection of tweets
ranging from breaking
news to cute animal pictures to football results and
tweets from celebrities.
Users have the option
to follow a Moment and
have tweet updates added
to their timeline.
Moments are currently
assembled by Twitters curation team and are intended for a general audience,
rather than customized for
individual users.
The intent behind the
new feature is to surface
the best of Twitter, but
like other features of the
platform, it is probably a
bid to draw people into
the social network and increase the amount of time
users spend looking at
tweets.
The feature is the latest in
a string of products Twitter has launched under
the leadership of returning Chief Executive Jack
Dorsey, who was named
the companys permanent
leader Monday after a
three-month stint as interim CEO. Dorsey is now the
head of both Twitter and
electronic payments company Square.
KOMANDO, page D6
LancasterOnline.com/homes
49 East Main Street Leola, PA 17540
This event may include a sales presentation intended to inform you of products and services we offer that may be of service to you. Attendees
who want to learn more about the topics discussed may schedule a follow-up meeting. Prudential Financial, Inc. has reimbursed Cetera
Financial Specialists for all, or a portion of the costs of this seminar. * Securities offered through Cetera Financial Specialists LLC, member
FINRA/SIPC. Advisory services offered through Cetera Investment Advisors LLC. Cetera is under separate ownership from any other entity.
D4
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Talking Points
DREAM GRANTS Steve Coleman, a saxophonist, won a MacArthur Foundation Fellowship last year. He learned early to budget and keep expenses low.
PAUL SULLIVAN
PHYLLIS KORKKI
MacArthur Geniuses
Each year, the John D. and
Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation selects new members of its
Fellows Program, better known as
the MacArthur geniuses.
$625,000
24
942
$15,000,000
Total amount that will be paid out
to the 2015 MacArthur fellows.
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
D5
MATTHEW GOLDSTEIN
Private equity and hedge fund
firms have bought more than
100,000 troubled mortgages at a
discount from banks and federal
housing agencies, emerging as
aggressive liquidators for the remains of the mortgage crisis that
erupted nearly a decade ago.
Federal housing officials have
welcomed the new financial players as being more nimble and
creative than banks with terms
for delinquent borrowers. But the
firms are drawing fire. Housing
advocates and lawyers for borrowers contend that the private
equity firms and hedge funds are
too quick to push homes into foreclosure and are even less helpful
than the banks had been in negotiating loan modifications.
One company has emerged as
a lightning rod: Lone Star Funds,
a $60 billion private equity firm
founded in 1995 by John Grayken.
The New York Times found a pattern of complaints that Lone Star
BACK HOME Charles and Pamela Hubbard of Sacramento briefly lost their
house when a private equity firms subsidiary refused to modify their loan.
ANN CARRNS
ROBERT NEUBECKER
RON LIEBER
Martin Winterkorn, former chief
executive of Volkswagen, promised that the German carmaker
would do everything that must
be done to restore trust in it.
How might Volkswagen define
everything? It isnt an easy
question to answer, given that no
one can be sure what will happen
to resale values even after Volkswagen fixes the affected cars.
Moreover, it isnt clear how best
to compensate people who chose
these cars because they wanted
their driving to be gentler on the
planet.
Volkswagen isnt saying much
yet, so lets consider the possibilities, from most generous to least.
The company could simply buy
back all the vehicles where the fix
on the emissions test was in. U.S.
PIRG, the federation of state public interest research groups, has
announced a campaign to pressure Volkswagen to write checks
to owners for whatever price
they paid for the vehicles.
Why not just ask for whatever
the cars were worth on the day
before news of the scandal broke?
Ed Mierzwinski, consumer program director at U.S. PIRG, said
that the drivers deserve more.
In that case, the consumer is
getting the value of the car but
not being compensated for the
harm, he said. They tried to
buy a green, high-performance
car and ended up being unwitting
participants in a conspiracy to
A few suggestions on
how diesel owners
could be compensated.
will be more. The problem is not
limited to the United States, with
about 11 million vehicles involved
in all.
Mr. Wilhite suggests extending
owners warranties for two years
with unlimited mileage and giving current diesel owners who
buy a new Volkswagen someday
a nontrivial amount of money to
put toward the new purchase.
While there is a precedent for
buybacks the Transportation
Department forced Fiat Chrysler to buy back Jeeps recently
Jack R. Nerad of Kelley Blue Book
says he doesnt think its likely
that Volkswagen will volunteer
to do so. The cost is enormous,
Q&A
Will filing a claim after hitting
a deer raise my premium?
