Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Philadelphia Eagles
preseason football
action kicks off today
n Sports, page C1
TM
n $2.00 n LANCASTERONLINE.COM
ECONOMY
STATE BUDGET
Schools
relying
on local
funds
No immediate cashflow concerns expected
during stalemate
TIM STUHLDREHER
TSTUHLDREHER@LNPNEWS.COM
The Lancaster Prospers? study, conducted by the Floyd Institute for Public Policy at Franklin & Marshall College, found growing
inequity across the city when it comes to jobs, income and housing values. While the downtown is thriving, many neighborhoods are
growing poorer, intensifying the economic disparities and threatening to fray the fabric of social life, the researchers concluded.
JEFF HAWKES
JHAWKES@LNPNEWS.COM
ENTERTAINMENT
How school
funding
works in Pa.
BUSINESS
ALSO INSIDE
Sesame Street
will air on HBO first
INDEX
CLASSIFIEDS........... CL1
LIVING......................... B1
LOTTERY................... A2
MONEY........................ D1
NATION & WORLD...A19
OBITUARIES...........A22
PERSPECTIVE............E1
REAL ESTATE..........RE1
SPORTS....................... C1
TRAVEL.....................B10
TV WEEK..................TV1
TIM BUCKWALTER
TBUCKWALTER@LNPNEWS.COM
MORE ONLINE
n Perspective, page E1
90 65 G
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A2
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
PENNSYLVANIA LOTTERY n
SUNDAY,
AUG. 9
Here are the winning Pennsylvania and Powerball lottery numbers for the week starting Aug. 9
MONDAY,
AUG. 10
TUESDAY,
AUG. 11
WEDNESDAY,
AUG. 12
THURSDAY,
AUG. 13
FRIDAY,
AUG. 14
SATURDAY,
AUG. 15
DAY PICK 2
0-3
2-3
8-3
1-2
1-9
4-8
9-6
DAY PICK 3
8-8-5
8-8-3
0-5-4
1-2-7
0-5-3
8-1-6
5-7-8
DAY PICK 4
8-6-1-4
5-9-5-4
3-5-6-0
6-2-6-8
4-0-4-0
4-7-4-2
5-6-6-5
DAY PICK 5
5-0-0-8-9
0-6-6-8-5
6-9-5-0-9
2-4-4-2-8
3-9-1-2-8
2-8-7-0-8
0-3-2-7-5
07-10-23-28-30
12-22-23-25-26
05-06-08-12-27
01-02-06-18-19
01-11-25-27-30
03-15-22-27-29
05-11-17-21-25
TREASURE HUNT
NIGHT PICK 2
9-0
8-8
7-8
7-4
5-3
8-2
7-5
NIGHT PICK 3
3-6-5
4-5-1
9-5-7
2-9-2
1-3-9
8-1-1
1-8-9
NIGHT PICK 4
3-4-8-8
7-6-7-1
6-1-9-0
7-2-3-2
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7-3-2-9
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NIGHT PICK 5
6-4-1-0-6
4-1-3-8-1
0-2-2-1-5
2-1-3-4-0
6-9-3-6-5
6-6-2-6-3
6-0-0-4-3
03-09-15-22-43
04-23-24-31-35
04-06-10-13-34
06-13-25-31-32
03-06-08-09-16
03-18-20-29-33
22-26-33-38-40
03-08-29-57-68
MEGABALL: 08
MEGAPLIER: 4
08-13-29-38-52
POWERBALL: 28
POWERPLAY: 2
12-15-20-52-71
MEGABALL: 03
MEGAPLIER: 4
03-13-17-42-52
POWERBALL: 24
POWERPLAY: 4
CASH 5
08-23-27-47-48-49
MATCH 6
CASH4LIFE:
02-07-11-33-47
CASH BALL: 02
CASH4LIFE
POWERBALL &
MEGA MILLIONS
04-08-09-17-23-41
CASH4LIFE:
08-12-50-51-56
CASH BALL: 04
CONTACT US
Through the
Viewfinder
MARTY HEISEY
Classified: 291-8711,
class@LNPnews.com
MHEISEY@LNPNEWS.COM
Engagements, weddings
& anniversaries: 291-4957,
celebrations@LNPnews.com
Online: LancasterOnline.com,
LancasterOnline.com/mobile
CORRECTIONS
n Incorrect answers to
THE METHOD
Nikon D4s with a Nikkor 80-400mm lens at 200mm 1/800 of a second, f5.3 amd ISO
400. Shot in color and converted to black and white in Adobe Photoshop.
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LOCAL
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Catching up
on the news
NONPROFIT
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HSTAUFFER@LNPNEWS.COM
displayed on a pickup
truck sparked a fight that
drew a crowd in Columbia
late Monday afternoon.
Police from several
departments responded
and closed off an area
near Walnut Street.
SCORES PLUMMET
n Some of the local results
are in for elementary
standardized tests and
though official data
wont be available until
September, it appears
math scores have suffered
the most. Administrators
in some county school
districts say math
proficiency rates have
dropped by anywhere
from 20 to 50 percentage
points, based on
preliminary calculations.
Guest speaker Vera Cornish, left, stands with Latino Vision Association president Cinthia Kettering at a gala fundraiser held Saturday at the Lancaster Marriott in downtown Lancaster.
JKOPF@LNPNEWS.COM
six-year organization
much higher: summer programming in music and
sports, after-school programs, tutoring, community service.
But to do all that, even
with the dedicated service
of dozens of volunteers,
takes money.
n Numbers reported by
A3
FUNDRAISING
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n City Council voted 6-0
SUSPECT
SURRENDERS
ENTERTAINMENT
JKOPF@LNPNEWS.COM
n William Flores-
Sandoval, wanted by
police for allegedly firing
gunshots inside a crowded
McDonalds restaurant
at 210 W. King St. Aug.
7, turned himself in to
police Wednesday. He was
charged and committed
to Lancaster County
Prison. The owner of the
restaurant said that even
before the incident, she
had been in talks with
community leaders, police
and the mayor about ways
to combat recent crimes in
the area.
Market Street.
Elizabethtown-based
artist Leanne Hickey
had set up shop inside
the Market Street! Improving Business offices.
A second-year participant with her boldly colored work, Hickey said
she was eager to take
part again.
We need to get more
art downtown, she said.
A bit further east,
Spacedragon the Clown
had come in from Harrisburg with twirling
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A4
FROM PAGE A1
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Two funding
sources
Public school districts have two principal sources of revenue:
their state subsidy and
local funding. The latter
comes primarily from
property taxes.
Compared with other
states,
Pennsylvanias
state subsidy is comparatively low. One consequence is that many
districts budgets have
a large local funding
component, so they can
weather a state budget
battle for some time before the lack of funding
begins to tell.
In Lancaster County,
the state share of district
funding ranges from a
low of about 17 percent
for Manheim Township
School District to 45
State funding
as a portion of
school district
budgets (2013-14)
Manheim Township
Conestoga Valley
Pequea Valley
Lampeter-Strasburg
ELANCO
Hempfield
Manheim Central
Ephrata
Donegal
Cocalico
Warwick
Elizabethtown
Penn Manor
Solanco
Lancaster
Columbia
17%
18%
20%
21%
22%
25%
28%
28%
28%
29%
29%
30%
31%
35%
45%
48%
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Educated guesses
School districts have
gotten used to passing
their budgets before
knowing what their state
allocation will be.
In 2009, the state budget wasnt signed un-
in Columbia. Lancaster
is the only local district
that gets a larger share
of revenue from the state
than from local sources.
Q. Why do the local
and state funding ratios vary so much from
district to district?
A. The state generally gives more money to
poorer districts because
they usually have a harder time raising revenue
through local real estate
taxes. Thats because real
estate taxes are based on
property values, which
are usually lower in poor
areas. So 1 mill of tax
raises less in a poor area
than a wealthy area.
Further squeezing urban districts like Lancaster is the fact that
many properties are tax
exempt because of a high
concentration of government buildings and
nonprofit organizations.
It all means that the real
estate tax rate has to be
higher to raise the same
amount of money. And
that puts even more burden on property owners
in poor areas.
In Lancaster County,
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Q.
Districts
vary
greatly in size, with
local enrollment ranging from about 11,400
students in Lancaster
to fewer than 1,500 in
Columbia. So how does
this all shake out, in
terms of funding per
student?
A. Lets look at that from
the standpoint of local
funding, state funding and
total funding per student.
Local revenue per
student ranges from
$13,639 in Pequea Valley
to $6,762 in Lancaster.
State funding per student ranges from $7,492
in Lancaster to $2,345 in
Conestoga Valley.
Total combined funding
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FROM PAGE A1
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
School funding
per student from local,
state, federal and other
sources ranges from
$18,190 in Pequea Valley
to $12,836 in Solanco.
Actual spending per student including the costs
of instruction, support
services, facilities and financing ranges from
$16,754 in Pequea Valley
to $12,694 in Penn Manor.
Q. So what solutions
are on the table?
A. For 2015-16, Republican lawmakers want to
distribute their proposed
$100 million state funding increase through a
new formula that takes
into account a districts
enrollment, poverty and
ability to generate local
tax revenue. The proposal doesnt include any
new state taxes.
Under the GOP plan,
Lancaster County school
districts would see funding increases of 2 to 5
percent, according to
data provided previously
by Republican state Sen.
Lloyd Smuckers office.
Wolf,
meanwhile,
wants to fund his proposed $400 million increase with a $1 billion
severance tax on natural
gas. He wants to wait to
apply a new education
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1697 Oregon Pike
Lancaster, PA 17601
(717) 945-6938
CAMP HILL/
LEMOYNE OFFICE
836 Market St. (Rear)
Lemoyne, PA 17043
HERSHEY OFFICE
1128 Cocoa Avenue
Hershey, PA 17033
(717) 533-7000
A6
FROM PAGE A1
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
It pains us
a bit.
Kathleen Pavelko,
president and CEO
of WITF
STIR
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Walnut St.
FROM
-11% King St.PAGE
+20%A1
-10% -28%
S
Manor
t.
t.
ph S
Jose
Fa i r S t .
vie
w A -22%
ve .
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Chestnut St.
-23%
Vine St.
-5%Chester
St.
Ann St.
Queen St.
A8
-12%
t.
Harr
-9% to -1%
0% to 20%
-13%
-11%
rg A
ve .
Walnut St.
King St.
h St.
osep
-10% -28%
Manor
St.
J
Fa i r S t .
vie
wA
-20%
ve .
-7%
+20%
-22%
-26%
N
olla
ew H
nd A
ve .
Chestnut St.
-8%
-23%
Vine St.
-5%Chester
St.
-26%
Ann St.
isbu
Lime St.
eS
Queen St.
Continued from A1
Duk
-26%
-12%
Duk
eS
t.
Limited analysis
Mayor Rick Gray, who
earlier this month said
he will be appointing a
Mayors Commission to
Combat Poverty, criticized the reports limited analysis of rather
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Out of step
Alliance responds
The Lancaster City
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LANCASTER, page A9
School
Start
End
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7:45 am
8:00 am
3:15 pm
3:00 pm
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2:45 pm
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FROM PAGE A8
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Lancaster: Study
Continued from A8
Poverty emphasis
Shultz said hes encouraged that Mayor Gray recently put a spotlight on
poverty by proposing a
poverty commission.
As director of program
development for Lancaster Housing Opportunity Partnership, Shultz
is leading a new, foundation-funded study of
southwest
Lancaster
with the goal of addressing poverty and crime in
that neighborhood.
Poverty now is going to
A9
Urgency needed
Daniel
Betancourt,
president and CEO of
nonprofit lender Community First Fund, said
the Floyd Institutes report is valuable in bringing a sense of greater
urgency to issues of poverty alleviation.
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LOCAL
Elizabethtown, Aug. 8.
GALIE, Joseph D. Sr., 80,
Lancaster, Aug. 13.
GRAUBARD, Leon H., 82,
Kirkwood, Aug. 8.
GREENLEAF, Edgar F., 78,
Kirkwood, Aug. 12.
GROFF, Angela G.
(Neifert), 48, Manheim,
Aug. 11.
HALBERT, E. Jean, 103,
Willow Street, Aug. 6.
HARRIS, Eunice I., 83, Lititz,
Aug. 11.
HARZER, Charles E., 53,
Elizabethtown, Aug. 13.
HAZLETT, Sara A., 79,
Lancaster, Aug. 6.
HESS, Mabel (Humbert), 91,
York, Aug. 6.
HILDEBRAND, James R.,
93, Lancaster, Aug. 9.
HOAR, Betty E., 85,
Lancaster, Aug. 7.
HUGHES, Douglas R., 49,
Gordonville, Aug. 8.
HYMAN, Marvyn N., 74,
Lancaster, Aug. 11.
JACKSON, Eleanor
(Shickley), 99, Bainbridge,
Aug. 6.
JAMISON, Margaret J., 94,
Nottingham, Aug. 5.
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
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Bacon
Belle
You always
had a way
to make
everyone
smile. Your
voice will
always be in
our hearts.
Miss you,
The Adams
Go
booty,
go
booty.
In Loving Memory of
Our Little Girl
Abbey
Amy
7/25/98 7/13/14
Ben
Benny
2002-2015
2000-2015
Our Beautiful
Benny. We will
never forget the
joy, love & laughter
you brought to
us each and every
day for 15 years.
Dinner time will
never be the same,
we will cherish
our memories.
Loyal
companion,
faithful
friend,
we miss
you.
The Goods
BB
Bosley
Dear Mommie,
For 19 years I was your only boy. We
flew to Florida (so much paperwork).
We went to the Blough reunion in
Hollsopple, PA. And best of all we
went to Tall Pines, DE with my pal
Baxter. We stayed in bed till noon
(ahh). I tried to bite anyone who
dared to kiss you! (even Sheila). You
carried me when I could no longer
walk. You were with me when I
crossed the Rainbow Bridge. I will
see you in heaven dear Mommy.
Love, Bosley
The Eckmans
Love,
Sandy & John Miller
In Loving Memory of
In Loving Memory of
In Loving Memory of
In Loving Memory of
2007-2015
2001-2015
1999-2015
2002-2009
Brownie
Bully, Cody
& Cyrus
You have
all touched
our hearts.
Miss you
guys.
Love,
Joe & Pat
Bucky
Ghia
1992-2005
It is impossible
to forget
someone
who gave you
so much to
remember.
RIP my
beautiful girl.
Catera Rose
Jack
Maddie
Mittens
2013-2015
We miss you
so much.
Think of you
every day.
Life with
you was too
short.
Love, Nana
1997-2013
In memory
of Mittens,
The Holiday
Cat of Orca.
I miss you
so much
every day.
You were my
best friend!
Millersville ~ 717-872-5041
SnyderFuneralHome.com
www.SnyderFuneralHome.com
In Loving Memory of
Lady
2004-2015
Nittany
Your Dads
Rebel
6/9/97-6/29/15
Lady Aspen
Maggie
In Loving Memory of
Once by my side,
forever in my heart
1997-2012
2/2/05-1/9/15
Sandy
In Loving Memory of
In Loving Memory of
1994-2013
1999-2014
Nutmeg
In Loving Memory of
Rusty
Polly
Maggie Mae
Patches
2002-2014
Rusty
Sally
2006-2014
1996-2009
The Swineharts
Millersville ~ 717-872-5041
SnyderFuneralHome.com
www.SnyderFuneralHome.com
Valiant
Search dog,
gentle friend,
precious
gift our
hearts ache
with tender
memories.
In valor there
is hope.
The Hughes
Shamrock
You were
free to
a good
home.
You gave
us 17
wonderful
years.
Pemberton
2000-2014
Pemberton
Pussycat. You
made me laugh
for 15 wonderful
years you were
so comical and
never met a box,
basket or bag you
didnt love. I know
you will be waiting
for me over the
rainbow bridge.
Love, Mama K.
In Loving Memory of
Tucker
1995-2008
Smokey
Valiant
Miss you, big
brother, and
remembering
all you taught
me. Heroes
dont always
wear capes.
Love,
Guardian
Sammy, Podley
& Cinda
In loving memory of
Sheba, Oscar,
and Mimi
Taffy
1995-2002
My wonderful
rescue in 1995
from ARL of
Berks, gone
since 2002, but
still loved and
remembered
as a dear, dear
therapy dog.
Blessings,
Doris
Murphy
2000-2014
In Loving Memory of
Skylar Blue
1999-2014
Spud
Samantha
Doobie
2002-2013
Love, Anne R.
In Loving Memory of
2002-2014
My Little Girl
Millersville ~ 717-872-5041
SnyderFuneralHome.com
www.SnyderFuneralHome.com
FROM PAGE A3
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Guest mingle during the Latino Vision Association gala fundraiser on Saturday in downtown Lancaster.
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LancasterOnline
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Woods Edge Plaza 144 S. Centerville Rd.
Nick Selch bids on a silent auction item during the event at the Lancaster Marriott on
Saturday.
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Saturday afternoon
was a quiet crowd
Friday nights art walk
was busy, said Becky
Staley of Folklore
Coffee & Co. and
those who were strolling around were looking for ways to keep
cool.
Some followed the
lead of Itzy the clown.
With his Segway-riding sidekick, Smiley,
Itzy spent early Saturday afternoon re-
G A M E - R E A DY
Even if you forgot to schedule a sports physical, Lancaster
General Health Express puts your kids back in the game. Its
quick and convenient care when they need a physical for sports,
camp, a drivers permit or work. Well make sure your kids are ready
to play and get you on your way.
Hours:
Monday Friday: 8 a.m. 7 p.m. Accept most insurance
Saturday: 8 a.m. 6 p.m.
Open 7-days a week
Sunday: 11 a.m. 5 p.m.
Call for lab hours
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FROM PAGE A3
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
A15
to their potential.
United Way didnt pick
his foundation to receive
funding, so Steffy turned
to a source that has aided
the foundation in the
past: The Community
Action Requires Employee Support organization.
Formed by employees
of Auntie Annes Inc.,
teer needs.
CARES accepted. The
tournament that followed was the most successful to date, the agency said, raising more
than $225,000 for three
nonprofits.
Chairwoman
Tracy
Barley said the CARES
Police log
ASSAULT
n NEW HOLLAND: Carrie
DUI
n SALISBURY TWP.:
DRUGS
n LANCASTER:
THEFT
n LANCASTER: A delivery
package containing two
jackets was stolen Aug.
3 from a home in the 100
block of North Shippen
Street.
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GOVERNMENT
Government calendar
Columbia
Borough
Historical
The Historical Architectural
Review Board of the
borough of Columbia will
meet at 7 p.m. Wednesday
in council chambers of
borough hall, 308 Locust
St., Columbia. Agenda
items include:
n 128 S. 2nd St., Robert
Gainer, owner. Install a
wooden divider on the
north side of the front
porch of a duplex house.
Conestoga Valley
School District
Conestoga Valley School
District Board of Directors
will meet at 7 p.m. Monday
at the administration
center, 2110 Horseshoe
Road. Among the agenda
items:
n Commentary on district
activity.
n Public, professional, staff
input.
n Consent agenda:
approval of minutes;
approval of financial
reports; approval of
superintendents report;
approval of first reading of
district policies; approval
of testing instruments for
2015-2016; approval of
district goals 2015-2016;
East Hempfield
Township
Supervisors
The East Hempfield
Township Board of
Supervisors will meet at
7 p.m. Wednesday at the
municipal building, 1700
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LNP | LANCASTER, PA
East Hempfield
Township Zoning
The East Hempfield
Township Zoning Hearing
Board will meet at 7 p.m.
Monday at the municipal
building, 1700 Nissley
Road, Landisville. Among
the agenda items:
n Orrstown Bank has filed
a variance application,
seeking relief to the sign
requirements for the
property located at 2098
Spring Valley Road.
East Hempfield
Township
Supervisors
The East Hempfield
Township Board of
Supervisors will meet at
7:30 p.m. Monday at the
municipal building, 1700
Nissley Road, Landisville.
Among the agenda items:
n Approval of bills, checks,
various funds.
n Old business: discussion
of ordinance to adopt
International Property
Maintenance Code;
discussion of resolution
on policy toward liquor
transfer applications.
n New business:
resolution, PA DEP
sewer planning module,
Denlinger, 244 Lynwood
Road; request to waiver
land of development
planning, Denlinger, 244
Lynwood Road; Sauder egg
stormwater management
plan, 1825 William Penn
Way.
n Other business:
presentation, Lancaster
Public Library and
2016 funding request;
presentation, project to
assess Ag BMPs and
township modeling,
Lancaster Farmland Trust;
presentation, Young Lungs
at Play initiative, LGH;
ordinance amending police
pension ordinance: killed
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LampeterStrasburg School
District
The Lampeter-Strasburg
School Board will meet
at 7:30 p.m. Monday at
the district administration
building board room, 1600
Book Road, Lampeter.
Among the agenda items:
n Personnel committee.
n Business and Finance
committee.
n Discussion of new policy.
Lancaster
City Historical
Commission
The City of Lancaster
Historical Commission will
meet at 6 p.m. Monday in
the Commission Room, City
Hall Annex, at 120 N. Duke
Street:
n 567 Rockland St., Carlos
Montgomery, owner.
Install stone veneer base
and stucco finish on a
freestanding brick house.
n 524 Poplar St., Miguel
and Marisol Pagan, owner.
Construct a covered front
porch on a brick rowhouse.
Lancaster City
Planning
The Lancaster City
Planning Commission will
meet at 6 p.m. Wednesday
in the Commission Room,
City Hall Annex, at 120 N.
Duke Street. Among the
agenda items:
n Final plan, 640. S.
Franklin St., contains
a recycling business.
The owner proposes to
construct an 1,805-squarefoot addition and to
comply with conditions
requiring enclosure of
recycling materials.
n Certifications of blight
for vacant properties: 622
S. Lime St., 713 N. Queen
St., and 413 Chester St.
n Election of planning
commission member to
the Property Reinvestment
Board.
n Other business.
Lancaster City
zoning
The City of Lancaster
Zoning Hearing Board will
meet at 4 p.m. Monday in
the City Council Chambers,
first floor City Hall, at 120
N. Duke St.:
n Rama Seelam, 666 W.
Chestnut St., special permit
for three-unit multi-family
dwelling; special permit to
require parking space.
n Eastern Mennonite
Missions, 442 N. Prince St.,
use variance for rooming/
boarding for missionary
training.
n Lancaster General
Hospital, 534 N. Christian
St., special permit for
heliport in HC District; use
variance to increase height
of overall structure.
n Nathanael Salome for
Ark of Salvation, 615 N.
Manheim
Township
Planning
The Manheim Township
Planning Commission
will meet at 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday at the
municipal building, 1840
Municipal Drive
n Subdivision/land
development plans:
Belmont, preliminary
subdivision and land
development, planned
commercial development,
Fruitville Pike.
n Subdivision/land
development plans: The
Crossings at Conestoga
Creek, preliminary
subdivision and land
development, planned
commercial development,
Harrisburg Pike and
Farmingdale Road.
Penn Manor
School District
The Penn Manor School
Board will meet at 6:30
p.m. Monday at Manor
Middle School, 2950
Charlestown Road. An
executive session will start
at 6:30 p.m., followed by
the committee of the whole
at 7. The regular board
meeting will follow the
committee of the whole.
Agenda for the latter
follows:
n Superintendents report.
n Payment of bills: general
fund, cafeteria fund;
capital reserve fund; 2012
construction fund; student
activity fund.
n Review of school board
meeting agenda.
n Consent agenda for
the committee of the
whole meeting: PSBA 2015
Delegate assembly.
n Consent agenda for
administrative actions:
contract at Winners Circle
Center for up to four
special education students
to receive services;
approval and advertising of
the bus routes for the 20152016 school term and also
approval for advertising of
same; acceptance of bus
drivers for the 2015-2016
school term; 2015-2016
school term field trip rates;
middle and high school
code of student conduct
for 2015-2016; acceptance
of STS Aides/Para and
Personal Care Assistants
for the 2015-2016 school
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Centerville 301 Centerville Road, Lancaster, 717-735-3871
Columbia 921 Lancaster Avenue, Columbia, 717-684-6872
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Elizabethtown 1275 South Market Street, Elizabethtown, 717-367-9652
Ephrata 1759 West Main Street, Ephrata, 717-733-9930
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717-548-2322 or 1-888-553-2440
WORLD/GOVERNMENT
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
ASSOCIATED PRESS
CHINA EXPLOSION
TIANJIN, China
New small explosions
rocked a disaster zone
in the Chinese port of
Tianjin on Saturday
as teams scrambled to
clear dangerous chemical contamination and
found several more bodies to bring the death toll
to 104 in massive blasts
earlier in the week.
Angry relatives of missing firefighters stormed
a government news conference to demand any
information on their
loved ones, who have
not been seen since a fire
and rapid succession of
blasts late Wednesday at
a warehouse for hazardous chemicals in a mostly industrial area.
The death toll in the
ensuing inferno includes
HOW THEY
VOTED
n The House and Senate
A17
Government calendar
Chinese emergency crew members survey the site of an explosion in Tianjin municipality.
CHRISTOPHER
BODEEN
at least 21 firefighters
making the disaster the
deadliest for Chinese
firefighters in more than
six decades.
An unknown number
of firefighters remain
missing, and a total of
720 people were injured in the disaster in
Tianjin, 75 miles east of
Beijing. One additional
survivor was found Saturday.
Two Chinese news outlets, including the staterun The Paper, reported
that the warehouse was
storing 700 tons of sodium cyanide 70 times
more than it should have
been holding at one time
and that authorities
were rushing to clean it
up.
Sodium cyanide is a
toxic chemical that can
form a flammable gas
upon contact with water.
term; acceptance of
STS substitute teachers
for the 2015-2016 school
term; acceptance of
gift from The Ressler
Mill Foundation for 450
copies of dictionaries to
be used for third-grade
classrooms; IDEA Part B
use of funds agreement
for the use of Federal
Funds from the 2015-2016
allocation pertaining
to the Individuals with
Disabilities Education Act;
Pennsylvania Educators
Clearinghouse contract of
Service for the 2015-2016
school year; water line
easement and agreement
with property owner;
Penn Manor parking deck
power washing as per
proposal from Power Pros
Pressure Washing, LLC
to clean the exterior of
the High School parking
deck; Hambright backup
generator maintenance
agreement as per
proposal from Slaymaker
Group; baseball/
softball scoreboards
and installation as per
proposal from Daktronics.
n Consent agenda for
personnel: employment
and change in status for
the 2015-2016 school
year; resignations;
substitute nurses within
the school district;
2015-2016 fall coaching
positions; dental hygiene
services; 2015-2016
middle school team
leaders; 2015-2016 cocurricular positions; 20152016 mentors; twilight
school instructors; nurse
substitute caller stipend.
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Upper Leacock
Township
Supervisors
improvement security.
n Solicitors report; draft
zoning ordinance, zoning
map, official map, and official
map ordinance, motion to
advertise.
n Payment of bills.
n Correspondence; public
works director report.
n Managers report: pool
report, pool committee
report, walk audit update,
Route 23/Hellers Church
Road project update
and public meeting
announcement, Lancaster
Labs.
West Lampeter
Township
Planning
The West Lampeter
Township Planning
Commission will meet at
7 p.m. Thursday at the
administration office, 852
Village Road, Lampeter.
Among the agenda items:
n New business: Ag security
petitions; Eli and Nancy King,
501 Strasburg Pike; Aaron
and Rebecca King, 2007
Pioneer Road; Henry and
Esther Beiler, 416 Strasburg
Pike; preliminary/final land
development plan, Willow
Valley Square Advance Auto
Parts.
n Director of community
development report.
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LNP | LANCASTER, PA
MarketPulse
DULLED
Rain, rain go away so gold can
have a better day. One big reason
gold has struggled is all the rain
that India got early this year. It may
seem like a leap, but India is one of
the worlds most important markets
for gold. Families traditionally give
gold as gifts for holidays and
weddings, and Indian consumers
accounted for more than a fifth of
the worlds total gold demand the
last five years. Indian demand for
gold dropped more than 20 percent
last quarter after rains damaged
crops and dragged down incomes
for rural Indians. The bad weather
has hurt not only gold but also other
goods popular with rural Indians,
including motorcycles and tractors.
Extra
19,000
-3
-47.51
MON
TUES
WED
China
US
THUR
5,300
FRI
18,000
5,000
17,500
4,900
+6.6%
MO
YTD
-12.90
-9.84
34.40
-83.50
-12.90
MON
TUES
WED
THUR
FRI
week
-1.7%
Nasdaq composite
+0.9%
week
-0.4%
YTD
MO
+3.4%
SMALL-CAP
Russell 2000
S&P 400
YTD
+0.5%
week
-4.3%
MO
+0.7%
YTD
INDEX
Dow Jones industrial average
4,600
CLOSE
17629.13
17125.81
17477.40
+104.02
+0.6
8391.77
8141.55
8318.70
+67.85
+0.8
11254.87
9886.08
NYSE Comp.
10906.08
10628.94
10782.24
+19.09
+0.2
5231.94
4116.60
Nasdaq Comp.
5112.47
4945.79
5048.24
+4.70
+0.1
2134.72
1820.66
S&P 500
2105.35
2052.09
2091.54
+13.97
+0.7
1551.28
1269.45
S&P MidCap
1510.34
1470.04
1501.72
+13.56
+0.9
22537.15 19160.13
Wilshire 5000
22143.50
21589.91
22009.76
+157.17
+0.7
Russell 2000
1223.39
1189.42
1212.69
+5.79
+0.5
t
s
t
t
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-1.9
$!|987631 +4.9
-9.0
$!|731 +0.7
$150
+1.6
$!|9986531 +7.0
+3.4
$!|998765 +7.6
+1.6
$!|99764321 +6.3
+0.7
$!|997631 +6.2
22.1 %
10.1
3-YR^
5-YR^
^annualized
HOLD
BUY
Number of analysts: 49
Gold
Emerging-market stocks
Energy stocks
Copper
Crude oil
8.9
4.8
5.3
Lenovo &
Motorola
2015
FUND
TICKER
American Funds
AmBalA m
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IntlStk
Stock
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IntlInstl
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ABALX
24.83
CAIBX
59.24
CWGIX 47.11
ANCFX 52.97
AGTHX 45.49
AMECX 21.19
AIVSX
37.30
AWSHX 40.76
DODIX
13.58
DODFX 41.66
DODGX 179.93
FCNTX 104.90
FUSVX 73.90
FKINX
2.26
HAINX
68.42
MWTIX 10.83
PTTRX
10.61
PRGFX 58.19
VFIAX 193.46
VGHAX 100.17
VINIX
191.58
VIIIX
191.59
VITPX
47.63
VTPSX
105.50
VBTLX
10.76
VGTSX 15.77
VTSAX
52.65
VITSX
52.66
VTSMX 52.63
VWENX 67.91
Fidelity
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* - annualized
NAV
$CHG
1WK
+0.03
+0.12
-0.20
+0.08
+0.29
+0.02
+0.14
+0.29
-0.03
-0.97
-0.44
+0.47
+0.54
+0.01
-1.10
-0.02
-0.04
+0.32
+1.41
+0.20
+1.40
+1.39
+0.35
-1.20
-0.02
-0.18
+0.38
+0.38
+0.38
+0.19
1,025
0.1
1,008
-0.9
1,006
0.1
1,005
-0.9
962
-0.9
942
2.3
922
-2.2
881
1.8
833
0.5
793
-5.4
$1,000
AAC
Anacor Pharma
ANAC
BioPharmX Corp
Eagle Pharmaceutical
Huawei
BPMX
EGRX
22.62 +27.3
1.87
+2.2
66.70
-27.6
8.00
-7.3
231.40
+1.2
136.22
-3.9
+506.3
-26.5
TREE
133.71 +10.5
+62.0
RCPT
Voltari Corp
VLTC
Adeptus Health
ADPT
112.87
NVIV
Gen Employ
AXN
JOB
ESPR
1.55
8.26 +11.5
0.76
-16.5
-11.6
-13.6
-29.0
43.31
+1.0
CEMP
37.26
BLUE
127.82
FOLD
+0.6
11.16
66.18 +12.7
Cempra Inc
Amicus Therapeutics
+0.8
+15.9
ABMD 103.92
CTRV
+8.6
-8.2
-1.2
Abiomed Inc
TTPH
-0.6
4.38
15.97
-33.1
+8.6
+43.7
-7.8
-11.4
-16.3
-8.9
-18.7
+5.1
-3.3
-17.5
dd
...
dd
+580.6
Aoxing Pharmaceut
...
+553.9
-6.4
-13.2
Receptos Inc
cc
dd
16.51 +12.8
EGLE
PE YLD
-15.4 +1133.3
ADXS
%RTN
1YR
-45.9 +4376.0
Advaxis Inc
ContraVir Pharma
-22.2
+460.7
+405.9
...
...
...
dd
76
cc
+320.5
dd
+312.9
37
+286.8
dd
+315.1
+291.7
+281.9
+277.5
+270.7
...
dd
+374.9
+327.7
...
...
dd
+338.6
...
cc
+404.4
+388.8
...
...
dd
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
cc
...
dd
...
dd
...
IndustryRankings
Xiaomi
PERCENT CHANGE
1WK 1MO 1QTR
INDUSTRY
Utilities
2.5
Consumer Goods
0.0
Financials
0.4
Industrials
1.1
Telecommunications
1.3
Consumer Services
0.3
---------- PERCENT RETURN ---------DJ Total Market index
0.7
1WK 1MO 1YR RANK 5YRS* RANK RATING 7.
Health Care
0.1
Technology
0.7
+0.1
-0.5
+5.6 1 +12.2 1 HHHHI 8.
9.
Oil & Gas
3.1
+0.2
-0.8
+1.8 1 +9.2 1 HHHII
10.
Basic Material
0.6
-0.4
-1.3
+3.0 3 +10.9 3 HHHII
+0.2
-1.4
+7.7 3 +14.8 4 HHHII
+0.6
-0.3 +10.3 4 +16.0 4 HHHII
+0.1
-1.5
+1.8 4 +10.7 2 HHHII
General Retailers
1.5
+0.4
-0.6
+6.2 4 +14.7 4 HHIII
Weight Watchers
WTW
-0.5
+0.7
-1.1
+5.8 2 +15.2 2 HHHII
hhgregg Inc
HGG +22.4
-0.2
-0.1
+0.6 4 +4.0 2 HHHHI
Autobytel Inc
ABTL +10.6
-2.3
-5.6
-7.2 5 +8.4 2 HHHHI
Strayer Education
STRA
-1.1
-0.2
-2.0
+4.7 3 +16.8 1 HHHHI
Beacon Roofing Suppl
BECN +4.5
+0.5 +0.3 +12.9 3 +17.1 3 HHHHI
Travel & Leisure
-0.1
+0.7
-0.6
+9.2 2 +16.5 1 HHHHI
World Wrestling Ent
WWE
-2.7
+0.4
-2.6
-6.1 5 +8.1 1 HHHII
MGM Resorts Intl
MGM
+1.3
-1.6
-4.0
-1.7 4 +7.9 2 HHHII
Chuys Holdings Inc
CHUY +3.1
-0.2 +0.6
+1.8 2 +5.0 1 HHHHH
Carrols Restaurant
TAST
+4.2
-0.3 +0.5
+1.6 2 +3.7 2 HHHHH
Virgin America
VA
+1.7
+0.6 +1.1 +17.2 1 +19.5 1 HHHHI
0.4
+0.7
-0.6
+9.2 2 +16.6 1 HHHHI Food & Drug Retailers
Supervalu
Inc
SVU
+2.6
+0.2
-2.4 +28.3 3 +24.7 3 HHHII
SYY
+12.0
+0.7
-0.6
+9.2 2 +16.6 1 HHHHI Sysco Corp
GNC
-0.4
+0.7
-0.6
+9.2 2 +16.6 1 HHHHI GNC Holdings Inc
IMKTA +9.6
+0.7
-1.1
+8.9 2 +16.8 1 HHHHI Ingles Mkts
CASY +3.6
-1.1
-3.1
-5.2 5
NA
HHIII Caseys Gen Store
Media
-0.9
-0.2 +0.8
+1.9 1 +3.0 4 HHHII
P
+3.8
-1.1
-3.1
-5.3 5 +5.9 4 HHHII Pandora Media
ACXM +5.0
+0.7
-1.1
+8.9 2 +16.8 1 HHHHI Acxiom Corp
EROS +1.5
+0.7
-1.1
+8.9 2 +16.8 1 HHHHI Eros Intl plc
GSOL
-1.3
+0.7
-1.1
+8.8 2 +16.6 1 HHHHI Global Sources Ltd
VALU
+0.1
+0.3
-0.1
+5.4 1 +11.4 1 HHHHH Value Line Inc
Brandon Bailey; Jenni Sohn AP
LocalFunds
FAMILY
$500
COMPANY
Tetraphase Pharm
14.1
60
2014
0.2
InVivo Therapeutics
21.7%
45.2
2013
1,029
Esperion Therap
Samsung
90
2012
Technology stocks
$0
10.8% 27.5%
16.5 16.4
Others
2011
-1.5
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 Aug. 13
AP
Apple
2010
5.7
1,056
120
30
European stocks
-0.4 %
1,092
Natural gas
41| -0.1
$!|999995 +13.1
Aug. 13
$115.15
$ 1,106
Cotton
High-yield bonds
-0.5
1-week
... today is percent
worth change
Investment-grade bonds
+6.6
1-YR
Commodities
APPLE (AAPL)
Total return
Bonds
Small-cap stocks
Stocks
S&P 500
YTD
1YR
CHG %CHG MO QTR%CHG %CHG
LOW
7700.57
1040.47
HIGH
Close: 5,043.54
1-week change: -84.74 (-1.7%)
9310.22
Europe
AP
+1.6%
Derby
4,700
Close: 17,373.38
1-week change: -316.48 (-1.8%)
18351.36 15855.12
NOW THIS
The list of reasons for falling
commodity prices was already long.
