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LEHIGH VALLEYS BEST LOCAL NEWSPAPER
For convenient, reliable home delivery, A2 | Tuesday, October 30, 2012 | 75 cents
Sandys surge
This is an extremely dangerous situation
BY NICK FALSONE The Express-Times
The threat of Hurricane Sandy paralyzed the Lehigh Valley and northwest New Jersey on Monday as residents and officials braced for pulverizing conditions that were only expected to intensify overnight into today. Power outages and the potential for flooding plagued the entire region. In Bethlehem, officials ordered apartments evacuated near the Monocacy Creek. In Easton, fears of a citywide power loss prompted the mayor to set a 9 p.m. Monday curfew. Emergency shelters opened in Belvidere, Phillipsburg and elsewhere. The greater threat to the region appeared to be wind rather than rain, forecasters said Monday afternoon. The National Weather Service issued a high wind warning for all of Lehigh and Northampton counties. Advisories for windy conditions also were issued for Hunterdon and Warren counties. This is an extremely dangerous situation, the weather service said in a statement. Gusts were predicted to reach up to 75 mph overnight, the statement said. Electric utilities anticipated that power outages would affect hundreds of thousands of customers and could last up
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AP PHOTO
Madison Maher, left, runs into the rain Monday while her mother, Susan Sorenson, takes a picture of the rough surf at Sea Bright, N.J.
AP PHOTO
Workers haul sandbags Monday to shore up valuable spots in Washington, D.C., at The Pavilion and the Old Post Office. The Justice Department lies in the background.
ity to more than 1 million people and figured to upend life for tens of millions more. It clobbered the ghost-town cities of the Northeast corridor, from Washington, D.C., to Boston, with stinging rain and gusts of more than 60 mph. As it drew near, Sandy moved closer to converging with two cold-weather systems to form a hellish superstorm of snow, rain and wind. Forecasters warned of 20-foot waves bashing into the Chicago lakefront and up to 3 feet of snow in
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TO OUR READERS
^ In the interest of safety for our employees and contractors, The Express-Times is delivering Tuesdays newspaper with Wednesdays editions. Home delivery Tuesday was suspended because of Hurricane Sandy, although the newspaper was available at select single-copy locations. ^ Check for any school closings, storm cancellations, etc., at lehighvalleylive.com. The weather also has forced postponement of Wednesdays scheduled Breakfast Showdown visit to Stemies Place on Route 611 in Williams Township. WEATHER
Rain and wind, 51/42 More weather, lehighvalleylive.com
Shoppers at the Giant supermarket in Forks Township endure heavy rain Monday afternoon.
Northampton County Emergency Management Coordinator Bob Mateff explains the role of the countys emergency operations center.
ONLINE POLL
Will you stay home for the duration of the storm? Vote in our poll at lehighvalleylive.com.
Pennsylvania and New Jersey authorities warned residents to stay off the roads, but with school and work closures Monday, crowds flocked to Lehigh Valley and northwest New Jersey stores and shopping centers for last-minute storm-preparation purchases.
At Home Depot locations, shoppers were seeking what was left of power generators, batteries and flashlights. At the Greenwich Township location, shoppers could be seen carrying sand and wooden
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INDEX
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With emergency declarations in place, and Hurricane Sandy continuing to bear down on the region,
Northampton, Warren and Hunterdon county authorities Monday staffed emergency operations centers as calls began to come in for downed trees and power lines. To speed local disaster re-
sponse, Northampton County set up a one-stop shop at the county 911 center in Upper Nazareth Township, said Bob Mateff, the county emergency management coordinator. Representatives of the Pennsylvania Department of Transportation and PPL
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IMPACT:
West Virginia.
disasters in U.S. history. President Barack Obama and Republican challenger Mitt Romney canceled their campaign appearances at the very height of the race, with just over a week to go before Election Day. The president pledged the governments help and made a direct plea from the White House to those in the storms path. When they tell you to evacuate, you need to evacuate, he
said. Dont delay, dont pause, dont question the instructions that are being given because this is a powerful storm. Sandy, which killed 69 people in the Caribbean before making its way up the Atlantic, began to hook left at midday, moving at almost 30 mph faster than forecasters had expected. While the hurricanes 90 mph winds registered as only a Category 1 on a scale of 5, it
packed astoundingly low barometric pressure, giving it terrific energy to push water inland, said Kerry Emanuel, a professor of meteorology at MIT. We are looking at the highest storm surges ever recorded in the Northeast, said Jeff Masters, meteorology director for Weather Underground, a private forecasting service. The energy of the storm surge is off the charts, basically.
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READINESS:
Hurricane doesnt hold back shoppers
boards into their cars. Sergio Moreira, owner of Express Employment Professionals in Palmer Township, visited the Palmer Home Depot to buy 20 sandbags for his business and needed more to deflect water from the doorway. Im trying to get more today, he said. A Williams Township man searched for charcoal so he could grill once the power went, and Bill Verbics, of Palmer Township, was buying supplies to cover his basement window wells to keep out water. Fast-food eateries along 25th Street saw a steady early afternoon stream of vehicles moving through the Burger King, McDonalds and Dunkin Donuts drivethroughs. The parking lot was full by noon at the Giant supermarket in Palmer, with residents stocking up on the usual milk, eggs, bread and canned goods. Milton Fedd, of Easton, filled his cart with a 12-pack of water bottles, peanut butter, chips and what he described as his favorite comfort food: a bag of pistachios. The shelves are basically bare, he reported after checking out. I was finding stuff thats not going to go bad, things you dont need to heat to cook with. A line formed at the Redbox kiosk outside the supermarket with people interested in renting DVDs before the power went out. Were looking for anything new thats out right now, said Miller Horan, of Wilson Borough, who grabbed a movie with her daughter, Brianna Horan, a senior at Wilson Area High School. Patrick Sessions, of Bucks County, who works for Polytek Development Corp. in Williams Township, was recycling water jugs outside the Giant, noting he already had 10 gallons and was stocking up another five gallons. He also filled up the gas tank in his car and got gasoline for his power generator, he said. At Frank & Dots Beer Depot in Easton, a clerk by 1 p.m. said he sold the last three 20pound bags of ice. Sales of beer and cigarettes were steady. Easton resident Angelo Ortiz stopped in for two packs of cigarettes and a candy bar the last purchases before the storm, he said. I hope we just get the rain hard but no flooding, he said.
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CENTERS:
UTILITY OUTAGES
As of Monday evening, thousands of people were without electricity in the Lehigh Valley and northwest New Jersey. Utilities were reporting the following numbers. PPL: Lehigh County 495 outages, the majority of which were in the Slatington, Lower Milford and Upper Saucon townships. Northampton County 162 outages, the majority of which were in Plainfield Township and Lower Saucon Township. JCP&L: Warren County 2,826 apparent outages, the majority of which were in Knowlton, Blairstown, Liberty and Washington townships. Hunterdon County 10,187 apparent outages, the majority of which were in Frenchtown and the townships of Clinton, Tewksbury, Delaware and Raritan. Met-Ed: Northampton County 1,832 apparent outages, most of which were in Moore and Bushkill townships, and Nazareth. Natural gas companies: UGI Gas says flooding caused by heavy rain could result in an interruption of service. Anyone affected should call 800-276-2722. UGI customers who smell the rotten-egg odorant added to gas should leave the building immediately and call 800-276-2722. Elizabethtown Gas customers should call 800-492-4009. Both utilities say gas appliances under water need to be inspected before they are restarted.
Robert Robeski, chief Radio Amateur Civil Emergency Service officer, adjusts the volume level on a radio Monday afternoon in the Warren County 911 command center in Franklin Township. The amateur radio operators staged at area hospitals and shelters to augment the countys communications.
Personnel will also keep in touch with organizers of the American Red Cross of the Greater Lehigh Valleys emer-
gency shelter at 2121 City Line Road in Bethlehem, he said. Warren County also had a backup in place to keep communications flowing. In case the communications center loses power, a team of about 15 ham-radio operators part of the Radio Amateur Civil Emergency Services will be deployed throughout the county to coordinate with authorities. The amateur operators work in coordination with the communications center and will be stationed at Warren Haven and St. Lukes Hospital, Phillipsburg, with batterypowered radios, Wheatley said. I always say they could take two sticks and a rubber band and talk to China, Wheatley said. They are very astute at what they do. A group of licensed volunteers, the Amateur Radio Emergency Services Team is also available to work with municipal emergency coordinators in Warren County.
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HURRICANE:
Sandys surge
to a week in some parts because of winds knocking down lines. Tens of thousands in New Jersey and Pennsylvania had already lost power as of Monday afternoon. Locally, the number of power outages was in the thousands as of Monday evening.
FREE OFFER
During the storm, New Jerseys largest daily newspaper, The Star-Ledger, is offering free access to its digital replica edition, which allows you to view the newspapers pages online. To do so, go to ed.starledger.com/daypass. Use the password FREE, in all capitals. It will prompt you for the password as well as your email and telephone number. Be sure to use numerals only on the phone number no hyphens. Each days edition will be available by 5:30 a.m.
Delawares upper basin. Its still a significant storm throughout the state.
nonessential employees at 2 p.m. Monday. Most schools were closed Monday and planned to stay shuttered today. Lehigh Valley International Airport was virtually empty; all flights were canceled. LANTA shut down almost all of its transit services. Emergency crews put up barricades to stop traffic from traveling on roads that were expected to flood. Pennsylvania lowered speed limits on Interstate 78 and other major highways. A stretch of Seventh Street in Allentown, and portions of College View Drive in Hackettstown were among those closed to traffic.
Contingency plans
County officials on both sides of the Delaware River spent much of Monday firming up contingency plans in the event the power outages affect their essential operations. In case the Warren County communication center loses power, a team of about 15 hand-radio operators Radio Amateur Civil Emergency Services will be deployed throughout the county to coordinate with authorities. The
amateur operators work in coordination with the communications center and will be stationed at Warren Haven and St. Lukes Hospital in Phillipsburg with batterypowered radios, said Frank Wheatley, Warren Countys public safety/emergency management coordinator. I always say they could take two sticks and a rubber band and talk to China, Wheatley said. They are very astute at what they do. Angel Gillette, a spokeswoman for Northampton Countys office of emergency management, said the countys 911 center in Upper Nazareth Township is equipped with a bank of generators that will power operations in the event of an outage. Despite the anxiety about the storm, some residents were taking the storm in stride. Ed Supon, of East Allen Township, said hed already stocked up on the necessities, including gallons and gallons of water, a small generator and firewood. On Monday afternoon, he was among a steady stream of customers who stopped at Tanczos Beverage in Hanover Township, Northampton County. Now Im getting beer to last me seven days, Supon said with a laugh Monday afternoon.