Since deer accident claims are
generally filed under your policys comprehensive coverage,
where there is usually no fault
assigned, they are less likely to result in a rate increase,
said Loretta Worters, a spokeswoman for the Insurance Information Institute, an industry
group.
But for a deer accident to be
considered a comprehensive
claim, the car must have physical contact with the animal. If
you swerve to avoid the deer
and hit a tree or another car, that
would probably be filed under
your policys collision coverage,
which could affect your rates,
she said. Some states may allow
the option of filing a deer accident as a collision claim.
Am I more likely to hit a deer
at certain times of the year?
Deer are more likely to be on
the move late in the year be-
CARL RICHARDS
A few years ago, a friend asked
a well-known academic about
cognitive biases a mistake
we make because of a hole in
our thinking. My friend wanted
to know if being aware of a bias
could be enough to change behavior.
No, answered Mr. Academic.
As Ive said before, my only hope
is that by reading my studies and
my books, people will know what
to call the mistake after theyve
made it.
It makes the situation seem
hopeless, because we have these
natural human tendencies to do
things that will cause us problems. But knowing what they are
called, and even identifying our
tendency toward particular biases or mistakes, does help.
It allows us to put in place what
I like to think of as guardrails
lifestyle hacks to minimize the
mistakes we tend to make.
Let me give you an example.
Recently when my mom visited
us, she brought in a few groceries to stash in our fridge while
she stayed for dinner. She knew
that if she didnt do something to
remind herself, she would forget
the groceries in the fridge. So she
went back to the fridge, opened
the door, and set her car keys next
to her groceries. Now I wont forget my groceries because I cant
D6
BUSINESS
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
ROOT
Lititz clothing
shop
Komando
Continued from D3
APPAREL FOR
THE PEOPLE
n Address: 245 Bloomfield
Drive, Suite 104, Lititz
n Hours: 10 a.m.-7 p.m.
Monday through Saturday.
n Phone: 970-590-4391
n Online: facebook.com/
apparelforthepeople
Glowforge
The Glowforge team members have
come up with any number of projects including cutting cardboard and
piecing it together to make lamps
and engraved wedding invitations on
delicate wood squares. They even cut
chocolate to make cupcake toppers
shaped like rockets.
The original thinking was that Glowforge printers would be targeted at
designers and hobbyists, but Shapiro
has found an even wider audience of
engineers, big companies and parents
who want to work on crafts with their
kids.
Patrick OBrien, a product manager
in Washington, D.C., preordered the
machine to make toys and gadgets
with his twin 3-year-old daughters.
The really killer feature was the
ability to draw something, and all in
one push, scan and engrave and cut
it, he said.
Pink messages of
hope and support...
TThank a nurse or doctor. Encourage patients and survivors.
Thank family and friends for support. Encourage a card shower.*
style $
Thank You
1 45
Nurse Amy
www.neffsvilleph.com
625-1000
Margie is
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dedicated her
life to helping
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Maximize yo
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PA6136
Continued from D3
CONSUMER ALERT!
Please print legibly. Include a self-addressed, stamped envelope for photo return.
BLOCK STYLE
1 2
_________________________________________________________________________________________________
CARD SHOWER ADDRESS* ____________________________________________________________________________
If requesting a card shower, you must either use your address or have permission to use the address of the person receiving cards.
PHONE ____________________________
ADDRESS ____________________________________________________
OR CHARGE:
SIGNATURE ___________________________________________________
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).
Perspective
HIGHER EDUCATION
DEBT DILEMMA
Navigating debt incurred in pursuit of a college degree
ANN WOMBLE
JAZMINE REYES
RICHARD MUSSER
SPECIAL TO LNP
SPECIAL TO LNP
SPECIAL TO LNP
WOMBLE, page E4
REYES, page E4
BRIAN HERNON
SPECIAL TO LNP
MUSSER, page E4
HERNON, page E4
E2
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Opinion
Beverly R. Steinman
Robert M. Krasne
Suzanne Cassidy
Chairman Emeritus
Executive Editor
In our words
This is one thing we know already about poverty in Lancaster city: 31 percent of city residents are poor and that rises to an abysmal
40 percent south of King Street.
By comparison, the poverty rate in Lancaster
County minus the city is 9 percent.
As Dan Jurman told the editorial board last
week, the poverty numbers here are going in
the wrong direction.