Now China is piling on. Chinas
move this past week to devalue its
currency could mean more losses
ahead for copper and other
commodities, which have generally
been sinking for years. Chinas
rapid growth that is, rapid until
recently for years fueled demand
for metals and other basic building
blocks. But now demand is slowing
along with Chinas economy. The
falling value of the yuan makes
commodities, many of which are
priced in dollars, even more
expensive for Chinese buyers.
MO
MID-CAP
+0.7%
$1,000
4,800
52-WEEK
HIGH
LOW
ONE LOVE
Its difficult to find consensus in the
market, but everyone seems to love
big grocery chains and other food
retailers. So says a survey by
Credit Suisse strategists, which
looked at how popular industries
were among several camps of
investors. The strategists looked at
financial analysts, hedge funds and
mutual funds, checking to see
which industries had the most
favorable ratings and heavy
ownership. Buy ratings from
analysts are near a 12-year high for
retailers of food and consumer
staples, while professional
investors also have relatively large
stakes. Such universal love could
be a red flag of caution for
contrarian investors.
week
5,100
1296.00
India
+0.1%
-3.1%
YTD
18,500
MO
-91.66
14
-25%
-1.9%
LARGE-CAP
S&P 500
Nasdaq
5,200
16,500
Year-over-year change
+0.6%
week
-3.4%
Dow industrials
StocksRecap
17,000
Consumer demand
for gold in 2Q
Money&Markets
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
4.4
0.5
-0.4
-1.1
-1.3
-1.5
-1.6
-2.3
-3.5
-4.8
-5.4
2.1
0.4
2.1
-4.1
-3.3
1.6
-1.6
2.0
-3.0
-14.5
-13.7
%RTN
1YR
((*&%@|8721 7.8
((*&%@|876531 9.8
((*&%@|96532 12.4
((*&%@|763 4.0
((*#@!7421| -3.0
((*&%@|987521 18.7
((*&%@|8643 6.9
((*&%@|9971 23.1
((*&%@|8651 7.1
998752| -28.9
(&%$@!9765321| -15.0
5.1
-17.7
+5.7
+47.9
+11.2
+15.1
1.2
+56.3
+15.5
+26.7
+29.7
+24.0
0.7
+1.1
+11.0
+11.8
+14.4
+16.8
-2.4
+1.8
+23.7
+102.7
+46.3
-3.7
((|87531 30.5
99| -73.2
(&%#@8642| -24.3
((|9986543 +126.5
(*&%#@!641| -5.9
((|8654321 +27.3
((|75421 13.0
((|9821 +55.4
(*^%#7421| -10.8
((|762 +14.1
((|997531 +85.4
((| 0.0
((|874321 29.6
(*&%$#@!6| -4.7
((|63 +5.2
((|9741 +47.0
((|9986543 +108.5
((|976542 +54.1
((|5431 4.2
($#@87651| -34.5
((|76521 +16.5
((| 0.0
((|753 +12.0
(*%!76432| -15.8
Local Stocks
COMPANY
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
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
32.07
APD 118.20
ALU
2.28
AA
9.28
AIT
37.15
AWI 44.00
SAN
6.54
BONT 3.75
CNHI 7.35
CPB 41.15
CRS 34.28
CLC 57.34
COST 117.78
DGICA 14.07
RRD 14.32
EXC 30.63
FTR
4.19
FULT 10.43
GSK 41.19
HOG 53.04
HSIC 109.34
HSY 87.79
IP
44.50
JNJ 95.10
K
58.83
KR
24.79
LLL 103.64
MTB 111.78
5
8
5
1
3
0
1
1
7
0
3
3
8
2
3
3
4
9
4
4
9
2
3
3
0
0
5
9
36.45
158.20
4.96
17.75
50.00
59.90
10.29
11.23
9.72
50.62
55.44
68.72
156.85
16.47
20.22
38.93
8.46
13.66
49.24
70.41
149.95
111.35
57.90
109.49
69.89
39.43
132.92
134.00
34.05
146.74
3.50
9.41
40.77
58.67
6.60
3.99
8.88
50.70
39.08
59.77
146.09
14.40
16.05
33.08
5.49
13.09
43.97
59.23
145.10
91.35
47.31
98.81
69.77
38.35
115.43
130.47
-0.16
0.55
-0.09
0.00
3.18
1.80
-0.16
0.01
-0.31
0.42
1.09
-0.18
1.23
-0.01
-0.35
0.95
0.32
0.07
-0.26
0.48
0.27
1.62
0.17
-0.04
0.85
0.64
0.81
-0.30
-0.5
0.4
-2.5
0.0
8.5
3.2
-2.4
0.3
-3.4
0.8
2.9
-0.3
0.8
-0.1
-2.1
3.0
6.2
0.5
-0.6
0.8
0.2
1.8
0.4
0.0
1.2
1.7
0.7
-0.2
t
s
t
t
s
s
t
t
t
s
s
t
s
t
t
t
s
t
s
s
t
t
t
t
s
t
t
t
t 1.4 +2.9
t 1.7 +13.1
t -1.4 +10.8
t -40.4 41.3
t -10.6 12.5
s 14.8 +7.2
t -20.8 26.2
t -46.2 53.8
t 10.2 +6.8
s 15.2 +18.8
t -20.6 26.4
t -10.3 +0.1
s 3.1 +28.0
t -9.9 3.5
t -4.5 0.4
t -10.8 +7.8
t -17.7 8.8
s 5.9 +20.1
t 2.9 1.2
s -10.1 3.2
s 6.6 +22.5
t -12.1 +1.3
t -11.7 +2.3
t -5.5 0.4
s 6.6 +12.1
s 19.5 +53.2
t -8.5 +11.8
s 3.9 +11.0
3
2
2
4
4
2
4
5
2
2
4
3
1
3
3
2
3
1
3
3
1
3
3
3
2
1
2
2
10.0
16.2
5.3
-1.2
11.0
18.6
-3.4
-8.7
...
9.4
5.6
12.8
24.3
9.0
5.3
0.0
1.1
11.5
8.0
19.8
22.0
16.6
19.9
13.9
9.2
29.3
13.4
11.1
34
29
...
13
14
43
...
...
18
21
26
20
28
15
12
12
...
15
...
16
26
24
19
17
65
21
17
17
5.5
2.2
...
1.3
2.6
...
9.2
5.0
...
2.5
1.8
1.3
1.1
3.8
6.5
3.7
7.7
2.8
5.7
2.1
...
2.6
3.4
3.0
2.9
1.1
2.3
2.1
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
52.49
9.17
11.52
76.69
29.32
38.59
10.50
5.90
27.51
4.42
19.08
2.50
7.26
51.03
31.61
20.75
36.80
31.54
38.30
27.89
45.09
70.36
38.23
46.44
4.42
11.90
7
8
8
9
5
9
9
5
9
0
3
5
4
6
2
4
7
7
6
3
4
1
4
9
2
6
63.62
11.66
13.30
100.52
38.14
51.49
20.23
11.30
36.46
9.47
48.25
4.30
12.00
73.73
40.80
33.40
45.10
39.74
58.89
47.25
51.73
90.97
51.91
58.77
18.10
25.40
59.18
10.95
12.84
97.59
33.36
49.79
18.61
8.52
35.32
9.08
25.18
3.37
9.14
62.53
33.44
25.44
42.50
36.49
49.12
32.32
47.49
72.38
43.12
57.33
6.72
19.53
1.21 2.1
0.19 1.8
0.16 1.3
-0.21 -0.2
1.00 3.1
0.05 0.1
-0.38 -2.0
0.28 3.4
0.13 0.4
0.20 2.3
0.79 3.2
0.10 3.1
0.23 2.6
0.62 1.0
0.63 1.9
-1.14 -4.3
0.65 1.6
1.35 3.8
-1.13 -2.2
-0.27 -0.8
1.13 2.4
1.13 1.6
0.66 1.6
-0.14 -0.2
1.08 19.1
-0.19 -1.0
s
t
t
t
s
s
t
t
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
t
t
s
t
t
t
t
s
t
s
s
t 4.2 +3.7
s 4.0 +12.7
s 2.5 +7.3
s 7.0 +21.1
s -1.0 +11.5
s 3.5 +29.3
s 35.5 +70.3
t 31.5 12.5
s 13.4 +26.8
s 20.7 +46.0
t -23.7 25.1
t -16.9 15.5
s -5.8 4.7
t -1.1 +2.6
t -9.5 0.4
t -0.3 3.6
s 6.0 +14.0
t -3.9 +11.8
s 11.7 0.2
t -8.0 11.1
t 1.5 +1.4
t -15.7 -0.1
t -9.8 +3.1
s 4.6 +16.7
t -47.8 36.4
s -13.2 11.4
2
2
2
1
2
1
1
4
1
1
4
4
3
3
3
3
2
2
3
3
3
3
3
2
4
3
14.1
17.5
8.7
13.9
10.2
14.7
24.1
-12.9
20.0
57.1
-11.2
-25.5
-2.2
20.2
11.5
23.1
21.9
17.6
10.2
0.9
14.0
10.0
7.9
19.3
14.3
-61.0
17
15
18
13
12
22
...
...
25
25
...
...
12
13
32
5
13
26
16
19
20
15
22
14
...
85
3.0
4.0
4.4
2.1
4.5
1.8
...
...
3.2
...
...
...
...
2.1
3.4
2.2
0.9
2.5
4.2
...
4.6
2.7
2.8
2.6
8.9
...
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
A19
Nation&World
FOR THE LATEST UPDATES, GO TO LANCASTERONLINE.COM
In brief
BAGHDAD
Pakistani minister
quits after comment
A Pakistani Cabinet minister resigned from his post on Saturday after
claiming in an interview that the countrys former spy master, Gen. Zaheerul
Islam, wanted to overthrow Prime
Minister Nawaz Sharif through violent
rallies in Islamabad last year.
The government received the letter of
resignation from Mushahidullah Khan,
a senior leader of the ruling Pakistan
Muslim League-N party, Information
Minister Pervez Rashid said, but it was
not clear if Sharif would accept it.
JERUSALEM
Palestinian killed
after stabbing cop
Israeli military and police shot two
Palestinians, one fatally, after separate
stabbing attacks on security forces in the
West Bank on Saturday, authorities said.
Police spokeswoman Luba Samri said
a Palestinian approached officers conducting a routine security check and
stabbed one in the back, moderately
wounding him. An officer nearby opened
fire, killing the attacker, identified by
doctors at Rafidia hospital in Nablus as
21-year-old Rafeq Ahmad al-Taj.
Earlier, a Palestinian was shot by Israeli troops after asking soldiers at a
West Bank border crossing for a glass
of water, then stabbing the soldier who
turned to get it, the military said.
PORT-AU-PRINCE, HAITI
Crash of crowded
truck kills 18, hurts 28
A truck crowded with vendors heading to a market lost control and tipped
over in Haitis northern region Saturday, killing 18 people and injuring 28,
authorities said.
The accident occurred when the
truck swerved to avoid a motorcycle
and turned over near the coastal city
of Cap-Haitien, said Jean-Henri Petit,
a coordinator for the Civil Protection
Agency. He said the 28 injured were all
hospitalized, but no details were available on their conditions.
FERGUSON, MO.
Police investigate
Brown bonus post
St. Louis County police are investigating a Facebook post in which one of
its officers discusses how he spent his
annual Michael Brown bonus.
The Guardian reported that Officer
Todd Bakula posted on his Facebook
page that he took his wife to a bed and
breakfast using money earned for staffing the recent protests in Ferguson,
where the unarmed Brown was fatally
shot by a white officer last year.
PINKHAM NOTCH, N.H.
Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump, left, waves to the crowd Saturday at the Iowa State Fair, while Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., speaks to a crowd at the fair.
TRUMP & SANDERS
WASHINGTON If Donald
Trump were running against Bernie
Sanders in the general election next
year, Americans would face a choice
between an unabashed capitalist and
an enthusiastic socialist. One candidate would rail against the power of
the billionaire class, while the other once said part of the beauty of me
is that I am very rich.
On many levels, the contrast between the two candidates in this
hypothetical and highly unlikely
matchup would be stark. But its
what they have in common that has
made them the men with the momentum this summer.
Both Trump, the real estate tycoon, and Sanders, the independent senator from Vermont, are
tapping into anti-establishment,
pro-outsider sentiment that is
emerging as a potent force early in
the campaign cycle.
Voter expectations
Years of dissatisfaction with
Washington leaders, along with a
thirst for authenticity in politics, is
leading voters to at least contemplate something different this year
dramatically different.
While the primary races are still
six months from any ballot being
cast, the first phase has become the
disrupter summer, where candidates who promise to upend the system are rising fast and those promising merely to fix it seem stuck.
The long, hot trend was unavoidable over the last week as Sanders,
who is seeking the Democratic
nomination, drew a total of 60,000
people to rallies in Seattle, Portland, Oregon, and Los Angeles, and
for a second week appeared to be
Campaigns see it
But both campaigns acknowledge
albeit somewhat reluctantly
that they share common undercurrents.
On the one hand, I find the comparison preposterous, said Tad
Devine, a longtime Democratic
strategist and Sanders adviser.
Aside from some similar-sounding
populist rhetoric on trade and on
campaign finance, the two mens
Disrupter label
ASSOCIATED PRESS
WORLD
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
AIR TRAVEL
Technical glitch
disrupts flights
Hundreds of cancellations, delays
JOAN LOWY AND
BRETT ZONGKER
ASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON
ASSOCIATED PRESS
U.S. Navy officers pay their respects Saturday in Chattanooga, Tenn., at the battlefield crosses for fallen servicemen
at a memorial for the five killed in the July 16 attacks on two military facilities.
MEMORIAL
CHATTANOOGA,
Tenn. Vice President
Joe Biden on Saturday
called the slaying of four
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bination of disturbed
mind, violent extremism and hateful ideology was behind the
shooting, but vowed
that the United States
would present a strong
response.
The few who threaten or incite harm to
Americans violent
extremists or terrorists,
wherever they are will
surely, very surely, no
matter how long it takes,
come to feel the long
arm and the hard fist of
justice, Carter said.
Those killed were
Navy Petty Officer
2nd Class Randall
Smith and four Marines: Staff Sgt. David
Wyatt, Sgt. Carson
Holmquist, Gunnery
Sgt. Thomas Sullivan
and Lance Cpt. Squire
Skip Wells, who just
moments before had
texted his girlfriend
in Savannah, Georgia,
the words ACTIVE
SHOOTER.
Expect another
cold, snowy winter
KATHY
MCCORMACK
ASSOCIATED PRESS
CONCORD, N.H.
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OBITS
A26 SUNDAY,
Obituaries
MEDITERRANEAN
Fuel
fumes
kill 40
ROME (AP) At
least 40 migrants died
Saturday in the hold of
an overcrowded smuggling boat in the Mediterranean Sea north of
Libya, apparently killed
by fuel fumes, and some
320 others aboard were
saved by the Italian
navy, the rescue ships
commander said.
Migrants by the tens
of thousands are braving the perilous journey across the Mediterranean this year,
hoping to reach Europe
and be granted asylum.
They are fleeing war,
persecution and poverty in the Middle East,
Africa and Asia.
The dead were found
in the hold, said Cmdr.
Massimo Tozzi, speaking from the navy ship
Cigala Fulgosi while
the rescue was still
ongoing. Asked by
RaiNews24 how the
migrants died, Tozzi
said it appears to be
from inhaling exhaust
fumes.
When
rescuers
stepped aboard the boat,
the bodies of migrants
were lying in water,
fuel, human excrement
in the hold, Tozzi said.
The death toll was not
yet final.
They are still counting the victims, Interior Minister Angelino
Alfano told reporters.
Tozzi said the survivors included three
children and 45 women, some of whom
were crying for their
husbands (and) their
children who died in
the crossing.
The navy said the survivors were later transferred to a Norwegian
ship with the Frontex
mission, a European
effort to save migrant
lives in the Mediterranean.
A21
Randall S.
Heacock
Randall S. Heacock,
52, passed a w a y
T h u r s d a y,
August 13,
2015 at his
home.
Tribute
services
will be private. Life Tributes by
Olewiler & H effner
Funeral Chapel &
C re mat or y, In c., 35
Gotham Place, Red Lion
is in charg e of arrang e ments.
Born October 16, 1962
in Harrisburg, a son of
Patricia L. Schorr of
York
o and George R. and
wife Dixie Heacock of
Ft. Littleton, Fulton Co.;
he was a 1980 graduate
of Warwick High School.
Randy was an electrician and proud member of International
Brotherhood
of
Electrical Work
o ers. He
wa s a m e m b e r o f P i n e
Grove United Methodist
Church in York
o and will
be remembered for his
love of rock and roll.
Randy enjoyed following sports and was an
avid New Yo
ork Jets fan.
He loved the Lord and
his familyy.
In addition to his
parents, Mr. Heacock
is survived by a son,
Andrew R.L. Heacock of
Lancaster; a sister, Lori
K. Heacock of Lancaster
and her son, Geordy
Fleming; two half brothers, Austin Heacock
who is stationed in
Germany with the USAF
and his wife Kaitlyn
a n d t h e i r s o n , H ay e s ;
a n d A l e x He a c o c k o f
Williamsburg, VA and
his wife Ashley and their
daughters, Hanna and
Sarah.
M emorial contri butions may be made
to American Cancer
Societyy, 924-N Colonial
Ave, York,
o
PA 17403.
Online condolences
may be made at www.
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OBITS
A22 SUNDAY,
AUGUST
A22 SUNDAY,
AUGUST 16,
2015 16, 2015
Deaths Reported
Bunting,StacyW.
58. August 10, 2015.
AndrewT.ScheidFuneralHome,397-8298
Hedge,BarbaraC.
80. August 14, 2015.
AndrewT.ScheidFuneralHome,397-8298
Cicero, Franklin R.
56, of Lancaster. June
21, 2015. Andrew T.
Scheid Funeral Home,
397-8298
Herr, Jay L.
85, husband of Doris A.
Miller Herr, of Washington Boro. August 14,
2015.MelanieB.Scheid
Funeral Directors &
Cremation Services,
The Gundel Chapel,
872-1779
Services Today
Breen, Walter F. III
Charles F. Snyder Jr.
Funeral Home & Crematory, 3110 Lititz Pike,
3 PM
Buckwalter, Joanne
Marie
Lancaster Evangelical
Free Church, 419 Pierson Rd., Lititz. 3 PM.
Furman Homes for
Funerals.
Groff, Angela G.
Neifert
Manheim Brethren In
Christ Church, 54
North Penryn Road,
Manheim, 3 PM. Buch
Funeral Home, Inc.
Lockard, Raymond B.
Workman
Funeral
Homes, Inc., 114 West
Main St., Mountville, 5
PM
Marvel, Jordan B.
Conoy Brethren In
Christ Church, 1722
Bainbridge Road, Elizabethtown, 3 PM. Trefz
& Bowser Funeral
Home, Inc.
McElwain, Marian
Louise (Strine)
Centre Presbyterian
Church, 83 New Park
Road, New Park, 3 PM.
Miller-Finkenbinder
Funeral Home & Crematory
Pennington, William
G.
Workman
Funeral
Homes, Inc., 114 West
Main
Street,
Mountville, 2 PM
Zook, J. Harold
New Life Bible Fellowship Church, 2960 W.
Philadelphia Ave., Oley,
3:30 PM. Stitzel Family
Funeral Homes & Crematory, Inc.
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Donald
Conrad
LeFevre
Donald
Conrad
LeFevre, 82, of Lititz,
p a s s e d
away o n
T h u r s d a y,
August 13,
20 15 ,
at
Lancaster
General
Hospital.
He was
born
in
Lancaster
to the late
Elwood
B.
and
Leona M.
(Conrad)
LeFevre and
was the hus band of Mary
Louise (Erb) LeFevre
with whom he shared 58
years of marriage this
past October 21.
Donald was a member of the Ephrata
Church of the Brethren.
He was a 1952 graduate
of Ephrata High School.
Donald retired from the
US Air Force in 1973
as an avionics technician and then went on
to work at Lancaster
General Hospital as a
b iom ed ic al en gi ne er
until his retirement
in 1994. He enjoyed
woodworking, traveling, spending time with
his familyy, especially his
grandson.
In addition to his
wife, he is survived
by a son, Michael E.,
husband of Roberta
(Fasnacht) LeFevre
of Lititz; 2 daughters,
Donna M. LeFevre of
Harrsiburg, Diane L.,
wife of Daniel Horst of
Lititz; a grandson, Josh
LeFevre; and a brother, James LeFevre of
Stevens.
In addition to his parents, he was preceded in
death by 2 brothers, Carl
LeFev re and Elwood
Wo
oody LeFevre.
A Celebration of Life
service will take place
on Tuesday, August 18,
at 7 pm, at the Ephrata
Church of the Brethren,
20 1 Cresc ent A v e.
Ephrata, with Pastor
Rob Eshelman officiating. The family will greet
friends from 6 to 7 pm at
the church. Interment
will be private at the
convenience of the familyy. Military honors will
be accorded by the Red
Rose Veterans Honor
Guard.
M emorial contri butions in Donalds
memory
ma y
be
made to the Brethren
Villag e Benev olent
Fund, 3001 Lititz Pike,
Lancaster, PA 17606 or
Songs for the Journey,
2437 Fruitville Pike,
La nc ast er, PA 176 01
www.songs4thejourneyy.
org.
Arrang ements b y
Stradling
F uneral
Homes, Inc., Akron/
Ephrata. Online condolences can be given at
stradlingfuneralhome.
com.
Capt. Kelley
R. Wilson
USAF-Ret.
1927-2015
Obituaries
OTHER OBITUARIES
ON PAGES A23,
A24, A25 & A21
IN LOVING MEMORY OF
MICHELLE Y.
SOUDERS
Processing
or
Management Information Systems (MIS).
After his active duty, the
U.S. Army recruited him
as a civilian employee
creating ow charts and
documenting processes,
procedures and job descriptions. He went on
to work at Westinghouse
and IBM in the 1950s in
information systems at
the dawn of the age
when large corporations
were beginning to utilize
computers.
He worked for RCA
on the 51st oor of the
famous 30 Rockefeller
Plaza for 6 years, before
moving his family to
Lancaster in the fall of
1970 as Director of
Management Information Systems for
RCA.
Upon meeting him,
people often commented how gracious he was.
Bills 90th year was
marked by three family
weddings, where he was
the most sought after
dance partner. His 90th
birthday party was a tting celebration of love
and respect for the great
man who was loved by so
many.
He was a loving father
who provided us all an
exemplary demonstration of how to be a man,
a husband and a friend.
In lieu of flowers,
please send a gift to the
Wounded
Warrior
Project in Bills name.
You can leave messages for the family at
www.Facebook.com/
groups/billcronin
All are invited to attend a Mass and Life
Celebration for Bill
Cronin on Saturday,
August 22nd at 12 noon
at St. John Neumann
Catholic Church, 601 E
Delp Rd., Lancaster, PA
17601.
IN LOVING MEMORY OF
ROBERT M.
CARROLL
Love,
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| LANCASTER,
PA AUGUST 16, 2015
OBITS
A23 SUNDAY,
Obituaries
Frances Lolita
Williams Dunlap
Fr a n c e s
Lolita
Williams
Dunlap
passed peacefully surrounded by her family on May 28, 2015 in
Seattle, Washington.
She leaves behind
her husband, John H.
Dunlap, and their children Lucinda M. Dunlap
and Benjamin S. Dunlap
of Seattle, Washington
and her sister Ellen B.
Williams of Lancaster,
PA.
Fran was the daughter of Dorothea Sener
Wieand Williams and
Dr. Henry Taylor Noyes
Williams of Lancaster,
Pennsylvania.
Fran graduated from
Westminster College,
New
Wilmington,
Pennsylvania with a degree in Art and Biology.
She worked as a technical draftsman at Woods
Hole Oceanographic
Institute, Cape Cod,
Massachusetts. where
she met her husband,
John.
Francis
Frank X.
Hertz, Jr.
Fr an ci s Fr an k
X. Hertz, Jr., 65, of
Camden,
DE, passed
away s u d denly Sat.,
Au
ug. 8, 2015,
in
Kent
General
Hospital, Dover.
Frank was born April
25, 1950 in Lititz, PA
A, to
the late Francis & Anna
(Flick) Hertz.
He had worked in
retail management and
as a chef for several
y e a r s t h r o u g h o u t CA ,
PA, & IL. Frank was a
former member of the
Veterans of Foreign
Wars
a and the American
Legion; having served in
the Marines during the
Vietnam Waar.
In his free time,
Frank enjoyed country
music, pho tograph y,
building models & had
several Pinterest pages.
In addition to his parents, he is preceded in
death by sisters Theresa
Fink & Pauline Agnes
Hertz.
Francis is sur vived by his wife of 40
years, who was raised
in Ephrata, Judith E.
(Grifffiith) Hertz; 2 sisters, Gertrude Waalton
(Georg e) of Lititz, and
Rita Whiskeyman (Earl)
of Milford, CT; a cousin
Robert Hertz of Lititz,
several nieces & nephews, and his children,
his cats Willie & Waylon.
A Celebration of his
Life will be held 1 pm,
Sat., Au
ug. 22, 2015 at the
American Legion Hall,
109 N. Broad St., Lititz,
PA.
In lieu of flowers,
contributions may be
made to the Vasculitis
Foundation, P..O. Box
28660, Kansas Cityy, MO
64188.
Condolences may be
sent via: www
w..pippinfuneralhome.com
Angel L. Colon
De Jesus
Angel L. Colon De
Jesus, 58, passed away
on Sunday,
August 9,
2 01 5
at
Home. Born
January
10,
1957
in Juana
Diaz, PR, son of the late
Emiliano Colon and
Clementina De Jesus.
He was the husband of
Maria D. Archevald to
whom he was married
for 33 years.
Angel worked at K &
L plating company. He
enjoyed old fashioned
muscle cars, working
on cars, being a handyman, helping out his
family and friends and
absolutely loved telling
jokes. Angel will always
be remembered for his
great smile.
In addition to his wife
Maria, Angel is survived
by a daughter, Gimell
M. Colon and several
brothers and sisters.
Angels Celebration
of Life Memorial Service
will be held at the Lords
House of Prayer, 133 E.
Vine Street, Lancaster,
PA 17602 on Thursday,
August 20, 2015 at 7PM,
Pastor Howard Paslay
officiating. Inurnment
will be held privately at
the convenience of the
family.
To submit an online condolence, visit:
scheidfuneralhome.com
Ina C. Elliot
Ina M. (C hurch)
Elliot, 91, of Brethren
Village,
Lancas ter ,
PA passed
away
on
A u gu s t 9,
2015
at
H eart of
Lancas ter Regional
Medical Center after
suffering a stroke a week
earlier. Born on March
14, 1924 in McMechen,
WV
V, she was the daughter of the late William
French Church and
Ethel Leota (Prettyman)
Church. Her beloved
husband of 68 years,
William Bill D. Elliot,
died on May 15, 2015.
Ina grew up in Wes
e t
Virginia and western
Pennsylvania. She and
Bill met while he was
s tationed in P ennsylvania before being
sh ip pe d to Ge rm any
during Wo
orld Waar II.
They were married in
New York City in
December, 1946. They
lived on Long Island,
New Yo
ork until moving
to Lancaster in 1987. In
1998, she and Bill moved
to Brethren Villag e
where they enjoyed many activities. Ina facilitated the Bre thren
Villag e Life Story
Writing
r
Group for many
years up until her death.
She passionately re cruited new group members an d e ncou rag e d
others to write their life
stories as a gift and legacy for their children and
future generations.
Ina was a member of
First United Methodist
Church and was involved in the Stephen
Ministry program for a
number of years. She
was on the local advisory
board for
o the Lancaster
County Drug and
Alcohol Committee and
active in local Twelvestep Programs.
A lover of the outdoors and nature, Ina
actively supported environmental awareness at
Brethren Villag e. She
supported the use of native plantings and was
instrumental in the development of two innovative pollinator meadows at Brethren Village,
which have been en joyed by many. In earlier
years, Ina maintained a
large vegetable garden
and loved to grow owers.
Despite her 91 years,
she was active and living
independently
depe de t y. An avid
readerr, Ina never tired of
learning new things. A
healthful lifestyle, including good nutrition
and health
hy eating were
very important to her.
She loved to walk and
exercise. She attended
the Qi Gong group at
Brethren Village and included Qi Gong as a reg~
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OTHER OBITUARIES
ON PAGES A24, A25 & A21
Peter Andrew
Kus
u uplos
Peter
K usuplos ,
Andrew
94, of
L a n c a s t e r,
P A, died
p e a c e fully
at
C o n es t o g a
View on
A u g u s t
13, 2015. He was the
husband of Sara Mae
(Christ) Kusuplos and
they celebrated their
66th wedding anniversary on January 14th.
He is the son of the
late Andrew and Helen
Kusuplos.
Peter worked for the
Food Fair stores in the
meat department as a
cutter. He enjoyed following the stock market and financial
i
inv es tments, w atching
television, working in
his yard, going to the
shore, but most of all he
treasured his time with
his familyy. He proudly
served his country with
the United States Navy
on a P T Boat during
Wo
orld Waar II.
In addition to his
wife, he is survived by his
four daughters, Vicki,
wife of Paul Hartsburg,
Tucson, AZ; Elena, wife
of Jay Hanselman, Fort
Mill, SC; Deborah, wife
of Jeff Sweinhart, Oleyy,
PA; and Tammy, wife
of Todd Snyder, Buena
Vista, CO; three grandchildren, Lisa McCardle,
Sha wn Fa wber, and
Timothy Fawber, as well
as extended grandchildren and great grandchildren. He also is survived by a sister, Anna
Komis of Lancaster,
PA
A. He was preceded in
death by ve siblings.
Relatives and friends
are invited to attend
P e t e r s
Memorial
Service from the Charles
F. Snyder Jr. Funeral
Ho me & C rem at oryy,
3110 Lititz Pik e,
Lititz, PA on Saturday,
October 24, 2015 at
2:00 P..M. with Mr. Jack
Davenport offfiiciating.
The family will receive
friends from 1:00 P..M.
until time of service.
Private interment will
be held at the convenience of the familyy. In
lieu of owers, memor i a l c o n t r i b u t i o n s m ay
be sent to the National
Parkinson Foundation,
200 SE 1st Street, Suite
800, Miami, FL 33131.
To share a memoryy, visit
our website at
SnyderF
Fu
uneralHome.com
Charles F. Snyderr, Jr.
Funeral Home &
Crematory
(717) 560-5100
Katthryn
Arlene
Esbenshade
Grove
K athryn
Arlene
Esbenshade Grove, 82,
residing
at Landis
H omes in
L a n c a s t e r,
P e n n sylvania,
peacefully
joined her Savior in
Heaven on Thursday,
August 13, 2015.
Born in the farmhouse on what is now the
Lancaster Bible College
campus on July 2, 1933,
to J. Martin and Anna
B r u b a ke r E s b e n s h a d e ,
Kathy grew up with one
sister, Jean E. Sebastian.
She attended Manheim
Township High School,
went to Penn State
University for two years,
and graduated from
Providence Barrington
Bible College. She met
Orie Grove at Americas
Keswick, and they married on May 27
7, 1961 at
Covenant EUB Church
in Lancaster.
K ath y work ed at
Wyyeth Laboratories and
Bartlett Tree Experts
but was best known
as a wonderful homemaker, wife, and mother to Timothy James.
Kathy was very proud of
Tims accomplishments
within the Smithsonian
Institution and the publishing world.
Kathy is survived by
husband Orie, son Tim,
sister Jean and brotherin-law Paul Sebastian,
niece Nancy and grandniece Becky Meyer.
The memorial service for Kath
hy Grove will
be held this Tuesday,
A u g u s t 1 8 , 2 0 1 5, a t
Grace Baptist Church
(1899 Marietta Ave.,
Lancaster), where she
was a charter member.
Family greeting will
begin at 10am, and the
service will be held at 11
with a family and friends
luncheon following.
In Kathy s memoryy,
the family greatly appreciates your donations to nd a cure for
Alzheimer s (www.alz.
org ) or to Lancaster
Bible College, instead of
owers.
With a great sense
of loss, we remember
Kathy as a caring, compassionate and g odly
woman who loved her
family and friends.
Browse or leave a condolence
from your smart phone at
LancasterOnline.com/Obituaries
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OBITS
A24 SUNDAY,
AUGUST
A24 SUNDAY,
AUGUST 16,
2015 16, 2015
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Obituaries
Jay L. Sonny Herr
companion of William
Rockey of Millersville.
His grandchildren that
he cherished so much
are Justin, husband of
Allie Swope, Shane Goss,
companion of Jazmine
Ford, Aus
u tin, husband of
K atie H err, A dam
Houck, companion of
Becca Boozer, twins
Ryan and Joel Herr,
Amanda, wife of Brent
Shaw and Kristin, wife of
Derek Shearer. Great
grandchildren that
brought joy to him are
Blak e Sha w, Carter
Shearer, Hunter Swope,
Jace Goss, Samantha
Shaw, Peyton Swope,
and Aspen Herr.
Sonny came from a
large and close family
and he leaves behind his
brother, Earl M., husband of Gladys Herr of
Lancaster; sisters, Alta
M. Herr of Millersville,
M. Jeanette Dombach of
Wilmington, DE and
Bonnie L., wife of Ronald
Huth of South Hampton,
MA
A and several nieces
and nephews. He was
preceded in death by his
brothers, C. Eugene, C.
Richard, Elvin R. and
James N. Herr, along
with sisters, Dorothy I.
Herr and Frances V.
Burkhart. His son-inlaw Todd Swope also
preceded him in death.
Family and friends
are respectfully invited
to attend Jay s funeral
services on Thursday
evening, August 20, 2015
at 6:30PM from the
M elanie B. Scheid
Funeral Directors &
Cremation Services, The
Gundel Chapel, 3225
Main Street, Conestoga,
PA with his grandsonin-law, Brent Shaw officiating. Friends will be
received at the funeral
home on Thursday from
5 to 6:30 PM. Private inin
terment will be held in
the St. Josephs Catholic
Cemeteryy, Bausman, PA.
A
Please omit owers, memorial remembrances
may be made in Sonny s
memory to Hospice and
Community Care. For
o ther information
please call 717-872-1779
or to submit an online
condolence visit www.
thegundelchapel.com.
Melanie B. Scheid
Funeral Directors &
Cremation Services
Conestoga, PA
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Groundhog
L o d g e ;
Strasburg
Sportsmans
Club; and the
Royal Order
of Rabbits.
In his capacity with
Lancaster
City Police,
he had been
inv olved in
many other
advisory positions and
organizations.
Waalter had a zest
fo r lif e and lo v e d
spending time with
family and friends. He
was particularly proud
of his grandchildren. As
an avid outdoorsman,
he had enjoyed hunting, shing, and boating. He also like to bowl
and golf and had a great
love of animals. Anyone
who knew Waalter knew
that he loved to tell stories and was always up
for a good laugh.
In addition to his
wife, he is survived by
his children: Linda G.,
wife of John Bradley
H o y, Douglass ville,
PA; Carol A., wife of
Craig A. McClenaghan,
Bro wns to wn; and
Theodore W.., husband
of Lisa (Kulp) Goeke,
Akron. Other survivors
include four grandchildren: Grace and Sarah
M c Cl e na gh an , Er in
Hoy, and Grant Goeke.
A bro ther, Jackson
B. Goeke, husband of
Debra Goeke, Mt. Joy,
a sister-in-law, Doris
Goeke, Lebanon, and
many nieces and nephews also survive him.
In addition to his
parents, he was predeceased by his sister
Evelyn Richwine and
her husband Paul, his
br othe rs F. Rich ard
Goek e and Ronald
Goeke, and his brother-in-law, Charles E.
Meyer.
A memorial service
will be held Tuesday,
August 18th, at 7:30
pm at Charles Snyder
Funeral Home, 3110
Lititz Pik e, Lititz
with P as tor Mark
Thiboldeaux off ici ating. Preceding the
funeral, family and
friends will be received
on Tuesday between
5:00 and 7:30 pm.
In lieu of flowers,
contributions ma y
be made to either the
American Red Cross,
430 W. Orang e St.,
Lancaster, PA 17603
or the American
H eart Association,
610 Community Way,
Lancaster, PA 17603.
To place a condolence online, please
visit
SnyderF
FuneralHome.com
Charles F. Snyder, Jr.
Funeral
u
Home &
Crematory
(717
7) 560-5100
OTHER OBITUARIES
ON PAGES A25 & A21
Dear Dad,
God shared you with
us for 92
years and
no w
has
taken you to
your heavenly home
to join Jean,
your wife of
64 years. We
are sad but we
also rejoice!