Reporters Andrew George, Sara K. Satullo, Kathryn Brenzel, Pamela Sroka-Holzmann, Jeff Sistrunk, Regional Editor Kurt Bresswein, Assistant Managing Editor/Operations Tony Rhodin and The Associated Press contributed to this report.
typically closes at 9 p.m. Mondays. As soon as the doors opened Monday morning, customers were hauling cases of beer up to registers. This Monday morning was like a typical Friday at rush hour, Matla said. Sam Kalic, of Bethlehem, has a house full of guests from Europe for her daughters wedding this weekend in New York City. Kalic said she was trying to stock up on food and drink and then planned to head home until Wednesday morning likely. Im certainly not going to be on the road tonight or tomorrow, Kalic said.
Closed stores
Plenty of businesses closed Monday. The Lehigh Valley Mall made the call Sunday night. Sears and Bon-Ton remained open for a brief period at the Phillipsburg Mall, which otherwise was closed. The Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board closed all its liquor stores statewide in anticipation of Hurricane Sandy. The board planned to continue to monitor weather conditions to determine whether the stores will remain closed or reopen as scheduled today. The Shoprite in Greenwich Township was closed, but the Redbox kiosks outside the front door still drew a crowd. Victor Narra, clerk of Parkway Liquors & Deli, at Memorial Parkway (Route 22) and South Fourth Street in Lopatcong Township, was open even though he said business was slow. He didnt want to open, but a contractor was scheduled to swing by and finish reconstruction of the stores outside wall after a truck crashed though it Oct. 10. Narra said people are panicking because of the proximity to the Delaware River, even as forecasts indicated it would crest well short of flood stage. Its scary, he said. They dont want to lose anything.
LOTTERIES
Monday, Oct. 29, 2012 PENNSYLVANIA MIDDAY: Daily Number: 554 Big 4: 7133 Quinto: 3, 2, 2, 8, 3 Treasure Hunt: 2, 5, 15, 21, 30 NEW JERSEY MIDDAY: Pick 3: 018 Payoffs: Straight, $301.50; Box, $50; Pairs, $30 Pick 4: 5867 Payoffs: Straight, $2,640; Box, $110 Due to weather conditions, the evening lotteries for Monday were not available at press time. They will appear in Wednesdays paper. Readers should check with their point of purchase to confirm winning numbers.
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HURRICANE SANDY
With Hurricane Sandys impact expected to be brutal when it reaches the New Jersey coast sometime Monday night, Easton resident Rachel Haddad wanted to defer questions about how concerned she was until the storms first surge was actually felt. Dont ask me today, ask me tomorrow, Haddad, who has multiple properties in Atlantic City and Brigantine, N.J., said Monday afternoon. Like other Lehigh Valley residents who own homes and condos along the shores of New Jersey and Delaware, Haddad said she checked on her properties this past weekend and advised her tenants to leave. Most decided against her advice, she said. Im screaming at them and no ones leaving, Haddad said. Haddad said that having owned properties along the Jersey Shore for roughly 30 years, she knows that when emergency officials call for an evacuation, its not a suggestion. The emergency officers
know whats going to happen, she said. Whatever they say, people should heed their warning. But even if the multiple advisories and warnings dont convince people to flee the area, Haddad said, a glance at Atlantic Citys bottom line should be enough of an indicator that its time to head for higher ground. When they close casinos, you know its serious stuff, she said. Monday afternoon, with the hurricane still hours from coming ashore, the ocean had broken through the dunes on a portion of Long Beach Island, where evacuations were under way due to Hurricane Sandy. A dune breach in Beach Haven flooded the streets, and flooding is reported elsewhere on the island as well. Police and rescuers were going house to house in some communities, offering to remove people from their homes. Palmer Township resident Michael Cavanaugh owns a home about a mile inland from Bethany Beach, Del., and said his top concern is the high-
AP PHOTO
A truck backs up hastily Monday as rough surf from the Atlantic Ocean breaks over the beach and across Beach Avenue in Cape May, N.J., as high tide and Hurricane Sandy begin to arrive.
speed winds that Sandy is forecast to bring. As of 11 oclock Monday morning, the National Hurricane Center upped Sandys potential maximum wind speed to 90 mph. Cavanaugh said he remains hopeful that his home will weather Sandy like it did during Irene in 2011, and he is staying in touch with his neighbors throughout the storm. Hes planning on going to Delaware on Thursday to assess the aftermath. We survived the last one OK and Im hoping this one works out OK, too, said Cavanaugh. Frank Lombardo, president of WeatherWorks in Hackettstown, said that for now, Lehigh Valley residents with properties on the coast need to stay put and listen to officials. The biggest part of this damage will be the Jersey Shore, he said. Fortunately, theyre in the Lehigh Valley right now and not down the shore. Lombardo said that Sandy has the potential to damage properties along the coast that have seemed to weather other hurricanes in the past. There are properties that will flood down the shore that have never flooded before.
Reporter Andrew George can be reached at 610-258-7171 or at ageorge@express-times.com.
In Brief
many chose to embrace what was coming. Doorman Ozzie Pomales showed up at work at his lower Manhattan high-rise with binoculars around his neck. I really wanted to see some big waves, he said. Mark Vial pushed a stroller holding his 2-yearold daughter, Maziyar, toward his apartment building in Battery Park City, an area that was ordered evacuated. Were high up enough, so Im not worried about flooding, said Via, 35. Theres plenty of food. Well be OK.
AP PHOTO
Sandbags and tape block the entrance Monday to the PATH train station in Hoboken, N.J.
Sandy grounded thousands of flights in the Northeast on Monday and upended travel plans across the globe, stranding passengers from Hong Kong to Europe. The massive storm threatens to bring a near halt to air travel for at least two days in a key region for both domestic and international flights. Major carriers such as American Airlines, United and Delta canceled all flights into and out of three area airports in New York, the nations busiest airspace. All flights were canceled at Lehigh Valley International Airport as well. According to the flight-tracking service FlightAware, nearly 10,000 flights had been canceled for Monday and today, almost all related to the storm. About one-quarter of all U.S. flights travel in or out of New York airports each day. So cancellations here can dramatically impact travel in other cities.
tions are fully staffed, the company said in a news release Monday. Elsewhere along the East Coast, additional inspectors are being sent to nuclear power plants. The Nuclear Regulatory Commission says its headquarters and Northeast regional office are both closed, except for emergency personnel. The agency says safeguards at all nuclear plants can withstand hurricane-force winds and flooding. Still, plants will be shuttered if hurricane-force winds are expected in the area.
From staff and wire reports
and getting ready to cut trees if they block the roads. National Weather Service meteorologist Tim Axford said the overwhelming majority of residents live in lower elevations where significantly less snow was expected. No significant power outages were reported Monday.
Leave immediately. ... The window for you getting out safely is closing. New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg
Nearby, Keith Reilly climbed up on a rail next to the rising waters of New York Harbor so his friend Eli Rowe could snap a photo of him in an Irish soccer jersey with the Statue of Liberty in the background. This is not so bad right now, said the 25-year-old Reilly. Well see later. The worst of the storm, a combination of Sandy, a wintry system from the West and cold air streaming from the Arctic, was expected to hit the city under a full moon about 8 p.m. Surging waters
of between 6 and 11 feet could flood subway tunnels, knocking out the underground network of power, phone and high-speed Internet lines that are the lifeblood of Americas financial capital. It marked the second time in 14 months that New York City has faced a scenario forecasters have long feared: a big hurricane hitting the city or a bit south, with counterclockwise winds driving water into miles of densely populated shoreline. Mayor Michael Bloomberg urged more of the 375,000 people in the citys evacuation zone to get out earlier Monday, saying the weather would soon get too bad to leave. He closed schools for a second day today. The U.N. and the 9/11 memorial were also closed. Leave immediately. ... The window for you getting out safely is closing, he said. Joshua Segal, who lives in a 10-story Battery Park City building, stayed, chatting with neighbors outside his building Monday afternoon. He said at least half of his neighbors decided not to leave, even though the superintendent turned off the elevator. He said he can understand why people with health concerns might want to evacuate but if youre in good health and youre just going to stay and read a book by candlelight Im OK.
Snowplows were out in parts of the southern Appalachian mountains Monday, preparing for as much as 3 feet of snow in higher elevations spawned by the merger of a winter storm with Hurricane Sandy. The early snowfall could be a boon for the areas ski resorts, which have sometimes struggled to keep their slopes open with a warming climate. Forecasters in West Virginia expanded a blizzard warning to at least 14 counties for high winds and heavy, wet snow. Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin declared a state of emergency. Were not taking it lightly, Marlinton Volunteer Fire Department Capt. Gene Tracy said. Were preparing for the worst power outages
Most students applying to college face deadlines in January or on a rolling cycle throughout the year, but many selective schools have early decision, early action or priority rounds whose Nov. 1 deadlines for applications and letters of recommendation fall on Thursday this year. With the storm threatening widespread power outages and other disruptions along the East Coast, the National Association for College Admission Counseling called on colleges to extend deadlines if appropriate, and a number of schools were announcing via blog post, email or Twitter their plans to do so. We hope this helps to relieve some of the stress and anxiety you might be feeling as the storm approaches your region, Columbia said in a message on its website.
will be closed in the U.S. for a second day today as Hurricane Sandy bears down on the East Coast. Bond trading will also be closed. The last time the New York Stock Exchange was closed for weather was in 1985 because of Hurricane Gloria, and it will be the first time since 1888 that the exchange will have been closed for two consecutive days because of weather. The cause then was a blizzard that left drifts as high as 40 feet in the streets of New York City. The New York Stock Ex-
change and Nasdaq said they intend to reopen Wednesday and would keep investors updated. Much of the East Coast was at a standstill Monday as the storm approached. Mass transit and schools were closed across the region ahead of the storm hitting land, which was expected to happen later Monday. Areas around New Yorks Financial District were part of a mandatory evacuation zone. The storm surge is already pushing water over seawalls in the southern tip of Manhattan. CME Groups New York trading floor was closed, but
electronic markets were functioning. Crude oil fell 80 cents to $85.48 in electronic trading. CME hasnt made any announcements about trading on its markets for today. CME owns exchanges that trade commodities, futures, options and securities related to interest rates. Bond trading will also be closed today. The Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association called for an early close to bond trading Monday at noon. The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note was 1.72 percent, compared with 1.75 percent late Friday.
ENTERTAINMENT
A5
Almanac
Oct. 30, 2012
Today: is the 304th day of
2012. There are 62 days left in the year.
On this date
^ In 1938, the radio play The War of the Worlds, starring Orson Welles, aired on CBS. ^ In 2007, singer-actor Robert Goulet died at a Los Angeles hospital at age 73.
Todays birthdays
Rock singer Grace Slick is 73. Actor Henry Winkler is 67. Actor Kevin Pollak is 55. The sun sets 5:59 p.m. today, rises 7:31 a.m. Wednesday. The moon sets 8:14 a.m. today, rises 7:07 p.m. Wednesday. It is two days after the full moon.
Henry Winkler
force to break the glass. As the vessel was sliding down the ways, however, a man grasped the rope to which was attached the bottle and swung with such force that the bottle cleared the New Yorks prow and burst with a great pop on the port side.