If that trend is to be reversed, even interrupted, we need more than platitudes and the same
old nonsolutions.
The promising thing is Jurman knows that.
He seems ready, even eager, to shake up the
status quo. He is candid about the failings of
the War on Poverty, perhaps because poverty
isnt merely academic to him. He and his family were homeless for a time when he was in
high school.
He is clear-eyed about the magnitude of the
task before the commission.
So, too, is Mayor Gray, who says he wants realistic and practicable solutions to come out of
the commissions work, which will begin this
November and conclude in December 2016.
We dont want a world-peace-and-feed-thechildren kind of thing, Gray said.
Were glad to hear it.
Because its truly sobering to consider the
other efforts that have been made to revitalize the citys southeast section (1990); to win
federal funding to halve the citys poverty rate
(1994); to attack the underlying causes of crime,
poverty included (1996); to restore South Duke
Street as a Main Street at the heart of the
citys poorest neighborhood (1998).
Efforts to help the poor will always be with
us, it seems.
Were hoping the Mayors Commission to
Combat Poverty is the game changer low-income people in the city so desperately need.
The commission will be identifying the barriers institutional, situational, cultural, behavioral to achieving financial self-sufficiency; figuring out how to help people who lack
social capital and connections to escape from
poverty; examining the core needs that go unmet; and addressing the job-readiness of lowincome city residents, including those who
lbit.ly/PovertyCommissionNamed
bit.ly/CommissionQuestions
CHARLES
KRAUTHAMMER
THE WASHINGTON POST
Another massacre,
another charade
WASHINGTON
Theres the cycle of poverty. Theres the cycle of
violence. And then theres
the cycle of gun talk. It
starts with a mass shooting. Gun-control advocates blame the deaths on
gun-control opponents,
who argue, in turn, that
none of the proposed restrictions would have had
any effect on the incident
in question. The debate
goes nowhere. The media
move on.
Until the next incident, when the cycle
begins again.
So with the Roseburg
massacre in Oregon.
Within hours, President
Barack Obama takes to
the microphones to furiously denounce the NRA
and its ilk for resisting
commonsense gun-safety laws. His harangue
is totally sincere, totally
knee-jerk and totally
pointless. At the time he
delivers it, he and we
know practically nothing
about the shooter, nothing about the weapons,
nothing about how they
were obtained.
Nor does Obama propose any legislation. He
knows none would pass.
But the deeper truth is
that it would have made
no difference. Does anyone really believe that
the (alleged) gun-show
loophole had anything
to do with Roseburg?
Universal background
checks sound wonderful. But Oregon already
has one. The Roseburg
shooter and his mother
obtained every one of
their guns legally.
The reason the debate
is so muddled, indeed
surreal notice, by the
way, how gun control has been cleverly
rechristened commonsense gun-safety laws,
as if were talking about
accident proofing is
that both sides know
that the only measure
that might actually prevent mass killings has
absolutely no chance of
ever being enacted.
Mere commonsense
regulation, like the assault weapons ban of 1994
that was allowed to lapse
10 years later, does little
more than make us feel
good. A Justice Department study found no
discernible reduction in
the lethality and injuriousness of gun violence.
As for the only remotely plausible solution, Obama dare not
speak its name. He made
an oblique reference to
Australia, never mentioning that its guncontrol innovation was
confiscation, by means
of a mandatory buyback.
Theres a reason he didnt
bring up confiscation
(apart from the debate
about its actual efficacy
in reducing gun violence
in Australia). In this
country, with its traditions, public sentiment
and, most importantly,
Second Amendment,
thems fightin words.
Obama didnt say
OP-ED/LETTERS
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Selfishness, cruelty
hurting GOP hopeful
Extremist Republican attempts to defund Planned
Parenthood based on splicing
an apparently doctored and
edited video with an unrelated
audio have resulted in presidential candidate Carly Fiorina losing all credibility.
Its obvious to me that once
humans are brought into the
world, Republicans have no
problem throwing them to the
wolves.
Republicans dont want to
help with affordable housing,
medical care, raising the minimum wage to become possibly a living wage, education
funding, equal justice with the
haves, and sane jobs that dont
turn you into a human-robot
for globalization goals that enrich the already rich; not even
gun control. So, you might
wind up even having to run for
your life.
To end abortions, provide
help with these issues. God forbid, taxes might be involved.
So far, Republican dogma
dictates youre on your own.