We ar e so
very blessed to have had
you as our role model as
you lived a Godly life.
You
o dearly loved your
wife, your 4 children, 11
grandchildren and 11
gre at-grandc hildren .
Your
o heart belonged to
your familyy, your home
and to your s trong
Christian faith.
Yo
ou were a selfless
giver and the rock of our
familyy. We loved your
stories and respected
your advice, wisdom and
encourag ement. We
fon
o dly remember your
singing, homemade
fudg e, hug e garden,
warm smile, napping
and strong handshake.
Yo
ou enjoyed taking us on
family vacations, teasing
your grandchildren
about finding
i
boy/girlfriends, taking them
golng and helping with
tuitions. Yo
ou sang to our
crying babies, went shing, enjoyed our dogs,
joined your sons at the
hunting camp, solved
cross word puzzles ,
bowled, made apple sauce and offered us
dishes of vanilla ice
cream with peaches.
Yo
our love, support
Franklin R.
Cicero
Benjamin
Wade Jarboe
Franklin R. Cicero,
56, of Lancaster, passed
away Sunday,
June 21, 2015
at LGH. Born
Augus
u t 10, 1958
in Lancaster,
son of the late Casper V.
and Bonnie L. (Keiser)
Cicero.
Frank enjoyed music,
especially harmonica
and guitar and will always be remembered
for his sensitive personalityy.
Frank is surviv ed
by companion, Jeanie
Wolfe
o and sister, Diane
Cicero of Lancaster.
A Mass of Christian
Burial will be held at St.
Mary s Catholic Church,
119 South Prince
Street, Lancaster, PA
on Thursday, August
20, 20 15 at 10AM
( Visitation 9-10AM.)
Inurnment will be
held privately at the
convenience of the familyy.
To submit an online condolence, visit:
scheidfuneralhome.com
SnyderF
Fu
uneralHome.com
Charles F. Snyderr, Jr.
Funeral Home &
Crematory
(717) 560-5100
Benjamin
Wade
Jarboe, 48, of Lancaster
p a s s e d
away s u d denly at his
home on
Wednesday,
Au g u st 1 2 ,
2 0 1 5. B en
was a loving father,
son and husband. He
was born in San Diego,
CA the son of Linda S.
(Runkel) Jarboe and
the late Rufus Jarboe.
H e w as married to
Mary Jane (Sultzbach)
Jarboe. Ben was truck
driver and previously
a cheff at the Hamilton
Club. He enjoyed cooking, bicycling, driving
his 1970 Ford Mustang,
and shing.
Surviving in addi tion to his mother and
wife is his daughter
Hannah Jane Jarboe
and his stepson Richard
Douglas Flood, Jr., his
sisters Laura J. Cruz and
Ann Paszkiewicz.
Fr i e n d s a r e i nv i t ed to a MEMORIAL
SER
RV
VICE on Tuesday,
August 18, 2015 at 7:00
PM from the Groffs
Fami ly Funer al &
Cremation Services, 528
W. Orange St., Lancaster
PA 17603. Online condolences may be posted on
our Weeb site:
www
w..thegroffs.com
The Groffs Family
Funeral Home,
717-394-5300
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OBITS
A25 SUNDAY,
LNP | LANCASTER,
PA AUGUST 16, 2015
Obituaries
Henrietta
(Raub) Morian
(1928-2015)
Henrietta Morian,
87, went to her eternal rest on August 2,
2015 in Costa Rica. She
was born in Lancaster,
Pe n n s y l v a n i a
on
January 24, 1928.
She graduated from
Quarryville High School
(PA) and later from
The School of Nursing
at Lancaster General
Hospital. She worked as
a Registered Nurse until
1951, when she married
John P. Morian, Sr.
Henrietta returned to
nursing after raising her
family and retired from
the Jefferson Barracks
V.A. Medical Center in
St. Louis, Missouri. She
and her husband retired
to Glendale, Arizona in
1999. She spent the last
two years of her life living with family in Costa
Rica.
She was preceded in
death by John, her husband of 63 years; her
parents, Henri E. Raub
and Helen L. (Reinhart)
Raub; her brother,
Richard V.L. Raub;
and her sister, Helen
Cynthia (Raub) Beitel.
Henrietta is survived
by her three sons, John
P. Morian, Jr. (Mary) of
Glendale, Arizona, Dan
Morian (Maryann) of
Costa Rica, and Robert
H. Morian of Dallas,
Texas; 11 grandchildren; 9 great-grandchildren; and siblings, Sara E. (Raub)
Stubbs of Seattle, WA,
Joanna (Raub) Ripple
of Lancaster, PA, John
H. Raub of Strasburg,
PA, Amelia S. (Raub)
Stoner of Quarryville,
PA, and Albert N. Raub
of Quarryville, PA.
Funeral Mass will be
at 10 a.m. Wednesday,
November 25, 2015 at
SS. Simon and Jude
Cathedral in Phoenix,
AZ. Interment will be 10
a.m. Monday, December
28, 2015 in the National
Memorial Cemetery of
Arizona in Phoenix, AZ.
Helen E.
Thomas
Helen E. Thomas, 72
of 400 Mill St., Trinity
H o u s e
A p a r t m e n t s ,
Columbia,
PA died on
Thursday at
Lancaster
General Hospital. Born
in Wes
e t Chester, PA
she was the daughter
of the late William and
Eleanor Summersgill
To wnsend. She re tired from Hartstrings
Clothing Manufacturing
Co. in King of Prussia
where she was their
Quality Control Road
Representative. She was
a graduate of Bernina
University and loved
sewing as a seamstress.
Surviving is a Son:
L. James husband of
J essica Thomas of
Wrightsville, PA and a
Daughter: Leslie wife of
Dean Carson of Lititz,
P A. Also surviving
are 3 Grandchildren:
Amanda, Oliv ia an d
Matthew and Brothers:
Earl Jack husband
of Helene Coover of
Coatesville, PA and
William Townsend companion of Pat Bruzgulis
of Hamburg, PA. She
was predeceased by a
Sister: Emily Townsend.
The Viewing will be
held at the Clyde W.
Kraft Funeral Home,
Inc., 519 Walnut St.,
C ol um b ia , P A o n
Thursday, August 20,
2015 from 6:00PM 7:00PM. A Celebration
of Helens Life will be
at 7:00PM. This Service
will be opened to anyone who wishes to share
memories of Helens
Life. The Interment will
be Private. The family requests that owers
be omitted. Memorial
Contributions
in
Helens memory may
be made to the Humane
League of Lancaster,
2195 Lincoln Highway
E a s t , L a n c a s t e r, P A
17602.
www.cwkraftfh.com
James R. Gla
la
atfelter
t
James R. Glatfelter,
66, of Baumgardner
R o a d ,
Lancaster
passed away
unexpectedly Friday
morning,
August 14,
2015 in Martic Twp.,
while riding his motorcycle. Born in Lancaster,
Jim was the son of the
late Robert J. Glatfelter
and Mary Jane (Eitnier)
Glatfelter of Manheim.
He was the husband of
Betty J. Bollinger with
whom he was married 31
years on June 30th.
Jim graduated from
Manheim Twp. High
School in 1968 . H e
worked as an estimator
for Graphic Crafts ,
Willow Street, retiring
on April 1, 2011. Jim enjoyed sailing on the
Chesapeake for over 15
years with Bettyy. He was
a member of the Pequea
Boat Club. In his younger years, he coached the
Lancaster Rugby Team
and stayed connected
with the old and young
pla yers. H e enjo yed
building and riding his
Kikker Motorcycles. Jim
was a great cook and enjoyed competing in BBQ
cook offs as part of the
Pequea Pullers. He was a
member of the Kansas
City BBQ Society. Jim
enjoyed relaxing in his
backyard, music playing
in the background.
Jim will be dearly
missed by his wife, Betty
and his mother, Mary
Jane. Also surviving is a
sister, Mary Alice, wife
o f R o b e r t Wr ig h t o f
Bolingbrook, IL and
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Lancaster
Good to be king
Henry VIII rules at
Pennsylvania Renaissance Faire
n Entertainment, page B4
HEALTH
Cancer-free
Sarah Park finishes 28 months of chemotherapy,
looks forward to getting back to normal
PROFESSIONAL
EMPATHY
A June graduate of Manheim Township
High School, Park will attend Case Western
Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio, in
the fall.
She will major in nursing, she says not
necessarily because of all this, but the
experience definitely showed me what a
good bedside manner is. Its given me an
inside look at the profession.
It also opened her eyes to the nonprofit
world, dealing with foundations and
projects such as Penn States Four
Diamond fund for cancer research and
Camp Mak-a-Dream, a cancer camp for
teenagers in Montana.
I could have sat out there and looked at
the mountains all day, every day, Park
says, a little dreamily.
Her experiences over the past year have
really shown me the good side of people,
she says, from the nurses who are willing
to stand there and hold your hand to
the volunteers who come in to give you
snacks.
Park furrows her brow and thinks for a
moment.
I think its made me more compassionate
than I was before, she says. Everybody
is so quick to judge people based on their
illnesses, instead of who they are. Ive had
people stare at me, and I didnt like it.
I always make it a point to meet their
eyes. And smile.
SUZETTE WENGER/STAFF PHOTOS
Sarah Park, a Manheim Township High School graduate, celebrates after finishing 28 months of chemotherapy. In the top
photo she holds Mercaptopurine pills, which were part of the chemotherapy treatment.
TOM KNAPP
TKNAPP@LNPNEWS.COM
No joke
The Manheim Township teen got
the bad news April 1, 2013.
It was the worst April Fools joke
ever, she says wryly. The doctor
TEEN, page B3
MUSIC
Theme song
JJANCI@LNPNEWS.COM
B2
LOCAL
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
MUSIC
Restaurant inspections
The Pennsylvania
Department of Agriculture,
866-366-3723, uses a
risk-based inspection
reporting process for
restaurants and other food
handlers.
JJANCI@LNPNEWS.COM
determine appropriate
sanitizer concentration.
Observed deeply scored
cutting boards not
resurfaced or discarded as
required. Food employees
are unfamiliar with the
three-step method of
warewashing. Encrusted
food residue observed
on can opener blade.
Heavy buildup of old food
residue in microwave oven
observed. Observed meat
cleaver containing food
residue stored on magnetic
strip. Trash observed
outside kitchen back door.
There is an accumulation
of dust on portable room
fan with the potential to
contaminate food and food
contact surfaces. There
is a heavy accumulation
of food, dirt and grease
under equipment at floor/
wall junction. An extreme
buildup of grease noted on
hood baffles and in hood
canopy. Service company
called at the time of
inspection and a cleaning
appointment made. Mop is
not being hung to air dry.
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LOCAL/ADVICE
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
AMY DICKINSON
ASK AMY
Stance on homosexuality
tests friendship
DEAR AMY: I have a guy friend with whom I
have had a platonic relationship for a few years.
We are in our 50s and hang out a few times a
month.
I have always known he was Christian and
very involved in his church. But last week when
we were discussing which movie to go to, he said
he wouldnt go to see certain movies because either the character played a gay man or the actor
was gay in real life.
After two years of friendship this is the first
time this has come up, but what he said bothered me. I am very open-minded and accepting.
He didnt say hateful or mean things. Just that
he didnt approve of that kind of lifestyle and
wouldnt support those actors. It may not even
come up again.
I am now questioning our friendship, but
should I let this affect me? Wondering Friend
DEAR FRIEND: You seem to associate being a
Christian with not accepting gay people; this lack of
acceptance is so un-Christian that this might be a
Show biz
Continued from B1
However, he wasnt
happy. Following graduation, he didnt find his
work fulfilling, and he
gained 60 pounds. (Hes
since lost 70).
After a year in production scheduling at Boeing, Scargall put it all on
the line to pursue his
passion.
Drawn to music
For Scargall, music
has been a lifelong interest. He says his mom
remembers him singing (well, maybe more
like screaming) along
to The Lion King
soundtrack.
I have a rather strong,
belting voice, Scargall says. Maybe that
helped, when I was yelling as a child!
He started playing sax-
DISNEY EXPO
Star Wars
attraction
Disney CEO Bob Iger
says Star Wars is getting its own themed land
at Disney parks.
Iger announced at
Disneys D23 Fan Expo
on Saturday that the 14acre attraction will be
built at Disney World in
Orlando, Florida, and
Disneyland in Anaheim,
California. It represents
the largest parks expansion ever.
Disney parks have previously only had the Star
Tours ride as their Star
Wars themed attraction.
Lion or lamb
He said you could be
a lion or a lamb in life,
Scargall says. Dr. Dillon
was a big influence on
me.
Dillon says that Scargall took that advice to
heart.
He just decided to embrace that kind of perspective, Dillon says. In
his eyes, Scargall decided
to be a lion.
John is larger than
life, Dillon says. Hes
just bursting with enthusiasm and energy.
Although he ultimately
didnt pursue a career in
Births
ANDREW, Aimee, and
David T. Messimer,
Ephrata, a son, at
WellSpan Ephrata
Community Hospital,
Friday.
DIECK, Andrew D. and
Carolyn (Sheirich),
Mount Joy, a daughter,
at Women & Babies
Hospital, Tuesday.
FRANEY, Travis M.
and Chelsee (Warner),
Harrisburg, a son,
at Women & Babies
Hospital, Tuesday.
MARTINEZ, Luisa,
and Edwin A. Torres,
Lancaster, a daughter,
at Women & Babies
Hospital, Monday.
PATRICK, Trevor K.
and Tamara (Mellott),
Elizabethtown, a son,
at Women & Babies
Hospital, Tuesday.
TUSCAN, Jordan M.
and Heidi (Holland),
Lancaster, a daughter,
at Women & Babies
Hospital, Tuesday.
200 Artisans
from 29 States
and Canada
B3
Teen
is overjoyed.
Were thrilled that she
is through her therapy
with very few issues, and
that she is cancer-free,
Kozma says.
Continued from B1
Uncertain
future
Doctors dont really tell you a lot about
your future, Park
says.
I know for the
next year, Ill be seen
once a month. Then
it backs off a little,
she says. Eventually,
Ill be down to once a
year.
Shes so used to the
chemo ritual that
Park isnt sure how
shell react now that
its over.
I bet Ill feel like Im
forgetting something
all the time, she says.
But it will be good to
get back to normal.
Shell
continue
maintenance therapy,
including
monthly
blood tests and prophylactic antibiotics
to help rebuild her
immune system, she
says.
Her mom, of course,
Silver linings
Thursday:
Home &
Garden
Your rings
dont fit
anymore?
We can
fix that!
The Jewelry Experts
Sept. 4 & 5: 10 am - 6 pm
Sept. 6: 10 am - 5 pm
$5.00
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and details.
Sorry, no pets allowed.
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any purchase of
$25 or more.
With this coupon.
One coupon per customer,
per day. Not valid with other
offers or prior purchases.
Exp. 10-2-15
(717) 394-4828
MiraclesConsignmentShop.com
B4
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Entertainment
RENAISSANCE FAIRE
JHOLAHAN@LNPNEWS.COM
A young Henry
House-parenting hiatus
Nine years ago, Ramsey and his wife
Kate decided it was time to leave the Renaissance Faire. They had two very small
kids, and Ramsey was worried about his
future, including his financial situation.
I never wanted to leave, but I thought
it would be best for my family, he says.
IF YOU GO
n Pennsylvania Renaissance Faire
n Mount Hope Estate, Route 72
n Weekends through Oct. 25
n Sat., Sun. 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. (plus Labor Day
Monday)
n $25.95 online. $30.95 at the gate, children 5 to 11,
$11.95, 4 or younger, free
n parenfaire.com
Greg Ramsey, as
Henry VIII, presides
over parades, court
occasions and the
occasional battle at
the Renaissance Faire.
THEATER REVIEW
STEPHEN KOPFINGER
UNSCRIPTED
I ought to be in pictures:
these 5, in particular
A few columns back,
I revealed my fantasy
about moving in with
The Waltons, one of
Americas best-loved
television families.
Now Im stepping up
to the big screen. There
are movies I wish I
could just live in.
Not long ago, I had
a vicious attack of insomnia, got out of bed
and turned on Turner
Classic Movies. The
Philadelphia Story
was on in the middle of
the night.
It lulled me back to
sleep because it was so
civilized, as if life could
be safe and elegant.
That got me thinking:
What movies would I
wish to live in? Below is
my self-indulgent list,
starting with the picture I just mentioned.
The Philadelphia Story (1940).
How I could just step
into this world: beautiful people Cary
Grant, Katharine Hepburn, Jimmy Stewart
JHOLAHAN@LNPNEWS.COM
Suspending
disbelief
West Side Story is,
of course, a 1950s retell-
Couples dance in a scene from the Dutch Apple Dinner Theatres West Side Story.
IF YOU GO
n West Side Story
n Dutch Apple Dinner
ENTERTAINMENT/LIVING
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Review
Unscripted
Continued from B4
of F. Scott Fitzgeralds
iconic American novel
about the Roaring 20s.
I like it. It captured
the vacuous nature of
the new-money set
perfectly represented
by Bruce Dern and the
vapid Mia Farrow
along with the tragic
longing of Robert
Redfords Jay Gatsby,
forever pining away for
his lost love, Farrows
Daisy.
Nick Carraway,
played with aplomb
by Sam Waterston and
admirably followed up
by Tobey Maguire in
the 2013 remake, is my
spiritual brother. Hes
the guy who has access
to the rich and troubled
and manages to get his
foot in the gilded door
and observe it all.
The Poseidon
Adventure (1972).
OK, this sounds like
a weird choice. Why
would you want to
spend time on a capsized, rapidly sinking
ocean liner?
Well, when youre a
10-year-old boy, as I
was when this classic disaster movie
came out, the scenario
looked like the time of
my life. Think about it:
You get to climb a fake,
three-story Christmas
tree in an inverted art
deco dining saloon,
crawl through air
shafts, swim underwater through a flooded
n Stephen Kopfinger is
an LNP correspondent.
Unscripted is a weekly
entertainment column produced by a rotating team of
writers.
-A
IME Da
Mus
ic a l
nce
Coming Up at the
Ware & Winter Centers
Gorgeous music
Continued from B2
DAR
D
dering as Bernardo,
and Zoe Raphael
matches his heat as
Anita, his girlfriend.
These two characters
are always the ones
who add the sizzle to
the show, and neither
disappoints here.
The rest of the cast
is solid. Kirk Lawrence is a heartbroken
Doc; Craig Smith is a
nasty and bigoted Lt.
Schank; and Gerard
Lanzerotti gives Riff
an edge. Will Leonard
overacted as Action,
who is overwhelmed
with anger, but youll
remember the character.
Jason Long does a
good job as Chino, who
is in love with Maria
and whose anger rises after the rumble,
which the gangs turn
into a tragedy.
The story line is a little dated: West Side
Story is definitely a
show of the 1950s. But
as tragic as it is, we
can all imagine, sadly,
that it might end even
more tragically if set
in the present.
STAN
Continued from B4
Restaurant inspections
Medium Shrimp.......................$8.99/lb
Certified Sustainable
Icelandic Cod Fillet.................$9.99/lb
B5
Certification records as
required. Scoops and
utensils are being stored
in a container of water and
sanitizer. No sign or poster
posted at the handwash
sink in mobile unit to
remind food employees to
wash their hands.
Cafe Capriccio, 318
Honeysuckle Drive,
Marietta, July 28. TCS
foods prepared or
opened by the facility
are not date-marked
with a prep/open date or
discard date. The person
in charge of this facility
is not performing the
duties required by the
PA Food Code to actively
manage food safety.
Food employee observed
donning single-use gloves
without a prior hand wash.
Food employees observed
in pizza-making area,
not wearing proper hair
restraints, such as nets
or hats. A food employee
prepared sandwiches
a ready-to-eat food
with bare hands. Bulk
food ingredient storage
containers are not labeled
with the common name of
the food. Observed food
stored on the floor in the
walk-in cooler and freezer,
rather than 6 inches off
of the floor as required.
Torn rubber door gaskets
observed on the pizza
bain-marie. Ice machine
deflector plate has black
mold-type residue present.
Soda gun in the bar area
has a black mold-type
residue present. Walkin condensing unit fan
guards have static dust
accumulation. Rear screen
door is not tight fitting
to prevent the entry of
insects or rodents.
Harveys Main St. Bar-B-Q,
304 E. Main St., Mount
Joy , opening, July 28. No
violations.
Lake In Wood Snack Bar,
576 Yellow Hill Road,
Narvon, July 29. Food
employee observed
preparing food while
wearing a watch. Observed
wet wiping cloths not
being stored in sanitizer
solution. Hot dogs and
ham slices in bain-marie
were held at 56 F and 49
F respectively rather than
41 F or below as required.
Discarded In Gnome Cafe,
bathroom faucets lack a
mixing valve. Each spigot
has to be held down in
order to wash hands. In
mens room, the flow
of water is less than 15
seconds. Repeat violation.
B6
MOVIES IN REVIEW
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
ASSOCIATED PRESS
This photo provided by Universal Pictures shows, from left, Aldis Hodge as MC Ren, Neil Brown Jr. as DJ Yella, Jason Mitchell as Eazy-E, OShea Jackson Jr. as Ice Cube and Corey
Hawkins as Dr. Dre in Straight Outta Compton.
RICHARD ROEPER
CHICAGO SUN-TIMES
Avengers
The Gift
Home
Inside Out
Jurassic World
Max
Minions
Mission Impossible 5
Mr. Holmes
Paper Towns
Pixels
San Andreas
Southpaw
Spy
Ted 2
Terminator Genisys
Trainwreck
Vacation
MOVIE NEWS
DVD RELEASES
(Coming on Tuesday)
n The Riot Club
(R): In the elite
realm of Oxford
University, no society
is more exclusive
than The Riot Club,
the ultra-selective
fraternity for Britains
most privileged
sons. When hes recruited to join, down-to-earth first-year student
Miles (Max Irons) is amused at first, but then things get ugly when a
hedonistic night of drinking and drugs gets out of control, giving Miles
a taste of upper-crust entitlement.
n TV series: Most of the other releases this week are seasons from TV
series, including: Mike & Molly, season 5; Greys Anatomy, season
11; Blacklist, season 2; NCIS: New Orleans, season 1; NCIS: Los
Angeles, season 6, and just plain old NCIS, season 12.
A new mockumentary
Christopher Guest,
the king of mockumentaries, will release his next film,
tentatively titled
Mascot, on Netflix.
No details about
the cast or a release date
have been announced.
The satirical comedy explores the world of mascots
those big-headed, furry mascots in a competitive setting
where things can get ugly.
Guests last film was way back
in 2006. For Your Consideration was a satirical look at
the Oscar race. Hes also done
fake documentaries about the
Best-seller to be filmed
Erik Larsons best-selling
true crime book, Devil in the
White City, looks like it is finally coming to the big screen.
Paramount Pictures just
closed a deal to acquire the
rights to the book after an auction in which five studios were
bidding.
Leonardo DiCaprio will play
serial killer Dr. H.H. Holmes,
who is alleged to have killed
a number of people around
the time of the 1893 Worlds
Fair in Chicago, including a
number of young women who
stayed in his boarding house.
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
ASK A PEDIATRICIAN
n Hydration is key.
Some US rowers
fall ill at 2016
Olympics test event
ASSOCIATED PRESS
RIO DE JANEIRO
Thirteen rowers on the
40-member U.S. team
came down with stomach illness at the World
Junior Rowing Championships a trial run for
next summers Olympics
and the team doctor
said she suspected it was
due to pollution in the
lake where the competition took place.
The event took place
amid rising concerns
about the water quality
at venues for the Rio de
Janeiro Olympics, now
less than a year away.
The Americans were
by far the hardest hit at
the regatta that concluded last weekend, with
reports of vomiting and
diarrhea. Other teams
in the competition reported some illnesses,
according to World Rowing, the sports governing body, but those were
about as expected at an
event that featured more
than 500 young rowers.
On July 30, The Associated Press published
an independent analysis of water quality that
Cutting: An act to
be taken seriously
ATHLETE HEALTH
STEPHEN WADE
B7
Question: I am 14
years old. My best friend
showed me yesterday
how she cuts herself
on her arms when she
gets mad. She told me I
should not tell anybody.
I want to keep her secret,
but could this be dangerous?
Answer: Cutting is
dangerous, and you
should alert a trusted
adult to your friends
behavior as soon as possible. Everybody wants
to be trustworthy with
secrets, but secrets like
this one need attention
and, in the long run, it
will be clear that you did
the right thing.
Cutting is the act of
self-injury inflicted with
a razor blade or knife (or
anything sharp) in an effort to diminish strong
emotional feelings. It is
not typically a suicide attempt, although it should
still be taken very seriously. Cutting is a sign
that a person feels overwhelmed in their situation. The emotions can
be sadness, anger, frustration or hopelessness.
Teens who cut describe
their motives as wanting
to feel something different than despair, or they
desire a way to feel alive
and consequential.
In addition to being
a clear sign that a child
needs help, cutting also
needs intervention because of potential consequences. This type
of emotional release
may become addictive
and can replace healthy
THIS SERIES
n The second in a series
featuring problems,
issues, ideas and
solutions pertaining to
the emotional health
of our children in
preparation for the
start of the school year.
FUTURE
PHOTOGRAPHERS
Where to begin?
Parents should start
by being there physically and emotionally.
Talk to your child
This might seem scary,
but remember: Regardless of his or her reaction, your child does
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B8
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Food
DR. JOSEPH McPHEE
THE SURGEONS KITCHEN
Kebabs easy,
satisfying
grilled dish
Staying on the summer barbecue theme, this week I have a nice
pork loin shish kebab recipe.
Kebabs, a method of skewering
meat and cooking directly over
open flames, originated in the
Eastern Mediterranean thousands of years ago.
It is used in many Middle
Eastern, Mediterranean and East
Asian dishes.
I find it one of the easiest and
most satisfying ways to come up
with a great grilled dish without a
lot of hassle and mess.
The basic idea is to find whatever variety of meat you want,
give it a little spice through rubs
or sauces, pick a variety of matching vegetables, skewer them and
throw it all on the grill. Can't get
any simpler than that.
The traditional meat is lamb, but
chicken, beef and pork are also
very popular and easier to find at
local supermarkets.
Shish Kebabs
n 1 (12- to 16-ounce) pork tenderloin,
This Chili Lime Chicken gets its flavor from a wet rub and Chipotle Lime Crema.
Notes
Boneless, skin-on chicken is a great
option for grilling, if available. Even
if you prefer not to eat the skin, it will
help the chicken retain moisture while
cooking. Boneless, skinless breasts
are a fine option, too. For an evenly
cooked, juicy chicken, you may wish to
pound the breasts so they are roughly a
-inch thick throughout.
If you aren't familiar with smoked
FOOD
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
B9
FOOD MEDIA
The three finalists on the Food Network competition show The Next Food Network Star are, from left, Dom Tesoriero, who runs a
food truck in Staten Island, New York; Eddie Jackson, a former pro football player; and Jay Ducote of Baton Rouge, Louisiana.
Central Market.
n 2 tablespoons freshly
n 1 teaspoon honey
n 1 garlic clove, minced
n teaspoon kosher salt
Blend all ingredients in
a jar with an immersion
blender or using a regular
blender or food processor.
Scrape down the sides,
as needed, blending until
the mixture is smooth. (If
you'd like to cut this recipe
in half, I recommend not
using a regular blender or
food processor because
the smaller portion is
almost not enough to
catch in the blending
mechanism and fully
blend. As an option, mince
the garlic and chipotle
by hand. Wear rubber
gloves or wash your hands
Notes
The lime will be easier
to zest when cold, but
will be easier to juice
at room temperature.
Once zested, you can
warm the lime in the
microwave for 20
seconds if you have
trouble squeezing a full
2 tablespoons from the
cold lime.
I have used chipotle chili powder as a
quick substitute for the
chipotle pepper in adobo
sauce. In this case, I rec-
13 Ears $2.50
Tomatoes
Plum Tomatoes - $10.00
30 lb. basket
Peppers - 3/$1.00
Eggplant - 2/$1.00
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LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Travel
DESTINATION
Artist Ernest Zacharevics series of murals reflects the cultural amalgam unique to this corner of Southeast Asia
TRACEY TEO
LNP CORRESPONDENT
WHERE TO STAY
RECREATION
A walk on Broadway
A look at some
top walking
tours in New
York City
Inside
Broadway
Tour guide
Brigid Kegel
tells visitors
about the
history of
Shubert
Alley near
Times
Square in
New York.
Her tour
is one of a
handful that
offer theater
lovers a
lively look at
the history
of Broadway
and Times
Square.
MARK KENNEDY
AP DRAMA WRITER
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Broadway up close
Highlights: Ducking inside the
massive AMC Empire 25 movie complex on 42nd Street to find a hiding
former Broadway theater inside; sto-
TRANSPORTATION
TRAVEL
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Walk
B11
Online: walksofnewyork.com/new-yorktours
Disney on
broadway:
Behind the
Magic
Highlights: Access
to Disney Theatrical props at the New
Amsterdam Theatre,
including a chance to
wear the coat from
Mary Poppins; get
into Ariels seashell tub
from The Little Mermaid; handle some
carbon graphite masks
from The Lion King;
and examine a fancy
shoe from Beauty and
the Beast (theres a
run-of-the-mill Reebok
high-top underneath).
Program: 2 hours, 30
minutes.
Cost: $72 per adult;
children (3-11) $65
Days: Friday, Saturday and Sunday mornings.
Selling point: The
only tour to actually get
you inside a Broadway
theater and to handle
some real props.
Accommodates: Up to
25 people.
Visual aid: Laminated photos.
Audio: Each person
gets a headset to hear
the guide talk, as well
as listen to snippets of
songs.
Meeting point: Duffy
Square at 46th and
Broadway by the George
M. Cohan statue.
Why choose them:
There are a lot of
great guides in New
York and a lot of them
really know their stuff
and were lucky to have
them. But nowadays
the demand is more
and more for a little bit
more immersive experience and going a little
bit deeper, Stephen
Oddo, co-founder of
parent company Walks
of New York. You can
find information pretty
easily on your own. To
be able to go into a theater, thats a whole different story.
Inside Broadway
Tours
Highlights: Gossip
on actress Ethel Barrymore (she hated clutter
and, weirdly, applause);
visiting the Hotel Edison to see the place
where a scene from
The Godfather was
filmed; learning about
theater superstitions
(break a leg and not
saying Macbeth out
loud).
Program: 1 hour, 45
minutes
Cost: Adults $35; children 12 and under, free
Days: Every day at 4
p.m.
Selling point: Cheerful,
knowledgeable
guides, all working actors and theater fans.
Accommodates: Up
to 20 people.
Visual aid: Laminated photos.
Audio: Guides wear
a small speaker around
their neck.
Meeting point: Duffy
Square at 46th and
Broadway by the George
M. Cohan statue.
Why choose them:
Its the authentic, immersive nature of our
tour, says Andrew
Luan, the founder. Its
not that hard to start a
tour company. I think
what we have is a process to source, manage
and maintain quality. I
think thats our differentiator.
Online: insidebroadwaytours.com
Walkin
Broadway
Highlights: The story of the night Bill and
Hillary Clinton went
to Chicago; honoring Firehouse Engine
54, which lost many on
9/11; listening to Judy
Garland sing Plays the
Palace outside the Palace Theatre; the story
of 20-year-old Julie
Andrews fitful start in
My Fair Lady; finding out why there are so
many Irish pubs near
Times Square; learning
how the TKTS booth
works and getting a list
of tips on finding discounted theater tickets;
listening to hits written
in the Brill Building
outside the Brill Building.
Program: 90 minutes.
Cost: Adults $30,
Children (6-12) $20.
Days: Every day at 9:30
a.m., 11:30 a.m. and 2 p.m.
Selling point: Guides
are working actors.
Treats the tour like a
show itself, complete
with songs, impromptu
dancing and recorded
stories from Broadway
royalty.
Accommodates: Up
to 26 people.
Visual aid: None.
Audio: Each person
gets a headset to hear an
impressive collection
of show tunes and snippets of interviews with
such important figures
as Chita Rivera, Hal
Prince and Alan Menken, together with tales
from
knowledgeable
guides.
Meeting point: The
Actors Chapel (239
West 49th St., between
Broadway and Eighth
Avenue)
Why choose them:
Hearing the music of
the musicals while you
do it brings it to life, says
co-founder Don Frantz,
a Broadway producer.
People walk away with
a sense of the old, the
current and as far as
the young tour guide
the up-and-coming.
Online: walkinbroadway.com
Follow us on Facebook at
LancasterOnline
A shrine at the
Pinang Peranakan Mansion in George
Town, Penang,
Malaysia.
WESLEY K.H. TEO
Scene
architecture, remnants
of the citys colonial
past that Zacharevic
chose
Continued
as his
from
canvas.
B10
I had a carefully
planned itinerary of historic sites, but Zacharevics whimsical, sliceof-life street art proved
to be a distraction, albeit a welcome one, that
made me smile at practically every corner.
On Armenian Street,
I snapped a few photos
of Cultural Girls, a
sweet, cartoonish depiction of a trio of children
that represents each of
Malaysias three main
races: Malay, Indian and
Chinese.
Batik painting
Map in hand, I was trying to get back on track
with my original plan
when a woman emerged
from a doorway to tell
me about the newly
opened Batik Painting
Museum Penang. I was
right there. How could I
not go inside?
Batik is an age-old
method of producing
intricate designs on textiles by using wax resistant dyes, something I
first became acquainted
with in Indonesia.
The museum chronicles the brief history of
batik painting, a process
created by the late Chinese-born Penang artist
Chuah Thean Teng in
the 1950s. He adapted
the ancient craft of batik for use in fine art,
and the museum showcases how batik paint-
HISTORIC WRIGHTSVILLE
n Saturday, Oct. 24: Historic Frederick, Md. tour
Uber
Continued from B10
necessarily regulated by
government taxi licensing authorities.
Both Uber and competitor Lyft insure their
drivers during paid rides
and also require the
drivers to carry personal
auto insurance that covers them the rest of the
time.
Ubers pricing compared with traditional
cabs can vary. Its UberX
service, often drivers in
www.seacrestinn.com
WHERE TO EAT
n Penang is known for
Mansion
I finally made it to one
of the destinations on
my itinerary, the Pinang
Peranakan
Mansion.
Here, I was introduced
to the legacy of an elite,
prosperous group of acculturated Chinese who
adopted local Malay and
British customs while
retaining core Chinese
values, forming their
own unique culture that
flourished through the
mid-20th century.
Peranakan, a Malay
word meaning locally
born, is a term for the
hybrid ethnic group
that was spawned during the colonial era
when Chinese maritime
traders
intermarried
with local women. The
descendants of these
unions were also called
Babas (men) and Nyonyas (women).
This restored residence once owned by a
19th-century Chinese
tin mining baron is a
melding of Asian and
EXCHANGE RATES
These foreign exchange selling rates, as of the close of
business Aug. 13, 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. $
0.793
1.26
0.8231
1.21
1.0927
0.92
0.1609
6.22
Euro (EUR)
1.1922
0.84
1.6769
0.60
0.008592
116.39
0.06634
15.07
0.1323
7.56
0.7106
1.41
1.6769
0.60
Swedish Kroner(SEK)
0.1269
7.88
B12
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Books
N.Y. Times best-sellers
Fiction hardbacks
1. 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.
2. The Girl on the Train, by Paula Hawkins.
(Riverhead) A psychological thriller set in the
environs of London.
3. 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; the winner of the 2015 Pulitzer Prize.
4. Circling the Sun, by Paula McLain. (Ballantine)
A novel by the author of The Paris Wife about
Beryl Markham: raised in Kenya, a horse trainer and
aviatrix and the lover of Denys Finch Hatton.
5. Badlands, by C.J. Box. (Minotaur) Detective
Cassie Dewell must deal with a drug-gang war in a
North Dakota oil boomtown, where a paperboy has
accidentally taken possession of a shipment.
6. The English Spy, by Daniel Silva. (Harper) Gabriel
Allon, an art restorer and occasional spy for the
Israeli secret service, helps British intelligence track
down the killer of a beautiful former member of the
royal family.
7. Code of Conduct, by Brad Thor. (Emily Bestler/
Atria) In Thors 15th thriller, the counterterrorism
operative Scot Harvath undertakes a deadly
assignment set in motion by a leaked video.
8. 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.
9. Armada, by Ernest Cline. (Crown) A teenage
gamer helps save the Earth from an alien invasion.
10. Luckiest Girl Alive, by Jessica Knoll. (Simon
& Schuster) The life of a successful New York
magazine writer is shaken when secrets from her
past are revealed.
11. The Rumor, by Elin Hilderbrand. (Little, Brown)
Two friends on Nantucket must deal with damaging
gossip about themselves and their husbands.
12. Speaking in Bones, by Kathy Reichs. (Bantam)
The forensic anthropologist Temperance Brennan
becomes involved in an investigation with an
amateur websleuth.
13. The Little Paris Bookshop, by Nina George.
(Crown) A bookseller embarks on a journey in
pursuit of his own happiness.
14. The Bourbon Kings, by J.R. Ward. (NAL) Secrets
and scandals in a wealthy Southern family; the first
novel in a new series.