JEANNE PHILLIPS
Dear Abby
kids have never held a pencil or scissors, and dont know how to share or take directions from an adult. Its sad to hear them say they have no crayons at home or books to read. As for testing, unless the parents do THEIR job, we will see little improvement in scores. And no, I dont work in a big-city school district this is a nice suburban area.
STILL LOVE MY JOB
wrote about. Then you asked where the parents are. Let me tell you! Theyre too busy on their smartphones talking to or fighting with their latest boy- or girlfriend, playing electronic games, out drinking and partying so much they dont know or care where their kids are. Parents who actually spend time with their children and give them undivided attention are sadly in the minority. Those who help to teach them are even fewer in number.
KANSAS READER
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DEAR SEEN IT ALL: Thank you for your comments. The letter from Chaplin, Conn. Reader brought a HUGE number of responses on this issue, primarily from teachers: DEAR ABBY: I have worked in an elementary school for nine years. A teacher is a counselor, doctor, social worker and behavioral specialist all in one. Kids come to class dirty, hungry, tired, with no manners or clue about the alphabet or counting. Teachers have halted lessons because a child is in a meltdown. Some
DEAR ABBY: I spend half my teaching time on behavioral issues, social skills, bullying, how to work in a group and just trying to hold kids attention. Many children today are so used to constant stimulation from TV, video games, texting, etc., that their attention spans max out at 30 seconds. I practically have to sing and dance to reach them or they tune out. I suggest Chaplin go to a school, volunteer, and try to become a part of the solution instead of adding to the burden of already overworked teachers.
TEACHING In Tacoma
DEAR ABBY: You are correct that teachers are overwhelmed by many curricular, legislative and administrative demands. However, educators can continually instill many of these life lessons into students by acting as positive role models who consistently demonstrate core values such as integrity, respect and determination. Students tend to do and learn what they see even more than what they are told by parents AND teachers.
ANNE In Nevada
DEAR ABBY: I am a retired physical education teacher, One day during a health class, a mother of one of my students came to school and told me I should teach morals and manners to her daughter. My response: Maam, if you couldnt do that in 14 years, I cant do it in 40 minutes a day.
REMEMBERS IT WELL
Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Write Dear Abby at DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.
DEAR ABBY: You said parents should be the ones teaching the kinds of things the Connecticut reader
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Cadillac (Part 1 of 2)
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By all accounts, Jay Moriarity was a lovely young man: a talented, dedicated surfer whose enthusiasm and optimism were infectious throughout the Santa Cruz, Calif., community where he was well known and loved. But that doesnt exactly make him the most compelling figure to place at the center of a film, at least not in the onenote way in which hes depicted in Chasing Mavericks. This cloyingly familyfriendly production tells the story of the late surfer (played by newcomer Jonny Weston) in 1994, when hes only 15 years old and dares to take on the dangerous and potentially deadly Mavericks surf break just up the coast from his home. Jay wants to conquer these waves ... well, because theyre there. And he enlists a gruff, reluctant local legend, Frosty (Gerard Butler), to help him train. This sets up a Karate Kidstyle, mentor-student, fatherson formula in which the plucky underdog awakens early each day to complete a series
of arduous tasks in preparation for a once-in-a-decade, fivestory-tall wall of water. Every step of the way is accompanied by the plainly spelled-out reasons why it matters. Nothing is left to our imagination or interpretation. Not a single character or moment rings true in the script from Kario Salem, based on a story by Jim M e e n a g h a n Butler and Brandon Hooper. No one feels like a fully fleshed-out human being, from Jays alcoholic mother (Elisabeth Shue, doing the best she can with an underwritten role) to the pretty childhood friend who would become the love of his life (Leven Rambin) to the tough kid who arbitrarily bullies him. They are all coming-of-age-movie types. But this is most troublingly the case with Jay himself who, in the hands of the angelic Weston, comes off as singularly sweet and upbeat, without an ounce of complexity or even garden-variety teen angst. (Jay Moriarity died in 2001, the day
before his 23rd birthday, in a free-diving accident in the Maldives.) With his curly blond locks and big blue eyes, hes consistently eager and guileless and actually a little boring, as is the film itself. Chasing Mavericks is credited to two longtime directors, Curtis Hanson and Michael Apted, because Apted had to step in to complete the picture when Hanson was suffering from some health issues. Some of the surfing footage is spectacular but the film as a whole lacks the kind of tonal and aesthetic imprimatur youd want to see from a respected veteran, much less two. The film features some well-known names from the world of surfing but that doesnt add much authenticity; despite the inherent peril involved in the sport, and in this particular location, everything feels very clean and safe. The surfer dudes dont go around spouting stereotypically idiotic bro slang to each other, but they dont feel like real people, either.
Rated PG for thematic elements and some perilous action. Running time: 115 minutes.
Bridge
Your honor, the district attorney announced, we will prove that West committed a felony. He let South make a hopeless game. Well hear evidence, said the judge. Against 3NT West led the king of hearts, the DA said. South won the third heart and took the ace of clubs. When all followed low, he led another club. West took the king, but his ace of spades won the defenders last trick. Making three. When South failed to finesse in clubs, the DA went on, West knew East had the jack. So West should dump his king under the ace. Declarer cant set up the clubs without letting East get in, and Easts good heart provides the setting trick.
Silly
Objection, roared Wests counsel. For my client to drop the king of clubs would look silly if East had J-x. Im inclined to show mercy, the judge ruled. West erred, but at least he did well to lead the king of hearts, not a spade. Arrest South: He always makes 3NT by leading a low club at Trick Four, not the ace.
Daily question
You hold: Q 7 8 6 2 K J 9 Q 10 6 5 2. Your partner opens one spade, you respond 1NT, he bids two hearts and you return to two spades. Partner then bids three hearts. What do you say?
Answer
Partners three hearts is a try for game (despite your preference bid of two spades, which suggested weakness) and
shows at least 10 cards in the major suits. Since your minorsuit honors may be worth nothing, pass. You could raise to four hearts with Q 7, 8 6 2, K 9 2, A 10 6 5 2. South dealer Both sides vulnerable NORTH Q7 862 KJ9 Q 10 6 5 2 WEST EAST A 10 8 2 643 K Q 10 J974 10 7 5 3 862 K8 J93 SOUTH KJ95 A53 AQ4 A74 South West North East 1 NT Pass 3 NT All Pass Opening lead K
A6
OPINION
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worse. If one wonders why this country is going to hell in a handbasket one can look no further then this editorial.
BOB PACE Independence Township
editorial acknowledges that Obamacare is complex and needs a lot of work. Could that be because it was written in a hurry by one party in complete control without the democratic ability or bipartisanship to work with the other side? I won is not a plan or a good start toward fostering a spirit of cooperation. Romney has proven he can work in a bipartisan manner with a sharply divided legislature while Obama, faced with a lessdivided legislature, has failed. As the editorial says, Obamas approach is known but doing the same thing again for the next four years hoping for different results is not a good plan. We need new leadership with a new plan and a record of success.
BEN H. HEDRICK Bethlehem Township, Pa.
REGION
In Brief
Man admits sexual assault on teen
ALLENTOWN | An Allentown man admitted Monday to the 2006 sexual assault of a 16-year-old girl, who gave birth as a result. Robert Aponte, 57, pleaded guilty to a sexual offense, admitting he molested the teen at some point between January and June 2006. The woman had a child, who is now 6, but did not know Aponte was the father until shortly after she approached police earlier this year to report the sexual assault. DNA testing results confirmed a 99.9 percent probability that Aponte was the childs father, said Lehigh County Chief Deputy District Attorney Matthew Falk. The sexual assault took place in Allentown, according to court testimony. Under the terms of the
Whitehall Township, including Claudio, came to the park for an arranged fight with another group from Catasauqua, according to court testimony. Harris was not originally part of the fight but was playing basketball with friends at the park when he saw the fight and attempted to intervene, Luksa said. A man named Steven from the Whitehall Township group was beating up a juvenile identified as Mr. Dragon, Luksa said. Harris broke them up and said to Steven, Pick on somebody your own size. Harris and Steven then started fighting, during which time Claudio drew two knives he brought to the fight and started stabbing Harris, according to testimony. Claudio entered a plea Monday of guilty but mentally ill. His attorney, Irene Johns, said he has bipolar dis-
order with psychosis and was not on his medication at the time of the stabbing. Claudio, wearing a blue jumpsuit and a scruffy beard during his court appearance, did not speak except to answer questions by Judge Maria Dantos. Is that what happened? Dantos asked. Did you stab the victim in this case, Mr. Harris? Yes maam, Claudio responded. He faces a sentence of five to 10 years in state prison under the plea, but Dantos postponed the sentencing to allow for evaluations and so that Harris can be present to speak. Harris was unable to attend Mondays hearing, but Luksa said his family agrees with the plea bargain. Harris foster mother was present in the courtroom but did not speak.
guilty plea, Aponte will receive a minimum prison sentence likely 24 to 36 months, according to his public defender, Richard Webster. Aponte, wearing a blue prison jumpsuit and darkrimmed glasses, did not speak during his court appearance except to yes and no answer questions from Judge Maria Dantos. He will be sentenced at a later date.
Police say Walker had been drinking on the afternoon of Aug. 3 when he relieved himself, wetting a neighbors porch pad, garden hose and gas can. Witnesses told police the councilman routinely urinated outside his home where others could see him, according to testimony during a preliminary hearing for the case. You have to at least make an effort to go somewhere private, Anthony noted. The 67-year-old councilman told the judge, I wont do this again. As a councilman, Walker is expected to set an example in his community, First Deputy District Attorney Steven Luksa said. Public urination is unsanitary and unsightly, he said. Walker declined comment after the hearing, but defense attorney Al Stirba IV said the charge to which his client pleaded guilty and Anthonys sentence are appropriate given the facts of the case.