Good luck!
Its like the boy who impregnates a girl and then abandons
her. What phonies. The only
thing Fiorina has going for her
are clueless voters.
Republicans fight tooth
and nail to bring you into this
world, but then fight tooth and
nail not to give you any safety
from death by out of control
gun access.
Thank you, NRA. Money
talks, and you sure know how
to use it. Youre experts at programming spineless Republicans.
Ben Thompson Jr.
Lebanon
Privatize liquor?
I say we shouldnt
Do we need to follow other
states across the nation by
US militarism also
takes innocent lives
Which is worse:
The Oct. 1 deadly rampage at
Umpqua Community College
in Roseburg, Oregon, that extinguished nine innocent lives?
Or the Oct. 3 U.S.-led airstrike
that killed 22 people in the
Doctors Without Borders hospital in Kunduz, Afghanistan?
Is the one atrocity more sane
than the other? What difference is there in the loss of lives
here or there? Dont all lives
matter?
Or are these crimes part of
the same mindset that somehow things can be improved
by using guns and armaments
to violently and vengefully retaliate against those who are
considered enemies?
If your product is a weapon, your market is killing.
Wouldnt it be more appropriate to be able to resolve differences without the ready availability of guns and armaments?
We ask how the Oregon
shooter could have access to
13 guns. We could also ask how
the U.S. government has the
armaments to inflict terrorism in Kunduz, Afghanistan.
Hasnt the time come for the
public to end its support of
the manufacture and sale of
Looking forward
to new president
Fighting violence
in our schools
Presidential run
comes with perks
E3
ISMAIL SMITH-WADE-EL
LNP COLUMNIST
E4
PERSPECTIVE
Womble
LOUIS A. BUTCHER JR
MATTERS OF FAITH
Hernon
Continued from E1
Continued from E1
Reyes
Continued from E1
Musser
MORE ONLINE
Continued from E1
bit.ly/TipsReDebt
continued to be employed in
public service.
This Student Loan Forgiveness
option can be easily applied for
through the U.S. Department of
Education or the lender. You do not
need to pay someone to set the plan
up for you. It is a misrepresentation
to suggest that all of your student
loan debt will be forgiven, and that
you need the assistance of any
agency to accomplish this.
Anyone needing assistance
with student loan repayment options can seek online help from
the U.S. Department of Education at bit.ly/StudentDebtForgiveness or contact a nonprofit
consumer credit agency for
one-on-one counseling.
The other commercial is from a
debt relief company (How would
you like to have a large portion of
your debt forgiven?). It suggests
that you can get out of debt through
forgiveness of your debt, and of
course you need the advertisers
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
The links
between sports
participation
and every
measure of
academic
performance are
well established.
have a combined record
of three wins and 187
losses against teams
from districts with advantages in average fam-
OPINION
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
E5
Sunday Conversation
JONAH GOLDBERG
SYNDICATED COLUMNIST
EUGENE ROBINSON
THE WASHINGTON POST
n Jonah Goldberg is a fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, a senior editor of Na-
tional Review and a Tribune Content Agency syndicated columnist. Twitter: @JonahNRO
E6
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
generation
FRESH TAKES
BY,
FOR
AND
ABOUT
TEENS
FEED OF
THE WEEK
Instagram:
@humansofny
n Humans of New York
Fall TVs
WINNERS
and
losers
Grandfathered
Tuesday, 8 p.m. on Fox
Stars: 2 out of 4
Blindspot
Monday, 10 p.m. on NBC
Stars: 4 out of 4
Scream Queens
Tuesday, 9 p.m. on Fox
Star: 1 out of 4
Mr. Robot
USA at usanetwork.com/mrrobot
4 out of 4
Heroes Reborn
Thursday, 8 p.m. on NBC
Stars: 2 out of 4
THE LIST
READ
'Bossypants'
by Tina Fey
n Tina Fey's
autobiography is a laughout-loud commentary
on life. Fey gives insight
into the behind-thescenes work of SNL and
producing a hit TV show
through a unique and
comical lens. The book
takes on a strong feminist
theme as Fey shares her
experiences with blazing a
trail for female comedians.
Sprinkled with jokes and
quips, "Bossypants" is a
thoroughly entertaining
read.