15. Finders Keepers, by Stephen King. (Scribner) A
deranged readers infatuation with a Salingeresque
novelist has dangerous consequences in a sequel to
Mr. Mercedes.
16. Truth or Die, by James Patterson and Howard
Roughan. (Little, Brown) An attorney discovers a
shocking secret.
Nonfiction hardbacks
1. 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.
2. The Wright Brothers, by David McCullough.
(Simon & Schuster) The story of the bicycle
mechanics from Ohio who ushered in the age of
flight.
3. Modern Romance, by Aziz Ansari with Eric
Klinenberg. (Penguin Press) The comedian enlists a
sociologist to help him understand todays dating
scene.
4. A Full Life, by Jimmy Carter. (Simon & Schuster)
At 90, the 39th president (and Nobel Prize winner)
reflects on his private and public life.
FICTION
CATHY MOLITORIS
LNP CORRESPONDENT
Second career
Now retired, he lives in Harrisburg and has discovered a
second career as a fiction writer.
His first book, A Choice of
Darkness, was released in 2013.
Although the self-published
Right to Bear Arms is the second in the Major Crimes Task
Force series, Kurtz says readers
can enjoy the books independently of each other.
You definitely dont have to
have read the first one to enjoy
this book, he explains, but
readers have told me they really enjoy seeing the character
development of the protagonists in the first book going into
the second book. Its the same
task force in both books, but the
antagonist is different in each
book.
Jon D. Kurtz,
a former
deputy
commissioner for the
Pennsylvania
State Police,
is the author
of Right to
Bear Arms,
his second
novel.
Started journal
When he first graduated from
the police academy in the mid1980s, he started a journal of
all the odd things that happened around the police department, thinking he might want to
write a nonfiction book about it
someday.
Then life just got too busy and
I didnt have the time to be writing things down all the time, he
says. I only kept the journal for
about six months and sometime
over the past years, I lost it.
Still, he didnt give up on his
dream of becoming a published
writer and after his retirement he
found he had the time to try his
hand at fiction.
It was harder than he expected,
he admits, figuring out everything
from how to format his book for
publication through Amazons
Kindle Direct program, to reacquainting himself with the basics
of proper grammar.
You realize how little you
know about the written English
language once you start writing a
book, he laughs. Like, whats a
gerund and a participle? I needed to re-educate myself on a lot
of things.
For help, he turned to Jeanne
Yaggi, a retired teacher-turnededitor from the Williamsport
area.
DETAILS
n Right to Bear Arms
(Major Crimes Task Froce
Volume 2)
n By Jon D. Kurtz
n CreateSpace
Independent Publishing
Platform
n 416 pages; $9.99
(paperback), $2.99 (Kindle)
Saw promise
Yaggi says she saw the promise in
Kurtzs writing from the start.
From the beginning of the novel,
the characters, as well as the suspense,
drew me into the story, she says.
Clearly, Mr. Kurtz draws from his ex-
CHECK IT OUT!
Is your child soon starting school? Find these reassuring picture books about beginning school, in the
Childrens Room at the Duke Street Library.
1. Monsters Love School by Mike
Austin. Nervous monsters attending
school for the first time learn new
things, make friends, and sample Chef
Octis special School Gruel.
2. First Day Jitters by Julie
Danneberg. Sarah is afraid to start at
a new school, but both she and the
reader are in for a surprise when she
gets to her class.
3. The Pout-Pout Fish Goes to School
by Deborah Diesen. Mr. Fish recalls
how, on his very first day of school, he
anxiously went to one classroom after
wonderful time.
6. If You Ever Want to Bring an
Alligator to School, Dont! by Elise
Parsley. A child provides insights,
based on personal experience, into
everything that can go wrong if one
brings an alligator to school for showand-tell.
7. The Kissing Hand by Audrey Penn.
When Chester the raccoon is reluctant
to go to kindergarten for the first
time, his mother teaches him a secret
way to carry her love with him.
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
PREVIEW
A collaboration in
mischief, and more
BOOKS/LOCAL HISTORY
B13
Send
photos and
information
to: Valerie
Marschka,
LNP, P.O.
Box 1328,
Lancaster, PA
17608-1328,
or by email to
vmarschka@
LNPnews.com.
FLASHBACK LANCASTER
Kurtz
touch of romance work together with the characters and fast-paced plot to create an engaging
novel, she says.
Kurtz says he intentionally focused on character development in his books, which he notes
have received steady, positive feedback on Amazon.
I believe in developing characters in such a
way that you feel at home with them, he says.
Youre interested in what happens to them and
you want to read more about them. Thats my
goal with my books.
B14
LOCAL
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
IN THE SPOTLIGHT
DNEPHIN@LNPNEWS.COM
August Sale
of commuting by public
transportation.
My first job: Through
a program for disadvantaged kids, I worked on
the janitorial staff at my
high school one summer,
scraping gum off the bottom of desks and cleaning ink. Janitors saw
me working hard and I
got promoted to stripping, buffing and waxing
floors. That led to my being a substitute janitor
throughout high school.
Growing up, I wanted
to be: A writer, both of
books and comic books. I
used to write little short
stories and little comic
books. And my only fan
was my grandmother.
Words that best describe: Restless. I dont
like to sit still. I like to be
busy. Im an idea guy. Im
a creative guy.
My unfulfilled ambitions: To go to New
York City to audition for
the theater I still have
the headshot I got when
I was 18 and was going to
do that; and to get a novel published that one
still has a shot.
Someone I admire:
Dr. Martin Luther King
Jr.
The person Id most
like to have dinner
with: President Obama
just to hear him talk
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LOCAL
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B15
family.
He is available for
adoption at the Lancaster County SPCA shelter,
848 S. Prince St.
Recently, the LCSPCA
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LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Celebrations
Anniversaries
Denlinger
50th
Dr. J. Kenneth and Carole Gibson Denlinger,
Lititz, marked their 50th
wedding anniversary at a
celebration their daughters hosted recently at
Bent Creek Country
Club. They are also planning a trip.
They were married
July 10, 1965, at Calvary
Independent Church.
He is a retired anesthesiologist, and she
is a homemaker. They
are members of Westminster
Presbyterian
Church.
Their children are
Marriage licenses
The following have applied
for marriage licenses
in Lancaster County
Courthouse:
CR Lapps
Catering for All Your Events! Weddings,
Picnics, Party Trays, Etc.
101 Fite Way Quarryville
717.786.1768
Sensenig 50th
Eby 71st
Melvin and Mary Feirick Eby, Leola, celebrated their 71st wedding anniversary by going to the
Squeeze Hot Dog Stand
in
Northumberland.
They were married Aug.
10, 1944, in Leola.
He retired from RCA
and Horizon Industries;
she is a homemaker.
They are members of
Zion Lutheran Church,
Leola.
They have two children, Terry Eby and
Linda Morris; three
Betty J. Lefever.
Jeremy Troy Houck, 21,
of 29 Woodcrest Road,
Ephrata, son of Clifton T.
and Cheryl A. Houck, and
Marley Anne Horst, 20,
of 35 Woodcrest Road,
Ephrata, daughter of
Calvin T. and Jennifer L.
Horst.
Matthew John Noel, 24, of
2440 Cypress Drive, son
of John G. and Katherine
J. Noel, and Aubrey Ann
Detzel, 23, 110 Woodcrest
Drive, daughter of
Stephen and Jennifer L.
Detzel.
Felipe A. Castaneda, of
1127 New Holland Ave., son
of Norbey Castaneda and
Alba Tapias, and Megan
Elizabeth Chappell, of
2127 Landis Valley Road,
daughter of Eugene C. and
Linda L. Chappell.
Wilbur Chocolate
Chocolate filled favor boxes and
wedding themed chocolate molds
48 N. Broad Street Lititz
717.626.3249
Ream Jewelers
Engaging Lancaster Since 1935
58 N. Queen Street Lancaster
Acorn Farms
More than your average wedding
banquet hall, Acorn Farms strives to
build lasting relationships with our
clients and be there for all special
occasions including showers,
birthdays, and anniversaries.
We even offer self-service catering
and off-site catering.
3141 Mt Joy-Manheim Rd
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
grandchildren, Michael
and Mark Eby and Susan
Ulsh; and three greatgrandchildren,
Dylan
and Phoenix Eby and
Abby Ulsh.
Georgia, daughter of
Chadd P. and Virgina I.
Hilty.
Ryan Troy Bluntschly,
38, of 231 Lincoln Ave.,
Ephrata, son of the late
George P. Bluntschly
and the late Phyliss E.
Bluntschly, and Melissa
Nicole Wiker, 29, same
address, daughter of
Stephen T. and Karen L.
Wiker.
Allen P. Rudolph, 40, of
142 Front St., Akron, son
of William J. and Rhonda
A. Rudolph, and Jeana
Colleen Murphy, 33, same
address, daughter of
Joseph E. and Diane C.
Murphy.
Nicolas John Fillgrove,
23, of 1690 State St., East
Petersburg, son of Kevin L.
and Anna M. Fillgrove, and
Lora Eden Carr, 21, of 405
Hamilton Blvd., Morrisville,
daughter of Robert D. and
Maxine Carr.
Ryan Jeffrey Miller, 23,
of 214 E. Main St., Leola,
son of Jeffrey L. and Karen
L. Miller, and Kristen Joy
Lichty, 23, same address,
daughter of Milton R. and
Janet L. Lichty.
Rental World
All Your Needs For Your Special Day
2662 Columbia Ave. Lancaster
717.397.3663
www.rentalworldpa.com
Lancaster School
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Pamper Your Bridal Party
50 Ranck Ave. Lancaster
717.299.0200
Elite Coach
Nostalgic 20 Passenger Trolley &
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800.722.6206
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For more information or to advertise on this page, please contact 717.291.8800 or email advertising@LNPnews.com
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
B17
Celebrations
Engagements
HarnerDetwiler
Amanda Detwiler and
Colin Harner became
engaged July 11, 2014,
after he proposed at Rehoboth Beach, Delaware.
She is the daughter
of Irene and Mark Detwiler, York. A graduate
of Eastern York High
School in 2008 and Millersville University in
2012, she is employed
by Eastern York School
District as a first-grade
teacher.
He is the son of Lane
and Sharon Harner,
Kemp-Baer
HendrixLouro
Angela Marie Louro
and Christopher Robert
Hendrix have become
engaged.
She is the daughter of
Gina and Carlos Louro,
Lancaster. A graduate
of Manheim Township
High School in 2005 and
Temple Universitys Fox
School of Business in
2009, she is employed
by General Building
Contractors Association
as education and professional development
manager.
He is the son of Gloria
and Art Hendrix, York.
Anniversaries
PierreGreenwald
Young 50th
Ibach 55th
Glenn and Mary Rohrback Ibach, Mountville,
celebrated their 55th
wedding
anniversary
during a family vacation
in Ocean City, Maryland.
They were married July
31, 1960, in Lancaster.
He retired from Lancaster Malleable Castings Co.; she retired
from Turkey Hill Dairy.
They are members of
Trinity Reformed United Church of Christ,
Mountville
They have a daughter,
5 Generations
Baby Sawyer Reese
Hill with Father Tyler
Hill, GrandmotherShelby
Noll, Great Grandfather
Sheridan Moritz and
GreatGreatGrandmother
Colleen Moritz.
electrical engineering
from Arizona State University and is employed
by Sandia National Laboratories, Albuquerque,
as a senior member of
technical staff for the
Power Systems Research
Group.
They plan to marry in
May 2016.
Mast-Sipes
CELEBRATIONS
GUIDELINES
LNP publishes
wedding, engagement
and anniversary
announcements as a free
public service on Sundays.
Submit a wedding,
engagement or
anniversary
List-Shank
5 Generations
James and Linda Eshelman Young, Lancaster, are celebrating
their 50th wedding anniversary with a trip to
Cape May, New Jersey.
They were married July
10, 1965, at First Presbyterian Church of Lancaster, where they are
members.
They have three children: Steve, dating Gale
Stump, Lancaster; Sue,
married to Chip Mauney,
Columbia, South Caro-
Millersville University.
He is employed by Costco Wholesale.
He proposed to his
high school sweetheart
among the sand and
seashells on Shell Island, while on a family
vacation to Fripp Island,
South Carolina.
They plan to marry in
June 2016.
WeigardWanner
SherkBedenbaugh
Jaclyn Layne Bedenbaugh and Jacob Giovanni Sherk have become
engaged.
She is the daughter of
Carl Bedenbaugh, Trinity, North Carolina, and
David and Lisa Clemens,
Elizabethtown. A 2010
graduate of Elizabethtown Area High School,
she is employed by Trilogy Group Benefits.
He is the son of Jacob
and Laura Sherk, Elizabethtown, and Michael
and Donna Torner,
ForsheyBingman
n Online:
bit.ly/LNPanniversaries
bit.ly/LNPengagements
bit.ly/LNPweddings
n By fax:
399-6507
n By mail:
Celebrations Dept.
LNP Media Group, Inc.
P.O. Box 1328
Lancaster, PA 17608
n Email:
celebrations@LNPnews.com
n Phone:
399-6607
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30% OFF
LancasterOnline
for breaking news
LancSports.com
B18
Cutting
Continued from B7
can see that you are leading the way back to emotional health.
Check in frequently
Even after things are
better, check back on
your child and ask how
he or she is doing emotionally. Ask open-ended
questions that require
your child to think
about feelings and actions. Choose your time
carefully for these talks,
when you can ensure
that there is appropriate privacy and when
things are calm. Car
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Water
Rio.
I dont know if it was
the water bottles in the
boats, or hygiene precautions that some athletes
are really good about
and others werent, said
team physician Dr. Kathryn Ackerman.
Francia said the U.S.
team had taken precautions about competing
in the polluted lake beneath Rios picturesque
Christ the Redeemer
Continued from B7
Paralympic
water
venues, including the
Rodrigo de Freitas Lagoon, where the rowing competition took
place.
U.S. coach Susan
Francia, a two-time
Olympic gold-medal
rower, said in an interview with the AP that
13 athletes and four
staff members including herself suffered various gastrointestinal symptoms
during the teams two
weeks of training in
PLAY
Saturday:
Faith &
Values
Complete your entry form every day. Drop off your contest
form by the following Wednesday at any participating advertiser
and youll have a chance to win the $500 weekly prize.
Contest runs through August 29, 2015, so keep playing for your
chance to WIN! Questions about the contest, call 291-8800.
Sluggers Pizza
701 N Queen St, Lancaster
717-295-1500
Miller Optical
845 Columbia Ave, Lancaster
717-393-2020
222 Willow Valley Lakes Dr #1100
Willow Street 717-464-5695
Taj Mahal
2080 Bennet Avenue, Lancaster
717-295-1434
Lighting Gallery
1607 Manheim Pike, Lancaster
717-560-3726
Mr. Stickys
501 Greenfield Rd, Lancaster
717-413-9229
Village Haus
2 N Market St, Reinholds
717-484-5100
Wayback Burgers
343 Comet Dr, Millersville
717-584-6284
Mecks Produce
1955 Beaver Valley Pike, Strasburg
717-786-4713
Sakura
31 N Queen Street, Lancaster
717-509-2838
Scoops Ice Cream & Grille
312 Primrose Ln, Mountville
717-285-2055
MARIE JONES
OF EAST PETERSBURG
WEEK #7 WINNER
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DAY
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Tuesday
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Sports
n SEND STORY TIPS & INFO TO: CHRIS OTTO, 291-8662, COTTO@LNPNEWS.COM
Busch league
Kyle Busch crashes in Sprint Cup
practice, comes back to win
Truck Series race
k Page C5
Quarterback is battling for a roster spot, not a starting job ... but if he plays well today ...
ON THE AIR
BOB FORD
PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER
TEBOW, page C4
MIKE GROSS
PENN STATE FOOTBALL
Secondary is
first glimpse at
Franklins true
vision for PSU
obin Anderson stretches for a shot Saturday during her semifinal victory against top-seeded An-Sophie Mestach at the Koser
Jewelers Tennis Challenge at the Hempfield Rec Center. Anderson will face Naomi Broady in todays championship match.
For more coverage, see Page C3.
MINOR-LEAGUE BASEBALL
PGA CHAMPIONSHIP
Warwick grad
Zach Shank
has had a
rollercoaster
season on the
farm for Seattle
KEVIN FREEMAN
KFREEMAN@LNPNEWS.COM
SHANK, page C9
SHEBOYGAN, Wis.
With six straight 3s
on his card, Jason Day
looked determined as
ever Saturday to finally
get that first major. He
had a 6-under 66 and
built a two-shot lead
in the PGA Championship, the third straight
major he has at least a
share of the lead going
into the final round.
One look at the leaderboard at the name
right behind him
Jordan Spieth made
it clear it wont be easy.
Spieth was five shots
behind and had two
holes to play when
he capped off a stunning charge along the
LEADERS
Third Round
n Jason Day
68-67-66201............... -15
n Jordan Spieth
71-67-65203................ -13
n Branden Grace
71-69-64204............... -12
n Justin Rose
69-67-68204.............. -12
n Martin Kaymer
70-70-65205.............. -11
n Tony Finau
71-66-69206............... -10
n Matt Jones
68-65-73206............... -10
GROSS, page C2
C2
SPORTS
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
SPORTS ON TV
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GYMNASTICS
P&G Championships: Mens final
Jason Day reacts to his birdie on the 17th hole during the third round of the PGA Championship on Saturday at
Whistling Straits in Haven, Wisconsin.
MOTOR SPORTS
FIM Moto: Czech Grand Prix
NASCAR Sprint Cup: Pure Michigan 400
NFL PRESEASON
Indianapolis at Philadelphia
SOCCER
English Premier League:
Arsenal at Crystal Palace
Bundesliga:
Eintracht Frankfurt at Wolfsburg
English Premier League:
Chelsea at Manchester City
Womens International Friendly:
Costa Rica vs. United States
MLS: Orlando City SC at Seattle FC
MLS: Chicago at Philadelphia
TENNIS
WNBA
Indiana at Phoenix
LPGA
Teen Henderson
opens 5-shot lead
PORTLAND, Ore. (AP)
Brooke Henderson
gave herself some breathing room in her bid for a
breakthrough victory.
The 17-year-old Canadian opened a five-stroke
lead Saturday in the
Cambia Portland Classic,
shooting a 7-under 65 at
Columbia Edgewater.
Shes trying to join Lydia Ko and Lexi Thompson as the only players to
win an LPGA Tour title
before turning 18.
Henderson made seven birdies in her bogeyfree round. Henderson,
who turns 18 in September, tied the tournament
coaches comfortable
moving senior Jordan
Lucas from corner to
strong safety. The other
safety will be Marcus Allen, who started late last
year as a true freshman.
Behind the starters are
corners Daquan Worley, John Reid, Amani
Oruwariye and Garrett
Taylor, and safeties Troy
Apke and Malik Golden.
All these guys can play.
Many of them will play,
in nickel and dime packages and certainly on
special teams. Haley returned kickoffs last year.
He and Campbell were
excellent as gunners of
the punt return unit.
Their recruiting stories are a hodgepodge.
Campbell wasnt ranked
among the top 1,000
players in his highschool class. He had few
high-major offers and no
interest from Alabama
or Auburn despite growing up in their backyard,
Phoenix City, Alabama.
cellor/Troy Polamalu
mold, an attacking playmaker better at going
forward and disrupting
than at making plays
with the ball in the air.
Which is why he and
Lucas, the ex-corner
who should be a cover,
safety, make an intriguing combo.
(Allen) watches a lot
of Kam Chancellor film,
he sees himself a little
bit like that, that box
type safety whos very
good in the run game,
Shoop said.
Hes got to continue
to work on his ball skills.
When (Jim Haslett, the
former NFL linebacker
and coach now consulting at Penn State) first
came on the job, that was
somebody that caught
his attention and said if
this guy can improve his
ball skills a little bit, the
skys the limit for him.
He can take his game to
the next level.
And I do feel that way
SPORTS
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Local digest
GOLF
n After three days of competition, it all came down to
Naomi
Broady hits a
shot during
her semifinal victory
over Shelby
Rogers at the
Koser Jewelers $25,000
Tennis Challenge at the
Hempfield
Rec Center
on Saturday.
Broady will
face Robin
Anderson in
todays final.
PRO TENNIS
Robin Anderson and Naomi Broady pulled off upsets to advance to todays final
SPORTS STAFF
SPORTS@LNPNEWS.COM
defeating then-No. 92
Timea Babos in the first
round before falling to
Caroline Wozniacki in
the second round.
Anderson, 22, won the
Koser Jewelers Tennis
Challenge in 2011 and is
seeking her second title
in Landisville. She is a
UCLA graduate.
The championship action will get under way
at noon, starting with
the doubles champion-
BASKETBALL
MGROSS@LNPNEWS.COM
C3
letes.
D.J. Kennedy, a former St. Johns star who
did a stint with the
Cleveland Cavaliers,
scored 24 for Overseas
Elite. Point guard Errick McCollum, a fourtime NAIA All-American who once averaged
37 and scored 82 in a
game, in the Chinese
Pro League, added 15
points and seven assists.
OBrien served as assistant coach.
It was unbelievably
exciting and nervewracking, he said.
Honestly, I felt sick.
Turned out OK. The
team doled out the
money on a pro-rated basis according to
games played. OBrien
collected
$55,000.
Guys who played all
seven games made
about $100,000.
The Polish season
begins in September,
with training camp in a
couple weeks. OBriens
team is based in southeast Poland, not far from
major cities like Prague
and Vienna. Theres just
one game a week.
Should be plenty of
time to get on a train,
go out and see some
thing, do some things,
OBrien said. Should
be pretty cool.
PWOLF@LNPNEWS.COM
Manheim Township
High School has a new
head baseball coach.
Matt Kirchoff, a 1994
alumnus who played
shortstop for Township, said Friday that
his appointment was
approved at Thursdays
school board meeting.
He replaces his former
high school coach, Bill
Sassaman, who led the
Blue Streaks for 23 seasons.
Kirchoff, 39, was most
recently an assistant for
two years under Hempfields Jeremy Morrison. He said he has a lot
of respect for the Black
Knights program and
looks forward to competing head to head.
A married father of
two, including a 6-yearold son who attends
school in the district,
Kirchoff the son of
former Lancaster Catholic baseball coach Craig
Kirchoff said he was
happy and proud to be
hired at his alma mater.
He said his immediate
goal is to start building
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C4
SPORTS
DAN MASSEY
FANTASY SPORTS
After Brown,
question
marks at
wide receiver
Pittsburghs Antonio
Brown has quickly become the best receiver
in the entire NFL. After
he led the league with
129 catches for 1,698
yards in 2014, any fantasy owner who snags
Brown in the first round
will get not only a statstuffer but a consistent
performer. Brown had
at least five catches and
70 yards in every game
of 2014.
Aside from injury,
there is little risk to
Brown. It is difficult to
make that claim about
many other receivers
in the fantasy football
draft pool. For instance,
Demaryius Thomas,
who ranked second to
Brown in receptions
and yards in 2014, is
staking his success on
the ability of Peyton
Manning to get through
the season relatively
unscathed.
Following a strong
first half of the season, Thomas yardage
dropped almost 20
percent in the seasons
final eight games. Even
so, he had 57 receptions, 725 yards and five
scores during that span.
If Denver becomes a
more evenly-balanced
offense with C.J. Anderson in the backfield for
a full season, Thomas
could see a decrease in
output.
Realistically, though,
the real victim of a
balanced offense will
be Emmanuel Sanders.
The first-year Bronco
had more receptions
than Thomas through
eight games, yet he only
had 44 catches for an
albeit healthy 619 yards
in the second half of
the season. Sanders is a
high-end No. 3 fantasy
receiver in 2015.
Whereas the Bronco
receiving duo saw diminished production in
their final eight games,
Odell Beckham, Jr.
became the fifth player
since the league went to
a 16-game slate in 1978
to amass over 1,000
yards in the second half
of a season. A healthy
Victor Cruz will not
keep Beckham from
being a No. 1 fantasy
receiver.
Calvin Johnson had
spent the last few years
atop the wide receiver
rankings until decreasing numbers and
increasing injuries have
made the soon-to-be
30-year-old a secondor third-round fantasy
selection.
In 2014, Johnsons
Detroit teammate
Golden Tate ended
the season with better numbers, but he
still falls significantly
behind Johnson in the
fantasy rankings. In
the 12 games where
both Johnson and Tate
played the whole game,
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
NFL ROUNDUP
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Arizona Cardinals training camp assistant linebackers coach Jen Welter talks with line
judge Sarah Thomas prior to an NFL preseason game against the Kansas City Chiefs
on Saturday in Glendale, Arizona.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Philadelphia Eagles quarterback Tim Tebow signs autographs for fans after a recent
practice in Philadelphia.
an occasional Wildcat
option, someone to
force defensive coordinators to add one more
page to their weekly
preparation, but mania
would be out of the
question.
Things could go
another way as well, of
course.
Yes, its only the first
preseason game, and,
yes, the Colts will have
their defensive firstteamers on the field for
only a limited amount of
time, but still. What if?
What if Tebow is good?
During camp, he hasnt
thrown the ball as well
as Bradford, obviously,
but neither has anyone
else. Tebow worked on
his mechanics and his
motion before being
signed by the Eagles, and
it shows. He has delivered a pretty decent ball
during practices, and he
brings a physical ability
that none of the others
have, particularly if you
believe Kelly truly wants
to see whether readoption can work in the
NFL.
[In practice], I can
see Tim zone-reading
something, pulling it,
and then the whistle
AUTO RACING
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
NASCAR
BROOKLYN, Mich.
This was exactly the kind
of scenario Kyle Busch
needs to avoid.
Busch slid onto the
grass
after
coming
through a turn during
NASCAR Sprint Cup
practice Saturday, damaging his No. 18 Toyota.
He returned to the track
in a backup car, but he
now faces the prospect of
having to start from the
back today in the 400mile, 200-lap race at
Michigan International
Speedway.
I was just running
along, everything was
fine and I was actually
feeling pretty good about
it, Busch said. Just
started to get a little free
up off of (turn) four.
Busch has won four
times this year, but hes
only 30th in points because he missed 11 races
after breaking his right
leg and left foot in February. He needs to be in the
top 30 at the end of the
regular season to make
the Chase for the Sprint
Cup, and right now hes
six points ahead of 31stplace Cole Whitt.
In other words, he
needs to avoid major
mistakes during these
last four races of the
regular season. Busch
was sixth in qualifying
Friday, but going to the
backup car will force him
to start from the back in
todays race.
If top 20 is it, then
thats it, Busch said.
Michigan is not a place
that I had circled on the
list to go win at, so lets
just make it through (today) and carry on.
The day wasnt a total
loss for Busch. He won
the Truck Series race at
MIS shortly after wrecking his Cup car.
There was damage to
the front of Buschs car
after he went onto the
grass. The Joe Gibbs
Racing star has said in
the past he thinks theres
C5
XFINITY
TRUCK
ASSOCIATED PRESS
In this file photo, Kyle Busch climbs from his car after qualifying for the Pocono 400
earlier this season. Busch crashed during Saturdays practice for todays race at Michigan International Speedway.
ON THE AIR
NASCAR Sprint Cup
400
n Where: Michigan
International Speedway
n When: 2:30 p.m.
n TV: NBCSN
Rules package
Drivers are dealing
with a high-drag rules
package for this race,
and theres been a lot of
uncertainty over how
the cars will handle in
traffic. Now Busch will
Gibbs on a roll
Buschs crash was
a rare misstep lately
for Joe Gibbs Racing,
which swept the top
three spots in qualifying Friday. Matt
Kenseth took the pole,
followed by Denny
Hamlin and Carl Edwards.
Better weather
Kurt Busch won the
June race at Michigan,
but it was shortened
because of rain. The
forecast is for a sunny
day today with temperatures in the 80s.
Dillons problem
Busch wasnt the only
BROOKLYN, Mich.
Kyle Buschs eventful
day included a trip to
victory lane.
Busch passed Ryan
Blaney with four laps
remaining and won the
NASCAR Truck Series
race at Michigan International Speedway on
Saturday. The victory
came after he wrecked
his Sprint Cup car during a morning practice,
and then was penalized
on lap 27 of the Truck
race for speeding on pit
road.
After being sent to the
rear, he made his way all
the way back in his No.
51 Toyota and battled
with Blaney through the
final few laps.
These trucks tend
to put on a good show,
Busch said. You can
kind of draft back up on
guys and use the bottom,
use the top, kind of work
around a little bit.
Blaney took the lead
with six laps remaining
after a restart, but Busch
eventually moved back
in front for his 44th victory on the series. He
has won each of his two
Truck starts this year.
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Congratulations to Calvin Clarke Jr. of Lancaster the July FORE Golfers Contest Winner.
C6
SPORTS
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 Keystone State
Bombers 12U baseball
team fall and spring tryouts
will be held at the Keystone
State Baseball & Softball
Academy, 662 Ditz Drive,
Manheim, on Aug. 16 from
4 to 6 p.m., Aug. 23 from
6 to 8 p.m. and Sept. 11
from 7 to 9 p.m. Register
for tryouts at http://
keystonestatebombers.
com/, then click on the
online registration forms.
Players should report to
the facility no earlier than
15 minutes prior to tryouts.
The Mid-Atlantic Red
Sox, sponsored by
Under Armour, will
conduct tryouts for the
fall and spring 13U team
on Aug. 22 at Greene
Township Municipal
Park, 996 Elevator St.,
Chambersburg. The rain
date will be Aug. 23. The
tryout will begin at 10 a.m.
For an invitation, email
midatlanticredsoxnewman
@yahoo.com.
Spooky Nook Baseball
is looking for a few more
10U and 11U players to fill
out its fall travel teams.
A tryout has been set for
Aug. 24 from 6-8 p.m.
at Spooky Nook Sports.
Also, the organization will
offer a two-day Training
Day with Fred Ferreira,
International Scout for the
Baltimore Orioles. To be
held at the Hempfield JV
baseball field Aug. 20 and
21 from 6-8 p.m., it is open
to all U14-U17 players. The
cost is $120 per player for
both days. The best players
may have the opportunity
to play on the Baltimore
Orioles Fall Scouting
Team hosted by Spooky
Nook Sports. For more
information about either
event, contact Director of
Baseball Operations Troy
Steffy at (717) 618-8516 or
troys@nooksports.com.
The 14U PA Diamond Nine
Baseball Club is holding its
Fall 2015 and Spring 2016
tryouts Aug. 16 from 4-7 p.m.
at Cabin Branch Field, 1894
Long Level Road, Wrightsville.
Register for the free tryout at
the PA Diamond Nine website
or contact kstover@hershey.
k12.pa.us.
BASKETBALL
The Lititz recCenter
is offering a Mens Fall
Basketball League. Games
will be on Wednesday
nights from Sept. 23
through December at 6:309:30 p.m. The fee is $500
per team. Registration
forms are due by Sept 12.
Contact Maria at 626-5096
ext. 237 for information.
Online registration is
available at www.lititzrec.
com.
A 25+ mens league will
have games on Tuesdays
or Wednesdays at the
City Center or LampeterStrasburg YMCAs. Games
begin Sept. 15, and a
captains meeting will
be held at 7 p.m. Sept.
8 at the City-Center Y.
Also, individuals or teams
can register for a 45+
mens league to be held
at either the City-Center
or Lampeter-Strasburg
YMCAs. For more
information about either,
contact Ron Stief at rstief@
lancasterymca.org.
The Brightside
Opportunity Center,
515 Hershey Ave.,
Lancaster, will hold the
Stop the Violence
3-on-3 tournament at 2
p.m. Aug. 29. This is a
coed event, one-game
elimination, with ages
12-15, 16 -20 and 21 and
BUS TRIP
The Capital Area Chapter/
Penn State Alumni
Association is sponsoring
a trip to Columbus, Ohio,
Oct. 16-18 for the Penn
State-Ohio State football
game. The trip includes:
ticket, motorcoach
transportation, two nights
hotel accommodations,
meals and more. Cost is
$599 per person/double
room occupancy, $729
single room occupancy.
For reservations or more
information, contact Allen
Cwalina at AJC8@comcast.
net or (717) 343-4670.
CANOEING/
KAYAKING
The Muddy Run Canoe/
Kayak Race will be held
Sept. 19 at Muddy Run
Park, Holtwood, to benefit
the Red Rose K-9 Search
and Rescue Team. The race
is held on a lake, and there
are three course lengths: a
1 1/4-mile course for adult
and youth in the same
boat, a one-lap course
(2.7 miles) for recreational
type boats, and a twolap (5.5 miles) course for
special racing type boats.
Sign in and registration is
8:30-10 a.m. with the race
starting at 10:45 a.m. All
registrations received by
Sept. 9 are guaranteed
a T-shirt. Fee is $15 per
person. For information call
(717) 872-2805 or email
johnnymuzz@verizon.net.
COACHING
OPENINGS
Donegal School District
Athletic Department has a
vacancy for a cross country
head coach. Qualified
candidates should have
previous playing and/
or coaching experience.
Details available online at
www.donegal.k12.pa.us
under Support Services;
Human Resources;
Opportunities. Interested
candidates should contact
human resources at (717)
492-1308 to request an
application packet. Position
open until filled. EOE
McCaskey High School is
seeking candidates to serve
as assistant cheerleading
coach this school year.
Qualified candidates
should send cover letter
and resume to Athletic
Director Jonathan Mitchell
at jemitchell@lancaster.k12.
pa.us.
Pequea Valley School
District has assistant
coaching positions in
junior high girls soccer
and high school field
hockey available starting
for the 2015-16 season.
Applications can be found
at www.pequeavalley.org.
Submit application and
resume to Dan Myers, P.O.
Box 287, Kinzers, PA 17535.
Lancaster Catholic High
School has an immediate
need for an assistant
cross country coach and
an assistant boys soccer
coach. All clearances are
needed. If interested,
email response ASAP
to Lancaster Catholic
AD Rich Hinnenkamp at
rhinnenkamp@lchsyes.org.
Elizabethtown Area
School District has several
openings for the 2015-16
school year, including:
boys assistant junior
high basketball coach,
varsity head wrestling
coach, junior high head
wrestling coach, varsity
head baseball coach.
Additionally, the high
school band seeks a
percussion instructor and
an assistant marching
band director. See www.
etownschools.org for
details on how to apply.
Lancaster Mennonite
School has the following
openings: (Fall) junior high
football assistant coach,
junior high girls soccer
head coach and junior
high boys soccer coach;
(Winter) junior high girls
basketball head coach;
and (Spring) varsity track
CROSS COUNTRY
The Solanco Cross
Country and Track Alumni
Association will be hosting
an anniversary banquet
to celebrate 50 years for
the mens and 30 years
for the womens programs
at Solanco High School.
The banquet will be held
Sept. 26 at the Chestnut
Level Presbyterian
Family Life Center.
Banquet registration
can be confirmed by
contacting Suzie Hershey
at pshershey@comcast.net
or (717) 669-2904. More
details can be accessed at
www.solancoxc.org.
FOOTBALL
Manheim Central will be
selling reserved seats for the
2015 football season every
weekday until the first home
game on Sept. 11. Interested
persons should stop by the
senior high office for further
details.
A Fall NFL Flag Football
League for children ages 6-12
will be held from Sept. 14
through Nov. 7 at Reservoir
Park. For more information,
contact Jack Bingeman at
(717) 392-2115 x129.
GOLF
The 2015 Kiwanis Cup
Invitational Match Play
Championship will
be played Sept. 12 at
Highlands of Donegal, not
as originally scheduled
at Royal Manchester Golf
Links, due to continued
greens restoration. The
two-person team event
supports the care and
treatment of the critically
ill and mentally and/or
physically-challenged
children at the Camp Lady
Bug programs and the
Childrens Miracle Network
Childrens Hospital at
Hershey Medical Center.
Team registration and
sponsorship forms for
event are available by
contacting Dr. Dale Treese
at (717) 367-9144 or
cdtreese@centurylink.
net. Only 64 team slots
are available. Registration
deadline is Aug. 22.
The third annual Lancaster
Public Library Golf Benefit
will be held Sept. 28 at Bent
Creek Country Club, Lititz.
Registration is at 11:15 a.m.
with a shotgun start at 12:30
p.m. Cost is $250 per person
and includes 18 holes of
golf (Callaway scoring), box
lunch, $100 in gifts, awards
dinner and more. To register
or for more information visit
lpl-golfbenefit.eventbrite.
com or call Jennifer Wiggin
at 239-2101.
Delaware Valley Golden
Retriever Rescue will hold
its annual fundraising golf
outing Sept. 19 at Foxchase
Golf Club in Stevens. The
shotgun start begins at
1 p.m. The cost is $115
per person or $400 per
foursome, and proceeds
benefit golden retrievers,
doodles and labs in need of
finding adoptive families.
The entrance fee includes
greens fees, cart, prizes,
dinner and refreshments.
Registration and payments
are due by Aug. 31.
Registrations can be made
online at www.dvgrr.org/
events or by mail to Golf
Outing, 60 Vera Cruz Road,
Reinholds, PA 17569. Nongolfers are welcome to join
for dinner at a cost of $40.
Crossgates Golf Club, 1
Crossland Pass, Millersville,
will offer two September
group clinics. The Ladies
Beginner Clinic will run
from 4 to 5 p.m. Sept. 9,
16, 23 and 30, and the Get
Golf Ready! Adult Beginner
Clinics will run from 5:30
to 7 p.m. the same dates.