HURRICANE SANDY
A7
SANDYS COMING
Officials in Pennsylvania, New Jersey and New York urged commuters to stay home as major roads and public transportation throughout the region were shut down due to Hurricane Sandy. Motorists throughout eastern Pennsylvania were advised to stay off the roads due to the increasing wind speeds hitting the Northeast. Steve Chizmar, press secretary for the Pennsylvania Department of Transportation, said Monday most roads were open to traffic, but motorists should bunker down for the approaching storm. If conditions worsen roads could be closed to everyone except emergency personnel. Its not clear if or when it will come to that point, however. Theres not really a straw that breaks the camels back here, Chizmar said. We want as many motorists as possible to stay off the road now. He noted that every person stranded on the roads is another person emergency responders must attend to and put themselves at risk. Joe Dee, a spokesman for the New Jersey Department of Transportation, said similar requests were being made of New Jersey drivers. Since Sunday, there had been 63 incidents on state roads, some of which are weather related, Dee said. As the storm strengthened, those figures are expected to skyrocket, he said. Its just not worth going out on the roads, especially as the later we go, the worse its going to get, he said. Emergency speed limits of 45 mph were being enforced on most major highways, including Interstates 76, 78 and 81, Routes 22 and 33 and the Pennsylvania Turnpike, according to a PennDOT news release. Vehicles including motorcycles, empty tractortrailers, overweight trucks and recreational vehicles were banned from the roads. All LANTA bus routes were canceled for today according to the LANTA website. Officials may open up some routes later in the day depending on the weather, the announcement said. Calls to LANTA offices were not returned. Trans-Bridge Lines bus routes to Jersey City, Newark and New York City along with Newark Liberty and JFK international airports for today had been canceled, said President Tom JeBran. Similarly, Easton Coach and Phillipsburg Coach were shut down, he said. Nearly all Delaware River Joint Toll Bridges are still open, including the Interstate 80 toll bridge and the EastonPhillipsburg toll bridge, according to the commissions website. Only the Lumberville-Raven Rock TollSupported Bridge between Hunterdon County and Bucks County was closed to the public because Bulls Island State Park on the New Jersey side was shut down for the day. In New Jersey, Gov. Chris Christie tweeted the Garden State Parkway was being closed from Exit 129 on south as of 4 p.m. Monday. On the northern end of the state, the Holland Tunnel was shut down at 2 p.m. Travelers were advised to find an alternate crossing, according to another release. There were no plans to shut down state highways, but some restrictions were in place for the New Jersey Turnpike, Dee said. Motorcycles and passenger vehicles hauling trailers were restricted from the road, and speed limits have been dropped to 45 mph, he said.
Tsewang Guyrme, top, manager of the U.S. Fuel gas station in Phillipsburg, puts bubble and shrink wrap around his new gas pumps Monday. Bottom, neighbors gather to see a maple tree that split in two Monday due to high winds on Hudson Street in Phillipsburg.
sengers trying to get to the airport (in this weather). Theres also the risk of flooding on the runways, which may not be as large a concern here as it is for the New Jersey and New York airports, she adds. The airport was relatively empty. Kittle explained that as an originating airport, and not a hub that offers connecting flights, theres no reason for passengers to stick around. Sisters Marci and Marilyn McDonald flew in from St. Petersburg, Fla., recently to help a friend move from Carbon County to Lehigh County. They arrived Monday morning at LVIA to find that their flight home had been canceled, so theyre going to spend at least one more night with their friend in her new Whitehall Township home. The siblings still havent decided whether to cross their
fingers for a flight or to find a way south. Weve been thinking about driving and trains and buses, Marci McDonald said. A lot of stranded passengers are opting to drive, said longtime National Car Rental employee Audrey Berkheiser. Its been absolutely crazy. When one couples Allegiant Air flight was canceled, they opted to rent a car and drive to Miami in time to board their cruise ship, Berkheiser said. Denver residents Jim Orsi and Gabrielle Popoff were in Washington, D.C., for an academic conference and had planned to fly home Sunday. After their flight was canceled, the couple opted to drive to the Lehigh Valley and stay with Orsis family in Lower Saucon Township while they wait for a flight to Colorado out of LVIA, he said.
back of the building. Lehigh Valley CART spokeswoman Donna Lagomarsino said the shelter was set up for a capacity of 10 animals but could possibly accommodate up to 30. Please dont leave your animals behind, Lagomarsino stressed. The group is asking pet owners to bring a weeks supply of food, medication with directions and vaccination records. Also, owners could bring treats, blankets, toys and the like to make pets feel safe and comfort them. Lagomarsino said residents could alert Red Cross staff at the emergency shelter when they check in that they have a pet with them and a Lehigh Valley CART representative will escort them to the animal shelter. Anyone with questions about the animal shelter can
call 610-390-0088. Warren County also has emergency shelters. The Goodwill Fire Co.s station at 689 Water St. in Belvidere is designated as a shelter, said Frank Wheatley, the Warren County emergency management coordinator. Residents must bring their own bedding. Other municipalities also have designated shelters such as Phillipsburg at Phillipsburg High School, 200 Hillcrest Blvd., and Blairstown Township at the North Warren Regional High School, 10 Noe Road. A Hunterdon County shelter has been set up in Raritan Township at Building No. 1 of the countys facility at 314 Route 12. Those reporting to the shelter are asked to bring their own basic comfort items and any required medication.
Local officials are counting on backup generators and gravity distribution systems to prevent any interruptions in water service for residents who use municipal water in Bethlehem, Easton and western New Jersey. But flooding could cause problems for Bethlehems wastewater treatment plant, and flood conditions could cause problems for homeowners who rely on well pumps. There should not be service interruptions at Easton Suburban Water Authority. Our backup generators are all at the pumping stations, and theyre all filled with gas and ready to go, said Erin Rapp, customer relations manager for Easton Suburban Water Authority. Unless were unable to get there to refill gas tanks, well be fine. In New Jersey, the story is similar. Aqua New Jersey representative Donna Alston said all major facilities have independent electric generators, which are fueled and ready for a power loss, and Aqua has spare mobile generators in case any of the generators fail. While Aqua will have emergency personnel available in the event of life-threatening emergencies, most of their responses to the flooding will be delayed until the severe portion of the storm is over, according to Alston. Local call centers, such as the one in Phillipsburg, will be open from 7:30 a.m. to 5 p.m., and emergency calls are accepted 24 hours a day, Alston said. Bethlehems system is a gravity-fed system that doesnt rely on pumps to get water to the treatment plant or to most customers. But within the citys distribution system there are several tanks on higher elevations that require pumping. David Brong, the citys water and sewer resources director, said those pump stations have generators as well. If we lose power, wed just have to send one of our staff members up to the site and turn the generator on, Brong said. The concern for Brong is wastewater treatment. Sometimes we have such a high amount of inflow into our system that it causes problems at our plant, Brong said. With the estimated amount of rain the city will see as a result of the storm, some backup is a certainty, he said. There are two separate and distinct power feeds to the wastewater treatment plant,
and the plant will have power as long as one is serviceable. But in the event storm water creates a serious backup, the city could be forced to send water through a minimal treatment process. The worst-case scenario would be a shutdown of the plant, which, in other communities, has meant a rule against flushing toilets or using showers or sinks. But Brong said this scenario is highly unlikely because of the two different electrical feeds.
Well water
For residents who use private well pumps, flooding and accompanying power outages could mean a lengthy period without water. Jake Kocher, president and owner of Kochers Water Pumps and Tanks of Bath, recommended people with wells fill their bathtubs for water to flush toilets. If your tub is clean, you can even cook with it, Kocher said. If you boil it, its good to go. But beyond the temporary loss of water, there is a serious risk of contamination of a well if the well head becomes submerged underwater. If that happens, Kocher said homeowners must chlorinate the well with well sanitizer or Clorox. Youve got to make sure to do that to every fixture in the house, Kocher said. It will sanitize the well, but youre going to have to run a bacterial test in about a week to make sure its cleared up. When pipes run empty, the well must be shocked to prevent bacterial growth. In a pinch, Kocher said residents can use a cup of Clorox bleach in the filter to temporarily sanitize the house.
Reporter Zach Lindsey can be reached at 610-258-7171 or zlindsey@express-times.com. Follow @ZachJLindsey on Twitter.
A8
REGION
Sunday. Hospital staff say the victim was driven to the hospital by a friend and needed immediate medical attention and surgery, according to police. Lt. Mark DiLuzio said authorities learned the victim was originally from New York but was living locally. He was staying in the Main Street apartment with an adult female, two adult males and a 10-year-old child at the time of the incident, DiLuzio said. Sometime between 6 a.m. and 6:25 a.m., two men, one armed with a knife, barged into the apartment and came at the victim, demanding to know
where money was being kept, according to police. DiLuzio said the victim was stabbed during this encounter, but no one else in the apartment was harmed. The only description police have of the suspects is that they were light-skinned males and one was wearing a grey hooded sweatshirt, DiLuzio said. He said police received only limited information from witnesses, but are still trying to obtain more detail. DiLuzio said the investigation is ongoing. Police suspect drugs and gang activity may have played a role.
Area High School teacher Angela R. Pessina died from severe head injuries following a crash early Sunday on Route 22 in Hanover Township, Lehigh County, the county coroners office said Monday in a news release. Pessina, 29, of the 700 block
of Benner Road, Allentown, was a Spanish teacher at the high school, according to a school Facebook page. She worked for about five years at the school, Principal John C. Smith said Sunday night while not identifying Pessina. Pessina was driving a Mercury Mariner when she rear-ended a Freightliner box truck driven by Paul David Haney about 2:41 a.m., Pennsylvania State
Police at Bethlehem reported. Pessina didnt see slowed traffic from a previous accident, police said. The Mariner became trapped under the truck and Pessina had to be cut from the vehicle, police said. She died at 4:29 a.m. at Lehigh Valley Hospital in Salisbury Township, the coroners office said, attributing the death to the accident.
on her neck, court records say. York allegedly grabbed ODonnell by the neck during the argument and threw her to the ground before choking her and covering her mouth. You had better stop crying or I will kill you, York allegedly told ODonnell. When he released the victim, ODonnell said she reminded him that she was pregnant with his child, court papers say. York allegedly came at her again and assaulted her in the same way. When ODonnell tried to walk away from him, court papers say, York grabbed her purse, pulled out her cellphone and threw it to the ground.
Police say York tried to run away when authorities first attempted an arrest. He returned to the Front Street home a short time later, authorities say, and was taken into custody. York was arraigned before District Judge James Narlesky on charges of aggravated assault, terroristic threats, simple assault, disorderly conduct, harassment, underage drinking and criminal mischief. He was sent to Northampton County Prison in lieu of $20,000 bail, records say.
Reporter Sarah M. Wojcik can be reached at 610-258-7171, ext. 3201, or swojcik@express-times.com. Follow @Sarah_M_Wojcik on Twitter.
SPORTS
COACH ANDY REID HAS NO CHOICE but to keep
Tuesday, October 30, 2012 | SPORTS EDITOR: Barry Miller, phone 610.258.7171, ext. 3575; fax 610.253.5447; email sports@express-times.com
lehighvalleylive.com
B1
Now what? Those two words sum up the predicament Andy Reid and the Philadelphia Eagles
face after Sundays embarrassing Reids word 3017 loss to the Atlanta Falcons. Reids grand attempt to turn around a season sliding into mediocrity or worse, the
bye week dismissal of defensive coordinator Juan Castillo and his replacement by Todd Bowles, proved an utter failure Sunday. Matt Ryan and the Falcons did pretty much as they pleased when they pleased and where they pleased as an impotent Eagles
defense could only watch open receivers run loose in space making big plays, running backs slice through Eagles tackles with ease and Ryan completely not bothered by what passed for a pass rush from a feeble Eagles front four. Given that the Eagles de-
fense went from OK, if underachieving, to just plain bad in two weeks, Eagles fans might well ask Reid to avoid any such future overhauls. But Reid has no choice but to try more shakeups. One, because right now his Eagles look absolutely nothing like a
playoff team, and, two, his job depends on the Birds being just that. Reid correctly said Sunday that talking wont help the Eagles, though Reid and his bunch talk incessantly about doing better, fixing things,
| PLEASE SEE REID, B2
Sports Flash
RUNNING
FIRST TEAM
^ Cody Zeller, Indiana ^ Doug McDermott, Creighton ^ Isaiah Canaan, Murray State ^ Deshaun Thomas, Ohio State ^ C.J. McCollum, Lehigh ^ Trey Burke, Michigan
BASKETBALL
C.J. McCollum averaged 21.9 points, 6.5 rebounds and 3.5 assists last season, leading Lehigh in all three categories.