Erika Echternach, 17
LISTEN
WATCH
WEAR
Ive Cortez
17, of Lancaster
n Lancaster Country Day School
n Photographed during her senior
1989
by Ryan Adams
n To create an entire
cover album of Taylor Swift
songs is risky, to say the
least. But Ryan Adams
1989 unlocks the true
emotion behind Swifts
writing. Covers such as
Blank Space and Out
of the Woods have never
sounded more compelling,
and show the incredible
talent of both artists.
Jack Zuckerman, 17
American
Horror Story
on FX
n In this thrilling television
series, each season brings a
new terror and explores the
depth of human natures
evil side. The plot and
characters change each
season, with the addition of
Lady Gaga in this seasons
American Horror Story:
Hotel. The twists and turns
throughout each episode
will leave the audience on
the edge of their seats.
Zelie Hummer, 17
10-SECOND
MOVIE REVIEWS
SCORCH TRIALS
must see | n don't see | just rent
EDWARD
SCISSORHANDS
n must see | don't see | just rent
PUZZLES/BRIDGE
Bridge Results
The following results are from
Friday, Sept. 25, through
Thursday, Oct. 1.
nThe Friday Morning Duplicate Bridge
Club meets at 11 a.m.
Section A North-South: 1. Richard
and Roz Braunstein; 2. Ruth Witman
and John Klinger; 3. Dorie Van
Antwerp and Marv Burkhart; 2B. Ron
and Jean Zimmerman
East-West: 1. Bonnie Heilig and
Charlie Wooten; 2. Sally Buckwalter
and Dennis Shaub; 3. Ann Silverstein
and Vernon Hester; 2B. Kasey Long
and Mikki Martin
Section B North-South: 1. Kathy Mast
and Charlie Ritchey; 2. Beth Menges
and Chuck Stoner; 3/4 (tie) Dick
Glidden and Tim Sumner, and Jane
Church and Brenda Miller; 2C. Dottie
Allen and Lynn Brown
Puzzle No. 1
PEOPLE OF
THE PAST
Puzzle No. 2
su l do l ku
@ Puzzles by Pappocorn
1
7
4
2
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
2
5
9
5
7
5
9
3
8
7
4
8
9
1
1
5
3
4
PUZZLES/HOROSCOPE
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
66 In need of a cracker,
perhaps
68 Listen to Christmas
carolers?
72 Slipshod
73 Overlook
74 Multiple-choice
options
75 Justice Kagan
77 Post-op locale
79 Cold War-era territory:
Abbr.
80 *How actor Bill feels
about houseguests?
86 Hershiser of the
1980s-90s Dodgers
87 Cannabis ____
(marijuana)
88 Chicago suburb
92 Removes from a can?
95 **Find cake or Jell-O
in the back of the
fridge?
97 Hunger
98 Drawbridge locale
100 The Spartans of the
N.C.A.A.
101 PBS benefactor
102 And other stuff
105 Misconstrue, as words
109 Other side of a
childish debate or
a phonetic hint to the
answers to the four
double-starred clues
113 *Fall colors?
117 Talk down?
120 Yawnfest
121 **Question from El Al
security?
123 Like lightning rounds
124 Tear-stained, e.g.
125 Investigate, as a cold
case
126 Pianist Gilels
127 Woo-hoo!
SOUND ARGUMENT
35 Check
By Jeremy NewtoN / Puzzles edited By will shortz
36 Brunch spot
NO. 1004
38 Fire away!
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
41 Dress at the altar
42 PC part of interest to
16
17
18
19
20
audiophiles
21
22
23
24
43 Author Seton
44 Kick back
25
26
27
45 First name in long
28
29
30
31
jumps
46 Open again, as a keg
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
48 Sounds of fall?
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
49 Odettes counterpart in 40
Swan Lake
50
51
52
53
52 QB Tony
54
55
56
57
58
59
55 Over my dead body!
56 Prefix with realism
60
61
62
63
64
65
57 London jazz duo?
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
58 Sudden turns
59 Belgian river to the
74
75
76
77
78
79
North Sea
80
81
82
83
84
85
60 Play for a fool
61 Restaurant chain
86
87
88
89
90
91
founded by a celebrity
92
93
94
95
96
chef
62 Febreze target
97
98
99
100
101
67 Goof
103 104
105
106 107 108
109 110 111 112
69 Greeting on el telfono 102
70 Supercharges, with
113
114
115 116
117
118 119
up
120
121
122
71 Get ones hands on
some dough?