Both will be taught by
Director of Instruction
Jason Przystup. For more
information, contact Jason
at (717) 872-4500 or visit
www.crossgatesgolf.com/
adult-clinics/.
The 22nd annual Golf Fore
Moms House Tournament
will be played Sept. 21 at
Crossgates Golf Course in
Millersville. The four-person
scramble proceeds help
Moms House of Lancaster
provide free childcare and
other support services to
single-parent families. Prizes
will be awarded, and after
the event there will be a
buffet-style dinner with a
silent auction. Cost is $300
(foursome), $75 (individual)
or $55 (golf only). For
HORSEBACK
RIDING
The Arabian Horse Showcase
festival will be held from
11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sept. 27
at Crescendo Training
Centre, 288 S. Fairmount
Road, Ephrata. Sponsored
by the Pennsylvania
Arabian Horse Foundation,
the free event, which
includes demonstrations
and education, will benefit
Greystone Manor Therapeutic
Riding Center. For more
information, call Pat Nodecker
at (717) 327-8224.
KICKBALL
A Coed Kickball League
for ages 16 and over will
be held on Thursdays
from September through
November at Conlin Field.
cost is $150 per team. For
more information, contact
Jack Bingeman at (717)
392-2115 x129.
LACROSSE
Xtreme Lacrosse Club is
holding a camp open to
all girls entering fourth
and fifth grade Aug. 3-5.
Details and registration
information can be found
at www.xtremelaxpa.com.
The Lanco Elite girls travel
team will hold tryouts at Red
Rose Arena on Nov. 15 from
4-5:30 p.m. Tryout fee is $20
(pinnie included). Sign up at
www.lancoelite.com.
LIFEGUARDING
Lititz recCenter will offer
an American Red Cross
Lifeguarding Course on
Sept. 24-27 (5-9 p.m. the
first two days and 8 a.m.-4
p.m. the last two days).
Participants must be 15 by
the end of the course. Cost
is $235 for members, $275
for nonmembers. For more
information, call 626-5096
ext. 227, or visit www.
lititzrec.com.
POLO
Lancaster Polo Club
hosts regional matches
each Sunday through
Oct. 11 at Forney Field on
Church Street in Rothsville
(between Lititz and
Brownstown, two blocks
south off Route 772).
This week, Aug. 16, LPC is
scheduled to play Delaware
on Whiteout Day (everyone
wears white). 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.
ROLLER HOCKEY
East Petersburg Inline
Hockey will hold registration
for its fall youth league at Play
It Again Sports, 411 Granite
Run Dr., Lancaster, from 11 a.m.
to 1 p.m. Aug. 22 and 29. Cost
is $50 with shirt, $40 without.
For More information, call Don
Krow at 892-8534.
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
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
SOCCER
VOLLEYBALL
HempfieldYouth
Association registration
is now open. At the www.
hyasports.com home
page, click on the link for
Sports Registration then
Volleyball 2015 Fall and
follow the instructions.
Registration is open until
Sept. 7. The intramural
program is for Hempfield
school district residents
in grades 5-12 (boys and
girls). Individuals, groups,
or teams of 6-8 players
may register. Cost is
$75 per player through
Aug. 21, and $80 after
(includes instructions,
shirt and awards). There
are weekly matches with
startup practice/clinic time
included. Games will be
for one hour between 6:30
and 9:30 p.m. Monday
or Wednesday nights.
The season will run from
early September to early
November.
A co-ed league will be
held at the YMCA at New
Holland on Tuesday nights.
Register at lancasterymca.
org or contact Ron Stief at
rstief@lancasterymca.org
for information.
A Fall Volleyball League
for ages 16 and over
will be held Mondays,
Tuesdays and Wednesdays
from September through
December (SDOL schools).
Cost is $400 per team. For
more information, contact
Jack Bingeman at (717)
392-2115 x129.
SOFTBALL
A coed softball team is
looking for three female
players a catcher, a
second baseman and a
right fielder. Games are
Monday and Wednesday
nights in Lancaster starting
the week of Sept. 7. If
Interested, call (717) 3973314; ask for Mark.
The Razorbacks club
team will be accepting
new players for the 2015
fall and 2016 summer
seasons. Interested players
should contact Jere Flick
at (717) 940-1549 or
jndrazorback@yahoo.com.
Visit razorbacksoftball.com
for more information.
The Force will hold tryouts
for its 2016 travel season
on Aug. 9 and 16 starting at
1 p.m. and Aug. 13 starting
at 6 p.m. All tryouts will be
held at the Rheems Softball
Complex, 136 Robinson
Drive, Elizabethtown.
Tryouts are for ages 12, 14, 16
and 18. Any questions may
be directed to Terry Seiders
att.seiders21@gmail.com or
(717) 572-4261.
The Pierson Cup softball
tournament Sept. 26 at
Strasburg Jaycee Park,
starting at 8 a.m. Team
registration is $250. Each
team must have at least
10 players, including
two female players.
Event sponsorships are
available, and volunteers
are needed. Registration
deadline is Sept. 12. For
more information, visit
http://lovingandcaring.org/
events/ or http://hohc.org/
events-list-with-sidebar/.
The Jerry Ross SlowPitch Softball League is
looking for teams for its
2015 season. The league
plays doubleheaders
on Sundays at Rapho
Township Community Park
in Mount Joy. The season
begins Sept. 13. There will
be a league meeting at 1
p.m. Aug. 23 at the House
of Pizza on Chestnut Street
in Lancaster. For more
information call Steve
Enedy at (717) 412-9816.
SWIMMING
Marauder Aquatic Club, a
USA Swimming-affiliated
team located at Millersville
University, will hold an
open house at 6 p.m. Aug.
23 at the Pucillo pool.
Stop in to find out more
about the program, meet
coaches and have swimmers
evaluated. Questions? Email
marauderaquaticclub@
gmail.com. Registration for
the 2015-2016 season is
currently open. Visit www.
marauderaquaticclub.org for
more info and to register.
TENNIS
The 2015 Tennis Central Mixed
Doubles Tennis Tournament
(formerly Lancaster Tennis
Patrons) will be held at the
Lancaster Tennis and Yacht
Club Sept. 11-13. Divisions will
be combined NTRP ratings of
6.5, 7.5, 8.5, and Open. Players
may be no more than 1.0 NTRP
level apart. Each team will play
a minimum of three matches.
A buffet dinner/social with live
music will be held after the
matches on Saturday evening
at 6 p.m. Tournament entry fee
is $75 per team. Cost for the
social is $35 per person. Entry
deadline is Sept. 1 or when
draw is filled. To register online,
go to www.tenniscentral.org.
Hover over For Adults and
click on Tennis Central Mixed
Doubles Fundraiser.
The Lancaster Recreation
Commission will sponsor tennis
lessons for children ages 6-15
on Saturdays from Sept. 12 to
Oct. 17 at Buchanan Park. For
more information, contact Jack
Bingeman at (717) 392-2115
x129.
WRESTLING
The Solanco Wrestling
Association is looking for
a volunteer youth wresting
coordinator and volunteer
coaches for grades three
to six. A meeting is
scheduled for 6 p.m. Sept.
23 in the Solanco wrestling
complex, located at
Solanco High School next
to the football stadium. For
more information, email
John Little at john_little@
solanco.k12.pa.us.
YOUTH
TRIATHLON
The ninth annual Lititz
recCenter Youth Triathlon
for ages 7-15 is set for 4:30
p.m. Sept. 25. Checkin begins at 3:30 p.m.
Distances for the swim,
run and bike portions vary
by age group. Register
before Sept. 11 for a T-shirt.
Fee is $15. Register online
at www.lititzrec.com. For
more details or to register,
contact Simon Ababou at
626-5096 ext. 239.
LancasterSports
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
C7
Outdoors
Calendar
To submit calendar items,
email: preilly@lnpnews.
com; call 575-3039; or
send to Ad Crable, PO
Box 1328; Lancaster, PA
17608-1328.
n TODAY
Sunday hunting
n WEDNESDAY
PA Triple Trophy Unlimited is a new organization founded to revive recognition for hunters who tag a bear, a buck and a gobbler in one hunting year.
Crawford Co. men want to restore the glory once accorded super-successful season
Poll results
P.J. REILLY
OUTDOORS WRITER
So, weve had two polls on the LancasterOnline site over the past month
pertaining to articles that appeared on
this page. I figured Id circle back and let
you know the results.
These are not scientific studies or
anything. Basically, we asked readers
for their opinions, and some chose to
respond.
Semi-automatic rifles
On Aug. 2, an article appeared on this
page about House Bill 366, which seeks
to make semi-automatic rifles legal for
hunting.
We reported that Pennsylvania and
Delaware are the only two states in the
nation that dont allow semi-automatic
rifles for hunting. But Delaware has
since changed its rules and now allows
semi-automatic rimfire rifles for hunting squirrels.
That leaves Pennsylvania as the only
state in the nation that outlaws semiautomatic rifles for hunting. There are
hunters who say its time for the Keystone
62%
n No, dont
57%
43%
n Yes, change
n No way,
the law.
safety first.
expand.
38%
n Yes, more
Sunday hunts.
n AUG. 22
Tactical shoot: Manheim
Sportsmens tactical
shoot begins at 10 a.m.;
registration starts at 8
a.m. The club is at 552
Oak Tree Road, Manheim.
n AUG. 22-23
3-D shoot: Atglen
Sportsmens 30-target
3-D archery shoot from 8
a.m.-noon; $10 for adults;
$5 for kids 12-16. The club
is at 82 Creek Road in
Sadsbury Township.
3-D shoot: Lancaster
Archery Clubs 30-target
3-D shoot from 7 a.m.noon; $10 for adults; free
for kids 12 and under.
Take Prince Street south
from Lancaster; right on
Eckman Road.
3-D shoot: Mount Joy
Sportsmens 30-target
3-D archery shoot from 7
a.m.-2 p.m.; $8 for adults;
$4 for kids 12-16; free for
kids under 12. Take Route
283 west; left on Route
772; right on Old Market
Street.
3-D shoot: Christian
Bowhunters of America
annual 40-target 3-D
shoot at Paradise
Sportsmens club from
7 a.m.-2 p.m. on Sat.;
and 7 a.m.-1 p.m. on
Sun. Take Route 741 east
from Strasburg; right on
Belmont Road.
3-D shoot: Penn Dutch
Sportsmens 30-target
3-D archery shoot from
7 a.m.-3 p.m.; $10. Take
Route 322 east from Blue
Ball; right on Route 897;
right on Sandmine Road;
left on Paes Road.
n AUG. 23
3-D shoot: Fox Harbor
Archery Clubs 30-target
3-D shoot from 7 a.m.noon; $10. Take Route 30
west; right on Prospect
Road; left on Indian Head
Road.
Lancaster Hiking Club:
Hike 4.5 miles through
Gov. Dick Preserve.
Carpool at 1:15 p.m. from
the northeast corner
of Race and Buchanan
avenues in Lancaster city.
C8
BASEBALL
NATIONAL LEAGUE
New York.......................................63
Washington...................................58
Atlanta...........................................52
Miami............................................46
Philadelphia...................................46
St. Louis.........................................75
Pittsburgh......................................67
Chicago..........................................67
Cincinnati.......................................51
Milwaukee.....................................50
Los Angeles....................................65
San Francisco.................................62
Arizona..........................................57
San Diego.......................................55
Colorado........................................47
East Division
53 .543
57 .504 41-w
9
64 .448 11 151-w
70 .397 17 211-w
71 .393 171-w 22
Central Division
7-3
3-7
4-6
3-7
4-6
41 .647
46 .593 61-w
48 .583 71-w
63 .447 23 151-w
68 .424 26 181-w
West Division
8-2
7-3
9-1
3-7
5-5
51
53
58
61
67
.560
.539 21-w
5
.496 71-w 10
.474 10 121-w
.412 17 191-w
5-5
5-5
6-4
3-7
3-7
42-19
31-23
31-24
28-30
27-29
21-34
27-34
21-40
18-40
19-42
W-2
W-2
W-9
L-1
W-2
44-17
39-18
34-24
28-26
26-36
31-24
28-28
33-24
23-37
24-32
W-1
W-2
W-1
W-1
L-5
40-20
33-24
30-29
26-29
25-30
25-31
29-29
27-29
29-32
22-37
AMERICAN LEAGUE
New York.......................................64
Toronto..........................................64
Baltimore.......................................59
Tampa Bay.....................................58
Boston...........................................52
Kansas City....................................70
Minnesota.....................................58
Detroit...........................................55
Chicago..........................................54
Cleveland.......................................54
Houston.........................................63
Los Angeles....................................60
Texas..............................................57
Seattle...........................................54
Oakland.........................................51
East Division
51 .557
54 .542 11-w
56 .513
5 1-w
57 .504
6 11-w
64 .448 121-w
8
Central Division
4-6
8-2
5-5
7-3
5-5
46 .603
58 .500 12
2
60 .478 141-w 41-w
60 .474 15
5
61 .470 151-w 51-w
West Division
7-3
4-6
4-6
4-6
6-4
53
56
57
63
67
Fridays NL Games
Pittsburgh 3........................ N.Y. Mets 2 (10)
Atlanta 3...................................... Arizona 2
Milwaukee 3......................... Philadelphia 1
St. Louis 3...................................... Miami 1
San Diego 9................................ Colorado 5
L.A. Dodgers 5......................... Cincinnati 3
San Francisco 8..................... Washington 5
Fridays AL Games
Baltimore 8...........................Oakland 6 (13)
N.Y. Yankees 4.............................. Toronto 3
Boston 15..................................... Seattle 1
Texas 5.................................... Tampa Bay 3
Cleveland 6............................. Minnesota 1
Houston 5..................................... Detroit 1
Kansas City 4........................... L.A. Angels 1
Fridays Interleague Games
Chicago Cubs 6............Chicago White Sox 5
.543
.517
3
.500
5
2
.462 91-w 61-w
.432 13 10
3-7
4-6
6-4
5-5
3-7
W-3
L-2
W-2
L-1
W-2
32-21
39-23
34-20
31-31
29-28
32-30
25-31
25-36
27-26
23-36
W-2
W-1
L-1
L-2
L-1
41-20
37-24
28-30
29-28
24-34
29-26
21-34
27-30
25-32
30-27
W-2
L-2
W-2
L-2
L-5
39-18
36-23
24-29
26-33
27-34
24-35
24-33
33-28
28-30
24-33
Saturdays NL Games
Arizona 8...................................... Atlanta 4
Milwaukee 4......................... Philadelphia 2
St. Louis 6...................................... Miami 2
Pittsburgh at N.Y. Mets............................(n)
San Diego at Colorado.............................(n)
Cincinnati at L.A. Dodgers.......................(n)
Washington at San Francisco...................(n)
Saturdays AL Games
N.Y. Yankees 4.............................. Toronto 1
Boston 22................................... Seattle 10
Baltimore 4................................. Oakland 3
Minnesota 4............................. Cleveland 1
Kansas City 9........................... L.A. Angels 4
Detroit at Houston...................................(n)
Tampa Bay at Texas..................................(n)
Saturdays Interleague Games
Chicago Cubs 6........... Chicago White Sox 3
Sundays AL Games
Pittsburgh (Locke 6-7) at N.Y. Mets (Harvey 11-7), 1:10 p.m.
Arizona (R.De La Rosa 10-5) at Atlanta (S.Miller 5-9), 1:35 p.m.
Philadelphia (Harang 5-13) at Milwaukee (Jungmann 6-4), 2:10 p.m.
Miami (Phelps 4-8) at St. Louis (C.Martinez 12-4), 2:15 p.m.
Washington (J.Ross 3-4) at San Francisco (Bumgarner 13-6), 4:05 p.m.
Cincinnati (DeSclafani 7-7) at L.A. Dodgers (Greinke 12-2), 4:10 p.m.
San Diego (Kennedy 7-10) at Colorado (Rusin 3-5), 4:10 p.m.
Sundays NL Games
N.Y. Yankees (Severino 0-1) at Toronto (Hutchison 11-2), 1:07 p.m.
Oakland (Graveman 6-8) at Baltimore (W.Chen 6-6), 1:35 p.m.
Seattle (Nuno 0-1) at Boston (Owens 1-1), 1:35 p.m.
Cleveland (Carrasco 11-8) at Minnesota (Milone 5-3), 2:10 p.m.
Detroit (Boyd 1-3) at Houston (Fiers 0-0), 2:10 p.m.
Tampa Bay (Smyly 0-1) at Texas (Gallardo 8-9), 3:05 p.m.
L.A. Angels (Santiago 7-6) at Kansas City (Ventura 7-7), 8:10 p.m.
Sundays Interleague Game
Chicago Cubs (Haren 8-7) at Chicago White Sox (Sale 10-7), 2:10 p.m.
NL BOXES
Brewers 4, Phillies 2
Philadelphia AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Utley 2b...............4 1 2 1 1 1 .213
Hernandez 3b......3 0 0 0 1 1 .282
Herrera cf............4 1 2 0 0 2 .288
Howard 1b...........4 0 2 1 0 2 .235
Francoeur rf.........4 0 0 0 0 1 .270
Asche lf................3 0 1 0 0 0 .259
Galvis ss...............3 0 0 0 0 1 .272
Ruiz c...................4 0 0 0 0 1 .211
Williams p............2 0 0 0 0 1 .071
a-Brown ph..........1 0 0 0 0 0 .233
DeFratus p...........0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Araujo p...............0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Garcia p...............0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
c-Blanco ph..........1 0 0 0 0 1 .283
Totals............... 33 2 7 2 2 11
Milwaukee
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Peterson cf-lf.......4 0 0 0 0 1 .291
Lucroy c...............4 1 2 0 0 0 .237
Braun rf...............4 0 0 0 0 1 .272
Lind 1b.................3 0 0 0 1 0 .280
Davis lf.................4 1 2 0 0 0 .238
Rodriguez p..........0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Gennett 2b..........4 1 4 2 0 0 .254
Segura ss..............4 1 1 1 0 1 .259
Herrera 3b...........4 0 1 0 0 2 .230
Nelson p..............2 0 0 0 0 2 .104
Smith p................0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
b-Rogers ph.........1 0 0 0 0 0 .222
Jeffress p..............0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Schafer cf.............0 0 0 0 0 0 .184
Totals............... 34 4 10 3 1 7
Philadelphia....... 101 000 000 2 7 2
Milwaukee......... 000 020 11x 4 10 1
a-grounded out for J.Williams in the 7th.
b-flied out for W.Smith in the 7th. c-struck
out for Lu.Garcia in the 9th.
EFrancoeur (5), Asche (6), Segura (15).
LOBPhiladelphia 9, Milwaukee 7. 2B
Utley (12), O.Herrera 2 (24), Lucroy (13),
K.Davis (13). HRUtley (5), off Nelson.
RBIsUtley (30), Howard (65), Gennett 2
(22), Segura (34). SBO.Herrera (12), Segura (18). SC.Hernandez.
Runners left in scoring positionPhiladelphia 5 (Francoeur, J.Williams, Howard,
O.Herrera, Ruiz); Milwaukee 5 (S.Peterson
2, K.Davis, E.Herrera 2). RISPPhiladelphia
2 for 10; Milwaukee 4 for 14.
Runners moved upFrancoeur, Ruiz,
Braun, Lind.
Philadelphia IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Williams........... 6 5 2 1 0 4 79 5.47
DeFratus L, 0-2... 2-e 2 1 1 0 0 7 5.60
Araujo..............1-e 0 0 0 0 1 4 3.03
Garcia.............. 1 3 1 1 1 2 26 3.35
Milwaukee IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Nelson.......... 62-e 5 2 2 2 6 93 3.61
Smith W, 6-2....1-e 0 0 0 0 1 6 2.22
Jeffress H, 14... 1 2 0 0 0 2 22 3.15
RodriguezS,28-28...1 0 0 0 0 2 11 1.91
Inherited runners-scoredAraujo 1-0,
W.Smith 2-0. IBBoff Lu.Garcia (Lind).
HBPby Nelson (Galvis, Asche). WPDe
Fratus. PBLucroy.
T2:58. A39,204 (41,900).
Diamondbacks 8, Braves 4
Arizona
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Inciarte rf.............4 2 1 0 1 1 .299
Pollock cf.............4 3 2 0 0 1 .313
Goldschmidt 1b...5 1 2 2 0 3 .341
Peralta lf..............3 1 2 3 1 0 .304
A.Hill 2b...............3 1 1 1 1 0 .231
Lamb 3b...............5 0 2 1 0 0 .281
Saltalamacchia c..4 0 1 0 0 1 .182
Owings ss.............3 0 0 1 1 0 .232
Corbin p...............3 0 0 0 0 3 .000
Hernandez p........0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
c-Romak ph..........1 0 0 0 0 1 .300
Hessler p..............0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Hudson p.............0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Ziegler p...............0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Totals............... 35 8 11 8 4 10
Atlanta
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Peterson 2b.........5 0 0 0 0 3 .242
Maybin cf.............5 1 2 0 0 0 .276
Markakis rf..........4 0 0 0 0 0 .296
Gomes lf..............4 1 1 1 0 2 .211
Ad.Garcia 3b........4 1 2 1 0 1 .263
Swisher 1b...........4 1 1 2 0 2 .111
Simmons ss..........2 0 0 0 2 0 .257
Lavarnway c.........3 0 1 0 1 2 .275
Foltynewicz p.......1 0 0 0 0 0 .080
Jackson p.............1 0 0 0 0 0 .000
a-Perez ph............0 0 0 0 0 0 .276
b-Terdoslavich ph.1 0 0 0 0 1 .204
Detwiler p............0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Brigham p............0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
AL BOXES
Yankees 4, Blue Jays 1
New York
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Ellsbury cf............5 0 2 1 0 0 .265
Gardner lf............5 0 0 0 0 1 .284
Beltran rf.............3 1 2 1 1 0 .271
1-Young pr-rf........0 1 0 0 1 0 .253
Teixeira dh-1b......4 1 2 2 1 1 .261
Headley 3b..........3 0 0 0 1 1 .272
Bird 1b.................4 0 1 0 0 1 .111
Tanaka p..............0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Gregorius ss.........4 0 0 0 0 1 .262
Murphy c.............4 1 1 0 0 0 .282
Drew 2b...............3 0 1 0 0 1 .196
Totals............... 35 4 9 4 4 6
Toronto
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Tulowitzki ss........3 0 0 0 1 0 .217
Donaldson 3b......2 0 0 1 1 1 .292
Bautista rf............4 0 1 0 0 1 .241
Encarnacion dh....4 0 2 0 0 0 .255
Colabello 1b.........4 0 1 0 0 2 .323
Navarro c.............4 0 0 0 0 1 .216
Pillar cf.................4 0 0 0 0 0 .259
Goins 2b..............3 1 0 0 1 1 .220
Revere lf..............3 0 1 0 0 2 .229
Totals............... 31 1 5 1 3 8
New York............ 100 001 011 4 9 0
Toronto.............. 000 010 000 1 5 0
1-ran for Beltran in the 8th.
LOBNew York 9, Toronto 7. 2BBeltran
(25), J.Murphy (7), Encarnacion (23). 3B
Ellsbury (2). HRBeltran (12), off Estrada;
Teixeira (31), off Estrada. RBIsEllsbury (24),
Beltran (40), Teixeira 2 (79), Donaldson (86).
SBGardner (16). SDrew. SFDonaldson.
Runners left in scoring positionNew
York 3 (Teixeira 2, Gregorius); Toronto 3
(Goins, Pillar, Encarnacion). RISPNew
York 2 for 6; Toronto 0 for 7.
Runners moved upD.Navarro.
New York
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Tanaka W, 9-5....9 5 1 1 3 8 112 3.56
Toronto
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Estrada L, 10-7... 6 3 2 2 3 3 102 3.20
Lowe................ 1 1 0 0 0 0 16 1.56
Hawkins........... 1 3 1 1 0 2 20 1.35
Loup................ 2-e 2 1 1 0 0 15 5.20
Hendriks..........1-e 0 0 0 1 1 13 2.40
Inherited runners-scoredHendriks 1-0.
WPHendriks.
T2:57. A46,630 (49,282).
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Orioles 4, Athletics 3
Oakland
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Burns cf...............3 1 1 0 1 0 .296
Canha 1b.............3 0 1 1 1 0 .238
Reddick rf............3 1 1 1 1 0 .282
Butler dh..............4 0 1 0 0 1 .239
Vogt c...................4 0 0 0 0 2 .260
Lawrie 3b.............4 0 0 0 0 2 .261
Sogard 2b.............4 0 2 0 0 2 .248
Semien ss.............3 0 0 0 0 1 .258
Fuld lf...................3 1 1 1 0 0 .198
Totals............... 31 3 7 3 3 8
Baltimore
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Machado 3b........4 0 0 0 0 1 .296
Parra rf.................4 2 2 1 0 0 .236
Jones cf................4 0 1 0 0 0 .281
Davis 1b...............4 2 2 3 0 1 .259
Schoop 2b............2 0 1 0 0 1 .296
Clevenger c..........3 0 0 0 0 0 .357
Hardy ss...............3 0 0 0 0 2 .229
Urrutia dh............3 0 0 0 0 1 .000
Reimold lf............2 0 0 0 1 0 .233
Totals............... 29 4 6 4 1 6
Oakland.............. 102 000 000 3 7 0
Baltimore........... 000 201 001 4 6 0
Two outs when winning run scored.
LOBOakland 4, Baltimore 1. 3BBurns
(7). HRFuld (2), off Mi.Gonzalez; Reddick
(14), off Mi.Gonzalez; C.Davis (33), off Bassitt; G.Parra (2), off Bassitt; C.Davis (34), off
Venditte. RBIsCanha (38), Reddick (61),
Fuld (17), G.Parra (2), C.Davis 3 (88). SB
Burns (24).
Runners left in scoring positionOakland
2 (B.Butler 2). RISPOakland 0 for 2; Baltimore 0 for 0.
Runners moved upCanha. GIDPReddick, B.Butler, M.Machado, Clevenger.
DPOakland 3 (Sogard, Semien, Canha),
(Semien, Sogard, Canha), (Fuld, Sogard,
Canha); Baltimore 2 (M.Machado, Schoop,
C.Davis), (J.Hardy, Schoop, C.Davis).
Oakland
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Bassitt.............. 8 5 3 3 1 6 103 2.60
Venditte L, 0-1.. 2-e 1 1 1 0 0 14 1.42
Baltimore
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Gonzalez.......... 7 6 3 3 3 5 110 4.42
ODay............... 1 1 0 0 0 1 9 1.19
Britton W, 3-0... 1 0 0 0 0 2 9 1.88
HBPby Bassitt (Schoop). PBClevenger.
T2:25. A44,028 (45,971).
Twins 4, Indians 1
Cleveland
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Ramirez 2b...........4 0 0 0 0 1 .204
Lindor ss..............3 0 2 0 1 0 .296
Gomes dh............4 0 0 0 0 2 .232
Santana 1b...........3 1 1 0 1 0 .227
Urshela 3b...........2 0 0 0 2 0 .237
Almonte cf...........4 0 0 0 0 1 .313
Perez c.................4 0 1 1 0 3 .224
Chisenhall rf.........2 0 0 0 1 0 .237
a-Sands ph...........1 0 0 0 0 1 .241
Aviles lf................3 0 0 0 0 1 .225
Totals............... 30 1 4 1 5 9
Minnesota
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Hicks cf................4 0 1 0 0 0 .284
Dozier 2b.............4 1 1 2 0 0 .246
Mauer 1b.............4 0 1 0 0 0 .269
Sano dh................4 0 1 0 0 2 .279
Plouffe 3b............3 0 0 0 0 1 .244
Hunter rf..............3 0 0 0 0 2 .238
Rosario lf..............3 1 1 1 0 0 .274
Herrmann c..........3 1 1 1 0 1 .162
Escobar ss............2 1 0 0 1 0 .238
Totals............... 30 4 6 4 1 6
Cleveland........... 000 000 001 1 4 1
Minnesota.......... 000 020 02x 4 6 0
a-struck out for Chisenhall in the 9th.
ELindor (8). LOBCleveland 7, Minnesota 3. 2BLindor (9), C.Santana (21).
HRE.Rosario (7), off Tomlin; Herrmann
(2), off Tomlin; Dozier (25), off B.Shaw.
RBIsR.Perez (17), Dozier 2 (61), E.Rosario
(27), Herrmann (10).
Runners left in scoring positionCleveland 1 (Urshela); Minnesota 1 (Tor.Hunter).
RISPCleveland 1 for 5; Minnesota 1 for 4.
Runners moved upAlmonte, Hicks,
Plouffe. GIDPAviles, Plouffe.
DPCleveland 1 (Lindor, Jo.Ramirez,
C.Santana); Minnesota 1 (Plouffe, Dozier,
Mauer).
Cleveland
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Tomlin L, 0-1....61-e 5 2 2 0 5 84 2.84
Crockett.......... 2-e 0 0 0 0 0 5 2.16
Shaw................ 1 1 2 2 1 1 20 2.76
Minnesota IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Duffey W, 1-1... 6 1 0 0 5 7 94 6.75
Fien H, 12........ 1 0 0 0 0 1 9 3.95
Jepsen H, 23.... 1 1 0 0 0 0 16 2.85
Perkins............. 1 2 1 1 0 1 16 2.54
T2:27. A30,601 (39,021).
Royals 9, Angels 4
Los Angeles AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Giavotella 2b.......4 0 3 0 0 1 .273
Calhoun rf............4 0 0 0 0 0 .268
Trout cf................3 0 0 0 0 0 .301
Cron 1b................1 1 1 1 0 0 .271
Pujols 1b..............3 1 1 1 0 1 .253
Victorino cf..........1 1 1 0 0 0 .240
Murphy dh...........4 0 2 0 0 0 .290
Gillaspie 3b..........4 0 0 0 0 2 .231
DeJesus lf.............4 1 1 0 0 0 .238
Perez c.................4 0 2 1 0 1 .226
Featherston ss.....3 0 0 0 0 1 .130
Totals............... 35 4 11 3 0 6
Kansas City
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Escobar ss............4 0 0 0 0 0 .268
Zobrist 2b............2 1 1 1 3 0 .280
Hosmer 1b...........4 1 2 1 1 0 .319
Morales dh..........5 0 2 0 0 2 .289
Moustakas 3b......5 1 2 1 0 0 .276
Perez c.................5 1 2 2 0 2 .253
Rios rf..................4 1 0 0 1 0 .239
Orlando lf............4 2 2 1 0 1 .244
Dyson cf...............4 2 3 3 0 0 .257
Totals............... 37 9 14 9 5 5
Los Angeles........ 010 000 003 4 11 1
Kansas City......... 061 002 00x 9 14 1
EFeatherston (5), J.Dyson (1). LOBLos
Angeles 5, Kansas City 10. 2BDav.Murphy
(14), C.Perez (7), Hosmer (25), Moustakas
2 (21), S.Perez (17), Orlando 2 (8), J.Dyson
(6). HRPujols (31), off Cueto; Cron (8),
off Hochevar; S.Perez (17), off Shoemaker.
RBIsCron (26), Pujols (67), C.Perez (14),
Zobrist (42), Hosmer (70), Moustakas (44),
S.Perez 2 (50), Orlando (18), J.Dyson 3 (15).
SBJ.Dyson 2 (22). SA.Escobar.
Runners left in scoring positionLos
Angeles 2 (Featherston 2); Kansas City 6
(Moustakas, Rios 2, K.Morales 2, J.Dyson).
RISPLos Angeles 3 for 7; Kansas City 7 for
19.
Runners moved upRios. GIDPTrout,
K.Morales.
DPLos Angeles 1 (J.Alvarez, Giavotella,
Cron); Kansas City 2 (Rios, S.Perez, Hosmer), (A.Escobar, Zobrist, Hosmer), (Hosmer).
Los Angeles IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
ShoemakerL,5-9...12-e 7 6 6 3 0 54 4.76
Salas................ 1 2 1 1 0 1 20 4.08
Ramos............21-e 2 0 0 1 3 35 2.08
Alvarez............. 2 3 2 2 1 1 37 3.51
Gott................. 1 0 0 0 0 0 7 1.65
Kansas City IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Cueto W, 2-1.... 8 8 1 1 0 4 105 1.80
Hochevar......... 1 3 3 1 0 2 26 3.58
Inherited runners-scoredSalas 2-0,
C.Ramos 1-0. HBPby Cueto (Featherston).
T2:55. A39,251 (37,903).
Red Sox 22, Mariners 10
Seattle
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Marte ss...............5 1 2 1 0 1 .256
Seager 3b.............4 0 0 0 0 1 .261
Miller 3b..............1 1 1 0 0 0 .253
Cruz rf..................3 2 2 3 2 1 .324
Cano 2b...............5 1 1 0 0 1 .267
Gutierrez lf...........3 1 1 0 1 1 .304
a-Morrison ph.....1 0 0 1 0 0 .220
Jackson cf............5 1 2 3 0 2 .257
Trumbo dh...........4 1 2 0 1 0 .241
Montero 1b.........4 0 0 0 0 2 .245
Zunino c...............4 2 2 1 0 1 .172
Totals............... 39 10 13 9 4 10
Boston
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Betts cf.................5 2 3 2 1 0 .271
Holt 2b-3b...........6 2 3 2 1 0 .281
Bogaerts ss..........7 0 4 2 0 0 .315
Ortiz dh................3 0 3 3 0 0 .263
1-Cecchini pr-dh....1 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Shaw 1b...............6 0 0 0 0 0 .286
Sandoval 3b.........1 2 1 1 0 0 .259
Rutledge 2b.........2 4 2 0 2 0 .250
DeAza lf...............5 3 1 2 1 1 .273
Swihart c..............5 4 4 3 1 1 .258
INTERLEAGUE
LancasterSports
BASEBALL
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
PAULA WOLF
WHEELCHAIR QUARTERBACK
J.P. Crawford.
One of the top prospects in all of baseball, Crawford, 20, is
among the youngest
players in the Double-A Eastern League.
Nick Willams.
The 21-year-old outfielder received in the
Hamels trade batted
.415 in his first nine
games at Reading,
with three homers,
seven RBIs and 12
runs scored.
Roman Quinn. A
speedy center fielder,
Quinn, 22, was enjoying a breakout season
with Reading until he
got hurt.
Jake Thompson. Acquired in the
Hamels deal, the
21-year-old right
hander was 2-0 in
his first two starts at
Reading.
Zach Eflin. The
right-handed starter,
21, whom the Phillies got in the Jimmy
Rollins trade, is 6-6
with a 3.67 ERA at
Reading.
Andrew Knapp.
Although he was a
high draft pick in
2013 out of college,
the 23-year-old
catcher only vaulted
himself this year
into contention as a
possible replacement
for Carlos Ruiz with
a monster offensive
effort in Double-A.
Edubray Ramos. A right-handed
reliever, Ramos, 22,
has been very good at
Clearwater and Reading this season.
The Phils wont
hit the jackpot with
all these players, of
course, but theres a
real chance a few of
them will be at least
solid major leaguers,
and thats definitely
something to look
forward to.
Slugfest captured
by Lancaster bats
JOEL SCHREINER
LNP CORRESPONDENT
C9
ASSOCIATED PRESS
some perspective on
what separates DoubleA from Triple-A.
In Triple-A, you have
some young prospects
but also players who
have been back and
forth between the big
leagues and the minor
leagues, he said. The
biggest difference is
that guys understand
themselves in TripleA. The pitchers play to
their strengths as opposed to trying to overpower somebody with
their stuff.
When Tacoma hosted
Las Vegas on July 2,
MLB ROUNDUP
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Phillies Chase Utley watches his home run against the Brewers during the third inning
Saturday.
National League
Cardinals 6, Marlins 2: John Lackey was
dominant into the ninth
inning and gave St. Louis
an unexpected bonus
with two hits and a victory over Miami.
Diamondbacks
8, Braves 4: Patrick
Corbin continued to gain
momentum in his return
from Tommy John surgery, allowing only three
hits and no runs while
pitching into the seventh
inning as Arizona beat
Atlanta.