The biggest man on The Associated Press preseason AllAmerica team got the most votes. Seven-foot sophomore center Cody Zeller, the main reason Indiana is the preseason No. 1 for the first time in 33 years, was one vote shy of being a unanimous selection for the preseason All-America team. Zeller, who averaged 15.6 points and 6.6 rebounds while shooting 62.3 percent from the field, received 64 votes from the national media panel which selects the weekly Top 25. Also on the team announced Monday were junior forwards Doug McDermott of Creighton and Deshaun Thomas of Ohio State and three guards seniors Isaiah Canaan of Murray State and C.J. McCollum of Lehigh and sophomore Trey Burke of Michigan. McDermott was named on 62 ballots, while Canaan was on 43 and Thomas 26. McCollum and Burke tied for the fifth spot with 16 votes each. Zeller is one of five starters back for the Hoosiers and when a top-flight recruiting
class is added in there are a lot expectations for the No. 1 team. I dont know that weve really set any goals as a team, but obviously, we want to win a national championship, Zeller said. Were not going to guarantee anything. Were just going to play and see where it takes us. McDermott, who averaged 22.9 points (third in the nation) and 8.2 rebounds while shooting 60.1 percent from the field and 48.6 percent on 3s for the Bluejays last season in earning first-team All-America honors, has the added pressure of playing for his father, Greg. The relationship is the key to Creighton trying to become the latest mid-major to possi| PLEASE SEE LEHIGH, B2
BRAD WILSON
Above The Fray
such as the offensive line, usually staffed by tested veterans. There are sophomores and freshmen, who most college coaches want kept safely on the sideline, all over the field. What this results in is the typical highs and lows of adolescence highs like seven interceptions against Penn and a stirring rally at Yale and lows such as the mysterious first half of futility at Robert
Morris. Then there was Saturdays appalling 20-17 loss at home to Georgetown in which for the first time this season, Lafayette put two halves of football together two bad ones. It was the kind of performance that gets most adolescents grounded. The Leopards coughed up seven turnovers, committed 10 often mind-numbing penalties and
executed as poorly as a hangman who could only tie slip knots. I had no hint this was coming at all, said a frustrated Lafayette coach Frank Tavani, discovering another adolescent specialty, the total surprise. We had a great week of practice and we know every game is a big game down the stretch. Its just hard to imag| PLEASE SEE WILSON, B2
win, was simply historic. No National League team had swept a World Series since the 1990 Cincinnati Reds. No NL team had won twice in a three-year span since the Big Red Machine in 1975-76. Im numb, really, the fact that weve won two World Series in the last three years, Giants manager Bruce Bochy said. This will sink in, but right now, Im kind of speech-
less on that. This happens in the NL only slightly more often than appearances of Haleys Comet. They are just the fifth NL team to accomplish the feat since the 1907-08 Chicago Cubs, joining the 1921-22 New York Giants, the St. Louis Cardinals of 44 and 46, the Los Angeles Dodgers of 63 and 65, and that Big Red Machine. And these Giants did it with small ball, becoming only the fifth big-league team and the first since the 1982
| PLEASE SEE SERIES, B2
AP PHOTO
Giants pitcher Sergio Romo, left, and catcher Buster Posey celebrate their sweep of the Tigers.
B2
SPORTS
nally getting his championship ring. Somehow, that seems like an ancillary element to opening night in Miami. Tonight, its Boston vs. Miami, a rematch of last seasons Eastern Conference finals that went seven games before the Heat prevailed. Its Ray Allen vs. the Celtics for the first time since he left after five seasons to join Bostons biggest current rival. And, oh, its also the night when the
Heat celebrate last seasons NBA championship with a splashy ring-and-banner ceremony. Well honor and respect what we were able to accomplish before the game, Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said. After that? All business for both teams. In other openers tonight, Washington visits Cleveland and Dallas plays at the Los Angeles Lakers. The Heat and Celtics practiced simultaneously Monday in Miami, because Boston ar-
rived a day ahead of schedule to avoid dealing with the brunt of Hurricane Sandy. And both preached the same mantra yes, its a big game, but win or lose, both teams will still have 81 games left to go in the regular season when they wake up Wednesday morning. If we win, do we get a trophy? We get one win and thats it, Celtics coach Doc Rivers said. And if we lose, which we dont want to do, we get one loss and it doesnt mean we still cant win it. But at the end of the day, were all human. ... These games, they dont really have more meaning, but they do have more meaning.
It comes as no surprise to either side that the schedulemakers sent Boston to Miami for ring night. Every time theres something big going on, Heat forward Chris Bosh said, were playing the Celtics. There has been a slew of upgrades at the arena over the summer slightly different looks here and there, a new nightclub and restaurant, more concessions and bars for ticketholders to enjoy. The Heat will even offer fans the chance to purchase championship-ring-related merchandise, designed in the same manner as the players title-re-
ward jewelry. The upgrades extend to whats going to be on the court as well. Miami kept its championship rotation intact, plus added Allen and Rashard Lewis to the mix. Allen knows it will be unusual to see the Heat get their rings, especially since five months ago, he was busy trying to thwart their title march. Im excited for these guys, having spent time around them over the last two, three months, getting to know them and their families, Allen said. Im happy for them that they won, but at the same time, they
beat me and put us out. I understand the emotions that Boston will feel, watching the whole ceremony. But at the same time Im excited for these guys. And once its over with, its business as usual. Boston figures to be better as well. Jason Terry now comes off the Celtics bench, theres an influx of youth in the rotation, Jeff Green is back after heart surgery, and the remaining members of what was a Big Four Rondo, Paul Pierce and Kevin Garnett are loaded up for another championship push. Its just another basketball game, Rondo said.
Continued from B1
WILSON:
messy loss, Lafayette was in position several times to close out Georgetown and pull off the win. What sloppy and careless youth took away, determined and tenacious youth also almost made happen. The kids just kept fighting; I dont worry about people playing hard, Tavani said. Lafayettes played hard and smart often enough to be 5-3 overall, 2-1 in the Patriot League, in a season that looked less than promising back in the summer. In some ways such an adolescent team should be achieving much less; in many ways, its remarkable the Leopards stand where they do when theyre so young. Go find another D-I team with a winning record with three sophomores starting on the offensive line. Good luck. Where Lafayette finds itself is, somehow, even after such an ugly loss as Saturdays, a loss that had Tavani writhing in agony at the postgame press conference, is in position to be champion. The bottom line is that football team (Georgetown) has two league losses and we have one, and we still have a chance to do something great,
Tavani said. To do that, we have to make a huge improvement. Well get off this mat and find a way to win these last three games one way or the other. That will be a difficult way. This week brings a trip to Colgate, which has piled up 1,154 total yards in its last two games, then a jaunt to Fordham where the Rams have three full scholarship classes under their belt and finally home to arch-rival Lehigh, which owns four straight wins over the Leopards. If Lafayette wins all three or even two with a loss to league ineligible Fordham the 2012 team will go down as a very special, almost historic squad. It may seem like too tall a task and may well prove one. Then again, Colgate surrendered 531 yards to 1-7 Bucknell, Fordham has the same 53 record as the Leopards and Lehigh hasnt always played four good quarters in a row this season. It also may be that Lafayette, the adolescent team, may have grown up a bit after Saturday and may be ready to pull off another remarkable result.
Continued from B1
SERIES:
AP PHOTO
Ryan Theriot scores the Giants winning run in the top of the 10th inning as Tigers catcher Gerald Laird waits for the throw and pitcher Phil Coke backs up the play.
big hit for Detroit, interrupting San Franciscos run of dominant pitching with a tworun, wind-blown homer over the right-field wall in the third. Posey put the Giants ahead 3-2 with a two-run homer in the sixth and Delmon Young hit a tying home run in the bottom half. San Francisco then won a battle of bullpens. Ryan Theriot led off the 10th with a single against Phil Coke, moved up on Brandon Crawfords sacrifice and scored on a shallow single by Scutaro, the MVP of the NL championship series. Center fielder Austin Jackson made a throw home, to no avail. We were very adamant that we have to step on their throats, Giants pitcher Barry Zito said. We saw what they did to New York. Santiago Casilla got one out in the ninth for the win. Romo struck out the side in the bottom of the 10th for his third save of the Series. The Giants finished the month with seven straight wins and their seventh Series championship. They handed the Tigers their seventh straight World Series loss dating to 2006. Obviously, there was no doubt about it, Tigers manager Jim Leyland said. It was freaky. I would have never guessed we would have swept the Yankees and I would have never guessed the Giants would have swept us. The Giants combined for a 1.42 ERA, outscored the Tigers 16-6 and held them to a .159 batting average third-lowest in Series history ahead of only the 1966 Baltimore Orioles (.146) and 1966 Dodgers (.142). This was the worst day of my career, Tigers catcher Alex Avila said. They played great, and we didnt. Its that simple. The NL has won three in a row for the first time in 30 years. San Francisco won six elimination games en route to the title.
Continued from B1
REID:
NFL NOTES
^ Broncos LB Joe Mays is likely out for the season after suffering a serious injury to his lower left leg. ^ DE Mario Williams has rejoined the Bills and expects to play this weekend following a procedure on his sprained left wrist. ^ Chiefs QB Brady Quinn is being evaluated for a possible concussion, and his status for Thursday nights game at San Diego remains uncertain. ^ The NFL has moved its trade deadline back two days to Thursday because of potential complications from Hurricane Sandy.
said. The thing I do know, and Ill go and watch the film and Ill evaluate myself, is that Im giving us every opportunity to win. Im trying my hardest. Some things dont go right when I want them to. Some things do. So if thats a decision that coach wants to make, then I support it. Probably the real answer on offense is to dump the current scheme and build a unit based first and foremost on the comprehensive skills and talent of the Eagles best player LeSean McCoy but theres no way that can be in-season. The Eagles best route to the playoffs is with Vick at the helm, like it or not. 2. Send Jim Washburn and his Wide-Nine packing. After all, Castillos gone, so why not go all the way and have a complete defensive rehab? Hire a more conventional line coach and play the way most NFL teams do. If defensive
end Jason Babin, a friend of Washburns, doesnt like it, tough. Washburns philosophy seems ineffective and gimmicky and depends on having the kind of linebackers and safeties the Eagles dont have and never will under Reid. This wouldnt be all that difficult to do and might pay real dividends, especially for veterans such as Cullen Jenkins and Trent Cole, and especially against the run. 3. Have DeSean Jackson return punts. The Eagles special teams are nothing special, largely because coordinator Bobby April doesnt have top-shelf material to work with. Putting Jackson on punt-return duty could produce some big plays, would force the opposition to react in ways that could help the Eagles (i.e. shorter punts, better field position) and would also send a welcome message to fans that Reids being aggressive in trying to reverse the Eagles fortunes. 4. Stop pretending the Eagles are a good football team. Theyre not, having lost four of five and owning three wins by a total of four points. Dont keep talking about talent and putting it together and the like, talk that infuriates fans and makes Reid and his staff look out of touch. Talk about back to basics and rebuilding and trying to become a playoff team and the like. It would be refreshing, and it would also be true. Now what? for the Eagles should be answered with anything that works. And almost anything is worth trying.
