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SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

n $2.00 n LANCASTERONLINE.COM

ENERGY

BREXIT

Britain
rattles
postwar
stability

TOP OF THE WORLD


Tremendous view is a job perk for turbine service technician
working 262 feet above Turkey Point, near Columbia

Forces challenge alliances


that have held global sway
since after World War II

JIM YARDLEY, ALISON SMALE,


JANE PERLEZ AND BEN HUBBARD
NEW YORK TIMES

LONDON Britains historic vote to


leave the European Union is already
threatening to unravel a democratic bloc
of nations that has coexisted peacefully
together for decades. But it is also generating uncertainty about an even bigger
issue: Is the post-1945 order imposed on
the world by the United States and its allies unraveling, too?
Britains choice to retreat into what
some critics of the vote suggest is a Little
England status is just one among many
loosely linked developments suggesting
the potential for a reordering of power,
economic relationships, borders and ideologies around the globe.
Slow economic growth has undercut
confidence in traditional liberal economics, especially in the face of the disKEITH SCHWEIGERT | STAFF

Technician Matt Strine gets a grand view of the Susquehanna River atop a wind turbine at Turkey Point, near Columbia.

AD CRABLE

EU leaders demand quick exit, page A7.

ACRABLE@LNPNEWS.COM

ne of the few humans ever to


stand atop the landmark twin
wind turbines at Turkey Point,
near Columbia, Matt Strine
always takes a moment to look around.
Snapping an industrial-size carabiner to
a clamp so he wont be
blown away and can survive a slip, the specially
trained technician savors the birds-eye view
from one of the highest points in Lancaster
County.
The view is just a perk
for this new breed of
worker very much in
demand amid a nationwide push for sustainable energy and earning high pay for the
seemingly high risk that
comes with the job.
In the open air on top
of the turbines nacelle,
where the trio of blades

is attached, Strine stands


upright, a dizzying 262
feet above the ground.
Obviously, the 32-yearold has no fear of heights.
Over the lip of Turkey
Point, the Conejohela
Flats stretch like tiny
pieces of a land puzzle.
He can see cars and
trucks rumbling across
the Route 30 bridge and
beyond Chickies Rock to
Marietta.
He can almost see
his home in East York,
across the river. To the
east, he can make out the
tops of downtown Lancasters Griest Building
and the Lancaster Mar-

AD CRABLE | STAFF WRITER

The view from ground level as Strine works at a height of 260 feet
on top of the nacelle housing of one of the Turkey Point turbines.

TURBINES, page A8

ALSO INSIDE

BRITAIN LEAVES THE EU:


RELATED COVERAGE

WATCH THE VIDEO

See the view from the top of a wind turbine at Turkey Point
in an online video at LancasterOnline.com

locations caused by trade and surging


immigration. Populism has sprouted
throughout the West. Borders in the
Middle East are being erased amid a rise
in sectarianism. China is growing more
assertive and Russia more adventurous.
Refugees from poor and war-torn places
are crossing land and sea in record numbers to get to the better lives shown to
them by modern communications.
Accompanied by an upending of politics and middle-class assumptions in both
the developed and the developing worlds,
these forces are combining as never before to challenge the Western institutions
and alliances that were established after
World War II and that have largely held
global sway ever since.
Britain has been a pillar in that order, as
well as a beneficiary. It has an important
(some would argue outsize) place in the
United Nations, and a role in NATO, the
International Monetary Fund and the
World Bank the postwar institutions
invested with promoting global peace, security and economic prosperity.
Now Britain symbolizes the cracks in

BREXIT, page A6

FAMILY

Foundling seeks her parents, siblings


Left on porch as a baby 40 years ago, woman spurred to search by sightings of double
TOM KNAPP

TKNAPP@LNPNEWS.COM

n Perspective, page E1

Forty years ago, a widowed


Amish woman and her daughter watched from their window late one night as someone
in dark clothing approached
their farmhouse near Gordonville and left a basket on the
porch.
The frightened widow summoned her son from the attached house next door. They
saw movement in the basket
and assumed it was kittens.
Then they saw a pair of tiny,
fluttering hands and knew
someone had left them a baby.

INDEX
CLASSIFIEDS........... CL1
LIVING......................... B1
LOTTERY................... A2

REAL ESTATE..........RE1
SPORTS....................... C1
TRAVEL............ B10, B11
TV WEEK..................TV1

Ryan Dornes claims his


1st Lanco Amateur title
n Sports, page C1

Follow LNP reporter on his


walking tour of Lancaster
n Lancaster Living, page B1

Gun violence presents a


modern-day dilemma

MONEY........................ D1
NATION & WORLD...A21
OBITUARIES...........A24
PERSPECTIVE............E1

The 65-year-old Annie Lantz


sent her son, David, more than
a mile on foot to a neighbor
with a horse and buggy. From
there he rode to a Mennonite
home with a phone to call police.
Meanwhile, the baby waited
contentedly on the porch,
swaddled in a blanket and
sucking her thumb. Lantz and
her daughter watched from
inside, afraid to approach the
basket until police arrived.
Now, that little Jane Doe all
grown up and raising children
of her own in Lititz hopes to
SEARCH, page A4

86 60 H

BLAINE T. SHAHAN | STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

Diane Bell, who was left on a porch near Gordonville 40 years


ago as an infant, is pictured during an interview Thursday.

TODAY'S WEATHER

FORECAST, PAGE C14

222nd Year, No. 9

COPYRIGHT LNP MEDIA GROUP, INC.


ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

LOCALLY OWNED SINCE 1794

A2

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

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Through the
Viewfinder

CONTACT US
General info: 291-8811, P.O. Box
1328, Lancaster, PA 17608
Newsroom: Tips, stories and
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news@LNPnews.com
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circulation@LNPnews.com
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RHERTZLER@LNPNEWS.COM

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CORRECTIONS
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substantive errors of fact.
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A STEINMAN COMMUNICATIONS COMPANY

Member of the Associated Press


Formerly known as

hile driving to and from


assignments for LNP, I am
always scanning the beautiful landscape and people
of Lancaster County for interesting features. Most of the time I see something

LNP and LancasterOnline.com are


protected by federal copyright statute. No
part of this newspaper may be broadcast,
reproduced or republished in any form
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LNP Media Group, Inc. shall not be liable
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advertisement at any time.

that could be a great photo, Ive already


passed it or the moment is gone. This photo was taken near Fetterville along Route
322 just east of Blue Ball. The family was
loaded up for an outing and following another family in a buggy.

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THE METHOD Nikon D4S camera with an 80-400mm lens @ 400mm, 1/800th
sec @ F16 and ISO 1600. For more Through the Viewfinder photos and musings, visit
LancasterOnline.com/TTV

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Mayflies dont
bug these folks

The Week in Review


In case you missed it: A recap
of local news stories in LNP.

n Amish relatives said loss of

faith and land affected Quarryville


residents Daniel and Savilla
Stoltzfus, now held in Bucks County
Prison, it was reported Tuesday.
The couple are charged with
endangering the welfare of children
after allegedly gifting their then14-year-old daughter to Lee Kaplan,
51, of Feasterville, for helping
them financially. Kaplan reportedly
fathered two children with the
daughter, now 18.

JEFF HAWKES

JHAWKES@LNPNEWS.COM

RANDY HESS | STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

PRIDE FEST
n The largest Lancaster Pride

festival since the first one in 2007


attracted some 4,000 people to
Lancasters Binns Park last Sunday
to celebrate gay, lesbian, bisexual
and transgender identity and to
remember victims of the deadly
attack on a gay nightclub in Orlando,
Florida, a week earlier.

HORSE DIES
n Lily, the half-blind, paint-

splattered horse found abandoned


March 15 at the New Holland Sales
Stables, died after a fall last Sunday
at the New Jersey farm of TV
personality Jon Stewart. He and his
wife adopted the animal last month.

OPT-OUT PLEA
n Some School District of Lancaster

parents were alarmed that Buchanan


Elementary School Principal Stacy
Kain tried to dissuade parents
from opting their children out of
standardized testing, it was reported
Tuesday. The number of opted-out
students in the county has grown
from 15 to almost 700 in three years,
it was reported Friday.

Bill Minarik, executive director of the Lower Susquehanna Riverkeepers, explains


why the mayfly is worth celebrating at the first-ever Mayfly Festival on Saturday
at the John Wright Restaurant boat ramp in Wrightsville, York County.

Insects celebrated as symbol of a healthy


river Saturday on Wrightsville Bridge
JENELLE JANCI

JJANCI@LNPNEWS.COM

ayflies have a pretty poor reputation


around here.
After tens of thousands of hexagenia bilineata rose up
from Susquehanna River mud last
summer, their carcasses covered
the Wrightsville Bridge in 2-footdeep piles.
The slippery mess caused three
motorcycle accidents, and the
Pennsylvania Department of Trans-

portation had to scoop away smelly


mounds of dead bugs.
Despite this, the Lower Susquehanna Riverkeeper Association
insists mayflies are something to
celebrate. So on Saturday, the environmental advocacy group hosted
its first Mayfly Festival at the John
Wright Restaurant boat ramp.
There, the group also hosted its
sixth annual Susquehanna Biathalon, its largest fundraiser. Steve
Maounis, of Centerville, and Becky
MAYFLY, page A10

ATHLETICS

Hempfield drops drug testing


District cites legal challenges in ending program
JUSTIN STOLTZFUS

SCHOOLS SHARE

LNP CORRESPONDENT

n Columbia Borough and Eastern

Lancaster County school districts


agreed to a $165,000 contract to
share Superintendent Bob Hollister
in the coming school year. On
Thursday, state Sen. Ryan Aument,
R-Landisville, introduced a bill to
aid such money-saving partnerships
with grants.

Housing
program
likened to
redlining

Critics call homebuyer


assistance discriminatory;
employers dispute charge

COUPLES CRISIS

FILE PHOTO

Hempfield School District has scrapped its


decade-old program of randomly drug testing
athletes and other students who participate in
extracurricular activities.
The district was one of the first in the county
to implement random drug testing and now
becomes among the first if not the first to
abandon the program in the face of potential
legal battles and tighter state regulations.
In the end, the board and administration
agreed that attempting to defend the policy
against any challenges that might be forthcom-

QUOTABLE
Attempting
to defend the
policy against
any challenges
that might be
forthcoming would
be an imprudent
use of our taxpayer
dollars.
Shannon
Zimmerman, district
spokeswoman

HEMPFIELD, page A11

Over the last 10 years, Lancaster General Hospital has helped 144 employees buy homes within a 50-block area
of the hospital.
Similarly, Franklin & Marshall College has offered assistance to 64 workers who bought homes in an area of
about 40 blocks east of the campus
since 2003.
Some housing advocates say they are
model programs for increasing homeownership in the city. But an F&M professor says the programs discriminate
against workers who can afford homes
only in less costly parts of Lancaster.
Economics professor Antonio Callari, in public remarks last week, likened the homebuying zones to redlining, a former federal housing policy
that for decades steered home loans
away from people wanting to buy in or
near black neighborhoods.
When LGH and F&M dont allow
their employees to get assistance to
buy homes in (Lancasters) Southeast,

ASSISTANCE, page A16

EDUCATION

SDL approves
budget, raises
taxes 2 percent
Spending plan restores
program cuts, adds staff
KIMBERLY MARSELAS
LNP CORRESPONDENT

The School District of Lancaster adopted a $196 million budget Tuesday


that raises property taxes by 2 percent and funds programs board members were prepared to do without just
weeks ago.
The spending plan boosts taxes by
$55 for the average homeowner, a jump
from $2,721 to $2,776 on a $100,000
home. It also relies on a 1.33 percent
projected increase in state funding for
$781,400 in new revenue.
The final budget represents a $2 million increase over the preliminary version approved by the school board in
May. That plan included a conservative 1 percent increase in state funding, reflecting the uncertainty of state

SDL, page A11

UPDATE

CASEY KREIDER | STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

Man found safe in Florida


STAFF

HIT TWICE
n After being leveled by a tornado

four months ago, the recently


rebuilt chicken house on the Eby
farm on Millwood Road in Salisbury
Township was destroyed Thursday in
a $1 million fire.

A3

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

A 57-year-old mentally disabled man who was reported


missing from Strasburg on
Tuesday has been found safe
and sound in Florida, state police reported Saturday.
Mark S. Perks, 57, had last

been seen in Strasburg around


noon Tuesday, driving a minivan. He and the vehicle were
found in Florida and are headed
back to Pennsylvania, state police reported Saturday morning. State police had asked for
help locating Perks.

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2015

A4

FROM PAGE A1

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

Search: Abandoned on porch, woman seeks birth family

RIGHT: BLAINE T. SHAHAN | STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER; ALL OTHERS: FILE PHOTOS

From left, Diane Bell at Lancaster General Hospital shortly after being found on the porch of an Amish family near
Gordonville; as a toddler; in her midteens; again, in her midteens; at the age of 19; and today at the age of 40.

Becky Bell didnt roll


neatly off the tongue.
Bell celebrates her
birthday Feb. 10. Its a
date her adoptive parents picked, based on her
estimated age at the time
she was found.
She also celebrates
Porch Day, May 26, the
day she was found.
Its a weird little holiday, she says. It marks
my arrival on this planet.
Its like being an alien I
got dropped, and this is
where I landed.

Continued from A1

find her birth family.

Baby A, Jane Doe


Diane Bell has been an
artist and pastry chef.
These days, she works as
an independent driver
while raising two children, 18-year-old Evan
and 13-year-old Kaelie.
Bell was about 3
months old when she
was left on that porch.
Taken by police to Lancaster General Hospital,
she was officially named
Baby A in the pediatrics
ward, although nurses
called her Jennifer, Kitina and Sweetheart.
She was listed as Jane
Doe by social services,
which two days later
placed her in a foster
home, where she was
called Rebecca.
Seven months later,
the baby was adopted by
Don and Marlene Bell, of
Mount Joy. They named
her Diane after deciding

Learns story at 15
Marlene Bell says she
and her husband were
childless and on a waiting list to adopt for quite
a while. They were delighted to be chosen to
raise the mysterious
Jane Doe, who had been
the feature of several
newspaper stories and a
large-scale effort by police to track down those
who had abandoned her.

Your rings
dont fit
anymore?
We can
fix that!

Initially, only a few


people close to the family knew the girls background, Marlene Bell
says. Details who adopted her, where she was
living were kept quiet,
Diane Bell says. Her parents fretted that someone might try to claim
her and take her away
someday.
Bell didnt know she
was something of a local
celebrity until she was
15.
I always knew I was
adopted, she says. I was
chosen. I was brought up
feeling really great about
being adopted, but I
didnt know the circumstances.
She was assigned to
make a family tree in
high school. Without
telling her parents, she
called the adoption
agency to see what she
could learn about her
birth family.
A woman from the
agency contacted Bells
adoptive parents and
told them what happened. She didnt want
to be the one to inform
Bell of her origins, she
told them.
Its
unbelievable,
Diane Bell says. Every-

 ATCH
W
THE VIDEO

Diane Bell speaks about


the search for her birth
parents in a video at
LancasterOnline.com

body has somewhere


they came from. Everybody has family trees.
People can say if breast
cancer runs in their family, or if it doesnt. People
can say their family has
certain dispositions. I
have none of that.
Bell knows her love of
music comes from her
adopted mom, and her
fondness for trains comes
from her dad. But where,
she asks, did she inherit
artistic tendencies?
Its that whole nature
versus nurture thing,
she says.
She spent hours in the
library reading microfilmed newspaper articles about her discovery.
Her first baby pictures,
she says, are those that
appeared in Lancaster
newspapers.

Bells
doppelganger
Her desire to find her
natural family if not

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FILE PHOTO

Jane Doe is shown in the arms of Sharon Gates, intake


supervisor at the county Childrens Bureau, as Lancaster
General Hospital head nurse Jeanette Enck signs a release form, shortly after being found on the porch of an
Amish family near Gordonville in 1976.

her birth parents, she


says, maybe a sibling
has waxed and waned
over the years.
The desire was rekindled last week when Bell
made a delivery in York
to a woman who confused her with someone
who apparently looks
identical to her.
Its happened before,
Bell says. Years ago, an
ex-boyfriends mother
thought she saw Bell
walking hand in hand
with another boy. Even
Bells own father swore
he saw her at a pancake
breakfast, but she insists
she wasnt there.
Theres
someone
walking around who
looks a lot like me, she
says. I know I sound
crazy saying that.
Unfortunately, no one
has ever approached or
been able to identify the
blue-eyed, blond-haired
double and give Bell
a place to start on her
quest for family.
I even tried a psychic,
she says with a laugh.
I love my family, she
adds. If this was remotely hurting either

Amish
connection

Besides trying to find


her birth family, Bell was
inspired to reconnect
recently with the Amish
family that found her.
I met the Amish family. ... I found the porch
where I was left, she
says.
I did not actually get
up on that porch. I dont
know why. I stood next
to it. I took a picture. ... I
had a much more grandiose porch in mind. When
they took me around to
see it I was like, Thats
it?
Annie
Lantz
and
daughter Rebecca are
dead, Bell says. David
Lantz, now 75, lives in
the same house on Musser School Road with his
wife and children, and he
clearly recalls the night
of Bells discovery.
The family, he told Bell,

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LNP | LANCASTER, PA

Search: No anger

No longer angry
I have no idea what Id
say if her birth parents
or siblings turn up, Bell
says.
Most of the time, it
doesnt bother me to be
who I am. I dont really
think about it. I dont
talk about it, she says.
Im not angry anymore, she adds. I definitely dont understand
it. But hard situations
call for hard choices.
Theres no way to know
if (her birth mother)
even had any part in the

LANCASTER CITY

2 proposals submitted for vacant spaces

Hotel, apartments, offices and stores among suggested uses from developers

Continued from A4

has long regretted not


keeping her themselves.
Lantz said the Amish
community gave his
mother a hard time for
giving up the baby, Bell
says, but she didnt feel
it was right. She cried a
lot about it afterward.
Surrounded by people
who, with a slight twist
of fate, could have been
her siblings, nieces and
nephews gave Bell an
odd feeling.
How could you possibly put into words how
different a life that would
be? she asks.
She spent time with
several Lantz youngsters who were excited
to learn that Bell enjoys
baking and painting.
Some of the granddaughters want me to
teach them to paint, she
says.
Were going to have a
giant get-together. Were
going to have a picnic,
she adds. Apparently
there are a lot of people
in the Amish community
who want to meet me.
Whod have thought, after all this time, its still
being talked about?

A5

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

DAN NEPHIN

DNEPHIN@LNPNEWS.COM

Everybody has
family trees.
People can
say if breast
cancer runs in
their family,
or if it doesnt.
People can say
their family
has certain
dispositions.
I have none
of that.
Diane Bell

decision.
I stopped being angry
about it years ago. But
when I became a mom, it
became really confusing
for me. Theres no way I
could leave my children
somewhere.
Maybe her birth parents are gone, she says.
Maybe they had one or
more children whom
they raised. Or maybe,
she adds, they gave away
other children as well.
They could be in the
same position as me, she
says. Id want to meet
them, at least to have a
cup of coffee. If theres
someone out there, Id
love to sit down and have
a conversation.
Having a sibling, she
adds, would be really
great. I wouldnt know
what to do. Ive been an
only child all my life.
That would be pretty
cool.

Plans to revive a key


block in downtown
Lancaster received a
boost after officials
received at least two
proposals from interested developers.
The Lancaster City
Alliance has received
two proposals to develop properties at
South Queen and Vine
streets across from
Lancaster
County
Convention Center.
The Alliance sought
proposals
earlier
this year on behalf of
the city, LNP Media
Group and the Lancaster County Convention Center Authority, which own the six
properties in question.
Bob
Shoemaker,
president and chief
executive officer of
the Alliance, declined
to go into details of
the proposals.
Although a dozen
entities were invited
to submit proposals, Shoemaker said
Wednesday he wasnt
disappointed just two
did.
It was quality over
quantity, he said.
Theyre clearly worthy of consideration.

FILE PHOTO

The Jasper Yeates house, right, which is connected to the LNP production buildings on
the left, is pictured in March. These buildings are among those available for development.

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development strategic
plan the Alliance created
to guide the citys growth
over the next 10 to 15 years.
The property owners,
Shoemaker and Marshall
Snively, the Alliances
executive vice president,
will review the proposals
in the middle of July.
By early to mid-Au-

vention Center Authority.


The idea is to connect
downtown with the impoverished
southern
parts of the city, help the
convention center attract larger conventions
and expand downtowns
growth.
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A6

FROM PAGE A1

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

Brexit
Continued from A1

that postwar foundation. Its leaving the European Union weakens


a bloc that is the worlds
biggest single market,
as well as an anchor of
global democracy. It also
undermines the postwar
consensus that alliances
among nations are essential in maintaining
stability and in diluting the nationalism that
once plunged Europe
into bloody conflict
even as nationalism is
surging again.
Its not that this, in
and of itself, will completely destroy the international order, said Ivo
H. Daalder, a former U.S.
representative to NATO
who is now president of
the Chicago Council on
Global Affairs. But it
sets a precedent. It is potentially corrosive.

Leaders meet
The symbolism was
pointed in China on Saturday morning, two days
after the British vote. In
the packed ballroom of
a Beijing hotel, Chinas
new international development bank held
its first meeting of the

57 countries that have


signed up as members.
The new institution, the
Asian
Infrastructure
Investment Bank, is designed to give China a
chance to win influence
away from the World
Bank and the International Monetary Fund.
History has never
set any precedent, the
new banks president,
Jin Liqun, once wrote of
the United States and its
Western allies, that an
empire is capable of governing the world forever.
Even as European
leaders held a flurry of
meetings Saturday to
weigh a response to Britains departure, President Xi Jinping of China
welcomed
President
Vladimir Putin of Russia
to Beijing for a brief state
visit. More than China,
Russia is an outlier to the
U.S.-led
international
system, and Putin at
best a wary partner of
China, which itself has
severe economic challenges in recent years
has worked to divide and
destabilize Europe.
Putin has troubles of his
own, including an economy hurt by low oil prices,
that could limit his ability to exploit the moment.
Still, for him, analysts say,
the British vote is an unexpected gift.

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Russia has nurtured


discord inside the European Union by supporting an array of small, extremist political parties
that foment nationalist
anger in different countries. Russias seizure of
Crimea in 2014 and meddling in eastern Ukraine
directly challenged the
rules-based international
system of respecting national borders and led to
a continuing political confrontation with the United States and Europe.
Vladimir Putin will be
rubbing his hands in glee,
British historian Timothy
Garton Ash wrote in The
Guardian. The unhappy
English have delivered
a body blow to the West,
and to the ideals of international cooperation,
liberal order and open societies to which England
has in the past contributed so much.

Postwar order
at an end?
The end of Pax Americana is not a new theme.
Predictions of U.S. decline were rampant after the global economic
crisis in 2007 and 2008,
amid parallel predictions of the dawning of a
new Chinese century.
But the U.S. economy
steadily recovered, if
imperfectly, while Chi-

na has unnerved many


of its Asian neighbors
with a newly aggressive foreign policy. Chinese overreach opened
a path for renewed U.S.
engagement in Asia, the
fastest-growing region in
the world, as President
Barack Obama called for
a pivot to Asia.
Analysts disagree on
whether this pivot signaled a declining U.S. interest in European affairs
and contributed to the
continents current problems. Part of the Obama
administrations rationale
was to extricate the United States from decades
of costly involvement in
the Middle East at a time
when that region was in
upheaval.
There, the breakdown
of the postwar political order has been more fundamental and violent than
in Europe. The uprisings
of the Arab Spring erupted from widespread frustrations with stagnant,
autocratic politics and
economic lethargy. But
these rebellions failed to
yield stable governments,
and the borders drawn
by Europeans a century
ago in Syria, Lebanon and
Iraq have been rendered
largely irrelevant.
The nationalism surging in Europe is not the
problem in the Arab
world; rather, populations

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have retreated into greater reliance on sects, ethnic


groups and militias. Jihadi groups like al-Qaida
and the Islamic State have
fought national armies
and won, providing a religious alternative to the
nation-state that has been
embraced by some.
Bassel Salloukh, an
associate professor of
political science at the
Lebanese American University in Beirut, said the
problems in the Middle
East and Europe shared
a common origin in the
anxieties caused by tectonic shifts in the global
economy. But while fear
and frustration in the
West have shown themselves through democratic elections, brittle
Arab states lacked the
flexibility to respond.
Here, we have hypercentralized,
homogeneous,
authoritarian
states which, when facing these transformations, just exploded,
Salloukh said.
And those explosions
were not contained within the Middle East. Refugees have poured out of
Syria and Iraq. Turkey,
Jordan and Lebanon
have absorbed several
million refugees. But it
is the flow of people into
the European Union
that has had the greatest
geopolitical impact, and
helped to precipitate the
British vote. Stabilizing
Syria and permanently
curbing the refugee flow
could be one of the critical factors in determining whether Europe can
steady itself politically.
Before the refugee crisis, the European Union
was already an unwieldy
and unfinished entity. Its
contradictions and imperfections were exacerbated by the economic
crisis. Yet it was the onset of more than 1 million refugees marching
through Greece and the
Balkans toward Germa-

   


  

  


   

   

  
  
 

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ny that may ultimately


prove to be the most destabilizing event in Europes recent history.
European
countries
erected border fences
despite the blocs system
of open internal borders.
Populist parties raged
against immigrants. Britain was relatively insulated, yet British politicians
campaigning to leave the
European Union depicted an island under siege,
mixing the very different
issue of immigration from
other European Union
states with the perceived
threat from an influx of
poor Muslims. This antiimmigrant strain twinned
with the economic anxieties of many Britons who
felt left out of the global
economy to drive support
for the country going its
own way.
In the wake of Britains
choice, Europe faces the
parallel challenges of
holding itself together
and of retaining its global influence.

Turning point
in Europe

Even before Britains


exit, Germany was Europes dominant power,
and Chancellor Angela
Merkel of Germany was
Europes dominant leader.
Germany, though, has
been reluctant to play a
diplomatic and military
role commensurate with
its economic heft. Ever
mindful of its Nazi past,
and its four decades as a
divided country, Germany
often wraps its policies in
the mantle of Europe and
has developed a pacifist
instinct that is a poor fit
with the expectations that
it must now lead.
There is no point
beating about the bush,
Merkel said Friday. Europe has reached a turning point and more and
more often, we encounter basic doubts about
ever-greater union.

WORLD

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

A7

BREXIT

Britain, EU at odds over timing of divorce talks


EU politicians say delaying withdrawal from the 28-nation bloc could cause further financial, political instability
ASSOCIATED PRESS

LONDON The European Union wants a


quick divorce, but Britain wants time to think
things over.
Senior EU politicians
demanded Saturday that
the U.K. quickly cut its
ties with the 28-nation
bloc a process Britain says wont begin for
several months as the
political and economic
shockwaves from the
U.K.s vote to leave reverberated around the
world.
There is a certain urgency ... so that we dont
have a period of uncertainty, with financial
consequences, political
consequences, French
Foreign Minister JeanMarc Ayrault said at a
meeting in Berlin of the
EUs six founding nations.
EU Commission chief
Jean-Claude
Juncker
warned that the split
was not an amicable divorce but noted it was
never a tight love affair
anyway.
Britons voted 52 to
48 percent Thursday
in favor of ending their
countrys 43-year membership in the 28-nation
bloc.
But no country has
ever left the EU before,
so no one knows exactly how the process will
play out. Britain must,
at some point, unambiguously notify the bloc
of its intentions and set
a two-year clock ticking for negotiating its
departure. Until then,
Britain remains an EU
member.
In contrast to the
clamoring of EU officials,
the leaders of Britains
leave campaign, who
had reassured voters
that the EU would offer
Britain good terms for a
new relationship, were
largely silent Saturday.

Scotland talks
independence
Englands 300-yearold union with Scotland
could be another casualty of the referendum,
since most people in
Scotland voted to remain in the EU but were
outvoted by a majority in
much-larger England.
Scottish leader Nicola
Sturgeon said Saturday
that her semiautonomous
administration

would seek immediate


talks with EU nations
and institutions to ensure that Scotland could
remain in the bloc.
(We will) explore possible options to protect
Scotlands place in the
EU, she said after meeting with her Cabinet in
Edinburgh, adding that
a new referendum on
Scottish independence is
very much on the table.
Scotland voted in 2014
to remain a part of the
U.K., but that decision
was seen as being conditional on the U.K. staying
in the EU.

Italy, the Netherlands,


Belgium and Luxembourg met in Berlin
for hastily arranged talks
and stressed that the
exit process should be
speedy.

There must be clarity, Luxembourg Foreign


Minister Jean Asselborn
told reporters. The people have spoken and we
need to implement this
decision.

Frances Ayrault suggested Britain could


name a new prime minister within several
days but that is likely instead to take several months. The process

calls for Conservative


lawmakers to winnow
candidates down to two
choices who will then
be voted on in a postal
ballot of party members.

Opposing
timelines
The victorious leave
campaigners have said
theres no rush to trigger Article 50 of the EUs
Lisbon Treaty, which
will begin a two-year
exit process to renegotiate trade, business and
political links between
the U.K. and what will
become a 27-nation bloc.
British Prime Minister David Cameron announced his resignation
Friday and said his successor, to be chosen by
October, should be the
one to navigate the tricky
process of withdrawing
from the bloc.
The favorite to succeed
him, former London
Mayor Boris Johnson,
has said theres no need
for haste but EU leaders are saying the opposite, in insistent tones.
Juncker said Saturday
the British had voted
to leave and it doesnt
make any sense to wait
until October to try and
negotiate the terms of
their departure.
I would like to get
started immediately, he
said.
French Economy Minister Emmanuel Macron
expressed the frustrations that many EU
politicians feel, accusing
Britain of taking the EU
hostage with a referendum called to solve a domestic political problem:
challenges to Cameron
from right-wing euroskeptics.
The failure of the
British government has
opened up the possibility of the crumbling of
Europe, Macron said at
a debate in Paris.
Top diplomats from
the European Unions
six founding nations
France, Germany,

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A8

FROM PAGE A1

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

Turbines: Fastest-growing occupation has its perks


TURBINES: BY THE NUMBERS

n Blade

n Height

length:
131 feet

from ground
to tip of
blade:
399 feet

n Top

blade
speed:
165
mph

n Height

above
ground for
outside
maintenance
work:
260 feet

AD CRABLE | STAFF WRITER PHOTOS

When servicing the two wind turbines at Turkey Point, technician Matt Strine, left,
makes a 10-minute, 260-rung climb up ladders inside the turbines.
Continued from A1

riott at Penn Square.


Trains following the
Port Deposit line hugging the river seem like
toys; sailboats skimming
across Lake Clarke are
mere white specks. The
farm fields of western
Lancaster County are
peaceful and pretty.
But Strine is not being
paid a tidy sum to enjoy
the breathtaking view.
He bends down to check

the blinking red airplane


warning lights and the
weather station that
cues the rotor to turn
the three blades into the
wind.
He works for Allentown-based
Energy
Power Partners Renewable Energy, which owns
the turbines. Since 2011,
the spinning 131-foot
blades have produced
about 20 to 25 percent
of the electrical needs

of adjacent Turkey Hill


Dairy.

Workers
in demand
Strines is the fastestgrowing occupation in
the United States. The
average annual mean
wage for a turbine service technician was listed at $53,030 in a May
2015 report from the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

Brand Names for


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n Rungs on ladder to reach outside hatch: 260


n Climbing time: 10-15 minutes
n Weight of safety harness: 26 pounds
n Electrical output for each turbine: 1.6 megawatts
(power for about 1,600 homes)

The job description includes what many may


find off-putting: working at great heights, in
the open, in all kinds of
weather.
Before Strine began his
work maintaining and
inspecting turbines, he
was sent to a six-week
training school run by
turbine manufacturer
General Electric.
Strine remembers the
first time he serviced
one of the Turkey Point
turbines. It was January 2011, extremely cold,
and the wind was blowing, as it often is at tur-

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rungs on the vertical ladder, opened a hatch and
emerged into the winter
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The height didnt bother him. Nor did the cold.
I was excited to get to
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view was like, he recalls.
The river was frozen. It
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view was tremendous.
Before Strine climbs
atop the wind turbine on
a recent morning, Ken
Boerman, plant manager, opens a control panel
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Matt Strine

base and shuts down the


blades, whose tips can
reach a top speed of 165
mph.
Strine dons a heavyduty safety harness that
adds 26 pounds to his
weight. While on the
turbine, hes always
tethered by at least one
point, and usually two.
A winch operated by
remote control hauls
up his equipment bag,
which includes rescue
rope in case he becomes
incapacitated.
It takes him about 10
minutes of steady climbing to reach the hatch
door on the nacelle,
which houses all of the
generating components
of the wind turbine.
For safety reasons,
Strine is never alone at
the turbine. Boerman,
himself an occasional
turbine technician, remains on the ground and
stays in contact by twoway radio or cellphone.
Its a good industry
to be in, Strine says.
Sometimes the work is
difficult and tedious, but
its pretty rewarding. Its
a nice view every day.

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LNP | LANCASTER, PA

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

A9

CONSUMER PROTECTION

How to spot, and stop, scammers


Here are some tips to avoid being the
victim of a fraudulent scheme
JONAS FORTUNE

JFORTUNE@LNPNEWS.COM

When John and Paul


Harrison of Harrison
Paving approached an
elderly East Hempfield Township resident
about sealing her driveway, she told them no
numerous times.
But the Harrisons persisted. And the resident
felt intimidated.
After not quoting
an upfront price, they
charged her $4,300
for the services and
requested she make a
check payable to another person and not the
business.
The work, done in
March, turned out to
be substandard at best.
And the Harrisons or
Harrison Paving didnt
exist.
Ace Leo Frank, 24, of
Chicago, was arrested
for his part in the scam.
He pleaded guilty to
misdemeanor charges in
May. Christopher A. Yoanis, 28, of Philadelphia,
and Cherie Alvarez,
27, of Fort Lauderdale,
Florida, have warrants
out for their arrest.
Scams can take on
many forms, from home
improvement fraud, like
the one committed by
the Harrisons, to letters requesting payment
to a Nigerian prince.
And
theyre
ever
evolving.
Unfortunately, scammers grow with technology and they dont see
sex, race or age, Attor-

ney General spokesperson Sadie Martin said.


A person is a person
with a bank account.

What to watch
out for
It helps to be prepared.
Fraud.org, the website
of The National Fraud
Information Center, is a
good resource.
Crooks pretending to
be from companies you
do business with may
call or send an email,
claiming they need to
verify your personal
information, the site
says. Dont provide
your credit card or bank
account number unless
you are actually paying
for something and know
who you are sending
payment to.
One of the more popular current scams is
using the name of a
government agency or
utility to demand funds
from consumers.
Government agencies
will not call or email,
Martin said. Theyll do
it through a written letter.
The Federal Bureau of
Investigation warns of
these key phrases:
You must act now
or the offer wont be
good.
Youve won a free
gift, vacation, or prize.
But you have to pay for
postage and handling
or other charges.
You must send
money, give a credit

USEFUL WEBSITES
n fraud.org.
n fraudguides.com.
n bbb.org/council/bbb-scam-stopper.
n fbi.gov/scams-safety/fraud.
n attorneygeneral.gov.
n justice.gov/criminal-fraud.
n stopfraud.gov.

COMPLAINTS
Call the Bureaus Home Improvement Registration
Hotline, at 1-888-520-6680, to report unregistered
contractors operating in your area. Or email the
report to the attorney generals office at
HIC@attorneygeneral.gov.

card or bank account


number, or have a check
picked up by courier.
You dont need to
check out the company
with anyone.
You dont need any
written
information
about the company or
their references.
You cant afford to
miss this high-profit,
no-risk offer.

Home
improvement
When it comes to home
improvement fraud, it
could be anything from
new windows to a full
home renovation, Martin said.
But be careful who you
do business with.
When someone is
knocking on your door

and asking you for work,


it may not be someone
you want to do business
with, Martin said.
There are several ways
consumers can find legitimate home improvement businesses.
Contractors who perform at least $5,000
worth of home improvements per year must register with the Pennsylvania Bureau of Consumer
Protection, according to
The Home Improvement Consumer Protection Act of 2008.
Registered contractors
are easily searchable on
the Attorney Generals
website at hicsearch.attorneygeneral.gov. Or
consumers can call a
toll-free hotline at 1-888520-6680.
The state attorney
generals office suggests
anyone planning on us-

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ing a contractor should


check the contractors
references, obtain more
than one bid for a job and
check for complaints
with the Better Business
Bureau.
If you become a victim
of fraud, keep as much
information as possible
and report it to your local police and the attorney general as fast as you
can, Martin said.
Consumers or businesses can call the bureaus Home Improvement
Registration
Hotline, at 1-888-5206680, to report unregistered
contractors
operating in their communities.
Complaints about unregistered contractors
can also be emailed to
the attorney generals
office at: HIC@attorneygeneral.gov.

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FROM PAGE A3

A10 SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

Mayfly: Festival on river


Continued from A3

Tucker, of Lancaster,
came in first place as a
relay team, running and
boating. Brian Palmer, of
Hummelstown, was the
first solo man to cross the
finish line; Laura Zeafla,
of Columbia, Maryland,
the first solo woman.
Craft and food vendors
were on hand, along with
several river educators at
tables. The Vinegar Creek
Constituency provided
tunes.

Symbol of a
healthy river
Michael Helfrich, Low-

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er Susquehanna Riverkeeper and founder of the


association, said he first
thought about having a
festival during last years
media frenzy surrounding the mayflies. The Associated Press, New York
Daily News and other
national publications reported on the Wrightsville swarm in 2015.
We had national press
on how bad the mayflies were, Helfrich said.
How often do we get
national press for the
Wrightsville Bridge? Not
that often. So, as soon
as I saw that, I thought,
Wait a minute. This is really something we should
be celebrating, because
theyre a symbol of a
healthy river.
Helfrich was pleased
that people came to the
festival. For a first-time
event, Im pretty happy,
he said.
While the insects may

cause inconveniences,
the Lower Susquehanna
Riverkeeper Association
warns that an absence of
mayflies is a bigger cause
for concern.
If we dont have an annual swarm of mayflies,
something is really, really wrong, and maybe
unfixably wrong, said
Steve Todd, chairman of
the Lower Susquehanna
Riverkeeper
Association.
Todd said the mayflies life cycle and larvae
feed the river during the
warm months. They are
a food source for smallmouth bass, which are
fished
recreationally
from the Susquehanna.

RANDY HESS | STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER PHOTOS

Harmless to
humans
Melissa Weisser, 23,
and Matt Emschweiler,
24, of York, said they
didnt realize the may-

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Clockwise from top: Last years Susquehanna Biathlon winner Mark Southam, right, and
wife Jessica McPherson relax by the river waiting for friends to finish the race; Laura
Zeafla, of Columbus, Md., is the first female across the finish line. Brian Palmer, of Hummelstown, who finished first in the races mens division, stands with his race canoe.

flies had a positive effect


on the ecosystem before
coming to the festival
with their 9-month-old
French bulldog, Bruno.
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While they may cling


to you or your car, they
dont bite you, said Bill
Minarik, executive director of the Lower Susquehanna Riverkeeper Association.
You can compost
these. Its a bug we kind of
like, he said. And though
mayflies may mess up the
walls of your riverside
cottage, theyre harmless, he noted.
Because of this, Minarik said he had one
wish for all attendees of
Saturdays Mayfly Festival: May the flies be with
you.

June 22 - July 9, 2016

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Question & Answer Session


2018 REASSESSMENT PRESENTATION SCHEDULE
The presentations will be held across the County
at the following venues and on the following dates:

JUNE 28, 2016

Warwick Township Municipal Building


315 Clay Road, Lititz 6 PM

JUNE 30, 2016

East Donegal Township Municipal Building


190 Rock Point Road, Marietta 6 PM

JULY 13, 2016

Quarryville Library
357 Buck Road, Quarryville 6 PM

717-299-8381
lancaster.pa.us/ta

FROM PAGE A3

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

SDL: Budget raises taxes

Continued from A3

funding levels for both


the 2015-16 and 2016-17
school years.

Programs funded

FILE PHOTO

School District of Lancaster Superintendent Damaris Rau


speaks to LNP in this 2015 photo.

We have many activities and


people working on college
readiness programs, but they work
in isolation. ... Ive talked to too
many whove told me, I dont know
what Im doing after high school.
School District of Lancaster Superintendent Damaris Rau,
discussing a new college and career coordinator position for the
districts high school

Trending

Whats hip
around the county

Tuesday:

Business
Local business
news & profiles

cut after hearing success


stories from parents and
getting additional data
from district officials last
week.

Coordinator
position
Thats also when the
board decided to fund a
new college and career
readiness
coordinator for the high school
at an estimated cost of
$75,000.
Members previously
passed up the new position recommended by
Superintendent Damaris Rau.
They also factored in
new state budget numbers when reconsidering.
When things brightened a bit, we were able
to put some things back

on the table, Schott explained.


After the meeting,
Rau said the coordinator would help students
design and pursue postsecondary plans.
Rau said the position should be filled by
the start of the 2016-17
school year. The coordinator will ensure that
each student works individually with a guidance
counselor, college-prep
Gear UP staffer, or other
adviser.
We have many activities and people working on college readiness
programs, but they work
in isolation, Rau said.
That allows some students to slip through.
Ive talked to too many
whove told me, I dont
know what Im doing after high school.

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Wednesday:

Food

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Thursday:

Home &
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Tips & trends

ing would be an imprudent use of our taxpayer


dollars, said Shannon
Zimmerman, a district
spokeswoman.
Hempfields
drug
testing program was
initially suspended in
October 2015 to allow
for administrators and
school board members
to study the issue. The
board voted in midJune to end the program.
The district has cited
state regulations that
allow schools to test
students for drug use
only if they have identified a drug problem
and provided the data
to support the need for
screenings.
Mark Fitzgerald, the
solicitor for Hempfield,
said the district would
be unlikely to win a
legal challenge at the

state level. He cited a


2003 case in which the
state Supreme Court
declared a similar drug
testing program unconstitutional because the
school hadnt proved
the students being
screened had a high rate
of drug use.
At least one school
district here has faced
a lawsuit over its drug
testing policy.
In 2012, the American Civil Liberties
Union challenged Solanco School District,
claiming its program
violated the 2003 ruling requiring schools
to justify such programs with evidence of
widespread drug use in
the population being
tested.
It later withdrew the
suit because the plaintiff transferred to a private school.

Solanco and Hempfield were among the


first districts here to
implement drug testing policies, and Penn
Manor, Columbia, Eastern Lancaster County,
Manheim
Township
and Lampeter-Strasburg school districts
followed later.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimated that
nearly 1 in 5 U.S. school
districts had similar
policies as of last year.
Hempfield has said
it tested 10 students a
week.
According to newspaper records, Hempfield
is the first local district
to repeal its program,
though others have begun reviewing theirs.
Policies banning the
possession and use of
drugs remain in effect,
however.

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A11

Hempfield: Drug testing

Continued from A3

The board voted 8-1


in favor of the final budget, funding a program
to promote elementary
literacy with new classroom libraries; adding
teaching staff to limit
class size to 30 students;
and investing in iPads
and other classroom
technology.
It also incorporates
two last-minute changes.
In the first, the board
reversed course and decided to fund a kindergarten class for Wharton Elementary Schools
dual-language immersion program, which
provides daily instruction in Spanish and English.
The program serves
fewer than 150 students
per year, all of them chosen by chance after expressing interest.
Its small class sizes and
extra support cost about
$6,000 more per pupil
than the regular educational program.
Board members previously reached consensus
on eliminating the programs earliest grade level and looking at phasing
it out entirely in future
years.
Board member Linda
Troublefield Owens voted against the budget in
part because the immersion program was fully
funded.
I dont believe this
budget reflects equity
for every student, she
said.
Board members Adam
Schott and Candace
Roper said they favored
reversing the program

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

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A12

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

COURTS

Man pleads guilty


to sexually abusing
17-year-old girl
Judge sentences Dennis Mowday,
of Willow Street, to up to 15 years
STAFF

Dennis Mowday pleaded


guilty to
sexually
abusing a
girl.

A Willow Street man


has pleaded guilty to
sexually abusing a
teenage girl and filming some of the acts, his
second conviction for a
sex offense.
Dennis E. Mowday,
61, has been sentenced
to 4 to 15 years in
prison for sexually
abusing the 17-year-old
girl in 2014 and 2015,
according to the county
district attorneys office.
West
Lampeter
Township police be-

came aware of the


crimes after Mowdays
employer found evidence he was abusing
the girl among his belongings.
The employer contacted police.
Mowday, who recently lived in the first block
of Beaver Valley Pike,
was convicted in 1995
of sex abuse of a child.

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STATE / LOCAL

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

THUNDER IN THE VALLEY

Police log

SHOOTING

Wounded officer
thanks police

Continued from A12

Laments missing Chesneys


South Philadelphia concert

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Howard Anderson and Cindy Hughes, of Altoona, depart the Biker Mall on their
Harley Davidson during the annual Thunder in the Valley motorcycle rally in
Johnstown on Saturday.

COURT

N.H. woman drops Cosby lawsuit


SPRINGFIELD, Mass.
(AP) A 72-year-old
New Hampshire woman who says Bill Cosby
raped her in 1965 withdrew her civil defamation lawsuit against the
comedian on Friday, a
day after a federal judge
had allowed the case to
move forward.
Kristina Ruehlis lawyer told The Associated
Press that her client had
decided not to pursue
the case because the legal
landscape has changed
since she first filed suit
in November. Cosby
now faces criminal prosecution in Pennsylvania,
and similar civil actions
are in play in Massachusetts and elsewhere by
dozens of other accusers.
Ms. Ruehli is 72 and
her husband just celebrated his 79th birthday, Megan Deluhery,

Ruehlis lawyer, said.


She will watch the
pending cases proceed
in solidarity with other
survivors, those known
and unknown, while returning her focus, if she
can, on her daily life and
trying to put behind her
all the pain this ordeal
has caused her.
Cosby spokesman Andrew Wyatt responded that the comedian
hopes more lawsuits are
dropped or dismissed
and that Cosby looks forward to fighting the rest
before a jury in court.
Wyatt also noted Ruehlis is the second defamation case against his
client to be dismissed this
year. In January, former
teen actress Renita Hills
civil suit was dismissed
by a federal judge in Pittsburgh who ruled that the
Cosby camps comments

were protected by the


First Amendment.
For those in the media
who accepted every allegation raised without
question or evaluation,
they need to answer the
well-known
question
with respect to Mr. Cosby, Which office do I go to
to get my reputation
back? Wyatt said in a
statement.
Deluhery countered
that Ruehlis dismissal,
unlike Hills, was voluntary and had nothing
to do with the merits of
the case.
Ruehli filed a notice to
voluntarily dismiss the
suit without prejudice,
meaning she could refile
it. It came after a judge in
Springfield, near where
Cosby has a home, rejected the comedians
bid to dismiss the case
Thursday.

A13

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

PHILADELPHIA (AP) A police officer


shot several times near Philadelphia spoke
from his hospital bed to thank police and
medical personnel and included a shoutout to country singer Kenny Chesney.
In a video aired Saturday by WPVI-TV,
Officer Christopher Dorman said Id like
to thank all the police, paramedics and the
doctors and hey, Kenny, dont forget me!
The station said the Folcroft officer was
supposed to attend Saturday nights concert in South Philadelphia.
Penn Presbyterian Medical Center referred
questions about Dormans condition to Folcroft police, who didnt return calls Saturday.
Authorities said Dorman was shot in the
face, leg and groin Friday morning as he
approached people suspected of smoking
marijuana behind an apartment building.
A suspect, Donte Island, was charged with
attempted murder and aggravated assault.

block of Marshall Street.


n LANCASTER: A 1997 gray
Honda was stolen overnight on
June 22 at 629 New Holland
Ave. and recovered on Ice
Avenue about 12 hours later.
n LANCASTER: Marysol Reices,
48, of Lancaster, was charged
with retail theft after police said
she attempted to steal a pair of
shorts June 23 from a store at
Park City Center.
n LEACOCK TWP.: State police
say a bag was reported stolen
between 9 and 10 p.m. June
22 during baseball practice at
Intercourse Community Park.
The bag contained two baseball
bats, a baseball glove, cleated
shoes and a wallet. Anyone
with information should call
state police at 299-7650.

THEFT BY
DECEPTION
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part of an online scam.

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AVAILABLE
CORPORATE HAPPY HOUR

GOVERNMENT

A14 SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

Roll call
WASHINGTON (AP)
Heres how area members of Congress voted
on major issues in the
week ending June 24.

House
n ZIKA VIRUS,

TRANSPORTATION,
HOUSING: Voting 239 for
and 171 against, the House
on June 23 approved the
conference report on a
GOP-drafted bill (HR 2577)
that would appropriate
$56.5 billion in fiscal 2017
discretionary spending for
transportation, housing
and other programs. The
bills $1.1 billion outlay for
countering the mosquitoborne Zika virus drew
Democratic opposition
because much of the
money would be carved
out of other health care
programs. The bill would
bar Planned Parenthood
funding of Zika-related
reproductive care.
Overall, the bill would
fund initiatives such as
airport improvements,
air-traffic control, maritime
programs, highway safety,
mass transit, Amtrak, public
and elderly housing and
Community Development
Block Grants to cities.
Separately, the bill would
release $44 billion from
the Highway Trust Fund

for road and bridge repairs


and new construction in
the fiscal year that begins
Oct. 1.
There was no debate
on this appropriations
measure. A yes vote was
to approve the conference
report.
Voting yes: Pat Meehan,
R-7.
Not voting: Joseph Pitts,
R-16.

n STANDARDS FOR

FINANCIAL ADVISERS:
Voting 239 for and 180
against, the House on
June 22 failed to reach
a two-thirds majority
for overriding President
Obamas veto of legislation
concerning fiduciary
standards for financial
advisers. The vetoed
measure (HJ Res 88)
sought to kill a new
Department of Labor
requirement that advisers
to retirement and pension
plans put their clients
financial interests ahead of
their own. The upshot of
this vote is that the DOL
regulation will take effect
on schedule in April 2017.
There was no debate
on this veto-override
measure. A yes vote was in
opposition to the fiduciary
rule for financial advisers.
Voting yes: Meehan, Pitts.

n CELL SERVICE FOR

LOW-INCOME USERS:
Voting 207 for and 143

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against, the House on


June 21 failed to reach a
two-thirds majority for
passing a bill (HR 5525)
scaling back a program
that provides nearly 10
million low-income persons
with discounted telephone
service. President Ronald
Reagan began the Lifeline
Program for landline
service and President
George W. Bush expanded
it to include cell service.
This bill would end the cellservice component. The
programs budget of more
than $1 billion is financed
through the Universal
Service Fee on consumer
phone bills. A yes vote was
to pass the bill.
Voting yes: Pitts.
Voting no: Meehan.

Senate
n GUNS, EXPLOSIVES,

TERROR LISTS: By a vote


of 47 for and 53 against,
the Senate on June 20
defeated a Democraticsponsored measure
to prohibit the sale of
firearms or explosives to
individuals on the FBIs
terrorism watch list and
related lists of persons
known or suspected to
have links to terrorism.
Such sales are now legal.
Federal law enforcement
and intelligence agencies
maintain several watch and
no-fly lists that reportedly

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contain the names of more


than 800,000 foreigners
and American citizens. The
amendment was offered
to a budget bill (HR 2578)
that awaited final passage.
A yes vote was to back the
Democratic amendment.
Voting yes: Robert Casey
Jr., D.
Voting no: Pat Toomey, R.

n 72-HOUR DELAY OF

GUN SALES: By a vote of


53 for and 47 against, the
Senate on June 20 failed
to reach 60 votes needed
to advance a GOP-drafted
amendment to HR 2578
(above) that sought to
delay sales of firearms
for up to 72 hours if the
purchasers name is on FBI
terrorism watch or no-fly
lists. To block an impending
sale, federal attorneys
would have to obtain
a court order against it
within the 72 hours. A yes
vote was to advance the
GOP amendment.
Voting yes: Toomey.
Voting no: Casey Jr.

n COMPROMISE GUN

MEASURE: Voting 46
for and 52 against, the
Senate on June 23 failed to
table (kill) a compromise
amendment to HR 2578
(above) that would require
background checks of
buyers who are named
in the FBIs no-fly list or
receive extra preflight
screening. The amendment
was much narrower than a
competing Democratic plan
(above) and lacked a rival
GOP plans requirement
(above) that prosecutors
must go to court to block
specific sales to those on

gK

watch lists. A yes vote


was to quash the only
bipartisan gun amendment
before the Senate.
Voting no: Toomey, Casey
Jr.

n GUN DENIALS,

CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS:
Voting 67 for and 31
against, the Senate on
June 23 tabled (killed)
an amendment that was
similar to a compromise
gun measure (above)
except that it required
advance court approval
of government actions to
block gun sales based on
entries in terrorism watch
and no-fly lists. By contrast,
the bipartisan compromise
allowed those denied gun
purchases to appeal the
decision only after the fact.
A yes vote was to kill the
amendment to HR 2578.
Voting yes: Casey Jr.
Voting no: Toomey.

n INTERNET

SURVEILLANCE WITHOUT
WARRANTS: The Senate
on June 22 failed, 58 for
and 38 against, to advance
a measure extending the
reach of FBI National
Security Letters to
allow searches without
warrants of internet usage
by Americans who are
suspected of having links
to terrorism. Recipients
of these letters (internet
service providers in this
case) are prohibited
from ever mentioning
them. Backers said the
amendment would give
the FBI an important tool
in real time for monitoring
homegrown terrorists
and their contacts at
home and abroad before

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n EXPANDED GUN-

BACKGROUND CHECKS:
The Senate on June 20
defeated, 44 for and 56
against, a Democraticsponsored measure to
require criminal and
mental-health background
checks of buyers in
virtually all commercial
transactions, including
gun-show and online sales.
A yes vote was to close
the so-called gun show
loophole, which allows a
large share of U.S. firearms
sales to bypass the
National Instant Criminal
Background Check System
(NICS). A yes vote was to
expand background checks
on gun sales.
Voting yes: Casey Jr.
Voting no: Toomey.

n FUNDING BOOST FOR


BACKGROUND CHECKS:
Voting 53 for and 47
against, the Senate on
June 20 turned back a
Republican attempt to
increase funding for the
NICS and remove names
thought to have been
erroneously entered
into the system. This
amendment to HR 2578
(above) needed 60 votes
to advance. A yes vote
was to advance the GOP
amendment.
Voting yes: Toomey.
Voting no: Casey Jr.

Key votes ahead

In the week of July 27,


the Senate will resume
work on a budget bill for
the departments of Justice and Commerce. The
House has begun its Independence Day recess.

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they strike, while foes


called it a gross violation
of Fourth Amendment
privacy protections. The
amendment was proposed
to HR 2578 (above). A yes
vote was to advance the
amendment.
Voting yes: Toomey, Casey
Jr.

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FOURTH OF JULY

SALUTE!

July 4, 2016 marks the 240th Anniversary

Since then, July 4th has been recognized as the dawn of


American independence, and celebrations that included
fireworks and parades can be traced back to the 18th century.
On July 4, 1777, the city of Philadelphia, which would become
the first capital of the United States of America, held the
first annual commemoration of American independence,
and exactly one year later George Washington ordered
that all of his soldiers be offered double rations of rum to
commemorate the anniversary. In 1781, Massachusetts was
the first state to make July 4th an official state holiday, and
the day was actually declared a federal holiday by the U.S.
Congress in 1870. However, that declaration did not grant a
paid holiday to federal employees. That benefit came in 1941,
which is why that year is now recognized as the first year when
the Fourth of July officially became
a federal holiday.

of the signing of the Declaration of Independence. Fireworks


will illuminate the night sky, the rich smell of barbecue will
be in the air, and the country will be awash in red, white and
blue splendor.
The Fourth of July has been a federal holiday
since 1941. Though that may seem like
a long time for the country to wait
to celebrate the independence it
declared in 1776, the tradition of
the Fourth of July, often referred
to as Independence Day, dates
back to the dawn of the American
Revolution and the adoption of
the Declaration of Independence
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FROM PAGE A3

A16 SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

Assistance

F&M AND LGH NEIGHBORHOOD HOMEBUYER


HOME BUYERASSISTANCE
ASSISTANCEZONES
ZONES
Franklin & Marshall College and Lancaster General Hospital offer up to $10,000 in assistance to employees who buy
homes in zones near their workplaces.

F&M COLLEGE

LGH

Continued from A3

Liberty St.
Ross St.
F&M

CLIPPER MAG .
STADIUM

e.

Frederick St.

F&M

ge A

ve .

Av

Plum St.

rg

Shippen St.

Frederick St.

Lime St.

bu

Duke St.

rris

Queen St.

Ha

Prince St.

New St.

F&M
College

Clay St.

Colle

LGH

James St.

Water St.

Lemon St.
Ne

Ave

Plum St.

Shippen St.

Chestnut St.

b i a Av

wH

d
llan

Walnut St.

Arch St.

Colum

Charlotte St.

e.

Lancaster Ave.

Av

Mary St.

tta

Pine St.

rie

Nevin St.

Ma

Mulberry St.

James St.

Orange St.

e.

King St.

P ENN S QUARE

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but only in those areas


around them, well, thats
what redlining was all
about, Callari said at a
hearing of the Lancaster
poverty
commission
Thursday.
We should not tolerate
that in this community,
Callari added to applause.
Callari pointed to the
restrictions on the homebuying assistance programs as an example of
a structural barrier that
hampers poverty reduction in Lancaster. He also
mentioned low wages.
Informed of Callaris
comments, LGH spokesman John Lines said the
hospital regularly evaluates its Home in the City
program to determine
whether changes are
warranted to enhance its
benefits to our employees
and LG Health.
F&M spokesman Greg
Wright said expanding
the colleges homebuying
zone could be considered in the future.
Ray DAgostino, CEO of
the nonprofit Lancaster
Housing
Opportunity
Partnership, who attended Thursdays hearing,
pushed back against Callaris redlining analogy in
an interview with LNP.
Redlining was intentional steering away of
people from certain areas, DAgostino said.
Thats not whats happening here. LGH and
F&M are doing a good
thing to provide a resource to help people live
closer to work, which is so
needed.
But DAgostino agreed
with Callari that expanding the zone would help
more people.