American League
Yankees 4, Blue Jays
1: Masahiro Tanaka
Interleague
SPORTS
NFL
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
East
W L T Pct PF PA
Buffalo................. 0 1 0 .000 24 25
Miami.................. 0 1 0 .000 10 27
New England....... 0 1 0 .000 11 22
N.Y. Jets................ 0 1 0 .000 3 23
South
W L T Pct PF PA
Jacksonville.......... 1 0 0 1.000 23 21
Houston............... 0 0 0 .000 0 0
Indianapolis......... 0 0 0 .000 0 0
Tennessee............ 0 1 0 .000 24 31
North
W L T Pct PF PA
Baltimore............. 1 0 0 1.000 30 27
Cincinnati............. 1 0 0 1.000 23 10
Cleveland............. 0 1 0 .000 17 20
Pittsburgh............ 0 2 0 .000 24 37
West
W L T Pct PF PA
Denver................. 1 0 0 1.000 22 20
Oakland............... 1 0 0 1.000 18 3
San Diego............. 1 0 0 1.000 17 7
Kansas City.......... 0 0 0 .000 0 0
NATIONAL CONFERENCE
East
W L T Pct PF PA
Washington......... 1 0 0 1.000 20 17
Philadelphia......... 0 0 0 .000 0 0
Dallas................... 0 1 0 .000 7 17
N.Y. Giants............ 0 1 0 .000 10 23
South
W L T Pct PF PA
Atlanta................. 1 0 0 1.000 31 24
Carolina............... 1 0 0 1.000 25 24
Tampa Bay........... 0 0 0 .000 0 0
New Orleans........ 0 1 0 .000 27 30
North
W L T Pct PF PA
Chicago................ 1 0 0 1.000 27 10
Detroit................. 1 0 0 1.000 23 3
Green Bay............ 1 0 0 1.000 22 11
Minnesota........... 1 0 0 1.000 14 3
West
W L T Pct PF PA
Arizona................ 0 0 0 .000 0 0
San Francisco....... 0 0 0 .000 0 0
Seattle................. 0 1 0 .000 20 22
St. Louis............... 0 1 0 .000 3 18
Thursdays Games
Baltimore 30...................... New Orleans 27
Green Bay 22.................... New England 11
Detroit 23.................................... N.Y. Jets 3
Chicago 27................................... Miami 10
Washington 20....................... Cleveland 17
San Diego 17................................... Dallas 7
Fridays Games
Carolina 25................................. Buffalo 24
Atlanta 31.............................. Tennessee 24
Jacksonville 23....................... Pittsburgh 21
Cincinnati 23.......................... N.Y. Giants 10
Denver 22................................... Seattle 20
Oakland 18................................. St. Louis 3
Saturdays Games
Tampa Bay at Minnesota........................ (n)
San Francisco at Houston....................... (n)
Kansas City at Arizona............................ (n)
Sundays Game
Indianapolis at Philadelphia............. 1 p.m.
Thursday, Aug. 20
Detroit at Washington................. 7:30 p.m.
Buffalo at Cleveland......................... 8 p.m.
Friday, Aug. 21
Atlanta at N.Y. Jets....................... 7:30 p.m.
Seattle at Kansas City....................... 8 p.m.
Saturday, Aug. 22
Baltimore at Philadelphia................. 7 p.m.
Miami at Carolina............................. 7 p.m.
New England at New Orleans...... 7:30 p.m.
Chicago at Indianapolis............... 7:30 p.m.
Jacksonville at N.Y. Giants............ 7:30 p.m.
Oakland at Minnesota...................... 8 p.m.
Denver at Houston........................... 8 p.m.
San Diego at Arizona...................... 10 p.m.
Sunday, Aug. 23
Green Bay at Pittsburgh.................... 1 p.m.
Dallas at San Francisco..................... 8 p.m.
St. Louis at Tennessee...................... 8 p.m.
FRIDAYS SUMMARIES
Bengals 23, Giants 10
N.Y. Giants...................0 10 0 0 10
Cincinnati..................10 7 3 3 23
First Quarter
CinSanu 3 pass from Dalton (Obarski
kick), 10:24.
CinFG Obarski 46, 5:20.
Second Quarter
NYGDarkwa 1 run (J.Brown kick), 9:40.
CinWilder Jr. 2 run (Obarski kick), 4:44.
NYGFG J.Brown 41, :00.
Third Quarter
CinFG Obarski 25, 5:47.
Fourth Quarter
CinFG Obarski 21, 9:33.
A39,914.
NYG
Cin
First downs..................................13
29
Total Net Yards...........................224
432
Rushes-yards....................... 24-106 42-225
Passing.......................................118
207
Punt Returns............................ 3-12
5-12
Kickoff Returns...................... 3-115
1-21
Interceptions Ret..................... 1-61
0-0
Comp-Att-Int.......................15-33-0 16-29-1
Sacked-Yards Lost.................... 2-17
2-10
Punts..................................... 8-45.9
4-53.3
Fumbles-Lost..............................0-0
0-0
Penalties-Yards........................ 7-70
4-36
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
RUSHINGN.Y. Giants, Darkwa 9-52, Hunt
3-18, Nassib 3-18, Jennings 2-14, Vereen 2-4,
K.Harper 3-2, Williams 2-(minus 2). Cincinnati,
Wilder Jr. 14-53, Watson 7-52, J.Johnson 6-37,
Burkhead 4-23, Alford 1-23, J.Hill 2-15, Peerman 3-11, Dalton 1-6, Bernard 4-5.
PASSINGN.Y. Giants, Stanzi 3-7-0-34, Nassib 8-18-0-79, Manning 4-8-0-22. Cincinnati,
Dalton 3-3-0-31, Wenning 2-5-1-11, J.Johnson
11-21-0-175.
RECEIVINGN.Y. Giants, Talley 3-34, Robinson 2-12, J.Jones 2-11, Jennings 2-1, Cunningham 1-28, Williams 1-16, D.Harris 1-15,
Washington 1-8, Davis 1-5, Donnell 1-5. Cincinnati, Little 3-65, Eifert 2-30, Uzomah 2-13,
Moore 1-30, Peerman 1-18, M.Jones 1-17,
Green 1-16, Alford 1-13, Tate 1-11, Kumerow
1-4, Sanu 1-3, Wilder Jr. 1-(minus 3).
MISSED FIELD GOALSN.Y. Giants, J.Brown
53 (WR). Cincinnati, Obarski 27 (WR).
GOLF
PGA CHAMPIONSHIP
Saturday
At Whistling Straits (Straits Course)
Sheboygan, Wis.
Purse: $10 million
Yardage: 7,501: Par: 72
Third Round
Jason Day............................. 68-67-66201
Jordan Spieth....................... 71-67-65203
Branden Grace..................... 71-69-64204
Justin Rose........................... 69-67-68204
Martin Kaymer..................... 70-70-65205
Tony Finau........................... 71-66-69206
Matt Jones........................... 68-65-73206
Dustin Johnson.................... 66-73-68207
Anirban Lahiri...................... 70-67-70207
Matt Kuchar......................... 68-72-68208
Billy Horschel....................... 72-68-68208
J.B. Holmes.......................... 68-71-69208
Brooks Koepka..................... 73-69-67209
Brandt Snedeker.................. 71-70-68209
Russell Henley..................... 68-71-70209
George Coetzee................... 74-65-70209
Boo Weekley........................ 75-70-65210
Robert Streb........................ 70-73-67210
Charl Schwartzel.................. 73-69-68210
Rory McIlroy........................ 71-71-68210
Justin Thomas...................... 72-70-68210
Paul Casey........................... 70-70-70210
Hiroshi Iwata....................... 77-63-70210
Phil Mickelson..................... 72-73-66211
Jason Bohn.......................... 74-71-66211
Patrick Reed......................... 75-69-67211
Ernie Els............................... 71-71-69211
Hideki Matsuyama............... 70-70-71211
Brendan Steele.................... 69-69-73211
Jim Furyk............................. 73-70-69212
Luke Donald......................... 72-70-70212
Henrik Stenson.................... 76-66-70212
Cameron Smith.................... 74-68-70212
Scott Piercy.......................... 68-70-74212
David Lingmerth.................. 67-70-75212
Victor Dubuisson................. 76-70-67213
Tyrrell Hatton....................... 73-72-68213
Francesco Molinari.............. 71-73-69213
Thomas Bjorn...................... 69-75-69213
Rickie Fowler....................... 73-70-70213
Bubba Watson..................... 72-71-70213
Hunter Mahan..................... 72-68-73213
Marcel Siem......................... 70-70-73213
Nick Watney........................ 78-68-68214
Marc Warren....................... 72-73-69214
Danny Lee............................ 68-77-69214
Lee Westwood..................... 72-72-70214
Chesson Hadley................... 73-71-70214
Steve Stricker....................... 71-72-71214
Webb Simpson.................... 71-71-72214
Y.E. Yang............................... 70-72-72214
Jason Dufner........................ 71-75-69215
Vijay Singh........................... 73-71-71215
Danny Willett....................... 74-70-71215
Louis Oosthuizen................. 72-71-72215
Sangmoon Bae.................... 71-72-72215
Emiliano Grillo..................... 70-73-72215
Harris English....................... 68-71-76215
Mikko Ilonen........................ 72-73-71216
Bill Haas............................... 73-72-71216
Sean OHair.......................... 75-68-73216
Kiradech Aphibarnrat.......... 72-72-73217
Charles Howell III................. 70-70-77217
Morgan Hoffmann............... 72-74-72218
Keegan Bradley.................... 76-70-72218
Koumei Oda......................... 79-67-72218
Kevin Streelman.................. 73-71-74218
Ryan Moore......................... 73-70-75218
Sergio Garcia....................... 72-71-75218
Brendon de Jonge................ 72-71-75218
J.J. Henry............................. 75-70-74219
Troy Merritt......................... 74-70-75219
James Morrison................... 69-74-76219
Kevin Chappell..................... 73-68-78219
Carl Pettersson.................... 76-70-75221
Nick Taylor........................... 73-73-75221
Brian Gaffney....................... 71-73-78222
LPGA
PORTLAND CLASSIC
Saturday
At Columbia Edgewater Country Club
Portland, Ore.
Purse: $1.3 million
Yardage: 6,476; Par 72
Third Round
Brooke M. Henderson......... 66-67-65198
Morgan Pressel.................... 71-67-65203
Sandra Gal........................... 67-72-65204
Caroline Masson.................. 70-64-70204
Ha Na Jang........................... 68-70-67205
Candie Kung......................... 69-66-70205
Alison Lee............................ 66-71-69206
Jenny Shin............................ 67-68-71206
Jaye Marie Green................. 76-68-63207
Min Lee................................ 72-67-68207
Pornanong Phatlum............. 69-69-69207
Azahara Munoz.................... 68-70-69207
Cristie Kerr........................... 67-71-69207
Alena Sharp......................... 67-70-70207
Mo Martin........................... 67-69-71207
Julieta Granada.................... 66-69-72207
SooBin Kim.......................... 69-72-67208
So Yeon Ryu......................... 68-71-69208
Austin Ernst......................... 72-66-70208
Lisa Ferrero.......................... 71-67-70208
Amy Anderson..................... 65-72-71208
Sun Young Yoo..................... 72-69-68209
Lizette Salas......................... 71-70-68209
Maria McBride..................... 70-71-68209
P.K. Kongkraphan................. 71-68-70209
Mirim Lee............................ 71-68-70209
Xi Yu Lin............................... 70-68-71209
Sydnee Michaels.................. 69-68-72209
Kim Kaufman....................... 69-67-73209
Karine Icher......................... 69-73-68210
Stacy Lewis.......................... 71-69-70210
Mika Miyazato..................... 70-70-70210
Minjee Lee........................... 68-72-70210
Yani Tseng............................ 70-69-71210
Hyo Joo Kim......................... 68-68-74210
Joanna Klatten..................... 72-72-67211
Jennifer Song....................... 70-71-70211
Kelly W Shon........................ 68-73-70211
Ju Young Park....................... 71-68-72211
Wei-Ling Hsu........................ 70-73-69212
Beatriz Recari....................... 73-69-70212
I.K. Kim................................ 72-70-70212
Jee Young Lee...................... 71-69-72212
Ryann OToole..................... 68-72-72212
Anna Nordqvist.................... 70-69-73212
Eun-Hee Ji............................ 72-72-69213
Carlota Ciganda................... 70-74-69213
Felicity Johnson................... 68-76-69213
Ashleigh Simon.................... 71-72-70213
Brooke Pancake................... 70-73-70213
Karrie Webb......................... 74-68-71213
Jenny Suh............................. 70-72-71213
Sakura Yokomine................. 73-69-72214
Haru Nomura....................... 72-70-72214
Lydia Ko............................... 70-72-72214
Brittany Lang....................... 70-71-73214
Giulia Sergas........................ 69-72-73214
Mi Hyang Lee....................... 70-70-74214
Sandra Changkija................. 65-72-77214
Jane Park............................. 70-73-72215
Kelly Tan.............................. 70-73-72215
Sadena A Parks.................... 72-68-75215
Christel Boeljon................... 74-70-72216
Christina Kim....................... 71-73-72216
Ariya Jutanugarn.................. 71-73-72216
Cheyenne Woods................ 70-74-72216
Kendall Dye.......................... 74-69-73216
CONESTOGA
LANCASTER
MEADIA HEIGHTS
EAGLE Rick Caldwell eagled the 370yard, par-4 eighth hole using a 3-wood and
4-hybrid.
WOMENS 18-HOLE GROUP Sweeps:
Medal Play, Suzette Crandall 69; Lisa Dichter 70; (tie) Constance Murphy, Desri Pursell and Robin Stauffer 72.
OVERLOOK
HOLE-IN-ONE Jim Benchich had a holein-one on the 145-yard, par-3 sixth hole using a 9-iron.
TRANSACTIONS
BASEBALL
American League
BALTIMORE ORIOLES Optioned OF Junior Lake to Norfolk (IL). Recalled OF Henry
Urrutia from Norfolk.
BOSTON RED SOX Placed RHP Steven
Wright on the 7-day DL, effective Friday.
Recalled 3B Garin Cecchini from Pawtucket
(IL). Agreed to terms with LHP Rich Hill on
a minor league contract. Sent RHP Rick
Porcello to Lowell (NYP) for a rehab assignment.
CLEVELAND INDIANS Optioned RHP
Shawn Armstrong to Columbus (IL).
MINNESOTA TWINS Recalled RHP Tyler
Duffey from Rochester (IL).
NEW YORK YANKEES Designated LHP
Chris Capuano for assignment. Recalled
RHP Caleb Cotham from Scranton/WilkesBarre (IL).
OAKLAND ATHLETICS Designated RHP
Taylor Thompson and LHP Brad Mills for
assignment. Optioned RHP Arnold Leon
and RHP Aaron Brooks to Nashville (PCL).
Recalled RHPs Pat Venditte and Dan Otero
from Nashville. Sent 2B Tyler Ladendorf to
Nashville for a rehab assignment.
SEATTLE MARINERS Optioned RHP
Mayckol Guaipe to Tacoma (PCL). Recalled
RHP Danny Farquhar from Tacoma.
TAMPA BAY RAYS Reinstated OF Desmond Jennings from the 60-day DL.
TEXAS RANGERS Sent LHP Derek Holland to Round Rock (PCL) for a rehab assignment.
National League
ATLANTA BRAVES Optioned RHP Ryan
Kelly to Gwinnett (IL). Claimed RHP Danny
Burawa off waivers from the N.Y. Yankees.
Agreed to terms with RHP Edwin Jackson
on a one-year contract.
CHICAGO CUBS Optioned LHP Zac
Rosscup to Iowa (PCL).
CINCINNATI REDS Optioned RHP Michael Lorenzen to Louisville (IL). Recalled
LHP John Lamb from Louisville.
COLORADO ROCKIES Recalled LHP Ken
Roberts and RHP Gonzalez Germen from
Albuquerque (PCL).
LOS ANGELES DODGERS Placed RHP
Juan Nicasio on the 15-day DL, retroactive
to Monday. Reinstated RHP Chris Hatcher
from the 60-day DL. Transferred RHP Carlos
Frias to the 60-day DL.
MIAMI MARLINS Placed OF Christian
Yelich on the 15-day DL, retroactive to
Monday. Recalled OF Marcell Ozuna from
New Orleans (PCL).
MILWAUKEE BREWERS Recalled RHP
David Goforth from Colorado Springs (PCL).
NEW YORK METS Sent LHP Steven
Matz to St. Lucie (FSL) for a rehab assignment.
SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS Sent RHP Tim
Hudson to San Jose (Cal) for a rehab assignment.
WASHINGTON NATIONALS Agreed to
terms with OF Brenden Webb on a minor
league contract.
American Association
KANSAS CITY T-BONES Signed INF
James Boddicker.
LINCOLN SALTDOGS Signed C Juan
Medina.
WICHITA WINGNUTS Released RHP
Luis Pardo.
Atlantic League
LONG ISLAND DUCKS Signed INF Ryan
Gebhardt.
FOOTBALL
National Football League
CHICAGO BEARS Waived LB DeDe Lattimore. Signed W Jeremy Kelly to a oneyear contract.
DALLAS COWBOYS Waived/injured S
Ray Vinopal. Activated RB Darren McFadden from the PUP list. Signed RBs Michael
Hill and Ben Malena.
MIAMI DOLPHINS Waived/injured WR
Tommy Streeter. Re-signed WR Tyler McDonald.
WNBA
EASTERN CONFERENCE
W
L Pct GB
New York....................16
6 .727
Chicago.......................15 10 .600 21-w
Indiana........................13
9 .591
3
Washington................13
9 .591
3
Connecticut................12 11 .522 41-w
Atlanta..........................8 15 .348 81-w
WESTERN CONFERENCE
W
L Pct GB
x-Minnesota...............18
6 .750
Phoenix.......................15
8 .652 21-w
Tulsa...........................10 14 .417
8
Los Angeles...................7 16 .304 101-w
San Antonio..................7 17 .292 11
Seattle..........................6 19 .240 121-w
x-clinched playoff spot
Fridays Games
New York 90........................ Connecticut 78
Minnesota 84..............................Atlanta 82
Chicago 94................................... Seattle 84
Saturdays Game
Tulsa at New York....................................(n)
Sundays Games
Connecticut at Atlanta....................... 3 p.m.
Minnesota at Washington................. 4 p.m.
Chicago at Los Angeles...................... 5 p.m.
Indiana at Phoenix............................. 8 p.m.
San Antonio at Seattle....................... 9 p.m.
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
NATIONAL LEAGUE
TEAM BATTING
AB R H HR RBI Avg
San Fran.........3935 491 1061 99 465 .270
Colorado........3869 504 1038 130 488 .268
Arizona..........3956 514 1055 103 485 .267
Pittsburgh......3876 475 1005 94 447 .259
Los Angeles....3815 481 975 139 465 .256
St. Louis.........3887 453 988 91 436 .254
Miami............3844 419 976 83 395 .254
Philadelphia...3944 429 997 83 404 .253
Atlanta...........3850 427 973 71 406 .253
Cincinnati.......3892 450 976 123 431 .251
Milwaukee.....3909 450 973 101 430 .249
Washington...3820 468 947 113 442 .248
Chicago..........3816 450 916 107 429 .240
San Diego.......3904 452 934 99 432 .239
New York.......3859 432 917 105 417 .238
INDIVIDUAL BATTING
AB R H HR RBI Avg
Kipnis Cle............. 405 66 132 6 39 .326
Fielder Tex........... 434 56 141 17 68 .325
NCruz Sea............ 435 63 140 34 70 .322
LCain KC............... 396 75 126 12 52 .318
Hosmer KC........... 426 71 135 14 69 .317
Brantley Cle......... 397 48 124 8 63 .312
Bogaerts Bos........ 425 54 132 3 54 .311
JIglesias Det......... 355 35 108 2 21 .304
Trout LAA............. 416 79 126 33 71 .303
Altuve Hou........... 440 59 132 9 49 .300
Kinsler Det........... 457 73 137 6 52 .300
MMachado Bal.... 446 73 133 25 59 .298
Burns Oak............ 368 48 109 2 26 .296
Moreland Tex....... 329 39 97 17 61 .295
Donaldson Tor..... 454 85 133 31 85 .293
Cespedes Det....... 403 62 118 18 61 .293
Abreu CWS.......... 425 69 123 21 67 .289
KMorales KC........ 424 51 122 13 82 .288
Gardner NYY........ 404 74 116 11 52 .287
JMartinez Det...... 426 69 121 30 75 .284
AJones Bal........... 412 59 116 20 60 .282
Reddick Oak......... 384 47 108 13 60 .281
MeCabrera CWS.. 442 52 124 7 58 .281
BHolt Bos............. 328 37 91 2 32 .277
Forsythe TB.......... 393 45 109 13 51 .277
Longoria TB.......... 415 49 115 13 52 .277
Moustakas KC...... 390 50 107 11 43 .274
Headley NYY........ 413 57 113 9 47 .274
Aybar LAA............ 418 54 114 2 35 .273
Calhoun LAA........ 436 52 118 16 62 .271
AEscobar KC......... 440 62 119 2 37 .270
Mauer Min........... 420 48 113 8 51 .269
Giavotella LAA..... 402 46 108 3 40 .269
Eaton CWS........... 425 69 114 10 30 .268
Cano Sea.............. 440 55 118 12 51 .268
Betts Bos.............. 404 53 108 10 51 .267
ARodriguez NYY... 386 64 103 24 63 .267
Beltre Tex............. 380 55 101 9 30 .266
ACabrera TB......... 355 44 94 7 28 .265
Gregorius NYY...... 363 39 96 5 32 .264
Seager Sea........... 440 56 116 17 46 .264
Lawrie Oak........... 406 39 107 10 45 .264
AvGarcia CWS...... 391 45 103 11 45 .263
Vogt Oak.............. 358 47 94 16 62 .263
HRamirez Bos...... 370 56 97 19 53 .262
Pillar Tor............... 425 55 111 7 40 .261
Semien Oak......... 415 46 108 10 28 .260
Teixeira NYY......... 379 56 98 30 77 .259
Ortiz Bos.............. 388 53 100 25 69 .258
Sandoval Bos....... 369 34 95 9 38 .257
CDavis Bal............ 405 65 104 32 85 .257
AJackson Sea....... 361 37 92 6 30 .255
Andrus Tex........... 425 46 108 5 43 .254
Encarnacion Tor... 376 59 95 21 65 .253
Pujols LAA............ 432 63 109 30 66 .252
BMiller Sea.......... 335 32 84 9 36 .251
SPerez KC............. 379 32 95 16 48 .251
RuMartin Tor....... 342 60 85 15 51 .249
Plouffe Min.......... 411 53 101 16 62 .246
Dozier Min........... 444 80 109 24 59 .245
Kiermaier TB........ 367 43 90 5 26 .245
BMcCann NYY...... 334 47 81 20 69 .243
Bautista Tor.......... 390 75 94 27 80 .241
TorHunter Min..... 383 52 92 18 60 .240
Castellanos Det.... 388 29 93 11 51 .240
Choo Tex.............. 376 49 90 14 50 .239
AlRamirez CWS.... 414 32 99 7 42 .239
BButler Oak......... 390 45 93 9 47 .238
Gattis Hou............ 408 46 97 17 60 .238
CSantana Cle........ 381 50 86 12 54 .226
Morrison Sea....... 363 36 80 12 36 .220
Moss Cle.............. 337 36 73 15 50 .217
Infante KC............ 393 36 85 1 33 .216
Valbuena Hou...... 346 50 73 21 43 .211
LaRoche CWS....... 357 32 75 10 37 .210
Napoli Tex............ 335 38 68 13 40 .203
Carter Hou........... 322 39 59 17 49 .183
INDIVIDUAL BATTING
AB R H HR RBI Avg
Goldschmidt Ari... 399 74 136 22 83 .341
Posey SF............... 391 57 130 16 76 .332
Harper Was.......... 367 77 122 29 69 .332
DGordon Mia....... 421 52 139 2 32 .330
LeMahieu Col....... 407 63 130 5 45 .319
Pollock Ari............ 426 77 133 12 49 .312
Panik SF............... 375 56 116 7 35 .309
YEscobar Was...... 397 52 122 8 35 .307
DPeralta Ari......... 320 45 97 11 60 .303
Votto Cin.............. 396 64 120 20 54 .303
MDuffy SF............ 373 49 113 9 52 .303
Markakis Atl......... 435 47 131 2 42 .301
Tulowitzki Col...... 323 46 97 12 53 .300
McCutchen Pit..... 398 67 119 18 77 .299
Revere Phi............ 366 49 109 1 26 .298
Inciarte Ari........... 354 48 105 3 29 .297
HKendrick LAD..... 419 57 124 9 49 .296
Rizzo ChC............. 406 64 120 22 66 .296
AGonzalez LAD.... 414 63 121 22 69 .292
Kang Pit............... 312 43 91 9 40 .292
Heyward StL........ 394 55 114 9 40 .289
Phillips Cin........... 405 53 117 8 43 .289
SMarte Pit............ 396 58 113 13 57 .285
OHerrera Phi........ 340 43 97 6 32 .285
Lind Mil................ 366 49 104 17 66 .284
Blackmon Col....... 434 66 123 13 46 .283
Molina StL............ 382 27 108 2 43 .283
JhPeralta StL........ 430 48 121 16 56 .281
DanMrphy NYM... 343 30 96 8 43 .280
Hechavarria Mia.. 406 49 113 5 46 .278
Braun Mil............. 394 68 109 20 65 .277
Yelich Mia............ 346 37 95 6 29 .275
Arenado Col......... 427 65 117 28 82 .274
Galvis Phi............. 387 42 106 5 30 .274
CaGonzalez Col.... 384 59 105 26 65 .273
Belt SF.................. 377 54 103 17 53 .273
NWalker Pit.......... 400 52 109 11 46 .273
Maybin Atl........... 380 48 103 8 48 .271
Prado Mia............ 348 30 94 4 31 .270
MCarpenter StL... 398 68 107 17 60 .269
Solarte SD............ 358 40 96 7 41 .268
Wong StL............. 422 59 113 11 47 .268
BCrawford SF....... 394 55 105 19 71 .266
Frazier Cin............ 443 64 116 28 71 .262
Segura Mil........... 386 35 100 4 32 .259
Lagares NYM........ 371 38 96 4 33 .259
Pagan SF.............. 399 38 103 0 26 .258
GPolanco Pit........ 396 57 102 6 34 .258
Kemp SD.............. 438 54 112 12 63 .256
Simmons Atl........ 376 49 96 3 32 .255
Grandersn NYM... 424 63 108 20 49 .255
WFlores NYM....... 377 40 96 11 44 .255
Upton SD............. 392 60 99 20 63 .253
Bryant ChC........... 377 60 95 16 66 .252
Duda NYM........... 393 57 97 21 55 .247
ArRamirez Pit....... 338 27 83 11 49 .246
Bruce Cin............. 400 45 98 18 64 .245
JPeterson Atl........ 393 43 96 5 48 .244
MTaylor Was........ 336 31 82 10 48 .244
PAlvarez Pit.......... 328 44 80 17 56 .244
Coghlan ChC........ 324 38 79 11 25 .244
Fowler ChC.......... 420 74 101 12 32 .240
Byrd Cin............... 341 45 82 19 42 .240
DeNorris SD......... 387 47 93 12 52 .240
ARussell ChC........ 330 37 79 7 31 .239
SCastro ChC......... 414 34 98 5 46 .237
Owings Ari........... 361 43 85 3 31 .235
WRamos Was...... 336 30 79 9 49 .235
Howard Phi.......... 383 42 90 19 64 .235
BHamilton Cin...... 378 54 87 4 27 .230
Ahmed Ari........... 329 38 73 7 26 .222
Desmond Was..... 415 52 92 14 40 .222
JRollins LAD......... 406 51 90 11 35 .222
Pederson LAD...... 376 56 83 22 45 .221
TEAM PITCHING
ERA H ER BB SO Sh Sv
Houston........ 3.46 924 397 303 873 11 30
Oakland........ 3.50 941 405 312 890 14 20
Kansas City... 3.57 943 406 341 774 6 40
Tampa Bay.... 3.59 902 410 334 950 10 47
Los Angeles... 3.66 949 417 298 852 9 28
Baltimore...... 3.75 955 420 327 866 9 31
Toronto......... 3.78 975 437 301 809 8 24
Cleveland...... 3.80 922 431 302 1019 7 27
New York...... 3.90 987 446 302 949 1 36
Chicago......... 4.03 1021 454 323 941 8 26
Seattle.......... 4.05 998 472 340 915 9 32
Minnesota.... 4.22 1089 477 280 693 9 32
Detroit.......... 4.49 1076 514 331 799 8 28
Texas............. 4.49 1049 508 373 749 5 32
Boston.......... 4.55 1065 516 340 857 5 27
TEAM PITCHING
ERA H ER BB SO Sh Sv
St. Louis........ 2.61 938 305 326 937 13 48
New York...... 3.17 927 367 271 919 11 37
Pittsburgh..... 3.24 993 372 321 910 10 39
Chicago......... 3.39 921 389 298 989 14 34
Los Angeles... 3.53 949 403 291 1001 17 31
Washington.. 3.69 1002 416 249 925 9 33
San Fran........ 3.70 969 422 307 825 14 31
Miami........... 3.89 962 437 317 812 8 21
San Diego...... 3.98 985 460 347 954 2 33
Cincinnati...... 4.02 958 459 384 839 7 25
Arizona......... 4.05 1014 465 331 825 8 29
Atlanta.......... 4.09 1030 461 370 822 6 37
Milwaukee.... 4.14 1022 477 344 911 5 27
Philadelphia.. 4.69 1152 534 349 825 4 25
Colorado....... 5.05 1100 559 394 764 2 25
INDIVIDUAL PITCHING
IP H BB SO W L ERA
SGray Oak........ 162 115 40 136 12 4 2.06
Kazmir Hou...... 136 103 43 117 6 7 2.12
Keuchel Hou.... 172 134 40 151 14 6 2.36
Price Tor........... 168 150 34 162 11 4 2.41
Archer TB......... 155 117 38 190 10 8 2.62
Santiago LAA.... 135 116 41 126 7 6 2.87
Odorizzi TB...... 116 102 29 99 6 6 3.09
FHernandz Sea.. 151 130 42 145 14 6 3.11
WChen Bal....... 137 128 32 111 6 6 3.21
Estrada Tor....... 118 93 37 92 10 6 3.21
Salazar Cle....... 133 103 40 151 10 6 3.26
Volquez KC....... 146 130 54 107 11 7 3.27
Buehrle Tor...... 155 156 24 73 13 5 3.31
Gallardo Tex..... 138 128 53 88 8 9 3.33
Kluber Cle........ 181 154 34 193 8 12 3.34
Sale CWS.......... 150 131 30 193 10 7 3.47
Karns TB........... 130 112 49 125 7 5 3.53
Richards LAA.... 142 124 47 113 11 9 3.55
Quintana CWS... 148 159 31 127 6 9 3.59
Carrasco Cle..... 144 124 28 155 11 8 3.68
Pelfrey Min...... 129 143 38 62 6 7 3.70
Gibson Min...... 142 140 45 103 8 9 3.75
Chavez Oak...... 131 134 37 113 6 12 3.84
CWilson LAA.... 132 118 46 110 8 8 3.89
UJimenez Bal... 131 130 42 122 9 7 3.92
Dickey Tor........ 157 142 53 97 7 10 3.96
Pineda NYY...... 118 129 15 117 9 7 3.97
NMartinez Tex. 121 131 44 73 7 7 4.09
McHugh Hou... 145 154 37 116 13 6 4.22
Eovaldi NYY...... 129 154 38 92 12 2 4.26
Bauer Cle......... 141 121 57 137 9 9 4.35
Shoemakr LAA.. 116 116 27 105 5 8 4.36
MiGonzalz Bal.... 119 120 38 92 9 8 4.45
PHughes Min... 144 172 15 85 10 8 4.49
JohDanks CWS.. 128 141 40 91 6 9 4.58
TWalker Sea..... 135 128 35 132 8 7 4.60
Lewis Tex......... 146 147 27 110 12 5 4.61
Tillman Bal....... 116 117 42 82 8 7 4.66
Miley Bos......... 133 137 49 98 8 9 4.68
Samrdzija CWS.. 164 171 33 120 8 8 4.78
Simon Det........ 128 140 47 86 10 7 4.84
AnSanchz Det.. 155 149 48 136 10 10 4.95
Sabathia NYY... 129 155 30 107 4 9 5.23
Hutchison Tor.. 125 146 39 110 11 2 5.26
Guthrie KC....... 125 157 36 62 8 7 5.63
Porcello Bos..... 115 138 27 92 5 11 5.81
INDIVIDUAL PITCHING
IP H BB SO W L ERA
Greinke LAD..... 158 108 28 142 12 2 1.59
deGrom NYM... 147 103 28 152 11 6 2.03
Arrieta ChC...... 155 115 39 158 13 6 2.38
Kershaw LAD.... 162 119 30 205 10 6 2.39
GCole Pit.......... 149 133 34 149 14 6 2.48
SMiller Atl........ 145 122 48 118 5 9 2.48
Harvey NYM.... 148 116 31 135 11 7 2.61
Cueto Cin......... 131 93 29 120 7 6 2.62
CMartinez StL.. 137 124 51 139 12 4 2.62
Scherzer Was... 165 125 23 194 11 9 2.73
Lackey StL........ 151 142 37 110 9 7 2.91
Wacha StL........ 138 120 35 119 14 4 2.93
Lynn StL........... 128 124 44 137 9 7 2.95
Burnett Pit....... 135 145 36 114 8 5 3.06
Hammel ChC.... 128 106 27 125 6 5 3.10
Bumgarner SF.. 154 139 26 160 13 6 3.15
Liriano Pit........ 135 105 48 149 8 6 3.19
Lester ChC........ 146 136 36 149 8 8 3.21
Zimmrmnn Was... 148 150 26 114 8 8 3.34
Heston SF......... 141 125 43 106 11 7 3.38
TRoss SD.......... 146 134 67 155 8 9 3.40
BAndersn LAD... 129 135 36 87 6 7 3.43
Niese NYM....... 135 140 37 91 7 9 3.46
GGonzalz Was.. 123 130 45 111 9 4 3.50
Leake SF........... 143 131 36 95 9 6 3.52
Haren ChC........ 139 128 28 97 8 7 3.55
Hamels Phi....... 129 113 39 137 6 7 3.64
Nelson Mil....... 143 127 48 122 9 9 3.65
Koehler Mia..... 134 119 46 93 8 10 3.68
AWood LAD..... 137 150 44 106 8 7 3.74
DeSclafani Cin.. 132 132 47 98 7 7 3.75
Fiers Mil........... 118 117 43 121 5 9 3.89
Shields SD........ 153 144 54 167 8 5 3.89
Hendricks ChC. 131 129 30 111 6 5 3.97
Cashner SD...... 134 140 41 114 4 12 4.09
ChAndersn Ari... 117 121 28 79 5 5 4.31
Locke Pit.......... 124 128 48 95 6 7 4.43
Teheran Atl...... 144 142 52 123 8 6 4.44
Harang Phi....... 121 132 34 81 5 13 4.52
RDeLaRosa Ari.. 142 143 41 116 10 5 4.55
BColon NYM.... 141 162 16 105 10 11 4.58
Hellickson Ari... 124 131 36 103 8 8 4.73
Garza Mil......... 131 142 46 91 6 12 4.82
Lohse Mil......... 129 155 32 91 5 13 6.14
SCOREBOARD
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
AUTO RACING
XFINITY
SPRINT CUP
HORSE RACING
PENN NATIONAL RESULTS
1st$28,500,5f
5-Orchlee (Gonzalez E.)........ 7.20,3.60,3.00
1-Wildwood Days (Wolfsont A.)... 3.60,3.00
4-Godspeed Tommy (Garcia G.)........... 3.00
Also Ran: Atticus Finch, Magnum Forty, Get Happy, (dq)Bin Daas. Race Time:
:57.84. Exacta (5-1) Paid $16.20; Superfecta
(5-1-4-7) Paid $8.31; Trifecta (5-1-4) Paid
$24.20.
2nd$18,000,1m
6-Goodbyeseeulater (Rodriguez A.)......5.00,2.40,2.10
1-Prince Leroi (Potts C.)................ 2.60,2.10
3-R Ks Bobkat (Rodriguez E.)................ 3.00
Also Ran: Royal L. S., Gone Mountain.
Late Scratches: Wonderful Union, Casual
Creeper (IRE). Race Time: 1:39.46. Daily
Double (5-6) Paid $22.40; Exacta (6-1) Paid
$4.90; Trifecta (6-1-3) Paid $7.45.
3rd$17,100,1m
3-Proud Reward (Rodriguez E.)......22.60,8.60,5.20
5-Fairly Complicated (Potts C.)..... 5.60,2.80
2-Boardwalk Run (Wolfsont A.)............ 2.20
Also Ran: Black Opal, Saturday Brat, East
View. Race Time: 1:43.96. Daily Double (63) Paid $86.40; Exacta (3-5) Paid $55.80;
Superfecta (3-5-2-6) Paid $49.48; Trifecta
(3-5-2) Paid $75.75; Pic 3 (5-6-3) Paid
$98.95.
4th$20,000,5f
1-Leroys Jewel (Oro E.)....... 11.00,6.60,3.40
7-Starkers (Gonzalez E.)................ 7.40,4.80
8-Quality Silver (Wolfsont A.)............... 2.80
Also Ran: Artful Lady, Sobeit Sylvia,
Bank of Stars, Picadilly Lily, Chillin It. Late
Scratches: Greygoose Miss, Uknowfriends,
Southern Flair, Molly Mac. Race Time:
:56.34. Daily Double (3-1) Paid $178.60;
Exacta (1-7) Paid $42.00; Superfecta (1-7-85) Paid $69.04; Trifecta (1-7-8) Paid $76.25;
Pic 3 (6-3-1) Paid $260.25; Pic 4 (5-6-3-1)
Paid $965.50.
5th$20,900,5 1/2f
5-Benny Time (Conner T.)..... 4.60,3.00,2.20
4-Vicksburg Bluffs (Cora D.).......... 3.00,2.10
3-Sunshine Mark (Castillo A.)............... 3.20
Also Ran: Spring Equinox, Badstormrising, Forbidden Story. Race Time: 1:04.93.