Brad Wilson can be reached at bwilson@express-times.com.
Continued from B1
LEHIGH:
range. Having him back is great, and hes a tremendous kid, Murray State coach Steve Prohm said. He will go down as if not the best player, one of the best players, ever to play at Murray State. Anytime you have an elite guard as a coach that makes you feel really good. Thomas averaged 16 points and 5.5 rebounds a game last season playing in the same frontcourt with first-team AllAmerica Jared Sullinger. While Sullinger left for the NBA, Thomas decided to come back and join two other returning starters in trying to get the Buckeyes past the national semifinals where they lost to Kansas. I knew one more year would be good for me, the 6-7 Thomas said. I came back just for one reason to also go to the national championship and to win the Big Ten. McCollum grabbed headlines last season in earning Patriot League Player of the Year honors and plenty of attention from NBA scouts. The 6-3 McCollum averaged 21.9 points,
6.5 rebounds and 3.5 assists last season, leading the Mountain Hawks in all three categories. He really opened eyes when he scored 30 points in Lehighs NCAA tournament upset of Duke. C.J. has been a very reliable performer on the floor and has grown as a leader over the course of his career, Lehigh coach Brett Reed said. Our team has a great deal of confidence because C.J. exudes confidence in his performance and that ultimately transfers to his teammates. They feel more confident in their ability because he handles pressure situations and adversity very well. The 6-foot Burke averaged 14.8 points, 3.5 rebounds and 4.6 assists in a freshman season that saw the Wolverines crack the top 10 and share the Big Ten title. Im pumped, Burke said of the upcoming season. Im really excited. The level of talent we have, Im excited to see how far we can go. Zeller, McCollum and Burke all were honorable mention selections last season.
Local Digest
FOOTBALL
E Darius Joyce 15 run (kick failed) Note: Easton completes third consecutive undefeated season.
CALENDAR
Middle school
Beth. Catholic 0 0 0 00 Easton (8-0) 7 20 12 645 E Katrell Thompson 17 run (Trey Bailey kick) E DaVion Kidd-Jackson 35 run (kick failed) E Ben Nimeh 37 pass from Connor Fahie (Bailey kick) E Mitch Daniel 40 interception return (Bailey kick) E Daniel 65 kickoff return (kick failed) E Sincere Williams 32 run (kick failed)
WHATS HAPPENING
Todays events
No events scheduled.
Metuchen or Ramsey at Pingry in North 2 Group 1; South Hunterdon at Keyport in North 2 Group 1. COLLEGE WOMENS VOLLEYBALL Misericordia at DeSales in Freedom Conference semifinals, 7 p.m.
course.
Patriot League
WOMENS SOCCER Offense Murphee Greeley, Lehigh junior scored two goals in a 4-0 win over Holy Cross. Defense Paige Elliott, Lehigh freshman anchored a defense that allowed just four shots on goal in a 4-0 win over Holy Cross. FIELD HOCKEY Offense Deanna DiCroce , Lafayette senior scored three goals and had an assist in an 8-0 win over Lehigh and contributed a goal and two assists in a 7-0 win over Georgetown.
Freshmen
Whitehall 0 7 0 07 Easton 7 21 0 634 E Trey Durrah 19 run (Jarrod Koose kick) E Corey Deemer 23 pass from Durrah (Koose kick) W Nicholas Kovalchick 5 pass to Gianni Sinatore (Saquae Nicols kick) E Nathan Moser 24 run (Koose kick) E Greg Albertson 71 pass from Durrah
Easton
P.A.L. WRESTLING SIGN-UPS Easton Police Athletic League midget wrestling program will hold sign-ups from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. daily until the end of November at the Easton Police Department, 25 S. Third St. Registration fee is $5 and a copy of a birth certificate must be provided.
Wednesdays events
COLLEGE MENS SOCCER Centenary at Marywood in CSAC Tournament first round, 7 p.m. COLLEGE WOMENS SOCCER Centenary at Neumann in CSAC Tournament first round, 7 p.m.; Swarthmore at Muhlenberg in Centennial Conference tournament, 7 p.m. NJSIAA FIELD HOCKEY Belvidere at Mountain Lakes in North 1 Group 1, 2 p.m.;
Landmark Conference
CROSS COUNTRY Men Dillon Farrell, Moravian sophomore was named the conferences runner of the year after placing first in the conference championship meet in a time of 26 minutes, 2.60 seconds over Juniatas 8,000-meter
SCOREBOARD
FOOTBALL
B3
25. Eastern Kentucky 6-3 376 18 Others receiving votes: Sacramento State 367, Tennessee-Martin 274, Harvard 231, Eastern Illi(Sundays late game) New Orleans 0 7 0 714 nois 188, Bethune-Cookman 155, McNeese State Denver 7 10 7 1034 73, Southern Illinois 66, Youngstown State 60, Jacksonville State 31, The Citadel 30, Southern AMERICAN CONFERENCE First quarter Utah 29, Samford 22, Arkansas-Pine Bluff 21, East DenMcGahee 1 run (Prater kick), 4:39. Alabama A&M 16, Chattanooga 14, Northern Iowa W L T Pct PF PA Second quarter NOSproles 29 pass from Brees (Hartley kick), 12, Colgate 7, Fordham 6, Stephen F. Austin 4, New England 5 3 0 .625 262 170 Drake 3, Delaware State 3, North Carolina Central Miami 4 3 0 .571 150 126 14:53. 2. Buffalo 3 4 0 .429 171 227 DenDecker 13 pass from Manning (Prater kick), NOTE: Lehigh is sixth in the coaches poll. 6:43. N.Y. Jets 3 5 0 .375 168 200 DenFG Prater 33, 0:00. South Third quarter W L T Pct PF PA DenD.Thomas 1 pass from Manning (Prater DIVISION I (BCS) Houston 6 1 0 .857 216 128 kick), 9:30. 1. Rutgers; 2. Penn State; 3. Cincinnati; 4. SyraIndianapolis 4 3 0 .571 136 171 Fourth quarter cuse; 5. Pittsburgh; 6. Temple; 7. Connecticut; 8. Tennessee 3 5 0 .375 162 257 DenDecker 2 pass from Manning (Prater kick), Boston College; 9. Army; 10. Buffalo. Jacksonville 1 6 0 .143 103 188 14:54. DIVISION I (FCS) North DenFG Prater 33, 5:27. 1. Lehigh; 2. Old Dominion; 3. (tie) Stony Brook, W L T Pct PF PA NOJ.Graham 18 pass from Brees (Hartley kick), New Hampshire; 5. James Madison; 6. Albany; 7. Baltimore 5 2 0 .714 174 161 2:03. Richmond; 8. Harvard; 9. Towson; 10. Villanova. DIVISION II Pittsburgh 4 3 0 .571 167 144 A76,832. 1. Shippensburg; 2. New Haven; 3. (tie) BloomsCincinnati 3 4 0 .429 166 187 TEAM STATISTICS NO Den burg, Indiana (Pa.); 5. American International; 6. Cleveland 2 6 0 .250 154 186 First downs 14 29 California (Pa.); 7. West Chester; 8. Mercyhurst; 9. West 252 530 Bentley; 10. Slippery Rock. W L T Pct PF PA Total Net Yards DIVISION III Rushes-yards 17-51 41-225 Denver 4 3 0 .571 204 152 Passing yards 201 305 1. Hobart; 2. (tie) Wesley, Widener; 4. Johns San Diego 3 4 0 .429 154 144 Punt Returns 1-(-1) 4-43 Hopkins; 5. SUNY-Cortland; 6. Trinity (Conn.); 7. Oakland 3 4 0 .429 139 187 Kickoff Returns 0-0 1-12 Salisbury; 8. Waynesburg; 9. Rowan; 10. St. John Kansas City 1 6 0 .143 120 209 Interceptions Ret. 0-0 1-8 Fisher. NATIONAL CONFERENCE Comp-Att-Int 22-42-1 22-30-0 East Sacked-Yards Lost 1-12 0-0 W L T Pct PF PA Punts-average 8-51.6 5-46.4 N.Y. Giants 6 2 0 .750 234 161 Fumbles-Lost 1-0 2-1 3-15 5-34 Philadelphia 3 4 0 .429 120 155 Penalties-Yards 24:46 35:14 Dallas 3 4 0 .429 137 162 Time of Possession (Sundays late game) Washington 3 5 0 .375 213 227 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHINGNew Orleans, P.Thomas 8-43, Ingram San Francisco Detroit South ab r h bi ab r h bi W L T Pct PF PA 3-7, Brees 2-2, Sproles 4-(minus 1). Denver, 5 0 0 0 AJackson cf 4 1 0 0 Atlanta 7 0 0 1.000 201 130 McGahee 23-122, Hillman 14-86, Ball 2-14, Pagan cf Manning 1-4, Osweiler 1-(minus 1). Scutaro 2b 4 1 2 1 Berry lf 3 0 00 Tampa Bay 3 4 0 .429 184 153 PASSINGNew Orleans, Brees 22-42-1 for 213. Sandoval 3b 5 0 1 0 AGarcia ph-rf0 0 0 0 New Orleans 2 5 0 .286 190 216 Denver, Manning 22-30-0 for 305. Arias 3b 0 0 0 0 D.Kelly ph 1 0 0 0 Carolina 1 6 0 .143 128 167 RECEIVINGNew Orleans, Sproles 7-56, Colston Posey c 4 1 1 2 MiCbrera 3b 4 1 1 2 North 5-63, J.Graham 5-63, Moore 3-25, P.Thomas 2-6. Pence rf 4 1 1 0 Fielder 1b 4 0 0 0 W L T Pct PF PA Denver, D.Thomas 7-137, Decker 4-43, Green 3-44, Belt 1b 3 0 1 1 D.Young dh 4 1 2 1 Chicago 6 1 0 .857 185 100 Tamme 3-33, McGahee 2-33, Stokley 2-19, Hillman G.Blanco lf 4 0 1 0 Dirks rf-lf 4 0 1 0 Minnesota 5 3 0 .625 184 167 1-(minus 4). Theriot dh 4 1 1 0 JhPeralta ss 4 0 0 0 Green Bay 5 3 0 .625 208 170 MISSED FIELD GOALSNone. BCrawford ss 3 0 1 0 Infante 2b 3 0 1 0 Detroit 3 4 0 .429 161 174 Worth pr-2b 0 0 0 0 G.Laird c 4 0 00 West Totals 36 4 9 4 Totals 35 3 5 3 W L T Pct PF PA FOOTBALL CHAMPIONSHIP SUBDIVISION 010 002 000 14 San Francisco 5 2 0 .714 165 100 he top 25 teams in The Sports Network Football San Francisco 002 001 000 03 Arizona 4 3 0 .571 124 118 Championship Subdivision poll, with first-place Detroit Seattle 4 4 0 .500 140 134 votes in parentheses, records, points and DPDetroit 2. LOBSan Francisco 5, Detroit 6. 