Applying pressure

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a loan of up to $10,000
for a down payment and
closing costs. After five
years, the loan is forgiven.
The boundaries of the
hospitals zone are North
Plum Street, East Orange
Street, North Arch Street
and Liberty Street. For
F&M, the boundaries are
West Orange Street, College Avenue, Harrisburg
Avenue and North Arch
Street.
The program aims to
stabilize and strengthen the neighborhood
around LGH by promoting ownership of homes
within a comfortable
walking distance of the
hospital, Lines said.
The program, which
has cost the hospital
$1.5 million, helps LGH
recruit and retain staff,
Lines said. A total of
121 of the 144 employees who made use of the
program were first-time
homebuyers.
The average home
price has been $117,600,
Lines said, but the hospital last week helped a
worker buy a home on
East Liberty Street for
$72,000.
We are engaged in the
poverty commissions efforts and are interested
in the range of solutions that it identifies to
mitigate poverty in the
city, Lines said. Well
continue to evaluate the
program.
Daniel
Porterfield,
F&Ms president, said
in an email the colleges
City Life program is one
of many ways we ... strive
to be responsive and engaged members of our
community.
Callari was one of four
speakers at the poverty
commissions third hearing, which drew about 80
participants.
Topics ranged from
loans drying up for small
businesses to not-inmy-backyard opposition to affordable housing.
Callari
advocated
changing conditions for
the poor by applying
bully pulpit pressure
on local policymakers.
You really got to hold
the feet to the fire (for)
these institutions to
treat the people that
they hire and that they
serve from the Southeast
and from the southwest
better, more equitably,
he said.

Unfair systems

Callari warned that


ignoring changes to the
communitys
systems
and structures will doom
efforts to combat poverty and lend weight to
those who blame poverty on the people caught
up in dysfunctional and
unfair systems.
Blaming the poor for
conditions beyond their
control, Callari said,
gives rise to a pathology
of anger, frustration and
resentment.
In her address, Jessica
King, executive director
of Assets, also touched
on the need to address
structural issues, including income-based school
segregation and affordable housing.
She said unfair systems
have made the southern
half of Lancaster city the
place with the densest
concentration of poverty
in the county.
We cant sustain the
level of poverty we have
in Lancaster city, King
said. It needs to be
shared. It needs to be beyond just Lancaster city.
So I think one of the
biggest challenges in
front of us as a commission is how do you get
buy-in from a community that doesnt necessarily care or doesnt necessarily see it in such a real
way?

NATION

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

A17

MISSISSIPPI LEGISLATURE

NATIONAL LAKESHORE

Lawmakers fight on
demon chipmunk

Rotting trees caused dune holes

Report explains void that swallowed boy in 2013, leading to closure at park

EMILY WAGSTER
PETTUS

TOM COYNE

thought their ideas were


being ignored by the Republican supermajority.
Hughes sued Gunn over
the speedy voice, and
the dispute awaits consideration in the state
Supreme Court
In the brief for
Hughes, Hill wrote that
Gunn had used the computer voice at a fast but
understandable pace in
previous years.
In the 2016 legislative session, however,
when legislators sought
to exercise their rights
under Article 4, Section
59, Speaker Gunn retaliated by having the machine play at warp speed
so that no member
could understand what
was being said, Hill
wrote. On the House
floor, members began to
refer to Speaker Gunns
machine as the demon
chipmunk.
On March 23, 2016,
Speaker Gunn again set
loose the demon chipmunk in response to
a members request to
have a bill read aloud.
Hinds County Circuit
Judge Winston Kidd
issued an order March
23 to block Gunn from
using the fast setting
for the reading. The Supreme Court tossed out
Kidds order hours later,
and the speed-reading
resumed.

ASSOCIATED PRESS

JACKSON, Miss. A
Mississippi lawmaker
says the state constitution is at stake in
his lawsuit against the
House speaker over a
speed-reading
computer voice thats been
called the demon chipmunk.
Democratic state Rep.
Jay Hughes of Oxford
says Republican Speaker Philip Gunn violated
the constitution by setting the machine to read
bills aloud at a superfast
speed. Hughes attorney
says House members
called it a demon chipmunk voice.
No one, not even the
speaker of the Mississippi House of Representatives, is above the
Constitution, Hughes
attorney, S. Ray Hill III,
wrote in a brief filed
Tuesday with the state
Supreme Court.
Any member of the
Mississippi House or
Senate can demand that
a bill be read aloud immediately before a final
vote on it, according to
Section 59 of the 1890
state Constitution. Billreading is a common
filibuster tactic.
House
Democrats
forced readings in
March because they

supports her findings.


He said it wouldnt be
appropriate to comment
until the agency had the
chance to review both. G.
William Monaghan, a senior research scientist at
the IGS, said he hopes to
have its completed study
to the Park Service by
Aug. 1.
Monaghan said the IGS
study, which Argyilan
is also involved in, will
include a map of potentially hazardous areas
based on 1930s photos
that show the location
of trees before the sand
buried them. The scientists said reopening
Mount Baldy would be a
risk-management decision that the Park Service would have to make.

ASSOCIATED PRESS

SOUTH BEND, Ind.


Mysterious holes that
forced the closure of a
massive dune at an Indiana national park after a
6-year-old boy fell into
one and nearly died were
caused by sand-covered
trees that left cavities
behind as they decayed
over the years, researchers have found.
Fungi on the covered
trees formed a sort of
cement that allowed
the sand to keep its hollowed out shape as the
wood decayed and collapsed inward, leaving
holes more than 10 feet
deep in the dune known
as Mount Baldy at the
Indiana Dunes National
Lakeshore,
according
to a study published in
December by Erin Argyilan, who heads Indiana
University Northwests
department of geosciences. She said the phenomenon likely explains
similar holes found in
migrating dunes in Oregon and Michigan.
Although she determined the holes to be
more of a nuisance than
a hazard, Argyilan said
they could present an
unseen geological hazard in heavily visited natural places like Mount
Baldy. The popular dune
has been closed except
for small ranger-led
tours since the July 2013
rescue of the Illinois boy,
who was trapped under
sand for more than three
hours.
The question facing the
National Park Service is
whether to keep Mount
Baldy closed to the unsupervised public or to find
a way to safely reopen it,
at least partially.

No one, not even


the speaker of the
Mississippi House
of Representatives,
is above the
Constitution.
S. Ray Hill III, attorney

ASSOCIATED PRESS

A researcher uses large equipment to study Indiana


Dunes National Lakeshores Mount Baldy in Michigan
City, Ind., in a file photo.

Bruce Rowe, a spokesman for the park, declined to comment on

Argyilans study or an
ongoing Indiana Geological Survey study that

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Their purrs, wagging tails, and


exuberant happy-dances let us know
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family by participating in a special
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of the photographers below, or submit


your own photo too participate.
Photo submission
deadline:

Friday, July 15

Participation fee:

30*

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August ,
14

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including your furry (or not so furry)
family members and join our fun and
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A portion of the proceeds


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Lancaster County.

A Reflection by Sherry

Free Your Mind Photography

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Krista Pelletier Photography

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Lititz (717) 341-1720

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Captured by Missi Photography

CAPTUREDBYMISSI.WIX.COM/CBMPHOTOGRAPHY

Stevens/Ephrata (717) 721-7728

Erin Lyn Photography

WWW.ERINLYNPHOTOGRAPHY.COM

Lancaster (717) 419-4448

Evelyn Rivera Photography


& Photo Booths
WWW.FACEBOOK.COM/
EVELYNRIVERAPHOTOGRAPHY

Lancaster (727) 520-2925

WWW.PHOTOSANDKAKESBYKRISTA.COM

Photography by Barry

WWW.PHOTOGRAPHYBYBARRY.COM
Mount Joy (717) 468-5452

* The participation fee includes your sitting (if using a


participating professional photographer) and insertion
into the newspaper. The sitting is for families and
their pets. Additional sittings may be charged by
photographer. Reshoots are subject to additional fees.
Minimum package price may apply. Please note that
non-professional photos may not reproduce in the same
fashion as a photo from a professional photographer.
Photos will also be displayed on LancasterOnline.

Join the
PET SHOWCASE!
Call 717-291-8800 or email
advertising@LNPnews.com
for a submission form and
more information.

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A18

NATION

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

WESTERN WILDFIRES

WEST VIRGINIA FLOODING

150 homes burned in California

Couple describe
fleeing their home

Entire blocks reduced to rubble as winds drive flames through Sierra Nevada
SCOTT SMITH AND
ROBERT JABLON

JONATHAN
MATTISE

ASSOCIATED PRESS

ASSOCIATED PRESS

LAKE ISABELLA, Calif. A voracious and


deadly wildfire in central
California has burned
150 homes, and the toll
may rise, fire officials
said Saturday.
The tally rose from 80
homes as firefighters began going through neighborhoods to count houses and mobile homes
incinerated by the blaze.
Entire blocks were reduced to rubble, and at
least 2,500 homes remained threatened.
The winds that drove
the fire through small
southern Sierra Nevada
communities calmed by
late afternoon, helping
firefighters gain access
to the fire line. However,
hot weather and low humidity remained a worry.
Thats something we
have to keep an eye on.
It could spark another
disaster, Kern County
fire Engineer Anthony
Romero said.
About 1,140 firefighters
battled the flames.

ASSOCIATED PRESS

A pickup truck passes the remains of mobile homes devastated by a wildfire Saturday
in South Lake, Calif.

Gov. Jerry Brown declared a state of emergency, freeing up money


and resources to fight
the fire and to clean up in
the aftermath. The Federal Emergency Management Agency also authorized the use of funds
for firefighting efforts,
fire officials said.
Since it began Thursday, the fire has swept

Social Security
Disability & SSI

through 35,711 acres


nearly 56 square miles
of parched brush and
timber. It moved so
quickly that some residents barely had time to
escape and two didnt.
An elderly couple apparently were overcome
by smoke as they tried
to flee, county Sheriff
Donny Youngblood said.
Their bodies were found
Friday, but their names
havent been released.
Allen
Montgomery,
40, who lives across the
street from the couple,
said he didnt know their

Tony Hopkins
Attorney

233 N. Duke St., Lancaster, PA

517-9637

~ Applications & Appeals ~


Free Parking Hablamos Espaol

PEST CONTROL
www.KirchnerBrothers.com
717.394.8838

names but understood


that the woman was bedridden. Before he fled his
home on Friday, Montgomery said he saw the
mans body about 20 feet
from the house that was
engulfed in flames.
There was so much
smoke you could barely
see it, he said.
Everett Evans, 45, fled
Thursday as the fire
came down a mountain with a roar toward
his South Lake mobile
home. When you hear
a freight train, its time
to leave. You could hear
it, you could see it, you
could smell it, he said.
Evans said he knocked
on doors to get neighbors to leave. Evans and
his father, his son and his
sons girlfriend were in
the convoy.
But he has nothing left
to come back to. Virtually no homes survived
in his neighborhood.

CLENDENIN, W.Va.
Surrounded by muddy devastation, Cathy
Light and her husband,
Chris, thought it was
heaven sent they had
free burgers to munch
on in a Clendenin parking lot Saturday.
To their left, the
roof of a Dairy Queen
slumped to the pavement. Behind it, a trailer home was ripped
from its foundation,
with four concrete
stairs all that remained
in the ground. Occasional whiffs of rotten food wafted from
a nearby grocery store
that, not long ago, was
filled with 5 feet of
muck water.
Before they jumped
in a rescue boat in Clendenin on Saturday, the
Lights could only save
their dog Odie and a TV
that sat atop a bedroom
dresser the highestup they stored anything
in their house.
The heavy rains that
pummeled West Virginia resulted in at least
24 deaths, leaving families homeless with the
tearful realization that
theyre starting from
scratch.
I dont have anything, said Cathy
Light, as she ate the free
meal provided by Grace
Community Church.
Where do we go now?
The scene in Clendenin,
located
in
Kanawha
County,
wasnt as deadly as
in Rainelle. Sixteen
people died in Green-

I dont have
anything.
Where do we
go now?
Cathy Light

brier County, at least


15 of them in Ranielle.
Greenbrier is the only
county where Gov. Earl
Ray Tomblins administration believes people
remain missing.
It does not appear
there are unaccounted for people in other
counties, but its still a
somewhat fluid situation, said Chris Stadelman, Tomblins chief of
staff.
Rainelle Mayor Andrea Andy Pendleton
wept as she surveyed
her town Saturday.
I weep for my people, I weep for the businesses, she said.
About six buses full
of people whose homes
were either without
power or too damaged
to inhabit were evacuated. Some were taken
initially to a fire department facility, but
then it flooded so they
were moved to an abandoned store. When that
started to flood, buses
took the evacuees to a
church 40 miles away.
Six other deaths were
reported in Kanawha,
in addition to one each
in Jackson and Ohio
counties.

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NATION

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

A19

ELECTION 2016

Dems platform reflects Sanders influence


KEN THOMAS

all single-payer health


care system and a carbon
tax to address climate
change, and freeze hydraulic fracking.
While the platform does
not bind the Democratic
nominee to the stated
positions, it serves as a
guidepost for the party
moving forward. Party officials approved the draft
early Saturday.
The Democratic National Conventions full
Platform
Committee
will discuss the draft at a

ASSOCIATED PRESS

ST. LOUIS A draft of


the Democratic Partys
policy positions reflects
the influence of Bernie
Sanders
presidential
campaign:
endorsing
steps to break up large
Wall Street banks, advocating a $15 hourly wage,
urging an end to the death
penalty.
Hillary Clintons supporters turned back efforts by Sanders allies to
promote a Medicare-for-

meeting next month in


Orlando, Florida, with a
vote at the convention in
Philadelphia in late July.
Deliberating late into
Friday, the group considered language on the Israel-Palestinian conflict,
an issue that has divided
Democrats. The committee defeated an amendment led by Sanders supporter James Zogby that
would have called for providing Palestinians with
an end to occupation
and illegal settlements

and urged an international effort to rebuild Gaza.


The draft reflects Clintons views and advocates
working toward a twostate solution of the Israel-Palestinian conflict
that guarantees Israels
security with recognized
borders and provides
the Palestinians with independence, sovereignty,
and dignity.
In many cases, Clintons side gave ground to
Sanders. The document
calls for the expansion

of Social Security and


says Americans should
earn at least $15 an hour,
referring to the current
minimum wage of $7.25
an hour as a starvation
wage, a term often used
by Sanders.
Sanders has pushed for
a $15-an-hour minimum
wage. Clinton has supported efforts to raise the
minimum wage to that
level but has said states
and cities should raise the
bar as high as possible.
Sanders allies wanted

the draft to specify calls


for a $15 per hour minimum wage indexed with
inflation. Clintons side
struck down a direct link,
noting the document
elsewhere included a call
to raise and index the
minimum wage.
The committee also adopted language that said it
supports ways to prevent
banks from gambling with
taxpayers bank deposits,
including an updated
and modernized version
of Glass-Steagall.

PLAY
FOR A CHANCE TO WIN
L

10 WEEKLY PRIZES OF 500


$

Shop locally using the award-winning LNP.


Shop-Dine-Do Local is easy to play. Get your
weekly entry form in LNP on Sunday or Monday. Look
through the newspaper Monday through Saturday
for the daily advertisements that contains the
Shop-Dine-Do Local logo.

ADVANCED TECH
28-30 E. King St Lancaster
717-393-4000 (Not a Drop Off Location)

GEORGES FAMILY RESTAURANT


2600 Willow St Pike Willow Street
717-464-5252

ANNIE BAILEYS
28-30 E. King St Lancaster
717-393-4000

GOCHNAUERS APPLIANCE
5939 Main St East Petersburg
717-569-0439

BARN DOOR
14 Blue Rock Rd Millersville
717-872-9943

THE JIGGER SHOP


5202 Gettysburg Ave
Mount Gretna 964-9686

BRIDGEPORT FAMILY RESTAURANT


1655 Old Philadelphia Pike Lancaster
717-392-5943

JOHN HERRS VILLAGE MARKET


25 Manor Ave Millersville
717-872-5457

CARUSOS
2933 Willow St Pike Willow Street
717-464-6464

LA PIAZZA
40 W. Orange St Lancaster
717-490-6430

CENTERVILLE DINER
100 S. Centerville Rd Lancaster
717-553-5772

LIGHTING GALLERY
1607 Manheim Pike, Lancaster
717-560-3726

CHERRY HILL ORCHARDS


400 Long Ln Lancaster
717-872-9311

MARTIN FURNITURE & MATTRESS


1717 West Main St, Ephrata
717-721-3139
2318 Beaver Valley Pike,
New Providence
717-806-7373

CLEMINTINES
25 E. Main St Lititz
717-626-6688
DARRENKAMPS
106 Willow Valley Square Lancaster
717-464-2700
945 East Main St. Mt. Joy
717-653-8200
191 Ridgeview Road South,
Elizabethtown 717-367-2286
FERRELLGAS
820 13 Doe Run Rd Lititz
717-665-3588

MECKS PRODUCE
1955 Beaver Valley Pike Strasburg
717-786-4713
MICKS ALL AMERICAN PUB
1411 Columbia Ave Lancaster
717-824-3292
2201 Strickler Rd Manheim/Mt. Joy
717-653-1220
543 Airport Rd Lititz
717-517-8288

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 27, 2016, so keep playing for your
chance to WIN! Questions about the contest, call 291-8800.
L

MILLER OPTICAL
845 Columbia Ave Lancaster
717-393-2020
222 Willow Valley Lakes Dr #1100
Willow Street 717-464-5695
MinDs BOUTIQUE
4 Sturgis Ln Lititz
717-627-7856
MOUNT GRETNA LAKE & BEACH
130 Lakeview Dr Lebanon
717-964-3130
MR. STICKYS
501 Greenfield Rd Lancaster
717-413-9229
OLDE MILL HOUSE SHOPPES
105 Strasburg Pike Lancaster
717-299-0678
ReUzit SHOP of NEW HOLLAND
707 W. Main St New Holland
717-354-8355
RISTENBATT VACUUM
1038 Lancaster Rd Manheim
717-665-5126
SCOOPS ICE CREAM & GRILLE
312 Primrose Ln Mountville
717-285-2055
SHOWCASE OF FASHIONS
301 E Orange St Lancaster
717-393-0451

TWO COUSINS PIZZA


Willow Street
717.464.0777
Lincoln Highway East Paradise
717.687.8606
Quarryville
717.786.1400
East Petersburg
717.581.1111
Manheim
717.665.0202
Columbia Avenue Lancaster
717.399.8888
Stevens
717.336.8888
Millersville
717.871.9200
Ephrata
717.733.0303
Mount Joy
717.653.8311
Lincoln Highway East Lancaster
717.291.1900
THE VILLAGE HAUS
2 N Market St Reinholds
717-484-5100
WILEYS PHARMACY
507 Lehman Ave Millersville
717-871-1100
112 Townsedge Dr Quarryville
717-786-1191
300 Historic Dr Strasburg
717-687-6058
903 Nissley Rd Lancaster
717-898-8804

CHECK BACK HERE


FOR THE WEEKLY

CONTEST ENTRY FORM


L

WINNER

Rules & Regulations

Name____________________________________________Phone______________________

1. Must be 18 or older to participate. No purchase necessary.

Address_______________________________________________________Apt. #__________

2. Cut out the weekly entry form in each Sunday or Monday issue
of LNP from 6/20/16 through 8/22/16. Youll use those entry
forms all week.

Town___________________________________State____________Zip Code _____________


Email Address_________________________________________________________________
By providing my e-mail address, I agree to occasionally receive special emailed offers from LNP MEDIA GROUP, Inc. and its trusted advertisers

WEEK 2: 6/27 - 7/2

Entry Deadline: Wednesday, 7/6

DAY

Business 1

Business 2

Business 3

Monday

___________________________ __________________________ _________________________

Tuesday

___________________________ __________________________ _________________________

Wednesday ___________________________ __________________________ _________________________


Thursday

___________________________ __________________________ _________________________

Friday

___________________________ __________________________ _________________________

Saturday

___________________________ __________________________ _________________________


Once you have written in the names of the 3 stores each day in which the Shop-Dine-Do Local contest
logo appeared Monday through Saturday, a total of 18 names, drop off your entry at one of the
store locations listed on this ad by this weeks Wednesday entry deadline above.

3. Each day, Monday through Saturday, search for the


advertisement that has the Shop.Dine.Do Local logo in the ad.
Write that business name on your entry form, 3 per day, next to
the day it appeared. At the end of each week, your entry form will
list 18 business names.
4. Drop off your completed entries at any of the participating
Shop.Dine.Do. Local contest business. The deadline for each
weeks entry is the close of business the following Wednesday
each week. Entries may also be dropped off by the deadline date
by 4:30 PM at the LNP office, 8 W. King St., Lancaster.
5. Mailed or emailed entries are not valid and will be discarded.
6. Each week, a random drawing will be held from all completed
entries received by the deadline. The first entry chosen that
correctly lists all 18 businesses on the correct days will be
declared that weeks winner of gift certificates and cards valued
at $500 from participating businesses.
7. There are 10 contest weeks, each week with a $500 winner.
Thats a total of $5,000 in prizes to be awarded to 10 weekly
winners.
8. Winners will be contacted by telephone within 2 weeks after
each contest week. Winners are responsible for all taxes on
prizes won. No cash substitute for any prize won.
9. Complete rules & regulations available on
LancasterOnline.com/contests.

8 West King St., PO Box 1328, Lancaster, PA, 17608

A20 SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

MarketPulse
DRONE ZONE
After years of wrangling, the
Federal Aviation Administration
announced new rules for the use
of small drones. The new rules
permit drones to be flown without
special permission if they weigh
less than 55 pounds. The FAA
spent years trying to write rules
that would let drone users enjoy
the new technology while also
protecting privacy and public
safety. Under the old set of
guidelines, anyone using a drone
for a commercial purpose, like real
estate agents, filmmakers and
farmers, had to apply for a waiver
from the rules that govern the use
of manned aircraft.

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

Dow industrials

Nasdaq

-1.92% (wkly)

t 4-wk. -2.64%
t YTD -0.14%

t 4-wk. -4.57%
t YTD -5.98%

-1.63% (wkly)

t 4-wk. -2.94%
t YTD -0.32%

129.71

24.86

-48.90 230.24 -610.32

MON

TUES

WED

19,000

THUR

5,200

FRI

17,000

-1.50% (wkly)

t 4-wk. -2.31%
s YTD 4.22%

36.88

6.55

-10.44

76.72 -202.06

MON

TUES

WED

THUR

t 4-wk. -1.99%
t YTD -0.73%

FRI

$1,000

4,400

Dow Jones industrials

Close: 17,400.75
1-week change: -274.41 (-1.6%)

18188.81 15370.33

LOW

CLOSE

YTD
1YR
CHG %CHG MO QTR%CHG %CHG

18011.07

17356.34

17400.75

-274.41

-1.6

7757.23

7293.87

7320.55

-269.29

-3.6

6403.31

Dow Jones transportation

11170.82

8937.99

NYSE Comp.

10641.17

10164.42

10183.51

-164.42

-1.6

5231.94

4209.76

Nasdaq Comp.

4910.04

4698.42

4707.98

-92.36

-1.9

2132.82

1810.10

S&P 500

2113.32

2032.57

2037.41

-33.81

-1.6

1551.28

1215.14

S&P MidCap

1517.62

1455.61

1457.59

-22.36

-1.5

22537.15 18462.43

Wilshire 5000

21884.31

21057.14

21102.32

-328.82

-1.5

Russell 2000

1172.22

1123.48

1127.54

-17.15

-1.5

943.09

8530.82

1296.00

t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t

t
t
s
t
s
s
s
s

-0.1

(((*&%@!9742| -3.0

-2.5

&$#!9999875| -11.2

+0.4

(*&@!9997542| -7.8

-6.0

(*&^%$@999621| -7.3

-0.3

(((*&$97531| -3.1

+4.2

(((@995421| -4.9

-0.3

((*&^$#99651| -5.1

-0.7

999995431| -11.9

Thursdays close: CBS(CBS)


111%

150%

Viacom vs. CBS since split


100
50
Dec 8,
2005
0
-50

06

07

08

09

10

11

12

13

14

15

16

Ryan Nakashima; Jenni Sohn AP

LocalFunds
FAMILY

FUND

TICKER

American Funds

AmBalA m
CapIncBuA m
CpWldGrIA m
FnInvA m
GrthAmA m
IncAmerA m
InvCoAmA m
WAMutInvA m
Income
IntlStk
Stock
500IdxPr
Contra
IncomeA m
TotRetBdI
TotRetIs
500Adml
InstIdxI
InstPlus
InstTStPl
IntlStkIdxAdm
IntlStkIdxIPls
MuIntAdml
PrmcpAdml
TotBdAdml
TotIntl
TotStIAdm
TotStIIns
TotStIdx
WelltnAdm

ABALX
24.16
CAIBX
56.77
CWGIX 42.14
ANCFX 50.44
AGTHX 40.41
AMECX 20.65
AIVSX
34.43
AWSHX 39.02
DODIX
13.74
DODFX 33.73
DODGX 155.83
FUSVX 71.96
FCNTX
94.53
FKINX
2.14
MWTIX 10.94
PTTRX
10.24
VFIAX 187.93
VINIX
186.10
VIIIX
186.11
VITPX
45.83
VTIAX
23.08
VTPSX
92.31
VWIUX
14.60
VPMAX 98.36
VBTLX
11.03
VGTSX 13.80
VTSAX
50.67
VITSX
50.67
VTSMX 50.65
VWENX 64.24

Dodge & Cox

Fidelity
FrankTemp-Franklin
Metropolitan West
PIMCO
Vanguard

* - annualized

NAV

$CHG ---------- PERCENT RETURN ---------1WK 1WK 1MO 1YR RANK 5YRS* RANK
-0.20 -0.8
-0.77
NA
-0.85 -2.0
-0.86 -1.7
-0.76 -1.8
-0.16 -0.8
-0.55 -1.6
-0.49 -1.2
+0.02 +0.1
-1.12
NA
-3.85 -2.4
-1.19 -1.6
-1.67 -1.7
-0.01 -0.5
+0.01 +0.1
... -0.2
-4.05 -1.6
-3.07 -1.6
-3.07 -1.6
-0.76 -1.6
-0.49
NA
-1.98
NA
+0.04 +0.3
-2.21 -2.2
+0.01 +0.1
-0.29
NA
-0.83 -1.6
-0.84 -1.6
-0.84 -1.6
-0.76 -1.2

-0.1
NA
-2.4
-1.7
-1.9
-0.2
-0.7
-0.7
+1.2
NA
-3.0
-1.7
-3.3
...
+1.2
+0.5
-1.7
-1.7
-1.7
-1.5
NA
NA
+1.4
-3.8
+1.6
NA
-1.5
-1.6
-1.5
-0.9

+2.8
NA
-9.1
-0.9
-3.8
+0.5
-0.8
+1.3
+3.7
NA
-9.5
-1.3
-4.4
-4.9
+4.3
+3.5
-1.2
-1.2
-1.2
-2.8
NA
NA
+7.1
-5.4
+5.6
NA
-2.9
-2.9
-3.0
+0.8

1
1
3
1
2
1
1
1
4
5
5
1
2
5
3
1
1
1
2
2
2
2
2
1
2
2
2
2
1

+9.9
NA
+6.3
+11.0
+11.5
+8.3
+11.6
+11.6
+3.8
NA
+10.9
+12.3
+11.8
+5.3
+4.8
+3.5
+12.3
+12.3
+12.3
+11.9
NA
NA
+4.6
+12.7
+3.4
NA
+11.8
+11.8
+11.7
+9.0

1
1
2
3
2
1
2
1
2
3
2
1
2
2
1
1
1
1
1
4
4
2
1
3
4
2
2
2
1

RATING
HHHHI
HHHHI
HHHII
HHHII
HHHII
HHHHI
HHHII
HHHHI
HHHHI
HHHII
HHHHI
HHHHH
HHHHH
HHIII
HHHHH
HHHHI
HHHHH
HHHHH
HHHHH
HHHHI
HHIII
HHIII
HHHHI
HHHHH
HHHII
HHHII
HHHHI
HHHHI
HHHHI
HHHHH

Commodities

1-week
... today is percent
worth change
8.4 %

Oil

$1,353

-2.7

Utilities stocks

1,191
1,183

0.0

1,097

0.8

1,095

1.3

1,064

4.6

Gold

REITs

Emerging-market stocks
S&P 500

Investment-grade bonds

Small-cap stocks

European stocks

Technology stocks
Copper

Health care stocks


Asian stocks

$0

$600

1,045

1.7

1,042

-0.6

1,039

2.1

1,022

9.7

1,017

1.3

1,013

5.6

999

0.8

990

3.2

$1,200

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 June 23
AP

20 Best Stocks One Year


COMPANY

FRIDAY %CHG %CHG


TICKERCLOSE 1WK 1MO

Celator Pharmaceut

CPXX

30.19

+0.1

+72.2 +1246.0

dd

...

MGT Capital Invest

MGT

3.23

-6.4

+37.4

dd

...

Helios and Matheson

HMNY

dd

...

Vista Gold

10.10

-17.2 +818.2

VGZ

1.57

+8.3 +136.1

Lifevantage Corp

LFVN

13.20

+2.2

-2.4

McEwen Mining Inc

MUX

3.61

+8.7

+63.3

Grt Panther Silver

GPL

1.58

+1.9

+9.7

Gold Standard Vent

GSV

1.78

+1.1

+9.9

MeetMe Inc

MEET

4.86

+4.1

+40.9

Alexco Resources

AXU

1.35 +11.6

+23.9

Energy Recovery

ERII

8.17

-6.3

-22.9

Internet Gold-Golden

IGLD

12.92

+3.7

+2.1

Skyline Cp

SKY

8.40

-6.7

-16.6

Richmont Mines

RIC

8.88

-2.2

+20.3

US Energy Corp Wyo

USEG

1.77

-22.4

-18.1

Weight Watchers

WTW

12.34

-7.2

-16.7

Natl Beverage

FIZZ

58.43

+6.7

+10.1

Fst Majestic Silver

AG

13.07

+6.7

+26.3

B Communcations Ltd

BCOM

21.99

-0.5

-2.1

Spark Energy Inc

SPKE

32.02

-7.4

+5.9

%RTN
1YR
+690.1
+329.1
+311.8

+279.8
+259.4
+256.4
+246.5

PE YLD

cc

...

51

...

dd

0.3

...

...

+234.7

...

...

17

...

+194.5

...

...

dd

...

+187.3

...

...

cc

...

...

...

+225.6
+190.0
+160.9
+159.2
+159.1
+151.8
+141.7
+137.4
+135.9

...

...

23

...

49

...

cc

...

...

...

26

4.5

IndustryRankings

Viacom(VIAB) -1%

Sources: S&P Dow Jones Indices; FactSet

Bonds

High-yield bonds

Take me to the Moon

With Viacom in turmoil, investors are


among younger audiences.
hoping for a savior: Les Moonves.
CBS stock has doubled in value
The CEO of sister media giant
since the company split from Viacom
CBS, Moonves has turned
a decade ago. Viacoms stock is
fuddy-duddy assets like local TV
down 1 percent.
stations and a 75-year-old broadcast
Recombining the companies
network into a Wall Street darling.
should be easy because both have the
Chock it up to savvy programming,
same controlling shareholder,
Les Moonves
negotiating know-how and an embrace of
93-year-old Sumner Redstone.
digital and international opportunities.
But hold on. CBS shareholders could see
By contrast, Viacoms Paramount movie studio
Viacom as a drag. Analyst firm MoffettNathanson
isnt pumping out enough hits, while its
says a deal might increase CBSs per-share profit
youth-oriented cable channels MTV, Comedy
by just 11 percent by 2017. Still, a moonshot may
Central and Nickelodeon are facing industry-wide
be better than none at all.
declines in television subscribers, particularly

Stocks

$1,000 invested at the end of last year ...

Close: 4,707.98
1-week change: -92.36 (-1.9%)

HIGH

INDEX
Dow Jones industrial average

Nasdaq composite

4,200
4,000

In the run-up to Thursdays vote in Britain on


whether to remain in the European Union, oil and
European stocks rose while gold lost ground.

Derby

4,600

16,000

52-WEEK
HIGH
LOW

COMPANY

-1.51% (wkly)

4,800

AP

Russell 2000

5,000

18,000

14,000

POWERING DOWN
Californias last nuclear power plant
will close by 2025, when its license
expires, according to the utility that
operates it. Pacific Gas & Electric
said it will replace the plant with
solar power generators and other
renewable energy sources, which
have become less expensive in
recent years. The Diablo Canyon
plant is 30 years old and environmental activists have opposed it
since before it was built, partly
because its located near seismic
faults between Los Angeles and
San Francisco. The plants built to
withstand up to a 7.5-magnitude
quake, which is considered the
strongest earthquake that could
potentially hit the area.

S&P mid-cap

StocksRecap

15,000

ASTRO TRASH
When youre taking out a bag of
garbage, a walk to the end of the
driveway can seem long. But thats
nothing compared to how the
International Space Station took out
the trash this week. A cargo carrier
built by Virginia-based aerospace
firm Orbital ATK took more than
4,000 pounds of garbage and
discarded equipment from the ISS
into Earths atmosphere, where it
burned up in the heat of re-entry.
Scientists hope to use data from
the capsules sensors to improve
future spacecraft.

-1.55% (wkly)

S&P 500

PERCENT CHANGE
1WK 1MO 1QTR

INDUSTRY
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.

Telecommunications
Utilities
Oil & Gas
Consumer Goods
Basic Material
Industrials
Health Care
DJ Total Market index
Consumer Services
Technology
Financials

6.0
3.7
-0.4
-1.5
-1.9
-2.1
-2.5
-2.9
-3.0
-4.7
-6.2

1.4
-0.2
-0.7
-1.9
-3.1
-2.3
-1.0
-1.7
-1.7
-2.0
-2.2

3.7
3.5
7.6
0.3
3.7
0.8
3.2
0.4
-1.9
-3.7
-0.3

%RTN
1YR
(*&^$#@|986543 11.7
(*&^$#@|999651 21.5
9876432| -13.0
(*&^$#@|85421 4.1
*^$@!9721| -8.5
(*&%$@!521| -0.5
&^$@9821| -10.2
(&$#@854321| -4.2
(&^!843| -3.7
(&^!843| -3.7
*%#97541| -9.1

Consumer Goods sectors (best performers)


Tobacco
Altria Group
Reynolds American
Vector Group Ltd
Food Producers
Calavo Growers Inc
Seneca Foods Corp
Smucker, JM
Household Goods
Cent Garden&Pet
Cntrl Garden & Pet A
Lifetime Brands Inc
Beverages
Coca Btl Cns
Natl Beverage
DavidsTea Inc
Personal Goods
Elizabeth Arden Inc
Kingold Jewelry
G III Apparel
Leisure Goods
Skullcandy Inc
Eastman Kodak Co
Univ Elec
Automobiles & Parts
Shiloh Industries
U.S. Auto Parts Net
Core Molding Tech

MO
RAI
VGR
CVGW
SENEA
SJM
CENT
CENTA
LCUT
COKE
FIZZ
DTEA
RDEN
KGJI
GIII
SKUL
KODK
UEIC
SHLO
PRTS
CMT

-0.2
+2.5
+2.1
+1.2
-1.0
+0.6
+0.7
+0.4
-1.9
-2.5
-0.3
-1.4
-1.6
0.0
+6.7
+0.3
-2.0
-0.6
+20.6
-0.4
-3.2
+26.0
+1.4
+1.3
-5.3
+5.0
+2.9
+0.1

1.5
+4.8
+2.3
+1.6
-0.0
+14.1
+14.0
+12.5
-0.8
+15.2
+14.6
+11.3
-1.1
+10.7
+10.1
+7.8
-1.4
+52.7
+22.2
+14.2
-5.4
+48.1
+27.0
+6.5
-7.6
+45.9
+8.6
+6.1

4.4
+10.1
+3.2
-3.4
6.3
+21.0
+9.3
+12.9
0.6
+38.2
+34.2
+24.2
0.1
-11.7
+40.4
+11.0
-5.8
+72.1
+67.8
-2.9
2.8
+60.0
+41.1
+11.5
-6.1
+59.8
+48.9
+11.0

(&^%$#!|876541 27.7
(&^%$#!|97631 +39.7
(&^%$#!|9741 +36.6
(&^%$#!|6541 +6.4
(&^%$#!|742 8.3
(&^%$#!|875421 +24.4
(&^%$#!|876321 +25.7
(&^%$#!|962 +32.3
(&^%$#!|5421 3.1
(&^%$#!|99983 +117.8
(&^%$#!|999651 +90.8
(&^%$#!|7621 +11.0
(&^%$#!|761 10.8
(&^$!521| -2.2
(&^%$#!|99983 +151.8
!9765421| -42.2
(&%$!63| -4.0
(&^%$#!|42 +1.2
(&^%$#!|99721 +64.4
^%$973| -36.1
(&^%$@!1| -0.2
9765431| -42.4
(&%!643| -4.9
(&^%$#!|97532 +38.1
*&%#@86321| -18.6
&!965421| -35.1
(&^%$#!|998762 +82.1
%$@!9761| -39.3

Local Stocks
TICKER

AT&T Inc
Air Products
Alcoa Inc
Applied Indl Tch
Armstrong World Inds
Bco Santander SA
Bon Ton Store
CNH Indl NV
Campbell Soup
Carpenter Tech
Clarcor Inc
Costco Wholesale
Donegal A
Donnelley RR & Sons
Exelon Corp
Frontier Comm
Fulton Financial
GlaxoSmithKline PLC
Harley Davidson
Henry Schein Inc
Hershey Company
Intl Paper
Johnson & Johnson
Kellogg Co
Kroger Co
L-3 Communications
M&T Bank
Merck & Co

52-WK RANGE
FRIDAY $CHG %CHG
%CHG %RTN RANK %RTN
LOW
HIGH CLOSE 1WK 1WK 1MO 1QTR YTD 1YR 1YR 5YRS* PE Yld COMPANY

T
30.97
APD 114.64
AA
6.14
AIT
35.55
AWI
31.13
SAN
3.69
BONT 1.10
CNHI
5.67
CPB
45.23
CRS
23.99
CLC
44.13
COST 117.03
DGICA 12.69
RRD
12.07
EXC
25.09
FTR
3.81
FULT 11.48
GSK
37.24
HOG 36.36
HSIC 126.17
HSY
82.41
IP
32.50
JNJ
81.79
K
61.99
KR
27.32
LLL
101.11
MTB 100.08
MRK 45.69

0 41.89
7 152.16
6 11.90
8 47.18
4 52.61
1 7.72
1 6.24
4 9.72
8 66.75
4 43.06
8 63.14
8 169.73
9 16.47
6 18.94
9 35.95
6 5.85
6 14.59
5 45.49
3 60.67
9 180.98
0 97.87
5 50.44
0 117.74
0 78.26
6 42.75
9 148.01
4 134.00
8 60.07

41.52
140.12
9.38
44.52
38.44
3.83
1.42
7.00
62.40
31.19
58.84
155.56
15.95
15.84
34.39
4.87
13.22
40.80
43.55
170.87
97.97
41.37
115.63
77.19
35.14
141.39
112.64
55.88

0.79 1.9
-3.19 -2.2
-0.20 -2.1
-0.75 -1.7
-1.27 -3.2
-0.51 -11.8
0.02 1.4
-0.45 -6.0
-0.04 -0.1
-2.86 -8.4
-1.64 -2.7
-0.33 -0.2
-0.11 -0.7
-0.47 -2.9
-0.26 -0.8
-0.24 -4.7
-0.25 -1.9
0.47 1.2
-1.58 -3.5
-2.03 -1.2
0.86 0.9
-0.59 -1.4
0.15 0.1
0.42 0.5
-0.04 -0.1
-2.31 -1.6
-4.57 -3.9
-0.01 0.0

s
t
s
t
t
t
t
t
s
t
t
s
t
t
s
t
t
t
t
t
s
t
s
s
t
s
t
t

s
t
t
s
t
t
t
s
t
t
s
s
s
t
t
t
t
s
t
s
s
s
s
s
t
s
s
s

20.7
7.7
-5.0
10.0
-3.0
-21.4
-32.4
2.3
18.7
3.0
18.4
-3.7
13.3
7.6
23.8
4.3
1.6
1.1
-4.1
8.0
9.7
9.7
12.6
6.8
-16.0
18.3
-7.0
5.8

21.4
-0.2
-19.1
9.7
-19.2
-45.7
-70.5
-22.8
32.6
-25.6
-4.3
13.6
7.9
-9.1
8.7
4.3
1.8
0.9
-22.4
18.4
13.7
-12.2
19.5
24.9
-2.5
24.5
-9.5
-0.9

1
2
4
1
4
5
5
4
1
4
3
1
2
3
1
2
2
2
4
1
1
3
1
1
2
1
3
2

10.7
10.7
-8.1
7.6
4.3
-8.2
-23.8
...
15.1
-8.2
6.5
17.1
8.0
2.2
0.0
-2.1
6.9
5.3
4.9
19.7
14.0
11.2
14.7
9.6
24.6
13.5
8.2
13.3

17 4.6
21 2.5
25 1.3
18 2.5
28 ...
... 9.1
... 14.1
88 2.0
27 2.0
25 2.3
22 1.5
29 1.2
13 3.4
15 6.6
14 3.6
81 8.6
16 3.0
... 6.0
12 2.8
29 ...
24 2.4
15 4.3
19 2.8
25 2.6
16 1.4
18 2.0
15 2.5
21 3.3

Nwst Bancshares Inc

TICKER

52-WK RANGE
FRIDAY $CHG %CHG
%CHG %RTN RANK %RTN
LOW
HIGH CLOSE 1WK 1WK 1MO 1QTR YTD 1YR 1YR 5YRS* PE Yld

NWBI

11.78 8 14.89

PNC Financial

PNC

77.67 2 100.52

PPL Corp

PPL

29.18 8 39.92

Patterson Cos

PDCO 38.51 6 53.07

Penn Natl Gaming

PENN

Penney JC Co Inc

JCP

6.00 5 11.99

Pfizer Inc

PFE

28.25 7 36.46

Rite Aid Corp

RAD

Sears Holdings Corp

SHLD

12.51 2 20.23

5.88 6

9.47

10.52 2 29.95

Skyline Cp

SKY

2.17 7 11.86

Supervalu Inc

SVU

3.94 1

TE Connectivity Ltd

TEL

51.70 4 69.73

Tanger Factory

SKT

29.46 0 38.04

Tegna Inc

TGNA

21.11 1 33.40

Tyson Foods

TSN

39.05 8 70.44

UGI Corp

UGI

31.51 0 44.35

Univrsl Corp

UVV

45.61 8 58.89

9.37

Urban Outfitters

URBN 19.26 4 36.99

Verizon Comm

VZ

38.06 0 54.68

WalMart Strs

WMT

56.30 9 74.14

Weis Mkts

WMK

37.14 8 53.59

Wells Fargo & Co

WFC

44.50 1 58.77

Windstream Hldgs

WIN

4.42 9

YRC Worldwide Inc

YRCW

6.25 2 21.37

9.50

14.21

81.08

0.09

-2.60

37.18

-1.86

13.95

-0.64

46.35
8.46

33.97
7.71

13.49
8.40

4.35

-0.94
-0.02

-0.25

-0.07

-0.75

-0.60

-0.29

0.6

15.2

8.2

-3.1

t -14.9 -15.1

6.1

9.7

22 4.2
11 2.5

-4.8

8.9

30.2

1 12.1

18 4.1

-2.0

2.5

-3.0

9.5

19 2.1

-4.4

t -12.9 -22.6

9.4

...

...

-0.2

t 27.0

-3.6

2 -23.0

...

...

-0.7

5.2

2.6

2 14.2

17 3.5

-0.9

t -1.7 -11.2

3 45.1

...

...

-5.3

t -34.4 -53.2

5 -22.3

...

...

-6.7

s 136.2 173.6

1 -12.4 \>99

...

-6.3

t -35.8 -48.8

5 -11.3

...

57.32

-3.30

-5.4

t -11.3 -13.9

3 12.5

10 2.3

-0.28

1.9

21.98

s 17.1

21.3

1 10.2

18 3.4

-1.3

t -13.9 -23.8

4 18.7

10 2.5

3.8

t 19.2

42.5

1 28.1

17 0.9

-0.5

s 30.4

27.9

1 18.2

23 2.1

1.0

t -1.6

-0.6

2 11.8

15 3.8

-0.5

t 13.7 -26.9

4 -1.9

14

1.2

s 17.8

1 12.5

12 4.2

1.4

s 17.4

2.2

9.1

16 2.8

0.3

s 11.3

17.8

7.4

20 2.4

-1.9

t -15.9 -17.9

4 13.6

11 3.3

-1.3

s 39.1

29.0

1 10.0

... 6.7

-5.0

t -39.1 -36.2

4 -51.9

28

38.29
63.57
44.03
55.17
25.86
54.43
71.96
49.29
45.71
8.96

8.63

0.73
2.35

-0.24

0.53

-0.12

0.65
1.01
0.15

-0.89

-0.12

-0.45

19.9

...

...

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

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

A21

Nation&World
FOR THE LATEST UPDATES, GO TO LANCASTERONLINE.COM

In brief
AVALON, CALIF.

3 killed, 4 hurt
when boat capsizes
A boat that may have been hit by a
wave capsized off Santa Catalina Island on Saturday, killing three people,
authorities said.
Four survivors were rescued after
the 15-foot skiff overturned off of Salta Verde Point. Three were in critical
condition when they were taken to
hospitals, and there was no immediate
word on the condition of the fourth,
Los Angeles County fire dispatchers
said.
TEHRAN, IRAN

Iranian forces kill


5 Kurdish separatists
Iranian security forces clashed with
Kurdish separatists who infiltrated a
northwestern village, killing five insurgents, according to the countrys powerful Revolutionary Guard.
The Guards website said five terrorists, including two leaders, were
killed Saturday in the fighting in the
West Azerbaijan province, near the
Iraqi border, and that a chase operation to destroy other terrorists was
underway.
It said no Iranian forces were wounded in the clashes, and that they confiscated large amounts of weapons and
ammunition.
ORLANDO, FLA.

Officials planning
permanent memorial
City officials in Orlando say they will
create a permanent memorial to the
49 victims killed in the Pulse nightclub
shooting.
A statement Friday from the city said
a committee will oversee an open and
transparent process that includes input from the victims families and the
community. Neither a location nor a
date for the memorials dedication has
been established.
ROUND LAKE PARK, ILL.

Officers sue over


full-time cameras
Ten police officers in a Chicago suburb are suing the town, claiming the
body cameras they wore never turned
off and recorded them using the restroom and changing clothes. They are
seeking $100,000 each.
The lawsuit filed Thursday in federal
court says one of the officers in Round
Lake Park, Dominick Izzo, discovered
the problem while reviewing video
from his camera in May. According to
the Chicago Tribune, the lawsuit says
the cameras recorded thousands of
highly offensive and voyeuristic intrusions.
COLUMBUS, OHIO

Bear cub makes


brief escape at zoo
A black bear cub scaled a 12-foot
fence in its new home at the Columbus Zoo and escaped its enclosure for
about 15 minutes before being corralled and sedated.
A spokeswoman said the zoo was put
on lockdown Saturday morning for a
few minutes until workers could contain the 7-month-old black cub named
Joan.
Two rescue cubs that had arrived just
a few months ago were being moved
into a new habitat when the one named
after rocker Joan Jett got out.
INDIANAPOLIS

Ride that stranded


zoo visitors to reopen
A ride that carries Indianapolis Zoo
visitors along an elevated track above
the orangutan exhibit is scheduled to
reopen after being closed for almost a
year.
WTHR-TV in Indianapolis reported
the Skyline ride is scheduled to reopen Friday. It has been closed since
last July when a mechanical problem
caused it to stop and trap some riders.
Eight people had to be rescued from
gondolas.
SOURCE: WIRE REPORTS

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Presumptive Republican nominee Donald Trump rides a golf cart Saturday with his granddaughter, Kai, at the Trump
International Golf Links at Balmedie, near Aberdeen, Scotland.
ELECTION 2016

GOP strategists reject Trump

As campaign enters more demanding stage, candidate has trouble boosting staff
STEVE PEOPLES

ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON

Donald
Trump has finally acknowledged
that to best compete against Hillary Clinton he needs more than the
bare-bones campaign team that led
him to primary success. But many
of the most experienced Republican political advisers arent willing
to work for him.
From Texas to New Hampshire,
well-respected members of the Republican Partys professional class
say they cannot look past their
deep personal and professional
reservations about the presumptive presidential nominee.
While there are exceptions, many
strategists who best understand
the mechanics of presidential politics fear that taking a Trump paycheck might stain their resumes,
spook other clients and even cause
problems at home. They also are
reluctant to devote months to a divisive candidate whose campaign
has been plagued by infighting and
disorganization.
Right now I feel no obligation to
lift a finger to help Donald Trump,
said Brent Swander, an Ohio-based
operative who has coordinated nationwide logistics for Republican
presidential campaigns dating to
George W. Bush.
Everything that were taught as
children not to bully, not to demean, to treat others with respect
everything were taught as children is the exact opposite of what
the Republican nominee is doing.
How do you work for somebody
like that? What would I tell my
family? Swander said.

Campaign shifts
Trump leapt into presidential
politics with a small group of aides,
some drafted directly from his real
estate business, with no experience

Everything were
taught as children is
the exact opposite of
what the Republican
nominee is doing.
How do you work for
somebody like that?
Brent Swander, GOP operative

running a White House campaign.


An unquestioned success in the
GOP primaries, they have struggled to respond to the increased
demands of a general election.
As in years past, the primary season created a pool of battle-tested
staffers who worked for other candidates, from which Trump would
be expected to draw. But hundreds
of such aides have so far declined
invitations to work for him.
They include several communications aides to Chris Christie, as
well as the New Jersey governors
senior political adviser, Michael
DuHaime, who has rejected direct
and indirect inquiries to sign on
with the billionaire.
Chris Wilson, a senior aide to Ted
Cruz, said the Texas senators entire
paid staff of more than 150 ignored
encouragement from Trumps team
to apply for positions after Cruz quit
the presidential race. Wilson said
that even now, many unemployed
Cruz aides are refusing to work for
the man who called their former
boss Lyin Ted.
Thats the case for Scott Smith, a
Texas-based operative who traveled the country planning events

for Cruz, and earlier worked on


presidential bids for Bush and Texas Gov. Rick Perry.
Its very clear that none of us are
going to work for Trump, Smith
said. Even if I wanted to work for
Trump, my wife would kill me.
Smith, like many experienced
strategists interviewed for this
story, noted the intense personal
sacrifice required of presidential
campaigns. Many advisers do not
see their families for long stretches, work brutal hours on little sleep
and enjoy no job security.
With Trump, Smith said, I would
feel like a mercenary. I cant be
away from my young children if its
just for money.

Dwindling effort

Trumps need for additional staff


is acute. His paltry fundraising network brought in less than $2 million last month. He has just one
paid staffer to handle hundreds of
daily media requests and only a few
operatives in battleground states
devoted to his White House bid.
Last month, Trump fired Rick
Wiley, who was the campaign
manager for Wisconsin Gov. Scott
Walker, a former 2016 candidate,
and was brought on to run Trumps
nationwide get-out-the-vote effort.
On Monday, Trump fired campaign
manager Corey Lewandowski, who
acknowledged he lacked the experience needed to expand Trumps
operation.
This campaign needs to grow
rapidly, Lewandowski told the
Fox News Channel. Thats a hard
job and candidly Ive never grown
something that big.
Trump credited Lewandowski
with helping a small, beautiful,
well-unified campaign during the
primary season. I think its time
now for a different kind of a campaign, Trump told Fox.

ORLANDO SHOOTING

Police feared terrorism, explosives


Authorities adjusted approach after event given special security designation
JENNIFER KAY
ASSOCIATED PRESS

MIAMI Law enforcement officials immediately suspected terrorism and adjusted their
staging areas due to fears
about an explosive device
as they responded to reports of shots fired at a
gay nightclub in Orlando,
according to sheriffs office incident reports released Saturday.
In the reports, Orange
County Sheriffs Office
deputies describe receiving limited information
about an active shooter
as they rushed to control

the chaos outside Pulse on


June 12 in what turned out
to be the worst mass shooting in modern U.S. history.
Sgt. David Legvold
wrote that as he assessed
all the sheriffs office personnel and resources at
the early morning scene,
he was told by a superior
that this incident had
been declared a National
Special Security Event
and should not be discussed outside the law enforcement community.
The U.S. Department
of Homeland Security
makes that designation
for events deemed to be

potential targets for terrorism, mass protests


or other criminal activity. Pope Francis visit
to Philadelphia last year
and this years Republican and Democratic national conventions have
received this designation.
Legvold wrote that the
commander of the sheriffs office Critical Incident Management Team
informed him about the
special security designation, but it wasnt clear
where that information
came from. A report
by the lieutenant that
Legvold identified as the

teams commander was


not released.
In a 911 call from the
club where 49 people
were killed and more
than 50 were injured, the
gunman, Omar Mateen,
pledged solidarity with
the Islamic State group.
Federal law enforcement
officials have said theres
no evidence Mateen was
directed by any foreign
terror groups.
Officials also have said
FBI investigators havent
found convincing evidence supporting reports
that Mateen was gay or
seeking gay relationships.

A22 SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

NATION

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

RELIGION

Ark defies science, evokes Christian version


Kentucky site opening next week after $102 million in costs, various legal disputes, questions about its message
LAURIE GOODSTEIN

Its because
were Christians
and we want to
get the Christian
message out.

NEW YORK TIMES

W I L L I A M S T O W N,
Ky. In the beginning,
Ken Ham made the Creation Museum in northern Kentucky. And he
saw that it was good at
spreading his belief that
the Bible is a book of
history, the universe is
only 6,000 years old, and
evolution is wrong and
is leading to our moral
downfall.
And Ham said, let us
build a gargantuan Noahs ark only 45 minutes
away to draw millions
more visitors. And let it
be constructed by Amish
woodworkers, and financed with donations,
junk bonds and tax rebates from the state of
Kentucky. And let it hold
an animatronic Noah
and lifelike models of
some of the creatures
that came on board twoby-two, such as bears,
short-necked giraffes
and juvenile Tyrannosaurus rexes.
And it was so.
Hams Ark Encounter, built at a cost of

Ken Ham

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Ark Encounter nears completion early this month in Williamstown, Ky.

more than $102 million,


is scheduled to open
July 7 in Williamstown,
Kentucky. Ham and his
crew have succeeded in
erecting a colossal landmark and an ambitious
promotional vehicle for
their particular brand of
Christian fundamentalism, known as young
earth or young universe creationism.

DINE
OUTDOORS

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But it was hardly


smooth sailing. The state
tried to revoke the tax rebates after learning Ham
would require employees to sign a statement
of faith that would exclude people who were
gay or did not accept
his particular Christian creed. Ham went to
court and in January, he
won.
On a recent afternoon,
the
Australian-born
Ham looked out on the
workers in hard hats affixing pine planking to
cover the Tyvek plastic

wrap still visible on the


stern. The ark stretches
1!-W football fields long,
rises as high as a sevenstory building and is said
to be the largest timberframe building in the
world. Ham is betting it
will become an international pilgrimage site,
as well as a draw for the
curious, the seculars and
even the skeptics.

Religious
purpose
The reason we are
building the ark is not as

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an entertainment center, Ham said in an interview in a cabin overlooking the construction


site. I mean its not like
a Disney or Universal,
just for anyone to go and
have fun. Its a religious
purpose. Its because
were Christians and we
want to get the Christian
message out.
The ark is also intended to serve as a vivid
warning that, according
to the Bible, God sent
a flood in Noahs time
to wipe out a depraved
people, and God will deliver a fiery end to those
who reject the Bible and
accept modern-day evils
like abortion, atheism
and same-sex marriage.
Were becoming more
like the days of Noah in
that we see increasing
secularization in the culture, Ham said.
Yet his interpretation
of what he calls the
Christian message is
derided by most scientists and educators, and
resented even by some
Christians who consider
it indefensible and even
embarrassing.
Young
earthers believe that
God created the universe
in six 24-hour days, and
since all of history is only
6,000 years, humans coexisted with dinosaurs.
An exhibit at the Creation Museum shows
two smiling children
playing in a lush garden
next to two petite Tyrannosaurus rexes.
Bill Nye, best known as
the science guy on television and in books, said
in a telephone interview,
Humans and ancient dinosaurs did not live at the
same time. Its completely unreasonable. Science
has established that the
earth is billions of years
old, and no worldwide
flood occurred in the last
6,000 years.
Were going to raise a
generation of kids who
are scientifically illiterate, said Nye, who debated Ham at the Creation Museum in 2014, a
matchup watched online
by millions.
A group of local atheist
activists, the Tri-State
Freethinkers, recently
tried to put up billboards on the highway
approaching the ark,
calling it the Genocide
and Incest Park, but
no billboard company

would agree, said the


Freethinkers founder
and president, Jim G.
Helton, so they plan to
protest at the arks grand
opening.
The moral of the flood
story is horrible, Helton
said. Were not saying
he cant build his park.
But we dont think its
appropriate for a family
fun day.