Daily Double (1-5) Paid $42.40; Exacta (5-4)
Paid $6.20; Superfecta (5-4-3-1) Paid $6.13;
Trifecta (5-4-3) Paid $13.65; Pic 3 (3-1-5)
Paid $369.80.
6th$30,400,1m70yds
1-Secretive (Conner T.)......... 3.60,3.00,2.80
5-Perfect Wind (Cora D.).............. 9.00,6.40
8-Dinny Dinosaur (Gonzalez E.)............ 5.00
Also Ran: Blitzensmajikreign, Dimension, Silent Ruler, Lets Get It Going, Ration.
Late Scratches: Worthy Lion. Race Time:
1:43.58. Daily Double (5-1) Paid $14.20;
Exacta (1-5) Paid $18.40; Superfecta (1-5-87) Paid $57.75; Trifecta (1-5-8) Paid $37.75;
Consolation Double (5-9) Paid $4.80; Pic 3
(1-5-1/9) Paid $22.05.
7th$12,400,5 1/2f
1-Kalamitty (Hernandez J.)....... 3.80,2.80,2.40
4-Mi Nieta Ale (Cora D.)............... 7.60,3.80
3-Wheres My Tail (Potts C.)................. 3.20
Also Ran: Coming Up Rosie, Keegyns Fire,
Tango Pass. Late Scratches: Purrsian Miss.
Race Time: 1:06.99. Daily Double (1-1) Paid
$10.00; Exacta (1-4) Paid $14.90; Superfecta (1-4-3-6) Paid $14.22; Trifecta (1-4-3)
Paid $22.85; Pic 3 (5-1/9-1) Paid $6.85.
8th$10,500,1m
4-The Silver Machine (Hernandez J.)....9.80,4.20,3.80
5-Repentless Lady (Rodriguez E.)..... 6.60,4.00
6-Naevia (Rodriguez A.)........................ 3.60
Also Ran: Miss Layla, Vall and Jan, Carolyn Shines, Brew Blessings, Bonita Estigo,
Robins Kisses, Keera. Race Time: 1:41.56.
Daily Double (1-4) Paid $24.40; Exacta (45) Paid $39.50; Superfecta (4-5-6-3) Paid
$61.58; Trifecta (4-5-6) Paid $79.65; Pic 3
(1/9-1-4) Paid $20.90; Pic 4 (5-1/9-1/2-4)
Paid $58.60.
OFF-TRACK WAGERING
MLS
EASTERN CONFERENCE
W L T Pts GF GA
D.C. United...........13 8 5 44 35 29
New York..............11 6 6 39 38 25
Columbus...............9 8 7 34 38 39
Toronto FC..............9 10 4 31 37 41
New England..........8 9 7 31 32 36
Montreal.................8 9 4 28 29 31
Orlando City...........7 10 7 28 32 37
New York City FC.....7 11 6 27 34 37
Philadelphia............6 13 5 23 29 40
Chicago...................6 12 4 22 24 31
WESTERN CONFERENCE
W L T Pts GF GA
Vancouver.............13 8 3 42 34 22
Los Angeles...........11 7 7 40 42 30
FC Dallas...............11 6 5 38 32 27
Sporting KC...........10 4 7 37 33 22
Portland................10 8 6 36 25 28
Seattle..................10 12 2 32 26 27
Houston..................8 8 7 31 30 28
San Jose..................8 10 5 29 24 29
Real Salt Lake..........7 9 8 29 27 37
Colorado.................5 9 9 24 20 25
NOTE: Three points for victory, one point
for tie.
Thursdays Game
New York City FC 3................. D.C. United 1
Fridays Game
San Jose 1.................................. Colorado 0
Saturdays Games
New York 3............................. Toronto FC 0
Houston at New England........................ (n)
Vancouver at Sporting Kansas City......... (n)
Los Angeles at FC Dallas......................... (n)
Portland at Real Salt Lake....................... (n)
Sundays Games
Orlando City at Seattle..................... 5 p.m.
Chicago at Philadelphia.................... 7 p.m.
Wednesday, Aug. 19
New York City FC at Columbus.... 7:30 p.m.
San Jose at Sporting Kansas City.... 8:30 p.m.
Friday, Aug. 21
Houston at Portland....................... 11 p.m.
Saturday, Aug. 22
Orlando City at Toronto FC............... 4 p.m.
San Jose at D.C. United..................... 7 p.m.
Sporting Kansas City at Columbus....... 7:30 p.m.
Philadelphia at Montreal.................. 8 p.m.
Colorado at Chicago.................... 8:30 p.m.
FC Dallas at Vancouver................... 10 p.m.
Seattle at Real Salt Lake.................. 10 p.m.
Sunday, Aug. 23
New York City FC at Los Angeles....... 3 p.m.
NWSL
W L T Pts GF GA
Seattle..................10 3 3 33 32 18
Chicago...................7 2 7 28 27 19
FC Kansas City.........7 6 4 25 26 18
Washington............7 5 4 25 25 22
Portland..................6 7 4 22 22 22
Houston..................5 7 5 20 19 22
Western New York....5 8 4 19 21 30
Sky Blue FC.............4 7 6 18 18 24
Boston....................4 10 3 15 21 36
NOTE: Three points for victory, one point
for tie.
Wednesdays Games
Chicago 1............................... Sky Blue FC 1
Washington 1............. Western New York 1
FC Kansas City 3.......................... Portland 0
Seattle 2...................................... Houston 1
Sundays Game
Washington at Chicago................ 8:30 p.m.
Friday, Aug. 21
Seattle at Houston............................ 8 p.m.
Saturday, Aug. 22
Portland at Sky Blue FC..................... 7 p.m.
Boston at FC Kansas City................... 8 p.m.
Sunday, Aug. 23
Western New York at Chicago.......... 5 p.m.
TENNIS
KOSER JEWELERS $25,000 TENNIS
CHALLENGE
At Hempfield Rec Center
Saturdays Results
SIngles Main Draw
SEMIFINALS
Naomi Broady d. Shelby Rogers 6-1, 6-3;
Robin Anderson d. An-Sophie Mestach 6-2,
6-4.
Doubles Main Draw
SEMIFINALS
Ivana Jorovic and Jessica Moore d. Cagla
Buyukakcay and Anhelina Kalinina 6-3, 6-4.
SUNDAYS SCHEDULE
Doubles
FINAL
Starting at 12 p.m.
Brynn Boren and Nadja Gilcheist vs. Ivana
Jorovic and Jessica Moore.
Followed by
Singles
FINAL
Robin Anderson vs. Naomi Broady.
ATP WORLD TOUR
COUPE ROGERS
A U.S. Open Series event
Saturday
At Uniprix Stadium
Montreal
Purse: $3.59 million (Masters 1000)
Surface: Hard-Outdoor
Singles
Semifinals
Novak Djokovic (1), Serbia, def. Jeremy
Chardy, France, 6-4, 6-4.
WTA
ROGERS CUP
A U.S. Open Series event
Saturday
At Aviva Centre
Toronto
Purse: $2.38 million (Premier)
Surface: Hard-Outdoor
Singles
Semifinals
Simona Halep (2), Romania, def. Sara
Errani (15), Italy, 6-4, 6-4; Belinda Bencic,
Switzerland, def. Serena Williams (1), United States, 3-6, 7-5, 6-4.
Doubles
Semifinals
Bethanie Mattek-Sands, United States,
and Lucie Safarova (3), Czech Republic, def.
Kristina Mladenovic, France, and Karolina
Pliskova, Czech Republic, 6-4, 7-6 (5).
DRAG RACING
SCHEDULE AND STANDINGS
Points Leaders
Through Aug. 2
Top Fuel
1. Tony Schumacher, 1,289; 2. Antron
Brown, 1,202; 3. Larry Dixon, 1,034; 4.
Richie Crampton, 969; 5. Doug Kalitta, 944.
Funny Car
1. Matt Hagan, 1,177; 2. Jack Beckman,
1,172; 3. Tommy Johnson Jr., 1,063; 4. John
Force, 1,025; 5. Del Worsham, 1,004.
Pro Stock
1. Greg Anderson, 1,322; 2. Erica Enders,
1,271; 3. Chris McGaha, 1,175; 4. Jason
Line, 1,102; 5. Allen Johnson, 951.
Pro Stock Motorcycle
1. Eddie Krawiec, 702; 2. Hector Arana Jr.,
596; 3. Andrew Hines, 546; 4. Karen Stoffer,
468; 5. Jim Underdahl, 459.
BOXING
FIGHT SCHEDULE
Aug. 23
At Sevastopol, Russia, Stanislav Kashtanov
vs. Felix Valera, 12, for Kashtanovs interim
WBA World light heavyweight title.
Aug. 28
At Walter E. Washington Convention
Center, Washington, D.C., Brandon Bennett vs. Jonathan Maicelo, 10, lightweights;
Phil Jackson-Benson vs. Antonio Guerrero,
super middleweights; Robert Easter vs. Osumanu Akaba, 10, lightweights.
At Downtown Las Vegas Events Center
(SHO), Trevor Bryan vs. Derric Rossy, 10,
heavyweights; Juan Ubaldo Cabrera vs.
Mike Gavronski, 10, middleweights.
Aug. 29
At Staples Center, Los Angeles (ESPN),
Hugo Ruiz vs. Julio Ceja, 12, for the interim
WBC World super bantamweight title; Leo
Santa Cruz vs. Abner Mares, 12, featherweights.
Sept. 5
At Dresden, Germany, Juergen Braehmer
vs. Konni Konrad, 12, for Braehmers WBA
World light heavyweight title.
Sept. 6
At American Bank Center, Corpus Christi,
Texas (CBS), Jamie McDonnell vs. Tomoki
kameda, 12, for McDonnells WBA World
bantamweight title.
Sept. 12
At Foxwoods Resort, Mashantucket,
Conn. (NBC), Cornelius Bundrage vs. Jermall Charlo, 12, for Bundrages IBF super
welterweigh title.
At the MGM Grand Garden Arena, Las
Vegas, Floyd Mayweather vs. Andre Berto,
12, for Mayweathers WBC and WBA Super
World welterweight titles; Roman Martinez vs. Orlando Salido, 12, for Martinez
WBO junior lightweight title; Badou Jack
vs. George Groves, 12, for Jacks WBC super
middleweight title.
Sept. 19
At Kempton Park, South Africa, Hekkie
Budler vs. Simphiwe Khonco, 12, for the
vacant WBA World and Budlers IBO World
minimumweight titles.
Sept. 22
At Tokyo, Shinsuke Yamanaka vs. Anselmo Moreno, 12, for Yamanakas WBC
World bantamweight title.
At TBA (FS1), Moises Flores vs. Luis Emanuel Cusolito, 12, for Flores interim WBA
World super bantamweight title.
Sept. 26
At Wemble Arena, London, Fedor Chudinov vs. Frank Buglioni, 12, for Chudinovs
WBA World super middleweight title.
At Puerto Penasco, Mexico, Juan Francisco Estrada vs. Hernan Marquez, 12, for
Estradas WBA Super World flyweight title.
At Buenos Aires, Argentina, Yoan Pablo
Hernandez vs. Victor Emilio Ramirez, 12,
for Hernandezs IBF cruiserweight title.
Sept. 27
At Osaka, Japan, Kazuto Ioka vs. Roberto
Domingo Sosa, 12, for Iokas WBA World
flyweight title.
Sept. 29
At TBA (FS1), Javier Fortuna vs. Carlos
Ivan Velasquez, 12, for Fortunas WBA
World super featherweight title.
Oct. 3
AT StubHub Center, Carson, Calif. (HBO),
Lucas Martin Matthysse vs. Viktor Postol,
12, for the vacant WBC World super lightweight title; Antonio Orozco vs. Humberto
Soto, 10, super lightweights.
Oct. 17
At Madison Square Garden, New York
(HBO PPV), Gennady Golovkin vs. David
Lemieux, 12, for Golovkins WBA Super
World-interim WBC-IBO middleweight
titles and Lemieuxs IBF middleweight title;
Roman Gonzalez vs. Brian Viloria, 12, for
Gonzalezs WBC flyweight title.
Oct. 24
At Esprit Arena, Duesseldorf, Germany,
Wladimir Klitschko vs. Tyson Fury, 12, for
Klitschkos WBA Super World-WBO-IBF
heavyweight titles.
CFL
EAST DIVISION
W L T Pts PF PA
Hamilton.................5 2 0 10 244 136
Toronto...................5 2 0 10 193 183
Ottawa....................4 2 0 8 131 150
Montreal.................2 5 0 4 142 135
WEST DIVISION
W L T Pts PF PA
Edmonton...............5 2 0 10 180 101
Calgary....................4 2 0 8 137 146
B.C..........................3 4 0 6 166 211
Winnipeg................3 5 0 6 160 237
Saskatchewan.........0 7 0 0 174 225
Thursdays Game
Edmonton 15........................... Montreal 12
Fridays Game
Toronto 27...............................Winnipeg 20
Saturdays Games
Hamilton 52...................................... B.C. 22
Ottawa at Calgary....................................(n)
Thursday, Aug. 20
Montreal at B.C............................... 10 p.m.
Friday, Aug. 21
Hamilton at Edmonton...................... 9 p.m.
Saturday, Aug. 22
Ottawa at Toronto............................. 4 p.m.
Calgary at Saskatchewan................... 7 p.m.
ARENA
FOOTBALL
PLAYOFFS
First Round
Friday, Aug. 14
National Conference
San Jose 55................................Portland 28
Saturday, Aug. 15
National Conference
Spokane at Arizona..................................(n)
American Conference
Philadelphia 47........................Cleveland 35
Jacksonville 55........................... Orlando 27
Conference Championships
Sunday, Aug. 23
American Conference
Philadelphia vs. Jacksonville, TBA
National Conference
San Jose vs. Spokane-Arizona winner, TBA
ArenaBowl
Saturday, Aug. 29
American vs. National, TBA
REC
SOFTBALL
LANCASTER SENIOR MODIFIED
Susq. Valley Sports 19......... Engle Printing 5
C11
ATLANTIC
LEAGUE
Freedom Division
W L Pct. GB
Lancaster........................23 12 .657
York.................................19 16 .543 4
x-Southern Maryland......13 22 .371 10
Sugar Land......................13 22 .371 10
Liberty Division
W L Pct. GB
Bridgeport......................20 15 .571
x-Somerset......................20 15 .571
Long Island.....................18 17 .514 2
Camden..........................14 21 .400 6
x-clinched first half
Fridays Games
Long Island 7............... So. Maryland 6 (10)
Sugar Land 5..............................Lancaster 3
York 13..................................... Bridgeport 5
Camden 5................................. Somerset 4
Saturdays Games
Camden 9................................. Somerset 4
Bridgeport 3...................................... York 2
Long Island 8............ Southern Maryland 6
Lancaster 10........................... Sugar Land 6
Sundays Games
Sugar Land at Lancaster................... 1 p.m.
Somerset at Camden................... 1:35 p.m.
Southern Maryland at Long Island...... 5:05 p.m.
York at Bridgeport....................... 5:35 p.m.
Mondays Games
York at Southern Maryland......... 7:05 p.m.
Lancaster at Camden................... 7:05 p.m.
Long Island at Somerset.............. 7:05 p.m.
Bridgeport at Sugar Land............. 8:05 p.m.
SUGAR LAND
LANCASTER
ab r h bi
ab r h bi
Almonte cf 4 1 2 0 Kajimoto cf 4 1 1 2
Dominguez 2b 5 2 3 1 Feliz 3b
5 1 4 5
Scott c
5 1 2 1 Matthes lf 5 1 1 1
Young rf
4 0 3 2 McDade 1b 5 0 1 0
Ward 1b
5 1 1 1 Cvs-Galvez rf 5 0 1 0
Wallace dh 4 0 1 0 Cutler c
4 0 0 0
Limonta lf
3 0 1 1 Hughes 2b 3 2 1 0
Palmiero 3b 4 0 1 0 Zawadzki ss 4 3 3 0
Zazueta ss 4 1 1 0 Pyles dh
4 2 4 1
Totals
38 6 15 6 Totals
39 10 16 9
Sugar Land........300 000 300 6 15 1
Lancaster..........020 620 000 10 16 0
2BAlmonte, Dominguez; Feliz, McDade, Pyles. HRFeliz, Matthes. LOB
Sugar Land 8; Lancaster 7.
IP H R ER BB SO
Sugar Land
Merritt (L, 5-5)............... 3.0 12 8 8 1 0
Villa................................ 1.0 0 0 0 0 1
Carpenter...................... 1.0 3 2 2 0 2
VanAllen........................ 1.0 0 0 0 0 2
Parr................................. 1.0 1 0 0 0 2
Weinhardt..................... 1.0 0 0 0 0 1
Lancaster
Beck (W, 3-1)................. 6.0 12 6 6 1 10
Moskos.......................... 0.2 2 0 0 0 0
Gracey............................ 1.1 1 0 1 0 0
Walden.......................... 1.0 0 0 0 1 0
SOAlmonte, Dominguez, Scott, Young,
Wallace, Limonta, Palmiero 2, Zazueta; Kajimoto, Feliz, Matthes, McDade 2, Hughes 2,
Zawadzki. BBAlmonte, Young, Limonta;
Hughes.
T3:10. A6,432.
INTERNATIONAL
LEAGUE
North Division
W L Pct. GB
Scranton/W-B (Yanks).....69 53 .566
Buffalo (Blue Jays)..........63 59 .516 6
Rochester (Twins)...........62 60 .508 7
Lehigh Valley (Phils)........54 68 .443 15
Syracuse (Nationals).......54 68 .443 15
Pawtucket (Red Sox).......46 76 .377 23
South Division
W L Pct. GB
Norfolk (Orioles).............70 50 .583
Gwinnett (Braves)...........65 56 .537 51-w
Charlotte (White Sox).....64 58 .525 7
Durham (Rays)................58 64 .475 13
West Division
W L Pct. GB
Indianapolis (Pirates)......72 50 .590
Columbus (Indians).........67 54 .554 41-w
Louisville (Reds)..............58 64 .475 14
Toledo (Tigers)................49 71 .408 22
Fridays Games
Durham 6.......................Indianapolis 1 (1st)
Indianapolis 7.....................Durham 1 (2nd)
Toledo 6..................................... Charlotte 1
Pawtucket 7.................. Lehigh Valley 6 (10)
Norfolk 3.....................................Louisville 2
Syracuse 8...................................... Buffalo 2
Scranton/W-B 5........................ Rochester 3
Columbus 5........................... Gwinnett 3 (7)
Gwinnett 5................................ Columbus 4
(comp. of susp. game)
Saturdays Games
Pawtucket 5............ Lehigh Valley 2 (9, 1st)
Lehigh Valley 6........... Pawtucket 5 (9, 2nd)
Norfolk 1.................................... Louisville 0
Charlotte 9..................................... Toledo 6
Buffalo 4.................................... Syracuse 0
Indianapolis 3............................. Durham 2
Rochester 3........................ Scranton/W-B 2
Gwinnett 6............................... Columbus 4
Sundays Games
Buffalo at Syracuse...................... 1:05 p.m.
Durham at Indianapolis............... 1:35 p.m.
Pawtucket at Lehigh Valley.......... 1:35 p.m.
Scranton/W-B at Rochester......... 1:35 p.m.
Charlotte at Toledo........................... 6 p.m.
Norfolk at Louisville..................... 6:05 p.m.
Gwinnett at Columbus................. 6:05 p.m.
Mondays Games
Gwinnett at Toledo........................... 7 p.m.
Syracuse at Pawtucket................. 7:05 p.m.
Durham at Louisville.................... 7:05 p.m.
Charlotte at Columbus................. 7:05 p.m.
Buffalo at Rochester.................... 7:05 p.m.
Norfolk at Indianapolis................ 7:05 p.m.
EASTERN
LEAGUE
Eastern Division
W L Pct. GB
Reading (Phillies)............68 51 .571
Binghamton (Mets)........64 54 .542 31-w
Trenton (Yankees)...........62 57 .521 6
New Hampshire (Jays)....58 58 .500 81-w
New Britain (Rockies).....57 61 .483 101-w
Portland (Red Sox)..........44 76 .367 241-w
Western Division
W L Pct. GB
Bowie (Orioles)...............68 51 .571
Akron (Indians)...............64 56 .533 41-w
Altoona (Pirates).............63 57 .525 51-w
Richmond (Giants)..........60 59 .504 8
Harrisburg (Nationals)....57 63 .475 111-w
Erie (Tigers).....................48 70 .407 191-w
Fridays Games
Trenton 2..................................... Reading 1
Akron 12..................................... Portland 2
Harrisburg 2................................... Bowie 0
Erie 5.............................. New Hampshire 4
New Britain 6........................ Binghamton 1
Richmond 5................................. Altoona 4
Saturdays Games
Bowie 9................................... Harrisburg 1
Portland 6....................................... Akron 4
Altoona 5................................. Richmond 3
Reading 4..................................... Trenton 2
New Britain 3........................ Binghamton 1
Erie 5.............................. New Hampshire 3
Sundays Games
Akron at Portland............................. 1 p.m.
Bowie at Harrisburg..................... 1:30 p.m.
Erie at New Hampshire................ 1:35 p.m.
Altoona at Richmond................... 1:35 p.m.
Binghamton at New Britain......... 1:35 p.m.
Reading at Trenton........................... 5 p.m.
Mondays Games
New Hampshire at Reading......... 7:05 p.m.
C12
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Lancaster Weather
TODAY
MONDAY
90
65
TUESDAY
90
66
90
68
POP: 10%
POP: 5%
REGION
LANCASTER
Humid today with sunshine. High
88 to 92. Winds south-southwest
3-6 mph. Clear and humid tonight.
Low 63 to 67. Winds southsouthwest 3-6 mph.
60
12 AM 3
9 NOON 3
9 12 AM
TEMPERATURE
Lancaster
88/62
Ephrata
91/61
New Holland
89/64
Lancaster (last year)
74/50
Normals for the day
84/63
Year to date high
92 on July 19
Year to date low
-2 on Feb. 20
PRECIPITATION
24 hours ending 7 p.m.
0.00
Month to date
0.76
Normal month to date
1.95
Month to date departure
-1.19
Year to date
24.91
Normal year to date
26.29
Year to date departure
-1.38
Greatest Aug. total 13.94 (1933)
Least Aug. total
0.51 (1957)
Source: www.atmos.millersville.edu/~wic
PRECIPITATION
Brownstown
Columbia
County Park
Ephrata
Flory Mill
Manheim
Mount Joy
Smoketown
Truce
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
RIVER STAGES
Levels as of 7:00 a.m. yesterday
Susquehanna
at Harrisburg
at Marietta
Conestoga
at Lancaster
at Conestoga
Feet
Below
Flood
3.61
34.14
13.39
14.86
3.18
1.43
7.82
POP: 25%
Erie
84/68
300
500
Yesterdays readings
Main Pollutant
Particulates
Ozone
Ozone
21
69
NATION
Winnipeg
72/48
Billings
74/53
Low
Absent
High
Moderate
Denver
91/60
Washington
94/74
Kansas City
90/70
Atlanta
89/72
El Paso
95/72
Houston
95/74
Chihuahua
90/63
-10s
Rain
Showers
-0s
0s
Snow
10s
Flurries
20s
Ice
30s
Cold Front
40s
50s
70s
HONDRUAUTO.COM
80s
MSRP .................................$24,345
HONDRU Discount...............-$1,586
Factory Rebate....................-$1,500
Ford Credit Bonus ..................-$750
FACTORY DISCOUNT...............-$490
Competitive Lease Conquest .-$750
Lease for
$99 MO
Stk#15F854
90s
100s
$99 MO
YOUR PRICE
$19,520
37 ESCAPES
AVAILABLE
Lease for
YOUR PRICE
Stk#15F876
MANHEIM
Lancas
717-665-3551
**24 mo
$0 Security Deposit
$3500 due at signing
MSRP .............................$37,115
Hondru Disc ................... -$2,616
Factory Rebate............... -$3,000
Ford Credit Bonus Cash .... -$750
Competitive Lease Conquest -$750
Lease for
0% for 72 MTHS
$199 MO
$19,395
19 FUSIONS
AVAILABLE
110s
MSRP .......................................$22,935
HONDRU DISC ...........................-$1,540
FACTORY DISC ..............................-$490
FORD REBATE ............................-$1,250
Competitive Lease Conquest ..........-$750
$99 MO
Mt. Jo
$13,395
STK#16F006
65/54/r
84/70/t
87/72/s
91/68/pc
91/72/s
86/68/s
87/67/t
90/69/t
89/69/t
96/78/s
84/57/t
91/68/s
91/76/sh
108/82/s
88/66/s
82/69/t
86/77/t
96/75/s
90/74/t
96/77/s
109/88/s
89/68/t
91/60/s
78/60/pc
95/75/pc
E-TOWN
YOUR PRICE
24 FOCUSES
AVAILABLE
**24 mo
$0 Security Deposit
$3500 due at signing
64/55/r
89/72/t
86/71/s
91/67/s
84/70/s
85/68/s
87/67/s
90/70/s
91/69/s
97/76/s
91/60/t
92/67/pc
90/77/sh
109/82/s
95/70/s
88/70/s
86/76/t
94/78/s
89/74/t
95/75/s
113/89/s
90/67/s
91/64/s
85/61/s
94/74/s
arrisburg
MSRP .......................................$19,090
HONDRU DISC ...........................-$1,195
FACTORY REBATE ......................-$1,000
FORD CREDIT REBATE ..................-$750
College Student Purchase Program -$500
Focus Owner Loyalty Retail Direct Offer -$1,500
Lease for
High:
Low:
Stationary Front
Hi/Lo/W
Warm Front
60s
MON
Hi/Lo/W
SATURDAY EXTREMES
Miami
91/79
Monterrey
95/69
T-storms
Anchorage
Atlanta
Atlantic City
Baltimore
Boston
Buffalo
Cleveland
Chicago
Charlotte
Dallas
Denver
Harrisburg
Honolulu
Las Vegas
Los Angeles
Nashville
New Orleans
New York
Orlando
Philadelphia
Phoenix
Pittsburgh
Salt Lake City
San Francisco
Wash., D.C.
Toronto
87/67
Detroit
88/70
New York
94/78
Minneapolis
82/66
Los Angeles
95/70
MON
6:18 a.m.
8:00 p.m.
9:05 a.m.
9:26 p.m.
New
TODAY
Montreal
85/67
Chicago
90/70
San Francisco
85/61
NATION
Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
POLLEN
TODAY
Sunrise
6:17 a.m.
Sunset
8:01 p.m.
Moonrise
8:10 a.m.
Moonset
8:57 p.m.
First
Full
Last
Scranton
90/67
Seattle
78/57
Grasses
Trees
Weeds
Mold
Todays forecast
STK#15F430
BEACH REPORT
Harrisburg
92/67
AIR QUALITY
POP: 10%
Partial sunshine
Williamsport
Punxsutawney
91/64
Wilkes-Barre
88/64
92/65
State College
86/63
Butler
87/63
92
69
POP: 10%
Bradford
84/58
Oil City
87/64
POCONOS
Mostly sunny and humid today.
High 83 to 87. Mainly clear tonight.
Low 60 to 64. Mostly sunny
tomorrow.
85
65
DELAWAREMARYLAND
More humid today with plenty
of sun; a thunderstorm in spots
in the Maryland panhandle. High
82 to 94.
85
67
POP: 10%
ALMANAC
80
88
70
POP: 40%
100
WEDNESDAY
YOUR PRICE
$29,999
67 F-SERIES
AVAILABLE
**24 mo
$0 Security Deposit
$3500 due at signing
**24 mo
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$3500 due at signing
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 8/31/2015. (Not responsible for typos)
2015 CHEVY
SONIC
20 SONICS
AVAILABLE
Stk# 15C152
MSRP ...................................$17,690
HONDRU DISC .......................-$1,003
GM Consumer Cash .................-$500
GM Bonus Cash ........................-$500
GM Credit Union Member Cash ...-$750 Stk# 15C226
GM SELECT MODEL BONUS CASH -$1,000
2015 CHEVY
CRUZE
2015 CHEVY
MALIBU
Stk# 15H310
YOUR PRICE
$13,937
MSRP................................... $26,395
HONDRU Disc .......................-$1,000
GM Consumer Cash .............-$1,500
GM Competitive Lease Cash -$1,500
GM Select Model Bonus Cash -$1,000
GM Bonus Cash .......................-$500
YOUR PRICE
$20,895
Lease for
$147 MO
12 CRUZES
AVAILABL
MSRP................................... $19,710
HONDRU Disc .......................-$1,215
GM Competitive Lease Cash -$1,500
GM Consumer Cash .............-$1,000
GM Bonus Cash ....................-$1,000
Stk#15C181
24 mo
$0 security deposit
$310 due at signing
Tax, Tags, License, & $134 doc fee extra.
Includes Competitive Lease Cash
11 CAMAROS
AVAILABLE
ALL
2015
CAMARO'S
YOUR PRICE
X 72 MO.
$22,245
14 AVAILABLE!!!
YOUR PRICE
$14,995
UP TO
42 MPG
24 mo
$0 security deposit
$1,300 due at signing
Taax, Tags, License, & $134 doc fee extra.
Includes Competitive Lease Cash
YOUR PRICE
2015
COMMEMORATIVE
CAMARO / COLORADO
IN STOCK!!
2 YR/24,000 MI.
FREE MAINTENANCE
ON 2015 MODELS
MSRP ...................................$26,730
HONDRU Disc ...........................-$735
GM Competitive Cash.............-$1,500
GM Select Model Cash...........-$1,000
GM Bonus Cash ........................-$750
199
MO
2 GREAT
LOCATIONS!
MSRP.................................$26,305
HONDRU Disc..................... -$1,310
GM Consumer Cash.............-$1,500
GM Bonus Cash..................... -$750
GM Competitive Lease Cash . -$500
Stk# 15H166
LEASE FOR
299
MO
$22,745
2015 CHEVY
EQUINOX LT
665-2466 OR 877-597-3551
STK#15H280
36 mo
$0 security deposit
$2000 due at signing
Tax, tags, license, & $134 doc fee extra
Includes Competitive Lease Cash
MANHEIM
RT. 72
LEASE FOR
189
MO
MSRP ................................$27,180
HONDRU Disc .................... -$1,280
GM Competitive Lease Cash -$1,500
GM Bonus Cash ................. -$1,250
GM Select Model Bonus Cash -$1,000
GM Consumer Cash .......... -$1,000
36 mo
$0 security deposit
$1100 due at signing
Tax, Tags, License, &
$134 doc fee extra.
Includes Competitive Lease Cash
YOUR PRICE
367-6644 OR 1-877-924-6644
$35,995
YOUR PRICE
$21,150
8 EQUINOXS
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2015 RAM
LEASE FOR
1500 QUAD CAB $
248
EXPRESS STK#15D229 X 36 MOMO
MSRP ................................$36,265
Rebate .............................. -$3,000
Chrysler Capital Bonus ........ -$500
Bonus Buck Coupons........ -$1,000
Summer Clearance Bonus -$1,000
Hondru Disc ...................... -$2,224
2015 DODGE
DART SXT Stk#15D198
MSRP........................$21,730
Hondru Disc ...............-$1,417
Rebate ..........................-$500
2015 DODGE
CHARGER SXT
STK # 15D166
MSRP ...................................$34,775
Rebate ..................................-$3,000
Summer Clearance Bonus ...- $1,000
Hondru Discount ..................- $1,852
YOUR PRICE
$28,923
LEASE FOR
309
MO
X 36 MO
$0 Due at Signing
2 CHARGERS
AVAILABLE
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n SEND STORY TIPS & INFO TO: TIM MEKEEL, 481-6030, TMEKEEL@LNPNEWS.COM
MICHELLE SINGLETARY
THE COLOR OF MONEY
Call debt
what it is
loathsome
This 2001 photo shows an aerial view looking east over the proposed site of the Crossings at Conestoga Creek shopping center on Harrisburg
Pike. Route 30 and Park City are to the upper left, and Longs Park is at the upper right.
Park City
30
TIM MEKEEL
THE CROSSINGS
AT CONESTOGA
CREEK
Farmingdale
Road
Toys R Us
Longs
Park
CROSSINGS, page D2
ne
st
Lancaster
Post
Office
a C re e k
Pike
n $100M to develop
n 713 employees
n $9.5M/year in taxes
og
g
ur
sb
rri
Ha
TMEKEEL@LNPNEWS.COM
Co
SINGLETARY, page D2
FILE PHOTO
Little
There is power in
words.
I cringe when I hear
financial professionals argue there is good
debt and bad debt.
They typically put
mortgages and student
debt into a category of
virtuousness.
On the other hand,
carrying credit-card
balances from month
to month is bad, they
advise.
People often to say to
me, I dont have any
debt. But then they
quickly add, except for
my mortgage.
The division of debt
into good versus bad
contributed to the housing crisis that became
the trigger for the Great
Recession. Americans
were led to believe that
mortgages, no matter
how high, exempted
them from the dangers
of debt.
And it has been the
same rhetoric about
student loans, which
are described as a good
investment that has
pushed families to borrow $1.3 trillion to pay
for education.
So it was with much
interest I read a new
report by the Pew
Charitable Trusts, which
found that 80 percent of
Americans have some
form of debt. But most of
those folks 69 percent
would prefer not to
have the burden.
Pew explored how four
generations of Americans have been affected
by debt. The report,
The Complex Story
of American Debt,
provides insights into
the good versus bad debt
discourse.
One of the biggest
shifts in American families balance sheets over
the past 30 years has
been the growing use of
credit and households
subsequent indebtedness, the report says.
In the years leading up
to the Great Recession,
the average household at
the middle of the wealth
ladder more than doubled its mortgage debt.
Although Americans
debt has decreased since
then, housing which
still is the largest liability for most households
and other debt remain
higher than they were in
the 1990s, and student
loan obligations have
continued to grow.
Heres a key finding
from the report. The
jump in debt hasnt been
met with an increase
in household income.
Debt, of course can
become particularly
burdensome for lowincome families. In the
aftermath of the recession, liabilities for lowincome families grew far
faster than their income.
In 2007, their debt was
equal to just one-fifth of
their income. It had ballooned to half by 2013.
Erin Currier, project
director of financial
security and mobility at
Pew Charitable Trusts,
said the report specifically examines how
Americans growing
indebtedness connects
APARTMENTS
HOTEL
RETAIL
ROADWORK
TMEKEEL@LNPNEWS.COM
HEATHER STAUFFER
WHATS IN STORE
Co-owners Cindy Lam and Sam Guo stand near the hot
bar at Silantra, an Asian street kitchen-style restaurant
that recently opened at the site of the former Red Rose.
n Phone: 399-1988.
D2
BUSINESS
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Project evolves
The Crossings first
made headlines in 2006
when High Real Estate
Group unveiled its first
plan for the 90-acre site
between Toys R Us and
the Lancaster Post Office.
At the time, The
Crossings was envisioned as 650,000
square feet of retail
space.
That would have
made The Crossings
the
second-biggest
shopping center in the
county, behind only
nearby Park City Center.
But the Great Recession, running from
December 2007 to
June 2009, dampened
enthusiasm for developing large new retail
spaces.
High Real Estate
Group revamped its
plan accordingly in
2011, reflecting what
one company official
called the new world
order.
In the revised plan, retail space was trimmed
to 211,000 square feet,
and 258 upscale apartments and a hotel with
up to 135 rooms were
added.
The project won zoning approval as a conditional use with 52
conditions late that
same year.
But much work remains to bring the plan
to life.
Since then, High Real
Estate Group has settled legal challenges
to the project, secured
its anchor tenant, finetuned the housing side
of the plan, and figured
out how to meet new
federal environmental
regulations.
So while the project
appeared, from the
publics
perspective,
to be idle the past four
years, High Real Estate
Main Street
ambiance
Evans said its presentation to the planning
commission will focus on demonstrating
how our plan and our
intent complies with
those (52) conditions.
Lancaster-based
High Real Estate Group
is in a position to address all those points
by itself because, unlike many mixed-use
ventures, the project
is being done entirely
by one parent company
and its affiliates.
For instance, affiliate
High Associates is handling the development,
leasing and management. Affiliate Greenfield Architects is doing
the design and affiliate
High Construction will
be the builder.
In many mixed-use
projects, the retailer,
hotelier and housing
developer are unrelated, Evans said. One
of them takes the lead
and moves its piece
forward first, then sells
or leases land to the
others.
Though the components of The Crossings
have morphed over the
years, the project will
retain its pedestrianfriendly, Main Street
ambiance, as required
by the conditional
uses, said Evans.
The retail area will
have benches, a water feature (such as
a fountain), a fire pit
or fireplace, stamped
and colored sidewalks,
pocket parks and raised
crosswalks, designed to
slow traffic. (This type
of crosswalk is now on
College Avenue near
Franklin & Marshall
College.)
The perimeter of the
site will have a walking
and biking path. On the
west end, it will connect to Noel Dorwart
Park in adjoining East
Hempfield Township.
On the east end, it will
connect to Longs Park.
The west edge, bounded by the Little Conestoga Creek, will get
an interpretative trail,
with signs explaining the importance of
wetlands, stormwater
management, riparian
buffers and other features.