2BPence (1). 3BBelt (1). HRPosey (1), St. Louis 3 5 0 .375 137 186 previous ranking: Record Pts Pvs Mi.Cabrera (1), D.Young (1). CSBelt (1). S Sundays late game 1. N. Dakota State (59) 7-1 3,951 3 B.Crawford. Denver 34, New Orleans 14 IP H R ER BB SO 2. Georgia Southern (76) 7-1 3,928 2 Mondays game 3. Montana State (9) 7-1 3,714 4 San Francisco San Francisco at Arizona, late 7 5 3 3 2 5 4. Sam Houston St. (9) 6-2 3,365 5 M.Cain Thursdays game 1 0 0 0 1 4 5. Old Dominion (2) 7-1 3,344 6 Affeldt Kansas City at San Diego, 8:20 p.m. 0 0 0 0 0 6. Wofford 7-1 3,210 7 S.Casilla W,1-0 Sunday, Nov. 4 Romo S,3-3 1 0 0 0 0 3 7. Eastern Washington 6-2 3,112 1 Arizona at Green Bay, 1 p.m. 8. Lehigh (4) 8-0 2,940 8 Detroit 6 7 3 3 1 8 Chicago at Tennessee, 1 p.m. 9. Stony Brook (4) 8-1 2,775 10 Scherzer 0 0 0 0 0 10. James Madison 6-2 2,741 9 Smyly Buffalo at Houston, 1 p.m. 1 0 0 0 1 1 11. New Hampshire 7-2 2,529 12 Dotel Carolina at Washington, 1 p.m. 2 2 1 1 0 4 12. Northern Arizona (2) 7-1 2,356 13 Coke L,0-1 Detroit at Jacksonville, 1 p.m. 13. Central Arkansas 7-2 1,962 14 HBPby S.Casilla (Infante). Denver at Cincinnati, 1 p.m. 14. Indiana State 7-2 1,863 15 UmpiresHome, Brian ONora; First, Brian Baltimore at Cleveland, 1 p.m. 15. Appalachian State 6-3 1,679 16 Gorman; Second, Joe West; Third, Gerry Davis; Miami at Indianapolis, 1 p.m. 16. Cal Poly 7-1 1,626 11 Right, Fieldin Culbreth; Left, Dan Iassogna. Minnesota at Seattle, 4:05 p.m. 17. Illinois State 7-2 1,546 17 T3:34. A42,152 (41,255). Tampa Bay at Oakland, 4:05 p.m. 18. Tennessee State 8-1 1,098 21 Pittsburgh at N.Y. Giants, 4:25 p.m. 19. Towson 4-4 843 23 Dallas at Atlanta, 8:20 p.m. 20. Albany 7-1 834 24 Open: N.Y. Jets, New England, San Francisco, St. 21. South Dakota State 6-2 734 NR Louis 22. Richmond 5-3 579 25 Monday, Nov. 5 23. Delaware 5-3 453 20 23. Villanova 6-3 453 19 The Associated Press 2012-13 preseason AllPhiladelphia at New Orleans, 8:30 p.m.
NFL standings
America team, with school, height, year and votes from a 65-member national media panel (key 2011-12 statistics in parentheses): ^ Cody Zeller, Indiana, 7-0, sophomore, 64 votes (15.6 ppg, 6.6 rpg, 62.3 fg pct) ^ Doug McDermott, Creighton, 6-8, junior, 62 (22.9 ppg, 8.2 rpg, 60.1 fg pct, 48.6 3-pt fg pct) ^ Isaiah Canaan, Murray State, 6-1, senior, 43 (19.0 ppg, 3.5 rpg, 3.6 apg, 45.6 3-pt fg pct) ^ Deshaun Thomas, Ohio State, 6-7, junior, 26 (15.9 ppg, 5.4 rpg, 52.0 fg pct) ^ C.J. McCollum, Lehigh, 6-3, senior, 16 (21.9 ppg, 6.5 rpg, 3.5 apg, 81.1 ft pct, 2.6 steals) ^ Trey Burke, Michigan, 6-0, sophomore, 16 (14.8 ppg, 3.5 rpg, 4.6 apg) Others receiving votes (alphabetical): Kenny Boynton, Florida; Lorenzo Brown, North Carolina State; Aaron Craft, Ohio State; Jamaal Franklin, San Diego State; Solomon Hill, Arizona; Pierre Jackson, Baylor; C.J. Leslie, North Carolina State; James Michael McAdoo, North Carolina; Tony Mitchell, North Texas; Mike Moser, UNLV; Shabazz Muhammad, UCLA; Nerlens Noel, Kentucky; Otto Porter, Georgetown; Phil Pressey, Missouri; Peyton Siva, Louisville; Michael Snaer, Florida State; Jeff Withey, Kansas.
Colorado 11 19 4 Portland 8 16 10 Chivas USA 7 18 9 x-clinched playoff berth y-clinched conference Sundays late game Los Angeles 1, Seattle FC 0
37 34 30
44 34 24
50 56 58
MLS playoffs
WILD CARDS Wednesday, Oct. 31: Houston at Chicago, 9 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 1: Vancouver at Los Angeles, 10:30 p.m. EASTERN CONFERENCE Semifinals (D.C. United vs. New York) Saturday, Nov. 3: D.C. United at New York, 8 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 7: New York at D.C. United, 8 p.m. (Kansas City vs. Chicago/Houston winner) Sunday, Nov. 4: Kansas City at Chicago/Houston winner, 3:30 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 7: Chicago/Houston winner at Kansas City, 9 p.m. WESTERN CONFERENCE Semifinals (San Jose vs. Vancouver/L.A. winner) Sunday, Nov. 4: San Jose at Vancouver/Los Angeles winner, 9 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 7: Vancouver/Los Angeles winner at San Jose, 11 p.m. (Seattle vs. Real Salt Lake) Friday, Nov. 2: Real Salt Lake at Seattle, 10 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 8: Seattle at Real Salt Lake, 9:30 p.m.
NBA openers
National Basketball Association Tuesdays games Washington at Cleveland, 7 p.m. Boston at Miami, 8 p.m. Dallas at L.A. Lakers, 10:30 p.m. Wednesdays games Indiana at Toronto, 7 p.m. Denver at Philadelphia, 7 p.m. Houston at Detroit, 7:30 p.m. Sacramento at Chicago, 8 p.m. San Antonio at New Orleans, 8 p.m. Dallas at Utah, 9 p.m. Golden State at Phoenix, 10 p.m. Memphis at L.A. Clippers, 10:30 p.m. L.A. Lakers at Portland, 10:30 p.m. Thursdays games New York at Brooklyn, 7 p.m. Oklahoma City at San Antonio, 9:30 p.m.
BASEBALL
Giants 4, Tigers 3
TRANSACTIONS
Baseball
American League NEW YORK YANKEESExercise the 2013 contract options for RHP David Aardsma, 2B Robinson Cano and CF Curtis Granderson. National League MILWAUKEE BREWERSReinstated 1B Mat Gamel, SS Alex Gonzalez and LHP Chris Narveson from the 60-day DL.
GOLF
College rankings
Harkers Hollow GC
National Basketball Association DALLAS MAVERICKSWaived G Delonte West. TWO-MAN SCRAMBLE 1. Larry Kurz and Steve Humphrey 68; 2. (tie) Pete Hourihan and Bob Colon, Chris Mattson and Matt Wilson 70. National Football League MINNESOTA VIKINGSSigned G Tyler Holmes to the practice squad. Waived DE Ernest Owusu from the practice squad.
SOCCER
LATEST LINE
NFL Favorite Points (O/U) Underdog Thursdays game SAN DIEGO 9 (44) Kansas City Sundays games Denver 3 (48) CINCINNATI GREEN BAY 9 (44) Arizona Miami 3 (42) INDIANAPOLIS Baltimore 3 (42) CLEVELAND HOUSTON 12 (48) Buffalo WASHINGTON 3 (46) Carolina Detroit 3 (44) JACKSONVILLE Chicago 4 (43) TENNESSEE SEATTLE 3 (39) Minnesota OAKLAND 2 (45) Tampa Bay NY GIANTS 3 (46) Pittsburgh
ATLANTA 6 (47) Dallas Mondays game NEW ORLEANS 3 (53) Philadelphia COLLEGE FOOTBALL Favorite Points Underdog Thursdays games OHIO 16 Eastern Michigan Virginia Tech 2 MIAMI, Fla. WESTERN KENTUCKY 10 Middle Tenn. St. Fridays game CALIFORNIA 4 Washington Saturdays games Penn State 3 PURDUE Air Force 7 ARMY KENT STATE 20 Akron Vanderbilt 8 KENTUCKY NORTHERN ILLINOIS 36 Massachusetts LOUISVILLE 14 Temple WAKE FOREST 3 Boston College Houston 2 EAST CAROLINA INDIANA 1 Iowa Georgia Tech 6 MARYLAND Clemson 14 DUKE ARKANSAS 5 Tulsa AUBURN 22 New Mexico St. Stanford 27 COLORADO UTAH STATE 25 Texas State Alabama 9 LSU WYOMING 9 Colorado State N.C. STATE 12 Virginia OREGON STATE 4 Arizona State FLORIDA 16 Missouri MICHIGAN STATE 1 Nebraska WEST VIRGINIA 7 Texas Christian OHIO STATE 24 Illinois NOTRE DAME 17 Pittsburgh LOUISIANA TECH 31 Tex.-San Antonio San Jose State 17 IDAHO CENTRAL FLORIDA 10 So. Methodist SOUTH FLORIDA 9 Connecticut CENT. MICHIGAN No line W. Michigan BUFFALO 2 Miami, Ohio GEORGIA 13 Mississippi CINCINNATI 6 Syracuse UTAH 12 Washington St. SOUTHERN MISS 3 Ala.-Birmingham MARSHALL 20 Memphis MINNESOTA No line Michigan KANSAS STATE 8 Oklahoma State TEXAS TECH 5 Texas Texas A&M 3 MISSISSIPPI ST. BAYLOR 17 Kansas Oklahoma 11 IOWA STATE Oregon 6 SOUTHERN CAL Rice 3 TULANE FRESNO STATE 33 Hawaii UCLA 3 Arizona UNLV 4 New Mexico BOISE STATE 14 San Diego State NAVY 15 Florida Atlantic Fla. International 4 SOUTH ALABAMA TENNESSEE 19 Troy Arkansas State 3 NORTH TEXAS LA.-MONROE 10 La.-Lafayette Home team in CAPS
RADIO
7:15 p.m. NBA: Boston Celtics at Miami Heat, ESPN (1230 AM and 1320 AM).