Preparation

Inside a cavernous
warehouse in an office
park in Hebron, Kentucky, a few miles from
the museum, about 50
artists, designers, carpenters, sculptors and volunteers have been working
six-day weeks to prepare
the exhibits for the ark.
A sculptor inserted stiff
gray-brown hairs one at a
time into the chin of what
looks like a wild boar. Another wiped off the black
dye on a bears chest to
make it look less like a
contemporary black bear.
A giraffe with a short
neck was being baked
in a large oven to set the
dye on its fur.
Tim Chaffey, a content
manager and writer for
the Answers in Genesis
ministry, explained that
most of the models do
not resemble animals the
way they look today, but
extinct species. According to young earth creationists, the ark carried
up to 1,400 kinds of
creatures that gradually
evolved into the animals
we know today. Young
earthers accept the notion that nature makes
small adaptations over
time but do not accept
that humans and chimpanzees descended from
a common ancestor.
The ark designers had
to scale back their initial ambition to have live
animals living on board
to demonstrate the truth
of the Noah story, said
Chaffey, a graduate of
Liberty University, a
Christian college in Virginia founded by the Rev.
Jerry Falwell.
And there will be only
about 30 pairs of stuffed
animals on the Ark Encounter because there
just isnt enough space.
We have to have dozens and dozens of bathrooms for visitors. Noah
didnt have to have that,
Chaffey said.

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LNP | LANCASTER, PA

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016 A23

HIGHER EDUCATION

RELIGION

University faculty to
consider strike vote

Amish expand to South America

HARRISBURG (AP)
The union representing faculty members at
Pennsylvanias 14 state
universities set an August date for a decision
on whether members
will take a strike authorization vote.
The Association of
Pennsylvania State College and University Faculties said an emergency
legislative assembly was
scheduled after no progress was made in talks
Friday with the Pennsylvania State System of
Higher Education.
Delegates from all 14
campuses are to convene
via conference on Aug. 25
to decide whether members will take a strike
authorization vote. If a
majority of delegates approve, the union will set
a date for a vote.
The
announcement
came despite several
other bargaining sessions planned over the
summer, the next one
on July 19. Faculty members have been working
without a new contract
since the last agreement
expired in June of last
year.
The union represents more than 6,000
faculty and coaches at
Bloomsburg, California,
Cheyney, Clarion, East
Stroudsburg, Edinboro,
Indiana, Kutztown, Lock
Haven, Mansfield, Millersville, Shippensburg,
Slippery Rock, and West
Chester universities.
The state system wants
employees to pay $3 to
$14 more every twoweek pay period toward
the cost of their health
insurance
premiums,
depending on their levels of coverage. The system also wants temporary faculty to teach an
additional course per semester, and to no longer
provide retiree health
care coverage for future
faculty members. The

Settlements in Bolivia, Argentina and in Prince Edward Island, Canada


MARK SCOLFORO
ASSOCIATED PRESS

The one thing


that rings
out is that
these changes
would turn our
universities into
degree factories,
not places for
our students to
earn a quality
education.
Ken Mash, union president

two sides are not yet discussing salary issues.


Union officials said the
state system is proposing
249 contract changes,
so many that it all just
collectively seems like
noise, union President
Ken Mash said.
The one thing that
rings out is that these
changes would turn our
universities into degree
factories, not places for
our students to earn a
quality education, he
said.
Kenn Marshall, a
spokesman for the system, has said the unions
proposals, including free
fitness memberships for
faculty and their spouses
and fee waivers for dependents, would hurt a
system already facing
financial difficulty and
declining enrollment.
Were facing very serious financial troubles,
and theyre looking to
add more costs, he said.
The union, which has
never gone on strike, decided against a walkout
in April, saying such an
action at the very end of
the semester would unfairly burden students
and their families.

HARRISBURG The
Amish branched out
last year with new settlements in Bolivia, Argentina and Canada as
their numbers continued to grow and a high
percentage of young
people opted to remain
within the religious
community, which eschews many modern
conveniences.
The sects total current population is
about 308,000 and has
grown about 18 percent
over the past five years,
according to an ongoing population survey
by the Young Center for
Anabaptist and Pietist
Studies at Elizabethtown College.
The two small South
American settlements
were founded last fall
after
longstanding
Mennonite communities in those countries
reached out to North
American Amish to explore affiliation, said
Steven Nolt, a senior
scholar at the center
who helped coordinate
the population survey.
Those Old Colony
Mennonites,
culturally conservative and
with roots in a group

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more than 200 congregations, or districts, as


they are known.
The total Amish population was only 124,000
in 1992.
The population study
includes
horse-andbuggy Amish, but not
car-driving groups such
as Beachy Amish and
Amish Mennonites.
The center says Amish
typically strike out and
establish new communities to find quality and
affordable farmland in
isolated areas near other Amish, to live where
there is work in specialized occupations and to
resolve disputes about
church leadership.
The Amish are Christian followers known
for using horses and
buggies for transportation, wearing traditional dress, worshipping
in homes not church
buildings, and speaking
a German dialect. Their
ranks are composed
of dozens of distinct
groups with different
practices they allow
and prohibit.

Pet Boarding

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Grooming

Sock Hop
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Allentown plans to
reinstate gun rules
Mayor Ed Pawlowski
said he plans to reintroduce the lost and stolen
guns proposal next week.
Proponents of the requirement say mandating
that gun owners report
lost or stolen firearms
makes it harder for straw
buyers to obtain guns for
people prohibited from
buying guns.
But gun rights advocates say the ordinance
doesnt work and the proposal is nothing but political theater.

northwestern Argentina
is located east of Catamarca.
This is kind of a new
and different thing and
illustrates (an) unusually even among the New
Order Amish Amish
approach to taking in
new members, Nolt
said. He said Mennonite
men in those areas have
begun to grow Amishtype beards, and an Ohio
Amish woman has made
bonnet head coverings
for the women.
Nearly two-thirds of all
Amish live in three U.S.
states Ohio, Pennsylvania and Indiana although there are currently settlements in 31
states and three Canadian provinces. Two new
settlements with a total
of about 30 people were
established this year in
Prince Edward Island,
Canada, a first for that
province.
The largest settlements are in Lancaster
County, Pennsylvania,
and Holmes County,
Ohio, both with more
than 34,000 people and

&

GUN LAWS

ALLENTOWN (AP)
Gun owners in Allentown
may soon be required
again to report lost or stolen firearms to police.
The Morning Call reported that the city is
poised to reinstate firearms restrictions that
were lifted last year after a
state law was enacted that
exposed municipalities to
lawsuits from organizations like the National Rifle Association. The state
Supreme Court rejected
the law on Monday.

that emigrated from


the old Russian empire
to Canada in the 1800s,
left Canada in the 1920s
over a dispute about
teaching their children
in English and landed
in Mexico and other
parts of Latin America,
Nolt said.
In recent years, their
members in Bolivia and
Argentina have faced
financial problems and
isolation, so they wrote
to an Amish publisher
in Canada and eventually got in touch with
a New Order Amish
group in Ohio that
permits its members,
under certain circumstances, to make airplane trips.
After ministers with
the Ohio Amish visited
South America, they
sent two families to settle there to create communities the existing
Mennonites can join.
North American Amish
generally do not proselytize or do mission
work. They also have
sent teams to help with
building projects.
The Bolivian community, known as Colonia Naranjita, is about
75 miles southwest of
Santa Cruz, while the
settlement in rural

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Getting you back to what you love.


Low Back Pain & Sciatica Workshop
Date: Saturday, July 9th, 10am-11am
Where: 1697 Oregon Pike, Lancaster, PA

Do you suffer from back pain or leg pain when you


stand or walk? When you sit or drive? Do you have
pain, numbness or tingling in your butt, groin or
down your leg? Are you afraid your back will go
out if you move the wrong way? If yes, then our next
workshop about back pain and sciatica may be the
turning point for you.

Boat
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Join us to discuss and learn: 1) Common causes of


low back pain and sciatica, 2) Mistakes we make that
slow or prevent healing, and 3) What you can do to
get relief and get back to what you love, without the
side-effects of medications and injections.

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- cause us lost time with family and friends; make
things like work, hobbies, and shopping difficult;
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many times leads to larger health problems. But it
doesnt have to. Hundreds of area residents have
gotten back to what the love, and you can too!

Please Call 717-945-6938 to register.


Registration is free. Attendees will receive our e-book
about back pain and sciatic free for attending.
www.hersheyrehab.com

Womens summer footwear


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OBITS
A24 SUNDAY,
JUNE 26, 2016
A24 SUNDAY,
JUNE 26, 2016

Deaths
Reported
Austin, Mark E.
42, husband of Jennifer A. (Goldbach)
Austin, of Lancaster.
June 21, 2016. The
Groffs Family Funeral
& Cremation Services,
Inc., 394-5300
Blaebaum,
Gloria
Jean
89, of Lancaster. June
22, 2016. Charles F.
Snyder Funeral Home
& Crematory, 3939661
Cassel, James Harold
60, husband of Patricia
Orbock (Griest), of
Denver. June 14, 2016.
Paul L. Gravenor
Home For Funerals,
733-6181
Curry, R. Bryson
83, husband of Marie
McGreevy Curry, of
Lancaster. June 23,
2016. Charles F. Snyder Funeral Home &
Crematory, 393-9661
Daubert, Dorothy L.
90, of Lititz. June 21,
2016. Charles F. Snyder, Jr. Funeral Home
& Crematory, 5605100
DeClementi, Ramona
V.
85, of Columbia. June
23, 2016. Clyde W.
Kraft Funeral Home,
Inc., 684-2370
Fisher,
Bernice
LaRue (Krick)
81, of Welsh Mountain
Home, New Holland,
wife of Elam Beiler
Fisher. June 24, 2016.
Lamm & Witman
Funeral Home, 610678-3461
Holtslander, Rita Jay
(Loomis)
73, wife of Craig Hall
Holtslander. June 19,
2016. Charles F. Snyder, Jr. Funeral Home
& Crematory, 5605100
Klacik, George E. *
84, of Lititz. June 22,
2016. Spacht-Snyder
Family Funeral Home
& Crematory, 6262317
Lahet, Lee Robert
June
23,
2016.
Cvach/Rosedale
Funeral Home, 410682-2467
Long, Lester R.
85, of Lititz. June 20,
2016. Charles F. Snyder, Jr. Funeral Home
& Crematory, 5605100
McFadden, Thomas
J. Jr.
78, of Lancaster. June
15, 2016. Charles F.
Snyder, Jr. Funeral
Home & Crematory,
560-5100
Musser, Beryl
81, of Lancaster. June
23, 2016. Charles F.
Snyder Jr. Funeral
Home & Crematory,
560-5100
Preisendanz, Edward
Snyder
91, husband of Jeanne
Hutton Preisendanz,
of Lititz. June 23, 2016.
Spacht-Snyder Family
Funeral Home & Crematory, 626-2317
Sites, Helen K.*
91, of Manheim. June
21, 2016. Buch Funeral
Home, 665-4341
Smith, Clark John
83, husband of June
(Adams) Smith, of
Manheim. June 18,
2016. Cremation Society of Pennsylvania,
Inc., 800-720-8221
Turns, George L. Jr.
92, husband of Joan
(McLaughlin) Duncan
Turns. June 20, 2016.
DeBord Snyder Funeral Home & Crematory,
Inc., 394-4097
Weirich, Jean B.
92, of Lickdale. June
23, 2016. Grose Funeral Home, 866-4233
Williams, Mary Jane
(Freeland)
Wife of Robert Lamar
Williams. June 24,
2016. Clyde W. Kraft
Funeral Home, Inc.,
684-2370
* No Obituary appears

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

Obituaries

Beryl Musser

Beryl Musser, 81, of


Lancaster, PA,
A passed
away o n
T h u r s d a y,
J une 23 ,
2016 at the
Lancaster
General
Hospital.
Born in Martic Twp., PA,
A
she was the daughter of
the late Norman F. and
Ada F. Hess Musser.
Beryl had worked for
18 years in many areas
at Costco of Lancaster
until her retirement
in 2014; she was a real
people person and enjo yed working with
the customers there.
Prior to this, while living in Spokane, WA
A, she
had worked as an operator for the US Wes
e t
Telephone Company,
retiring after 30 years of
service.
She had raised and
showed Boxer dogs in
show s. She also was
an avid NAS CAR fan,
en
njo
j yed g oing to the
theater, camping, and
in years past, riding
motorc ycle. She was
a 1952 graduate of JP
McCaskey High School.
Beryl is surviv ed
by her daughter, Kim
M. married to Charles
Wilson of Spokane, her
2 grandsons: Shaun
married to Stephanie
Wilson and Cody married to Kristina Wilson,
her companion Lloyd
D. Eshleman Jr. and
her niece and caretaker,
Lynn Grube of Lititz.
Friends will be received on Wednesda
e
y,
June 29, 2016 at the
Charles F. Sn yder
Jr. Funeral Home &
Crematoryy, 3110 Lititz
Pike, Lititz, PA from
1 -1:30PM, with the
Memorial Service to follow at 1:30PM. In lieu
of owers, please make
contributions in Beryls
memory to the Humane
League of Lancaster
Countyy, 2195 Lincoln
Hwyy. East, Lancasterr, PA
17602. To send an online
condolence, please visit
SnydeerrFuneralHo
ome.com

Services
Today
Bowen, Lana L.
Mt. Zion Evangelical
Cemetery, 105 N. 11th
Street, Akron, 2 PM.
Stradling Funeral Homes, Inc.
Murr, Dennis R.
Workman
Funeral
Homes, Inc., 31 South
Eighth Street, Columbia, 3 PM
Peachey, Kenton E.
The Hershey Free
Church, Hummelstown, 3 PM. Cremation Society of Pennsylvania, Inc.
Yelk, William E.
St. Johns Center UCC,
432 Reading Rd., East
Earl, 2 PM. Groff-High
Funeral Home, Inc.
Obituary notices are provided as an advertising service
by the Classified Advertising
department of LNP Media
Group, Inc.
Deaths Reported and Obituaries may be placed by first
calling the Obituary Coordinator at 295-7875, then submitting the written notice either
by
e-mail
(obits@LNPnews.com) or by
fax (717-399-6523), MondayFriday, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.; Saturday, 2 to 6 p.m.; Sunday, 3 to
6 p.m.
The advertising department
publishes obituaries provided
by funeral homes or crematoria, based on information provided to them by families. It
does not accept obituaries
from individuals. Obituaries
and related materials, submitted to LNP Media Group,
Inc. may be edited for style,
policy or legal reasons, and
they become the property of
LNP Media Group, Inc.

OTHER OBITUARIES
ON PAGES A25 & A26

R. Bryson Curry

Mark E.
Aus
u tin

Mark E. Austin, 42,


of Lancaster, PA passed
away unexpectedly at
his home
on Tuesday,
J une 21,
2 0 1 6. H e
w as born
in Philadelphia, PA the
son of the late Robert
M. Austin and Karen
(Carter) Taliaferro married to Rev. Dr. Ronald
L. Taliaferro. He was
married to Jennifer A.
(Goldbach) Austin.
Mark was employed
as a chef for TGI Fridays
in Lancaster for seven
years. He was an avid
Philadelphia Eagles Fan,
enjoyed football, basketball, and was a great
outdoor griller.
H e at tended the
Philadelphia school system, Lancaster school
system, J. P. McCaskey
High along with the Job
Corps majoring in culinary arts. Mark was a
member of Bright Side
Baptist Church and was
very active with the
youth choir activities.
He accepted Christ as
his personal savior.
Surviving besides his
wife, mother, and stepfather are his children,
Mark Lewis, Ethan
Groff, Alexa Austin,
and Gianna Austin; his
stepchildren, Shantelle
A. Waalls, Tierney R.
Walls
a , Jazlyn P. Waalls,
James D. Goldbach, and
Kyla J. Goldbach. Also
surviving are his siblings, William A. Au
ustin
(Danielle), Robert M.
Au
ustin ( Weendy), Faith C.
Taliaferro, and Ronald
N. Taliaferro and a host
of aunts, uncles, nieces,
nephews and cousins.
Family and friends
are invited to attend
Marks Funeral Service
on Saturday, July 2, 2016
at 11:00 a.m. at Bright
Side Baptist Church, 515
Hershey Ave., Lancaster
PA with a viewing on
Saturday at the church
from 9-11:00 a.m. Burial
will be in Melling er
Mennonite Cemeteryy,
Lancaster.
Online condolences
m a y b e p o st e d o n o u r
Weeb site:
www
w.thegroffs
.
.com

Outstanding
Outstanding
Trombonistt
Trombonis
Inspiring Educator
R. Bryson Curryy,
83, of Lancaster, died
June 23, 2016 at the
Glen at Willow Valley
a
Communities after a
courageous battle with
Parkinsons disease. He
was the loving husband
of Marie M cGreevy
Curryy, with whom he
celebrated 45 years of
marriag e. Bryson was
the devoted father of
Laura Lynn Trumpower,
wife of Jeffrey, and
proud grandfather
of Lynn Trumpower.
Bryson was predeceased
by his brother, Howard
Curryy, Jr. Bryson will be
deeply missed by family
members in Colorado
Springs, Chicag o, and
Harford Countyy, MD.
Bryson graduated
fr om the Un iv e rsit y
of K entucky and
the
Cincinnati
Conservatory of Music,
with additional study at
the University of Illinois,
Auburn Universityy, and
the Peabody Institute
of J ohns H opkins
Universityy.
B ry so n b eg an h is
musical life with the
trombone in Lexington,
Keentucky
tuc y, where
w e e hee was
invited to play with various adult musical groups
during his high school
years. After college, he
was part of the US Army
Band at Fort Benning,
GA, then began his public school music teaching in Columbus, GA.
He was a member of the
Columbus Symphony

CEMETERIES/LOTS
Two double vaults at
Conestoga Memorial Park.
Only needs casket & funeral.
Make offer. (717) 898-7619

and played with the


Jimm
my Fuller Orchestra.
When Bryson moved
to Cincinnati, OH, to
teach in public schools
there, he guided high
school s tudents in
concert bands, marching bands, jazz bands,
variety shows and ensembles. For two years,
Bryson served as manager of the Cincinnati
Yo
outh Orchestra and
played in the Cincinnati
Summer Symphony. As
a free-lance trombonist, Bryson played in
community bands and
brass ensembles in the
Cincinnati-Co vington
area.
After his move to
Maryland, Bryson was
a founding member of
Sounding Brass, a professional brass quin tet which entertained
at concerts, various
churches , weddings
and festivals. For many
years, he was a member of Baltimores Big
Band,
performing
weekly at various sites
in the city in the summers . A dditionally,
he pla yed with the
Baltimore Trombone
Choir and Just Bones,
a trombone ensemble.
In Harford Countyy, he
was a member of the Bel
Air Community Band
and the Susquehanna
Symphony Orchestra.
In his years at Havre
de Grace High School,
Bryson instructed and
directed the concert
b an d, t he m ar ch in g
band, and a jazz band
in numerous perfor mances, as well as presentations by the school
chorus.
At Dublin Elementary
and Hickory Elementary
sch ools in Harfo rd
Countyy, MD, Bryson delighted in starting students in musical studies, leading them from
novices to accomplished
pla yers. At Hick ory
Elementaryy, Bryson led
students to create the
rst student council at
the elementary level in
Harford Countyy.
After his retirement
from public school
teaching, Bryson was
honored to be inducted
into the Harford County
Public School Educator
Hall of Fame for his 27
years of outstanding
service to students, colleagues, and the communityy.
In Cincinnati and
i n M ar yl an d, B ry so n

Browse or leave a condolence


from your smart phone at
LancasterOnline.com/Obituaries

individually taught
brass music students at
his home, or in music
studios. His own brilliant public perfor mances inspired his students to emulate him.
Throughout his retirement, he was contacted
by former students to
thank him for starting
their musical careers.
An inspiring teacher
adhimself, Bryson ad
vocated for improved
teaching conditions for
all teachers. He was a
founding member of
the Cincinnati Teachers
Union, a division of
the AFT. In Maryland,
Bryson was an active
member of the Harford
County
Education
Association,
ssociation, an afffiiliate of NEA. He was an
HCEA Executive Board
member and part of the
negotiation team working for strong contracts
for Harfo rd Co unty
teachers.
After Bryson and his
wife moved to the Willow
Vaalley Communities in
Lancaster, Bryson became a member of the
Lampe ter - Strasburg
Community Band and
its jazz component,
FlipSide. A dditionallyy,
he performed frequently
at Willow Vaalley in small
groups, most notably the
Watt-a- Quintet. Early
in his residency, Bryson
was elected chairman
o f t h e M a n o r N or t h
Resident Council.
The Curry family is
g r a t e f u l t o t h e Jo h n s
Hopkins Department
of Neurology, Penn
State Hershey Medical
Center, Dr. Timothy
Martin of Lancaster, and
Dr. Winfried Wieland
of Willo w Stree t.
Additionallyy, the family
appreciates the personal
care given by the staff of
the Glen at Willow Vaalley
Communities, Visiting
Angels, PA Home Care,
WV Connections at
Home, and Hospice and
Community Care.
Interment will be private. In lieu of owers,
please consider a donadona
tion to the Parkinsons
Disease Research Center
at Johns Hopkins Dept
of Neurology or take a
musician to lunch. To
leave the family an online condolence, please
visit:
SnydeerrFuneralHome.com

More than a
funeral service,
its about
sharing a life.

Personalized services as unique


as your loved one.

Jeremy R. DeBord

Preplanning
Full Burial Services
Cremations
Online Tributes
Formerly Kearney A. Snyder Funeral Home
141 East Orange Street
Lancaster, PA 17602
Jeremy R. DeBord, Supv.

Loren E. Bender, Supr. - Terre Hill R. Fred Groff III, Supr. - New Holland

2024 Marietta Avenue


Lancaster, PA 17603
Randy L. Stoltzfus, Supv.

(717) 394-4097 | www.DeBordSnyder.com

145 W. Main St., New Holland 717-354-0444 209 E. Main St., Terre Hill 717-445-5122

Did You Know...

Planning your funeral in advance,


you dont have to pay the entire
cost at once?

Call Jackie or Kelly to set up an appointment to learn


more about advance funeral and cremation planning.
717.560.5100 or email preplan@SnyderFuneralHome.com
Downtown
Downto
Dow
ntown
nto
wn Lan
L
Lancaster
an
ncas
castter
ter

Millersville
M
Mi
Mil
illler
lle
ersv

Ki St.|
St | 717.393.9661
414 East
E t King
66
Charles F. (Chip) Snyder, Jr.

441 N
North
th G
George St
St. | 717.872.50411

Funeral Director/Supervisor

Funeral Director/Supervisor

Lititz Pike

3110 Lititz Pike | 717.560.5100


Charles F. (Chad) Snyder, III

www.SnyderFuneralHome.com

Funeral
Fune
Fu
une
eral Dire
Director
Director/Supervisor
ctor/Su
/Su
upervi
up
ervisor
sor

Mark D. Burkholder

Spacht-Snyder Lititz

127 South Broad St. | 717.626.2317


7
Jacqueline Adamson
visor/P
ning
ng
g Sp
p iali
alist
a
al
Supervisor/Pre-Planning
Supervis
Supe
rvis
or/ re-P
or/P
re-Plann
in
Spec
Specialist
st

Funding underwritten by Physicians Life Insurance Company

PAYMENT PLANS

my life. my plan. my time

OBITS
A25 SUNDAY,
LNP
| LANCASTER,
PA JUNE 26, 2016

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016 A25

Obituaries
Dorothy L.
Daubert

Dorothy L. Daubert,
90, of Lititz, passed
away on Tuesday, June
21, 2016 at Moravian
Manor.
She was the wife
of the late Charles I.
Daubert, Jr. who passed
away in 2006. Born in
Elizabeth, NJ, she was
the daughter of the
late Herman O. and
Gertrude Heckel Link.
She had been a homemaker, played bridg e
a n d e n j oy e d t h e o u t doors. She was a member of the Four Seasons
Social Club, liked to
c ook an d en te r ta in ,
and enjoyed all types of
crafts.
S h e i s s u r v i v e d by
her children: Charles
III married to Janis
Daubert of Lancaster,
Patricia married to
John Dalton of Lititz,;
her 3 grandchildren
Tara Daubert, Megan
Daubert and Chris
Riportella; and her
great grandchild Paige
Riportella. She w as
preceded in death by
her sister, Rosemarie
Giandalia.
Friends will be received on Friday, July
1, 2016 at the Charles
F. Snyder, Jr. Funeral
Ho me & C rem at oryy,
3110 Lititz Pike, Lititz,
PA from 9:30-10:30AM,
with the M emorial
Service to follow at
10:30AM. Interment
i n S t . Jo s e p h N e w
Catholic Cemeteryy. In
lieu of flowers, please
make contributions in
Dorothy s memory to
the American Heart
Assn., 610 Community
Wa y, Lancas ter, PA
17603. To send an online
condolence, please visit
SnydeerrFuneralHo
ome.com

Thomas
McFadden, Jr

Thomas J. McFadden,
Jr, 78, of Lancasterr, died
Wednesday,
J une 15 ,
2016
at
Brethren
Village.
Born in
L a n c a s t e r,
he was the son of the late
Thomas J. McFadden,
Sr. and Thelma Mae
(Seitz) McFadden.
Thomas was a laborer
for Waarner Lambert for
33 years until his retirement, and was a member
of St. John Neumann
Catholic Church.
He was a US Army
veteran.
Thomas is survived
by a cousin, Ellen Lee
and her husband Frank
of Odentown, MD.
A Mass of Christian
Burial will be held at 11
AM on Tuesday, June
28, 2016 at St. John
Neumann Catholic
Church, 601 E. Delp
Rd, Lancaster with the
Revv. Daniel F. X. Powell
as Celebrant. Friends
w i l l b e r e c e i ve d o n e half hour prior to the
service at the church.
Burial, with full military honors, will follow in Indiantown Gap
National Cemetery at
1:30 PM.
To place a condolence online, please visit
Snyder
erFuneralHo
ome.com

GOLD/SILVER HEADQUARTERS

BUYERS-SELLERS

Gold, Silver, Jewelry, Rare Coins, Investments


Since 1973

SUSQUEHANNA COIN
Willow Valley Square, Lancaster
717-464-4016 www.susquehannacoin.com

Jean B.
Weirich
e

member and past president of the Pennsylvania


Nurses Association,
and a life member of
the American Nurses
Association.
S h e i s s u r v i v e d by
a son, Michael, husband of Michelle
Weirich,
e
of Lickdale;
grandchildren, J osh
Miller of Lititz, Aaron
Miller, of Selbyville,
DE, Vaalerie Weeirich, of
Marietta, Ina Spicer,
of Newmanstown; and
great grandchildren,
Mandi, Mila, and Ian.
She was preceded in
death by a daughter, J.
Patrice Miller in 1999.
A viewing will be held
Wednesda
e
y, June 29,
2016 from 5 to 7 p.m. at
Union
Salem Walmers
a
Church, 25 Coulter Rd.,
Annville, followed by a
brief service at 7 p.m.
Interment will be held
at the convenience of
the family at the Union
Salem E vang elical
Congregational
Cemeteryy, Jonestown.
In lieu of flowers,
memorial contributions
may be made to St. Jude
Childrens Research
Hospital, PO Box 4138,
Fullerton, CA 92834, or
the American Cancer
Society, PO Box 1274,
Lebanon, PA 17042.
Grose Funeral Home,
My e r st ow n , h a s b e e n
entrusted with the arrangements.
www
w.GroseFH.com
.

Ramona V.
DeClementi

by three children, Ann


wife of John Bradyy,
Lancaster; Donna wife
of Ricky Paules, Yor
o k;
Don husband of Kathy
( Welsh)
e
DeClementi,
Mount Joy. Known aff-fectionately as Gram,
she is also survived by
ve grandchildren and
eight great grandchildren.
A Mass of Christian
Burial will be held from
Holy Trinity Catholic
Church, 409 Cherry
St. Columbia PA 17512
on Friday July 1, 2016
at 10:00 a.m. with the
Rev. Stephen P. Kelley,
Celebrant. Friends may
view at the church on
Friday one hour prior to
the Mass. Interment will
follow in Indiantown
Gap National Cemetery
on Friday at 1:30 p.m.
If desired, contributions in Ramonas
memory may be made
to Holy Trinity Catholic
Church. Arrangements
by the Clyde W. Kraft
Funeral H ome, Inc.
www.cwkraftfh.com

Jean B. Weirich, 92,


of Lickdale, formerly of
Lititz, died
T h u r s d a y,
J une 23 ,
2016
at
Spang Crest
Manor,
Lebanon.
She was the wife of
Harold Weeirich, who
died in 1977
7.
Born in Lickdale on
March 1, 1924, she was
the daughter of the
late J. Lloyd and Edith
(Batdorf ) Bohn.
A 1941 graduate of
Jonestown High School,
Jean earned a bachelors
degree at the Carnegie
Institute of Technologgyy,
her registered nurs ing license at the Wes
e t
Penn Hospital School of
Nursing, and her masters degree in education
at Temple Universityy.
She served in the
U..S. Cadet Nurse Corps
during World
o
War II,
and was employed as
an anatomy and physiology ins tructor at
the Lancaster General
H ospital School of
Nursing, later becoming
director of the school,
and also as director
of the Brandywine
H ospital School of
Nursing in Coatesville.
Jean was a member of
Salem Waalmers Union
Church, Annville, a life

Ramona V. DeClementi, 85, passed away on


June 23, 2016
at Hospice and
Community
Care, M ount
Joy. A long time Columbia resident, she had resided
at the Susquehanna
Va l l e y N u r s i n g a n d
Rehabilitation Center
for the past three years.
Ramona was the wife
of the late Donald F.
DeClementi who pre ceded her in death in
2014. Born in Mount
Carmel, she was the
daughter of the late
Peter and Anna Krushki
Baxter. All her life,
R a m o n a wa s a h o m e maker. She enjoyed putting together puzzles,
word fiind puzzles and
playing 500 Rummy.
She lo v ed to polka
and was a member of
Holy Trinity Catholic
Church, Columbia.
Ramona is survived

Lee R. Lahet

On June 23, 2016 Lee


Robert Lahet, graduate
of New Holland High
School and Franklin &
Marshall College, beloved husband of the
late Jean Lahet (nee:
Brubaker), devoted father of Steven Lahet
and his spouse Lisa
Marquette; Sue Lahet
and her spouse Mari
Droney. Dear brother of
John Lahet and his wife
Jennie and Roy Lahet.
Dear brother-in-law of

Anne and John Tennis.


Dear grandfather of Ian
and Nina Lahet.
Friends may gather
at the Oak Crest Village
Chapel, 8810 Walther
Blvd., Parkville, MD
21234, on Thursday
June 30th for Memorial
services that will begin at 11 am. Cremation
Private.
Arrangements by
CVACH/ROSEDALE
FUNERAL HOME, 1211
Chesaco Ave., Rosedale,
MD 21237.

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Cremation Services
at a Much Lower Cost

717-CREMATE (273-6283)

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OTHER OBITUARIES
ON PAGE A26

Gloria Jean
Blaebaum

Gloria
Jean
Bla ebaum , 8 9, of
L a n c a s t e r,
passed away
Wednesday,
J une 22,
20 16 ,
at
C o n es t o g a
View Nursing H ome. Born in
Lancaster, Gloria was
the daughter of the late
Stanley and Blanche
(Nonemaker) Harvey.
She was the loving wife
of the late Harvey F.
Blaebaum, whom she
met at Whities Sub &
Steak Shop. They were
married in 1963. Harvey
died in 1999.
Gloria graduated
from McCaskey High
School in 1944 and was
a successful business
woman who took great
pride in the business establishments she man ag ed. Along with her
husband she owned and
operated the Paddock
Inn in Eden and the Bite
and Chew Sandwich
Shop and J&W Lottery
and News.
In addition to be ing a proffiicient business woman, Gloria
enjoyed cooking, loved
the outdoors, spend ing time working in her
yard and gardening.
She also loved going to
Vaalentinos Caf, spending time singing with
her friends.
Gloria is survived by
her daughter, Eileen
Martin, wife of Garyy,
of Ephrata, and her
son, Fred Blaebaum,
husband of Janet, of
Kinston, NC. She is also
survived by her grandchildren: Tania (Martin)
Zaliznock, wife of Craig,
of Ephrata, and Jon and
Paul Blaebaum, both of
North Carolina. Gloria
was preceded in death
by the following family members: Robert
RobbieBlaebaum and
Barbara Freyy.
Funeral Services for
Gloria will be held at 12
PM, on Thursday, June
30, 2016 at the Charles
F. Sn yder Funeral
Home, 414 E. King St.,
Lancaster, PA 17602.
Family and friends will
be received at the funeral home one hour
prior to the service. In
lieu of owers, memorial contributions may be
made in Glorias memory, to the Alzheimers
Association of Greater
P enns ylvania, 2595
Interstate Drive, Suite
100, Harr isburg, PA
17110. To leave the family an online condolence,
please visit:
SnydeerrFuneralHo
ome.com

RETIRE the ORDINARY.


the

Rita Jay (Loomis)


(Loomis Holtslander

Rita Jay (Loomis)


Holtslander, 73, died
J une
19,
2016
at
L u t h e r
A c r e s
Retirement
H o m e ,
Lititz, PA
surrounded
by loved ones.
She was born
on September
27, 1942 in
Norfolk, VA the fourth of
fiive children to Rita
Berkley (Hines) Loomis
and Tom Charles
Loomis. On July 4, 1964
she married Craig Hall
H oltslander in Eas t
Lansing, MI. They were
within days of celebrating their 52nd wedding
anniversaryy.
She was preceded in
death by her parents and
brother Michael Halleck
Loomis (Fay-deceased).
She is survived by her
husband, her two children,
Margaret
Katherine Phillips and
husband Dr. Jason of
Lititz, PA and CAP T
Craig Alan Holtslander,
USN and wife Megan of
Fairfax, VA
A, and her
three grandchildren,
Thomas
Alan
H oltslander , Alana
Kathleen Phillips and
Meryn
Evans
Holtslander, along with
he r brot he r R ich ard
Loomis (Patricia) of
Sierra Vista, AZ, sister
Margaret
Hodge
(James) of Agoura Hills,
CA, brother Tom C.
L oo m is ( An d re a) of
Grayling, MI and many
nieces and nephews.
Rita earned her
Bachelor s Degree in
Speech Pathology and
Education
from
Michigan
State
University and spent
over 20 years as a Special
Education Teacher and
Speech and Hearing
Therapist, the majority
with Sidney City Schools
in Sidneyy, OH. She was a
gifted educator and

loved her students. She


was a proud member of
Alpha Delta K appa
(International Honorary Wo
omen Educators)
and a lifetime member
of the Wo
omen of the
M oose. Long before
there were Soccer
Moms Rita was a dedicated Swim Mom, logging countless hours and
miles in support of her
children. In later years,
as a resident of St. Johns
Herr Estate, she mastered Wii bowling, scoring many 300 games,
cheered on her many favorite sports teams
with a sweatshirt for
each and played cards
several times each week.
She was a loyal friend
and sisterr, proud grandmother, and cherished
frequent phone conversations with loved ones.
Rita w as a dev out
Catholic and her faith
sustained her.
A private Memorial
Mass will be held immeimme
diatelyy. A Celebration of
her Life and Burial will
both be held at a later
date.
In lieu of owers, the
family asks that memomemo
rials be made in her
name to: St. Johns Herr
Estate, 200 Luther Lane,
Columbia, PA 17512 or
Luther Acres Healthcare
Center, 400 St. Luke
Drive, Lititz, PA 17543
and/or National Shrine
of St. John Newman,
10 19 N. 5th Stree t,
Philadelphia, PA 19123.
The family would like
to thank the staff at
Hospice and Community Care, Luther Acres,
Lancas ter General
Hospital and St Johns
Herr Estates for their
loving care of Rita.
Share online condolences at
Snyder
erFuneralHome.com

Bernice LaRue
(Krick) Fisher

K. wife of Dennis
Deyong, Bay Village,
OH; four brothers,
George, Earl, Frank, and
Ronald Krick; and two
grandchildren, Ashley
and Ryan. She was preceded in death by two
brothers, Phillip and
Kenneth Krick; and a
sister, Miriam.
Services will be held
at 11:00AM, Thursday,
June 30, at Lamm
& Witman Funeral
Home, 243 W. Penn
Ave., Wernersville. A
viewing will be held 1011:00AM, Thursday, at
the funeral home. Burial
will be in Pleasant View
Cemetery.
Online condolences
can be made at www.
lammandwitman.com

Bernice
LaRue
(Krick) Fisher, 81, born
in Fritztown, lived in
Ephrata, most recently
of Welsh Mountain
Home in New Holland,
passed away Friday,
June 24, 2016 at the
Lutheran Home at
Topton. She was the wife
of Elam Beiler Fisher
with whom she shared
56 years of marriage on
May 7, 2016.
Born in Fritztown,
she was a daughter of
the late Herbert E. and
Mabel S. (Hatt) Krick.
In addition to her
husband she is survived by a son, Jeffrey
L. Fisher, San Francisco,
CA; a daughter, Wendy

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OBITS
A26 SUNDAY,
JUNE 26, 2016
A26
SUNDAY,
JUNE 26, 2016

Clark John
Smith

Clark John Smith,


83, of Manheim, passed
away on
S a t u r d a y,
June 18,
2016 at his
home with
his loving
wife, June
(Adams) Smith by his
side. August 18 would
have been their 60th
wedding anniversary.
He was born on
September 20, 1932, in
Blain, to the late Ralph
R. and Florence (Clark)
Smith.
Clark graduated
from Heidelberg Township High School in
Lebanon County and
later from Instrument
Technician School in
Philadelphia and New
York. He was a member of St. Pauls United
Church of Christ where
he served as Sunday
School Superintendent,
Deacon, and usher; and
a lifetime member of
the Manheim Historical
Society. Clark was a Cpl.
in the U.S. Army during the Korean Conict
from 1953-1955. He
continued to serve his
country by working for
the U.S. Postal Service
for 32 years before his
retirement in 1995.
Gardening, wood
working, reading, cooking, photography, doing
puzzles, and remodeling the house were just
a few of the things that
Clark liked to do in his
spare time. But his family always came rst and
foremost.
Surviving are his
wife; children Stephen
S. Smith of Seven Valley,
Lori Dietz (Charles)
of Lititz, and Jeffrey
D. Smith (Melissa) of
Manheim; grandchildren Desiree Smith
Walker, Jordan Dietz,
Garrett Dietz; step
grandchildren Matthew,
Nathaniel, Danielle; sisters Valerie Showers,
Isabelle
Lambert,
Myrtle Kulpa; brothers Roy Smith, Gary
Smith, and Ralph Smith.
Including his parents,
preceding him in death
are brother Newton
Smith; sisters Dorothy
Dick and Almeda
Workman.
A memorial service
will be held on Saturday,
July 9, 2016, at 11:00
a.m. at St. Pauls United
Church of Christ, 50 N.
Main St, Manheim, PA.
In lieu of owers memorial contributions
may be made to Hospice
Community Care, 685
Good Drive, P.O. Box
4125, Lancaster, PA
17604.
Arrangements by
Cremation Society of
Pennsylvania, Inc.

Edward
Snyder
Preisendanz

Edw ard
Sn yder
Preisendanz, 91, of
Lititz, PA
and formerly of
Wilmington, DE,
p a s s e d
away o n
Thursday, June 23, 2016
at Luther Acres.
He w as the hus band of Jeanne Hutton
Preisendanz, with
whom he would have
celebrated 68 years of
marriage on June 26th.
Born in Philadelphia, he
was the son of the late
Edward W. and Mabel
Snyder Preisendanz.
Edward had worked
as a mechanical engineer in the consulting
and engineering divi sion for the A.I. DuPont
Co. for 36 years. He had
been the past president of the American
Society of Professional
Engineers and served
as a mentor of the test
board.
A man of faith, he
was an active member
of the Lititz Moravian
C h ur c h , w he r e he
played trombone with
the Trombone Choir,
and was very involved in
the settling of refugees
from Burma / Myanmar
in the area. He enjoyed
bird watching, camping
and travel with his familyy, served as a leader
with the Boy Scouts of
America, and enjoyed
woodworking at Luther
Acres. He had a great
sense of humor and
loved to spend time with
his grandchildren and
great grandchildren.
In addition to his
wife, Jeanne, he is survived by his children:
Edward H. husband of
Heidi of Wilmington,
Rev. Da vid M. of
Elmira, NY
Y, and Nancy
P rei se nd an z, p art ne r
of Cristi Hawk of Iowa
Cityy, IA; his 6 grandchildren and 3 great
grandchildren. He was
preceded in death by
his son, J. Daniel who
passed away in 2005.
Friends will be received at the Eshbach
Parlor of Lititz Moravian
Chu rch, 8 Churc h
Square, Lititz, PA 17543
on Thursday, June 30,
2016 from 10-11AM,
with the Funeral Service
to be held in the church
at 11AM. Interment in
the church cemetery.
In lieu of owers, please
make contributions in
Edwards memory to the
Lititz Moravian Church
at the above address
or to LutherCare, 600
E. Main St., Lititz, PA
17543. To send an online
condolence, please visit
Snyder
erFuneralHo
ome.com

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Obituaries
James Harold Cassel

James Harold Cassel,


age 60, of Denver, PA,
died peacefully at his
home in the presence of
his family on the morning of June 14, 2016.
Born in Sellersville,
PA on June 12, 1956, Jim
was the youngest child
of the late Dr. Harold
K. and Evelyn R. Cassel
(Haer). In addition to
his parents, he was preceded in death by his sister, Nancy J. Cassel.
Jim is survived by his
constant companion of
37 years and wife of 32
years, Patricia Orbock
(Griest), children, Ezra
James Cassel (ffiance
i
Morgan Slovin), and
daughter Jasmine Jay
Stauffer
( husband
Donald Stauffer).
He is also survived
b y sis ters , Barbara
Christopher of Conway,
SC, J. Susan Ludwig &
husband, Earl of Telfor
o d,
PA, Donna Godshall
& husband, David of
H a t f i e l d , PA ; b r o t h e r
Donald Cassel & wife,
Suzanne of Chadds
Ford, PA, and beloved
Collie Louie.
Jim was a 197
74 graduate of Souderton Area
High School and attended Millers ville
State College, where he
played basketball for
the Marauders. He was
a loyal employee of RR
Donnelley and Sons for
40 years, where he was
a damn g ood Digital
Graphics Premedia

Technician, known as
The Judge.
Jim was a hard-working man who loved the
home that he built. He
was a tinkerer who enjo yed woodworking,
hobby farming and gardening. Jim also loved
animals, nature, the
outdoors, and catching
the big sh.
As a talented athlete,
Jim loved to teach his
children; enjoying golf
with his son, mini-golf
with his daughter, as
well as basketball, volleyball, and tennis. And
when he wasnt playin
he was watchin. That
Jimmy-Jam also loved
his music and getting
tog ether with colleg e
friends.
Jim was a loving husband and father, who
devoted his life to making his family happy.
He will always be proud
of his sons career in renewable energgyy and his
daughters pursuit in the
medical eld at the PA
program at Penn State
Hersheyy.
As a quiet, peaceful
man, Jim was adored
by friends, familyy, and
in-laws alike. He fought
valiantly for a cure for
ov er two years, and
continues to ght after
death by donating his
body to Research and
Medical Education.
Private services will
be held at the convenience of the familyy.
In lieu of flowers,
consider a donation in
Jims honor to aid in
Lymphoma research at
givingpages.upenn.edu/
casselscure
Paul L. Gra v enor
Home For Funerals,
Ephrata, PA is assisting
the
he familyy.
To send an online
condolence please visit
gravenorhomeforfunerals.com

Mary Jane (Freeland) Williams


Mary Jane (Freeland)
Williams, went home to
be with her
Lord
on
Friday evenin g, Jun e
24, 2016 affter a long
and courageous battle with cancer.
She was the wife of
Robert Lamar Williams
with whom she was married 62 years. Born in
Columbia, she was the
da ugh ter off t he la te
William and Mary J.
Elslager Freeland.
In addition to her
husband, she is survived
by two children; Mark
married to Pamela J.
( Wilt) Williams; John
married to Marie (Lutz)
Williams; two grand sons, Gregory and John
M.; three granddaughters, Amy, Lauren and
Renee; three great
granddaughters, Tella,
Emme and Lila, and four
grand dogs. She was preceded in death by her
siblings,
Charles,
William and Elva.
A 1941 graduate of
Columbia High School,
she worked in the office
of
the
Gilliland
Laboratories, Marietta,
(now GSK) and the former United Sound &
Signal Corporation of
Columbia. Mary Jane
was also the bookkeeper
for the R.P
P. Williams &
Sons, Inc., Columbia.
Mary Jane was a lifetime and devoted member of the Columbia
United
M e thodis t
Church where she

served for 42 years as


the Secretary of the
Sunday
School;
Chairperson of the
Kitchen Committee and
served as the Secretary
of the A dministration
Council and Finance
Secre tary for man y
years.
In addition, she was a
Girl Scout and leader for
the Pine Tree Troop No.
6, Columbia for 25 years.
Mary Jane was also a 50
year member and Past
Matron of the Columbia
Chapter No. 366, Order
of the Eastern Star.
Funeral services will
be held from the
Columbia
United
Methodist Church, 510
Waalnut St., Columbia,
PA 17512 on Saturday,
July 2, 2016 at 11:00 a.m.
with the Rev. Thomas
Grubbs , off iciating.
Interment will follow in
Mount Bethel Cemeteryy.
Friends may call at the
Clyde W. Kraft Funeral
Home, Inc., 519 Waalnut
St., Columbia, PA on
Friday, July 1, 2016 from
6:00 p.m. until 8:00 p.m.
and again at the church
on Saturday one hour
prior to the service.
Kindly omit flowers.
Contributions to the
Columbia
United
Methodist Church or to
Hospice and Community Care, PO Box 4125,
Lancaster, PA 17604
(www.hospiceandcommunitycare.org ) in Mary
Janes memory would be
deeply appreciated.
www.cwkraftfh.com

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George L.
Turns, Jr.

Georg e L. Turns,
Jr., 92, passed away
Mo n d a y,
J une 20,
2016
at
Masonic
Village,
Elizabe thto wn, PA.
Born in Harrisburg,
PA, he was the son of
the late George L., Sr.
and Bertha Schubauer
Turns.
He was the husband
of Joan (McLaughlin)
Duncan Turns to whom
he had been married
31 years. His rst wife,
Jane preceded him in
death.
Mr. Turns serv ed
in the U.S. Navy during WW II. He was employed by Bell of PA and
AT&T for 35 years.
He was a member of
Church of the Apostles
U.C.C., Lancaster, PA,
Masonic Lodge #0629
F. & A.M., Harrisburg
Consis tory, Zembo
Shrine and American
Legion Post #0034. He
enjoyed traveling, playing golf and cards, and
working in his yard and
ower garden.
In addition to his
wife, he is survived by
his son, Jeffrey Turns;
2 stepchildren: Steve

Lester
Let R. Long

Lester Let R. Long,


85, of Lititz, PA
A, passed
away o n
Mo n d a y,
J une 20,
2016
in
Lebanon.
He was
the husband of the
late Vera
Ritter Long,
who passed
aw a y
in
2009. Born
in L iti tz,
he was the
son of the late
Albert K. and
Della Uhlig
Long.
L e st e r h a d b e e n a
driver and salesman
for 25 years for the
Tast y B ak in g Co. o f
Philadelphia, selling
Tastykakes and other
products on his routes
in Lancaster. Prior to
this, he had worked as a
stone mason for Grant
Smith and other masons
in the Lancaster area.
H e w a s a U S A r my
veteran, serving as a Sgt
F i r st C l a s s d u r i n g t h e
Korean Waar years.
Lester was a member
of the Lititz Church of
The Brethren and the
Rose of Sharon Sunday
School class. He en-

Duncan and Sandra


Bennett; 2 grandchildren: Julie, wife of Mike
Zimmer and Kyle Turns;
4 step-grandchildren:
Rhianon Brown, Teague
Duncan, Meghan Smith
and Jessica Sturges; 3
great-grandchildren:
Cameron Zimmer ,
Reece Zimmer and
Dylan Zimmer; 3 stepgreat-grandchildren:
R o ry Sm i t h , D un c a n
Smith and Kinley
Brown.
Relatives and friends
are respectfully invited
to attend a Memorial
Service in the Sell
Chapel of Masonic
V i l l a g e s, 1 M a s o n i c
Drive, Elizabethtown,
PA on Saturday, July
9, 2016 at 1:00 p.m.
Friends may call at the
Sell Chapel from 12:00
p.m. until the time of
service. Interment will
be private at the convenience of the familyy.
Please omit flowers. If desired, contributions in Mr. Turns
memory may be sent
to Hospice at Masonic
Village, 1 Masonic Dr.,
Elizabe thto wn, P A
17022.
To send an on-line
condolence, please visit:
DeBordSnyder.com

717-394-4097
joyed bowling, hunting, shing, golng, and
spending time with his
grandchildren and great
grandchildren.
Lester is survived by
his children: Rick married to Carol Kinkel
Long, Mike married to
Dawn Moyer Long, and
Cheryl married to Scott
grandchil
Garner; his grandchildren: Kahlie married
to Brodie Gleason, Alex
Scott, and Joie married
to Joe Englehart IV
V. He
also has 3 great grandsons. He was preceded
in death by his siblings
Reba Gantz, Fred and
Curtis Long.
Friends will be received on Saturday, July
2, 2016 from 9:30am
to 11:00am at the Lititz
Church of The Brethren,
300 W. Orang e St.,
Lititz, PA, 17543 with
the Memorial Service
to follow at 11:00 am.
Interment will follow
in the church memorial garden. In lieu of
flowers, please make a
contribution in Lesters
memory to Lititz
Church of The Brethren
at the above address. To
send an online condolence, please visit
SnydeerrFuneralHo
ome.com

BERNIE WORRELL

P-Funk keyboardist
NEW YORK (AP)
Bernie Worrell, the ingenious Wizard of Woo
whose amazing array of
keyboard sounds and
textures helped define
the Parliament-Funkadelic musical empire
and influenced performers of funk, rock, hip-hop
and other genres, died
Friday at age 72.
Worrell,
who
announced in early 2016
that he had stage-four
lung cancer, died at his
home in Everson, Washington, according to his
wife, Judie Worrell.
Throughout the 1970s
and into the 80s, George
Clintons dual projects
of Parliament and Funkadelic and their various
spinoffs built upon the
sounds of James Brown
and Sly and the Family
Stone among others and
turned out some of the
most complex, spaced
out, political, cartoonish
and, of course, danceable
music of the era, elevating the funk groove to a

world view.
With a core group featuring Worrell, guitarist
Eddie Hazel and bassist
Bootsy Collins, P-Funk
maintained an exhausting and dazzling pace
of recordings, from the
hit singles Give Up the
Funk (Tear the Roof off
the Sucker) and Flash
Light to such albums
as One Nation Under a
Groove and Funkentelechy Vs. the Placebo
Syndrome.
Worrell was among
the first musicians to
use a Moog synthesizer,
and his mastery brought
comparisons to Jimi
Hendrixs innovations
on guitar.
He played with Talking
Heads for much of the
1980s and was featured
in their acclaimed concert documentary Stop
Making Sense. Worrell
also contributed to albums by Keith Richards,
Yoko Ono, Nona Hendryx, Manu Dibango and
the Pretenders.

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016 A27

Deaths from
earlier in the week
The following deaths
were reported in the past
week. Complete obituaries
can be found in the
LancasterOnline.com news
archives.
ALTIMUS, Patricia K., 89,
Lancaster, June 12.
ARCHIBALD, Demaris A.,
75, East Petersburg, June
18.
ARMSTRONG, Charles E.,
85, Lancaster, June 21.
BAIR, Barbara A., 84,
Mount Joy, June 16.
BAUBLITZ, Terry L., 46,
York, June 14.
BECKER, Esther M., 96,
Manheim, June 17.
BECKLEY, Chad T., 32, June
20.
BELL, Lily M., 6-month-old
daughter of Christopher
W. and Brook B.,
Conshohocken, June 18.
BENNETHUM, Virginia
(Werner), 85, Ronks, June
23.
BERLINGER, Robert L., 98,
Myerstown, June 13.
BOETTGER, Frances A., 77,
Lititz, June 21.
BOWEN, Lana L., 74,
Lancaster, June 20.
CORFEY, William A., 87,
New Holland, June 23.
CLUGSTON, Merle E., 74,
Manheim, June 19.
DETTINGER, Anna M.
(Gochenaur), 85, Lancaster,
June 19.

JASIENSKI, Bette L.
(Bryant), 75, Mount Joy,
June 21.
KAUFFMAN, Mark A. Sr.,
58, Fleetville, June 16.
KERSCHER, Ethel E., 100,
Lancaster, June 15.
KREIDER, John R., 48,
Elizabethtown, June 14.
LANTZ, Maribeth M., 30,
Pottsville, June 17.
LICHTY, Albert F. Sr., 89,
Lancaster, June 16.
LEONARD, Samuel B., 77,
New Providence, June 18.
MARLETT, Marion A., 91,
Lancaster, June 16.
MARTIN, Dorothy B., 79,
Columbia, June 22.
MARTIN, Esther B. (Kurtz),
88, Denver, June 21.
MARTIN, Lester R., 85, East
Earl, June 19.
MARTIN, Paul M., 77,
Stevens, June 22.
MAYHEW, Loumarie, 88,
Lancaster, June 19.
McFALLS, Etta, 84,
Columbia, June 19.
MURR, Dennis R., 74,
Columbia, June 18.
MYERS, Thomas L., 53,
Lancaster, June 15.
NEGRON, Bienvenido, 65,
Mountville, June 22.
NOLT, Alvin W., 81, Lititz,
June 22.
OLDS, Marilyn L., 90,
Lancaster, June 15.

DeVAULT, Nancy J., 84,


Lancaster, June 22.

PEACHEY, Kenton E., 51,


June 19.

DUNMIRE, Stephen M., 54,


Ephrata, June 17.

PEELOR, Little John, 60,


Lancaster, June 19.

EBERLY, W. Lamar, 77,


Stevens, June 23.

RANGE, Ronald L., 68,


Bainbridge, June 19.

ECKENRODE, Timothy A.,


68, Lancaster, June 20.

REIMER, Ronald H., 70,


Akron, June 23.

ECKERT, Beth A., 53,


Conestoga, June 16.

ROBERTS, Leonard, 62,


Adamstown, June 18.

FITZGERALD, Anna M., 90,


Lancaster, June 21.

SAKELLARIS, Antonis V.,


67, Lancaster, June 21.

FLOWERS, Jay R., 69,


Marietta, June 16.

SAMPLE, Barry R., 76,


Largo, Fla., June 18.

FRANTZ, Jean E., 86,


Mechanicsburg, June 9.

SEALS, Karen L., 53, Muncy,


June 20.

GOOD, Thomas, 44,


Reamstown, June 15.

SHELTON, Mary L.
(Habecker), 97, June 16.

GOOD, Willard L., 68, Terre


Hill, June 17.

STOLTZFOOS, Jeremiah,
infant son of Ephraim and
Ida (King), Paradise, June
24.

GOODLING, Mary A.
(Pickell), 98, Columbia,
June 18.
GRAHAM, Janice S., 76,
Tampa, June 13.
HARRIS, Mary H., 78,
Lancaster, June 21.
HARTRANFT, Wilbur T., 93,
Bethel, June 19.
HEITMUELLER, Ernest O.,
79, New Providence, June
21.
HERR, Olivia (Mercado), 83,
Elizabethtown, June 20.
HERSHEY, Warren W., 90,
Gordonville, June 19.
HESS, Doris G., 78,
Charlestown, Md., June 11.
HESS, Sally J., 56,
Lancaster, June 19.
HOERNER, Henry R. Jr., 85,
Hershey, June 19.
HOLLAND, Mary E. (Groff),
62, Gap, June 21.
HOLMES, Catherine T.
(Wickenheiser), 89, Bel Air,
Md., June 13.
JAKOB, Josephine, 89,
Lancaster, June 23.

STOLTZFUS, Elizabeth, 86,


Lancaster, June 18.
STOLTZFUS, Jacob K.,
infant son of Abner and
Rebecca (Kauffman), Peach
Bottom, June 17.
STRUNK, Helen
E. (Pfleegor), 92,
Elizabethtown, June 22.
SUTER, Susan A. (Aument),
96, Lancaster, June 15.
SWEIGART, Roy S., 72,
Denver, June 20.
USNER, Ronald C. Jr., 57,
Columbia. April 21.
WALTON, Harvey, 88,
Narvon, June 18.
WEAVER, Pearl E., 85,
Quarryville, June 17.
WEISSER, William G., 86,
Lititz, June 18.
YELK, William E., 67,
Gordonville, June 23.
ZIMMERMAN, Emma M., 91,
Akron, June 21.
ZOERB, Charlene (Lowell),
58, Marmora, N.J., June 12.

GERALD WALPIN

Staffer fired by Obama


NEW YORK (AP)
Gerald Walpin, a former
inspector general for the
federal AmeriCorps program who was fired by
President Barack Obama
over his handling of an
investigation into a California mayor and Obama
supporter, has died. He
was 84.
Walpin died Friday
morning after being
struck by a sport utility
vehicle in New York, his
son-in-law, Allan Tananbaum, said.
The New York Police
Department said Walpin was crossing a street
on the Upper East Side
when he was struck by
the vehicle. He suffered
serious head injuries and
died at a local hospital.
Walpin, a New York attorney, was fired in 2009
as the inspector general
who investigates Ameri-

Corps and other national


service programs after
an investigation into Sacramento Mayor Kevin
Johnson and his nonprofit group, which received
hundreds of thousands of
dollars in federal grants
from the corporation that
runs AmeriCorps.
Walpins probe found
Johnson used AmeriCorps grants to pay
volunteers to engage in
school-board political
activities and run personal errands for Johnson. Johnson had supported Obama during his
first campaign.
Walpin referred the
matter to the local U.S.
attorneys office, which
said Walpins conclusions seemed overstated
and didnt accurately reflect all the information
gathered. Obama said he
lost confidence in him.