The existing riparian
buffer (a strip of vegetation that shields a waterway from the impact
of land use) along the
Little Conestoga Creek
will be protected by a
new buffer with fresh
plantings of vegetation.
A farmhouse, parts of
which date to 1799, on
the southwest quadrant
of the property will be
preserved. High Real
Estate Group has yet to
decide how to use it.
Harrisburg Pike
upgrades
Road improvements
will remain a significant
part of the project. (See
related story for details.)
Most notably, Harrisburg Pike between
the Norfolk Southern
underpass and Route
30 will be widened to
include four lanes and
turning lanes.
If you drive along
Harrisburg Pike past
Woodcrest Villa and
the health campus, the
road system there will
be what we have here,
Evans said.
Road improvements
will be completed before The Crossings
opens, said Ken Hornbeck, vice president of
development for High
Associates.
High Real Estate
Group will spend $8
million to $9 million on
those road upgrades,
he said. On top of that,
it will pay a $2.2 million traffic impact fee to
Manheim Township.
The three types of
buildings that will comprise The Crossings
include that of the unidentified anchor ten-
DONATION
a mentorship program
in the fall semester,
and the school and
company have partnered on industry visits, internships and
training over the past
year.
Carel said it has seven current employees
who are Stevens alumni.
Carel USA, which has
an office in Manheim,
is a subsidiary of Carel
Industries, based in
Italy.
Crossings.
Coordinate traffic
signals on Harrisburg
Pike, from College Avenue to Park City Center, and optimize their
timing.
Construct Crossings Boulevard to run
through the back half of
The Crossings, connecting Harrisburg Pike and
Farmingdale Road.
Improve traffic signal and lanes for the
Route 30 on-ramp at
ROAD UPGRADE
AREAS
n Off-ramps from Route
Manheim Pike.
Contribute $1.3
million to East Hempfield Township, which
adjoins The Crossings,
for related upgrades
to Farmingdale Road,
Good Drive and Oreville
Road.
Calendar
Thursday, Aug. 20
n Elizabethtown Area Chamber of Commerce
business roundtable with SCORE Lancaster, at
Trellis Place, 7:30 a.m. Registration required at
elizabethtowncoc.com.
Wednesday, Sept. 2
n Lancaster Chamber mini-session on using its
Friday, Sept. 4
n Lancaster Chamber starts eight-session New
Whos News
Jeremy D.
Haines
Stephanie
Steffy
n Murry Communities
J. David
Aungst
Arthur W.
Weaver
WHO TO EMAIL
Bankruptcies
Here is a list of Lancaster
County bankruptcies
recorded in U.S.
Bankruptcy Court, Eastern
District of Pennsylvania,
Reading, Aug. 4-10.
Russell F. LaBrasca Jr., 400
block of Candlewyck Road.
Chapter 7.
Amy E. Scherer, 1200
block of Zeager Road,
Elizabethtown. Chapter 13.
Susan M. Frey, 100 block
of Charleston Drive, Willow
Street. Chapter 7.
Singletary
Continued from D1
to families financial
security, their attitudes
toward it, and how it
relates to their overall
financial health.
As part of the survey,
everyone was asked,
What comes closest
to your feelings about
debt? Here were the
choices:
No debt is worth it
to me.
Some debt is a necessity, but I would prefer
not to have it.
I am OK taking on
the debt that I need.
How would you answer?
I would have added a
fourth choice. I hate
debt and so use it begrudgingly.
It might appear that
my answer is similar to
some debt is necessary.
But as I said, there is
power in the words we
use or the things we tell
ourselves. So heres the
distinction. I use debt.
Ive used it to buy homes.
I use credit cards. I used
to rely on debt to buy
cars. But my internal
dialogue is one of loathing when it comes to
debt. That in turn keeps
me from accumulating
amounts that are unsustainable for me and my
family.
This summer I saw
Disneys animated movie
Inside Out, which was
a brilliant look at the internal conversations we
have with ourselves. The
film largely takes place in
the mind of 11-year-old
n michelle.singletary@
washpost.com
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
D3
Technology
SERVICES
SPRINT
HOUSE
CALLS
Robin co-founder Bart Lomont poses for a portrait as Joel McCloskey cuts the grass of a house in Dallas on July 2. Lomont
and fellow entrepreneur Justin Crandall created Robin, a lawn care service that taps into the sharing economy by linking
homeowners and lawn services.
KIM KOMANDO
CYBER SPEAK
5 secrets to make
you love Windows 10
Windows 10 is finally here! If you
hated Windows 8, youre most likely
in love with Windows 10. Of course,
you might still be waiting in line for
your chance to download the upgrade.
Microsoft is rolling it out in stages. Or
you could also be deciding whether
you even want to upgrade. New software almost always has bugs to work
out, and sometimes you just dont
know what to expect.
Whether youre on the fence about
Windows 10 or youre champing at the
bit to try it, here are five secret features that you need to know.
2. Manage updates
If youve been following Windows
10 through its development, youve
probably heard a lot of the controversy
surrounding the new update procedure. Gone are the days of picking and
KOMANDO, page D6
The redefined
worker
To participate in the
sharing economy, you
need only to lend your
car, rent out your room
or deliver food. Enter-
ON-DEMAND, page D6
GROWN
NOW A
FULL SERVICE
BRANCH
WEVE
The sharing
economy is widely
composed of
startups, but some
larger companies
are harnessing the
power of on-demand
services to connect
with their customers.
This summer,
telecom giant Sprint
Corp. launched an
on-demand service
in the area that
allows customers to
request a house call
from experts who
will deliver, set up
and transfer data to
new mobile devices.
Whole Foods also
is making waves
with its partnerships
with many food and
grocery delivery
services.
D4
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Talking Points
Underfunded pensions
raise concerns, but
defaults remain low.
Puerto Rico is drowning in $72
billion of debt it admittedly cannot pay back. Several states
Illinois, Pennsylvania, New Jersey and Kentucky among them
are facing mounting financial
problems of their own, mainly
because of pension promises that
are not properly funded.
Those government travails
come just two years after Detroits historic bankruptcy, the
largest municipal default ever.
Since individuals hold most of
the $3.7 trillion invested in municipal bonds or about 70 percent,
either directly or through mutual
funds it raises the question:
Should investors be worried?
After all, municipal bonds have
traditionally been viewed as safe
investments.
There is more stress in the
muni market today than there
was 10 years ago because there
are higher fixed costs like pensions and retiree health care
costs, increased debt costs and
more modest revenue increases,
said Lisa Washburn, a managing
director for Municipal Market
Analytics in Concord, Mass. I
am more worried about credit deterioration in states with significant pension issues, but I am not
at this point concerned about any
risk of default at the state level.
Overall default levels remain
exceedingly low and are not expected to rise meaningfully. The
default rate of the S&P Municipal
Bond Index, which tracks 84,000
bonds from more than 22,000 issuers, was 0.17 percent in 2014,
compared with about 0.11 in 2013.
We expect to see a small increase from the past in terms of
bankruptcy or restructuring, but
we have to put this in perspective, said Christopher W. Alwine,
head of Vanguards municipal
bond group. Its a few isolated
events in a very large market.
Still, the pension problem isnt
going away. Cities, counties and
states will struggle to find the
most politically palatable and financially feasible ways to shore
up their finances. In some cases,
governments have issued more
bonds to fill in the pension shortfall, which feels like resorting to a
credit card to cover the daily bills.
The Pew Charitable Trusts
found that state and local pensions had a funding gap of $1 trillion. The Illinois pension system,
for example, was only 39 percent
funded in 2013, according to the
report, and the Kentucky system
was just 44 percent funded.
Some states have big pension
problems, but they also have a
lot of power to manage expenses
and raise revenue, said Al Medioli of Moodys Investors Service.
The ability to raise taxes has
played a large part in keeping
overall municipal bond default
rates so low and has contributed to the perception that muni
bonds are generally solid investments. General obligation bonds
were issued by municipal governments and backed by their
ALVIN BAEZ/REUTERS
BROKEN PROMISES Debt from financially troubled Puerto Rico shows up in about 52 percent of municipal bond
mutual funds, according to Morningstar, with exposures ranging from less than 1 percent of the funds assets to
nearly half. A view from the Normandie Hotel in San Juan, which has been closed since 2008.
$3.7 trillion
52%
0.17
full faith, credit and taxing power, and investors in such bonds
had the legal standing to seek a
court-ordered tax increase if that
is what it would take to prevent
a default. Even in the extremely
rare case when a municipality
filed for bankruptcy, general obligation bondholders typically recovered most or all of their money, bond analysts said.
But in Detroits bankruptcy,
that didnt happen. General obligation bondholders recovered
at most only 74 cents on the dollar and in some cases less, while
many so-called revenue bondholders were not hurt. Revenue
bonds, like those issued by a sewer authority for a new treatment
plant, are repaid with a dedicated
stream of revenue generated by
that authority. As a result, some
bond managers and investors,
both large and small, are shunning general obligation issues in
favor of revenue bonds.
This is the flip of what was
taught in Bonds 101, said Marilyn Cohen, president of Envision Capital Management in El
Segundo, Calif. Everything we
have been taught about general
obligation bonds, that the issuers
have the unlimited ability to tax
the people and pay the bonds, we
PAUL SULLIVAN
Many wealthy people have the
same variety of family situations
as the not-so-rich. They live in
single-parent, blended, same-sex
and multigenerational households. Or they are single or part
of a heterosexual couple without
children. But the financial advice
these families require is often
geared toward the needs of traditional families.
Life for modern families is
very complicated, said Paula
Polito, chief client strategy officer at UBS Wealth Management.
Something like portfolio construction is important, but its
probably one of the last things
that modern families are concerned about now.
Here are some concerns of
modern families.
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
D5
RON LIEBER
Hostels
Take On
New Look
SHIFTING RULES
Consumers Have
Shield in Hacking
ECONOMIC VIEW
NATHANIEL POPPER
LEISURE
KAREN SCHWARTZ
As Saturday night turned into
Sunday morning, I returned to
the lobby of the Chicago Freehand hostel to find it filled with
hip 20- and 30-somethings, relaxing on sofas and sipping cocktails
with names like Ricky Business
and Chicago Politics.
Bypassing them, I swiped my
card key to activate the elevator
and headed to my shared quad.
In an attached mahogany-paneled bathroom, I showered under
the rain head using the French
toiletries provided, then stowed
my valuables in the in-room locker. I climbed into my cozy bunk,
plugged my iPhone into the outlet on the attached shelf, shut the
privacy curtain and settled in for
a good nights sleep.
I had entered the new world of
upscale hostels, bridging the gap
between backpacker basic and
four-star chic. In prime locations,
they maintain the social aspect of
hostels by providing affordable
shared rooms, common areas
and communal kitchens. But they
shatter preconceptions with their
funky furnishings, free Wi-Fi and
attention to detail. Many offer private rooms, en suite bathrooms
and free breakfasts. The bar at
the Freehand in Miami was twice
a semifinalist for a James Beard
award.
The $100 hostel Im at turned
out to be a kick, Claudia Tapia,
39, a massage therapist from San
Francisco, texted to a friend after spending the night in a coed
quad. Booking her trip at the last
minute, she said she had a choice
between a hotel in the middle of
nowhere, or the Chicago Freehand, blocks from the Magnificent Mile district. Its clean and
its modern, she said. It sure
brought hostels up a notch in my
book.
Its a trend sure to become
more visible in the United States,
as a long list of boutique hostels
position themselves. Freehand
made its debut in Miami in 2012
and expanded to Chicago in May.
It plans to open in Los Angeles late next year, said Andrew
Zobler, the chief executive of
Freehand.
WESLEY BEDROSIAN
CARL RICHARDS
A few years ago, I came across a
blog post by Emma Johnson who
declared You. Cannot. Afford.
To. Be. A. Full-time. Stay-at-home
mom. You just cant.
I like strong opinions because
they make me think, and this
statement certainly did. But Im
convinced Ms. Johnson missed
an important part of the equation.
My wife, Cori, happens to be a
stay-at-home mom. After graduating from the University of Utah
with a finance degree, she could
have taken one of the many jobs
available to her in the field. We
looked at the numbers recently.
D6
BUSINESS
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
26 East opens
The building known
as 26 East has opened
for business in the first
block of East King Street
in Lancaster, with its
bakery, bistro and bar all
currently in soft-opening mode.
Now is the time to figure all the little problems
out, said Ben Frank,
with building owner
Amalfi Properties.
Frank is partnering
with Cedric and Estelle
Barberet on the enterprise. He said theyre
planning to hold an official grand opening eventually, probably in early
September.
But for now, theyre
working on menus and
staffing and making sure
things go smoothly, particularly because its
one kitchen that makes
food for the entire building.
26 East is located between Tellus360 and
Annie Baileys. Bistro
Barberet & Bakery is in
the first floor, with the
second floor reserved
for events. The third
will be at 58 N. Prince
St., taking the place of
Crown Fried Chicken,
which closed recently.
Rice & Noodles is a
Vietnamese restaurant
that features pho (noodle soup) and banh mi
(baguette sandwiches.)
The new restaurant
will have 30 to 40 seats,
about the same as the
1238 Lititz Pike location, according to Alys
Truong, one of the owners.
The restaurants will
largely share a menu, although the details have
not been finalized, Truong said.
Truong owns Rice &
Noodles along with her
sister, Vy Banh, and
their respective husbands Bernard Truong
and Ninh Banh. The sisters brother, Khoa Cao,
is joining as a co-owner
of the new restaurant.
The family moved to
Lancaster in 2006, after
Hurricane Katrina ravaged the familys four
restaurants in New Orleans. They opened Rice
& Noodles that year.
They bought the Prince
Street building in February 2013.
Dairy Queen
renovation
The Ephrata Dairy
Queen/Orange Julius
that has been at 181 S.
Reading Road since the
1950s has a new exterior
look.
John Slotcavage, who
owns the franchise with
his wife, Lucy, declined
to disclose the cost of
renovations, which were
required as part of a new
franchise agreement.
The restaurants interior was renovated five
years ago.
Slotcavage
began
working at the Dairy
Queen in 1976, becoming
a partner in 1982.
Details
n Hours: 10:30 a.m. to
10:30 p.m. Monday through
Thursday; 10:30 a.m. to 11
p.m Friday and Saturday;
11:30 a.m. to 10:30 p.m.
Sunday.
n Phone: 733-9694.
n Online: dairyqueen.com.
Project nears
completion
Renovations that began in April at Park Place
Discover
Lancaster adds
space
Discover Lancasters
Visitors Center, 501
Greenfield Road, received a makeover and
now has two new attractions a gallery with
space for 38 exhibits,
and a local food and merchandise area.
The intent is not to
compete with local galleries and stores but to
provide a sampling, according to Discover Lancaster President Kathleen Frankford.
A soft opening was
held in April, and a grand
opening is planned for
September. Frankford
said that more than 30
pieces from the gallery
have sold and, eventually, the plan is to feature
different artists each
quarter.
Details
n Online:
discoverlancaster.com.
4. Explorer
window
If theres one thing
thats synonymous with
IInclude
In
ncl
c udde a ccolor
olo
lor pph
lor
photo,
hot
ottoo
along with a special poem or thought.
Submit your message one of three ways:
1) Bring your form to our office at
8 W. King St., Lancaster.
2) Email your info and photo to
memoriams@LNPnews.com.
3) Mail your form and payment to:
CARL ADAMS
1 45
ANNE SMITH
style $
2 25
Love,
Amber and Wes
To switch among
desktops, just bring up
Task View and click
which one you want
to use. You can move
programs among them
by clicking and dragging them from the task
view to the desktop you
want.
With these five secret
tricks, youll be a Windows 10 power user in
no time!
On-demand: Economy
Continued from D3
COUPON REWARDS
Please print legibly. Include a self-addressed, stamped envelope for photo return.
1 2
_________________________________________________________________________________________________
YOUR NAME __________________________________________________
PHONE ____________________________
ADDRESS ____________________________________________________
OR CHARGE:
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Perspective
IN KNOTS
MICHELLE MCCALL
RICHARD EDLEY
CAROL POWELL
SPECIAL TO LNP
SPECIAL TO LNP
SPECIAL TO LNP
Approximately 50 percent
of the districts income is
supported by state money.
Until the state has passed
its budget, the district
will not receive half of the
revenue needed to meet our
financial obligations.
McCALL, page E4
POWELL, page E4
n Richard Edley is the lead executive for the Rehabilitation and Community Providers Association, a health and
human services trade association with more than 325
member agencies in Pennsylvania.
EDITORIAL | The LNP Editorial Board weighs in on the state budget impasse, page E2.
E2
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Opinion
Beverly R. Steinman
Robert M. Krasne
Suzanne Cassidy
Chairman Emeritus
Executive Editor
In our words
n Sorry, she is a
n Of course Stedman
CHARLES KRAUTHAMMER
THE WASHINGTON POST
OP-ED/LETTERS
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
NAZLI HARDY
SPECIAL TO LNP
Social media a
servant, not a master
We all should develop a
technology diet. Like all
good diets, there has to be
room for flexibility on special
occasions. I apply the following 10 principles to myself
over the academic year, with
respect to technology and
social media, and it has enhanced the quality of my life
over the years.
1. Know that technology is
only a tool, albeit a powerful
one. Remember that you are
the artist/craftsperson. You
can decide when and how to
access this powerful tool. The
use of social media has made
fortunes for some, while the
misuse has brought about
disintegration in others. Some
people have brought about
meaningful positive societal
awareness/changes using
social media; others have lost
careers. The choice of how you
use the tool is yours.
2. Know why you are using a
social platform such as Facebook/ Twitter/ Instagram.
I use social media for three
reasons. Facebook allows me
to stay in touch with friends
who are scattered all over the
world. Blogging allows me to
Prevent first-time
DUI offenses
I applaud the efforts of state
Sen. Lloyd Smucker and others to improve the DUI laws
regarding repeat offenders
(Smucker targeting repeat
DUI offenders, Aug. 9). At
least equally important or
even more important would
be to enact laws to reduce the
numbers of first offenders.
Some states and countries have had success with
stricter laws governing first
offenders. Norway, for example, imposes a three-month
prison sentence against anyone caught driving with a
blood-alcohol level indicating severe impairment. The
offender begins the sentence
immediately, no exceptions.
There is widespread voluntary use of designated sober
drivers. There are very few
drunken-driving arrests.
Some places impose fines
related to the drivers income,
which can be many thousands
of dollars in some cases.
Car confiscation is used in
some cases. When the driver
has borrowed the car, it can be
confiscated if the owner knew
the driver was known to be a
serious drinker.
Bar owners and bartenders
are sometimes held partly responsible for serving an obviously drunken patron.
The ignition-lock devices
show much promise where
they have been used.
Some of these measures may
seem draconian but if thats
what it takes to prevent harm
or death to the innocent as a
result of impaired drivers, so
be it.
Jack Bryer
Gap
E3
Probe of Flight 17
downing not credible
Who shot down Malaysian
Airlines Flight 17 over Ukraine
in July 2014? There are only
two suspects: the Ukrainian
government or eastern Ukrainian separatists. The Netherlands, Belgium, Ukraine, Australia and (since December)
Malaysia are conducting the
investigation.
Thats right: Ukraine is both
a suspect and an investigator.
And a nondisclosure agreement gives any one of those
nations a veto over release of
the final investigative report.
Obviously, the world will
never see a report concluding that Ukraine is the guilty
party. This explains the recent effort to set up a United
Nations tribunal to investigate the atrocity. The existing investigation has been
corrupted, and its conclusion will not be credible. So
Ukraines supporters want
to launder that conclusion
through another body.
William Kiehl claims there
is irrefutable evidence from
multiple sources pointing
to the guilt of the separatists (Support for Ukraine is
a good investment, Aug. 9).
Tellingly, he doesnt identify
any of that evidence.
Significant evidence points
to Ukraine as the guilty party.
Flight 17 did not follow its
approved flight path but, at
the midflight direction of air
traffic control, flew much farther north, over the war zone.
Ukrainian fighter jets closely
approached Flight 17 in the
minutes just before it was attacked. Many (but not all) of
the projectile holes in the fuselage around the cockpit of
the downed plane are round,
suggesting an attack with a
weapon other than a groundbased missile.
The U.S. had a surveillance satellite directly above
Ukraine when the attack occurred, but has kept the data
Free breakfast
will be passed along
Wallet returned
in Mount Joy
E4
PERSPECTIVE
McCall
MARK R. WENGER
MATTERS OF FAITH
for Eastern Mennonite University at Lancaster. He also is a correspondent for LNP. Email him at wengermr@emu.edu.
Continued from E1
Edley
Continued from E1
Powell
Continued from E1
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
PENNSYLVANIA
n Gov. Tom Wolf, Democrat. Capitol office: 225 Main
Capitol Building, Harrisburg, PA 17120; phone: 7872500. Email via website at governor.pa.gov/contact;
website: pa.gov
OPINION
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
E5
Sunday Conversation
JONAH GOLDBERG
TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES
E.J. DIONNE
THE WASHINGTON POST
she denied.
An investigation into a random
sample of just 40 emails from a batch
of more than 30,000 revealed that
four contained classified information
and at least two were top secret.
So now that the FBI and the Justice
Department, both run by Obama
appointees, are on the case, attacking
the motives of inconvenient people
no longer works. So the Clinton
campaign has invoked a little-known
codicil to the first rule of Clintonism:
Blame an inanimate object.
The amazing thing is that this
spin isnt coming directly from the
campaign but from the reporters
covering it. National Public Radios
Tamara Keith reported Wednesday morning that the inquiry isnt
targeted directly at (Clinton) and
is simply intended to determine
whether the server was secure. Business Insider reported that Clintons
private server is under investigation
by the FBI, though Clinton is not a
target of the investigation. Even the
conservative Washington Free Beacon has fallen into using this locution, referring to the private email
server being investigated by the FBI.
McClatchys Anita Kumar, who
helped break the story that two
of the emails were top secret, felt
compelled to step on her own scoop.
She said on MSNBCs Morning Joe
that there are several investigations
into her conduct, not into her, but
into her use of personal email and a
personal server. Go ahead and try
parsing the difference between an
investigation into her conduct and
an investigation into her.
Clinton, in violation of State Department rules, guidelines from the
White House and all common sense,
used her own unsecured stealth
server. She sent classified material
on it. But its the server thats being
investigated?
Hopefully the server will one day
be able to testify on its own behalf: I
was just following orders.
In fairness to the press, even the
FBI is publicly toeing this line, saying that the investigation isnt into
Clinton. But on background, federal
officials sing a different tune. Its
definitely a criminal probe, a government source told the New York
Post. Im not sure why theyre not
calling it a criminal probe.
Ive talked to several lawyers who
assure me that the FBI doesnt conduct criminal probes into anthropomorphized IT equipment. The
bureau does investigate criminal
abuses of them by people.
n Jonah Goldberg is a fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, a senior editor of National Review and a Tribune Media syndicated columnist. Twitter: @JonahNRO
E6
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
generation
BY,
FOR
AND
ABOUT
TEENS
FRESH TAKES
Instagram:
@duke.rawlings
n Enter the charmed
Teens who
participated
in Lancaster
Archery Supplys camp
include, from
left, Kiersten
Busch, 14;
Dylan Roe,
15; Michael
Digregorio,
15; and Austin
Harrell, 13.
10-SECOND
MOVIE REVIEWS
Minions
must see | don't see |
SNEHA MITTAL, 15
GNEXT@LNPNEWS.COM
'Paper Towns'
by John Green
n "Paper Towns" includes all
of John Green's usual wit and
wisdom. Four teens embark
on a wild adventure as they
attempt to piece together
clues left behind by their
recently missing classmate.
Not your typical romance
story, "Paper Towns" teaches
the value of perspective and
why nothing can be judged
based on appearances. The
book is definitely a must read
before seeing the movie.
Erika Echternach, 16
LISTEN
WATCH
WEAR
Malik Therroo,
17, from Lancaster
n J.P. McCaskey High School
n Therroo was photographed in
Racine Carre
by Stromae
n Stromae, a Belgian
hip-hop artist, produced
his second album, Racine
Carre (translated from
French to Square Root)
in 2013. The artist layers
electronic rhythms paired
with mostly French lyrics to
create captivating songs.
Even though the words are
incomprehensible for nonFrench speakers, Stromaes
voice and rhythms stir
deeper emotions in the
listener than many Englishspeaking musical artists do.
Zelie Hummer, 16
Laura Bennett works with Tom Viles during an archery camp at Lancaster Archery Supply recently. Bennett is a world-class archer and
was also a finalist on Project Runway.
THE LIST
READ
n just rent
Say Yes to
the Dress
on TLC
nEvery girl, young and old,
dreams of her wedding day.
However, whats the perfect
day without the perfect
dress? Thats exactly what
Say Yes to the Dress
hopes to provide. However,
many brides bring a
brigade of helpers aunts,
mothers, mother-in-laws,
cousins and, as you can
believe, many turn out to
be a little less than helpful.
Livy Beaner, 18
The
DUFF
must see | don't see | just rent
n
Erika Echternach, 16
PUZZLES/BRIDGE
Bridge Results
The following results are
from Friday, July 31, through
Thursday, August 6.
nThe Friday Morning Duplicate Bridge
Club meets at 11 a.m.
Section A North-South: 1. Richard
and Roz Braunstein; 2. Dave Buckthal
and Mel Lubart; 3. Jeanne Parrett
and John Klinger; 4. Kasey Long and
Dian Wise
East-West: 1. Bonnie Heilig and
Charlie Wooten; 2. Karen Diffenbach
and Ann Silverstein; 3. Kathy Myers
and Bob Kurtz; 4. Andie Sheaffer and
Barry Gorski; 2B. Debi Klinger and
Vernon Hester; 2C. Barbara Sturgis
and Becky Weiss
Section B North-South: 1. Jenny
Krause and Jean Pryzbylkowski; 2.
Dick Glidden and Tim Sumner; 3.
Beth Menges and Chuck Stoner; 3B.
SPLITTING
THE LAND
Puzzle No. 1
Puzzle No. 2
su l do l ku
@ Puzzles by Pappocorn
6 3
6
8 7
2 4
1 9 2
2 6
9 5
For the solutions to the puzzles, please see next page.
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
2 7
5 6
8 3 1
1 8
5 6
9
7 4
PUZZLES/HOROSCOPE
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
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WHRATT
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105
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10
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109
115
116
87
94
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111
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118
119
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121
122
123
124
125
Muck
Listen
Suffix with cigar
Bull run target
Its up in the air
Is unsatisfactory
Lovers row
109 Dullard
111 ____ marker
112 Feel pity (for)
113 Leave undone
115 When doubled, a Ramone
117 Social
RALEWY
CRECEO
H
U
N
C
R
E
E
D
E
L
M
A
D
R
A
T
E
S
S T G
C A L L
O K A Y
S T E R N
A
S E C
N T O S H
D O N
AUGUST
E R
S P
R I F T A
O A T
D E G G S
I M S Y
G M
A
H A S H M
T
T E A
L E A N
O P T
S T S H U
O I I
S
S O N
C
O N
G
E S A I
B A C K
B Y M E
S E A
T
R E D S
O T O E
16, 2015
O T O N
P A R T
S
T H O
S W A B
T O N E
A R K S
R O S E
T O
A M A T
F F L E
I L O S
R A F T
E T T Y
NO. 0802
The Answers
ARIES
TAURUS
Allow your
creativity to emerge when
interacting with others. No
matter what you do, this
VIRGO
Tonight: Create an
interesting scenario.
You might be
more unrestrained than
you realize. Others will
respond to your energy
in a positive manner.
Though you could feel as
if a partner is pulling away,
for the most part, you
know that this response is
merely a transition.
GEMINI
LIBRA
Tonight: At home.
You could be
past the point of having a
discussion with a difficult
friend. You might need
some downtime to think and
consider your options. Know
what you want and proceed
accordingly. Do not use
business as an excuse.
CANCER
SCORPIO
LEO
You could be on
top of a personal matter
yet still feel unsure of
yourself. You need to do
some thinking in order to
really gain perspective. Go
out and enjoy yourself, no
matter what your thoughts
are focused on. A friend will
brighten up your day.
SAGITTARIUS
Deal with a
responsibility that often
takes up too much of your
time. Free yourself up to go
4
5
8
3
9
7
2
6
1
6
1
7
8
5
2
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3
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2
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5
8
1
9
3
7
CAPRICORN
(Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Be willing to
break past present
restrictions. You might find
yourself in a situation that
needs some changing. Be
more upbeat with a child
or loved one. Your role
modeling will help others
to pursue their goals.
Tonight: Relax to a good
movie or good music.
This Week: Remain upbeat
despite others demands.
AQUARIUS
(Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
PISCES
Puzzle No. 2
Puzzle No. 1
7
8
3
6
2
9
5
1
4
1
9
5
7
3
4
6
2
8
BORN TODAY
Singer/songwriter Madonna
(1958), actor Steve Carell
(1962), actress Angela
Bassett (1958)
Answer :
GUFNSU
INDUCT
LAWYER
THWART
FUNGUS COERCE
TIMELY
A crowd was gathering to see the
amazing kite after people
CIDTUN
MYLITE
NO. 0809
1
HELP WANTED
CAUGHT WIND
OF IT
ACROSS
1 Debate, with out
5 How some TV series
are sold
10 Use a witching rod
15 Travel with Sinbad,
say
19 Come ____ me,
all ye that labor
20 Port of Puerto Rico
21 Tony-winning Andrew
Lloyd Webber musical
22 Childrens TV
character who refers
to himself in the third
person
23 Need rural real estate
investor to
25 Need retail marketer
to
27 Where to begin
28 Peaceful
30 Kind of oil
31 Projector unit
33 Characters in The
Hobbit
34 Militant grp. in a 1994
peace agreement
35 Chrome alternative
38 Newspaper section,
for short
40 See 44-Across
44 What a 40-Across
produces in the
summer
45 Need cocktail
waitress to
49 Photocopier option:
Abbr.
50 Constellation between
Perseus and Pisces
52 Starting or ending
point for a commuter:
Abbr.
53 Luxury rental
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
33 (15)
Next Week:
How were
alike
Meet
Cece
Bell
Mini Fact:
The Newbery
Medal was
first awarded
in 1922.
Other jobs
A life-changing event
Becoming a creator
One of Ceces
jobs was designing
packaging for
supplies for exotic
pets. In that job,
she said, she
learned to use
the computer for
illustration.
She also worked
as a waitress and
a dental hygienists
assistant. I dont
think Ill ever want
to illustrate the
things I saw at the
dentists office! she
said.
Favorites
Resources
On the Web:
cecebell.wordpress.
com/bio
laurencastillo.com
yuyimorales.com/
At the library:
Try n Find
Mini Jokes
T
F
N
C
S
F
U
N
D
D
T
B
Q
E
R
B
N
A
R
R
O
M
I
I
N
L
E
O
J
A
C
R
E
R
D
R
T
R
A
W
E
N
A
R
S
A
X
E
U
S
D
E
A
R
R
R
L
N
T
S
L
W
E
T
E
E
H
N
H
G
A
T
S
T
N
T
J
I
O
H
C
U
P
R
E
U
P
W
R
A
L
A
K
O
W
P
T
G
R
L
H
G
D
M
B
M
K
A
I
C
R
V
P
U
E
O
H
D
S
K
O
O
B
H
R
C
P
U
B
L
I
S
H
M
Y
Eco Note
In Norway, a musician
and government worker
returned to his apartment to find that
a pigeon had made a nest and laid an
egg not just in his home, but in a
frying pan on his stove! I had to clean;
the kitchen was a total mess, said
Stian Fjelldal.
adapted with permission from Earthweek.com
Youll need:
4 slices whole wheat or white bread 1/4 to 1/2 teaspoon
cinnamon
2 large eggs
cooking spray
1/2 cup reduced-fat milk
pancake syrup
1/2 teaspooon sugar
What to do:
1. Cut bread diagonally in half and then again to quarter it (makes 16 triangles).
2. Whisk eggs, milk, sugar and cinnamon in a shallow bowl until well mixed.
3. Dip bread triangles in mixture until soaked.
4. Spray a griddle with cooking spray and cook bread triangles on both sides until
lightly browned.
5. Serve with pancake syrup. Serves 2.
Puzzling
Unscramble the words below that remind us of xxx.
eybrwne
tcoleadct
adwra
okobs
For Later:
The Mini Page 2015 Universal Uclick
Cooks Corner
Teachers:
For standards-based activities to
accompany this feature, visit:
bbs.amuniversal.com/teaching_guides.html
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
PUBLIC SALES
Employee's chattiness
isnt trivial
Q: One of my staff
members has been disturbing employees in
another department.
Hannah apparently has some friends
there, so she often
drops by to socialize
with them. This not
only interrupts their
work, but is also very
distracting to nearby
co-workers.
Although I have not
observed this behavior myself, several colleagues have
mentioned it to me.
While I dont want to
ignore the problem,
I obviously cant tell
Hannah to stop being
friends with these
people. How should
I handle this touchy
situation?
A: Actually, this situation is not touchy at
all. Its really quite
straightforward. If you
know Hannah is bothering people during the
workday, then this is a
performance issue you
must address. Thats just
part of your job as her
manager.
While you clearly have
no right to prohibit employee friendships, you
do have an obligation to
keep them from interfering with work. This
means that its time for
a coaching session with
chatty Hannah to establish expectations about
excessive socializing.
For example: Hannah,
Ive heard from several
people in marketing that
you spend a lot of time
talking with friends
in their department.
These lengthy conversations are interfering
with both your job and
theirs, so from now on,
you shouldnt visit the
marketing department
unless you have a workrelated reason.
If Hannah asks who
complained, indicate
that you understand her
curiosity, but that information is confidential.
During performance
discussions, employees
n Horst Auctioneers
conducted a public
auction at the Horst
Auction Center, Ephrata,
on Aug. 1. There were
400 registered bidders.
Several items and prices
included: a Winchester
12-gauge shotgun, $800;
a Winchester model 1885
rifle, $975; a Remington
.410 shotgun, $750; a
Sako .222 rifle, $700; a
Browning BT-99 shotgun,
$850; a DWM 9mm Luger
pistol, $975; a Marlin model
1894 rifle, $850; a Colt
.45-caliber pistol, $1,700;
a Marlin .41 mag carbine,
$1,200; and a Colt Python
.357 revolver, $2,250.
n Horst Auctioneers
conducted a public auction
for the G. Wilson Harris
estate, Geraldine T. Leffler
and others at Horst Auction
Center, Ephrata, on Aug. 5.
There were 393 registered
bidders. Several items
and prices included: an
Omnibot toy, $260; a Lionel
train set, $210; a walnut
Victorian drop front desk,
$350; an empire bowed
china closet, $200; a cherry
dining room set, $320; a
pine china closet, $220; a
blonde Heywood-Wakefield
set, $280; a three-piece
Depression-era set, $230;
a cherry bedroom set,
$450; and a softwood jelly
cupboard, $220.
n Horst Auctioneers
conducted a public auction
at Horst Auction Center,
Ephrata, on Aug. 6. There
were 215 registered
bidders. Several items
and prices included: two
Indian cents, $270; a
partial Canadian 5-cent
silver book, $280; a lot of
12 silver dollars and two
SBA souvenir sets, $270;
an 1881-CC silver dollar,
$550; an album of year
Z1
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LNP | LANCASTER, PA
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missing
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
SUGAR LAND
LANCASTER
ab r h bi
ab r h bi
Almonte cf 4 1 2 0 Kajimoto cf 4 1 1 2
Dominguez 2b 5 2 3 1 Feliz 3b
5 1 4 5
Scott c
5 1 2 1 Matthes lf 5 1 1 1
Young rf
4 0 3 2 McDade 1b 5 0 1 0
Ward 1b
5 1 1 1 Cvs-Galvez rf 5 0 1 0
Wallace dh 4 0 1 0 Cutler c
4 0 0 0
Limonta lf
3 0 1 1 Hughes 2b 3 2 1 0
Palmiero 3b 4 0 1 0 Zawadzki ss 4 3 3 0
Zazueta ss 4 1 1 0 Pyles dh
4 2 4 1
Totals
38 6 15 6 Totals
39 10 16 9
Sugar Land........300 000 300 6 15 1
Lancaster..........020 620 000 10 16 0
2BAlmonte, Dominguez; Feliz, McDade, Pyles. HRFeliz, Matthes. LOB
Sugar Land 8; Lancaster 7.
IP H R ER BB SO
Sugar Land
Merritt (L, 5-5)............... 3.0 12 8 8 1 0
Villa................................ 1.0 0 0 0 0 1
Carpenter...................... 1.0 3 2 2 0 2
VanAllen........................ 1.0 0 0 0 0 2
Parr................................. 1.0 1 0 0 0 2
Weinhardt..................... 1.0 0 0 0 0 1
Lancaster
Beck (W, 3-1)................. 6.0 12 6 6 1 10
Moskos.......................... 0.2 2 0 0 0 0
Gracey............................ 1.1 1 0 1 0 0
Walden.......................... 1.0 0 0 0 1 0
SOAlmonte, Dominguez, Scott, Young,
Wallace, Limonta, Palmiero 2, Zazueta; Kajimoto, Feliz, Matthes, McDade 2, Hughes 2,
Zawadzki. BBAlmonte, Young, Limonta;
Hughes.
T3:10. A6,432.
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missing
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Z1
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missing
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missing
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missing