TELEVISION
AUTO RACING 8 p.m. Global Rallycross Championship (ESPN2). BASKETBALL 8 p.m. NBA: Boston Celtics at Miami Heat (TNT). 10:30 p.m. NBA: Dallas Mavericks at Los Angeles Lakers (TNT).
BASKETBALL
Preseason All-America
B4
OBITUARY LISTINGS
October 30, 2012 ^ Bahn, Jennifer, 34, of Bethlehem ^ DeBias, Francis Jack, of Lambertville ^ Duda, Henry, 84, of Bethlehem ^ Gordon, Joanne M., 74, of Forks Township ^ Halley, Marie, 88, of Phillipsburg ^ Hirko, Rose M. Werner, 60, of Palmer Township ^ Moore, Craig ^ Nardo, Raymond, formerly of Phillipsburg ^ Nee, Mildred T. Millie, 81, of Bethlehem Township ^ Pessina, Angela Rene, 29, of Allentown ^ Plush, George Bevan, 92, formerly of Bangor ^ Tress, Beatrice M., 92, of Richlandtown, Pa. ^ Wichryk, Antoni, 85, of West Easton
03/09/43 - 10/30/2010 REMEMBERING YOU IS EASY, WE DO IT EVERYDAY, ITS THE HEART ACHE OF LOSING YOU THAT WILL NEVER GO AWAY. YOUR MEMORY IS OUR KEEPSAKE WITH WHICH WE WILL NEVER PART. GOD HAS YOU IN HIS KEEPING AND WE HAVE YOU IN OUR HEART. ALWAYS AND FOREVER, SHIRL, MICHAEL & MARIA, DAVID AND MADDY, DOREEN AND TIM AND JOE LOVE YOU POPPY, DAVEY, ADAM, KAYLA, BRITTANY, HANNAH, AND DANNY IN LOVING MEMORY OF
JOHN MCLAGAN
IN LOVING MEMORY
OUR BEAUTIFUL DAUGHTER, OUR LITTLE SISTER, A WONDERFUL AUNT, A LOVING FIANCE. NOW OUR GUARDIAN ANGEL, WE LOVE YOU, ALWAYS AND FOREVER. YOU LEFT US WAY TO SOON AT THE AGE OF 22, SO WE LAID YOU DOWN IN A BED OF ROSES. SO MANY TEARS FALL FOR YOU EACH DAY, YOUR SMILE SO BRIGHT, YOUR SKY BLUE EYES, YOUR GREAT PERSONALITY WILL ALWAYS BE MISSED. WE LOVE YOU, DAD, MOM, PEANUT, MIKEY, BUDDY & FAMILY
Marie Halley
Marie Halley, 88, of Phillipsburg passed away Monday, October 29, 2012 at home. Arrangements will be announced by the Doyle-Devlin Funeral Home, Inc. in Phillipsburg. Online condolences may be offered at www.devlinfh.com.
MISS THAT SMILE MOM. LOVE YOU; NO I LOVE YOU MORE. CONNIE, MIKE JR. AND FAMILIES
Joanne M. Gordon
Joanne M. Gordon, 74, of Forks Township, died Monday, October 29, 2012 at Country Meadows, Bethlehem. Born: September 10, 1938 in Easton, she was the daughter of the late William and Helen Longyear Trembler. Personal: She and her husband, Donald L. Gordon were married May 4, 1957. She was a secretary at EMBT, Easton for twenty years and also worked for 15 years at the Easton YMCA. Memberships: Joanne was a member of the Good Shepherd Lutheran Church, Easton. Survivors: In addition to her husband, she is survived by sons, Donald and his wife Susan Gordon of Nazareth, Richard and his wife Sandy Gordon of Forks Township; grandchildren, Sara and Korryne; brother, Robert Trembler of Easton. Services: Services will be private and at the convenience of the family. Memorials: Memorial contributions may be made to St. Judes Childrens Hospital in care of the BartholomewSchisler Funeral Home, 211 East Center Street, Nazareth, PA 18064. Online condolences may be made at www.schislerfuneralhomes.com.
Beatrice M. Tress
Beatrice M. Tress, 92, of Richlandtown formerly of Bethlehem died October 27, 2012 in Phoebe Richland Health Care Center, Richlandtown. Born: Born in Lower Nazareth, PA she was the daughter of the late Charles & Mabel Shoenberger Smith. Personal: She was the wife of the late Charles L. Tress. She was ministered to by the Pastors and friends of Grace Bible Fellowship, Quakertown. She was a former member and choir member of Ebenezer Bible Fellowship and Calvary Baptist Church both in Bethlehem. Beatrice enjoyed gardening with her late husband and enjoyed cooking. Known for her hospitality she was a gracious hostess in her home. She was a loyal grandmother know to her grandchildren as Nana Tress. Survivors: She is survived by three daughters Phyllis Olsen and Dr. Milt, Esther Bradway and Ed, and Kathy Martin and Paul. Eight grandchildren; twenty one great-grandchildren; and three great-greatgrandchildren. Services: Services will be held on Friday, November 2, 2012 at 10:30 a.m. in the C. R. Strunk Funeral Home, Inc. (www.crstrunk.com) 821 W. Broad St. Quakertown, PA 18951. Call 9:30 to 10:30 a.m. in the funeral home. Memorials: In lieu of flowers, contributions can be made to the Missions Program at Grace Bible Fellowship, 1811 North Old Bethlehem Pike, Quakertown, PA 18951.
Other death
Anthony P. Browne, a onetime rock-and-roll manager turned interior designer whose star clientele included media magnate Oprah Winfrey, composer Andrew Lloyd Webber and Washington socialites Pamela Harriman and Evangeline Bruce, died Oct. 13 at the Capital Caring hospice in the District of Columbia. He was 70. He had a tumor near the optic nerve, said a friend, David Helfrich. Before he found his calling in design, the English-born Browne was the personal assistant to Robert Stigwood, manager of such British rock groups as
Raymond Nardo
Mr. Raymond Nardo passed away on October 18, 2012, formerly of Phillipsburg, NJ. Personal: Mr. Nardo attended Phillipsburg High School and graduated in 1952. He joined the United States Air Force where he served as a Sergeant for the Air Police during the Korean War from 1952 to 1956. After his discharge from the Air Force, Mr. Nardo became a Service Manager for Walters Oil Company and then for Lessig Oil Company. Memberships: Ray was a member of the IAPC, Fleas Club, VFW, Elks, and American Legion Post # 0457. He was also a 32nd Degree Mason. Survivors: He is survived by his wife, Maureen McDevitt Nardo; his son, Raymond and Tina Nardo, Jr.; his daughters, Ronna Rae and Greg Couser and Lori Rae and Gary Velekel; and his sister, Louise Flexer; eight grandchildren, Jaklyn, Francesca, Victoria, Dominique Couser, Lorissa, Greg, Geoff Velekei, Daniel Nardo. He was predeceased by his sisters, Mary Hedges and Norma Frinzi. Services: Funeral services will be held Friday, November 2, 2012 at 9:30 a.m. at Ss. Philip & James Catholic Church. Immediately following, burial will be at Northampton Memorial Shrine.
Cream, and business partner of former Beatles manager Brian Epstein. For a period, Browne was world tour manager of the Bee Gees. Browne said he had an eye for interior design early in life but that his guardian family discouraged his interest. It was regarded as frivolous and unmasculine, he told Architectural Digest, but I couldnt help doing it because I was good at it.
The Washington Post
Jennifer Bahn
Jennifer Bahn, 34, of Bethlehem passed away Wednesday in the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania. Services: Private under the direction of the Irwin M. Judd Funeral Home, Allentown.
COMICS
B5
HOROSCOPES BY HOLIDAY
TODAY'S BIRTHDAY (Oct. 30). The sun's returning to the waters of your birth sign has a spiritually cleansing and rejuvenating effect. In November, you'll focus on the part of your personal life that needs creative reconstruction. In December, you'll lighten someone's load and gain three times the generosity you give. January brings new commitments. Libra and Taurus people adore you. Your lucky numbers are: 5, 25, 1, 44 and 31. ARIES (March 21-April 19). You're willing to fight for what is yours, but are you willing to fight for what is not yet yours? This takes great faith that your projection of the future is good for all. TAURUS (April 20-May 20). With the full moon encouraging you to live out loud, you'll spend extra time making sure you're ready to look good, sound good and present yourself in the best possible light. GEMINI (May 21-June 21). You'll be inspired to nourish your mind. The full moon brings intellectual encouragement to you, and you'll find no better excuse to buy books, enroll in a class or attend a lecture. CANCER (June 22-July 22). The fullness of your guiding luminary, the moon, will draw out your generosity. You'll feel inspired to spend money and effort to help the environment and repay Mother Nature in some small way for the gifts she's given you. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). The antics of others may cause the moral compass inside you to spin madly, searching for a set point. When, if ever, should you try to impose your moral standards on others? That will be the question of the day. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). The full moon turns your sense of logic on its ear. You'll figure out the answers to the more complex questions thrown your way, while simple questions may remain a mystery.
ZITS
WIZARD OF ID
MUTTS
PEANUTS
WONDERWORD
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). The energy is flowing, and you'll take on many activities over the course of the day. Before you make a single move, though, know your purpose. Everything changes when you know why you're doing what you're doing. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). You'll be given something that not only meets your expectations, but meets them with the wild, burning eyes of an excited friend who can't wait to reveal a bit of magic to you. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). You know who your real competition is: you. You've wanted to prove that you could outdo your previous success or right a past mistake, and now the full moon encourages you to pull out all the stops. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). You feel independently strong and will get a boost from doing things on your own. The strength you build on a solo mission may be so inspiring that you'll decide to go it alone more often. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). Time may wait for no man, but you're more polite. You'll contribute to world peace by patiently waiting for others, even if said "others" happen to be rudely talking or texting on their cellphones. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). You'll blaze a trail where there was none. It's harder for you, but you'll make it easier for those who come after you. You do this out of love, and the results will benefit all.
STONE SOUP
BABY BLUES
BEETLE BAILEY
JUMBLE
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE
BLONDIE
NON SEQUITUR
CLOSE TO HOME
GARFIELD
DOONESBURY
MARK TRAIL