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Security forces examine the scene after a bomb attack on the Nasa-Hablod Hotel in Mogadishu, Somalia, Saturday.
SOMALIA

14 killed in hotel attack

Security forces rescue hostages, kill last of al-Shabab militants on top floor
ABDI GULED

ASSOCIATED PRESS

MOGADISHU, Somalia Gunmen stormed a hotel in Somalias


seaside capital Saturday, taking
guests hostage and shooting at
everyone they could see, before
security forces pursued the grenade-throwing assailants to the
top floor and ended the hourslong assault, police and witnesses said. At least 14 people were
killed.
Islamic extremist group alShabab claimed responsibility
for the latest in a series of hotel
attacks in Mogadishu, one that
began with a powerful explosion
at the entry gate.
We have finally ended the
siege. The last remaining militants were killed on the top floor,
police Capt. Mohamed Hussein
said after security forces cornered the gunmen, who had set
up sniper posts on the roof of the
Nasa-Hablod hotel. Police said at
least four gunmen were involved
in the attack, and two were killed.
We have so far confirmed
the deaths of 14 people. Some of
them died in the hospitals, Hussein said. The deaths included
women who were selling khat, a

They were shooting


at everyone they
could see. I escaped
through the
back door.
Ali Mohamud, witness

stimulant leaf popular with Somali men, outside the hotel, he


said.
Security forces rescued most
of the hostages; it was not clear
whether any were killed. Police
and medical workers said another nine people were wounded in
the assault.
Police said the attack began
when a suicide bomber detonated an explosives-laden vehicle at
the hotel entrance, ripping off its
gate. Gunmen fought their way
inside, and a witness said they
began shooting randomly at hotel guests.
Blood was splattered on the ho-

tel floor. The bodies of two men,


including one thought to be a hotel guard and an attacker dressed
in a military uniform, lay on the
first floor.
Bullets pockmarked the hotel
walls. Security forces combed
through the dark hotel rooms,
searching for explosives.
A witness, Ali Mohamud, said
the attackers randomly shot at
guests. They were shooting at
everyone they could see. I escaped through the back door, he
said.
Yusuf Ali, an ambulance driver,
said he evacuated 11 people injured in the attack to hospitals.
Most of them were wounded
in crossfire, he said.
The Somalia-based, al-Qaidalinked al-Shabab has been waging a deadly insurgency across
large parts of Somalia and often
employs suicide car bomb attacks
to penetrate heavily fortified targets in Mogadishu and elsewhere.
In early June, an overnight
siege by extremist gunmen at another hotel in the capital killed
at least 15 people, including two
members of parliament. AlShabab claimed responsibility
for that attack.

ARMENIA GENOCIDE

Pope: Never forget, but reconcile


NICOLE WINFIELD
AND AVET
DEMOURIAN
ASSOCIATED PRESS

YEREVAN, Armenia
The world should
never forget or minimize the Ottoman-era
slaughter of Armenians, Pope Francis declared Saturday even as
he urged Armenians to
infuse their collective
memory with love so
they can find peace and
reconcile with Turkey.
Turkey,
though,
didnt budge. In its first
reaction to Francis
recognition of the 1915
genocide,
Turkish
Deputy Prime Minister
Nurettin Canikli called
the comments greatly
unfortunate and said
they bore the hallmarks
of the mentality of the
Crusades.
Francis began his second day in Armenia by
paying his respects at
the countrys imposing
genocide memorial and
greeting descendants

Pope Francis and Catholicos Karekin II reach to touch


a child during an Ecumenical encounter and prayer for
peace in Yerevans Republic Square, Armenia, Saturday.

of survivors of the 1915


massacres, who have
been emboldened by his
comments upon arrival
that the slaughter of Armenians a century ago
was a planned genocide meant to annihilate an entire people.
Francis presented a
wreath at the memorial
and stood, head bowed,

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in silent prayer before an


eternal flame as priests
blessed him with incense
and a choir sang haunting hymns.
Here I pray with sorrow in my heart, so that
a tragedy like this never

again occurs, so that humanity will never forget


and will know how to
defeat evil with good,
Francis wrote in the
memorials guest book.
May God protect the
memory of the Armenian people. Memory
should never be watered-down or forgotten.
Memory is the source of
peace and the future.
Francis also greeted
descendants of the 400
or so Armenian orphans
taken in by Popes Benedict XV and Pius XI at the
papal summer residence
south of Rome in the
1920s. Also approaching
Francis was Sosi Habeschyan, 68, and her sister;
their mother was a genocide orphan adopted and
raised by Danish missionary Maria Jacobsen, who
worked in the Ottoman
Empire in 1915 and wrote
about the massacre.

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Living

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

n SEND STORY TIPS & INFO TO: JON FERGUSON, 291-8839, JFERGUSON@LNPNEWS.COM

Lancaster

Flying nanny
Mary Poppins drops in at Dutch
Apple Dinner Theatre
n Entertainment, page B4

ALSO INSIDE: TRAVEL & BOOKS

COMMUNITY

SIGHTS

of

the

CITY

LNP reporter completes his


walking tour of Lancaster,
finds the trek filled with fun
discoveries, friendly people
TIM BUCKWALTER

TBUCKWALTER@LNPNEWS.COM

Shortly before noon on a quiet Sunday, I strolled


past a row of tidy duplexes in the 600 block of Emerald Drive, turned left onto Prospect Street and
paused at a white picket fence at Hershey Avenue.
My arrival at the intersection in southwest Lancaster essentially marked the end of my quest to walk
every block of Lancaster city in 2016.
I began in late winter and finished in early June,
covering every residential street in the original 4
square miles of town. Im told that amounts to nearly
100 miles.
Along the way, I tweeted some photos, using the
hashtag #walklancaster. You can still check them out
and contribute your own, using that hashtag.

WHERES
BUCKWALTER?

TIM BUCKWALTER | STAFF WRITER PHOTOS

Above, doors
make for a colorful backdrop in
an alley south of
West Chestnut
Street; at right,
bicycles decorate a fence in
the 200 block of
North Pine Street;
and below, a
mural at Crispus
Attucks Community Center
on South Duke
Street. These
are just some
of the sights
LNP reporter
Tim Buckwalter
discovered or
rediscovered
during his walking tour of the
neighborhoods of
Lancaster city.

Check out Tim Buckwalter on


Twitter and use the hashtag
#walklancaster to see what
hes found on his walking
tour of Lancaster city.
Twitter: @TBuckwalterLNP

Still awaiting my visit are a few


annexed, suburban-style neighborhoods that are part of the city but
are beyond the main 2-mile-by-2mile part of town. I plan to check
them out over the summer.

Reasons for walking

My initial goal in walking the entire city was exercise and getting to
know my town a little better. I made
lots of fun discoveries and met
some friendly folks along the way.
Among the sights were interesting murals, storefront churches,
little free libraries and intriguing porch
decorations. Not to mention colorful paint
jobs, bakeries, restaurants and other small
businesses, informative historical plaques,
unusual vehicles and sidewalk messages
written in chalk and etched in concrete.
I dont lay claim to a trove of deep insights
from the experience, but I do have a few observations I thought Id share.

Efficient and freeing

For one thing, walking in Lancaster is


freeing and incredibly efficient.
This wasnt really a new revelation for me,
having lived and walked in the city for the
past 30 years. But as I roamed farther and
wider than usual, I was impressed at how

WALK LANCASTER, page B5

ENTERTAINMENT

Success from lifes surprises

Latin jazz musician Sammy Figueroa embraces a free-flowing career


JENELLE JANCI

JJANCI@LNPNEWS.COM

Sammy Figueroas dream as a young


man was to record in New York City
with the biggest names in the music
business.
The Bronx native was hooked once
he got his start in a Latin rock-salsa band
during his time as a student at the University of Puerto Rico. The band featured
pianist Papo Lucca and trumpeter Bob-

by Valentin. Figueroa started off singing


but quickly developed a penchant for
percussion and switched to drums.
In 1967, at 19, he moved back to New
York to pursue his dream. He worked
at a record store to make a living, and
after three years, Figueroa thought
maybe that was his calling.
In my mind, I gave music up, says
Figueroa, who will play with his band,
FIGUEROA, page B2

IF YOU GO
n What: Sammy

Figueroas Latin Jazz


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n Where: Longs Park

Amphitheater, Route 30
and Harrisburg Pike.

n When: 7:30 p.m. Sunday.


n Cost: Free.
n More info: longspark.org

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Sammy Figueroa and his Latin Jazz Explosion will perform tonight at Longs Park.

Saturday, July 9th


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LIVING/LOCAL

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

Restaurant inspections
The Pennsylvania
Department of Agriculture,
866-366-3723, uses a
risk-based inspection
reporting process for
restaurants and other food
handlers.
Giant Foods Inc., 235 N.
Reservoir St., June 10. No
violations.
Greencircle Organics,
Central Market, June 10. No
violations.
King St. Food Mart LLC,
502 E. King St., June 7. No
violations.
Passenger, 7 W. King St.,
June 7. No violations.
Prince Street Cafe, 15
N. Prince St., June 7. No
violations.
First United Methodist
Church, 29 E. Walnut St.,
June 6. No violations.
Harvest Moon Bagel Co.,
443 N. Mulberry St., June 6.
No violations.
Lil World of Angels
Daycare Center LLC, 250
W. King St., June 6. No
violations.
Olive Garden, 910 Plaza
Blvd., June 6. Surfaces
around soda fountain
nozzles, a nonfood contact
surface, not cleaned at
a frequency to preclude
accumulation of residue.
Tableware in salad prep
area not displayed so that
only handles are touched
by employees; corrected.
Dirty utensils in handwash sink indicate uses
other than hand-washing.
Ceiling tile, missing in the
back storage area, needs
replacement.
Rodas Coffee House, 53
McGovern Lane, June 6. No
violations.
State of Affairs Catering,
221 E. Frederick St., June 6.
No violations.
Banana Blossom, 111
Meadow View Drive,
Leola, June 4. Condiments
and bottles stored in
unclean carton lined with
newspaper instead of
container that is smooth
and easily cleanable.

violations.

Brettas Bread, 9 Water


St., Lititz, June 4. Food
handlers not washing
hands as indicated by dry
soap and paper towels in
catch basin.

accessible in bain-marie.

Joels BBQ, 104 Forest Hill


Road, Leola, follow-up,
June 4. No violations.

Aaron Fisher Frozen


Dessert@Country Side
Road Stand, 2966
Stumptown Road, Ronks,
June 2. Facility does not
have available sanitizer
test strips or test kit to
determine appropriate
sanitizer concentration
and does not have original
certificate for certified food
employee posted in public
view.

McCalls Ferry Farm, 9 N.


Water St., Lititz, June 4. No
violations.
Bird-in-Hand Bulk Foods,
Dried Fruits and Nuts, 2710
Old Philadelphia Pike, Birdin-Hand, complaint, June 3.
No violations.
Farmstead Gourmet, 515
N. Reading Road, Ephrata,
June 3. No utensil with
handle available at selfserve bulk candy display.
Scoop at self-serve pretzel
samples, on table, and
tongs for candy at front
counter, unprotected.
No placard, poster or
sign at self-service bulk
candy display indicating
ingredients/allergens;
available upon request.
Some prepackaged candy,
cookies and pretzels
packaged in the facility
do not contain either
address or distributor
name and address, net
weight, ingredients or
allergen information. A cup
and other item in handwashing sink indicate uses
other than hand-washing.
Sporadic, dead insects and
webbing along coving.
Lapp Valley Farm Trailer,
244 Mentzer Road, New
Holland, June 3. No
violations.
Lapps Produce, 955 E.
State St., Ephrata, followup, June 3. No violations.
Mecks Produce Farm
Stand, 1955 Beaver Valley
Pike, Strasburg, June 3.
Static dust accumulation on
walk-in cooler condensing
unit fan covers.
New Holland Exxon, 312
W. Main St., New Holland,
June 3. Deli items held at
45 degree in bain-marie,
rather than 41 degrees
or below as required.
Temperature-measuring
device for ensuring proper
temperature of equipment
not available or readily

Uncle Jerrys Kettle


Corn, 945 Girl Scout
Road, Stevens, June 3. No
violations.

American Music Theatre,


2425 Lincoln Highway E.,
June 2. Facility does not
have available quaternary
sanitizer test strips or
test kit to determine
appropriate sanitizer
concentration.
Assembly of Christian
Churches, 103 Locust St.,
June 2. No sign or poster at
hand-wash sink in the food
prep area to remind food
employees to wash their
hands.
Chesapeake Crab
Connection, 2834
Columbia Ave., June 2.
Prepackaged spices not
labeled properly with
ingredient statement or
net weight. Employee
washing off gloves used
for seafood in designated
hand-wash sink. Screen on
back door is torn and does
not protect against insects.
Several flies in processing
area.
Friendlys No. 7364,
2150 Lincoln Highway E.,
June 2. Food employee
in food prep area not
wearing beard cover. Tine/
temperature-controlledfor safety foods (eggs and
bacon) held at 52 degrees
in bain-marie, rather than
41 degrees or below as
required; items discarded.
Ice buildup on boxes of
food in walk-in freezer.
Floor tiles missing around
drain pipe in ware-wash
area. Light fixture in
ware-wash area missing
protective cover.
G.L. Doyle Co./Brown
St. Cafe, 40 Brown St.,
Elizabethtown, June 2. No

Figueroa: Longs Park


Continued from B1

the Latin Jazz Explosion, tonight at Longs Park.


Then, flautist Herbie Mann
stopped by the record store.
Mann was a regular customer there, Figueroa says.
After a year of friendly exchanges, Mann asked Figueroa
if he played any instruments
and if he wanted to jam with
him at a gig in New Yorks Village.
Mann liked what he heard.
I never left, Figueroa says.
He asked me to quit my job
and join his band.
After touring with Mann,
Figueroa went back to Puerto
Rico to join the Brazilianfunk-jazz fusion band Raices,
which means roots in Spanish. Once the band was signed
to Atlantic Records, Figueroa
returned to New York.

Funk and jazz


They were doing something completely new that
was Brazilian with funk and
jazz and all that, Figueroa
says. It was right up my alley.

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

Even though the group soon


disbanded, its frequent performances including a gig
opening for Miles Davis
gave Figueroa the exposure
needed to take his career to
the next level.
Figueroa has since performed with the Brecker
Brothers, Chaka Khan, Mariah Carey, Sonny Rollins, Diana Ross, Bette Midler and
David Bowie.
He was just an amazing human being, Figueroa says of
Bowie, who died earlier this
year. Very intelligent, very
artistic guy. He knew what he
wanted.
Figueroa also reconnected
with Davis years after that
opening gig and played with
his band, too, even sharing his
home with the iconic trumpeter for a time.
He was extremely brilliant and he was very genius,
Figueroa says. He was very
eccentric.
Figueroa also appeared often as a member of the house
bands on the Late Show with
David Letterman and Saturday Night Live.

Hen House Grilling, 317


Ridge Ave., New Holland,
June 2. No violations.
IHOP, 2319 Lincoln Highway
E., June 2. Food employee
in cooking area wearing
bracelet on arm. Food
employee on cooking line
drinking beverage from an
open cup. Food employee
in cooking area not wearing
proper hair restraints, such
as nets, hats, or beard
covers. Plumbing system
not maintained in good
repair: Water leaking from
pipe under dipper well.
Kountry Korner Drive-In,
610 Route 897, Reinholds,
June 2. Cardboard boxes
(surfaces that cannot be
cleaned and sanitized) for
other products reused as
food containers. Nonfood
contact surfaces (shelves)
not cleaned at a frequency
to preclude accumulation
of dirt and soil. Basement
door to outside, located
in rear of facility, is not
self-closing and/or is being
propped open.
Moes Southwest Grill, 530
Centerville Road, opening,
June 2. No violations.
Save-Mor Groceries, 138
E. Main St., New Holland,
June 2. Repackaged items
not properly labeled with
complete ingredients
as indicated on original
container, including
allergen information.
Scooters Restaurant, 921
Lititz Pike, Lititz, June 2.
Internal temperature of
feta cheese in bain-marie
measured 49 degrees;
discarded. Beverages
being stored directly in ice
bin compartment where
lines and cooling plate are
located. Low-temperature
dishwasher does not
have a manufacturer
data plate with operation
specifications. Ice chests
need to be cleaned. Old,
unused equipment on
dumpster pad. Broken floor
tiles in kitchen to left of
fryers and in beer cooler;
tiles are not smooth, easily
cleanable surfaces.
Star Buffet & Grill, 2232
Lincoln Highway E.,
complaint, June 2. Person
in charge is not performing
duties as required by the
Pa. Food Code to maintain
active managerial control
of food safety. Food

Move to Miami
After decades of nonstop recording and performing and
living in New York and Los
Angeles, Figueroa moved to
Miami, Florida, in 2001 with
the intention of rest.
It didnt quite go the way he
planned.
Figueroa occasionally played
at a club in Miami, and the
manager suggested he start
a band of his own a project
that would eventually become
the Latin Jazz Explosion.
I said, I dont know if I
could do that, because I dont
really know musicians in Miami, Figueroa says.
But Rachel Faro, a producer
and Figueroas business partner in Faro Figueroa Productions, helped him find local
musicians.
Before you knew it, I had
a band in less than a week,
Figueroa says.
The group played in the
same club every three weeks,
eventually adding original
music to its repertoire of covers. After just a few months,
the band had developed a massive following.
Figueroa and his bands first
recorded album, And Sammy

employees in food prep


area not wearing proper
hair restraints, such as
nets, hats, or beard covers.
Chicken, fish, egg rolls
in walk-in cooler stored
open with no covering.
Shrimp thawing in standing
water in sink, which is not
approved thawing method;
repeat. Refrigerated, readyto-eat, time/temperaturecontrolled-for-safety
food, prepared in the food
facility and held for more
than 24 hours in the walkin cooler, is not being datemarked. Facility has some
foods identified as raw but
does not have consumer
advisory statement on
menu or on placard in
sushi area. Can opener has
dried food residue on blade
surface. Ceiling tile missing
near the ice machine and
needs replacement.
Vinnie & Pats, 32 N.
Market St., Elizabethtown,
opening, June 2. Threecompartment sink has
welded seems that are
not smooth and easily
cleanable. Toilet room does
not have self-closing door.
Waffle House No. 1510,
1021 Dillerville Road, June
2. Temperature-measuring
device for ensuring proper
temperature of equipment
is not available or readily
accessible in all Delfield
cooling units. An irreversible
registering thermometer
or thermal strips are not
provided for measuring
utensil surface temperature
for the mechanical
dishwasher. Torn rubber
door gaskets on the Delfield
cooling unit nearest to cook
line; part has been ordered.
Hot water used for sanitizing
in mechanical ware-washing
machine did not reach 165
degrees for stationary rack.
After machine ran for a
few minutes, temperature
reached only 133 degrees.
Cooking pans stored clean
in drawer below cook line
have old food residue and
grease on them. Heavy
accumulation of a grease
buildup under entire cook
line. Outside dumpster lids
open. Holding area where
dumpsters are kept has
grease and debris inside.
Back door of facility has gap
and does not protect against
entry of insects, rodents and
other animals; door sweep
has been ordered.
New Friendly Mini Market,
401 N. Queen St., June
9. Ready-to-eat food
requiring date-marking was

Walked In, was nominated for


a Grammy in 2005. The bands
second album, The Magician
was also nominated, in 2007.
I said, What just happened, Figueroa says. From a
little group in a club to two
Grammy nominations, I said
to myself, Wow, this is crazy
the way things could happen.
The music he makes with the
Latin Jazz Explosion is more
intricate than some of his previous work.
This music is more complex, its more beautiful,
Figueroa says. Its not the
type of music that every musician can play. For the ear palate, its beautiful. The music is
so beautiful. It has a lot of substance, a lot of rhythms, a lot of
different cultures.
While the music is complex,
Figueroa says, its still inviting
to the ears, even to those not
attuned to Latin jazz music.
Its not your typical Latin
jazz, Figueroa says. This music is more viable to the ear. Its
easier to listen to than a lot of
the Latin jazz thats out there.

Radio show
In addition to performing
and recording with the Latin

beyond the date and was


discarded. Facility does
not have available sanitizer
test strips or test kit to
determine appropriate
sanitizer concentration.
Cleaning rags were in
hand-wash sink, indicating
uses other than handwashing. No sign or poster
at hand-wash sink in food
prep area to remind food
employees to wash their
hands. Facility is storing
overflow of merchandise
in aisles. All product is to
be removed and placed in
proper storage.

Pizza Palace, 555 28th


Division Highway, Lititz,
June 6. Person in charge
does not have adequate
knowledge of food safety,
as evidenced by this
noncompliant inspection.
Food employee donning
single-use gloves without
prior hand-wash. Pizza
paddles found stored on
cardboard above pizza
oven, which is not a smooth,
easily cleanable surface.
Ice cream scoop stored
in a container of roomtemperature water rather
than 135 degrees or above
as required. Wet wiping
cloths in back of kitchen not
stored in sanitizer solution.
Bag of flour found stored
directly on floor and not
on a clean surface. Internal
temperatures of shredded
mozzarella cheese, cut
melons, cut lettuce and
salad dressings on salad
bar measured 47 to 57
degrees and not below 41
degrees as required; repeat
violation. Time in lieu of
temperature being used in
the food facility to control
pizza and other salad bar
items, Time/temperaturecontrolled-for-safety foods
on the lunch buffet are
without written procedures
or documentation to verify
disposition of food. Deeply
scored cutting boards not
resurfaced or discarded
as required. Dough mixer
and hook had hardened
dough on exterior and in
mixing bowl. Hardened
food on can opener blade.
Cheese shredder stored
in dirty cardboard box
near three-bay sink on
floor and not in container
that is smooth and easily
cleanable. Containers of
food stored directly on
walk-in cooler floor, and not
6 inches above the floor.
Food handler filling plastic
container with water at
hand-washing sink.

INSPECTIONS, page B13

Jazz Explosion, Figueroa


hosts The Sammy Figueroa
Show on Miamis 88.9 FM.
Figueroa took interest in the
radio show, where he presents
a mix of jazz and interviews
musical guests, after he was
approached at a concert by
someone who worked at the
station in Florida.
They came up to me and
said, Man you have an incredible radio voice, says
Figueroa, who speaks in a
warm, inviting baritone.
Figueroa took a tour of the
station and decided to give
the show a try. He likens the
opportunity to his encounter
with Mann in the record store,
or connecting with any of the
notable musicians hes worked
with.
I think that life is all
about wonderful surprises,
Figueroa says. It really is.
Thats why Figueroa cant
really guess what will be next.
All he can do is welcome the
opportunity when it arrives,
he says.
I dont know whats next. I
guess Ill let the universe decide that for me, Figueroa says.
Because everything in my life
has been a surprise ... Im waiting for the next surprise.

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LOCAL/ADVICE

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

AMY DICKINSON
ASK AMY

Chief cook and bottle washer


wants to hang up apron
Dear Amy: I am lucky enough to have my adult
bachelor son (in his 30s) live near me. His
father and I are in our late 60s, both self-employed, and have no retirement savings. It was
always my dream to have an equal marriage,
have my own career and be financially independent, but because of the stressful nature of my
husbands business and limited employment
opportunities where we live, I ended up working part time and being a support person for the
family instead.
Because I dont make much money, I have
assumed responsibility for all the cooking and
housekeeping throughout my marriage, to make
sure I am doing my share.
I love having my son nearby, and I invite him
to dinner at least once a month. I dont, however, feel comfortable with him raiding my fridge
and cupboards and eating up all my leftovers
when he stops by uninvited.
He works full time and cant understand why
he should have to do all his own cooking and
cleaning too. He does not invite us to his house
for dinner, though he is sweet about taking me
out on my birthday and Mothers Day.
I have invited him to eat with us anytime he is
lonely, if he brings a potluck dish.
I spend far too much time in the kitchen. I
have gardened and cooked healthy, balanced
meals for the family for 40 years, which requires a lot of time and work. I feel guilty when
I set food limits for my son, and he rubs it in.
My husband never backed me up when I tried
to set limits for my children, and that attitude
has continued.
I need some reassurance that my viewpoint is
valid. My son has become a workaholic like his
father, and he never has time to take care of the
homemaking basics.
What do you think? Done In
Dear Done In: Just because you chose to be a
homemaker, it doesnt mean that you are relegated
to cook, clean and wait on the family for the rest of
your life. You need to convey to your family members that, except for certain hours and under specific
conditions, the kitchen is closed.
Tell your son your households leftovers from the

night before are not his for the taking. The groceries you shopped for and carried home are not
community property.
If your son charges into your kitchen and eats
the leftovers saved for that days meal, then your
hardworking husband is just going to have to be
hungry for a while. Tell him, Our son ate your
dinner.
Your sons choice to manipulate you over this
should embarrass him.
Dear Amy: Ive been off and on with a guy
for 21 years. I love him, but Ive never met
his family or friends. Im never invited to his
home, but he comes to mine (off and on).
Ive tried to break it off with him several
times.
Im getting older (we are both 54), and he
still does not want to commit. When I dont
hear from him, it hurts me to think hes with
someone else. Im sure he has someone else
in his life.
I think sometimes Im losing my mind, especially when Im with him. How do I get over
him and move on? Heartbroken
Dear Heartbroken: You can be sure that this
man has other people probably several other
people (including, possibly, wives and children).
Im so sorry you are locked into this unhealthy
relationship. It obviously makes you miserable.
You already know what you need to do, and that
is to leave it completely. Break up, cut off and
block all contact.
This will be like giving up nicotine or alcohol.
You should ask a close friend or family member to
help you through this, to hold your hand and offer
you support during those times when youre feeling down. Counseling would also help.
You were trained to tolerate this by a manipulator. In order to take your power back, you will have
to retrain yourself to get away, and stay away.
Dear Amy: Heartbroken is heartbroken
because her adult son is moving away.
Real heartbreak is when you lose your son
to an illness like I did!
Maybe this son has had enough of her
smothering! I would tell him to go for it, and
get far, far away from this helicopter mother.
Real Heartbreak
Dear Heartbreak: Im so sorry. And yes you
make an excellent point about perspective. Thank
you.

n Contact Amy Dickinson via email: askamy@tribpub.com.

You can also follow her on Twitter @askingamy or like her


on Facebook.

Births

College news

BRINKMAN, David and


Laura (Wickenheiser),
Lititz, a daughter, at Heart
of Lancaster Regional
Medical Center, Friday.

GRADUATIONS

DUNCAN, Michael A. and


Brittany (Zimmerman),
New Holland, a daughter,
at WellSpan Ephrata
Community Hospital,
Saturday.
GRIMM, Adam and
Cherita (Baton), Manheim,
a daughter, Heart of
Lancaster Regional Medical
Center, Friday.
MANTE, Michael, and
Cynthia A. Owusu, Akron,
a son, at WellSpan Ephrata
Community Hospital,
Friday.
STAUFFER, Michael and
Ida Mae (Martin), Ephrata,
a daughter, at Heart of
Lancaster Regional Medical
Center, Saturday.
TOMARCHIO, Amelia, and
Joseph P. Sheesley Jr.,
Ephrata, a son, at WellSpan
Ephrata Community
Hospital, Wednesday.
ZIMMERMAN, Joseph
H. and Maray (Horning),
Terre Hill, a daughter,
at WellSpan Ephrata
Community Hospital,
Saturday.

missiology. She is the


daughter of Michael and
Tanya Fisher, of Akron.

n Kathryn Hershey was

n David W. Trump,

of Lititz, graduated
summa cum laude with
a Bachelor of Science
degree in Business
Administration, with a
major in finance, from
Ohio State University,
Columbus, Ohio.
A 2013 graduate of
Manheim Township High
School, he is the son of
Wayne and Mary Rose
Trump, of Lititz.

n Area students were

Kathryn
Hershey

Neopaney, Grace Pelaez,


Jazman D. Ramos, Joshua
Rivera, Keysi Yanilsa
Rodriguez, Topez S. Rosser,
Ashley Sipe, Ali Rashaad
Sloan Sr., and Rachel C.
Smith.

among those who


graduated from the
Consolidated School of
Business on April 29.

Those earning diplomas:


Ashleah Eshbach, Jeanette
Santiago Caraballo, Buddha
Subedi, Cheryl Ann Vargas.

Those earning associate


in specialized business
degrees: Justina Louise
Brown, Edward A.
Chapple, Alexis M. Clark,
Kierstin Creasy, Valeri N.
De Len, Januka Dhakal,
Laxmi Dhungana,
Destiny Garcia, Marlene
Garcia Romero, Dianelis
Viviana Gonzalez-Cayo,
Anju Gurung, Hilda
Maria Gutierrez, Breanna
Rene Kemmick, Marisol
Manzo, Jacqueline
L. Marrero, Michael
Matsiko, Alexandria
Louis McDonnell, Tila

DEAN'S LIST
n Kate Hartsock was

named to the dean's list


for the spring semester
at Cedarville University,
where she is a sophomore
majoring in broadcasting
and digital media. She
is the daughter of Matt
and Audrey Hartsock, of
Ephrata.

n Katelyn Fisher was


named to the dean's list
for the spring semester
at Cedarville University,
where she is a sophomore
majoring in linguistics and

named to the dean's list


for the spring semester
at Temple University,
where she is a rising
sophomore majoring in
international business.
A 2015 graduate of
Manheim Central High
School, she is the
daughter of Don and
Mariah Hershey, of
Rapho Township.

n Brian Wehmeyer, of

Oxford, has been named


to the dean's list for the
winter term at Elmira
College, Elmira, New
York.

HONORS
n Lauren Hayden, of

Elizabethtown, was
recently inducted into
the Sigma Tau Delta
International English
Honor Society by the
English department at
Misericordia University.

n Email college news items


to collegenews@lnpnews.
com or mail them to College News, c/o LNP Media
Group, Inc., P.O. Box 1328,
Lancaster Pa. 17608-1328.
Please include a self-addressed stamped envelope
for photos to be returned.

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

B3

BRANDON ENGLE
UNITED WAY

Learn about opportunities


at centers July 12 session

Join the Volunteer Center and United Way of


Lancaster County for a volunteering information
session.
The Volunteer Center at United Way specializes
in connecting individuals and groups to meaningful
and rewarding volunteer opportunities in Lancaster County. On July 12, the Volunteer Center will
host two informational sessions for community
members to learn about volunteerism in Lancaster.
Those interested in volunteering in the community
will learn techniques for finding an opportunity or
position that will be the best fit.
A key component of these informational sessions
will be a demonstration of Get Connected, the Volunteer Centers online volunteer portal. Get Connected may be the single most powerful tool to stay
engaged in the community through volunteering.
The platform allows local nonprofits to post all of
their volunteer needs and events. For volunteers, it
provides one-stop shopping for volunteer opportunities throughout Lancaster County and a chance
to engage directly with volunteerism.
Whether you are interested in learning about volunteer programs through United Way of Lancaster
County such as Day of Caring, Martin Luther
King Jr. Day of Service, Volunteer Income Tax Assistance or just hoping to learn more about how
to connect with local nonprofits, we hope to see
you July 12. Email Volunteer@UWLanc.org or call
824-8122 to RSVP for this event.
For current ways to get involved and give back,
consider these opportunities:
Lampeter United Methodist Church Youth
Ministry wants your passion to help mentor and
serve youth in grades six through 12. Minimum
ages of 20 (to mentor middle school students) and
23 (to mentor high school students) are required
for volunteers. Reply to Todd.RestoreEarth@
ymail.com, or call 344-2438 to set up an appointment.
Tabor Community Services is seeking a longterm volunteer to be responsible for updating and
maintaining a provider/partner database. The ideal
volunteer will be self-motivated, organized, diligent, detail-oriented and dependable. The volunteer must enjoy phone work and basic data entry.
Contact Ann Linkey at ALinkey@TaborNet.org, or
call 358-9391 to learn more.
LancasterHistory.org is in need of volunteers
to assist guests and visitors in the museum store.
A museum store associates primary responsibilities include: conducting retail sales, greeting and
welcoming all customers, gift wrapping, demonstrating personalized salesmanship, assisting
the museum store manager with merchandise
deliveries, labeling merchandise using pricing/
inventory system, maintaining a clean work space
and stocked shelves, and assisting with inventory.
Staff will provide training for interested individuals. A minimum of two years retail experience is
required. Contact Info@LancasterHistory.org, or
call 392-4633.
Lancaster County Reach Out and Read is
thankful for all of the generous book donations
it receives. You and a group of your friends, coworkers, teammates or family can help support its
work by organizing a book drive for the program.
Visit Info@RORLancaster.org, or call 299-6372,
ext. 12217.
Volunteer your time to help seniors learn
computer skills. St. Peter Apartments, a part of the
Housing Development Corp., recently opened a
computer lab for residents, who are eager to learn
how to use computers. Volunteers would be paired
with one or two seniors. Scheduling can be flexible,
Monday through Friday. For more information,
contact Dora Brown at DBrown@HDCWeb.com or
call 684-7972.
Nonprofit organizations in Lancaster County are
encouraged to publish volunteer needs in this column. For a copy of submittal guidelines, or if you
have questions about volunteering in Lancaster
County, contact United Ways Volunteer Center at
824-8122 or email Volunteer@UWLanc.org.

n Brandon Engle is the volunteer center manager at United


Way of Lancaster County.

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B4

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

Entertainment
THEATER

JON FERGUSON
UNSCRIPTED

Musicians try
patience; a favorite
writer tempts fate
There was a drugstore not more than
a hundred yards from the house where
I spent my teenage years.
What I remember is that it had a
back entrance, and you had to climb
a set of stairs to enter the store. But
more importantly, the store included a
small stock of record albums.
I became a familiar face to the
employees there because I would
frequently show up to thumb through
the albums, not knowing what I would
find.
One day my fingers stopped when I
happened upon a particularly peculiar
album cover. I pulled it out of the bin,
examining what at first glance looked
like black-and-white cartoon images
of four familiar faces. Around the
edges of the faces and peeking out of
their hair were black-and-white photos of John Lennon, Paul McCartney,
George Harrison and Ringo Starr.
What I held in my hand was a copy
of Revolver, arguably the best album
I own.
What a happy surprise. I had no
idea the Beatles had a new album in
the stores; I found it completely by
chance. I hadnt been counting down
the days until the albums release
because, back then, I never had any
forewarning that an album was about
to drop.

Like magic
Albums just magically appeared,
and it didnt seem like you ever had to
wait too terribly long for a new batch
of songs from a favorite artist.
Which was true. In the United
States, the Beatles released six albums in 1964, three more in 1965, and
a miserly two in 1966. The Rolling
Stones released three albums in 1965
and two the following year. Bob Dylan
released three of his best albums
during about an 18-month period in
1965-66.
That all quickly changed both
the frequency with which musicians
unleashed new tunes on the world
and my blissfully haphazard method
for buying albums.
I learned impatience when the
norm became one album a year.
Anticipation became my enemy, and
my irritation grew when the period
between albums grew.
Bruce Springsteen, for example,
released just eight albums from 1973
to 1987, two of which came out that
first year.

A little crazy
Patience has never been one of
my virtues, and that kind of release
schedule drove me a little crazy.
Unfortunately, my exasperation
with musicians not delivering the
goods in what I considered a timely
manner grew to include writers. And
writers are even more notorious for
testing the patience of their audiences.
Happily, one of my favorite authors
is Stephen King, who writes like a
man possessed (which he probably
is), cranking out books at an almost
alarming rate. He writes so quickly
that I sometimes worry I wont be
able to keep up.
Sadly, one of my other favorite writers is Robert Caro.
Caro, a former investigative reporter who writes in longhand, is the
best biographer of his generation (or
perhaps any generation) and has won
two Pulitzer Prizes and one National
Book Award.
But to say Caro writes at a snails
pace does a disservice to snails, who
are positively speedy by comparison.
Heres the problem: 34 years ago
Caro released the first volume of what
was planned as a trilogy about the life
of President Lyndon B. Johnson.
The project has now grown to a
projected five books, and the fourth
volume was released in 2012. The
fifth book is a work in progress.
Robert Caro turns 81 in October.
Its no longer a test of patience; its a
race against mortality.

n Jon Ferguson is assistant content editor for


entertainment and features. Unscripted is a
weekly entertainment column produced by a
rotating team of writers.

RICHARD HERTZLER | STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

Rachael Haber stars as Mary Poppins in the current production at the Dutch Apple Dinner Theatre.

MARY POPPINS MAGIC


Dutch Apple production breaks out a little bag of tricks

JANE HOLAHAN

JHOLAHAN@LNPNEWS.COM

Everyone knows Mary Poppins. She


was, in effect, our nanny.
In the series of books written by
P.L. Travers and the movie starring
Julie Andrews, she took us kids on
amazing adventures, taught us crazy
words, and helped as all to be our better selves.
But Mary Poppins was not a warm
and fuzzy nanny. Far from it.
She is very forward, and she says
whats on her mind, says Rachael
Haber, who portrays her in the production of Mary Poppins now at
Dutch Apple Dinner Theatre.
Shes the difference between a stern
nanny and a lovey-dovey nanny, adds
Ryan Gibbs, who is directing the show.
She always does what should be done.
She leads by example.
Oh, and she flies something she
will do during the Dutch Apple show.
Unfortunately, she will not fly over
peoples seats, as she did on Broadway.
But Gibbs says there is plenty of
magic in the show. Weve got a fun
little bag of tricks. And there is a ton of
dancing, he says.
Thats the trick in finding a Mary,
he adds. She has to tap a lot. This is a
huge dance show. Samantha Hewes
Cramer, fresh from Footloose at the
Fulton, is choreographer.

First-time Mary
This is Habers first time playing
Mary Poppins and her first time at
the Dutch Apple, though she has been
working at Dutch Apples sister theater in Florida, the Broadway Palm,
for the last year.
I saw the show on Broadway with
my mom when I was a kid. When
Mary flew over us, my mother started

IF YOU
GO

n What:

Mary
Poppins.

bawling, Haber recalls with a laugh.


And we all watched the movie.
The music is great. We just learned
Lets Go Fly a Kite, and it is different from the musical. It will give you
chills, she said.
You cant beat the Sherman Brothers (who wrote the songs for the film),
Gibbs says. They wrote the childhood
songbook of America.
Gibbs, who is originally from York
County and worked at the Dutch
Apple about 15 years ago, has been involved with the show for years.
I was the stage manager for the second national tour the one that came
to Hershey, Gibbs says. And I was
supervising Mary Poppins: Vienna.
Its very tricky to stage-manage,
he says. Its a 13-tractor-trailer show.
There is a lot of technical (equipment)
moving around.

Appeals to adults, too


So whats the appeal of the story?
Weve had the book for over 80
years, the film for 50, and Broadway
for 10, Gibbs says. It is in our DNA as
a culture. Youve got three, four generations, maybe even five, with different
experiences.
Gibbs has watched audiences watch
it for years.
Ive noticed that everyone has different things they are looking for, or
they have their favorite moments, he
says.
It is one of those rare stories that
you see and appreciate both as a child
and as an adult.
The musical is influenced by both
the movie and the books. Scenes and
situations from the movie are not in
the show, but others, not in the movie,
have been added.
Theres plenty of Disney magic in

n Where: Dutch

Apple Dinner Theatre,


510 Centerville Road.

n When:
Through
Aug. 6.

the show, Gibbs says.

Presence of greatness

As Bert, the chimney sweep, explains to the audience, Mary Poppins


simply appeared at the doorstep of the
Banks family at 17 Cherry Tree Lane
in London.
She is desperately needed. Michael
and Jane, the children of George and
Winifred Banks, are little monsters.
The last nanny stormed out of the
house. She couldnt handle these two
out-of-control kids.
Mary takes control right away, and it
doesnt take too long for Michael and
Jane to start behaving.
You know that feeling when you
are in presence of greatness? Gibbs
asks. The kids sense that about Mary.
They, all of a sudden, sense someone
they cant steamroll. Its an unstoppable force meeting an immovable
object, and the rest of the show comes
out of that.
But it isnt just the children who
benefit from Marys presence.
Mrs. Banks cant make her husband understand how difficult her life
seems to her, and Mr. Banks has trouble at the bank where he works as well
as at home.
Meanwhile, Mary takes the kids
on great adventures and introduces
them to Bert.
I always thought that Bert was the
last child she took care of, and they
have a great friendship, Haber says.
Gibbs notes that the company is putting its own spin on the show.
Its got similar bones to the Broadway production, he says. We are taking the footprint of the original production and infusing it with joy. We
want to make it a joyous experience
for everyone.

n Tickets:
$21-$60.

n Information:

dutchapple.com
or 898-1900.

THEATER REVIEW

Rainbows Perfect
Wedding a goofy romp
MARY ELLEN WRIGHT
MWRIGHT@LNPNEWS.COM

Four slamming doors, a hungover groom-to-be


who cant remember why he woke up in bed with
a woman whos not his fiancee, a wacky maid and a
wailing, overly sentimental mother-of-the-bride.
Combine these elements inside two wallpapered
rooms of an increasingly claustrophobic hotel
suite on a wedding weekend in Connecticut, and
you have the makings of a classic farce but not of
a perfect wedding.
Perfect Wedding is the ironic title of the broad
comedy, written by Robin Hawdon and directed
by David DiSavino, playing through mid-August at
REVIEW, page B5

SUZETTE WENGER | STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

Angela DeAngelo, center, tries to control Jessa Lynn Casner, left, and
Rachel Faust during Perfect Wedding at Rainbow Comedy Playhouse.

ENTERTAINMENT / LIVING

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

B5

Review: Perfect Wedding brings out everyones foibles


Continued from B4

Rainbows Comedy Playhouse


in Paradise.
Bill, the groom, played by
Sam Shea, wakes up the morning of his wedding and the
morning after his bachelor party beside Judy (Jessa Lynn
Casner), a lovely young woman
hes never seen before. His aching head wont let him remember how they both got there.
Bill has to hide Judy in the
bathroom, because his betrothed, the beautiful but
bossy bride-to-be, Rachel (Rachel Faust), needs the suite
to get ready for the wedding.
Bill pleads with his best man,
Tom (Rosser Lamason), to
claim the girl in the bathroom
was his conquest not the
grooms to keep the wedding on track and Rachel in the
dark about the night before.

Managing to confuse Julie,


the maid (Angela DeAngelo),
with Judy, the mystery woman
and mistaking one of them
for a call girl Tom gets the
maid involved in the weddingday deception.

A tryst
Too bad Tom already has a
girlfriend coming to the wedding. Hows he going to explain
pretending to have a tryst with
another woman?
You just know all these secrets wont stay buried; there
are just too many women in
the bridal suite. Rachel smells
a rat, and when Rachels not
happy, no ones happy.
The two couples keep the
action moving forward at a
good pace, milking the laughs
from the occasionally goofy

IF YOU GO
n What: Perfect Wedding.
n Where: Rainbows Comedy

Playhouse, 3065 Lincoln Highway


E., Paradise.
n When: Through Aug. 13.
Wednesday and Thursday, meal
11:30 a.m., show 1 p.m.; Friday and
Saturday, meal 6:30 p.m., show 8
p.m. Other days, options available.
n Cost: $30-$56.
n Contact: 800-292-4301;
rainbowcomedy.com

dialogue and fighting with and


lecturing each other loudly.
Friends turn against each other, forbidden love grows and a
toilet brush is passed around
more than any germophobe
would like to see.
Meanwhile, stealing pretty

much every scene shes in is


DeAngelo as the maid, who can
assess the romantic tension in
the room maybe Bill isnt
really all that keen on his bullying bride, and maybe Tom
and his girlfriend wouldnt
be headed for bliss, even if he
werent owning up to a faux
one-night stand.
Julie is a stock character
right out of Italian commedia dellarte Columbina,
the strong servant who understands the situation better than anyones else. Amid
the plays mistaken identities,
mouthy Julie knows exactly
who she is and how to take
care of herself. And DeAngelo
is a riot of a tough little bulldog in the role.
The mother of the bride,
dressed in brilliant purple with
an elaborate fuschia hat and

Walk Lancaster
Continued from B1

easy it is, literally, to


reach every corner of
town on foot.
With sidewalks everywhere, few steep hills,
traffic lights at major
intersections and most
streets only one or two
lanes wide, a person in
good health, using a reasonable amount of caution, can walk anywhere
with few obstacles.
Walking from one end
of town to the other took
me about 45 minutes,
and an active day can
easily include destinations in all four corners
of the city.
Restaurants,
coffee
shops, bars, churches,
theaters, friends houses, museums, corner
stores, hair salons, professional offices, galleries, drugstores, the
library,
government
buildings all are easily
reachable on foot.
Even a round-trip
walk from the far northwest neighborhood near
Franklin & Marshall
College to Lancaster
County Central Park, in
the far Southeast, can be
accomplished in an afternoon.

Look up, look


down
I thought I knew Lancaster pretty well, but
when I really started
looking around and
up and down I realized how much I had
missed over the years.
For one thing, I counted two dozen colorful
murals, large and small,
on main thoroughfares
and in small alleys
many of them celebrating children, cultures,
individual
neighborhoods or city life in general.
Houses of worship,
large and small, are everywhere. Sure, there
are historic St. James

Episcopal and Trinity Lutheran, but there


are also Iglesia Pentacostal Tabernaculo de
Reunion, the Lancaster
Metaphysical
Chapel,
Leglise de Dieu de la
Nouvelle Alliance, New
Life City Church, Iglesia
Evangilica Menonita El
Buen Pastor and Faith
Tabernacle Church of
God in Christ.
Small businesses of all
kinds fill city storefronts.
Dozens of them are barber shops and salons. On
West King Street alone
are Jornelys Hair Salon,
advertising Dominican
style, Bencosme Barber Shop, Alices African
Hair Braiding & Beauty
Supply and Champs
Barber School.
I also started seeking
out and reading historical plaques and displays,
which are scattered all
over town.
At Queen and Orange,
I learned about 18thcentury Jewish merchant Joseph Simon,
who helped establish
Lancaster as a center for
exploration, trade and
settlement.
Inside the new garage
at Queen and Chestnut, I saw great photos
of the train station that
once stood on that site.
And at South Christian
and Dauphin streets, I
learned about Joe Jackson, a Lancaster soldier
who collected supplies
for children in Vietnam
shortly before meeting
his death in that war.
Above me, I saw faded
business signs, such as
the Westenberger, Maley & Myers Furniture
sign on the west side of
Excelsior Hall on East
King Street. Beneath my
feet, I saw small brass
plaques and stamps for
S.J. Fulginiti, W.M. Oster, Joseph A. Eibel &
Co. and other masons
who built the sidewalks.
Others also left mes-

and ride a bike when it


rains.
Traveling on foot allows for the best combination of freedom, spontaneity and attention to
surroundings.

Joy of roaming

TIM BUCKWALTER | STAFF WRITER

This slender rowhouse sits at the intersection of Marietta


Avenue and West King Street.

sages on the sidewalk,


either engraved Luis-N-Aida,
T.B.+B.S.
4EVER, Someday never comes or in chalk:
Somebody loves you.
All over town, I was beguiled by the short, tiny
residential alley streets,
including Olive Street
and Wise Avenue in the
northeast, Atlantic Avenue and Palm Street in
the Southeast, Chambers Street and Lee Avenue in the northwest and
Groff Avenue and Lake
Street in the southwest.

Minor complaints
My only real complaints in travels around
town were the occasional sidewalks in really bad
repair and drivers who
made turns at intersections and failed to yield
to pedestrians in the
crosswalk.
Even with the flashing
walk sign, you cant
step off the curb without verifying that drivers

Stop in for one


of our Amish-style
desserts by

More than
Just 717.426.2210
Italian!

Chef Mike Livelsberger

Enjoy Our
Fresh
SAT-SUN
EVENING
DEALS!
Homemade Baked Goods!
Ice cream, homemade cheesecakes,
cannolis, tiramisu, and more!

Established in 1974

Call us for birthdays


and events

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Dont forget

played by Cynthia DiSavino,


blubbers over her baby getting
married, and inadvertently
makes matters worse by putting the brides gown on the
other woman for alterations.
DiSavino also has designed a
thoughtfully decorated, functional set thats completely believable as a hotel suite.
The acting is as broad as the
over-the-top comedic writing
in this show. The door-slamming comedy of misunderstandings and mistaken identities, after all, is Rainbows
bread and butter.
Perfect Wedding wont
make you think too hard, and
its resolution is a bit improbable. But, if the reaction of a recent Rainbow audience is any
indication, the show will certainly make you laugh a lot at
some universal human foibles.

The Best Italian Bread in Lancaster County!


Every Meal Includes Fresh Bread

making turns are going


to stop.
The more I got used to
walking everywhere, the
less interest I had even in
bicycling, let alone driving. A bike needs to be
parked and locked. Plus,
you have to watch out for
cars and curbs, and you
should wear a helmet,
which is safe but not very
fun. And you cant very
easily carry an umbrella

Another thing I learned


anew was to just set aside
stereotypes and expectations, and roam.
Sure, some neighborhoods are richer or poorer
than others, but there
are well-kept blocks and
struggling blocks in all
parts of town, and interesting details everywhere.
There can even be
lots of variation within
a block. Among my favorites are the odd, tiny
houses that sometimes
nestle inconspicuously
in the middle of a block
of larger homes.
Encounters with people vary as well.
In nearly every neighborhood, I found friendly
folks quick with a smile
and a greeting, as well as
those with no interest in
acknowledging another
stranger on the street. I
detected no real patterns
by neighborhood, age,
gender or race.
In terms of safety, I can
speak of only my own experience, and wouldnt
presume to tell others
where and when to feel
comfortable wandering.
But in my daytime for-

ays in every part of town,


I never encountered a
hostile word or action.

A sidewalk debate

On the contrary, I experienced some friendly


and pleasant encounters, sometimes when I
least expected them.
One occurred on the
most
hardscrabble
stretch of Manor Street,
before I had even begun
my official quest.
At mid-afternoon on a
Sunday, I passed a man
and a woman, probably
in their 60s, sitting on
the stoop of a tiny bungalow.
Excuse me, sir. ... Sir!
Can I ask you a question? the man, dressed
in a flannel shirt and
baseball cap called out
sternly as I passed by.
I stopped in my tracks
and turned his way.
Sure, I replied, trying
my best to sound open
and unguarded.
His face looked serious.
Which do you think is
more important, math
or reading? Weve been
sitting here discussing
it, and I just wondered
what you think.
Hmmm. Not a question I anticipated, and, to
be honest, not the place
I anticipated it. But the
three of us had a nice
chat, trying to sort that
one out together.
So what do YOU think?

B6

MOVIES IN REVIEW

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

Independence Day resurfaces 20 years later


MARC SPITZ

to know, I wont let you down, Randy


Quaid says when volunteering to pilot a jet in Film 1. Hes gone this time
around and sorely missed.
Plus: Maika Monroe, star of the horror film It Follows, plays the former
presidents daughter. And Liam Hemsworths fighter pilot, Jake Morrison, is
Errol Flynn-like.

NEW YORK TIMES

Perhaps its fate that today is the


Fourth of July, and you will once again
be fighting for our freedom, not from
tyranny, oppression or persecution
but from annihilation!
Maybe you remember the patriotic
climax of Independence Day in 1996.
It was a doozy of a speech, but has it become iconic enough to resonate after
20 years? How many moviegoers really recall that moment when Bill Pullmans unshakable President Thomas
J. Whitmore proclaims, Were fighting for our right to live, to exist, as he
sends a young squadron of pilots (and
a drunken one played by Randy Quaid)
to do battle with murderous alien invaders who have destroyed much of
the planet.
Even if you dont recall it, Roland
Emmerich, the outspoken director of
the original as well as the new Independence Day: Resurgence, doesnt
really care. Im always against sequels, he said via phone. Theyre exactly the same. He sees Resurgence
as a new film that just happens to be
anchored by some of the same actors.
But he was coaxed into Franchise Land
by the tremendous advances in visual
effects (the original won the Oscar in
that category). We had to wait for it to
catch up, he said.
For those who dont remember the
first, it earned more than $800 million
at the global box office and made Will
Smith, then 28, a worldwide summer
brand. Its success kicked off the first
barrage of big-budget disaster films
since the early-70s heyday of The
Poseidon Adventure and The Towering Inferno. Mega-grossers like Armageddon owe it some respect.

DVDS
Heres whats coming to DVD
Tuesday:
KUNG FU PANDA 3
Po reunites
with his
long-lost
dad, and
the pair
embark on
a journey
to a secret
panda
paradise. When
a supernatural villain named
Kai tries to defeat all Kung Fu
masters, Po must teach Kung
Fu to an entire village of goofy,
clumsy pandas before Kai reaches
them.
WHISKEY TANGO FOXTROT
Tina Fey plays
Kim Baker, a
cable news
producer
who is
looking
for a new
challenge.
She takes
an overseas
assignment in Kabul, Afghanistan.
Suddenly in a volatile war zone,
the journalist finds comfort in the
company of other reporters and
learns valuable lessons during her
journey.

EYE IN THE SKY


U.K.-based military officer Col.
Katharine Powell (Helen Mirren)
orders a drone strike to capture
a group of terrorists in Kenya.
Powell soon discovers that the
terrorists are planning a suicide
bombing and the mission
changes from capture to kill.
But when a 9-year-old girl enters
the target zone, the mission
becomes more complicated.
ADVENTURES IN BABYSITTING
In the latest
Disney
Channel
Original
Movie,
Sabrina
Carpenter
and Sofia
Carson star
as teens who
are supposed to be
babysitting a group of children at
home, but end up spending the
night on a wild adventure in the
big city. The movie is a remake of
the 1987 film of the same name.

The society

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Aliens re-invade the planet in Independence Day: Resurgence.

Still, 20 years between the same part


is a challenge for an actor. Jeff Goldblum, who is reprising his role as the
wisecracking scientist David Levinson,
cant remember many actors who have
taken on the same role two decades later. Its like Paul Newman in The Hustler and the Color of Money, he said
via phone. Even he had to rewatch the
original film. Making a ton of money
and being iconic are probably not the
same thing, Goldblum admitted, adding blithely, Who knows how deep an
impression it really has made and how
welcome it will be?
What has changed on and offscreen
will surely play a role in the films fate
if not the Earths this time around.
Heres a sampling.

The size
Plus: This ones in 3-D and IMAX

3-D. The ships are bigger, the aliens


scarier and more bloodthirsty, and the
technology is more advanced. We even
have bases on the moon and Saturn
(well, briefly).

The stars
Minus: The notion of an Independence Day without Will Smith is, to
some, like, well, Men in Black without Will Smith. He stole the first ID
by punching out an alien (Welcome
to Earth!), but hes not around for this
one. While his characters absence is
explained in the new film, and his son
(played by Jessie T. Usher) has taken over the family business of flying
through space, its certainly conspicuous.
Minus: Ever since I was kidnapped
by aliens 10 years ago, Ive been dying
for some payback, and I just want you

Whats playing
Heres whats playing in
Lancaster County this
weekend.
Alice Through the
Looking Glass (PG, 93
minutes, fantasy) Alice (Mia
Wasikowska) returns to
Wonderland and helps her
troubled friend, the Mad
Hatter (Johnny Depp), and
keeps Wonderland from
being destroyed.
The Angry Birds Movie
(PG, 97 minutes, animated)
Based on the popular app,
this movie explains how the
birds, who lived happily on
Bird Island, got angry when
green piggies came to the
island. Red (voice of Jason
Sudeikis), was an angry
bird before it became cool
to be an angry bird and he
must find out about those
piggies.
Batman v Superman:
Dawn of Justice (PG-13,
151 minutes, superhero
action) Batman fears
Superman is out of control
and the two do battle with
each other. While they are
fighting, a new threat looms:
Doomsday, created by Lex
Luthor, which could destroy
Metropolis.
Captain America: Civil
War (PG-13, 146 minutes,
superhero action) The
Avengers take different sides
on whether the government
should regulate their actions
or if they should be free of
any kind of government
regulations.
Central Intelligence
(PG-13, 117 minutes, action
comedy) Dwayne (The
Rock) Johnson and Kevin
Hart join forces to fight a
top secret case in Central
Intelligence.
The Conjuring 2 (R,
133 minutes, horror) Vera
Farmiga and Patrick Wilson
return as Lorraine and Ed
Warren, and this time they
travel to London, where a
single mom and her four
children are plagued by evil
spirits in their home.
Dheepan (R, 115 minutes,
drama) Three refugees
from Sri Lanka work to
build a new life in France.
But the area in which they
find themselves has its own
conflicts.
Finding Dory (PG-103
minutes, animation) The
forgetful Dory is happily
living close to Marlin and
Nemo, but she realizes she
needs to find her parents.
The trio sets sail to find
them in this long-awaited
sequel to Finding Nemo.

The Fits (72 minutes,


drama) Toni, an 11-year-old
tomboy, joins a tight-knit
dance troupe in Cincinnati.
Toni finds herself in danger
when members of the group
begin suffering from fainting

spells and violent fits.


Free State of Jones (R,
139 minutes, drama/action)
Matthew McConaughey is
Newt Knight, a Southern
farmer who creates a rebel
army of other farmers and
local slaves to battle the
Confederacy during the Civil
War.
Independence Day:
Resurgence (PG-13,
120 minutes, action/scifi) Liam Hemsworth and
Jeff Goldblum star in this
reboot of the 1996 film.
Aliens attack Earth once
more, with a battalion thats
stronger than ever.
The Jungle Book (PG,
95 minutes, adventure)
Rudyard Kiplings book
about Mowgli (Neel Sethi)
and his journey of selfdiscovery is done in live
action, with the voices
of Bill Murray, Iris Elba,
Ben Kingsley, Scarlett
Johansson, Lupita Nyongo,
Christopher Walken and
Garry Shandling.
The Lobster (R, 118
minutes, comedy) Colin
Farrell stars as David, a man
who has just been dumped
by his wife. David lives in a
society where single people
have 45 days to find true
love, or else they are turned
into the animal of their
choice and released into
the woods. After several
romantic misadventures he
decides to join up with a
rebel faction known as The
Loners, a group founded
on the idea of complete
rejection of romance. Once
there he starts falling for
Rachel Weisz.
Love and Friendship (PG,
92 minutes, comedy) Whit
Stillman tackles a short
novel Jane Austen never
published. Widow Lady
Susan (Kate Beckinsale)
invites herself to her in-laws
estate to find husbands for
her daughter and herself.