123
124
125
126
76 Alternative to Soave
127
128
129
130
78 Nominative, e.g.
81 Administrative worker
on a ship
Stumped? Call: 1-900-285-5656, $1.49 each minute;
82 Smoke
or, with a credit card, 1-800-814-5554.
83 Bank asset thats
104Chatted with, in a way
114 Lumber-mill equipment
92 Pig with pigtails
frozen?
93 Body of science?
115 Hover craft?
84 Google ____
106 Emotionally distant
94 Kaplan course for H.S.
116
Brood
85 Rap shouts
107 Arsenal
students
118
Film character who says,
89 Casino activity with
108 Aligns
96 Hwy. violation
Id just as soon kiss
numbered balls
a Wookiee!
97 Like bread dough and beer 110 Where capri pants stop
90 Dander
111 No. 2s at college
119 Some pipe joints
99 Looney Tunes bird
91 Part of a flight plan,
for short
122 King of old Rome
103 Play the siren to
112 Inhumane types
DEAFRO
Check out the new, free JUST JUMBLE app
RULHOY
NINDAL
BELEFE
S P O C K
O H C R
GLOBAL
INLAND
FEDORA
RSTUDIO
U S H HOURLY
A T
R FEEBLE
E R O
IThe
N seagulls
H E R
E flockGenjoyed
A I N
in the
their time
together
A D
A M because
A Rthey
M
were O P E N S E S
U N MBIRDS
A K E OF
S AE A U
N E A FEATHER
R E R T O
N B
M A T
A S A P
E T A I L
H O N O
E T T U B R U T E
T R A I P S E
A K
I H O P S
L A C U N A
T O L E
N E V E R M O R E
A G R A
P I L E U P
M E T
I S L E
E
A L A I N
M Y P R
H I M A L A Y A S
H A N D B A G
C H R
S I T U A T E
H A N
T R Y E R S
T W A
U
S
O
F
A
A
I
R
A
H
A
S
T
E
N
O
G
S
D
B I A N C A
E
P A N S O U T
N
U N C A S E S
I G L E A V E S
M E
N E R T S
N T W T
V I N
SOCTOBER
T A R
P
C O
11,I 2015
L L B E B A C K
E E
A T R E S T
W R I T E
C H A L I C E
U L K S M A S H
S E
S O W E R
C A N T
E M I
P A R A S A I L
A
N O M E R C Y
C I O U S
U N
S C H S
M E
E R O T I C
E R
R A M O N A
N T
Y E A S T
The Answers
NO. 0927
ARIES
A partner has a
lot to share and much more
to say. You will need to be
a receptive audience -- that
is, if you want peace in your
home. A discussion about
a certain out-of-town event
could cause you to rethink
your plans.
Tonight: Go along with an
associates choice.
This Week: Mondays New
Moon promises a positive
change in a relationship.
TAURUS
You could be
in a position where you
might want to go in a new
direction. Staying close
to home and choosing a
relaxing activity will feel
right to you. Allow a friend
VIRGO
GEMINI
You might
feel as if you have made
a sufficient effort to draw
out a loved one who seems
intent on having things work
out his or her way. Whether
this person is upset with you
or just in a mood, you are
unlikely to find out what is
ailing him or her.
LIBRA
A conversation will
start your day off on a very
positive note. Someone is
likely to reveal his or her true
feelings, which you will need
to handle with sensitivity,
especially if the feelings
are not mutual. A surprise
awaits you later in the day.
CANCER
Tonight: On a roll.
This Week: You are the
centerpiece at a meeting.
SCORPIO
LEO
You understand
what is expected of you
in a matter involving close
relatives or neighbors.
You will hear your share of
gossip. Until you have some
solid facts, dont jump to
conclusions. You know what
you want; continue to make
plans with that goal in mind.
SAGITTARIUS
(Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
Friends seem to
be reaching out to you with
invitations to go here, there
and everywhere. Because
you are so popular right
1
7
8
6
5
4
2
9
3
6
9
4
3
2
8
1
5
7
2
3
5
7
1
9
8
4
6
4
6
7
2
8
5
3
1
9
5
1
3
9
6
7
4
2
8
8
2
9
4
3
1
7
6
5
3
5
2
8
4
6
9
7
1
CAPRICORN
(Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
AQUARIUS
(Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
PISCES
Your ability to
home in on what a loved
one wants will allow for
a nearly perfect day. You
know that this person
might be in a less-thangreat mood, but your
ability to draw this person
out and help him or her
relax is one of the plusses
of this bond.