Me Before You (PG-13,


110 minutes, romance)
A perky young woman
(Emma Clarke) becomes
the caregiver for a bitter
parapalegic (Sam Claftin)
and the two fall in love.
Based on the bestseller by
Jo Jo Moyes.
Money Monster (R, 98
minutes, thriller) George
Clooney hosts a financial
show and Julia Roberts
is his producer. When a
man comes on the set and
threatens everyone with a
bomb, the two must find out
why he lost so much money
on his investment.
Neighbors 2: Sorority
Rising (R, 92 minutes,
comedy) The Radnors have
managed to sell their badly
located house but the new
owners have 30 days to
back out. Unfortunately

Plus: The glass ceiling has shattered.


Not only is the president of the United
States a woman (Sela Ward), but Vivica
A. Fox, Smiths wife in Film 1, is also no
longer an exotic dancer. Shes a staid
health care worker.
Plus: Gay heroes prevail. Dr. Brakish Okun (Brent Spiner) wakes from a
20-year alien-induced coma (Did we
win?), and hes loud, proud and armed
with lasers. Okun greets a benevolent,
super-intelligent orb with the Streisand-ian Hello, gorgeous!
Minus: But where is Harvey Fierstein, who played Goldblums colleague in Film 1?
Plus: Supersize globalism. Nations
have put their petty differences aside
in the wake of the first round of devastation. Earthlings now live in a virtual one-world state. Americans share
space stations with the Chinese, consult with the Germans and enlist the
help of African warlords.
Minus: After 9/11, the tsunami of
2004 and Hurricane Katrina, is watching the utter destruction of cities on
film as entertaining as it was back in
1996? Quite honestly, no.
Plus and minus?: Cineaste hipsterism has gone mainstream. Charlotte
Gainsbourg is in this film, and Von Trier-less, she smiles!

STREAMING
for the Radnors, a sorority
with something to prove
that women can party
as much as men moves
in next door. Seth Rogan,
Rose Byrne, Zac Ephron and
Chloe Grace Moretz star.

Neon Demon (R, 117


minutes, drama/thriller)
Jesse (Elle Fanning) moves
to Los Angeles to pursue a
modeling career. She soon
encounters women who
become obsessed with
her youth and beauty and
will resort to any means
necessary including
violence to take it from
her.
The Nice Guys (R, 116
minutes, drama) A pair of
detectives (Ryan Gosling
and Russell Crowe) stumble
into a sprawling conspiracy
while investigating the
alleged suicide of a onceprominent female porn star
in the Los Angeles of the
1970s.
Now You See Me 2 (PG13, 115 minutes, thriller)
The Four Horsemen
(Jesse Eisenberg, Woody
Harrelson, Dave Franco,
Lizzy Caplan) return, this
time to expose a tech
wizard (Daniel Radcliffe),
but he is the one behind
their vanishing act.
The Shallows (PG-13, 87
minutes, horror/survival)
Blake Lively is Nancy, a
young pro surfer who is
attacked by a shark. Nancy
finds herself stranded on
a rock, and needs to find
a way to make it back to
shore without being bit
again. No reviews available.
Teenage Mutant Ninja
Turtles: Out of the
Shadows (PG-13, 108
minutes, action animation)
Michelangelo, Donatello,
Leonardo and Raphael are
back, ready to keep the
world safe once again.
Warcraft (PG-13, 100
minutes, action sci fi) Based
on the video game, this film
explores the battle between
the Orcs, who must find a
new home, and the humans,
who must defend theirs.
X-Men: Apocalypse (PG13, 143 minutes, superhero
action) Worshiped as a
god for thousands of years,
Apocalypse, the first and
most powerful mutant
from the X-Men universe,
awakens and is disillusioned
with the world. He recruits
mutants to create a new
world order. A team of
young X-Men must save
the world from Apocalypse
before its too late.
Zootopia (PG, 108
minutes, animated comedy)
Zootopia is a place where all
kinds of animals, from the
tiniest shrew to the largest
elephant, live together.

Celebrate the official arrival of summer


with these warm-weather movies, all
available for streaming on Netflix.
SEVEN YEAR ITCH
After sending his
wife and son to
Maine for a summer
vacation, Richard
(Tom Ewell) becomes
infatuated with a
gorgeous model
(Marilyn Monroe)
who moves into his
apartment building
during a summer
heat wave. Richard considers cheating
on his wife with the blonde bombshell,
who is mostly only interested in his air
conditioning. (1955)
GREASE
Will a summer romance
continue to thrive
back at school?
Straight-laced
Sandy and bad
boy Danny seem
like total opposites,
and their summer
fling gets a bit more
complicated once school
starts again. Refresh your memory on the
lyrics of Summer Nights before your next
karaoke outing. (1978)
WET HOT AMERICAN SUMMER
Hormonally
charged
teenagers
(played by
adults) take
a final shot
at romance
before camp
ends in this
spoof of 1980s summer camp spoof.
Bradley Cooper, Elizabeth Banks, Paul
Rudd, Amy Poehler and others star in this
indie comedy. (2001)
THE ENDLESS SUMMER
Documentarian Bruce
Brown follows
two surfers on
an international
surfing trip when
the water in their
home of California
becomes too cold
to surf in. The surfers
chase warmer climates
and play with the idea that one can follow
warm climates year-round, thus living in an
endless summer. (1966)

THE SANDLOT
When school lets out, a group of children
devote their time to playing baseball
at a nearby field. The ramshackle team
encounters the Beast, a terrifying dog
that lives near the field. When a baseball
signed by Babe Ruth goes over the fence
into the Beasts territory, the players have
to find a way to get the ball back. (1993)

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

B7

Health & Fitness


MENS HEALTH

Male anorexia often goes


undiagnosed, untreated

FOTOLIA

One expert estimates that 80 percent of eating disorders in men go undiagnosed.


CHERYL STRITZEL
MCCARTHY
CHICAGO TRIBUNE

CHICAGO Eighteen months ago, Alex


Levy, then 19, fell while
rock climbing, injuring
his foot. He was midway
through freshman year
at college in California.
Levy loved to hike, cycle
and run. He played Ultimate Frisbee on a school
team.
The foot injury didnt
only snap bones and
rupture ligaments. It
snapped off physical activity and ruptured social interaction.
I thought, I dont want
to fall out of shape, Levy
says, so Ill eat less, eat
healthier.
I started to lose
weight. That became a
matter of pride. People
would comment. I would
feel good, though I was
essentially starving myself.
What Levy had tried to
control began controlling him.
I was restricting, my
body was malnourished,
the injuries piled up.
Im a musician, but I
had nerve damage in my
hands. I couldnt play
music. By the time summer came around, instead of one injury, I had
six. Carpal tunnel and
tendinitis plagued ankles, elbows, a shoulder.
The summer camp hed
always attended was out
of the question.
I never thought Id
have an eating disorder.
As a guy, I thought, men
dont have that. I cant
have that. Thats what
made me hide it.
I didnt consider that
all this was happening
because I was malnourishing myself.
Dr. Kimberli McCallum, founder and director of McCallum Place
eating disorder centers
in St. Louis, guesses 80
percent of eating disorders in men go undiagnosed.
Its hard to know. We
need more research.
There are many barriers to recognition of the
illness, even to access to
care. Out of 50 residential treatment centers,
only five that McCallum
knows of admit men.
I really think men
and boys arent getting
treatment at all. Instead
theyre worked up for
gastrointestinal problems, or told their pulse
is low because theyre
athletic, or sent for psy-

Even the best statistics, which


range from 5 to 25 percent, are
probably a gross underestimate of the
percentage of anorexics who are men.
Dr. Brad E.R. Smith, Rogers Memorial Hospital

chotherapy thats not


specialized.
Sometimes the primary care doctor will think
its an endocrine or thyroid problem. They dont
think to screen young
men for eating disorder.
A study of 2,822 students on a large university campus found 3.6 percent of men had eating
disorders. The female to
male ratio was 3-to-1.
The
most
widely
quoted study, according
to the National Eating
Disorders Association,
shows men represent 25
percent of all anorexia
and bulimia nervosa
cases, and 36 percent of
binge eating disorders.
Dr. Brad E.R. Smith,
medical director of the
multilocation
Rogers
Memorial Hospital behavioral health system,
agrees research is needed on numbers.
Even the best statistics, which range from 5
to 25 percent, are probably a gross underestimate of the percentage
of anorexics who are
men.
In early stages, eating
disorders can be devilishly difficult to diagnose. It often starts with
positive intentions to

become healthier. Some


sports emphasize leanness for performance
or aesthetics. Extra
training can precipitate
weight loss.
Many people start
out with those patterns,
and everything turns out
fine, Smith says. McCallum concurs, saying
most athletes naturally
become hungrier and eat
more when in training.
But some become engrossed with caloric
intake and body shape.
The obsession begins to
affect daily life, to the exclusion of relationships
and activities. Men with
eating disorders are less
likely to lose weight in an
alarming way and more
likely to try to sculpt
their muscles. Men at
risk are more likely to
have been overweight
before.
When should parents
seek help? Smith and
McCallum say early signs
can include rigid eating
rules, a quick change in
weight, excessive exercise, using diet pills or
laxatives and hiding food.
Help them get help,
even if they dont want
it, Levy says. Eating
disorders make people
say and do hurtful things.

Break down that persons


walls.
Experts stress that developing an eating disorder is not a choice, but
recovery is, and recovery is possible.
Now, Levy is excited
about his summer job
in Manhattan and returning to college. Joe
is thinking about becoming an advocate for
awareness of eating disorders, for college athletes and others.
I never thought Id
have an eating disorder.
As a guy, I thought, men
dont have that. I cant
have that. Thats what
made me hide it.
Levy agrees. There
was this idea I had to
be strong enough to fix
this on my own. I saw
therapy as unnecessary
and a sign of weakness to
engage in it. Turns out, I
needed it.

LEARN MORE
n National Eating

Disorders Association,
nedawareness.org.
n Eating Disorder Hope,
eatingdisorderhope.com.
n The Alliance for Eating
Disorders Awareness,
allianceforeatingdisorders.
com.

If youre
p
planning a family,
you should also
plan on how to
protect them.

DIET

Lactose intolerance
can develop at any age
MAYO CLINIC NEWS NETWORK

Dear Mayo Clinic: What would cause someone to become lactose-intolerant later in life?
Im in my 40s and have never had an issue
with dairy, but, now, I cant seem to have it
without problems. Do I need to see a doctor to
be tested for allergies, or should I just avoid
dairy?
Answer: Lactose intolerance isnt a true allergy,
and it can develop at any age. In some people, lactose intolerance may be triggered by another medical condition, such as Crohns disease. In others,
it develops without a specific underlying cause. It
would be a good idea to have your condition evaluated by your doctor to confirm what youre dealing
with truly is lactose intolerance.
Sometimes, lactose intolerance develops when
the small intestines production of lactase decreases after an illness, injury or surgery involving
the small intestine. This is called secondary lactose intolerance. Among the diseases associated
with this kind of lactose intolerance are celiac
disease, bacterial overgrowth and Crohns disease.
Treatment of the underlying disorder may restore
lactase levels and improve symptoms.
More common than secondary lactose intolerance is primary lactose intolerance. People who
develop primary lactose intolerance start life
making normal levels of lactase a necessity for
infants, who get all their nutrition from milk. If
you have lactose intolerance, there isnt a way to
cure it. The most effective way for people with lactose intolerance to get relief from symptoms is to
lower the amount of dairy products they eat. You
may be able to use dairy products that have reduced levels of lactose or are lactose-free. Some
people who have lactose intolerance benefit from
taking lactase enzyme supplements as well.
If test results do not point to lactose intolerance,
your doctor may recommend additional tests to
check for another condition that could be causing
your symptoms, such as a milk allergy, intestinal
disorders or other problems within your digestive
tract.

PIXABAY

Lactose intolerance may or may not have an underlying


cause in older people, but it can develop at any age.

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CTT S
Scan?
can?
Are you still experiencing
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havent gotten answers?
We have state-of-the-art
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B8

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

Food
Step

JENELLE JANCI
THE PRESS TABLE

After graham cake


disaster, banana bread
recipe is dependable
A few months ago, my dad stopped by my
place with a silver gift bag full of recipes
clipped out of newspapers, others hand
scrawled on notecards and floral stationary.
They were from my grandmothers house,
which my uncle has started cleaning out since
he retired from his full-time job last year.
I sifted through the bag for a new culinary
challenge to write about for this column. I
thought that maybe by recreating an unfamiliar recipe, written in my grandmothers
slanted cursive on nearly 40-year-old paper,
Id feel a special connection to her.
There was risk involved, though. Grammy
died in 2004, so I couldnt call her for clarification.
I selected a recipe written on rose-colored
paper titled Irmas Graham Cracker Cake, a
concoction bearing my great-aunts name. It
called for crushed graham crackers and walnuts, copious amounts of Spry (a Crisco-like
shortening this millennial had never heard
of ) and piles of sugar.
As I opened the oven with hopeful eyes, the
cake looked deflated.
Its sunken nature only worsened with time,
caving in completely as it cooled. I covered
the sad, brown brick in melted chocolate and
fluff in hopes of creating a Smores-inspired
treat, but even that couldnt save it. When I
cut the cake open, I was horrified to find that
the inside was a pasty mess and the outside
was hard enough to chip a tooth.
Grammy, its safe to say I needed your help
with this one.
So, this week, I wont be sharing Irmas Graham Cracker Cake with you. I cant do that in
good conscience.
Instead, heres a recipe that 10-year-old me
was smart enough to learn from Grammy herself: a simple banana bread.
This became a staple for me in college,
where my options were quick breakfast or no
breakfast at all.
I remember standing side-by-side with
Grammy at her kitchen counter as she made
this banana bread. When it came time for the
vanilla, her shaky hands poured in a bit more
than the teaspoon this recipe calls for.
I gasped, thinking that wed have to start
over with new batter.
Instead, Grammy just laughed. Itll just
have a little more flavor, she assured me.
The bread still came out perfectly.
I wish I could have learned more recipes
from Grammy while I had the chance. But,
baking mishaps like this weeks make me
even more grateful for the ones she patiently
showed me.

Step

CAKE and
ICE CREAM in one

Step

3
ANN FULTON | LNP COLUMNIST

This finished cake with frozen ice cream in the middle is perfect for a summer afternoon.

ANN FULTON

This dessert, perfect for a summer birthday, can be


assembled ahead of time and kept frozen

METRO CREATIVE CONNECTION

Banana bread can even be used as a college


breakfast staple.

GRAMMYS BANANA BREAD


n 3 ripe bananas, peeled and mashed
n 1 stick of butter
n cup of milk
n 1 teaspoon of baking soda
n 1 teaspoon of vanilla
n 2 cups of flour
n 2 eggs
n 1 cup of sugar
Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Cream sugar, butter
and vanilla. In a separate bowl, combine flour
and baking soda. Add flour mixture gradually
to wet batter. Add milk. Grease and flour a loaf
pan. Bake for 50-60 minutes. Check doneness by
poking with a toothpick. If toothpick is clean when
removed, the bread is done.

n Jenelle Janci welcomes email at jjanci@lnpnews.

com. The Press Table is a weekly column written by a


rotating group of LNP staff members.

A few weeks ago, I was working


at my computer when the doorbell
rang. Although I got up right away,
I opened the door to find no one
there. A quick glance up and down
the street revealed nobody, but as
I turned to close the door I noticed
a yellow rose, attractively wrapped
with a pretty bow, propped on the
stoop.
Was this some sort of fundraiser
or social media craze? Was the
rose actually meant for me or
did one of my boys have a secret
admirer?
A few minutes later, I left for a
meeting and, while there, asked
someone if she had heard of some
new fad involving a yellow rose.
She had not. By the time I arrived home, my older son had just
returned from track practice at
McCaskey, and I asked him if he
knew about the rose.
It was from me, he said. When
I asked him how he managed to
get the rose to me when he was at
practice, the most heart-warming
story was revealed.
After a hard meet the day before,
the distance runners were running
an easy loop through the city when
John noticed his name on the sign
at Flowers by Paulette. In all my
years driving through downtown

Lancaster, I never noticed that


theres a new name on the sign
every day. If your name is on the
sign, you get a free rose. Well, this
particular Tuesday was John day.
He mentioned to his teammates
that he would love to give a rose to
his mom and that there had been
a John day last year that he found
out about too late. Suddenly, he
said, there was a chorus of You
have to!
But it was a hot day, and John
commented that he couldnt go
into the shop because he didnt
have a shirt. Thoughtfully, one of
his teammates lent him his sweaty
T-shirt. John got the rose, and
the team agreed to run all the way
to our house so that John could
deliver it.
Mind you, this was not exactly
on their route and nothing was in
it for the other boys except the
good feeling of doing something
thoughtful for someone else.
Until this point, I wouldnt have
imagined that a single yellow rose
could have such an impact. The
thoughtfulness of my son was
wonderful, but the buy-in from
the whole group of teenagers was
nothing short of heartwarming.
Later, I asked the coach (a McCaskey classmate of mine) if he

knew what the boys were up


to that afternoon. They hadnt
revealed their route deviation,
so I filled him in. Knowing how
this simple gesture brightened
my day big time my only
wish was that each of those boys
could see their name on the
sign.
In a few days, John will turn
18. As he officially makes the
step from child to adult, I
thought it might be fun to share
one of his favorite treats.
This make-ahead dessert is
perfect on a hot summer night
and a surefire hit for a birthday
celebration any time of year.
Most recently, I made this
cool cake with mint chocolate
chip ice cream the birthday
boys favorite but it can be
customized with cake and ice
cream flavors of your choice.
JOHNS FAVORITE ICE CREAM CAKE,
page B9

n Have questions or comments about

Ann Fultons column? Check out her


blog at fountainavenuekitchen.com or at
facebook.com/thefountainavenuekitchen. She also welcomes email at ann@
fountainavenuekitchen.com.

FOOD

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

B9

JOHNS FAVORITE ICE CREAM CAKE

Continued from B8

Makes 16 servings (12 if youre my family)


This cake is quite easy to make and can
be done in stages. To allow for adequate
freezing time, its best to start a day or two
in advance.
For the freshest look and taste, I like to
do the final assembly of the cake layers
the day the cake will be served, leaving at
least a couple of hours for it to sit in the
freezer.

Ingredients:
n 1 (15.25-ounce) package chocolate cake

mix (or flavor of choice or your favorite


homemade cake)
n 1 1/2 quarts ice cream, softened
n Cool Whip or whipped cream for icing
n Optional: Sprinkles, chopped cookies or
candy bar pieces, etc.

Directions:
Prepare the cake according to package
directions in two 9-inch round cake pans.
Line the bottom of the pans with
parchment paper rounds for easy removal.
Cool completely.
At this point the cake layers may be

wrapped well and refrigerated for up to


two days.
Once the cake layers have been removed
from the pans, line one of the clean
pans with plastic wrap, leaving plenty of
overhang to use as handles later.
Spread the softened ice cream in the
pan, packing it down and smoothing the
surface. Freeze until completely firm. This
step may be done several days in advance
of the final assembly as well.
To assemble the cake: When the ice cream
is very firm, place one of the cooled cake
layers face down (flat bottom facing up)
on a cake plate.
Using the plastic wrap, remove the ice
cream from the pan (if needed, use a
dinner knife to pry it loose), peel off the
plastic wrap, and center the ice cream on
the first cake layer.
Place the second cake layer over the ice
cream, rounded side up this time. At this
point, I take a knife and spread the ice
cream to fill in any gaps and make smooth
sides to the cake. Return the cake to the
freezer for a few minutes to several hours
to ensure the ice cream is firm before icing.
Lastly, ice the cake with the whipped

ESTHER MARTIN
COUPON CUTTING MOM

Deals on summertime
stuff, from personal care
items to picnics
Summertime is officially here, and that means
picnics, pool days and so much more. Todays LNP
contains $115 worth of coupons that will save you
money on everything from sunscreen for those days
in the sun to condiments for your next barbecue.
Check out these noteworthy coupons found in
todays paper:
50 cents off one Heinz yellow mustard.
55 cents off one Texas Pete hot sauce.
Dunkin Donuts VIP card for $1.99 any size ice
tea in July.
$5 off one FreeStyle Precision Neo glucose
meter.
$4 off any Centrum Vitamints.
$3 off one Opti-Free multipurpose solution.
$1 off any one Coppertone product.
$1 off one box of Hefty tall kitchen bags.
75 cents off one Resolve carpet stain remover.
$1 off one Zest Fruitboost shower gel.
$2 off two Right Guard body washes.

CVS
Coke or Dr. Pepper 2 liter bottles are 99 cents this
week at CVS. Use the 25-cent CVS instant coupon
from the in-store machine and pay 74 cents.
Twizzlers and Jolly Ranchers are two for $4. Combined with the $1 off two 12-17.6-ounce Twizzlers or

cream, and decorate with sprinkles, cookie,


or candy pieces, if desired. Return to the
freezer until ready to eat. Once the cake
is completely frozen, carefully cover it to
avoid drying out.
If the fully assembled cake has been frozen
for a few hours, allow it to sit at room
temperature for about 5 minutes before
slicing with a large, sharp knife. If the cake
has been frozen overnight, it will likely
need to sit for closer 15 minutes before
cutting. The cake layer should be softened
enough to cut without enormous effort.

Notes:
n Watch baking time carefully so as not

to over-bake and dry out the cake. I have


found the times listed on some storebought mixes to be several minutes too
long in my oven.
n Make sure you have room in your
freezer for the cake and the platter on
which it will be served. If you are taking
it somewhere, make sure your host has
room.

Additional tips:
n If at any point during assembly the

ice cream layer becomes too soft, simply


return it to the freezer to firm up before

13-15.4-ounce Jolly Rancher coupon from the May


15 LNP SmartSource, you will pay $1.50 per candy
pack.
Wonderful-brand pistachios (16-ounce package)
are $8.99 and combined with the 50 cents off one
Wonderful Pistachios coupon from todays LNP
SmartSource you pay $8.49. Also, earn a $2 Extra
Care Buck, which brings your total to only $6.49.
Colgate Total mouthwash is on sale for $3.99. Use
the $2 Colgate mouthwash coupon from todays
LNP SmartSource and pay $1.99. This purchase will
earn a $1 Extra Care Buck and bring the final cost to
just 99 cents.

Rite Aid
This week at Rite Aid, Centrum Vitamints
(60-count package) are $6.99 on sale. Combined
with the $4 Centrum coupon from todays LNP
SmartSource, the price is $2.99. Schick disposable
razors are priced at $5.99, and when you buy $20
worth of select Schick products, you get $8 in Plenti
Points.
Here is a deal idea that will bring your razor packs
to just 99 cents each: Buy four Schick womens
razors at $5.99 each and use four $3 off one Schick
womens disposable razor coupons from todays
LNP SmartSource (purchase four papers to get
four coupons) and pay only $11.96. This purchase
will then earn $8 in Plenti Points, which brings the
final cost to 99 cents per pack. Also, be sure to check
todays LNP SmartSource for an offer that will earn
you a free movie ticket with this Schick purchase.
This week with an in-ad coupon, you can earn up
to $50 in Plenti Points for transferring your prescriptions to Rite Aid.

Walgreens
Use this weeks in-ad Walgreens coupon and get
Jell-O gelatin or instant pudding for two for $1.

Pineapple juice is secret ingredient in salmon marinade


MELISSA DARABIAN
ASSOCIATED PRESS

I try to get fish on my


familys table two or
three times a week. The
research describing the
incredible heart and
brain benefits to eating
fish, especially fatty fish
like salmon, is compelling.
An extra bonus? Fatty
fish is more filling, too,
which means Im less
hungry for late-night
snacks a few hours after
dinner.
However, many home
cooks shy away from
making salmon, thinking
it is too strong or fishy.
With a few tips, you can
be on your way to restaurant-quality salmon
dishes.
First tip: Buy salmon
straight from the fish
counter. Because it is
so perishable, the fish
counter often will have
gorgeous wild salmon
on sale. The fish should
smell like a salty ocean,
not fishy. Buy it and
make it the same day.
Second tip: Use high
heat, and dont overcook. The longer salmon
cooks, the stronger the
flavor, so a quick hightemp cook will keep the
flavor mild, making outdoor grilling an ideal
method for salmon cookery.
Cook to medium rare
for best results the
interior of the salmon
should be still pink and
moist, not completely
opaque, and certainly
not dry enough to be
flaked.

Last tip: Try marinating the salmon to balance the flavor. Even a
simple marinade of a
little lemon juice, olive
oil and salt and pepper
will make a noticeable, if
subtle, difference in the
final result.
My secret ingredient
for salmon marinades is
pineapple juice, which
adds both a little sweetness and a touch of acid,
both ideal for a good, flavorful soak.
And even in the winter:
Take heart this recipe
works beautifully for oven-roasting, too.

PINEAPPLE JUICE
MARINATED SALMON
Start to finish: 15 minutes
Yield: varies
n cup pineapple juice
n cup soy sauce
n 2 teaspoons freshly
grated ginger
n cup chopped green
onion
n teaspoon sriracha, or
other hot sauce
n 2 tablespoons
grapeseed or other neutral
oil
n Parsley and lemon slices
for garnish, optional
n 4 5-ounce fillets of wild
salmon

Mix the pineapple juice, soy


sauce, ginger, green onion,
sriracha or hot sauce and
oil in a medium bowl. Place
half the marinade in a small
bowl and set aside. Place the
salmon fillets in the medium
bowl and coat well with the
marinade. Marinate for 20
minutes or up to 12 hours.
When ready to serve, heat
the grill to medium high.
Grill the fish until just cooked
through, about 4 minutes
per side. Meanwhile, heat the
reserved marinade in a small
sauce pan until simmering.
Spoon on the cooked
salmon to serve. Garnish
with chopped parsley and
sliced lemon, if desired.

proceeding.
n We tend to keep this cake basic, but
you could sprinkle chopped candy or
cookies on ice cream before placing
the second cake layer, or add them as
a decoration on top of the cake after
frosting.
n Its also fun to match the decoration to
the ice cream flavor. For example, if youre
using cookies and cream or Heath bar
ice cream, you may wish to top the cake
with Oreos or Heath/Skor bars. Just avoid
ingredients that will freeze rock hard.
n If youd like to write a message with
decorating icing (a friend also told me that
Magic Shell works well), it will be easier to
do once the whipped cream has frozen.
n Also, I find its best to use a cake recipe
or mix that calls for oil instead of butter.
The texture will be better once frozen. The
same goes for the icing. A buttercream
icing is likely to become hard and crack.
Cool Whip or freshly whipped cream that
has been stabilized with a little sugar tend
to freeze quite well.
n Lastly, if using a gluten-free cake mix,
follow the same suggestions and simply
start with a cake that youve had success
with before.

Swedish Fish or Sour Patch Kids (8-ounce packs) are


on sale for two for $3. Combine this candy sale with
the $1 off two Swedish Fish/Sour Patch coupon from
the LNP May 22 coupon and pay $1 each.
Colgate toothpaste (4.6- or 6-ounce package) is
on sale for $2.50. Buy two packs of toothpaste and
use the $1 off two Colgate coupon from todays LNP
SmartSource to pay $4. This purchase then earns
$3 in Register Rewards, which brings the cost to 50
cents each.

Target
Check out the Deal Days of Summer in todays Target circular. These deals run daily through July 4 and
include savings on everything from beauty supplies
to $10 off a $50 grocery purchase.
Target gift card offers this week include:

Buy two select Up & Up diapers and receive
a $10 Target gift card.

Buy two select baby formulas and receive a
$10 Target gift card.

Buy four select beauty or personal care
products and receive a $5 Target gift card. If purchasing the Dove hair products included in this offer,
be sure to use the $3 off two Dove coupon from the
LNP June 12 Red Plum.
Coppertone Sport sunscreen is $8.99. Combined
with the $1 Coppertone coupon from todays LNP
SmartSource, you pay $7.99. If you purchase the
Coppertone on Tuesday, be sure to use the in-ad offer to save an additional 20 percent off your sun care
purchase.
When you buy three Country Time, Kool-Aid
and Crystal Light powdered drink mixes, you get
one free with this weeks Target sale. Be sure to use
the $1 off two drink mix coupon from todays LNP
SmartSource for even greater savings.
Summer fun and sun is never better than when
youre also swimming in savings like all these pool
party and picnic deals.

n Not all areas receive the same inserts. Read more from

Esther Martins Coupon Cutting Mom blog at bit.ly/LNPCouponMom.

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B10 SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

Travel
DESTINATION

YOULL ANGLE FOR A


STAY AT THIS FISHING CAMP
Colorados South Park,
three hours from Denver, is
a pure mountain wilderness
ANNE Z. COOKE

TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE

LAKE GEORGE, Colo. If youve


tried three flies and still havent
hooked one of these guys, Scott Tarrant said, wading farther out into the
Tarryall River, remember what the
old-timers say: Foam is home. Follow
the bubbles.
Sounds like a beer drinkers election
slogan to me, said Josh, the groups
self-appointed comedian, peering into
the ripples swirling around a fallen
tree trunk.
Fishermen would know that a
line of bubbles is where two currents
meet. Its like a conveyor belt sweeping fish and floating insects together,
explained Tarrant, manager at Fishing Camp, a fishing lodge in Colorados
South Park, three hours from Denver.
Crossing the river that morning, off
for an early run in the Lost Creek Wilderness, I was thinking more about Kit
Carson and Jim Bridger than about
trout. Best-known of the fur trappers
and mountain men who explored
the Rocky Mountains in the early decades of the 1800s, Carson and Bridger
camped in the mountain paradise
they called South Park and knew it
well.
I remembered hiking with my dad to
our favorite mountain streams, learning which fly to use and how to spot the
eddies where the trout lurked.
After he was gone, the rods and reels
went back in the closet for good. And
if it hadnt been for an invitation to a
wedding at the historic Broadmoor
Hotel in Colorado Springs, I wouldnt
have been at Fishing Camp at all.
With that invitation came two nights
at the legendary Broadmoor, at the
foot of the Rocky Mountains, a luxury
vacation destination popular since the
hotel opened in 1918.
This is where I learned about the
Broadmoors newest venture, three
back-country camps inspired by the
hotels new owner, Philip Anschutz, a
student and admirer of western traditions and history.
With the Rocky Mountains right
there in the hotels backyard, the time
was ripe for offering the kind of authentic wilderness and ranch experiences that adventuresome travelers

TRIBUNE NEWS MEDIA PHOTOS

South Park, the wilderness paradise where so many mountain men wintered over in the late 1830s, remains mostly undeveloped.

n The nitty gritty: South Park is a region

of meadows, streams and low peaks


west of the Front Range of the Rocky
Mountains and east of the Sawatch Range
and Collegiate Peaks. Linked by river
valleys to Middle Park and North Park, also
in Colorado, it provided a thoroughfare
for fur trappers traveling from Taos, New
Mexico, to Wyoming and Utah.

say they want.


Accordingly, the Ranch at Emerald
Valley, a cowboy-style outfit at 8,200
feet in the Pike National Forest, was
the first to open, in 2013. Cloud Camp,
at 9,200 feet on Cheyenne Mountain,
opened the following year.
For Anschutz, who told me he discovered Colorado during the summer
vacations his parents organized, the
idea of recreating an old-time fishing lodge, with a big front porch, pine
plank floors, rustic log cabins to bunk
in and family-style dinners, must have
been percolating.
FISHING, page B11

The Tarryall River, flowing through grassy meadows south to low hills and rock formations, meets the South Platte River north of Lake George, Colo.

LATIN AMERICA

Enjoy the best of Montevideo,


from the old city to the beach
Uruguays
capital offers
markets and
museums, with
wineries nearby

ATTRACTION

Presidents statue
returns to homestead
Standing
Lincoln being
installed today
at sculptors
property in New
Hampshire

MICHELLE LOCKE

HOLLY RAMER

M O N T E V I D E O,
Uruguay Uruguays
capital city, Montevideo, may not be as wellknown to international
travelers as some of
Latin Americas other
destinations. But theres
plenty here to see and
do, and its a relatively
short hop and worthy
side trip from Buenos
Aires, Argentina.
Laid-back and friendly, Montevideo has a
mellow vibe. Experience
it as you savor a tasty
chivito (steak sandwich)
at a sidewalk cafe, or on a
sunny stroll along a wide
sandy beach. Gaze over
the rooftops of the old
city at sunset and take
in the oddly appealing
mix of elegant buildings
rubbing stone shoulders

CONCORD, N.H.
More than a century after the promise of plenty of Lincoln-shaped
men attracted one of
the greatest sculptors of
the late 19th century to
rural New Hampshire,
a replica of his famed
monument to the fallen
president is being installed on the grounds
of his former home and
studio.
Abraham
Lincoln:
The Man more commonly referred to as
Standing Lincoln
was commissioned in
1884 for Lincoln Park
in Chicago. The 12-foot
bronze statue by Augustus Saint-Gaudens
shows a larger-thanlife Lincoln standing
in front of a chair, head

ASSOCIATED PRESS

ASSOCIATED PRESS

ASSOCIATED PRESS

This is the main hall of Montevideos Legislative Palace. The green-jacketed guards
are keeping watch over a glass case containing Uruguays Declaration of Independence and First Constitution signed July 18, 1830.

with squat, concrete


blocks.
Here are a few suggestions on making the
most of your visit.

Whats new
The renovated Mer-

cado Agricola market at


2220 Jose L. Terra has
everything from asado
(barbecued meat) to gelato to handcrafted gifts.
It is home to cafes and a
small brewery. Open 9
a.m.-10 p.m. daily.
Another rejuvenated

classic is the Sofitel Casino Carrasco and Spa.


Formerly known as
the Hotel Carrasco, the
beachfront luxury hotel
opened in 1921. Albert
Einstein stayed here in
its early years, and the
URUGUAY, page B11

ASSOCIATED PRESS

A plaster cast of former


President Abraham Lincoln sits at the studio of
Augustus Saint-Gaudens in
Cornish, N.H.

slightly bowed, left hand


grasping the lapel of his
coat.
Dedicated in 1887, it
was greeted with uniform respect, says Thayer Tolles, curator of
American paintings and
sculpture at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Lincolns son, Robert
Todd Lincoln, deemed it
the best likeness of his
father ever made.
I really think it was
the Standing Lincoln

LINCOLN, page B11

TRAVEL

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

B11

Travels & Trips


If your school, nonprofit club or organization is offering
a trip, tour or a travelogue open to the public, please
send us a typed notice in care of Travels, Trips & Tours,
LNP, P.O. Box 1328, Lancaster, PA 17608-1328. Our fax
number is 399-6507. Email address is estark@lnpnews.
com. Please include day of the week with the date of
your trip. See examples. Due to space, trips will run one
time. Deadline to submit is noon Tuesday.

This bath
house is a
convenience
for guests
in Fishing
Camps two
most rustic
cabins.

MUDDY CREEK LUTHERAN CHURCH


n Saturday, July 23: The Franklin Institute and Penn

Museum. Includes two exhibits at the Franklin Institute,


Lost Egypt and The Science Behind Pixar, plus the
Imax theaters National Parks Adventure. Also includes
The Golden Age of King Midas at the Penn Museum.
Includes bus, evening meal. Cost: 62 and over, $114; 19-61,
$116; 13-18, $108; 5-12, $93.
n Saturday, Aug. 6: Stone Harbor Arts and Crafts Festival
in New Jersey. Includes bus, evening meal. Cost: 62 and
over, $99; 61 and under, $101.
n Saturday, Aug. 20: Music Man at the Candlelight
Theatre Dinner Theatre near Wilmington, Delaware.
Includes bus, meal and show. Cost: 62 and over, $85; 13-61,
$87; 4-12, $69.
n Wednesday, Aug. 24: River Lady Boat Cruise and
Historic Smithville, New Jersey. Includes bus and meal on
authentic paddlewheel cruise. Historic Smith Village has
more than than 40 unique shops. Cost: 62 and over, $96;
61 and under, $98.
n Saturday, Sept. 10: Newseum and Washington, D.C.
Includes bus, museum, guided tour of city. Cost: 62 and
over, $115; 19-61, $117; 13-18, $110.; 5-12, $100.
Call Brenda Berger, 336-6886, or email bergerb@dejazzd.com.

EXCHANGE RATES
These foreign exchange selling rates, as of the close of
business June 22, 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. $

Australian Dollar (AUD)

0.8185

1.22

Canadian Dollar (CAD)

0.8416

1.19

Swiss Franc (CHF)

1.1256

0.89

Danish Kroner (DKK)

0.1638

6.11

Euro (EUR)

1.2225

0.82

British Pound (GBP)

1.5983

0.63

Japanese Yen (JPY)

0.01011

98.91

Mexican Peso (MXN)

0.05925

16.88

Norwegian Kroner (NOK)

0.1307

7.65

New Zealand Dollar (NZD)

0.7815

1.28

Scottish Pound (GBP)

1.5983

0.63

Swedish Kroner(SEK)

0.1308

7.65

Lincoln
Continued from B10

that really put him on


the map in a national
way, Tolles says. This
is the likeness of Lincoln
that all other artists after
that aspired to emulate
and were moved by.
Tolles calls todays
unveiling of the replica
thrilling. The ceremony is part of the celebration of the National Park
Services centennial.

Farmer
model used
Born in 1848, SaintGaudens grew up in New
York and returned there
after studying in Paris.
In 1885, his attorney and
friend persuaded him to
visit what would become
his longtime summer
retreat in Cornish, New
Hampshire, by telling
him there were plenty
of Lincoln-shaped men
up there.
Saint-Gaudens ended
up using a 6-foot-4-inch
farmer from nearby
Windsor, Vermont, as
his model, even having
him walk through fields
and mud wearing clothing similar to Lincolns
to obtain the presidents
slightly rumpled look.
Saint-Gaudens also relied on a life mask of Lincolns face and casts of
Lincolns hands, as well
as his own memories of
the president. As a teen,
Saint-Gaudens had seen
the president-elect during a parade in New York
and later viewed Lincolns body lying in state,
Tolles says.
This isnt the first time
the monument has been
recast. A replica was presented to Great Britain

TRIBUNE NEWS MEDIA

Fishing: Take jeep to Lost Creek


Continued from B10

There it remained, according to a spokesman


in Anschutzs office, until
he was out for a drive and
spotted an abandoned log
cabin on a former homestead in South Park.
When a little digging
revealed that the cabin,
on 76 acres, was not only
next to one of Colorados
top-rated trout streams
but that 5 miles of the
river frontage was private land, Fishing Camp
became a reality.

Rustic, not
spartan
For all its connections
with the Broadmoor,
Fishing Camp is wonderfully rustic, the kind

of place where everyone


feels at home. But spartan it isnt.
The main lodge, originally a homesteaders
cabin, is now restored,
rebuilt, re-chinked, reroofed, enlarged and insulated.
The lighting and
electricity have been
upgraded to current
standards. Bigger windows let in light and an
improved pine board
floor resists muddy
boots.
Tapestry-size Navajo
rugs hang on the walls,
surrounded by last centurys western memorabilia:
snowshoes,
buckets, cowboy hats,
antlers, several mounted fish, decoy ducks,

period lanterns, antique


fishing rods, a collection
of wicker creels and a
canoe and paddle, the
last propped overhead
on the rafters.
Seven different small
log cabins, each sleeping
two to eight guests, have
also been updated with
new chinking and insulation.
The door frames
are old, the doors and
screens are new. The
rooms were small; the
new rooms have been
rearranged to add more
space.
Upgraded
lighting,
comfy sofas and chairs
and framed 1930s magazine ads promoting rods
and reels, continue the
theme.

For others

If you dont want to


hike, ask about fourwheel jeep trails into
the Lost Creek Wilderness, where a network of
trails go from one photo
op to the next: arresting
rock formations, eagles
nests, marshy meadows,
sage-covered
sunny
slopes and half-ruined
pioneer cabin sites.
Wannabe cowboys can
take a guided horseback
ride at Tarryall River
Ranch, just off the highway, 3 miles south of
Fishing Camp.
Also in the vicinity is a
classic one-room school
house, built in 1921,
standing on the same site
where its predecessor,
built in 1898, once stood.

Uruguay: Historic sites, late nights


This is the
exterior of
the Legislative Palace
in Montevideo, where
Uruguays
parliament
meets. English-speaking
guided tours
of the palace
are available
twice a day.

Continued from B10

IF YOU GO
n Saint-Gaudens National
Historic Site.

n 139 Saint-Gaudens Road,


Cornish, New Hampshire.

n Open 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.


daily, May-October.
n Admission is $7 for ages
16 and over.
n Information at nps.gov/
saga/

in 1920; in 1964, President Lyndon Johnson


presented a copy to Mexico. Johnson later signed
legislation creating the
Saint-Gaudens National
Historical Site in Cornish, which includes the
sculptors home, studio
and gardens.
Standing
Lincoln
became the first large
public monument that
Saint-Gaudens completed in Cornish, according
to Rick Kendall, the site
superintendent.
He fell in love with
Cornish, continued to
come back in the summers year after year,
and finally made it his
full-time home around
1900, Kendall says.
Lincoln is really why we
have a national park in
Cornish today.
The
statue
will
be installed atop a
43,000-pound base of
New Hampshire granite and will be the first
sculpture visitors see
when they arrive, he
says.

Rolling Stones were


recent guests. Reopened in 2013 following a thoughtful
renovation, the hotels rooms start at
around $250.
A relative newcomer to Montevideos
extensive
museum
scene is the contemporary art museum,
Espacio de Arte Contemporaneo,
1930
Arenal Grande. Here
the setting may be
as interesting as the
exhibits: Its housed
in what was a 19thcentury prison. Free,
its open 2-8 p.m.
Wednesday- Saturday; 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Sunday.

Classic
attractions
Although it can get
busy, the Mercado
del Puerto market in
the Ciudad Vieja (old
city) is worth a visit. A
popular spot for asado
is El Palenque.
For a dose of history,
try the Legislative
Palace.
Highlights
include
uniformed
guards watching over
the glass case containing the national
constitution. Open
Monday-Friday. Visits are by guided tour
only (available in
English) at 10:30 a.m.
and 2:30 p.m. Enter
from Avenida General
Flores, $3.
Plaza
Indepen-

Looking for an

Exciting Getaway?

Here are just a few ideas...


Fall Foliage Tour, Alexandra Bay, NY October 4-7, 2016

ASSOCIATED PRESS

dencia (Independence
Square), at the beginning
of Avenida 18 de Julio, is
a good place to take photographs. Youll find the
Puerta de la Ciudadela
(Citadel Gate), a remnant
of walls that once surrounded the Ciudad Vieja, and a statue dedicated
to national hero Gen.
Jose Gervasio Artigas.
Not far from the
square is Teatro Solis,
at the corner of Reconquista and Bartolemeo
Mitre, which opened in
1856. In addition to performances, you can take
a guided tour, see exhibitions or get something
to eat.

Some tips
Uruguayans eat dinner as late as 11 p.m. on
weekends, but you can

find places ready to feed


you by 8 p.m. (though
it will be quiet if youre
that early). A good place
in the old city is Dueto,
1386 Bartolome Mitre,
which serves innovative
food with a fixed-price
menu of around $25.
If youre staying in the
old city, a good choice is
Alma Historica, 1433 Solis, a new boutique hotel
in tree-shaded Plaza
Zabala. A blend of modern convenience and
one-of-a-kind antique
furnishings, the hotel
has a hot tub-equipped
rooftop terrace. Rooms
start at $160.
For places close to the
beach look in the Pocitos and Carrasco neighborhoods.
Taxis are plentiful and
an easy way of getting
around. As always, ask for

the rate before you get in.


The city feels relatively safe but be alert, especially at night.

Exploring
The Rambla runs
about 17 miles along
Montevideos coastline.
Take a stroll or rent a
bike to explore the wide,
sandy beaches.
Walking around the
old city is the best way
to take in the citys mix
of architecture; the pedestrian thoroughfare,
Peatonal Sarandi, is the
main drag and will take
you past art galleries,
shops and street stalls.
Check out the traditional calabash gourds
and metal straws used
to imbibe yerba mate.
The drink is hugely popular.

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Boscovs Travel is located within select Boscovs


Boscovs Travel, Lancaster: 717-291-5460

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boscovstravel.com

B12

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

Books
N.Y. Times
best-sellers

FINDING THE
PHILIPPINES

Nonfiction paperbacks

1. Alexander Hamilton, by Ron Chernow. (Penguin) First published in 2004, this biography of a
founding father was turned into the Pulitzer Prizewinning hip-hop musical Hamilton.
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. The Boys in the Boat, by Daniel James Brown.
(Penguin) The story of the American rowers who
pursued gold at the 1936 Berlin Olympic Games.
4. Outliers, by Malcolm Gladwell. (Back Bay/Little, Brown) Why some people succeed it has to do
with luck and opportunities as well as talent.
5. I Am Malala, by Malala Yousafzai with Christina
Lamb. (Little, Brown)The Nobel Peace Prize winner
and teenage activist recounts her path to learning.
6. Dead Wake, by Erik Larson. (Crown) The tragic final voyage of the luxury ship Lusitania, sunk by
a German submarine in 1915. By the author of The
Devil in the White City.
7. The Oregon Trail, by Rinker Buck. (Simon &
Schuster) The author and his brother travel 2,000
miles by mule and wagon from Missouri to Oregon.
8. Killing Kennedy, by Bill OReilly and Martin Dugard. (St. Martins Griffin) The host of The
OReilly Factor recounts the events surrounding the
assassination of John F. Kennedy.
9. Just Mercy, by Bryan Stevenson. (Spiegel &
Grau) A law professor and MacArthur grant recipients memoir of his decades of work to free innocent
people condemned to death.
10. Sick in the Head, by Judd Apatow. (Random
House) Thirty years worth of the filmmakers interviews with comedians.
Trade fiction paperbacks
1. Me Before You, by Jojo Moyes. (Penguin) A
young woman who has barely been farther afield
than her English village finds herself while caring for
a wealthy, embittered quadriplegic. The basis for the
movie.
2. A Man Called Ove, by Fredrik Backman. (Washington Square) An angry old curmudgeon gets new
next-door neighbors, and things are about to change
for all of them.
3. The Girl in the Spiders Web, by David Lagercrantz. (Vintage Crime/Black Lizard) Lisbeth
Salander and Mikael Blomkvist are back in this continuation of Stieg Larssons Millennium series.
4. Go Set a Watchman, by Harper Lee. (Perennial/
HarperCollins) In the mid-1950s, a grown-up Jean
Louise Finch returns home to find that her adored
father is not as perfect as she believed.
5. My Grandmother Asked Me to Tell You Shes
Sorry, by Fredrik Backman. (Washington Square) A
girl is instructed to deliver a series of letters after her
grandmother dies.
6. In a Dark, Dark Wood, by Ruth Ware. (Scout
Press) A crime writer attends a party in a cabin in the
woods and is pulled back into the past, with frightening results.
7. Cross Justice, by James Patterson. (Grand Central) Detective Alex Cross returns to his hometown,
for the first time in 35 years, to help a cousin who has
been accused of murder.
8. Milk and Honey, by Rupi Kaur. (Andrews McMeel) A collection of poetry about love, loss, trauma
and healing.
9. The Alchemist, by Paulo Coelho. (HarperOne/
HarperCollins) A Spanish shepherd boy ventures to
Egypt in search of treasure and his destiny.
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.

DETAILS
n Liberaces Filipino
Cousin.

n By David R. Brubaker.
n Global Directions/Things
Asian Press.

n 160 pages ($12.95).

DAVID R. BRUBAKER

David R. Brubaker relaxes during a visit to the Philippines.

Lititz resident flew to island nation to visit his son


and fell in love with the country and its people
MICKAYLA MILLER
MJMILLER@LNPNEWS.COM

Twenty years ago, Lititz resident David R. Brubaker arrived at an airport in the Philippines for
the first time. In what he described as a big beehive of people, he had to find his way into the city
of Manila.
He was visiting his son, Andrew, who was stationed in Manila while volunteering with the Peace
Corps.
Brubaker said vaguely familiar fumes that
smelled of burning leaves and leaded gasoline filled
the air as he found his way into the quasi-American territory. He noted that there were American
restaurants and chains littered throughout Manila
and that most residents spoke English.
However, as he explored some of the almost 7,000
islands that make up the Philippines, he immersed
himself in the nations culture and became interested in its quirks.
Youve got a city within a city; people who live a
high life, the good life, but just outside of the wall
theres a stark difference between rich and poor,
Brubaker says. Youre in another world youre at
the end of the Earth.
In May, Brubaker published a book, Liberaces
Filipino Cousin, through Global Directions/
Things Asian Press about his travels in the Philippines.
Its a collection of essays written in a conversational, somewhat informal style and chronicles
several of his experiences in the Philippines. It offers an honest and personal account of the islands

and some of its people.


Brubaker says he found few books about the Philippines. He says the books he did find did not outline the true nature of what he believes the land and
its people have to offer.
The people are laid-back; they seem to be happy,
he says. Especially the kids.
Poverty is prevalent in the area, Brubaker says,
but people seem to be happy, despite living in houses made of things they just found, such as scrap
and other recyclable materials.
Despite the fact that many of the residents do not
have many material possessions, they have spirit
and accept everyone for who they are, he says.
Its very open, he says. In two days, youre accepted no matter who you are. Brubaker also
mentions the seemingly synthesized nature of the
culture, saying that the Filipino people seem to accept whatever life brings them and find a way to integrate everything back into their way of life.
One aspect of the culture a way of life for some
and something feared by others is dark magic and
sorcery. Brubaker says he was especially captivated
by Siquijor, an island where dark magic is practiced.
When diagnosed with a benign brain tumor, Brubaker says, he went to Siquijor to get a treatment
called Bolo-Bolo. Its a noninvasive procedure conducted by a witch, and it involves water, herbal
remedies and incantations. He says he has not received any traditional medical treatment for the
tumor.
Im trying to paint an honest picture of the PhilPHILIPPINES, page B13

Trade fiction paperbacks

1. Me Before You, by Jojo Moyes. (Penguin) A


young woman who has barely been farther afield
than her English village finds herself while caring for
a wealthy, embittered quadriplegic.
2. Cross Kill, by James Patterson. (Little, Brown)
Alex Cross watched Gary Soneji (Along Came a Spider) die more than 10 years ago but maybe not. A
Bookshots short novel.
3. The Collector, by Nora Roberts. (Jove) After a
writer and housesitter observes what appears to be
a murder/suicide, she and the victims brother find
themselves targeted for death.
4. Dakota Home, by Debbie Macomber. (Harlequin) A deadly storm brings together a rancher and
the woman trying to win his heart.
5. Marrying Winterborne, by Lisa Kleypas.
(Avon) The marriage of a cunning London tycoon to
a shy, beautiful woman invites a conspiracy against
them and the revelation of a dark secret.
6. Zoo 2, by James Patterson with Max DiLallo.
(Little, Brown) With Earth under siege by violent
animals, humans are mutating into a savage species,
for better or worse. A Bookshots short novel.
7. NYPD Red 3, by James Patterson and Marshall
Karp. (Vision) Detective Zach Jordan and his partner
investigate the disappearance of a billionaires son.
8. Dance of the Bones, by J.A. Jance. (Morrow/
HarperCollins) Two veteran policemen 1,600 miles
apart team up when they discover a link between
their cases and rush to save two young boys. A J.P.
Beaumont and Brandon Walker novel.
9. Code of Conduct, by Brad Thor. (Pocket Books)
The counterterrorism operative Scot Harvath investigates a secret committee hidden deep within a powerful organization.
10. Destiny Unleashed, by Sherryl Woods. (Harlequin) A woman seeks revenge on a man whom she
once loved but who now seems intent on destroying
her familys business.

Check it out!
Give yourself chills on these hot summer nights with these creepy new horror novels. Find them on the
new-book shelf at the Duke Street Library.
1. The Evening Spider, by Emily
Arsenault. In 1855 New England,
young mother Frances Barnetts
obsession with the details of a local
murder trial lead her to a mental
institution, while in the present
day, young mother Abby Bernacki
discovers Barnetts diary and finds
unsettling parallels with her own
life.
2. My Best Friends Exorcism,
by Grady Hendrix. High school
sophomores Abby and Gretchen
have been best friends since fourth
grade. But after an evening of
skinny-dipping goes disastrously
wrong, Gretchen begins to act
strangely and bizarre incidents keep
happening whenever shes nearby.
Abbys investigation leads her to

some startling discoveries.


3. Hex, by Thomas Olde Heuvelt.
The elders of the town Black
Spring have virtually quarantined
the town by using high-tech
surveillance to prevent their curse
from spreading. Frustrated with
being kept in lockdown, the towns
teenagers decide to break their
strict regulations, but in so doing,
they send the town spiraling into
the dark, medieval practices of the
distant past.
4. The Passenger, by F.R. Tallis.
When a German submarine collects
two prisoners from a vessel located
off the Icelandic coast, ordered
to transport them to the base

at Brest, one of the prisoners, a


British submarine commander, goes
rogue, setting in motion a series of
shocking, brutal events that seem to
be linked to the supernatural.
5. The Fifth House of the Heart,
by Ben Tripp. Asmodeus Sax
Saxon-Tang, a vainglorious and
well-established antiques dealer,
has made a fortune over many
years by globetrotting for the finest
lost objects in the world. Only Sax
knows the true secret to his success:
At certain points of his life, hes
killed vampires for their priceless
hordes of treasure. But now Saxs
past actions are quite literally
coming back to haunt him, and the
lives of those he holds most dear
are in mortal danger.

BOOKS

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

Bookends
Discussions
planned in July
Everyone is invited to participate in
the following book discussions; some
require advance registration.
Douglas Hunters The Race for
the New World, 6 p.m. July 6, Lancaster Public Library.
Gabrielle Zevins The Storied
Life of A.J. Fikry, 6 p.m. July 7, walk
and talk at Ephrata Public Library.
Tom Baileys The Grace That
Keeps This World, 1:30 p.m. July 13,
Quarryville Library.
Junot Diazs The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao, 8 p.m. July
13, Federal Taphouse, 201 N. Queen
St.
Anita Diamants Boston Girl,
10 a.m. July 13, Manheim Township
Public Library.
Fyodor
Dostoyesvkys
The
Brothers Karamazov, 10 a.m. July 14,
Lancaster Public Library.
James Baldwins Another Country, 2 p.m. July 16, Lancaster Public
Library.
Ari Shavits My Promised Land,
10:30 a.m. and 6:30 p.m. July 16, Milanof-Schock Library, Mount Joy.
Bell Hooks Where We Stand:
Class Matters, 7 p.m. July 18, Black
Forest Brewery, 301 W. Main St.,
Ephrata.
Felix Francis Refusal, 6:30 p.m.
July 21, Ephrata Public Library.

Library will host


local author
Manheim Township Public Library,
595 Granite Run Drive, is hosting local author Amanda Kemp at 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday.
Kemp, a visiting scholar at Franklin & Marshall College, will lead a
workshop based on her book Say the
Wrong Thing: 5 Strategies for Racial
Justice & Authentic Community.
The event is free and open to the public.
Part memoir and part social commentary, Kemps book provides
insight and strategies for creating
racial justice and a strong sense of
shared community.
Register for the free program by
visiting mtpl.info/calendar or by calling the library at 560-6441.

Philippines
Continued from B12

ippines, Brubaker says. Of both the


negative and the positive and all the
nuances in between.
He says Liberaces Filipino Cousin was his vehicle to do that.
I had a lot to say (about the Philippines), he says. Its a country with
over 100 million people, and its neglected. Its great, but people dont
see that. They dont think about pristine islands and the tremendous biodiversity.
More trips are on the agenda for
Brubaker, and perhaps one or two
more books, he says. He encourages
people to travel the world and immerse themselves in the culture and
the people of where theyre staying.
He also says people should visit the
places not frequented by most tourists.
We go to the typical tourist places, he says. What (tourists) see really isnt the way it is. The best way
to be a tourist is to not be a tourist, he
says.
You have to interact with the average person, the cab drivers, the guy
running the bakery, Brubaker says.
Thats how you learn.
When Brubaker is not in the Philippines, he says he likes to keep things
interesting back home in Lititz. He
lives with his wife, Marilyn, and has
three cats. He has two children: Andrew, who was in the Peace Corps,
and Adriane, an art therapist in Lititz.
Despite labeling himself as semiretired, he says he keeps busy by
teaching undergraduate weekend
courses at the McGuire Air Force
Base in Trenton, New Jersey. Brubaker spends his free time writing.

B13

REVIEW

Proulxs fifth novel


an ambitious project

Environmental epic is vivid, mean and wordy


DWIGHT GARNER
NEW YORK TIMES

Like the Lorax, Annie Proulx speaks


for the trees. Her new novel, Barkskins, is a clamorous epic of environmental despoliation. It plays out
across 717 pages and more than 300
years, from the arrival of woodcutting French settlers in Canada in 1693
through an eyewitness account of
melting glaciers in 2013.
In between, there is clear-cutting
and more clear-cutting, with the occasional sidebar about eating or
scheming or killing or rutting. This
is a jeremiad about the loss of North
Americas monstrous pine finery,
in the authors resonant phrase, and
thus its weird, old pagan soul. This
novel is a flood of acid rain.
Slaughter of every variety is on
Proulxs mind. Barkskins the title
refers to woodcutters is a Baedeker
of doom. Characters die from cholera
and measles and smallpox, from shipwrecks and scalpings and botched
amputations and occult tortures.
More often, they perish in grisly logging mishaps. No one ever seems to
yell, Timber!
Proulx is adept at this culling. She
has a lesser knack for first bringing
her men and women to life. Barkskins rarely warms in your hands. Its
ideas are more finely beveled than its
people, never a good sign.
In Barkskins, Proulx favors characters rather than character, as Alfred
Kazin complained about John Irving.
(Among the names here: Blade Scugog,
Dud McBogle and Hudson Van Dipp.)
Watching its action is like strolling
around the worlds largest ant farm.
Theres more wriggling than drama.
Barkskins is Proulxs fifth novel
and ninth work of fiction. Its an ambitious project for any novelist, much
less one who, like Proulx, is now 80. At
its best, it is vivid, mean and wordy, as
if the film The Revenant had been
annotated by Bob Dylan the Dylan
who wrote, in Blind Willie McTell,
that power and greed and corruptible
seed/seem to be all that there is.
Proulxs many readers will note, too,
how often logging leads her characters to take to the sea. Barkskins can
be read, to some degree, as a manyangled precursor to the authors novel
The Shipping News (1993), which
won the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Award.

Skinny and penniless


Barkskins begins when two skinny

Inspections
Continued from B2

Country Boy Meats, 2108 New Danville


Pike, June 6. Person in charge is not
performing duties as required by Pa.
Food Code to actively manage food
safety. Two skids of hot dogs in walk-in
freezer were covered in ice. Whole pigs,
frozen and thawed in the walk-in cooler,
were slimy to the touch and adulterated.
Food slicer had accumulation of dried
food residue on blade. Cutting boards
are stained and have black mold-type
residue. Meat grinder and meat saw have
dried meat residue accumulation and
were not cleaned after use. Feline-type
droppings found in old walk-in cooler not
in operation, indicating presence of a live
animal on the premises.
Sunoco No. 7092 @ Bowmansville
Turnpike Plaza, 1350 Reading Road,
Bowmansville, change of owners, June 6.
No violations.
The Grille, 241 W. Roseville Road,
opening, June 6. No violations.
U Thai, 2359 Oregon Pike, follow-up, June
6. No violations.
Brewsters BBQ, LLC Unit 2, 1830
Hempstead Road, June 9. Single-service
items (to-go boxes) stored with food
contact surface exposed; repeat violation
from 2015.
Clearview Lanes, 1990 W. Main St., June
9. No violations.

Facebook, Twitter
& Instagram at:

Columbos Pizza, 1226 Harrisburg Pike,


follow-up, June 9. Door gaskets of pizza
cooling and sandwich prep units no
longer smooth and easily cleanable as
a result of using caulking and foaming
agent on torn gaskets. Linoleum floor in
outside wait station has holes in it and is
not smooth and easily cleanable. Floor
scheduled for repair by June 30.

LancasterOnline

Dunkin Donuts, 1111 S. State St., Ephrata,


opening, June 9. No violations.

Connect with us

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

DETAILS
n Barkskins
n By Annie Proulx
n Scribner
n 717 pages ($32)
and penniless Frenchmen, Charles
Duquet and Rene Sel, arrive in Canada
as indentured servants. Duquet soon
manages to escape. He becomes a fur
trader and an imposing timber entrepreneur. He changes his surname to
Duke, and a logging dynasty is born.
Sel doesnt escape. A preternaturally
gifted logger, he works and he suffers.
He is forced to marry an older woman,
a native of the Mikmaw tribe. They
have strong, beautiful children who
suffer, too. We follow the Dukes and
the Sels across many generations.
A great deal of learning is on display
in Barkskins, as there is in nearly
everything Proulx writes. You will
absorb more here about cutting and
sawing and pulping and shipping and
estimating lumber yields than you
might think possible. There are lessons about negotiation. The care of a
burn victim is minutely detailed.
The meals in Barkskins offer fragrant lessons in backwoods cuisine.
Among the consumables: beaver bone
soup, moose bone marrow, woodcock
hung until it reached the desired hallucinogenic point of decay, caribou
haunch, eels with sour-grass sauce,
roly-polies and pandowdies. About
one woman, we read, Anguish and
rage mingled in her like a kind of soup
made from nettles and grit.
Proulx, a putter-inner, rather than
a taker-outer, spangles her sentences with unusual words (queaches,
sphagnum) and flora (hairy-stem
mastodon flowers). If the word she
needs does not exist, she will invent
it. You can imagine her saying to her
editor, as John OHara remarked to
his: Dont go citing dictionaries to me
... Dictionary people consult me, not I
them.

Sunlit loveliness
Often enough these sentences break
from the woods into the clearing of
sunlit loveliness. A moon is a slice of
white radish. Visiting his childhood
home, one man is catapulted into his
past as though seated on a swing that
someone had suddenly given a great
shove.
Bawdy humor plays below Proulxs

Ebys General Store Inc., 1009 Martindale


Road, Martindale, complaint, June 9. Nine
containers of cottage cheese found in
sales cart at ambient temperature, not held
at 41F or below as required; discarded.
Family Dollar No. 1680, 24 S. 18th
St., Columbia, June 9. Womens toilet
room not provided with covered
waste receptacle for sanitary napkins;
repeat violation from 2015. Floor/wall
in warehouse, made of drywall, and is
cracked and roughened, not a smooth,
easily cleanable surface; repeat violation
from 2013, 2014 and 2015. The floor/
wall juncture in restroom and warehouse
is not coved and closed to 1/32 inch;
repeat violation from 2015. Warehouse
is extremely dirty, dusty and in need of
cleaning; repeat violation from 2015.
Wall around back exit door in warehouse
area is broken and in need of repair;
repeat violation from 2015. Areas
under all kick-plates in customer area
have accumulation of dirt and debris
underneath. Intake and exhaust air ducts
throughout facility need to be cleaned or
have filters changed as they are emitting
dust and dirt into the air.
Grammaws Soft Pretzels, 307 Manor
Ridge Drive, Akron, June 9. No violations.
Mount Nebo United Methodist Church,
673 Martic Heights Road, Pequea, June 9.
No violations.
Sugar on Top, 27 N. Prince St., June 9. No
violations.
Barnys Grill, 605 Granite Run Drive, June
8. No violations.
Breyers Ice Cream Parlor@Dutch
Wonderland, 2449 Lincoln Highway East,
June 8. No violations.
Caddy Shack, 662 S. Oak St., Manheim,
June 8. No violations.
Fairfield Inn and Suites-Lancaster East,
2270 Lincoln Highway East, opening, June
8. No violations.
Funnel Cake Factory@Dutch
Wonderland, 2249 Lincoln Highway

JAVIER DEL REAL/TEATRO REAL VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES

Annie Proulxs latest novel is Barkskins.

prose like barrelhouse piano. A newly


married woman leaps on her husband
like a flying tigress. When he tries to
flee, she came after him, arms swinging, gorilla teeth bared. Another
woman is described as being more
like a chest of drawers than a companion.
The larger story Barkskins has to
tell is about arrogant white Christian
men coming to subdue the evil wilderness, raping the land and culturally annihilating the Native Americans
as they march along. It is a novel about
human infestation, about greed, about
virgin landscapes filled suddenly with
insufferable whiteman stink.
It is possible to utterly share Proulxs
environmental views while noting
how this books homilies fall, like a
succession of cut trees, into your path.
From the start, trees shiver and inhale
and help humans heal. Lives are filled
with leafy meaning. All things, not
just bark and skin, are seen to be connected.
This novel is a brief against managed forests and for entirely wild
ones. A character who is something of
a stand-in for the author says: I am
sure that wild natural woodlands are
the only true forests. The entire atmosphere the surrounding air, the
intertwined roots, the humble ferns
and lichens, insects and diseases, the
soil and water, weather. All these parts
seem to play together in a kind of wild
grand orchestra. A forest living for itself rather than the benefit of humankind.
Op-ed sound bites like this one light
the way toward this novels truly abysmal ending, in which a modern scientist solemnly warns about global
warming that a great crisis is just
ahead, and a woman wants to cry
out The forests, the trees, they can
change everything! You feel your
synapses, as did the forests, turn to
pulp.

East, June 8. Floor fan for air circulation


has static dust accumulation. No sign or
poster at hand-wash sink.
Giant Food No. 6004, 1008 Lititz Pike,
Lititz, June 8. Bottle of glass cleaner
stored on prep table in deli; corrected.
Internal temperature of fried chicken at
self-serve hot bar measured 121F, not
135F or higher as required; corrected.
Interior bottom of refrigerator in produce
department is rusted and not a smooth,
easily cleanable surface. Blender in rinse
compartment of three-bay sink in coffee
station contained dirty water. Spillage on
bottom of refrigerator in coffee station;
corrected. Dried food splatter in interior
of microwave oven in the coffee station;
corrected. Rusted steel wool pads in handwash sink of coffee station, indicating uses
other than hand-washing; corrected. Light
visible at corner of receiving door; seal to
prevent vector entrance. Some tomatoes,
potatoes and other food debris under
bagged onion/potato shelf; corrected.
Jimmy Johns at The Shoppes at
Manheim Pike, 1601 Manheim Pike, June
8. Working containers in food preparation
area used for storing cleaners taken
from bulk supplies and not marked with
common name of chemical. Working
container of sanitizer stored above
equipment in food preparation area. Food
employee preparing food, not wearing
proper hair restraints or beard cover.
Merlins Restaurant, 2249 Lincoln Highway
East, June 8. Unused equipment stored on
prep table, needs to be removed.
Millstream Eatery@Dutch Wonderland,
2249 Lincoln Highway East, June 8. Water
leaking from mechanical dish machine.
Ice chutes on two self-serve soda units
have pink mold-type residue. Facility has
original certificate posted, but location is
not conspicuous for public viewing.
Nathans@Dutch Wonderland, 2249
Lincoln Highway East, June 8. No
violations.
Noble Romans@Dutch Wonderland,
2249 Lincoln Highway East, June 8. Static
dust accumulation on fan covers in walkin cooler.

B14

LIVING

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

IN THE SPOTLIGHT

Supporting the community years after her transition


Joanne Carroll, president of TransCentralPA, uses advocacy to help other transgender people
MARY ELLEN WRIGHT
MWRIGHT@LNPNEWS.COM

Joanne Carroll, of Lancaster, was born male,


with the name John,
and lived that way for 50
years before she transitioned in 2001 to her life
as a woman.
During those 50 years,
John had served with
the Air Force, had two
marriages of 17 years
apiece and had children.
Now 75, Carroll is
president of TransCentralPA.
The primary function
of the organization is to
provide caring support
for transgender individuals, their families,
friends and allies, as well
as provide education and
advocacy for the trans
community,
Carroll
said.
When people ask her
when she decided to become a woman, Carroll
said she responds, I
didnt decide to become
a woman. I decided that
continuing to live as a

man was going to kill me.


I considered suicide
three times and almost
pulled the trigger a
fourth time, she said.
Forty percent of this
(trans) community considers it or goes through
with the act. Weve gone
through some terrible
stuff.
Carrolls mother for
whom she was a caregiver children and church
congregation have been
accepting of her transition, for which shes
grateful.
When you go to transition, you have to be
prepared to lose everything, she said. If you
dont, you win. There
comes a point where
living in the right spirit
is more important. Did
I lose things? Probably. But I gained just as
much, because I had the
support of my family.
I was prepared not to
have a relationship with
them for the rest of my
life, and that didnt hap-

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We Educate Before We Estimate

pen. Praise God.


Hometown: Calgary,
Alberta, Canada; and St.
Paul, Minnesota.
Education: Some college.
Military
service:
Master sergeant, U.S. Air
Force, retired.
Church: First Reformed United Church
of Christ, Lancaster. Vice
president of the leadership committee.
My family consists
of: Three daughters and
four stepchildren.
Growing up, I wanted
to be: A wife and mother.
My first job was:
Dishwasher at a Baptist
summer camp.
My childhood: I first
knew there was something going on when I
was 4 or 5 years old, but
I didnt have language
for it until much later.
... At Christmastime, my
girl cousins were dressed
in their Mary Janes and
pinafores and opening
tea sets, and I was wearing a vest and Brogans,
getting cannons and
tractors. And as much as
a 4- or 5-year-old mind
can process that, I wanted what they had.
When I transitioned:
In 2001. Id already been
on hormones for about
three or four years at that
point. I transitioned in
western Nebraska. I was
working as a male until the 14th of February
2001. The job ended by
mutual agreement with
the employer. I got a
severance pay. I went

$11.3 MILLION IN MERIT

BASED COLLEGE SCHOLARSHIPS


OFFERED TO THE LCHS CLASS OF 2016!

DAN MARSCHKA | STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

Joanne Carroll, president of TransCentralPA, poses for a portrait in the First Reformed
United Church of Christ in Lancaster.

home, I took everything


that John would wear,
I packed it up in three
large boxes and took it
to Goodwill. And on Feb.
15th of 2001, I stepped
out boldly into the world
(as Joanne) and never
looked back.
My faith: I identify
unapologetically as a
Christian. And I make no
bones about that. Thats
not a dichotomy. You
can be Christian and you
can be transgender.
The God that I worship
tells us to love him and
love each other, and love
ourselves a little bit, too.
I couldnt be more embraced than I am (at my
church). ... I give him the
glory.
How I came out publicly: Ive always been

Congrats!

Lancaster Catholic High School


650 Juliette Ave., Lancaster, PA 17601

www.lchsyes.org/admissions

FREE cordless lift system


for Silhouette, Duette and
Wood Blinds.

Mackenzie Lindenberger, 2015 Columbia


High School graduate,
has been named to the
Deans List at West
Chester
University
for the 2016 Spring
Semester. Mackenzie
is majoring in Early
Childhood Education
and Special Education. She is the daughter of Ed and Pam Lindenberger, Columbia.

Joanne since Ive lived


in Lancaster. I went public after my mother died.
This community needed
more voices. I thought,
Im tired of living in my
own shadow. Its time
to get busy. I came out
twice in my life once
when I transitioned, and
once when I went public
with my life.
The best thing about
being president of
Tr a n s C e n t r a l PA :
Meeting new people,
providing support to my
trans sisters and brothers, educating individuals and groups about the
trans experience, and
advocating for the trans
community.
The most challenging thing about it:
Travel and maintaining
my energy.
The one or two most
important
thing(s)
my organization does:
Providing support to the
trans community and
helping others discover
that we are not perverts
and freaks.
The most significant
way in which things
have changed for
transgender
people
in the past few years:
People are more aware
that there are transgender persons, and they
may actually know one
and not know it.
The most important
ways in which things
still need to change
for the better: We need
comprehensive nondiscrimination policies in
place in every corner of
our country, from the
smallest hamlet to the
largest
metropolitan
center.
A book Id recommend: The Bible.

A movie Id recommend: The American


President.
A TV show Id recommend: Big Bang Theory or the West Wing
series.
Favorite
way
to
spend a day: Out and
about on behalf of TransCentralPA.
Favorite kind of music: Smooth jazz and
Southern gospel.
Something youll always find in my refrigerator: Eggs and French
vanilla creamer.
My idea of exercise:
Walking.
My guilty pleasure:
Two pieces of dark chocolate.
One thing Id change
about myself: Drop 30
pounds.
The best gift Ive ever
received: My life.
A person I really admire: My mother.
Favorite
vacation
spot: Anywhere along
the Mediterranean.
My parents always
told me: Clean your
plate.
The person Id most
like to have dinner
with: President Obama.
Hobbies: Reading and
debunking the TV pundits.
Volunteer activities:
TransCentralPA and my
church.
Pets: Do the dust
bunnies under my bed
count?
If someone wrote a
book about my life, I
would like the title to
be: On her way to find
herself, she found God!
Three words that
best describe me: Happy, healthy and blessed.

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80 West Millport Road, Lititz, PA 17543


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LIVING

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

Could Jeff join


Kelly on Live?

Jeff Gordon
CASEY KREIDER | STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

Chester is an 8-year-old Spitz mix available for adoption at the Lancaster County SPCA.

Spitz mix wont


give you fits
Chester less hairy, cute
and well-behaved is tired
of being overlooked
LANCASTER COUNTY SPCA

Do you love the Spitz


breed but hate to think
of dealing with the shedding of long hair?
Then Chester, a Spitz
mix, may be just the dog
for you.
Eight years old and
neutered, Chester was
surrendered by his
owner some time ago.
Age discrimination has
caused him to be overlooked by potential
adoptive families. But
if you spend some time
with him, you will quickly see so many good qualities in Chester.
Chester is sensible
and polite. He is calm,
moderately playful, and
a pleasure to walk on a
leash.
He often wears a comical expression on his face
and has a cute muzzle
and small, pointed ears.
His dense fur with an
insulated,
waterproof
undercoat even denser
than the top coat helps
him retain warmth in
frosty temperatures. He
enjoys outdoor time, especially in cold weather.
Chester gets along well
with other animals, but
at times exhibits chasing
and herding instincts.
Thats why he would be
better suited for life with
older children and needs
a fenced yard.
Chester is available for
adoption at the Lancast-

B15

The Gossip Corner

PET OF THE WEEK

SUSAN MARTIN

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

er County SPCA shelter, at 848 S. Prince


St. Hours are 11 a.m.
to 6 p.m. Monday,
Thursday and Friday;
noon-5 p.m. Tuesday,
Saturday and Sunday; and noon-7 p.m.
Wednesday. You can
reach us at 917-6979
or lancasterspca.org.
We are happy to announce that our new
thrift store will open
Aug. 1 next-door to
the shelter, at 828
S. Prince St. During shelter business
hours, we are accepting donated items to
be sold at the store.
All store proceeds will
go to improving care
for the more than
6,000 animals we
serve yearly.

LAST WEEKS
PET
n Taco the Chihuahua
was adopted from the
Humane League of
Lancaster County.

Jeff Gordon is open to


succeeding Michael Strahan as Kelly Ripas new
Live co-host so long as
he could continue his new
job as a NASCAR analyst.
Gordon called his final race
of the season Sunday for
Fox Sports and is now heading into the first significant
downtime of his professional career. The four-time
NASCAR champion is in his
first year in the broadcast

TODAY IN HISTORY

n June 26, 1483: Richard


III began his reign as
King of England (he was
crowned the following
month at Westminster
Abbey).

n 1870: The first section


of the Atlantic City, New
Jersey, boardwalk was
opened to the public.

n 1925: Charles Chaplins


classic comedy The
Gold Rush premiered
at Graumans Egyptian
Theatre in Hollywood.

booth, and he insisted Saturday hell be back next year


when Fox resumes coverage
of the first half of the season
However, Gordon didnt
quash recent speculation
that ABC is interested in
him joining Ripa on Live.

Street named for


Franklins father

Aretha Franklin

Aretha Franklin has


participated in a streetrenaming
ceremony
for her late father at the

Detroit church where


he was a longtime pastor and prominent civil
rights leader. Franklin
played piano and sang
Friday at New Bethel
Baptist Church for hundreds gathered to celebrate the renaming of
part of Linwood Avenue
to Rev. C.L. Franklin
Boulevard. The Detroit
Free Press and Detroit
News report that attendees included gospel singer Yolanda Adams, TV
judge Greg Mathis and
the Rev. Jesse Jackson. C.L. Franklin, who
died in 1984, was a good
friend of Martin Luther
King Jr. Franklin helped
organize Kings 1963
march in Detroit that
previewed his March on
Washington that year.

Joel surprises
his own tribute

Billy Joel

Fans watching a Billy


Joel tribute band were
treated to a surprise appearance by the Piano
Man himself. Joel was
in the audience Friday night with his wife,
Alexis Roderick, at a
show in Huntington,
New York, when he decided to join the band
Big Shot for a three-song
set, Newsday reports.
The Associated Press

BIRTHDAYS

n Jazz musician-film composer Dave Grusin is 82.

Actor Josef Sommer is 82. Singer Billy Davis Jr. is 78.


Rock singer Georgie Fame is 73. Actor Clive Francis is
70. Rhythm-and-blues singer Brenda Holloway is 70.
Actor Michael Paul Chan is 66. Singer-musician Mick
Jones is 61. Actor Gedde Watanabe is 61. Rock singer
Chris Isaak is 60. Rock singer Patty Smyth is 59. Singer
Terri Nunn (Berlin) is 57. U.S. Bicycling Hall of Famer
Greg LeMond is 55. Country musician Eddie Perez
(The Mavericks) is 48. Rock musician Colin Greenwood
(Radiohead) is 47. MLB All-Star Derek Jeter is 42.
Country singer Gretchen Wilson is 42. Pop-rock singermusician Ryan Tedder (OneRepublic) is 37. Actress
Aubrey Plaza is 32. Actress-singer Ariana Grande is 23.

Ariana Grande, 23

n 1936: President

Franklin D. Roosevelt was


nominated for a second
term of office by delegates
to the Democratic National
Convention in Philadelphia.

n 1945: The charter of the


United Nations was signed
by 50 countries in San
Francisco.

n 1950: President Harry S.

Truman authorized the U.S.


Air Force and Navy to enter
the Korean War.

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2% Minimum Guarantee $10,000 Minimum Deposit


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Mon-Wed 9-5; Thurs-Fri 9-6; Sat 9-1; Closed Sunday

Tammy Kratzer Justin Kratzer

www.flowersbypaulette.com

301 Main St. | Landisville, PA 17538


*GBU Financial Life is a 124 year old fraternal benefit society domiciled in PA.

Jen has lost 182 lbs.

Her weight loss has he r

IN THE LEAD.
When Jen lost her father to heart disease, she vowed to change her lifes course.
With a commitment to better health, Jen chose bariatric surgery at Lancaster
General Health. The experienced team of weight loss experts and fellowshiptrained surgeons partnered with her to tailor a program based on her individual
needs. Today, she is racing ahead at full speed.
Upcoming Seminars:

Seminar location:

July 14 5:30 7 pm
July 28 5:30 7 pm

Healthy Weight Management & Bariatric Surgery


2150 Harrisburg Pike, Suite 300
Lancaster

Dont stop taking strides.


To register for a seminar, visit LGHealth.org/classes
or call 1-888-LGH-INFO (544-4636).
Also offering an online seminar:
LGHealth.org/bariatricsonline

LGHealth.org/bariatrics
Choose well. Be well.

B16

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

Celebrations

Contact Celebrations:

717.291.4957
celebrations@lnpnews.com
www.lancasteronline.com

Anniversaries
Pabon 40th

Barnett 50th

Peachey 50th

Petrin and George Pabon celebrate 40 awesome years together


on June 26th. Married
in Brooklyn, NY, they
began their journey in
Lancaster. Soon after,
they began to travel all
across the country for
20 years while serving
in the US Air Force, and
settled right back where
they started in Lancaster.
They are blessed with
two wonderful children,
Jessie and Ryan, and
four incredible grandchildren, Christopher,
Cameron, Olivia, and
Ezra. Being married to
such a beautiful woman
with a great big loving
heart and a very giving
and caring personality
has made the time just
y by! says George.

Charles and Mary Ann


(Douts) Barnett celebrated their 50th Wedding Anniversary with a
dinner with family and
friends. They were married on June 25, 1966 at
the Washington Boro
Church of God.
They are the parents of
four children: Mike Barnett and his wife Patty,
Scott Barnett and his
wife Marian, Todd Barnett and his wife Tikki,
Magen Thome and her
husband Neal, twelve
grandchildren and two
step-grandchildren.
They are active in their
church and enjoy attending all the various
activities of their grandchildren.

Rodney and Debbie


Peachey were married
at Christiana Methodist
Church, Christiana PA
on June 25, 1966.
The couple have three
children: Ranae wife
of Gerald Zimmerman,
Dawn wife of Steven
Watson, and Travis
Peachey married to
Kirsten Wanner. They
are very proud of every one of their seven
Grandchildren
Tia,
Rhiannon, Tyler, Brett,
Cole, Dustin and Madison.
The couple have created a warm and loving
home over the last 50
years which is the favorite gathering place for
all family celebrations
and Holidays.
Rodney is retired from
Case New Holland, New
Holland and Debbie is
retired from WL Zimmerman, Intercourse.
Thank you Dad and
Mom for your love to
each other and your
family.

The more you invest in a marriage,


the more valuable it becomes.
~ Amy Grant

Hesss BBQ
Your complete catering service!
2635 Willow Street Pike Willow Street
717.464.3374

Your guide to planning


beautiful Lancaster County
weddings and events
BAKERY
Achenbachs Pastries, Inc.
We take pride in producing wedding
cakes that are delicious to eat and
masterpieces to view!
375 East Main Street Leola
717.656.6671

BRIDAL FASHIONS
Country Threads by Gail
Quality new and lovingly worn gowns
194 Doe Run Road Manheim
717.665.3711
Patricias Bridal Elegance
Patricias Bridal Elegance is a premier
bridal boutique that offers designer gowns,
custom gowns, redesigning heirloom gowns,
dressing the bride, and wedding day service.
309 West King Street Lancaster
717.397.7664
Sonia Rose
Your grandmothers broach, your mothers
train any piece of jewelry, lace or fabric
can be transformed into a one-of-a-kind
bridal handbag for yourself or for your
entire wedding party!
50 N. Queen St. Lancaster
717.394.3700

BRIDAL REGISTRY
Endless Honeymoon
Let your guests give you something
memorable and specialYour honeymoon.
www.endlesshoneymoon.com
1.877.878.3768
The Registry at Boscovs
When you register, youll receive
Exactly What you Want and get Fabulous
Perks too!!
giftregistry.boscovs.com
1.800.284.8155

BRIDAL SHOWERS
A Tea Affair
A Perfect Place for your Bridal Shower
6 Sturgis Lane Lititz
717.626.1776
Sugar Plums & Tea
Plan your special occasion with us.
Bridal Shower Baby Shower
Anniversary Birthday
403 Bank Barn Lane Lancaster
717.394.9166
www.sugarplumsandtea.com

CATERING
CR Lapps
Catering for All Your Events! Weddings,
Picnics, Party Trays, Etc.
101 Fite Way Quarryville
717.786.1768
Encks Custom Catering
Celebrating is our business! Catering for
all occasions. Call about our Banquet
& Conference Center
244 Granite Run Dr. Lancaster
717.569.7000

Hinkles Restaurant
Quality Catering To Suit All Your Special
Occasions
Rehearsal Dinners
Bridal Showers
Bachelor & Bachelorette Parties
Call or Email Us at:
hinklesrestaurant@gmail.com 717.684.2888
Like us on Facebook hinklespharmacy.com
Scoops Ice Cream & Grille
Provide a family friendly atmosphere with
quality food for all to enjoy at both our store
and on our food trucks
312 Primrose Lane Mountville
717.285.2055
Weddings by JDK
Our commitment to excellence will provide
you with the most fulfilling wedding experience
imaginable. Our wedding expertise began
in 1987 and we take pride in continuing that
legacy today. Our full spectrum of services for
the bride include catering, event and floral
design, rentals and planning.
21 North Prince Street Lancaster
1 Bishop Place Camp Hill
717.730.4661

ERRANDS & DELIVERY SERVICES


Wedding Errands of Lancaster
You have the fun, well do the run!
Weddings and other celebrations.
www.weddingerrandslancaster.com
717.842.0093

FAVORS
Wilbur Chocolate
Chocolate filled favor boxes and
wedding themed chocolate molds
48 N. Broad Street Lititz
717.626.3249

FLORAL DESIGN
Neffsville Flower Shoppe
Flower Designs from Ceremony to Reception
2700 Lititz Pike Lancaster
717.569.1801
www.neffsvilleflowershop.com

INSURANCE
Unruh Insurance Agency, Inc.
Life changes fast, make sure youre
protected
2350 N. Reading Road Denver
1344 Main Street East Earl
877.854.3309
www.unruhinsurance.com

INVITATIONS
Bookman Graphics
Custom-made wedding stationary,
including save the dates, invitations,
maps, program, thank yous and more.
601 South Broad Street Lititz
717.568.8246
lisabmears@mac.com
BookmanGraphics.com

LICENSE
Brimmers Licensing Service
Brimmers specializes in license and
notary services with convenient hours
and fast service, we guarantee your
satisfaction every time.
1354 Harrisburg Pike Lancaster & 3 other
convenient locations
717.394.9991

Irvin 50th

Jim and Emma Irvin


are happy to be celebrating 50 years of marriage on June 25, 2016.
The occasion was highlighted by a family dinner at Lombardos Restaurant of Lancaster.
Both are retired after
many years of working; Jim in engineering
and Emma in nursing.
They are the parents of
three children and ve
grandchildren. A cross
country trip in their motor home, later this year
will further commemorate this event.

MATTRESS
American Sleep Center
Family owned and operated mattress store
focused on quality and customer satisfaction.
Call us for current sales & specials.
1957 Fruitville Pike Lancaster
717.560.0660

PHOTOGRAPHY
Shining Star Photo Booth
Special Memories Last Forever
Enchanted Photo Gazebos
Enclosed & Open Photo Booths
Dcor Lighting
Visit Our Website, Email Us or Call
info@shiningstarphotobooth.com
717.435.7682

REAL ESTATE
Anita Stoltzfus, Realtor, ASP, SRES
Kingsway Realty
1770 Oregon Pike Lancaster
717.587.6479
Kingsway Realty/Quality First Rentals/
Hometown Refurnishing
Buy, Rent or Furnish your home
830 Martin Avenue Ephrata
717.341.5081

RECEPTIONS OR
BANQUET FACILITIES
Double Tree Resort
Lancaster Willow Valley
Wedding Day Elegance in an
All-inclusive, Stunningingly Beautiful Setting
2416 Willow Street Pike Lancaster
800.369.9877
www.doubletreelancaster.com
Fireside Tavern Restaurant & Ballroom
Elegant Ballroom, Custom Cuisine, Ceremonies
& Receptions with outdoor courtyard area
1500 Historic Drive Strasburg
717.687.7979
Four Seasons Golf Course
Creating Truly Memorable Moments;
Perfect Setting for Wedding Receptions,
Rehearsal Dinners, Anniversary Parties
949 Church Street Landisville
717.898.0536
www.4seasonsbanquets.com
The Gathering Place
Gearing up for our 30th season of summer
weddings and many other banquets
From family reunions to class reunions.
6 Pine Street Mount Joy
717.653.5911
Hamilton Ballroom
Offers a one of a kind experience for
your special event and will guide you
through the entire planning process
941 Wheatland Avenue Lancaster
717.393.0668
The Iris Club
Weddings, Parties, Dances
and More at Affordable Prices
323 N. Duke Street Lancaster
717.394.7811
Lancaster Marriott at Penn Square
We now Pronounce your Wedding
Breathtaking!
Downtown Lancaster
717.239.1600
Meadia Heights Golf Club
Personalized, distinctive service in an
atmosphere of understated elegance.
402 Golf Road Lancaster
717.393.9761
www.meadiaheightsgolf.com/events

Gilchrist 50th

Graham 65th

Nathanial and Regina


A. (Mattera) Gilchrist
of Lancaster celebrated
their 50th wedding anniversary on Saturday,
June 18, 2016. They
were married in the former St. Marys Catholic
Church in Marietta, PA
on June 18, 1966. They
are the proud parents
of 3 daughters: Natalie
from Pittsburgh, PA,
Suzanne wife of Angelo
Popolizio from Downingtown, PA, and Erin
Jordan from Lancaster,
PA. They have 4 grandchildren:
Makayla,
Dominick, Shaun, and
Tyler. They will celebrate their anniversary
with an anniversary
trip to Nova Scotia and
Prince Edward Island,
followed by a family
celebration upon their
return.

Norman & Jean Graham held a 65th wedding anniversary picnic


celebration on Saturday,
June 11 with their family
at Landis Homes. This
event was followed by
a dinner at the Stockyard Inn in Lancaster
with their 3 children
& spouses. The couple
currently resides at
Landis Homes.
They were married on
June 16th, 1951 at the
brides home in BirdIn-Hand. Their wedding
was unique in the fact it
was a joint wedding with
her sister, Jane, who
married Harold Burkholder.
Norman & Jean are the
parents of 3 children.
Gerald, husband of Linda (Buckwalter) Graham resides in Gordonville, PA. Phyllis, wife
of Dale Gamber resides
in Lancaster, PA. Gary
Graham currently resides near Millersville,
PA.
In addition to their 3
children, the Grahams
have 4 grandchildren &
14 great-grandchildren.
All were in attendance
at the anniversary celebration picnic.
Mr. Graham is retired from Norman L.
Graham Inc., a custom
home building company
he started in 1951 with
his wife Jean. He is currently employed at Habitat-for-Humanity ReStore in Lancaster. He
is a past member of the
Building Industry Association of Lancaster,
Fulton Bank Advisory
Board, and the Tel Hai
Retirement Community
Board & Building Committee.
Mrs. Graham, the former Martha Jean Myers,
is retired as secretary of
Norman L. Graham Inc.
She volunteers at Heart
of Lancaster Regional
Medical Center.
Norman & Jean are
both members of Bethany Grace Fellowship
Church, East Earl, PA.

The goal in marriage is not to


think alike, but to think together.
~ Robert C. Dodds

Pheasant Run Farm Bed & Breakfast


Cozy rooms with rustic flair in a renovated
historic stone barn on a working corn
& alfalfa farm.
200 Marticville Road Lancaster
717.872.0991
Rock Ford Plantation
The Lancaster Estate of Revolutionary
War General Edward Hand
881 Rockford Road Lancaster
717.799.8751 ~ Nancy
weddingsatrockford@gmail.com
www.rockfordplantation.org
Stoudts Bier Garden
Our Reception Hall offers a one of a kind
space for your wedding.
2800 N. Reading Road Adamstown
717.484.4386
Union Meeting House
Make your next event special!
80 N. Waterford Ave. Marietta
717.426.4089
mariettafundraising@hotmail.com
Weavers Banquet Facility
Customizing Banquets for more than 24 years
2590 N. Reading Road Denver
1 mile from PA Turnpike & 222
717.484.4302

TABLETOP, HOME DCOR & GIFTS


Lenox Retail Outlet
Offering the finest china, crystal, flatware,
cookware and gifts at the lowest possible
prices. Experience a whole new way to shop
for Lenox with the ability to purchase items
as individual units rather than complete place
settings. Receive expert tips on table settings,
collecting and home dcor.
Major credit cards accepted.
Rockvale Outlets, 2460 Lincoln Highway
Lancaster
717.393.2400

Mull 50th

TRANSPORTATION
Elite Coach
Nostalgic 20 Passenger Trolley &
25-56 Passenger Coaches, Perfect for
Guest Transportation
1685 W. Main Street Ephrata
800.722.6206
www.elitecoach.com
Red Lion Bus, Inc.
School Bus Shuttles
Take the Worry Out of Transporting Your
Wedding Guests
Contact Us For a Customized Event Quote
Kim Chronister at 717-244-4591, Ext. 105 or
email kchronister@redlionbus.com

WEDDING CAKES
Bird-in-Hand Bakery & Cafe
Our moist, homemade wedding cakes
are the perfect desserts for your special
day. From simple to elaborate, traditional
to contemporary, our accomplished cake
decorators will help you pick a design that
reflects your tastes, helping you create
memories to treasure forever.
2715 Old Philadelphia Pike Bird-in-Hand
717.768.1501
www.Bird-in-Hand.com

For more information or


to advertise on this page,
please contact
717.291.8800 or email
advertising@LNPnews.com

Pick up your copy of I Do Bridal Magazine at any of these locations today.

Clair and Ida Mull,


Quarryville, have recently celebrated their
50th wedding anniversary. They were married June 25, 1966. They
will be celebrating with
close family and friends.

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

Anniversaries
Haslam 50th

Rev. Dr. Robert Haslam


and Doris were pleasantly SURPRISED by an
early 50th Wedding Anniversary Party initiated
by their church family
and friends. The gathering occurred on Sunday, June 5th at Bethany
Evangelical
Church
of Creswell where Dr.
Haslam is presently
serving as Pastor. They
were married on June
25, 1966 at Lehigh Baptist Church in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
They have two children,
eight grandchildren and
three great grandchildren.
Dr. Haslam was ordained to the gospel
ministry in May of
1972 at Lehigh Baptist
Church. He has four
earned degrees having received his second
Doctorate Degree in
2015. He is a graduate
of Northeastern Bible
College (where he and
Doris met), Faith Theological Seminary and
Trinity Bible College
and Seminary.
Dr. Bob and Doris
have served the Lord in
six different churches
throughout the United States and they are
now joyfully serving at
Bethany EC of Creswell,
Pennsylvania.

Celebrations

Witmer 60th

Jim Witmer and Sara


(Sally) Jane Good met
and
became
sweet
hearts at Penn Manor
High School. They were
married 60 years ago on
June 23, 1956 at Faith
Calvary Church in Bausman, PA.
They are blessed with
4 children, 7 grandchildren, and 1 great grandson. Children are Alan,
husband of Kim, Lebanon, NH; Phyllis, wife
of Peter Witmer, Leola,
PA; Andrew, husband of
Denise, Narvon, PA; and
Matthew, husband of
Natalie, Lancaster, PA.
Their grandchildren
are Cory, Michael, Scott,
Molly, Gabe, Isaac, Ellis,
and great grandson Mason.
They celebrated with
their children and their
spouses at the Log Cabin Restaurant. They
reside at Willow Valley
Communities.

Weddings
ListShank

BeaverHershey

Dougherty
50th

On June 4, 2016, Joseph J. and Catherine


A. (Beaver) Dougherty,
Ephrata
celebrated
their 50th wedding anniversary by renewing their wedding vows
at St. Anne Catholic
Church, Lancaster. Joe
and Kay were married
on June 4, 1966 at Our
Lady of Mount Carmel
Church, Mount Carmel,
PA. Joe married his sister Pats best friend Kay.
Their rst date started
as a joke but they fell in
love and were married
within the year.
Joe served in the USAF
during the Korean conict. He retired from
Federal Mogul Corporation after 35 years of
service. Kay worked as a
secretary for the Department of the Air Force,
RCA, Wickersham Construction and retired
from LCSWMA with
over 20 years of service.
Since retirement they
have enjoyed each other
and have treasured the
special times with their
children and grandchildren.
They are the proud parents of Joseph J. Dougherty, III, married to
Kimberly of Lancaster
and Colleen A. of Ephrata. They are the grandparents of Dalton, Sean,
James and Michael
Dougherty who are the
light of their lives. Joe
and Kim hosted a family dinner party at their
home immediately following the ceremony.

Schnee 50th

Mentzer 50th

Zerphy 60th

Wes and Annette (Pickel) Schnee celebrated


their golden wedding
anniversary with a
blessing during Mass at
St. Philips by Fr. Lawrence Sherdel on June
25th, 2016 and enjoyed
a dinner with family and
friends at Lombardos
Restaurant.
They were married at
Sacred Heart Church in
Lancaster on June 25th,
1966 on a bright sunny
105 degree day. The
couple met at Garvins
Department Store while
working part-time and
attending Millersville
University.
They have traveled extensively
throughout
the world during their
marriage and retirement. Annette was an
elementary teacher at
Buehrle and Robert Fulton in the School District of Lancaster for 32
years and Wes worked
for Armstrong World
Industries, retiring in
2000.
Since retirement they
have also continued volunteering many hours at
St. Philips, the Lancaster Public Library, and
various other places.

Judy and Ralph Mentzer celebrated their


golden wedding anniversary on June 18th,
2016, having married on
that day in 1966 at Leola
Methodist Church.
Despite growing up a
block apart in New Holland, Ralph and Judy
didnt meet until their
senior year at Garden
Spot High School when
they fell in love. Although Ralph graduated
from Drexel and Judy
from Syracuse, they
continued their love affair during college. Putting so many miles on
their cars fostered their
continuing love of road
trips. They recently
completed their trip
across country on old
Route 66.
Judy is a home economist who works in food
styling, recipe development, and teaching.
Ralph is retired from
Case New Holland after
a 40-year career in various management positions.
The Mentzers celebrated their anniversary early with a trip to Disney
World with their three
grandchildren, Anja and
Lars Loken, and Isidora
Mentzer, and with their
daughters and sons-inlaw, Cynthia Mentzer
and David Smith, and
Samantha and Rolf Loken. They then enjoyed
a party on their anniversary with friends
and family at Thorn Hill
Winery hosted by their
children.

Thomas and Theresa


(Buch) Zerphy were
married on June 24,
1956 at Zion Lutheran
Church in East Petersburg, PA. They were
blessed with 4 children: Thomas (Kim
Clark), Gregory (Pam
Sattazahn),
Steven
John (in Heaven), and
Gretchen (Jack Palmer).
Again blessed with 7
grandchildren: Kristen
(Ryan) Brokaw, Steven
(Johenly Paz) Zerphy,
Zachary Frey, Sarah
Zerphy, Scott Zerphy
(in Heaven) and Kelly
and Kerry Palmer. Once
more blessed with 4
great-grandchildren:
Ethan, Miley and Lacey
Brokaw, and Leah Zerphy.
Tom retired from Federal Mogul Corporation
as a supervisor after 38
years. Terry was a dental receptionist for 30
years. Crabbing, clamming and pontooning in
Rehoboth Beach for 30
years was our wonderful family fun. Terry is
also enjoying her twin
sister and best friend,
Pat Eshleman. Pat and
Jim will be celebrating
their 62nd anniversary
on July 24th. Terry and
Tom enjoy attending
LCBC, Lancaster Campus and serving their
Lord. To God be the
glory!

Engagements
EshlemanSangrey
Ashley Shank and Brian List were married on
May 28, 2016 at Calvary
Church in Lancaster,
PA.
Ashley is the daughter
of Douglas and Marjorie Shank of Lancaster.
She is a graduate of
Manheim
Township
High School (2009) and
Elizabethtown College
(2013). She currently
works for Acuity Advisors and CPAs, LLP as
an Accountant.
Brian is the son of
Bradley and Diane List
of Farmington Hills, MI.
He is a graduate of the
University of Michigan
(2007-BSE) and Loyola
University
Maryland
(2015-MBA). He currently works for Apex
Tool Group as a Mechanical Engineer.
The couple honeymooned in The Bahamas, and lives in Stewartstown, PA.

Kyle Beaver and Taylor


Hershey were united in
marriage Sunday, May
15, 2016 at Harvest View
Barn at Hershey Farms
in Elizabethtown, PA
followed by a reception.
Joe Sherer, pastor of the
couples church, Willow
Street Mennonite, officiated.
Kyle is the son of Bryan and Dawn Beaver of
Millerstown, PA. Taylor
is the daughter of Dale
and Deb Hershey of
Lancaster, PA. Kyle is a
2012 graduate of Greenwood High School. Taylor is a 2012 graduate
of Lampeter-Strasburg
High School. Both are
2014 graduates of Penn
State Mont Alto where
they met. The couple
spent their honeymoon
in Punta Cana and now
resides in Lampeter, PA.

Once in awhile,
Right in the middle of an ordinary life,
Love gives us a fairy tale.
Anonymous

B17

McElhanyAnderson

Life without love is like


a tree without blossom
and fruit
~ Khalil Gibran

CELEBRATIONS GUIDELINES
LNP publishes wedding, engagement and anniversary
announcements up to the first 150 words and 1 picture
as a free public service on Sundays. Additional wording can
be added for 50 cents/word and $25 for a second picture.

Gerald and Laura Sangrey of Willow Street


happily announce the
engagement of their
daughter, Kara Sangrey
to Eric Eshleman, son of
Todd and Vickie Eshleman, Landisville. The
two were engaged in December in front of the
Christmas tree in Lancaster Square. Family
and friends met afterwards to celebrate with
them.
Kara is a graduate
of Penn Manor High
School and the University of Delaware. She
currently teaches in the
Penn Manor School District. Eric is a graduate of
Hempeld High School
and Penn State University. He also teaches in
the Penn Manor School
District.
The wedding is planned
for November 2016.

Katrina Marie Anderson and Finian Bram


McElhany along with
their parents are pleased
to announce their engagement. Katrina is
the daughter of Connie
Anderson of Lancaster
and the late Ellis Anderson of York. Finian is the
son of Barton McElhany
and Jennifer McElhany
of Paradise, PA.
The
couple
met
through a mutual friend
in 2008. Katrina is a
Hempeld graduate of
2009 and works for Fulton Bank as a customer
service representative.
Finian is a Pequea Valley graduate of 2009
and works for Advance
AutoParts as a partsmanager.
They currently reside in West Lampeter
with their two dogs. A
Spring 2017 wedding is
planned.

Celebrations are now self-service! Create and see how


your celebration announcement will appear at:
www.LancasterOnline.com/celebrations/create
Questions: 717-291-4957
You may also submit an announcement in person or by mail:
LNP Media Group
8 W. King St., PO Box 1328, Lancaster, PA 17608.

A reason to

Celebrate your big


moment by publishing
your engagement,
wedding or anniversary
announcement and
photograph! The first 150
words and one picture will
be run at no charge. Each
additional word is $0.50.

To get started, visit:

LancasterOnline.com/celebrations/create
Photo courtesy of Melissa Mortimer, Captured by Missi Photography

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Fantastic Friday July 1st through July 4th!

J
U
L

Sports

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

n SEND STORY TIPS & INFO TO: CHRIS OTTO, 291-8662, COTTO@LNPNEWS.COM

Olympic
dreams

4 local swimmers aim for a trip to


Rio de Janeiro at U.S. swimming trials
k Page C2

ALSO INSIDE: OUTDOORS

UNITED STATES 1, NEW ZEALAND 1

LANCO AMATEUR

USA aims
for bronze

After clutch tie in London, Team


USA in 3rd-place field hockey match
DIANA PUGLIESE

DPUGLIESE@LNPNEWS.COM

CHRIS KNIGHT | LNP CORRESPONDENT PHOTOS

Ryan Dornes hits his approach shot on the 17th hole Saturday in the Lanco Amateur at Conestoga Country Club.

DORNES HOLDS ON
Edges Oliveri for his 1st Lanco Amateur title after difficult 2-day event
RYAN DIXON

LNP CORRESPONDENT

Just how tough was the


Conestoga Country Club
for the 64th Lanco Janney Montgomery Scott
Mens Amateur Championship?
Only five rounds for
the two-day tournament
finished under par.
Ryan Dornes and Marc
Oliveri Jr. combined
to record four of those
rounds. Together, the
young duo played a solid
36 holes which set up a
dramatic finish in Saturdays second and final
round.
A day after firing a
4-under 66 to take a
three-shot lead into Saturday, Dornes overcame
a double bogey on 15 and
held off a hard-charging
Oliveri to claim a oneshot victory for his first
Lanco Amateur title.
I made a mental mistake on the par 3 (15th)
and mis-clubbed and
should have hit something less, so I just tried
to come back from that
as strong as possible,
Dornes said. I just
wanted to keep with my
game plan of staying aggressive and it kind of
worked out for me in the
end.
The
19-year-old
Dornes finished with a

TIM GROSS
SPORTS WRITER

Summer
reading: 7
books for
sports fans
Summer kicked into
full swing with the end
of the NBA Finals last
Sunday and the summer
solstice Monday. For
some, the season offers a
chance to relax, pick up
a book and read on the

It was all about the


defense for the United
States womens field
hockey team Saturday at
the Champions Trophy
in London.
Fighting off a relentless attack from International Hockey Federation (FIH) No. 4 New
Zealand, Team USA
secured a spot in the
bronze medal game of
the tournament with a
1-1 tie on the final day of
pool play.
Team USA will meet
FIH No. 3 Australia
a 4-1 victor over Great
Britain at 11:15 a.m.
today in the Americans
first medal game appearance since finishing
third in 1995.
Defensively, we did a
really good job today,
U.S. coach Craig Parnham said via a team release. We needed to
because we werent as
good with the ball as we
wanted to be, as New
Zealand has a good counter attack. If we didnt
defend how we did today,
it would have been a dif-

MORE INSIDE
n L-L field hockey alums

gather in Ephrata for


scholarship fundraiser,
Page C3
n Chasing the Dream:
Meet Team USAs Caitlin
Van Sickle, Page C4
n Local players help U16
squad triumph at Spooky
Nook, Page C4

ferent score line. It was a


day of defenses.
Kelsey
Kolojejchick
put the U.S. on the board
first, but New Zealand
controlled play for most
of the opening quarter.
The Black Sticks took
their first shot just seconds into the game and
followed with a penalty
corner with 14:15 on the
clock, but the drag flick
was stopped by U.S. goalie Jackie Briggs.
Team USAs defense
stepped up two minutes
later to deny the initial
shot on New Zealands
second corner and Briggs
made a pair of saves as
New Zealand tried to net
the rebound.
Despite not spending

TEAM USA, page C4

COLOMBIA 1, UNITED STATES 0

With loss, US 4th


in Copa America

Marc Oliveri Jr., who finished second, blasts out of the sand on the 17th hole.

1-under 69 on Saturday,
good for a two-round
total of 135. Oliveri countered with a 67 on Saturday to go with a 69 from
Friday.
Ryans a great player
and I knew I was going
to have to shoot something low to even have a
chance, Oliveri said. I
shot 67 and I lost. You
cant do anything about
it.

When you come so


close to a victory, things
that at first didnt seem
so big loom large.
Case in point: During Fridays round, Oliveri assessed himself a
1-stroke penalty on the
fourth hole for his ball
moving.
Marc called a penalty
on himself on the fourth
green, said Conestoga
Country Club PGA Tour

Pro Robert Leeman.


He had went to mark
his ball and he placed
a coin behind his ball,
lifted the ball, unbeknownst to him, his
finger was on top of
the coin and the coin
had stuck to his finger
and when he lifted his
ball, he also lifted his
ball mark, which is a
ball at rest moved and

beach or between cookouts. Here are seven


sports titles to consider
as you fill out that summer reading list.
1. The Eighty-Dollar Champion: Snowman, The Horse That
Inspired a Nation, by
Elizabeth Letts.
The tale, published
in 2012, encapsulates
themes of The American
Dream, an underdog
story and the culture of
Cold War-era America
with the inspirational
relationship between
Snowman, a horse
once on the road to the
slaughterhouse, and
Harry de Leyer, a Dutch
Immigrant looking for
a chance to earn money

beyond a modest Long


Island farm. After de
Leyer purchased the
horse for $80, and after a
failed attempt to sell the
horse himself, the duo
eventually rose in the
show-jumping ranks to
improbable heights.
On the charts: The
Eighty-Dollar Champion reached the top
of The New York Times
nonfiction chart in June
2013, came in at No. 17
on the Times Sports
and Fitness list for June
2016 and ranks No. 1 in
the Amazon Best Sellers
list in the Sports & Outdoors category.
Critics say: If the
true stories of horses
Secretariat or Seabiscuit

kept you spellbound,


then consider leaving
the racetrack setting to
learn about the equestrian worlds shock in 1958
when an $80 plow horse
arrived to compete in its
top show. Meredith
Jacobs, The Fayetteville
Observer.
2. The Arm: Inside
the Billion-Dollar
Industry of the Most
Valuable Commodity in Sports, by Jeff
Passan.
From Little League to
the majors and beyond,
the arm of a pitcher is
one of the most valued
body parts in the sports
universe. Jeff Passan
of Yahoo! explores the
culture surrounding the

AMATEUR, page C8

GLENDALE,
Ariz.
(AP) Carlos Bacca beat
goalkeeper Tim Howard
by sliding to poke in a
headed cross in the 31st
minute, and the United
States finished fourth
in the Copa America
with a 1-0 defeat against
Colombia on Saturday
night.
After losing to Argentina 4-0 in the semifinals,
the 31st-ranked U.S. was
beaten by No. 3 Colombia
for the second time in the
16-nation tournament.
Bobby Wood came
closest to scoring for the
U.S. when he hit a post
in the 62nd, one minute
after Colombias Juan
Cuadrado hit the underside of the crossbar.
The U.S. matched its
previous best finish in
the tournament, when it
lost to Colombia in the

1995 fourth-place game


at Uruguay.
After the Americans
lost to Jamaica in the
semifinals of last years
CONCACAF Gold Cup
and struggled in the
semifinal round of qualifying for the 2018 World
Cup, U.S. coach Jurgen
Klinsmann was hoping
his team would rebound
in the Copa, when right
back DeAndre Yedlin,
central defender John
Brooks, midfielder Gyasi Zardes and forward
Bobby Wood solidified
their positions as regular
starters.
Colombia, which never has won the Copa
America, finished third
for fourth time but first
since 1995. Argentina
plays Chile for the title
on tonight in East Rutherford, New Jersey.

appraisal of pitching talent, the ways arms have


reeled in unprecedented
paychecks and the injuries that have cut careers
short. Passan follows
major leaguers Daniel
Hudson and Todd Coffey
on their paths back to
the mound after Tommy
John surgery, interviews
Sandy Koufax about the
injuries that ended his
career and more.
On the charts: The
Arm debuted at No. 4
on The New York Times
Sports and Fitness bestsellers list in April and
ranks 15th in Amazons
best sellers in Sports &
Outdoors.
Critics say: The
Arm should be re-

quired reading for youth


baseball coaches and
parents with a child
who appears to have a
gift to throw a baseball.
It also should be on the
list for fans who want to
understand why some of
most expensive athletes
in sports, pitchers, are
such a fragile commodity. Ed Sherman, The
Chicago Tribune
3. The Legends
Club: Dean Smith,
Mike Krzyzewski,
Jim Valvano, and an
Epic College Basketball Rivalry, by John
Feinstein.
A New York Times
bestselling author, Feinstein chronicles

BOOKS, page C11

C2

SPORTS

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

SPORTS ON TV
AUTO RACING

TIME

NBCSN

1pm

NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Toyota/Save


Mart 350

FS1

3pm

Indy Lights Series, Road America (sameday tape)

NBCSN

3:30pm

NETWORK

TIME

U.S. Olympic Trials,


womens springboard final

NBC

4:30pm

U.S. Olympic Trials,


mens platform final

NBC

7pm

NETWORK

TIME

FS1

11am

NETWORK

TIME

European PGA Tour, BMW International


Open, final round

GOLF

6:30am

PGA Tour, Qucken Loans National,


final round

GOLF

1pm

PGA Tour, Qucken Loans National,


final round

CBS

3pm

Champions Tour, American Family


Insurance Championship, final round

GOLF

3pm

LPGA Tour, Walmart NW Arkansas


Championship, final round

GOLF

5:30pm

PGA of America, PGA Professional


Championship, final round (same-day tape)

GOLF

8pm

GYMNASTICS

NETWORK

TIME

DIVING

DRAG RACING
NHRA, Summit Racing Equipment
Nationals, finals

GOLF

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Swimmers train at the U.S. Olympic swimming trials on Saturday in Omaha, Nebraska.
SWIMMING

Phelps seeks Olympic do-over

Not impressed with 6 medals at London, star athlete begins with US trials
PAUL NEWBERRY

NETWORK

IndyCar, Kohler Grand Prix

mate goal, but first he


must get by a meet that
might be even more
nerve-racking.
The U.S. Olympic trials, which begin Sunday
for what will be eight
sold-out days of swimming at a temporary
pool constructed inside
the CenturyLink Center
in downtown Omaha,
determine the roster
of the American team.
Only the top two finishers in each event are assured of a spot in Brazil.
For us being as strong
of a swimming country as we are, I think
theres probably more
pressure at trials than
the games, said Phelps,
who with 18 golds and
22 medals overall is the
most decorated ath-

lete in Olympic history.


We have almost 2,000
people here, and a maximum of 52 will make
the team, so its a pretty
small chance.
No one expects Phelps
to miss out, especially given the way hes
turned his life around
since a second drunkendriving arrest in 2014.
He underwent weeks
of inpatient therapy,
committed himself to
sobriety, reconnected
with his long-estranged
father, got engaged and
just seven weeks ago
became a father.
His infant son, Boomer, will be in the stands
with his mother and
the rest of Phelps family, too young to understand that his dad will

be trying to qualify for


his fifth Olympics but
serving as a huge inspiration nonetheless.
Phelps has entered
five events at the trials.
He wont get started
until Monday with the
preliminaries of the
200-meter freestyle and
the 200 butterfly. Hes
also set to compete in
the 100 fly, 100 free and
200 individual medley.
Based on his program
at last years U.S. national championships,
Phelps will be looking to
compete in three individual races in Rio: the
100 fly, 200 fly and 200
IM. The freestyle events
are probably nothing
more than a means to
ensure he has a spot on
all three Olympic relays.

NBC

9pm

NETWORK

TIME

Chicago Cubs at Miami


or Cleveland at Detroit

MLB

1pm

Tampa Bay at Baltimore

MASN

1:30pm

Washington at Milwaukee

MASN2

2pm

Philadelphia at San Francisco

CSN/PH

4pm

ESPN

8pm

NETWORK

TIME

UEFA, European Championship, round of


16, France vs. Ireland

ESPN

8:30am

UEFA, European Championship, round of


16, Germany vs. Slovakia

ESPN

11:30am

UEFA, European Championship, round of


16, Hungary vs. Belgium

ESPN

2:30pm

MLS, Houston at Portland

ESPN2

6pm

FS1

8pm

NETWORK

TIME

U.S. Olympic Trials, qualifying heats:


Mens 400 free, mens & womens 400 IM
(same-day tape)

NBCSN

6pm

U.S. Olympic Trials, finals


Mens 400 free, mens & womens 400 IM

NBC

8pm

NETWORK

TIME

Phoenix at New York

NBA

3pm

4 area swimmers will vie for a trip to Rio during this weeks trials

Connecticut at Los Angeles

NBA

5pm

NETWORK

TIME

DIANA PUGLIESE

nals on NBC at 8 p.m.