Tonight: Be more available.
This Week: A partner wants
and needs your support.
Puzzle No. 2
Puzzle No. 1
7
4
6
1
9
3
5
8
2
9
8
1
5
7
2
6
3
4
BORN TODAY
Football player Steve Young
(1961), former U.S. first lady
Eleanor Roosevelt (1884),
singer/songwriter Daryl Hall
(1946)
Answer :
LLOGAB
GLOBAL
INLAND
FEDORA
HOURLY
FEEBLE
STUDIO
The seagulls in the flock enjoyed
their time together because they
were
DISOTU
BIRDS OF A
FEATHER
ACROSS
1 Bye at Wimbledon
5 Bonnie who sang
Nick of Time
10 Needle holder
13 Pop star with the
fragrance Miami Glow
16 Scientist Pavlov
17 Move unsteadily
18 Ikes charge during
W.W. II
19 What King was king of
21 *Shrink whos
always changing his
diagnosis?
24 Piece in early Indian
chess sets
25 Grasp
26 **What ballet patrons
dine on?
28 One side of a childish
debate or a
phonetic hint to the
answers to the four
starred clues
30 Take care of
31 Lipton rival
32 30 Rocks location
34 Bend
37 Arias, typically
39 Aerosol sound
40 *Oregon States
mascot played by
actress Arthur?
47 Festoon
50 Pick in class
51 Assuming its even
possible
53 Cross, with off
54 **A deal on Afro wigs?
60 Commercial lead-in to
Balls or Caps
63 Couldnt be
64 Not so awesome
65 Court positions
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
41 (15)
Next Week:
Meet
Sacagawea
Language
Mini Fact:
A Visit to
Iceland
While most
Icelanders
speak
Icelandic,
English is
widely spoken
on the island.
Mini Page photo
Names
School
Animals
As you explore
Iceland, youll see
many people wearing
beautifully knitted
wool sweaters.
Icelandic sheep are
Icelandic wool comes shorn, or shaved, in
from Icelandic sheep. the spring so that
their coats can keep
These sheep are
descended from those them warm all winter.
brought to Iceland by settlers from Norway.
The Icelandic horse
was developed on the
island from ponies
brought by Norse
settlers. It is smaller
than most horses and
comes in many colors. Some sheep farmers use
the horses to round up animals.
Mixed-up names
Natural beauty
Resources
On the Web:
kids-world-travel-guide.
com/iceland-facts.html
At the library:
Try n Find
Mini Jokes
W
P
O
N
A
C
L
O
V
T
E
C
T
O
N
I
C
H
D
E
B
H
R
H
M
I
P
N
H
G
I
O
D
G
Y
A
A
S
D
R
N
H
S
S
R
L
G
S
A
L
R
S
E
L
E
E
L
A
E
E
Y
L
I
C
S
N
S
M
K
A
G
A
I
D
Y
B
J
F
L
Y
M
S
E
L
A
R
A
A
C
E
Greg: Where do
geologists like to
go for entertainment?
Gary: Rock n roll concerts!
G
Y
V
E
C
W
V
T
N
M
I
T
I
R
Q
A
X
T
K
A
E
O
L
L
Z
G
U
W
R
N
J
P
L
O
O
W
S
E
G
A
U
G
N
A
L
Eco Note
Oregon researchers say
they have developed a new
strain of seaweed that has twice the
nutritional value of kale and also tastes
like bacon. One form of the seaweed is
in strips that can be fried like regular
bacon. Its rich in protein, vitamins and
antioxidants. Eat up!
Youll need:
1 1/2 cups water
1/2 cup couscous (whole-wheat or
regular)
Sprinkle of salt
1/4 cup dried apricots, chopped
What to do:
1. Bring water to boil. Add couscous and stir. Reduce heat to low and simmer for 2
minutes.
2. Remove couscous from heat. Allow to stand for 5 minutes to absorb all water.
3. Fluff couscous with fork; sprinkle with salt to taste.
4. Add dried fruit, chickpeas and orange juice; stir gently.
5. Top with sliced almonds. Makes 4 servings.
Puzzling
Unscramble the words below that remind us of Iceland.
lecragi
kvyjeakri
sbylsame
eygres
For later:
The Mini Page 2015 Universal Uclick
Kooky Couscous
Cooks Corner
Teachers:
For standards-based activities to
accompany this feature, visit:
bbs.amuniversal.com/teaching_guides.html