Beach, AVP Tour, San Francisco Open

NBC

3pm

Three former Lancaster-Lebanon League


swimmers Warwick
graduate Emily Cameron and Conestoga Valley
alums Melissa Gates and
Todd Wilson will compete at the U.S. Olympic
Trials at the Century
Link Center in Omaha,
Nebraska from today
through July 3.
Octorara
graduate
Cierra Runge will also
swim at the trials after
qualifying in the 200,
400 and 800 freestyles.
Cameron, who helped
the University of Georgia wins its seventh
womens NCAA title in
March, leads the way
after qualifying in five
events. The rising senior
claimed spots in the 100
and 200 breaststrokes,
the 200 and 400 IMs and
the 200 butterfly.
Wilson will swim in the
100 backstroke, while
Gates, who swam collegiately at California University of Pennsylvania,
will compete in the 50
freestyle.
Only the top two finishers in each event make
Team USA except for
in the 100 and 200 freestyles, where the top six
earn spots to fill out the
relay teams.
The entirety of the trials will be televised by
NBC.
Heres a rundown of
when and where you can
watch the area swimmers:

Wednesday

FIVB World League, Men, United States


vs. Australia and United States vs. Italy
(tape-delayed)

NBCSN

7pm

AP NATIONAL WRITER

OMAHA, Neb. For


anyone else, six medals
wouldve been a marvelous way to exit the
Olympic stage.
Not so for Michael
Phelps.
When he looks back to
the London Olympics,
they sound like a total
failure.
I wasnt happy doing what I was doing,
Phelps said Saturday. I
sure as hell wasnt training. We all saw that. I
tried to fake it pretty
much.
Phelps is all in this
time, for what is essentially a do-over of his
farewell to competitive swimming. The Rio
Olympics are the ultiOLYMPIC SWIMMING

Locals strive to make a splash


DPUGLIESE@LNPNEWS.COM

Today
Cameron is seeded
13th in the 400 IM with
a time of 4:42.24. Maya
DiRado holds the fastest
qualifying time (4:37.71)
in the event, while 2012
silver medalist Elizabeth Beisel sits in sec-

Cammile
Adams
has the fastest qualifying time in the 200
butterfly (2:06.33),
in which Cameron is
99th (2:14.85).
NBCSN will show
the preliminary heats
at 7 p.m. and the finals
will air on NBC at 8
p.m.

Thursday

FILE PHOTO

Warwick grad Emily Cameron, pictured swimming in 2014


during her sophomore year at Georgia, is one of four local
swimmers competing at the U.S. Olympic Trials.

ond (4:31.99) and Katie


Ledecky holds the fifth
spot (4:37.93).
The prelims will air on
NBCSN at 6 p.m., followed by the finals at 8
p.m. on NBC.

Monday
Wilson sits at No. 102
in the 200 backstroke
after qualifying in a personal best 56.72. The top
spot belongs to David
Plummer (52.51), while
2012 gold medalist Matt
Grevers is seeded second
with a time of 52.54 in
the event.
Cameron will swim
in the 100 breaststroke,
where she is 66th
(1:10.55) behind Justine
Bowker (1:09.15)
Runge, who is set to
transfer from the University of CaliforniaBerkeley to Wisconsin
following the Olympics,
will take to the blocks
as the third seed in the
400 freestyle (4:04.55)

ahead of 2012 silver


medalist Allison Schmitt
(4:06.88). Ledecky holds
the top qualifying spot
with a time of 3:58.37.
The prelims will air on
NBCSN at 6:30 p.m. with
the finals being broadcast at 8 p.m. on NBC.

Tuesday
Cameron earned her
highest qualifying spot
in the 200 IM, where
she is seeded 11th with a
time of 2:12.54. DiRado
again holds the top spot
(2:08.99) ahead of thirdseeded Caitlin Leverenz
(2:10.35), the bronze
medalist in London.
A trio of big names sit
atop the qualifiers in the
200 freestyle in Ledecky
(1:54.43). Missy Franklin (1:55.49) and Schmitt
(1:56.23). Runge sits 10th
in the event with a time
of 1:57.97.
NBCSN will show the
preliminary heats at 7
p.m., followed by the fi-

Finishing
her
competition, Cameron will swim in the
200
breaststroke,
where she sits 35th
(2:30.58). Micah Lawrence posted the best
time in the event with
a 2:22.04 finish.
The prelims will air
on NBCSN at 6:30
p.m. with the finals
being broadcast at 8
p.m. on NBC.

Friday
Runge is also seeded third in the 800
freestyle after posting a time of 8:24.69.
Defending Olympic
champion Ledecky
leads the qualifiers
with a seed time of
8:06.68.
The prelims will air
on NBCSN at 6 p.m.,
followed by the finals
at 8 p.m. on NBC.

Saturday
Gates takes to the
pool in the 50 freestyle, where she is
seeded 28th (25.55).
Madison
Kennedy
holds the top spot
with a time of 24.45.
NBCSN will show
the prelims at 5 p.m.,
followed by the finals
at 8 p.m.

Women, P&G Championships

MLB

L.A. Dodgers at Pittsburgh

SOCCER

Copa America Centenario, final


Chile vs. Argentina

SWIMMING

WNBA

VOLLEYBALL

GYMNASTICS

Laurie Hernandez tries


for spot on Olympic team
Teens biggest trial may be her nerves
WILL GRAVES
AP SPORTS WRITER

ST. LOUIS Laurie Hernandez walked


onto the floor at the U.S.
gymnastics championships in 2012 and did
what most kids do if they
happen to see their role
models just sort of hanging out.
She kinda freaked.
I remember fangirling
because there were all
these Olympians, all
these world champions
around me, Hernandez
said. I was mesmerized.
Four years later, Hernandez is the one doing
the mesmerizing.
Two weeks removed
from her 16th birthday,
the girl from New Jersey
is rapidly becoming the
latest It Girl in a group
already jam-packed with
star power. Her electric
and eye-opening 60.450
all-around total during
the opening night of the
2016
championships
on Friday even left the
famously
difficult-toplease national team coordinator Martha Karolyi mouthing wow.
Did I? No. I dont
know, Karolyi said with
a laugh. I think its very
important that the girls
impress us and if I say
wow, I really like it.
Theres plenty to like
about Hernandez, who
has spent the last few
months building a com-

pelling case for a spot on


the five-woman Olympic team when it is announced in two weeks.
The biggest question
surrounding Hernandez
coming into her first year
at the senior elite level
had nothing to do with
her talent she won the
2015 U.S. junior title and
has been making regular trips to the Karolyi
ranch for years but
nerves. Karolyi needed
to be convinced Hernandez wouldnt be overwhelmed by the stakes.
She hardly looked
freaked out on Friday. Hernandezs score
equaled
three-time
Olympic medalist Aly
Raisman for second behind Simone Biles who
has spent the last three
years separating herself
from every other gymnast on the planet and
was more than a point
clear of Gabby Douglas.
Perhaps most impressive? Hernandezs consistency. She finished in
the top four in all four
rotations, showcasing
the kind of versatility
Karolyi values as much
as any stuck landing.
This is exactly what
we look for, Karolyi said.
We know her routines
are good and they are
world-class routines, but
we have to have the proof
she is able to perform
those routines when the
pressure is growing.

SPORTS

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

PAULA WOLF
WHEELCHAIR QUARTERBACK

A promising
start to the
era of Bryan
Colangelo

ROBERT DEVONSHIRE JR. | LNP CORRESPONDENT PHOTOS

Players are shown from the Lancaster-Lebanon Field Hockey Alumni Tournament, held at Ephrata Middle School on
Saturday. The game benefited the scholarship fund for the Linda Shelley Spirit Award.
FIELD HOCKEY

Helping a good cause


More participation hoped for in future L-L League alumni events
CHRIS A. COUROGEN
LNP CORRESPONDENT

About 20 former high


school field hockey players showed up Saturday
evening to pay tribute to
former Ephrata player
and coach Linda C. Shelley. They did it in a way
that would have pleased
Shelley by playing a
game of field hockey.
She would be delighted, said former Ephrata
player and coach Rhoda
Mountz, who played with
Shelley in high school
and began organizing
this annual game in 2012.
Players pay $10 to play.
The money goes to the
Linda Shelley Spirit
Award, a scholarship
presented annually to a
graduating LancasterLebanon League field
hockey player who plans
to continue to play in college.
Shelley, who died in
2011, was one of the top
field hockey officials in
the nation. She officiated
high school field hockey
for 30 years, held a national level ranking as an
official and worked both
PIAA and NCAA Division III championships
in her career.
Mountz calls the event
the Lancaster-Lebanon
Alumni Field Hockey
Tournament. There have
been years when they
have had enough players
to rotate three teams on
the field.
Mountz would like to
see the event grow to fulfill its name.
I would like to see
each Lancaster-Lebanon
League team field an
alumni team. That is my
ultimate goal, Mountz
said.
Some of Saturdays participants say that goal is
realistic.
There are enough people in the area. We just
need to get the word out,
said Heather Noll, who as
Heather Aughinbaugh
starred for Cocalico before graduating in 1994,
She went on to win a na-

Above, a player pushes


the ball downfield past
an outstretched defender.
Left, Garden Spot graduate Amanda Sauder (80)
played goalie for both
teams, switching sides
after each period.

tional championship as a
collegian at Wake Forest.
The players in attendance Saturday included
representatives from five
different high schools.
And they represented
more than a dozen different college teams.
There was even a mother-daughter tandem.
Jennifer
Wilkerson,
43, was a high school
teammate of Mountz at
Ephrata. Her 20-yearold daughter, Nicole, is
a more recent Ephrata
grad who plays college
field hockey at Messiah,
where she will be a junior
in the fall. Both would
love to play together as
Mountaineers against
their old high school rivals.
Its pretty cool. Lan-

caster County is the


home of U.S. field hockey.
It would be neat to see
this grow bigger, Jennifer Wilkerson said.
Noll remembers when
there used to be an annual alumni game between
Cocalico and Ephrata.
She was one of three Cocalico grads at the game.
We got a pretty good
turnout. I think we could
find enough (to play in a
tournament), said Noll.
Ephrata grad Amber
Shirk thinks there are
enough alums still playing the game in the area
to hold an alumni tournament. Shirk plays
indoors in the winter.
There are field hockey
leagues at Spooky Nook,
Red Rose Arena and Lanco Fieldhouse.

It has definitely gotten bigger in the last five


years. On Sunday afternoons, when the league
plays, you will find a lot
of adults playing, Shirk
said.
Shed also like to see
alumni event grow because this is a great
cause. Its nice we can
continue funding girls
through the scholarship.
A reminder of the good
the scholarship does
was on hand Saturday.
Ephrata graduate Katie
Hammaker, who now
plays goalie at Brown in
the Ivy League, won the
scholarship in 2014.
Hammaker, who is recovering from surgery,
was unable to play this
year. But she sang the
national anthem before
the game, then stayed to
cheer on her friends.
The scholarship has
helped me to continue
my education at Brown
and to continue playing
the game I love, Hammaker said. Id love if
they can recruit a few
more players and this
can grow into a big tournament. Wed be able to
help more girls.

INFERNO 4, MAGIC 1

Offense awakens for Inferno in win


Lancasters womens soccer team picks up 3rd win of season
SAM DISSINGER
LNP CORRESPONDENT

The Lancaster Inferno


ended a three-game losing streak by defeating
the New York Magic, 4-1,
on Saturday evening at
Millersville Universitys
Pucillo Field.
The womens soccer
team is now 3-4.
Lancaster dominated
time of possession on
Saturday night, with the
combination of a tenacious offensive attack
and a staunch defense
serving as the key ingredients in the triumph.
In the first half, the Inferno were able to keep
the ball pinned down in
New York territory for

the first 15 minutes of


play. The constant pressure on the Magic defense resulted in a great
goal in transition when
Lancasters Teresa Rynier gave a great feed to
teammate Katie Hackos,
who was able to put the
finishing touches on the
first goal of the game.
The unrelenting offensive attack helped to
keep the pressure off the
Inferno defense a defensive effort that only
allowed three Magic
shots on net in the first
half.
Not long after the Inferno posted their first
goal, they would follow
up with another score

when Rynier slipped


a soft pass in front of
net, where Amy Rieker
chipped in the second
goal.
New York answered
with a goal of its own,
when Shani Abraham
took advantage of a oneon-one to make it 2-1.
Just before the end of
the first half, the Inferno
were able to tack on one
more when Hackos got
off a great pass to Rynier,
who put Lancaster up
3-1.
Halfway through the
second half, the Inferno
started to get a better
push on offense, with
seven shots on net. That
added pressure culmi-

nated when Lancasters


Trisha Clark curled in
an exceptional corner
kick to teammate Bailey
Corbin, who was able
to elevate over her defender and put a header
in the back of the net to
bring the final tally to
4-1.
The Infernos next
game will be at 12:30
p.m. on Saturday, July 9,
against TSF Valkyries at
Clipper Magazine Stadium.

After years of closely


following Philadelphias sports team, by
now I should know not
to read too much into
rumors.
But I made that mistake before the NBA
draft, believing the
reports that the Sixers
badly wanted the No.
3 overall pick from
Boston so they could
choose Providence
point guard Kris Dunn.
We all knew Philly
would take LSUs Ben
Simmons at No. 1,
which was a no-brainer, as hes a possible
once-in-a-generation
talent.
But the team also
desperately needs a
point guard and shooters, so I really was
afraid GM Bryan Colangelo would overpay
for that third pick.
Maybe he did make
inquiries with Boston,
but I shouldve realized
the Philadelphia really wants Dunn rumors
were not coming from
the Sixers camp.
For one thing, why
would Colangelo
weaken his bargaining
power by telegraphing

C3

his desire for Dunn?


More likely, that was
put out by Boston to
try to generate trade
interest among teams
who might be looking
to move up in the draft.
Im sort of on the
fence about Dunn
anyway. He seems the
most NBA-ready of the
point guards drafted,
but he does have some
weaknesses in his
game.
The 2017 draft class
of point guards is
expected to be much
deeper.
So the Sixers ended
up not making any draft
day trades at all, after
people were assuming
Colangelo would go for
something big.
Instead, after selecting the best player
available at No. 1, he
managed to grab some
intriguing international prospects who were
expected to go higher
near the end of the first
round.
French small forward
Timothe LuwawuCabarrot and Turkish
shooting guard Furkan
Korkmaz may not be in
Philly this coming season, but the consensus
is that they represented great value at No. 24
and No. 26 overall in a
draft that was considered weak.
For all the handwringing about Colangelo, then, hes off to a
really good start.
Which means its
finally not embarrassing to be excited about
the Sixers again.

n Paula Wolf works in sports at LNP. Email her at pwolf@


lnpnews.com. She also tweets at @PaulaWolfLNP.

MLS ROUNDUP

Vancouver hands
Union first home loss
DC United shuts out New England,
NYC FC blanks Seattle Sounders
Andrew Jacobson,
Kekuta Manneh and
Christian
Bolanos
scored and the Vancouver
Whitecaps
handed the Philadelphia Union their first
home loss of the season, 3-2 on Saturday
night.
Bolanos had the
key goal in the 84th
minute, with Chris
Pontius scoring the
final goal for Philadelphia late in stoppage time. Bolanos
took a pass from Erik
Hurtado near the top
left corner of the 18
box, made a move and
right-footed a shot
through the legs of defender Keegan Rosenberry for his fifth goal.
The Union (7-5-5),
who were 6-0-2 at
home and lead the
Eastern Conference,
opened the scoring in
the 14th minute when
he cleaned up a loose
ball out front.
D.C. United 2,
Revolution 0: Lamar
Neagle had a goal and
an assist to give D.C.
United an early lead
that stood up in a 2-0
victory over the New
England Revolution
on Saturday night.
D.C., after being shut
out in its two previous
games and four of six,
opened the scoring in
the 20th minute when

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Luciano Acosta chipped


a perfect pass over the
defense to the foot of
Neagle, who volleyed it
in from 10 yards out.
D.C. (5-6-5) leapfrogged the Revolution
(4-5-7) into fifth in the
Eastern Conference with
its fourth shutout in the
last seven games and improved to 2-0-1 in the series this season.
New York City FC
2, Sounders 0: Frank
Lampard scored a disputed goal late in the
first half, Ronald Matarrita added an insurance
tally in the 87th minute
and NYC beat the Seattle
Sounders 2-0 on Saturday.
New York City (6-5-6)
won its second straight
after a four-game winless streak. The Sounders (5-9-1) dropped their
second in a row and fifth
in the last six games.

FROM WIRE REPORTS

SPORTS TOURS
Philadelphia

Phillies
NY Mets .......................July 17
SF Giants ....................... Aug 4
New York

Yankees
San Francisco Giants ...July 23
Cleveland Indians .......... Aug 7
Baltimore Orioles......... Aug 27

Baseball Hall of Fame


&

NY Yankees Game .........Aug 6-7

Acme Shopping Center


3957 Lincoln Hwy / US Rt. 30 Business
Downingtown, PA 19335 610-873-1133

ActionJacksonSportsTours.com

Jets in Pittsburgh

Oct 8-9 - Bus, downtown hotel, lower level ticket.... $549 dbl

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Tickets on sale for all


home games

For reservations call


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1619 Manheim Pk.
Lancaster

C4

SPORTS

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

Team USA: Tie


Continued from C1

much of the opening 15


minutes on the offensive,
the U.S. made the most of
the chances it had, scoring 8:58 into the first.
Emily Wold found Katie Bam, who worked the
ball down to the right
baseline before sliding
a pass across to Kolojejchick. The forward was
waiting in front of the
cage to drive the ball past
the goalie and put the
Americans up 1-0.
New Zealand continued its attack with another corner with four
minutes to go in the first,
but Melissa Gonzalez
sprinted up from the goal
line to make the stop.
Play was more evenly
distributed in the second quarter, but New
Zealand finished the half
with an 11-3 advantage in
shots.
The U.S. had another
look three minutes into
the third quarter when
Michelle Kasold found
former Penn Manor star
Jill Witmer by the right
post, but the New Zealand defense managed to
get a stick on the ball before Witmer could take
the shot.
New Zealand saw another penalty corner
turned away by Briggs
before tallying the equalizer on its fifth corner
of the game in the 36th
minute.
Anita McLarens drag
flick was saved, but Olivia Merry scooped up the
rebound and deflected
the ball into the back of
the net to pull the Black
Sticks even.

Needing a win to make


the third-place game,
New Zealand continued
to take aim at the U.S.
cage in the fourth quarter.
Charlotte
Harrison
fired a reverse from the
left side of the circle, but
Briggs was quick to make
the glove save. Warwick
alum Alyssa Manley
then stepped up for a
stick tackle to steal the
ball from an advancing
forward.
With less than three
minutes to play, New
Zealand pulled its goalie
in favor of Brooke Neal
as a kicking back. Just 11
seconds later, Team USA
earned its second penalty corner of the game.
After playing nearly
48 minutes without a
corner, the U.S. earned
four in the final three
minutes of play, but Neal
made three stops for
New Zealand.
Todays
third-place
game will be the second
meeting for No. 7 Team
USA and Australia. The
squads played to a 2-2
draw in the tournaments
opening match after the
Americans came back on
goals from Witmer and
Caitlin Van Sickle.
FIH No. 1 the Netherlands and No. 2 Argentina will play then play for
the Champions Trophy
title at 1:30 p.m.
The Netherlands won
2-0 when the teams
faced off on Saturday.
Competition today will
begin with New Zealand
vs. No. 6 Great Britain in
the fifth-place game at 9
a.m.

FIELD HOCKEY

Allessie, DeBerdine
help squad triumph
DIANA PUGLIESE

DPUGLIESE@LNPNEWS.COM

Lancaster-Lebanon
League field hockey players Mackenzie Allessie of
Donegal and Emma DeBerdine of Penn Manor
were part of the winning
Under-16 team at the National Futures Championship at Spooky Nook
Sports.
Their Montreal squad
won the 2016 title with
a 6-5 victory over fellow
Region 5 team Rome on
Friday.
Romes roster featured
Theodora Dillman of
Conestoga Valley.

The National Futures


Championship
highlights players from
across nine regions for
a week-long tournament divided into Under-14, Under-16 and
Under-19 age groups
and allows the athletes
selected to showcase
their skills in front of
college recruiters and
USA Field Hockey performance staff.
The U-14 tournament
concludes today. The
U-19 event, which features Donegals Katie
Jean, will run from today
through Wednesday.

CHASING THE DREAM

Van Sickle stays cool


Team USA defender strives to master staying calm during big moments
USA FIELD HOCKEY

Keep your head in the fridge


and your heart in the fire.
Whether by staying cool and
level-headed when her opponent is barreling full tilt into
the defensive end on a oneon-one breakaway or by utilizing her unwavering passion to
play when the score is tied and
exhaustion is kicking in, U.S.
womens national team defender Caitlin Van Sickle constantly
strives to keep this mantra in
mind.
If you can slow your
thoughts down in an intense
moment, youll more than likely make a better decision, said
Van Sickle. I dont think that
Ive necessarily mastered that,
but its something I constantly
remind myself. Its all about being cool and calm when that big
moment comes.
Ironically, her nickname also
cleverly ties into the fridge portion of the saying. Poppy, short
for popsicle, was the nickname
given to her by a college teammate due to the icy treats similarity to her last name.
Whichever name you call her,
her presence on the pitch is undeniable.
Van Sickles career with field
hockey began on an ordinary
day in fourth-grade gym class.

ABOUT SERIES
This is one of a series of Chasing
the Dream features on members
of the U.S. womens field hockey
team, provided to LNP by USA Field
Hockey. Additional profiles will be
published throughout the summer,
leading up to the Rio Olympics.
To support the Spooky Nookbased Team USA, go online to
www.teamusa.org/USA-FieldHockey/2016-Chasing-The-Dream.

On that day, in her hockey-oriented


hometown of Wilmington, Delaware, something clicked. It took one
full class for her to realize something much bigger was behind that
wooden field hockey stick.
I probably didnt know it at the
time, but my P.E. teachers planted
a seed in my mind and Im thankful for that, said Van Sickle. You
never know how that can influence a kid. This was instrumental
for me. I never would have guessed
back then Id be here now.
Through this incredible journey,
Van Sickle and her USWNT teammates are on, she has learned to
follow your dreams because you

never know where you may end


up.
After years of playing, building
and growing, Van Sickles heart
for the game showed through
in her play at the University of
North Carolina, where she was an
All-American from 2010 to 2012
and competed in NCAA national
championships all four years. Van
Sickle joined the U.S. womens national team in 2013.
When shes not in a competitive
field hockey environment, Van
Sickle enjoys watching movies, especially her familys favorite, The
Sound of Music. Van Sickle also
enjoys swinging a different kind
of sport stick in her rare but treasured free time.
Golf was introduced to Van Sickle at an early age by her mother a
professional instructor and golfer.
Although a challenging sport of
its own to master, Van Sickle uses
golf to unwind, not bothering to
keep score. Through it all, the
down time and training with the
USWNT, family is a constant for
Van Sickle.
My parents are always wanted
me to follow my dreams and didnt
steer me in any particular way,
said Van Sickle. They were supportive with whatever I was doing.
Their support has shaped who I am
and who I will be and thats something I want to instill in my kids.

EURO 2016 ROUNDUP

Poland reaches 1st quarterfinal


Wins shootout to set up soccer match with Portugal; Wales also advances

TENNIS ROUNDUP

Johnson captures his


1st ATP championship
Steve Johnson of the
United States won his
first ATP title with a 7-6
(5), 7-5 victory over Pablo Cuevas in the final of
the grass-court Nottingham Open on Saturday

FILE PHOTO

Caitlin Van Sickle, right, challenges Japan goalie Sakiyo Asano in a match Nov. 30, 2015, at Spooky Nook Sports.

in England.
The 26-year-old Californian capitalized on
two of his three break
chances, all of which
came in the second set after the first set went with
serve. Johnson broke for
2-1, but his Uruguayan
opponent broke back for
4-4 and held on until the
11th game before being
broken a second time.
Johnson, seeded sixth,
sealed the victory in the
following game on his
second match point.
The tournament in
central England is a
warmup for Wimbledon,
where Johnson opens
against Malek Jaziri of
Tunisia on Monday.
Eastbourne International: Dominika Cibulkova won her second
title of the year when she
defeated Karolina Pliskova of the Czech Republic 7-5, 6-3 Saturday
in the Eastbourne final.
Cibulkova has reached
fourth finals this year.
SOURCE: ASSOCIATED PRESS

Poland qualified for


the quarterfinals of
the European Championship for the first
time after it converted all its penalties to
beat Switzerland 5-4
in a shootout Saturday in Saint-Etienne,
France.
Following a 1-1 draw
that Switzerland had
dominated for long
periods,
Grzegorz
Krychowiak stepped
up to score the winning penalty into the
top left corner.
Poland will play Portugal in the quarterfinals on Thursday in
Marseille. It is clearly
in the weaker half of
the bracket, avoiding
Spain, Italy, Germany
and France until the
final on July 10.
Krychowiaks winning penalty capped
an impressive display
by Polands players
during the shootout.
The only player to
miss was Switzerland
midfielder
Granit
Xhaka, who fired his
kick wide of the left
post.
Towards the latter
stages of the match at
the Stade Geoffroy-

Guichard in the southern city of Saint-Etienne, Poland had been


pinned back in its own
half, seemingly content
with the prospect of the
penalty shootout.
Jakub Blaszczykowski
scored his second goal of
the tournament to give
Poland the lead in the
39th minute with a low
shot that went between
the legs of Switzerland
goalkeeper Yann Sommer.
Switzerland equalized
with an 82nd-minute
bicycle kick from Xherdan Shaqiri to send the
match into extra time.
Allowed far too much
space on the edge of the
area, Shaqiri jumped
with his back to the net
before firing a left-footed shot inside the post.
Shaqiri was a constant
threat to Poland with
his speed of touch and
play.
Portugal 1, Croatia 0: Cristiano Ronaldo helped create a
rare chance and substitute Ricardo Quaresma
finished it off, helping
Portugal beat Croatia
in Lens, France, and advance to the quarterfinals.

Portugal settled a poor


game in the 117th minute with its only serious
attack, when Ronaldos
one shot all match was
parried by goalkeeper
Danijel Subasic across
the goalmouth in the
second half of extra time.
Quaresma stooped to
head the ball into an unguarded net from close
range.
The goal came from a
fast counter attack just
after Croatia forward
Ivan Perisic had struck
the post with a shot.
Somehow,
Portugal
and Ronaldo, 31, have
a chance to win an elusive first title after three
draws in the group stage
and looking incapable
of scoring in a cautious,
mistake-filled match in
the round of 16.
Neither side aimed a
shot or header on target
until extra time, and the
match only sparked into
life in the closing minutes.
Croatias best chances
fell to defender Domagoj Vida. A 62nd-minute
header wide was the
closest anybody came in
90 minutes.
Wales 1, Northern
Ireland 0: Gareth Bale

was the creator of the


only goal an own-goal
to put Wales into the
quarterfinals with a win
in Paris.
Bales cross was aimed
at teammate Hal Robson-Kanu but it was inadvertently tipped into
the net by Northern Ireland defender Gareth
McAuley in the 75th
minute.
The only goal threat
by the Welsh before the
slightly fortuitous breakthrough came from a
free kick from Bale, the
tournaments co-leading
scorer with three goals.
In a drab British derby,
it was the Northern Irish
looking more dangerous in front of goal at the
Parc des Princes in the
first half of their first major tournament since the
1986 World Cup.
But Wales was more
dangerous after the
break and will next play
either Hungary or Belgium in the quarterfinals
in Lille on Friday. It will
be the first time Wales
will contest a quarterfinal match since the
1958 World Cup, its last
appearance at a major
tournament.

SOURCE: ASSOCIATED PRESS

SPORTS

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

C5

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

NASCAR

INDYCAR

Last years pole winner, AJ Allmendinger, qualified 2nd for todays race

America returns

Edwards earns top spot at Sonoma Open-wheel Road


Drivers to compete in the Kohler
Grand Prix, 1st there since 2007

JENNA FRYER

AP AUTO RACING WRITER

SONOMA, Calif.
Carl Edwards edged AJ
Allmendinger to earn
the stop starting spot today on the road course
race at Sonoma Raceway.
Edwards ran a lap at
95.777 mph around the
10-turn, 1.99-mile track
in qualifying Saturday to
put his Joe Gibbs Racing
Toyota in the top starting spot for the third
time this season.
Man this car is fast,
said Edwards, the winner at Sonoma in 2014.
AJ Allmendinger qualified second with a lap at
95.676 mph in his JTG
Daugherty Chevrolet.
Allmendinger was last
years pole winner and
believed he had a shot at
it again on Saturday.
When I saw Carls first
lap, I was like, I dont care
what kind of lap I run,
Im never going to catch
that, Allmendinger said.
Theres no pressure on
me. Hes won here before. We just have to go
out and have a solid day.
Despite being one of the
best road course racers in
NASCAR, Allmendinger
has just one victory
two years ago at Watkins
Glen. A win today would
give him a berth in the
Chase for the Sprint Cup
championship.
Edwards thought he
narrowly got the pole
over Allmendinger, and
doesnt consider himself
the sure favorite today.
I think every guy that
is starting this race, every guy and girl, is looking at themselves as a
favorite, he said. This
place is so tough and its
been so tough for me
that a win would be spectacular. I really think its
going to be a tough race.
Its going to be hot, its
going to be difficult.
Martin Truex Jr. qualified third in a Toyota for
Furniture Row Racing,
while Kurt Busch was
fourth for Stewart-Haas
Racing. Kyle Larson
completed the top five, as
Chevy drivers took three

GENARO C. ARMAS
AP SPORTS WRITER

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Carl Edwards answers questions from reporters after qualifying for the pole position for
todays NASCAR Sprint Cup Series auto race on Saturday.

TODAYS RACE
n What: Sprint Cup Series,
Toyota/SaveMart 350.

n Where: Sonoma, Calif.


n Time: 3 p.m.
n Watch: FS1.
of the top five spots.
Denny Hamlin qualified sixth and was followed by Joey Logano,
the highest-qualifying
Ford driver, defending
race winner Kyle Busch
and Paul Menard. Tony
Stewart, Danica Patrick
and Brad Keselowski
rounded out the top 12.
Dale Earnhardt Jr. was
fastest in Fridays practice, but none of the Hendrick Motorsports drivers advanced into the
second round of qualifying. Earnhardt will start
13th, Jimmie Johnson
15th, Chase Elliott 16th
and Kasey Kahne 19th.
Other interesting information ahead of todays race:
Larsons disappointment: Larson is looking

ton to a ninth-place finish at Mid-Ohio last year.


Lupton is a recent
graduate from UNCCharlotte, and has two
NASCAR K&N Pro Series
West wins at Sonoma.
This is such a blessing to make my Sprint
Cup Series debut at Sonoma, he said. For the
race, our goal is to see
the checkered flag. If we
can race the race track
and stay on the track all
day and have a little bit
of luck, I think we have
a shot at a top-25 finish. That would be huge
for me. Im just going to
stay focused behind the
wheel and do my job.
More road courses?:
NASCAR makes just
two stops a year at road
courses. The series runs
at Sonoma and then
again at Watkins Glen in
upstate New York in August. Everything else on
the schedule is an oval.
The last 11 races at Sonoma have produced
just one repeat winner,
Kyle Busch.

for his first Sprint Cup


Series win and would
love for it to come at his
home track today. He
was fastest in the first
practice session on Friday, so he wasnt thrilled
to wind up in the third
row after qualifying.
Its cool to be disappointed with a fifth,
Larson said. I thought
we would have a really
good shot at getting a
pole and we still had a
shot. We will see how we
race. Just have to keep
the rear tires underneath me and make no
mistakes and hopefully
get a win.
Larson is 22nd in the
Sprint Cup standings.
Lupton debut: California native Dylan Lupton
will make his Sprint Cup
Series debut at Sonoma
after qualifying 38th.
Lupton ran in back-toback Xfinity Series races
at Phoenix and Fontana
earlier this season. Hes
teamed with crew chief
Mike Ford for his Cup
debut, and Ford led Lup-

ELKHART
LAKE,
Wis. Wearing shades
and a white firesuit that
gleamed under a bright
sun, Mario Andretti
hopped out of the car
after taking a few spins
around Road America.
For a moment, it
looked as if the IndyCar great, and the series itself, had never
left this rural Wisconsin road course.
Andretti, 76, is still
retired. But the openwheel series is back.
The Kohler Grand
Prix today marks the
return of IndyCar at
Road America for the
first time since 2007.
This track has been
here since the 60s. We
had the glory days of
IndyCar here back in
the 80s and early 90s,
Andretti said this week.
To be back, I think its
what the series needs.
The return of Road
America kept an IndyCar stop in Wisconsin
after another historic
track in the state, the
Milwaukee Mile, fell off
the schedule. A series
of different promoters struggled to draw
crowds there.
The buzz felt a little
different in the days
leading up to race
weekend in Elkhart
Lake.
Kohler Co., which is
based in nearby Sheboygan, is on board as a
big-name sponsor. Attendance doesnt seem
like its going to be a
problem. Drivers appear happy.
Its one of my favorite tracks in the
United States, and I
was bummed when
we didnt come here
for many years, driver Tony Kanaan said.
Were back! Were
back for good, so Im
happy.
A unique layout adds

to the allure.
First, the venue looks
more like a woodsy
campground, with the
track hemmed in by
lush stands of trees and
rolling hills.
As for the track itself, there are elevation changes. Fourteen
turns. Fast corners and
slow corners.
Theres a series of two
turns in the middle of
the 4-plus mile circuit
called the Carousel,
which leads into a short
right turn called the
Kink. That stretch
leads into the Kettle
Bottoms
straight,
which, taken together
is a favorite section for
Kanaan.
You have to choose
where you want your
car to be good because
youre not going to have
it good in every corner, Kanaan said. Its
just completely different every time you go
around in different sections of the track.
Its that variety that
puts drivers of different
levels of experience on
more equal footing.
Its got real good flow,
high-speed
corners,
definitely keeps your
concentration,
said
rookie Max Chilton.
Puts it more of a level
playing field for the
rookies.
Andretti knows this
place well. He has finished on the podium
five times, including
victories in 1983, 1984
and 1987. Of the three
wins, the 1983 race
stands out to him.
We had a real (bad)
car the whole season,
and we turned the season around right here,
Andretti said Wednesday, when he gave
guests rides around
the track. We landed
a huge sponsor because
of that. ... It was a special day all around and
unexpected.

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C6

BASEBALL

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

NATIONAL LEAGUE

Washington...................................43
New York.......................................39
Miami............................................40
Philadelphia...................................31
Atlanta...........................................25
Chicago..........................................48
St. Louis.........................................38
Pittsburgh......................................36
Milwaukee.....................................34
Cincinnati.......................................28
San Francisco.................................48
Los Angeles....................................41
Colorado........................................35
Arizona..........................................36
San Diego.......................................33

East Division

Pct GB WCGB L10

Pct GB WCGB L10

32 .573
33 .542 21-w
35 .533
3 1-w
44 .413 12 91-w
48 .342 17 141-w
Central Division

3-7
5-5
6-4
1-9
7-3

25 .658
34 .528 91-w
1
39 .480 13 41-w
40 .459 141-w
6
47 .373 21 121-w
West Division

4-6
4-6
3-7
4-6
2-8

27
35
39
41
43

Pct GB WCGB L10

.640
.539 71-w
.473 121-w
5
.468 13 51-w
.434 151-w
8

9-1
7-3
4-6
7-3
7-3

Str Home Away

L-7
W-1
W-1
L-1
L-1

20-12
19-16
20-19
16-22
10-28

23-20
20-17
20-16
15-22
15-20

Str Home Away

L-1
L-1
W-2
W-3
L-4

25-11
15-21
21-18
21-17
17-22

23-14
23-13
15-21
13-23
11-25

Str Home Away

W-4
L-2
W-1
L-1
W-3

23-13
23-15
16-18
13-25
18-22

25-14
18-20
19-21
23-16
15-21

AMERICAN LEAGUE

Baltimore.......................................43
Boston...........................................41
Toronto..........................................41
New York.......................................37
Tampa Bay.....................................31
Cleveland.......................................43
Kansas City....................................38
Detroit...........................................38
Chicago..........................................37
Minnesota.....................................23
Texas..............................................47
Houston.........................................38
Seattle...........................................37
Oakland.........................................31
Los Angeles....................................31

East Division

Pct GB WCGB L10

Pct GB WCGB L10

30 .589
32 .562
2
35 .539 31-w
36 .507
6 21-w
41 .431 111-w
8
Central Division

6-4
5-5
6-4
6-4
1-9

30 .589
34 .528 41-w
1
37 .507
6 21-w
38 .493
7 31-w
51 .311 201-w 17
West Division

8-2
6-4
5-5
5-5
3-7

27
36
37
42
43

Fridays NL Games
Pittsburgh 8......................... L.A. Dodgers 6
Chicago Cubs 5.............................. Miami 4
San Diego 13............................ Cincinnati 4
N.Y. Mets 8................................... Atlanta 6
Milwaukee 5......................... Washington 3
Arizona 10................................ Colorado 9
San Francisco 5.................... Philadelphia 4
Fridays AL Games
Baltimore 6............................. Tampa Bay 3
N.Y. Yankees 5......................... Minnesota 3
Cleveland 7................................... Detroit 4
Boston 8......................................... Texas 7
Chicago White Sox 3................... Toronto 2
Houston 13............................ Kansas City 4
Oakland 7.............................. L.A. Angels 4
Fridays Interleague Game
Seattle 4...................................... St. Louis 3

Pct GB WCGB L10

.635
.514
9
2
.500 10
3
.425 151-w 81-w
.419 16
9

8-2
8-2
3-7
4-6
4-6

Str Home Away

W-3
W-2
W-1
W-3
L-9

29-13
23-18
19-17
21-15
15-20

14-17
18-14
22-18
16-21
16-21

Str Home Away

W-8
L-3
L-2
L-1
L-3

23-12
25-9
21-15
18-18
15-25

20-18
13-25
17-22
19-20
8-26

Str Home Away

L-1
W-6
W-1
W-2
L-5

26-12
22-15
16-18
16-22
15-22

21-15
16-21
21-19
15-20
16-21

Saturdays NL Games
Colorado 11................................. Arizona 6
Miami 9.............................. Chicago Cubs 6
Milwaukee 6......................... Washington 5
San Diego 3.............................. Cincinnati 0
Pittsburgh 6......................... L.A. Dodgers 1
N.Y. Mets at Atlanta................................ (n)
Philadelphia at San Francisco................. (n)
Saturdays AL Games
Baltimore 5.................... Tampa Bay 0 (1st)
N.Y. Yankees 2......................... Minnesota 1
Toronto 10................. Chicago White Sox 8
Cleveland 6................................... Detroit 0
Tampa Bay at Baltimore (2nd)................ (n)
Houston at Kansas City........................... (n)
Boston at Texas....................................... (n)
Oakland at L.A. Angels............................ (n)
Saturdays Interleague Game
St. Louis at Seattle.................................. (n)

Sundays NL Games
Chicago Cubs (Hammel 7-3) at Miami (Fernandez 9-3), 1:10 p.m.
San Diego (Perdomo 2-2) at Cincinnati (DeSclafani 1-0), 1:10 p.m.
N.Y. Mets (Colon 6-3) at Atlanta (Norris 2-7), 1:35 p.m.
Washington (Strasburg 10-0) at Milwaukee (Nelson 5-6), 2:10 p.m.
Philadelphia (Nola 5-7) at San Francisco (Cueto 11-1), 4:05 p.m.
Arizona (Corbin 4-6) at Colorado (Bettis 6-5), 4:10 p.m.
L.A. Dodgers (Kershaw 11-1) at Pittsburgh (Kuhl 0-0), 8:08 p.m.
Sundays AL Games
Minnesota (Duffey 2-6) at N.Y. Yankees (Eovaldi 6-4), 1:05 p.m.
Cleveland (Tomlin 8-1) at Detroit (Verlander 7-5), 1:10 p.m.
Tampa Bay (Smyly 2-7) at Baltimore (Wilson 3-5), 1:35 p.m.
Toronto (Stroman 6-3) at Chicago White Sox (Sale 12-2), 2:10 p.m.
Houston (Fister 8-3) at Kansas City (Kennedy 5-6), 2:15 p.m.
Boston (Buchholz 3-7) at Texas (Perez 6-4), 3:05 p.m.
Oakland (Gray 3-6) at L.A. Angels (Santiago 4-4), 3:35 p.m.
Sundays Interleague Game
St. Louis (Garcia 5-6) at Seattle (Paxton 1-3), 4:10 p.m.
Mondays NL Games
L.A. Dodgers at Pittsburgh......... 12:35 p.m.
N.Y. Mets at Washington.............. 7:05 p.m.
Chicago Cubs at Cincinnati.......... 7:10 p.m.
Philadelphia at Arizona................ 9:40 p.m.
Mondays Interleague Games
Cleveland at Atlanta.................... 7:10 p.m.
St. Louis at Kansas City................ 8:15 p.m.
Toronto at Colorado.................... 8:40 p.m.
Oakland at San Francisco........... 10:15 p.m.

AL BOXES
Orioles 5, Rays 0
Game 1
Tampa Bay
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Forsythe 2b..........4 0 0 0 0 1 .284
Dickerson lf..........3 0 0 0 1 1 .205
Longoria 3b..........3 0 1 0 1 0 .273
Morrison 1b.........4 0 1 0 0 1 .229
Miller dh..............4 0 0 0 0 2 .232
Beckham ss..........3 0 0 0 0 0 .193
a-Arcia ph............1 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Decker cf..............3 0 1 0 0 1 .091
Motter rf..............3 0 0 0 0 1 .174
Casali c.................3 0 1 0 0 1 .168
Totals............... 31 0 4 0 2 8
Baltimore
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Jones cf................5 0 2 1 0 2 .250
Kim lf...................3 1 1 0 2 0 .339
Machado 3b........5 0 2 0 0 0 .321
Davis 1b...............3 1 0 0 1 2 .232
Trumbo rf.............3 0 0 0 1 2 .277
1-Rickard pr-rf.....0 0 0 0 0 0 .259
Schoop 2b............4 2 2 0 0 1 .287
Alvarez dh............3 1 1 2 1 2 .236
Hardy ss...............4 0 2 1 0 0 .257
Pena c..................4 0 1 1 0 1 .240
Totals............... 34 5 11 5 5 10
Tampa Bay.......... 000 000 000 0 4 0
Baltimore........... 020 001 20x 5 11 1
a-grounded out for Beckham in the 9th.
1-ran for Trumbo in the 7th.
EHardy (2). LOBTampa Bay 6, Baltimore 10. 2BKim (7), Schoop (17). RBIs
Jones (45), Alvarez 2 (26), Hardy (11), Pena
(3).
Runners left in scoring positionTampa
Bay 3 (Motter, Arcia 2); Baltimore 5 (Jones,
Davis, Trumbo 2, Hardy). RISPTampa Bay
0 for 5; Baltimore 4 for 12.
Runners moved upMiller, Davis, Pena.
GIDPMotter, Pena.
DPTampa Bay 1 (Beckham, Forsythe,
Morrison); Baltimore 1 (Machado, Schoop,
Davis).
Tampa Bay IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Andriese L, 6-1...42-e 5 2 2 2 5 78 2.96
Sturdevant....... 2 5 3 3 1 3 37 4.80
Romero..........11-e 1 0 0 1 2 24 3.86
Baltimore
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
GausmanW,1-5...72-e 4 0 0 0 7 113 3.92
Drake.............11-e 0 0 0 2 1 22 0.00
Inherited runners-scoredSturdevant
1-0, Romero 3-2, Drake 1-0. IBBoff Sturdevant (Davis).
T2:46. A18,229 (45,971).
Yankees 2, Twins 1
Minnesota
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Nunez 3b.............4 0 0 0 0 0 .310
Grossman lf.........4 0 0 0 0 1 .274
Mauer dh.............4 0 1 0 0 3 .273
2-Santana pr-dh...0 0 0 0 0 0 .250
Dozier 2b.............4 1 1 1 0 1 .248
Kepler rf...............2 0 0 0 1 1 .242
Escobar ss............3 0 0 0 0 2 .275
Park 1b................3 0 0 0 0 2 .194
Suzuki c................3 0 1 0 0 0 .273
Buxton cf.............3 0 0 0 0 2 .194
Totals............... 30 1 3 1 1 12
New York
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Ellsbury cf............3 1 1 0 1 1 .278
Gardner lf............4 0 3 0 0 0 .262
Beltran rf.............4 0 2 1 0 0 .290
Chapman p..........0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Rodriguez dh.......4 0 1 0 0 2 .223
1-Hicks pr-dh-rf...0 1 0 0 0 0 .217
McCann c.............4 0 2 0 0 0 .226
Teixeira 1b...........3 0 0 0 1 1 .176
Castro 2b.............4 0 0 1 0 0 .253
Gregorius ss.........4 0 1 0 0 1 .285
Headley 3b..........4 0 0 0 0 0 .248
Totals............... 34 2 10 2 2 5
Minnesota.......... 010 000 000 1 3 2
New York............ 000 010 01x 2 10 0
1-ran for Rodriguez in the 8th. 2-ran for
Mauer in the 9th.

Mondays AL Games
Texas at N.Y. Yankees.................... 7:05 p.m.
Boston at Tampa Bay................... 7:10 p.m.
St. Louis at Kansas City................ 8:15 p.m.
Toronto at Colorado.................... 8:40 p.m.
Houston at L.A. Angels.............. 10:05 p.m.

EEscobar 2 (8). LOBMinnesota 3,


New York 10. HRDozier (9), off Pineda.
RBIsDozier (30), Beltran (53), Castro (29).
Runners left in scoring positionNew
York 3 (Rodriguez, McCann, Castro). RISP;
New York 2 for 11.
FIDPHeadley. GIDPCastro.
DPMinnesota 2 (Nunez, Dozier),
(Grossman, Suzuki).
Minnesota IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Santana............ 5 6 1 1 2 2 102 4.64
Rogers.............. 2 1 0 0 0 2 23 3.63
Pressly L, 2-4.... 1 3 1 1 0 1 22 4.02
New York
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Pineda.............. 6 2 1 1 1 8 94 5.51
Betances.......... 1 0 0 0 0 1 9 2.97
Miller W, 5-0.... 1 0 0 0 0 2 12 1.10
ChapmanS,15-16...1 1 0 0 0 1 11 2.70
E.Santana pitched to 1 batter in the 6th.
Inherited runners-scoredRogers 1-0.
T2:44. A40,075 (49,642).
Blue Jays 10, White Sox 8
Toronto
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Carrera rf.............5 1 2 0 0 0 .313
Travis 2b..............4 2 2 2 1 0 .265
Donaldson dh......4 1 2 1 1 0 .285
Encarnacion 1b....4 2 3 4 1 0 .258
Saunders lf...........5 1 1 1 0 1 .301
Tulowitzki ss........5 0 2 2 0 0 .217
Pillar cf.................5 0 0 0 0 2 .258
Goins 3b..............4 1 1 0 0 2 .177
a-Barney ph-3b....1 0 0 0 0 0 .293
Thole c.................3 2 0 0 2 0 .111
Totals............... 40 10 13 10 5 5
Chicago
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Anderson ss.........5 1 1 1 0 3 .261
Eaton rf................4 1 3 1 1 0 .282
Abreu 1b..............5 0 1 0 0 2 .266
Cabrera lf.............5 0 0 0 0 1 .290
Frazier 3b.............4 1 0 0 0 2 .199
Avila dh................4 1 2 1 0 2 .252
Lawrie 2b.............4 2 3 3 0 1 .245
Navarro c.............4 1 1 1 0 0 .214
Shuck cf...............4 1 1 1 0 0 .189
Totals............... 39 8 12 8 1 11
Toronto.............. 320 300 002 10 13 1
Chicago.............. 030 101 111 8 12 1
a-out on fielders choice for Goins in the
9th.
EGoins (4), Lawrie (6). LOBToronto 8,
Chicago 5. 2BCarrera (5), Encarnacion 2
(18), Saunders (20), Tulowitzki (8), Avila (5).
HRTravis (4), off Gonzalez; Lawrie (9), off
Dickey; Navarro (4), off Dickey; Shuck (1),
off Dickey; Lawrie (10), off Dickey; Anderson (2), off Storen; Avila (3), off Grilli; Eaton
(4), off Osuna. RBIsTravis 2 (16), Donaldson (47), Encarnacion 4 (66), Saunders (33),
Tulowitzki 2 (28), Anderson (2), Eaton (23),
Avila (6), Lawrie 3 (30), Navarro (16), Shuck
(5). SBEaton (7).
Runners left in scoring positionToronto
5 (Saunders 3, Pillar, Thole); Chicago 3 (Frazier, Shuck 2). RISPToronto 6 for 15; Chicago 1 for 6.
Runners moved upNavarro. GIDPCabrera.
DPToronto 1 (Tulowitzki, Encarnacion).
Toronto
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Dickey W, 5-8....51-e 6 5 4 1 7 86 4.23
Floyd H, 6.........1-e 1 0 0 0 0 4 4.06
Chavez H, 6......1-e 0 0 0 0 0 5 3.41
Storen H, 8....... 1 2 1 1 0 2 18 5.08
Grilli H, 6.......... 1 1 1 1 0 1 14 3.12
Osuna S, 15-17.... 1 2 1 1 0 1 11 2.16
Chicago
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Gonzalez L, 1-3...51-e 10 8 8 3 2 81 5.17
Beck.............. 12-e 0 0 0 2 2 30 3.38
Jennings........... 1 0 0 0 0 0 16 1.89
Ynoa.................1-e 3 2 2 0 1 21 3.60
Purke.............. 2-e 0 0 0 0 0 10 5.29
Inherited runners-scoredFloyd 2-1,
Beck 1-0, Purke 2-0.
T3:14. A25,776 (40,615).

Indians 6, Tigers 0
Cleveland
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Santana dh...........3 2 1 1 1 1 .235
Kipnis 2b..............3 0 1 0 0 1 .269
Martinez 2b.........1 0 0 0 0 0 .308
Lindor ss..............4 2 2 2 0 0 .306
Napoli 1b.............3 0 0 0 1 1 .235
Ramirez 3b...........4 0 0 1 0 0 .290
Chisenhall rf.........4 0 0 0 0 0 .272
Gomes c...............4 1 1 1 0 0 .185
Naquin cf.............4 1 2 0 0 1 .324
Davis lf.................4 0 1 1 0 1 .268
Totals............... 34 6 8 6 2 5
Detroit
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Kinsler 2b.............4 0 0 0 0 1 .297
Maybin cf.............4 0 1 0 0 1 .349
Cabrera 1b...........4 0 1 0 0 1 .295
Martinez dh.........4 0 0 0 0 1 .316
Castellanos 3b.....3 0 1 0 1 1 .296
Upton lf...............3 0 0 0 0 1 .234
Aviles rf................3 0 0 0 0 0 .218
McCann c.............3 0 0 0 0 1 .207
Iglesias ss.............3 0 1 0 0 0 .259
Totals............... 31 0 4 0 1 7
Cleveland........... 211 000 011 6 8 0
Detroit............... 000 000 000 0 4 0
LOBCleveland 3, Detroit 5. 2BNaquin
(5), Maybin (3), Iglesias (12). 3BNaquin
(4). HRSantana (16), off Sanchez; Lindor (9), off Sanchez; Lindor (10), off Lowe;
Gomes (8), off Lowe. RBIsSantana (40),
Lindor 2 (39), Ramirez (27), Gomes (29),
Davis (28).
Runners left in scoring positionCleveland 1 (Chisenhall); Detroit 2 (Kinsler, Martinez). RISPCleveland 1 for 5; Detroit 0
for 3.
Cleveland
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Carrasco W, 3-2...9 4 0 0 1 7 117 2.73
Detroit
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Sanchez L, 4-8...5 5 4 4 2 3 87 6.06
Wilson............. 2 1 0 0 0 1 32 3.86
Lowe................ 2 2 2 2 0 1 23 10.12
T2:43. A39,028 (41,681).

NL BOXES
Brewers 6, Nationals 5
Washington AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Revere cf..............5 0 0 0 0 0 .201
Werth lf...............4 1 1 0 1 0 .258
Harper rf..............4 0 1 0 1 0 .252
Murphy 2b...........5 1 3 0 0 0 .354
Ramos c...............5 0 2 1 0 0 .342
Zimmerman 1b....2 2 1 1 1 0 .230
Rendon 3b...........4 1 2 0 0 0 .252
Espinosa ss..........0 0 0 2 2 0 .222
Gonzalez p...........1 0 0 0 0 1 .143
a-Robinson ph.....0 0 0 1 0 0 .232
Petit p..................0 0 0 0 0 0 .250
b-Heisey ph..........1 0 0 0 0 0 .197
Belisle p...............0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
d-Drew ph............1 0 0 0 0 0 .254
Solis p..................0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Totals............... 32 5 10 5 5 1
Milwaukee
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Villar ss................4 1 3 1 0 0 .299
Hill 3b..................4 1 2 0 0 1 .273
Braun lf................3 1 1 0 0 1 .321
Lucroy c...............4 0 0 0 0 2 .296
Carter 1b.............3 2 2 3 0 0 .229
Perez rf................4 0 1 1 0 1 .284
Jeffress p..............0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Gennett 2b..........4 0 1 1 0 1 .270
Broxton cf............3 1 0 0 1 1 .133
Garza p................1 0 0 0 0 1 .250
c-Presley ph.........1 0 0 0 0 1 .200
Smith p................0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Torres p................0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Blazek p...............0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
e-Flores ph-rf.......1 0 0 0 0 0 .241
Totals............... 32 6 10 6 1 9
Washington........ 010 201 100 5 10 0
Milwaukee......... 312 000 00x 6 10 1
a-out on sacrifice fly for Gonzalez in the
4th. b-popped out for Petit in the 6th. cstruck out for Garza in the 6th. d-flied out
for Belisle in the 8th. e-grounded out for
Blazek in the 8th.
ECarter (6). LOBWashington 9, Milwaukee 6. 2BWerth (14), Rendon (17),
Villar (17), Perez (4). 3BMurphy (4). HR
Carter (19), off Gonzalez. RBIsRamos
(41), Zimmerman (33), Espinosa 2 (32),
Robinson (12), Villar (30), Carter 3 (47),
Perez (16), Gennett (21). SBVillar (26).
SFZimmerman, Espinosa, Robinson. S
Espinosa, Garza.
Runners left in scoring positionWashington 5 (Werth, Ramos 2, Rendon, Gonzalez); Milwaukee 2 (Lucroy, Garza). RISP
Washington 2 for 9; Milwaukee 5 for 13.
Runners moved upBraun, Hill. GIDP
Ramos.
DPMilwaukee 1 (Hill, Gennett, Carter).
Washington IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Gonzalez L, 3-7..3 6 6 6 1 5 69 4.73
Petit................. 2 1 0 0 0 1 28 2.92
Belisle.............. 2 2 0 0 0 2 31 1.54
Solis................. 1 1 0 0 0 1 13 1.46
Milwaukee IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Garza W, 1-0.... 6 7 4 4 3 1 81 2.81
Smith H, 5........1-e 1 1 1 1 0 9 2.13
Torres H, 5...... 2-e 1 0 0 0 0 14 3.65
Blazek H, 9....... 1 0 0 0 1 0 16 3.86
Jeffress S, 21-22.1 1 0 0 0 0 11 2.67
Inherited runners-scoredTorres 2-1.
HBPGonzalez 2 (Braun,Carter). WP
Belisle.
T3:05. A30,085 (41,900).
Padres 3, Reds 0
San Diego
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Jankowski cf.........3 1 1 0 2 1 .250
Myers 1b..............3 0 0 0 2 0 .286
Kemp rf................4 0 0 1 0 1 .262
Solarte 3b............3 0 1 0 1 0 .270
1-Amarista pr-2b....0 0 0 0 0 0 .273
Upton lf...............4 0 0 0 0 3 .259
Norris c................3 1 1 0 1 0 .213
Ramirez ss............4 0 0 0 0 1 .245
Rosales 2b-3b......4 0 0 0 0 2 .192
Pomeranz p.........3 1 2 2 0 1 .143
Buchter p.............0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
b-Wallace ph........1 0 0 0 0 1 .213
Rodney p.............0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Totals............... 32 3 5 3 6 10
Cincinnati
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Cozart ss..............4 0 0 0 0 1 .272
Votto 1b...............4 0 1 0 0 1 .243
Phillips 2b............4 0 1 0 0 1 .257
Bruce rf................4 0 1 0 0 1 .280
Duvall lf................3 0 0 0 0 1 .255
Suarez 3b.............3 0 0 0 0 2 .223
Hamilton cf..........3 0 0 0 0 1 .257
Cabrera c.............3 0 1 0 0 0 .265
Finnegan p...........1 0 0 0 1 1 .167
Ohlendorf p.........0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
a-Holt ph..............1 0 0 0 0 1 .235
Smith p................0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Totals............... 30 0 4 0 1 10
San Diego........... 100 010 100 3 5 0
Cincinnati........... 000 000 000 0 4 1
a-struck out for Ohlendorf in the 8th. bstruck out for Buchter in the 9th.
1-ran for Solarte in the 8th.
EBruce (4). LOBSan Diego 8, Cincinnati 4. 2BJankowski (1), Phillips (15), Cabrera (3). HRPomeranz (1), off Finnegan.
RBIsKemp (53), Pomeranz 2 (3). SB
Jankowski (10), Upton (17), Norris (3). CS
Phillips (6).
Runners left in scoring positionSan
Diego 3 (Myers, Kemp 2); Cincinnati 1 (Cozart). RISPSan Diego 1 for 8; Cincinnati 0
for 2.
Runners moved upMyers, Kemp.
LIDPRosales.
DPCincinnati 1 (Bruce, Cabrera).
San Diego
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Pomeranz W, 7-7...7 3 0 0 1 6 98 2.76
Buchter H, 13... 1 1 0 0 0 2 19 1.60
Rodney S, 17-17...1 0 0 0 0 2 13 0.31
Cincinnati
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Finnegan L, 3-6...62-e 5 3 3 3 8 110 3.83
Ohlendorf......11-e 0 0 0 2 1 26 4.24
Smith............... 1 0 0 0 0 1 11 2.40
Inherited
runners-scoredOhlendorf
2-0. IBBoff Ohlendorf (Norris).
T2:44. A40,871 (42,319).
Marlins 9, Cubs 6
Chicago
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Heyward rf-cf.......4 0 0 0 1 1 .229
Edwards p............0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Bryant 3b-cf.........4 1 1 0 1 1 .268
Rizzo 1b...............5 0 2 0 0 0 .279
Contreras lf..........3 1 1 1 2 0 .400
Baez 2b-3b...........4 1 0 0 0 1 .256
Russell ss.............3 2 1 3 1 1 .245
Montero c............4 1 2 1 1 2 .207

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

Lackey p...............1 0 0 0 1 0 .114


Concepcion p.......0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
b-Coghlan ph-rf...2 0 0 0 0 1 .231
Almora cf.............3 0 1 0 0 1 .267
Patton p...............0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Grimm p..............0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
d-Zobrist ph-2b....0 0 0 0 1 0 .302
Totals............... 33 6 8 5 8 8
Miami
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Suzuki cf..............4 2 1 0 1 0 .345
Prado 3b..............4 2 2 1 0 1 .314
Yelich lf................2 2 1 1 1 0 .309
Stanton rf.............3 2 2 3 1 1 .219
Bour 1b................4 1 2 3 0 1 .273
McGowan p.........0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Ramos p...............0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Dietrich 2b...........3 0 1 1 0 1 .294
Realmuto c..........4 0 1 0 0 0 .302
Hechavarria ss.....4 0 0 0 0 1 .239
Clemens p............1 0 0 0 0 1 .000
a-Gillespie ph.......1 0 0 0 0 0 .244
Wittgren p...........0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
c-Johnson ph.......1 0 0 0 0 0 .224
Barraclough p......0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Rojas 1b...............1 0 0 0 0 1 .228
Totals............... 32 9 10 9 3 7
Chicago.............. 013 000 011 6 8 2
Miami................ 100 240 20x 9 10 0
a-grounded out for Clemens in the 5th.
b-struck out for Concepcion in the 6th. cgrounded out for Wittgren in the 6th. dwalked for Grimm in the 8th.
ERizzo (4), Russell (9). LOBChicago
10, Miami 4. 2BBryant (17), Rizzo 2 (17),
Contreras (1), Prado (15), Stanton (9), Bour
(10). HRMontero (4), off Clemens; Russell (7), off Clemens; Bour (14), off Lackey.
RBIsContreras (9), Russell 3 (40), Montero (16), Prado (23), Yelich (36), Stanton 3
(37), Bour 3 (43), Dietrich (25). SBSuzuki
(7). SFYelich, Dietrich.
Runners left in scoring positionChicago
6 (Heyward, Contreras 2, Baez 2, Montero);
Miami 2 (Realmuto 2). RISPChicago 2 for
11; Miami 5 for 10.
Runners moved upRizzo 2, Coghlan,
Bour. GIDPHeyward, Coghlan, Hechavarria.
DPChicago 1 (Russell, Baez, Rizzo); Miami 2 (Dietrich, Hechavarria, Bour), (Rojas,
Hechavarria).
Chicago
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Lackey L, 7-4...41-e 7 7 7 3 5 95 3.30
Concepcion..... 2-e 1 0 0 0 0 12 0.00
Patton............11-e 2 2 1 0 0 24 5.40
Grimm............ 2-e 0 0 0 0 1 6 5.88
Edwards........... 1 0 0 0 0 1 16 3.38
Miami
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Clemens W, 1-0...5 4 4 4 5 4 103 6.30
Wittgren H, 1... 1 1 0 0 0 1 11 2.84
Barraclough H, 17..1 1 0 0 0 2 16 2.94
McGowan......11-e 2 2 2 3 0 27 2.96
Ramos S, 24-24...2-e 0 0 0 0 1 6 1.74
Inherited runners-scoredConcepcion
2-2, Grimm 1-0, Ramos 1-0. HBPClemens
(Baez), Ramos (Russell).
T3:09. A29,457 (36,742).
Rockies 11, Diamondbacks 6
Arizona
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Segura 2b.............1 2 0 1 4 0 .306
Bourn cf...............5 1 2 3 0 1 .250
Goldschmidt 1b...4 0 1 1 1 1 .300
Tomas rf...............4 0 0 0 1 1 .258
Collmenter p........0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Castillo c..............5 0 3 0 0 1 .271
OBrien lf.............4 0 0 0 1 1 .143
Drury 3b-rf...........3 1 0 0 2 0 .269
Ahmed ss.............4 1 2 0 0 1 .216
Miller p................2 0 1 0 0 1 .158
Bracho p..............0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
b-Lamb ph-3b......1 1 1 1 0 0 .290
Totals............... 33 6 10 6 9 7
Colorado
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Blackmon cf.........5 2 2 2 0 1 .300
LeMahieu 2b........4 2 2 3 1 1 .328
Arenado 3b..........4 0 1 1 1 1 .298
Gonzalez rf...........5 0 2 0 0 0 .314
Story ss................4 1 1 0 1 1 .266
Descalso 1b.........4 1 1 1 0 0 .372
Germen p............1 0 0 0 0 1 .000
Barnes lf..............4 3 3 0 0 0 .220
Wolters c.............3 1 3 4 0 0 .217
De La Rosa p........2 0 0 0 0 1 .214
a-Adames ph.......1 0 0 0 0 0 .224
Miller p................0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Qualls p................0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Reynolds 1b.........0 1 0 0 1 0 .291
Totals............... 37 11 15 11 4 6
Arizona............... 100 000 230 6 10 1
Colorado............ 100 312 04x 11 15 1
a-grounded out for De La Rosa in the 6th.
b-singled for Bracho in the 8th.
EOBrien (1), Wolters (5). LOBArizona
10, Colorado 7. 2BBourn (4), Arenado
(18), Gonzalez 2 (18), Story (18), Barnes
(3), Wolters (8). HRBourn (2), off J.Miller;
Blackmon (11), off S.Miller; Wolters (1),
off S.Miller; LeMahieu (5), off Collmenter.
RBIsSegura (31), Bourn 3 (15), Goldschmidt (47), Lamb (51), Blackmon 2 (38),
LeMahieu 3 (29), Arenado (63), Descalso
(12), Wolters 4 (15). SBSegura (13). CS
LeMahieu (5). SS.Miller, Wolters.
Runners left in scoring positionArizona 3 (Bourn, Tomas, OBrien); Colorado
4 (Blackmon, Story, Descalso, Germen).
RISPArizona 4 for 10; Colorado 5 for 12.
Runners moved upBourn, Segura, Gonzalez. LIDPDrury. GIDPBourn, OBrien.
DPColorado 3 (Story, Descalso), (Arenado, LeMahieu, Descalso), (Story, Reynolds).
Arizona
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Miller L, 2-7..... 6 11 7 7 1 5 95 6.79
Bracho............. 1 0 0 0 1 0 19 6.43
Collmenter....... 1 4 4 4 1 1 33 5.68
Colorado
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
DeLaRosa W, 5-4...6 6 1 1 5 6 107 6.47
Miller............... 1 1 2 2 1 0 17 5.51
Qualls............. 2-e 2 3 3 1 0 29 5.64
Germen S, 1-2...11-e 1 0 0 1 1 25 4.18
Inherited runners-scoredGermen 1-1.
IBBoff Germen (Goldschmidt), off Collmenter (Story).
T3:35. A33,337 (50,398).
Pirates 6, Dodgers 1
Los Angeles AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Hernandez 2b......4 0 0 0 0 2 .189
Howell p..............0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Turner 3b.............4 0 0 0 0 1 .245
Seager ss..............4 0 1 0 0 1 .297
Thompson cf........4 0 0 0 0 1 .239
Gonzalez 1b.........4 0 0 0 0 0 .263
Puig rf..................4 0 2 0 0 0 .254
Van Slyke lf..........3 1 1 0 0 1 .200
c-Pederson ph......1 0 0 0 0 0 .238
Ellis c....................3 0 2 1 0 0 .206
Maeda p..............2 0 1 0 0 0 .125
Blanton p.............0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Baez p..................0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
b-Kendrick ph-2b.1 0 1 0 0 0 .242
Totals............... 34 1 8 1 0 6
Pittsburgh
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Jaso 1b.................1 1 0 0 2 0 .276
Rodriguez 1b........1 0 0 0 0 0 .252
Marte lf................4 1 1 0 0 1 .328
McCutchen cf......4 2 2 4 0 1 .243
Freese 3b.............3 0 1 0 1 0 .291
Joyce rf................3 1 0 0 1 0 .296
Harrison 2b..........3 0 0 0 0 1 .287
Mercer ss.............3 1 1 2 0 0 .274
Kratz c..................3 0 0 0 0 1 .038
Locke p................2 0 0 0 0 1 .111
a-Frazier ph.........1 0 0 0 0 0 .333
Watson p.............0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Schugel p.............0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Totals............... 28 6 5 6 4 5
Los Angeles........ 000 001 000 1 8 1
Pittsburgh........... 000 105 00x 6 5 1
a-lined out for Locke in the 7th. b-doubled for Baez in the 8th. c-grounded out for
Van Slyke in the 9th.
EEllis (1), Rodriguez (2). LOBLos Angeles 6, Pittsburgh 2. 2BSeager (18), Van
Slyke (4), Ellis (4), Kendrick (6). HRMcCutchen (11), off Maeda; McCutchen (12),
off Maeda; Mercer (4), off Blanton. RBIs
Ellis (10), McCutchen 4 (32), Mercer 2 (26).
SBJoyce (1). CSEllis (1).
Runners left in scoring positionLos
Angeles 6 (Turner, Seager 2, Van Slyke 2,
Pederson); Pittsburgh 2 (Freese, Harrison).
RISPLos Angeles 2 for 10; Pittsburgh 2
for 6.
Runners moved upHernandez, Marte,
Joyce. GIDPJoyce.
DPLos Angeles 1 (Seager, Kendrick,
Gonzalez).
Los Angeles IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Maeda L, 6-5.... 5 4 4 4 2 4 92 2.91
Blanton............ 1 1 2 2 1 1 31 2.56

Baez................. 1 0 0 0 0 0 13 3.34
Howell............. 1 0 0 0 1 0 12 4.70
Pittsburgh
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Locke W, 7-5.... 7 5 1 1 0 3 89 5.12
Watson............ 1 2 0 0 0 3 23 3.38
Schugel............ 1 1 0 0 0 0 11 3.96
Maeda pitched to 3 batters in the 6th.
WPMaeda.
T2:47. A33,590 (38,362).

FRIDAYS LATE BOXES


Giants 5, Phillies 4
Philadelphia AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Herrera cf............3 0 0 1 1 0 .297
Hernandez 2b......5 0 0 0 0 1 .255
Franco 3b.............4 2 2 0 1 1 .239
Howard 1b...........3 0 1 1 0 0 .153
d-Joseph ph-1b....2 0 1 0 0 1 .234
Rupp c..................3 1 2 0 1 0 .269
Asche lf................3 0 0 0 0 1 .265
e-Goeddel ph-lf...1 0 0 0 1 0 .237
Galvis ss...............3 1 2 1 1 0 .221
Bourjos rf.............3 0 2 1 1 0 .238
Eflin p...................2 0 0 0 0 1 .000
a-Paredes ph........1 0 0 0 0 1 .225
Gonzalez p...........0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Araujo p...............0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Ramos p...............0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
f-A.Blanco ph.......1 0 0 0 0 0 .274
Neris p.................0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Totals............... 34 4 10 4 6 6
San Francisco AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Panik 2b...............3 1 0 0 1 0 .256
Belt 1b.................4 1 2 3 0 1 .305
Crawford ss..........4 0 1 0 0 0 .263
Pagan lf................4 0 3 2 0 0 .282
G.Blanco rf...........4 0 0 0 0 0 .259
Gillaspie 3b..........4 0 0 0 0 0 .207
Lopez p................0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Casilla p...............0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Brown c...............4 1 1 0 0 0 .231
Peavy p................2 0 0 0 0 0 .182
b-Parker ph..........0 0 0 0 0 0 .273
c-Posey ph...........1 1 1 0 0 0 .280
Law p...................0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Osich p.................0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Gearrin p.............0 0 0 0 0 0 1.000
g-Pena ph-3b.......1 0 0 0 0 0 .444
Span cf.................3 1 1 0 0 0 .254
Totals............... 34 5 9 5 1 1
Philadelphia....... 000 110 020 4 10 2
San Francisco...... 100 000 40x 5 9 0
a-struck out for Eflin in the 7th. b-pinch
hit for Peavy in the 7th. c-singled for Parker in the 7th. d-struck out for Howard in
the 8th. e-walked for Asche in the 8th. fgrounded out for Ramos in the 8th. g-flied
out for Gearrin in the 8th.
EHoward 2 (6). LOBPhiladelphia 11,
San Francisco 7. 2BFranco (10), Howard
(4), Rupp (14), Galvis (12), Belt 2 (21). 3B
Franco (1), Bourjos (3). RBIsHerrera (26),
Howard (24), Galvis (29), Bourjos (15), Belt
3 (38), Pagan 2 (22). SBPagan (7), Span
(8). CSHerrera (5). SFHerrera. SSpan.
Runners left in scoring positionPhiladelphia 6 (Herrera, Asche, Goeddel 2,
A.Blanco 2); San Francisco 7 (Crawford 2,
G.Blanco 3, Brown, Peavy). RISPPhiladelphia 3 for 12; San Francisco 3 for 13.
Runners moved upRupp, G.Blanco,
Panik, Crawford.
Philadelphia IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Eflin.................. 6 5 1 0 0 1 94 6.28
Gonzalez.......... 0 1 1 1 0 0 2 2.84
Araujo L, 1-1.... 2-e 3 3 3 1 0 21 5.87
Ramos..............1-e 0 0 0 0 0 2 0.00
Neris................ 1 0 0 0 0 0 15 2.68
San Francisco IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Peavy W, 4-6.... 7 7 2 2 2 4 102 5.22
Law H, 3...........1-e 1 1 1 0 0 7 2.80
Osich H, 15......1-e 0 1 1 2 1 11 4.09
Gearrin H, 13....1-e 1 0 0 1 0 13 2.20
Lopez H, 7........1-e 0 0 0 0 0 4 4.63
Casilla S, 17-21...2-e 1 0 0 1 1 22 2.43
Gonzalez pitched to 1 batter in the 7th.
Inherited runners-scoredAraujo 1-1,
Ramos 1-0, Osich 1-1. HBPCasilla (Rupp).
WPOsich.
T3:21. A42,238 (41,915).

Brewers 5, Nationals 3
Washington AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Revere lf..............4 0 1 0 0 0 .208
Taylor cf...............5 1 1 0 0 3 .235
Harper rf..............4 1 1 0 1 1 .252
Murphy 2b...........4 1 2 2 0 1 .349
Ramos c...............5 0 4 1 0 1 .341
Zimmerman 1b....4 0 0 0 0 3 .227
Rendon 3b...........3 0 0 0 1 3 .248
Espinosa ss..........3 0 0 0 0 3 .222
Scherzer p............3 0 0 0 0 1 .143
Belisle p...............0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
c-Robinson ph......1 0 0 0 0 0 .232
Treinen p.............0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Totals............... 36 3 9 3 2 16
Milwaukee
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Villar ss................4 0 1 0 0 3 .292
Gennett 2b..........3 1 0 0 1 1 .270
Lucroy c...............3 1 0 0 1 0 .301
Carter 1b.............3 1 1 0 1 1 .224
Nieuwenhuis cf....4 1 1 2 0 3 .224
Hill 3b..................3 0 1 2 0 1 .269
Flores rf...............3 0 0 0 0 2 .242
Presley lf..............3 0 0 0 0 1 .202
Davies p...............1 0 0 0 0 0 .083
a-Broxton ph........1 1 1 1 0 0 .140
Torres p................0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Smith p................0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
b-Perez ph...........1 0 0 0 0 1 .286
Thornburg p.........0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Jeffress p..............0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Totals............... 29 5 5 5 3 13
Washington........ 003 000 000 3 9 0
Milwaukee......... 200 012 00x 5 5 1
a-homered for Davies in the 5th. b-struck
out for Smith in the 7th. c-popped out for
Belisle in the 8th.
EDavies (2). LOBWashington 11, Milwaukee 3. 2BHarper (10), Murphy (20),
Ramos (13). HRBroxton (1), off Scherzer;
Nieuwenhuis (4), off Scherzer. RBIsMurphy 2 (48), Ramos (40), Nieuwenhuis 2 (19),
Hill 2 (24), Broxton (2).
Runners left in scoring positionWashington 6 (Taylor, Murphy, Ramos, Scherzer,
Robinson 2); Milwaukee 1 (Flores). RISP
Washington 2 for 9; Milwaukee 1 for 3.
Washington IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Scherzer L, 8-5...6 5 5 5 3 10 117 3.52
Belisle.............. 1 0 0 0 0 2 17 1.86
Treinen............ 1 0 0 0 0 1 11 2.01
Milwaukee IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Davies.............. 5 7 3 3 1 9 104 3.74
Torres W, 1-1... 1 0 0 0 0 2 15 3.72
Smith H, 4........ 1 0 0 0 0 1 12 1.46
Thornburg H, 14...1 1 0 0 1 2 33 2.84
Jeffress S, 20-21...1 1 0 0 0 2 19 2.76
HBPDavies (Espinosa), Thornburg
(Murphy), Jeffress (Revere). WPDavies.
T3:06. A32,668 (41,900).

This Date In Baseball

June 26
1913 Washingtons Eddie Ainsmith
stole three bases in one inning of a 10-3 loss
to the Philadelphia As. After safely reaching
base on a single in the bottom of the ninth
inning, Ainsmith stole second, third and
home proves to be of little consequence
with Philadelphia routing the Nats, 10-3
1916 In a game against the Chicago
White Sox, the Cleveland Indians appeared
on the field with numbers on their sleeves.
It marked the first time players were identified by numbers corresponding to the
scorecard.
1924 New York right-hander Virgil
Barnes faced his older sibling, Jesse, marking the first time brothers started against
one another in major league history. Jesse
got the loss when the Giants beat the Boston Braves 11-7.
1938 Lonny Frey of the Cincinnati Reds
had eight hits in a doubleheader split with
the Philadelphia Phillies. Frey had three hits
in a 10-3 opening-game loss and collected
five in the nightcap, which the Reds won 8-5.
1944 In an effort to raise funds for
war bonds, the New York Giants, Brooklyn Dodgers and New York Yankees played
against each other in a six-inning contest at
the Polo Grounds. More than 50,000 fans
turned out. Each team played successive
innings against the other two teams then
would sit out an inning. The final score was
Dodgers 5, Yankees 1, Giants 0.
1962 Earl Wilson of the Boston Red
Sox pitched a 2-0 no-hitter against the Los
Angeles Angels at Fenway Park. Wilson, the
Red Soxs first black pitcher, also homered
in the game.

BASEBALL

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

MLB LEAGUE
LEADERS

BARNSTORMERS 13, BEES 3

Big bats
spark the
Stormers

NATIONAL LEAGUE

Lancaster scores
season-high 13 runs in
win over New Britain
JOEL SCHREINER
LNP CORRESPONDENT

The runs came in bunches


for the Lancaster Barnstormers.
They erupted early and late,
which helped them produce a
season-high run total in a 13-3
win over New Britain Saturday night at Clipper Magazine
Stadium.
The win snapped a fourgame losing skid for the Barnstormers (30-31) and a threegame winning streak for the
Bees (30-31).
Lancaster wasted little time
jumping all over New Britain
starter Cole Johnson, who
entered the game with a 2.19
ERA. With one out in the first,
Kevin Ahrens, Caleb Gindl and
Josh Whitaker hit consecutive
singles to load the bases before Lance Zawadzki unloaded them with a grand slam to
right.
For Zawadzki, the reigning Atlantic League home run
champ, it was his sixth long
ball in 23 games started since
returning from an off-season
injury.
K.C. Hobson led off the second inning with a solo home
run, giving the Barnstormers
a 5-0 lead. Three batters later, Gindl launched a two-run
dinger, scoring Ahrens who
walked and the lead grew to
7-0.
The Bees got to Lancaster
starter Kelvin De La Cruz in
the third. After Jon Griffin
flew out to start the inning,
six straight Bees reached base,
five via hit, and three scored as
they cut the lead to 7-3.
De La Cruz went 5.1 innings,
surrendering the three runs
on eight hits, while striking
out seven and walking two.
Since being acquired in a trade
from York on June 15, De La
Cruz is 2-0 in two starts.
New Britain threatened in
the sixth, loading the bases
and bringing the tying run
to the plate, but Kevin Munson, who relieved De La Cruz,
struck out James Skelton and
Steve Carrillo to end the inning.
Late explosion: The Barnstormers broke it wide open in
the home half of the seventh.
The inning featured 11 batters
and six for Lancaster, a pair of
New Britain errors and a wild
pitch. When the dust settled,
the damage was six runs, three
earned and three unearned.
Ahrens, Gindl and Sean Halton each had three of Lancasters 16 hits, which is one shy of
a season-high. All nine Barnstormer starters had at least
one hit.
Up next: The four-game
series wraps up this evening
at 5 with Lancasters Tanner
Peters (2-2, 4.63 ERA) going
against the Bees Shawn Haviland (2-1, 3.43).
MLB NOTES

Reyes signs
with NY Mets
The New York Mets signed
shortstop Jose Reyes to a minor league contract on Saturday, creating a reunion with the
teams former star who now
must overcome a suspension
for domestic violence as he attempts to revive his career.
Reyes was cut by Colorado
after serving a 59-day suspension for violating Major
League Baseballs domestic
violence policy. He became a
free agent on Saturday.
Nationals
Strasburg
scratched: Washington ace
Stephen Strasburg has been
scratched from his scheduled
start today at Milwaukee.
Manager Dusty Baker says
Strasburg felt pain in his back
while throwing before Saturdays 6-5 loss to the Brewers.
SOURCE: ASSOCIATED PRESS

C7

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Baltimore Orioles center fielder Adam Jones leaps as he prepares to catch a ball hit by Rays Jaff
Decker for an out during the third inning of the second game in a split doubleheader on Saturday.
MLB ROUNDUP

Orioles sweep Rays


with rally in game 2
Matt Wieters hit two homers, and the Baltimore Orioles rallied from a four-run
deficit to beat Tampa Bay 8-6
Saturday night for a doubleheader sweep that extended
the Rays losing streak to 10
games.
Adam Jones and Chris Davis also homered for the AL
East-leading Orioles, who
trailed 4-0 in the third inning
and 6-3 in the fifth.
In the opener, Kevin Gausman allowed four hits over 7
2/3 innings to earn his first
win of the season and help
Baltimore to a 5-0 victory.
Seeking his 10th straight
win in the nightcap, Orioles
starter Chris Tillman gave up
six runs and 10 hits in five innings. But Baltimores comeback kept the right-hander
unbeaten in 13 starts since
April 14.
The turnaround came
against a struggling Rays
pitching staff that has now
yielded at least five runs in 10
consecutive games. Tampa
Bay has been outscored 6024 during this horrid stretch.
The Rays led 4-0 in the
third and were threatening
to make it a blowout when
Jones made a diving catch of
a two-out liner to center with
the bases loaded.

from the back end of its bullpen.


Dellin Betances, Andrew
Miller (5-0) and Aroldis
Chapman combined to throw
three scoreless innings for
the third straight game.
Blue Jays 10, White Sox
8: Chicago tied a team record
with seven home runs, but it
wasnt enough as Edwin Encarnacion drove in four runs,
Devon Travis homered and
Toronto held on to beat the
White Sox.
All seven homers were solo
shots. Brett Lawrie became
the first White Sox player
since Ron Santo in 1974 to
hit inside-the-park and overthe-wall homers in the same
game, and Chicago hit three
straight home runs in the second inning.
Indians 6, Tigers 0: Francisco Lindor homered twice
and Carlos Carrasco pitched
a four-hitter to lead Cleveland to its eighth consecutive
win over Detroit.
Cleveland also improved
to 8-0 against the Tigers this
year, outscoring them 51-16.
It was the first career multihomer game for the 22-yearold Lindor, and Carlos Santana and Yan Gomes also went
deep for AL Central-leading
Cleveland.

American League

National League

Yankees 2, Twins 1: Starlin Castro drove home the


tiebreaking run in the eighth
inning with a sharp one-hopper scored an error on shortstop Eduardo Escobar, and
New York edged Minnesota
with more dominant pitching

Padres 3, Reds 0: Drew


Pomeranz drove in a pair of
runs and pitched seven innings, leading San Diego to
victory in a game delayed a
few minutes by the Cincinnati Reds tribute to Pete Rose.
Pomeranz hit his second ca-

reer homer and had an RBI


single against left-hander
Brandon Finnegan (3-6). The
Padres have won the first three
games of the series, improving
to 12-3 against the Reds over
the last three seasons.
Marlins 9, Cubs 6: Justin Bour and Giancarlo
Stanton each drove in three
runs, Paul Clemens got his
first big league win in more
than three years and Miami
erased an early deficit to beat
Chicago.
Brewers 6, Nationals 5:
Chris Carter hit a three-run
homer, Matt Garza pitched
six innings for this first win
of the season, and Milwaukee
beat Washington.
Carter connected for his
19th homer with two out in
the first. Jonathan Villar had
three hits for Milwaukee, including an RBI single in the
second.
Rockies 11, Diamondbacks 6: Tony Wolters hit his
first major league home run
and drove in four runs, helping Colorado defeat Arizona.
Wolters hit a two-run double in the fourth off Shelby
Miller and a two-run homer
in the sixth that boosted Colorados lead to 7-1.
DJ LeMahieu and Charlie
Blackmon also homered for
the Rockies, who stopped a
three-game losing streak.
Jorge De La Rosa (5-4)
improved to 9-1 with a 1.96
ERA in 13 Coors Field starts
against Arizona, allowing one
run, six hits and five walks in
six innings. Gonzalez Germen got four outs for his first
save this season.
SOURCE: ASSOCIATED PRESS

NATIONAL LEAGUE

Charlie Hustle enters


Cincinnati Hall of Fame
27 years after being banned, Pete Rose is honored by the Reds
JOE KAY

AP SPORTS WRITER

CINCINNATI More satisfying than hit No. 4,192? In


some ways, it is for Pete Rose,
who needed more time to get
into the Cincinnati Reds
Hall of Fame than it took to
set baseballs hits record.
Rose is being inducted into
his hometown teams hall
and having his No. 14 officially retired over the weekend,
27 years after he was banned
from baseball for betting on
the Reds. His ban makes him
ineligible for baseballs Hall
of Fame, but the team is honoring him with the permission of Commissioner Rob
Manfred.
The Reds already honor
him in displays at their hall
and at various places in
Great American Ball Park.
Now, hell be included fully
in the teams gallery of greatest players.
This will be the ultimate
thing to happen to me so far
in my baseball career, Rose
said on Friday. I tell people
you should put it on your
bucket list to go to the Reds
Hall of Fame, and Im happy
to be in there. It seems like
everybody I played with is in
there, so they might as well
put me in there, too.
The Reds have turned the

Rose honors into a weekend


gala. They reunited members
of their 1976 Big Red Machine championship team on
the field Friday night before
a game against the San Diego
Padres, the same team Rose
got his record-setting hit
against on Sept. 11, 1985. Rose
was the last player introduced
but didnt speak to the crowd.
Hell be formally added to
the teams Hall of Fame on Saturday and have his number retired on Sunday. His son, Pete
Jr., is the only one who has
worn No. 14 since Rose played.
Last December, Manfred
turned down Roses application for reinstatement to
Major League Baseball, saying the hits king still hasnt
reconfigured his life as he was
told to do in 1989. Hall of Fame
catcher Johnny Bench said
he lobbied for Rose, who finished with 4,256 career hits, to
be added to the teams Hall of
Fame.
Its a long time coming,
Bench said. Hopefully, it will
motivate him maybe more, in
better ways, and we can get
this all behind us, after how
many years? Too many.
The Big Red Machine won
World Series titles in 197576 with Rose, Bench, Hall
of Famer Joe Morgan, Hall
of Famer Tony Perez, Ken

Griffey, George Foster, Davey


Concepcion, Cesar Geronimo, and Hall of Fame manager Sparky Anderson. Rose
declines to call it the greatest
team ever because the Yankees and Dodgers had some
great teams.
But I will go to my grave
saying the Big Red Machine
was the most entertaining team ever, Rose said.
We had white stars, we had
black stars, we had Latino
stars, we had a Hall of Fame
manager, we had speed, we
had defense, we had home
run leaders, we had batting
champions, we had daring
baserunners.
Bench said he still gets
stopped by many baseball
fans who want to talk about
that team.
For us, its magical, Bench
said. I go everywhere in this
country, and people come up
to me and can name our lineup. They say, I was a Cubs
fan, I was a Dodgers fan, I was
a Giants fan. Man, we loved
you guys. We hated you, but
we respected you. To this
day, they know our lineup.
That proves the excitement
we brought to the game.
People want something to
hold on to. We listen to the
oldies. Were kind of the oldies.

BATTINGMurphy, Washington, .354;


Ramos, Washington, .342; LeMahieu, Colorado, .328; Marte, Pittsburgh, .328; Braun,
Milwaukee, .321; Ozuna, Miami, .320; Gonzalez, Colorado, .314; Prado, Miami, .314;
Yelich, Miami, .309; Diaz, St. Louis, .307.
RUNSBryant, Chicago, 55; Arenado,
Colorado, 52; Myers, San Diego, 49; Carpenter, St. Louis, 49; Zobrist, Chicago, 49;
Gonzalez, Colorado, 48; Seager, Los Angeles, 48; Diaz, St. Louis, 47; Polanco, Pittsburgh, 47; Ozuna, Miami, 47.
RBIArenado, Colorado, 63; Bruce, Cincinnati, 57; Rizzo, Chicago, 54; Kemp, San
Diego, 53; Lamb, Arizona, 51; Duvall, Cincinnati, 51; Bryant, Chicago, 50; Myers, San
Diego, 50; Story, Colorado, 49; Murphy,
Washington, 48.
HITSMurphy, Washington, 98; Segura,
Arizona, 92; Gonzalez, Colorado, 89; Seager, Los Angeles, 88; Prado, Miami, 87;
Ozuna, Miami, 87; Marte, Pittsburgh, 86;
Arenado, Colorado, 84; LeMahieu, Colorado, 84; Myers, San Diego, 83.
DOUBLESJay, San Diego, 24; Polanco,
Pittsburgh, 23; Carpenter, St. Louis, 22;
Belt, San Francisco, 21; Parra, Colorado,
20; Murphy, Washington, 20; Markakis,
Atlanta, 20; Fowler, Chicago, 19; LeMahieu,
Colorado, 19; Marte, Pittsburgh, 19; Yelich,
Miami, 19; Cozart, Cincinnati, 19.
TRIPLESBruce, Cincinnati, 6; LeMahieu,
Colorado, 5; Panik, San Francisco, 5; Hernandez, Philadelphia, 5; Ozuna, Miami, 5;
Granderson, New York, 4; Segura, Arizona,
4; Lamb, Arizona, 4; Story, Colorado, 4;
Blanco, San Francisco, 4; Peralta, Arizona,
4; Murphy, Washington, 4; Harrison, Pittsburgh, 4; Owings, Arizona, 4; Carpenter, St.
Louis, 4; Smith, Atlanta, 4.
HOME RUNSArenado, Colorado, 21;
Duvall, Cincinnati, 21; Carter, Milwaukee,
19; Cespedes, New York, 18; Bryant, Chicago, 18; Story, Colorado, 18; Myers, San
Diego, 17; Rizzo, Chicago, 17; Moss, St.
Louis, 16; Seager, Los Angeles, 16; Ozuna,
Miami, 16; Bruce, Cincinnati, 16; Kemp, San
Diego, 16.
STOLEN BASESVillar, Milwaukee, 26;
Marte, Pittsburgh, 20; Hamilton, Cincinnati, 17; Upton Jr., San Diego, 17; Smith,
Atlanta, 14; Segura, Arizona, 13; Harrison,
Pittsburgh, 12; Herrera, Philadelphia, 11;
Goldschmidt, Arizona, 10; Jankowski, San
Diego, 10; Taylor, Washington, 10; Myers,
San Diego, 10.
PITCHINGArrieta,
Chicago,
11-2;
Kershaw, Los Angeles, 11-1; Cueto, San
Francisco, 11-1; Greinke, Arizona, 10-3;
Strasburg, Washington, 10-0; Lester, Chicago, 9-3; Fernandez, Miami, 9-3; Scherzer,
Washington, 8-5; Chatwood, Colorado, 8-4;
Bumgarner, San Francisco, 8-3.
ERAKershaw, Los Angeles, 1.57; Arrieta, Chicago, 1.74; Bumgarner, San Francisco, 1.85; Cueto, San Francisco, 2.06; Syndergaard, New York, 2.08; Lester, Chicago,
2.10; Fernandez, Miami, 2.36; Hammel,
Chicago, 2.55; Teheran, Atlanta, 2.66; Hendricks, Chicago, 2.76; Pomeranz, San Diego,
2.76.
STRIKEOUTSKershaw, Los Angeles,
141; Scherzer, Washington, 138; Fernandez, Miami, 125; Strasburg, Washington,
118; Bumgarner, San Francisco, 115; Syndergaard, New York, 110; Arrieta, Chicago,
107; Lackey, Chicago, 102; Pomeranz, San
Diego, 102; Lester, Chicago, 99.
SAVESFamilia, New York, 25; Ramos,
Miami, 24; Jansen, Los Angeles, 21; Jeffress,
Milwaukee, 21; Melancon, Pittsburgh, 21;
Gomez, Philadelphia, 19; Rodney, San Diego, 17; Casilla, San Francisco, 17; Ziegler,
Arizona, 16; Papelbon, Washington, 16.

AMERICAN LEAGUE

BATTINGBogaerts, Boston, .349; Altuve, Houston, .340; Ortiz, Boston, .339;


Desmond, Texas, .321; Machado, Baltimore, .320; Martinez, Detroit, .316; Escobar, Anaheim, .310; Nunez, Minnesota,
.310; Hosmer, Kansas City, .308; Lindor,
Cleveland, .306; Pedroia, Boston, .306.
RUNSBetts, Boston, 65; Donaldson,
Toronto, 62; Kinsler, Detroit, 58; Bogaerts,
Boston, 56; Davis, Baltimore, 54; Cano,
Seattle, 52; Machado, Baltimore, 52; Desmond, Texas, 52; Altuve, Houston, 51;
Springer, Houston, 51.
RBIEncarnacion, Toronto, 66; Ortiz,
Boston, 60; Cano, Seattle, 53; Betts, Boston, 53; Beltran, New York, 53; Trumbo,
Baltimore, 52; Bogaerts, Boston, 50; Napoli, Cleveland, 49; Frazier, Chicago, 49; Davis,
Oakland, 49; Trout, Anaheim, 49.
HITSBogaerts, Boston, 107; Altuve,
Houston, 98; Betts, Boston, 94; Desmond,
Texas, 92; Machado, Baltimore, 91; Cano,
Seattle, 90; Kinsler, Detroit, 90; Pedroia,
Boston, 89; Cabrera, Detroit, 85; Escobar,
Anaheim, 85; Lindor, Cleveland, 85.
DOUBLESOrtiz, Boston, 30; Machado,
Baltimore, 27; Altuve, Houston, 21; Bogaerts, Boston, 21; Shaw, Boston, 21; Pedroia, Boston, 20; Saunders, Toronto, 20;
Desmond, Texas, 19; Martinez, Detroit, 19;
Longoria, Tampa Bay, 19; Lawrie, Chicago,
19.
TRIPLESEaton, Chicago, 7; Bradley Jr.,
Boston, 6; Ellsbury, New York, 5; Kipnis,
Cleveland, 4; Donaldson, Toronto, 4; Betts,
Boston, 4; Burns, Oakland, 4; Miller, Tampa
Bay, 4; Naquin, Cleveland, 4; Aoki, Seattle,
3; Chisenhall, Cleveland, 3; Buxton, Minnesota, 3; Andrus, Texas, 3; Swihart, Boston,
3; Correa, Houston, 3; Orlando, Kansas City,
3; Cabrera, Chicago, 3.
HOME RUNSTrumbo, Baltimore, 21;
Frazier, Chicago, 21; Cano, Seattle, 19; Beltran, New York, 19; Encarnacion, Toronto,
19; Longoria, Tampa Bay, 18; Machado,
Baltimore, 18; Davis, Oakland, 18; Cruz, Seattle, 18; Ortiz, Boston, 18.
STOLEN BASESDavis, Cleveland, 21; Altuve, Houston, 18; Nunez, Minnesota, 17;
Desmond, Texas, 13; Burns, Oakland, 13;
Lindor, Cleveland, 12; Betts, Boston, 12; Dyson, Kansas City, 12; Ellsbury, New York, 12;
Gardner, New York, 11.
PITCHINGSale, Chicago, 12-2; Tillman,
Baltimore, 10-1; Happ, Toronto, 9-3; Zimmermann, Detroit, 9-4; Salazar, Cleveland,
9-3; Wright, Boston, 8-4; Porcello, Boston,
8-2; Hill, Oakland, 8-3; Price, Boston, 8-4;
Fister, Houston, 8-3.
ERAWright, Boston, 2.01; Salazar,
Cleveland, 2.40; Estrada, Toronto, 2.70;
Hamels, Texas, 2.79; Sale, Chicago, 2.83;
Tanaka, New York, 3.01; Quintana, Chicago,
3.04; Bauer, Cleveland, 3.20; Lewis, Texas,
3.21; Fister, Houston, 3.21.
STRIKEOUTSPrice, Boston, 110; Archer,
Tampa Bay, 108; Kluber, Cleveland, 103;
Verlander, Detroit, 102; Sale, Chicago, 102;
Salazar, Cleveland, 99; Pineda, New York,
96; Hamels, Texas, 95; Smyly, Tampa Bay,
94; Sanchez, Toronto, 93.
SAVESBritton, Baltimore, 23; Rodriguez, Detroit, 20; Colome, Tampa Bay, 19;
Robertson, Chicago, 19; Davis, Kansas City,
18; Kimbrel, Boston, 16; Cishek, Seattle, 16;
Dyson, Texas, 15; Osuna, Toronto, 15; Chapman, New York, 15.

SOURCE: ASSOCIATED PRESS

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C8

SPORTS

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

NHL DRAFT

Flyers fill
key needs
Very quietly, GM Hextall brings in
another impressive crop for Philly
SAM CARCHIDI

THE PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER

BUFFALO In some
ways, it was a strange
draft for the Philadelphia Flyers.
General manager Ron
Hextall wanted to move
up in the opening round
and select a cant-miss
forward. Instead, he
ended up dropping back
four spots.
Fans clamored for
the Flyers to draft a
much-needed
sniper
like Kieffer Bellows or
Julien Gauthier, each of
whom was available at
the teams original firstround draft spot (No. 18).
Instead, Hextall and
his staff chose two-way
center German Rubtsov,
who fell to them partly
because of a controversy
that booted his Russian
under-18 team out of the
World Juniors.
The knee-jerk reaction
is to say Hextall overthought the situation,
that he should have selected Bellows or Gauthier and given the team
a bona fide (and muchneeded) scorer down the
road.
But then you exhale, sit
back, and analyze what
Hextall did, and, well, his
plan comes into better
focus.
He landed a player in
the first round, Rubtsov,
who probably had top15 talent but slid to them
at No. 22 because some
teams were scared away
by the performanceenhancing drug scandal,
which, by the way, appears to have nothing to
do with the unknowing
players and everything
to do with the coach who
supplied the pills.
Hextall also landed
two other players, right
winger Pascal Laberge
and goalie Carter Hart,
who lots of scouts figured would be selected
in the first round. Both
dropped to the second
round, and Laberge was
drafted Saturday with
the pick Hextall acquired
the previous night from
Winnipeg.
In essence, Hextall got
two potential top-six forwards (Rubtsov and Laberge) by moving down
four spots in the first
round and surrendering
a third-round pick.
Which is why the #InHexyWeTrust hashtag
is still going strong in the
Twitterverse.
From the Flyers standpoint, last years draft
was sexier. They selected
two first-round players,
defenseman Ivan Provorov and winger Travis
Konecny, who have the

potential to be NHL
stars.
This year, the players
they drafted arent as
glitzy, but they have lots
of substance, lots of the
ingredients needed to
build a legitimate Stanley Cup contender: size,
speed, and the hunger to
play both ends of the ice.
For good measure, they
selected the best goalie
in the draft, Carter Hart.
Hextall had no expectation of drafting a goalie
so early (48th overall).
After all, he drafted three
goalies last year and already had six netminders in the system, including Anthony Stolarz and
Alex Lyon.
But he couldnt believe
Hart was still there, so
he strayed away from his
plan and grabbed him.
His mental game is
in order; his tools are in
order, Hextall said after
the draft at the First Niagara Center. Hes the
type of kid who bounces
back from a bad game.
He has all the makings
of someone who has the
potential to be a No. 1
guy.
Goalies are like majorleague pitchers; you can
never have enough good
ones in your system. The
overflow can be used as
trade bait. That means
if Hart progresses like
scouts believe, he will
one day be a valuable asset.
But Hextall, scouting
director Chris Pryor, and
their staff didnt come
to Buffalo trying to upgrade the systems goalie
depth. They came seeking to fortify their offensive prospects.
They did, drafting seven forwards with their 10
picks.
They added strength
down
the
middle
(Rubtsov, Connor Bunnaman) and talent, grit,
and size on the wings
(Laberge, Wade Allison,
and Carsen Twarynski),
according to scouting reports.
And they may have
uncovered a sleeper or
two by drafting centers
Tanner Laczynski (169th
overall) and Anthony
Salinitri (172nd) in the
sixth round. Craig Button, the highly respected
draft expert for TSN, had
those players ranked
99th and 84th, respectively.
Were happy with the
needs we filled, Hextall
said.
With the draft completed, Hextall will turn
his attention to the freeagency period, which
opens Friday.

CHRIS KNIGHT | LNP CORRESPONDENT

Ryan Dornes, center, accepts the King Knox Trophy from eight-time Lanco Amateur champion King Knox, left, and
Don Landis, president of the Lancaster County Golf Association, right, after winning the Lanco Amateur.

Amateur: Dornes holds on for win


Continued from C1

under the rules a oneshot penalty,


Then, there was the
Oliveri tee shot off of
17 on Saturday. The
21-year-old University of Delaware student went wide left
off his tee shot, but he
recovered nicely on
his second shot and
recorded a five on that
par-four hole.
Absolutely
(Id
like to have that shot
back), but in hindsight, though, I really
made a good bogey
with how far left I hit
the tee shot, Oliveri
said.
That set up the all
important 18th hole.
For Oliveri, it was
time to play for broke.
I was just trying to
hook a 3-wood around
the corner and give
myself a closer shot at
the green. I pushed it
a little right, but hit a
great iron (shot) and
made a birdie putt,

Oliveri said.
Holding a one-stroke
lead going into the 18th,
Dornes didnt change his
approach.
I just tried to play my
game. I kind of mis-hit
my tee shot and it kind
of put me in a tough position, but my wedge game
has been good. I felt comfortable and in a good
rhythm with my wedge
shots, said Dornes, who
calmly sank his putt following Oliveris birdie to
claim the title.

Tough course
Play off the tee was a
point of emphasis for all
the players over the two
days. Dornes, a sophomore varsity golfer at
Penn State, doesnt play
Conestoga Country Club
very often and knew the
narrow course could
present problems.
I played here a while
back and knew a little bit
about what I was doing,
but for the most part I

just attacked it, Dornes


said. If you mis-hit a
drive, it puts you in bad
places.
Dornes got settled
in on the tee box and
started to out drive his
playing partners (Oliveri
and Jarred Texter) down
the stretch on the back
nine, which set him up
for comfortable wedge
shots.
I kind of remembered
something I was taught
a while back about ball
placement, Dornes said.
The ball was too far up
in my stance, so I moved
it back and it helped me
a lot. I just started killing
it.
Oliveris game plan
with the tight course was
to avoid using his driver.
I only hit driver four
times these past two
days, Oliveri said. I was
able to hit fairways and
that reflected my score.
Oliveri, who was 2-under on the front nine
on Saturday, has made
a more conscious effort

to slow down his pace of


play over the years.
Ive been trying to be
a more deliberate player
this summer and trying
to slow things down for
myself. I play better that
way, Oliveri said.
Oliveri, a Conestoga
Valley alum who recorded his best finish to date
in the Amateur, enjoys
these kinds of tournaments compared to the
pressures of the college
ranks.
I like playing in these
tournaments because
they are not as uptight as
(college tournaments),
Oliveri said. College is a
little more intense.
Aaron Fricke, who
recorded the final under par round, shot a 66
Saturday and finished in
third place with a twoday total of 140.
Brandon
Detweiler
and Peter Chieppor finished tied for fourth at
143. Texter finished sixth
after shooting a 3-over,
73, on Saturday.

PRO GOLF ROUNDUP

Hurley fires 67 for a 2-shot lead


Naval
Academy
graduate Billy Hurley III shot a 4-under 67 on Saturday in
Bethesda, Maryland,
to take a two-stroke
lead over Ernie Els
into the final round
of the Quicken Loans
National.
Hurley had four
birdies in his bogeyfree round at Congressional to reach
15 under. The 607thranked player in the
world said he couldnt
think of a better tournament to be his first
PGA Tour victory because of its proximity to his Annapolis
home and connections to the military.
Els holed out for eagle on the par-4 12th
and finished with a 65.
The 46-year-old hit a

GREENBRIER CLASSIC CANCELED


The PGA Tour canceled the Greenbrier Classic, scheduled
for July 7-10, on Saturday because of devastating flooding
in West Virginia.
The Greenbrier Resort in White Sulphur Springs has been
was inundated with floodwater after heavy storms rolled
into the state Thursday. Tour officials say the Old White
TPC, the host course, suffered extensive damage and is
beyond reasonable repair to conduct the tournament.
PGA Tour Commissioner Tim Finchem said officials were
heartbroken by the devastation in West Virginia and
offered their thoughts and prayers.
Canceling the Greenbrier Classic is certainly the most
prudent course of action as our foremost concern is the
well-being of those who are having to live through this
tragic situation, Finchem said.
SOURCE: ASSOCIATED PRESS

9-iron from the fairway


from 157 yards out, the
first time he said hes
ever slam-dunked a
ball right into the hole.
Jon Rahm, who held
the lead after one round
and shared it with Hurley after two, struggled.
Playing his first event

as a professional, the
21-year-old former Arizona State star from
Spain had four bogeys in
a 70 that left him three
strokes behind Hurley.
LPGA Tour: Topranked Lydia Ko eagled
the par-5 18th to tie the
course record at 9-under

62 and take a share of the


second-round lead in the
NW Arkansas Championship in Rogers, Arkansas.
Ko matched Morgan
Pressel at 14-under 128
at Pinnacle Country
Club, tying the tournament 36-hole record set
by Veronica Felibert in
2012.
Ko, 19, played the final
eight holes in 7 under,
making five birdies and
the eagle. Pressel, winless since 2008, had a
63.
PGA Tour Champions:
Jean-Francois
Remesy had two eagles
in an 8-under 64 to take
the second-round lead
in the inaugural American Family Insurance
Championship in Madison, Wisconsin.

SOURCE: ASSOCIATED PRESS

NHL DRAFT, DAY 2

McPhee grows emotional once son is picked by Oilers


BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP)
As a longtime NHL scout
and general manager,
George McPhee has had
a hand in providing opportunities to countless
prospects at the NHL
draft.
It wasnt until Saturday when McPhee fully
appreciated how significant that moment felt as
a father.
McPhee was in the
stands with his family
in Buffalo when his son
Graham was drafted in
the fifth round, 149th
overall, by the Edmonton Oilers.
Even though youve

been in the business a


long time, it blows you
away, said McPhee, the
former Washington Capitals general manager
who is serving as a special adviser to the New
York Islanders.
Its an emotional
thing. I was hoping it
wouldnt be this emotional, he added, with
his voice cracking. Got
the lump in the throat.
McPhee spoke as the
draft drew to a close with
rounds 2 through 7, and
a day after Arizona-born
center Auston Matthews
was selected No. 1 by Toronto to spark a record

run of 12 Americans taken in the first round.


The host Sabres made
the biggest splash early
in the second round, addressing a key need by
acquiring veteran defenseman Dmitri Kulikov in
a trade with the Florida
Panthers. Besides swapping second-round picks
that had Buffalo moving
up to No. 33 from No. 38,
the Panthers acquired
defenseman Mark Pysyk
and the Sabres thirdround pick, 89th overall.
We have a need for a
left-shot D. He had an
outstanding playoff for
them, Sabres general

manager Tim Murray


said of the Russian-born
player.
Murray also addressed
another
topic
that
loomed over the draft by
confirming his interest
in making an offer to sign
Tampa Bay Lightning
captain Steven Stamkos,
should he enter the free
agent market on July 1.
Im going to ask if he
would be interested in
Buffalo, Murray said.
I have to ask that question, or I wouldnt be doing my job.
The interest in Stamkos ramped up Saturday
because it was the first

day all NHL teams were


allowed to contact pending free agents.
Lightning
general
Steve Yzerman said
his approach hasnt
changed. He still isnt
ruling out re-signing
Stamkos, and added he
has no control over what
other teams might do.
Its all part of the business. We all have decisions to make, Yzerman
said. Were both very
clear on our positions.
The Lightning made
the second trade of the
day, by sending prospect
defenseman
Anthony
DeAngelo to Arizona for

the 37th pick. Tampa Bay


used the pick to select
Czech Republic-born defenseman Libor Hajek.
The New Jersey Devils traded the 77th pick
to Pittsburgh to acquire
right wing Beau Bennett.
In a swap of prospects,
the Los Angeles Kings
traded defenseman Nick
Ebert to Dallas for goalie
Jack Campbell.
Another notable pick
was the Panthers selecting Jonathan Ang 94th
overall. Born outside of
Toronto, he has the opportunity to become
the first with Malaysian
roots to play in the NHL.

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

C9

Outdoors

Peace on the water

CLAYTON PANKEWICZ

Above, veteran Art Cassot with a smallmouth bass


caught and released on Little Beaver Creek. Right, veterans learning fly-fishing in the Donegal Chapter of Trout
Unlimiteds Veterans Initiative cast in Lititz Run. Below,
veterans get initiated in fly-fishing by members of the
Donegal Chapter of Trout Unlimited.

JIM WELLENDORF

Local sportsmens groups show appreciation to veterans by offering


fly-fishing, kayak fishing and paddling programs.

AD CRABLE
LNP OUTDOORS WRITER

onald G. Hershey has


yet to catch his first
trout on a fly rod.
Doesnt matter. Its just
being outdoors and around
nature and getting away
from life for awhile, says the
71-year-old from Manheim.
Hershey has more need
than most to take a break
from reality. He suffers from
heart problems, prostate
cancer, diabetes and other ailments he attributes to breathing in Agent Orange during
a four-year stint in the Navy
during the Vietnam War.
Hershey and about 10 other
veterans from Lancaster
County are discovering the
peace and challenge of the
gentle sport of fly-fishing
thanks to the Veterans Initiative by the Donegal Chapter of
Trout Unlimited.
With a trip to the fabled Yellow Breeches over the weekend, the free program for vets
is well into its second year.
Trout Unlimited members
provide casting instruction,
rods and reels, insect identification, knot tying and their
own hand-tied artificial flies,
then guide the converts to waterways in the region to fish
for trout, bass and panfish.
Its just something that
feels good to me. It feels
right, says Bill Nolan, a thirdgeneration veteran himself,
who runs this years fly-fishing
program.
I think everyone should
have some level of appreciation for what the veterans
have sacrificed.
Other local sportsmens
groups obviously share that
gratitude.

The Central Pennsylvania


Chapter of Heroes on the
Water introduces both active
and inactive members of the
military and their families to
kayaking and kayak fishing.
All equipment is provided.
It brings veterans from all
ages to gather and heal as we
travel on the waters, says
Brian Cunningham, of Mount
Joy, chapter representative.
Currently, there are 34 vets,
14 family members and 22
volunteers involved.
Upcoming kayaking and
fishing trips are coming to
Muddy Run Recreation Lake
on July 9, the Susquehanna
River on Aug. 20, Wrightsville
Quarry on Sept. 17 and Leaser
Lake Park on Oct. 8.
For more information, email
centralpa@heroesonthewater.
pa or see their Facebook page
at facebook.com/howcentralpa.
In addition, there is the
Susquehanna Valley Chapter
of Team River Runner, in its
second year of an outreach
effort to teach disabled, ablebodied or troubled veterans
how to paddle canoes and kayaks in flatwater or whitewater.
The program currently has
135 paddlers made up of veterans and their families, disabled
members of the community
and nonvet volunteers.
There have been 76 paddling
trips so far, and veterans are
so appreciative that they have
organized Kids are OutaSight!
kayaking clinics to teach blind
and vision-impaired kids and
their parents how to safely
paddle, or lead them on a
paddle.
The group is hoping to begin

Calendar

n 3-D shoot: Penn Dutch

The Outdoors Calendar items


below are just a few of the
activities this week from
throughout Lancaster County
and beyond. To read the full
calendar online, go to bit.
ly/28RsyuhoutcalendarJ25. To
submit calendar items, email:
acrable@lnpnews.com; fax to
399-6507; send to Ad Crable, P.O.
Box 1328; Lancaster, PA 176081328; or call 481-6029.

TODAY
n 3-D shoot: Columbia Fish &

Game. 32 targets. From 7 a.m.-1


p.m. $10 for adults, $3 for kids
12-16.

n Sporting clays shoot: Atglen

Sportsmens Association. From 8


a.m.-12:30 p.m; $12. The club is on
Creek Road, west of Atglen.

n 3-D shoot: Atglen Sportsmens


Association. 30 targets. From 8
a.m.-noon. $10 for adults; $5 for
kids 12-16.

JIM WELLENDORF

out and have a lot of fun and


fresh air.
Its a real good program,
says Smith, who served three
years in the Army in Seoul
during the Korean War.
By all accounts, Art Cassot
has been hit the hardest by the
fly-fishing bug.
A 33-year veteran of the
Army, the 70-year-old Manheim Township resident may
be seen practicing his cast in
his backyard.
I always thought it was kind
of pretty, he says of fly-fishing.
I like the idea of learning the
insects. But theres a lot more
to it than I thought.
I moved here from Huntingdon a year and a half ago
and I had no idea where to go
fish. I just like being out on the
stream. Half the time I dont
catch anything, but I just like
being out there.
Thats just the kind of appreciation of the passive pleasures
of fly-fishing that program
leader Nolan had hoped to
instill.
Nolan, who leans on other
volunteers in Donegal Trout
Unlimited such as Clay Pankewicz and Mark Coons, has

exposed the new fly-fishermen


to a variety of streams such
as Lititz Run, Fishing Creek,
the Conestoga River, Little
Beaver Creek and the Yellow
Breeches. He says many local
landowners have offered use of
their ponds when they learn of
the program.
This winter, Nolan wants
to continue the program by
getting some of the veterans
interested in learning how to
tie their own flies.
Hes already gotten back
what he gives in the form of
stories recounted by the vets.
And he says they have embraced the mission of conservation by Donegal Trout
Unlimited, picking up trash
and discarded fishing line at
every stream.
We have a good time every
time we go, he says.
For more about the Veterans Initiative, contact Bill
Nolan at wnolandtu@gmail.
com or 875-7426.

n 3-D shoot: Big Chiques

Science program: 10 a.m.-noon at


the North Museum of Nature and
Science, 400 College Ave. For
children ages 5 and under.

Club, 15 targets, from 5-7 p.m.


$5. Take Rte. 72 north over
Pennsylvania Turnpike, right on
Spring Hill Lane.

Lebanon Valley Sportsmen. 30


targets. From 7 a.m.-noon. $10
for adults. Club located at 841
Sportsmen Road, Robesonia.

n Sporting clays shoot: Atglen

FRIDAY

n Visitors are invited to see

MONDAY

Sportsmen, 5 p.m.; $5.50. The


club is on Creek Road, Sadsbury
Township.

n Practice trap shoot: Paradise

n Practice trap shoot: Manheim

Sportsmen. 40 targets. From 7


a.m.-3 p.m. $10.
Bowmen. 30 targets. Begins at
7 a.m.

Sportsmans Association, from


5-7 p.m.

TUESDAY
n Trap shooting practice:

Southern Lancaster County


Farmer-Sportsmens Association.
From 1-8:30 p.m.; $4. Take Route
272 south to Buck; left on Route
372; left on Hollow Road.

n Indoor handgun practice:

Manheim Sportsmens
Association. Open to the public.
From 7- 9 p.m. Cost is $10.
For more information, contact
Allan Wolf, 653-9979 or email
adwolf7812@gmail.com.

programming at the Lebanon


VA Medical Center.
For more information,
contact Bill Butler, chapter
coordinator, at 951-8948, by
email at bill.butler@teamriverrunner.org, or on Facebook
at facebook.com/groups/
susquehannavalleyTRR.
Most of those vets who have
taken Donegal Trout Unlimited up on its offer to learn flyfishing are doing so with no
previous experience, though
many fished by other means
growing up.
For years, Jim Brubaker,
71, of Manheim, has had two
Orvis fly rods that belonged
to his brother sitting around
the house. After retiring as a
machine operator, he finally
gave in to his curiosity.
A six-year veteran of the
National Guard, Brubaker has
caught several panfish but is
still looking for his first trout.
Im learning the technique
of it all, he says. I think Im
going to like it once I get onto
it.
At 86, Ed Smith, of Lancaster
is the senior veteran in this
years neophytes. I love it, he
says. Its relaxing and you go

Sportsmens Association, 552


Oak Tree Road, Manheim. From
5-7 p.m. Call 808-7522 for more
information.

n Trap shoot under the lights:

Adamstown Rod & Gun Club.


At 5 p.m.; $3. The club is at 563
Willow St., Reinholds.

n Trap shoot: Columbia Fish

& Game, from 6 to 8 p.m. Take


Route 30 west; right on Prospect
Road; left on Fairview Road.

n Summer Story Forest program

at Gov. Dick Park: 10:30 a.m. at


the Environmental Center at 3283
Pinch Road, Mount Gretna. For
children ages up to 10. Reading
and outdoor fun. $5 per child. For
more information, or to register,
email governordick@hotmail.com
or call 964-3808.

UPCOMING
n 3-D shoot: Saturday-Monday,

July 2-4, Lancaster Archery Club.


40 targets. 7 a.m.-noon. $12 for
adults, free for kids 12 and under.

n 3-D shoot: Saturday-Monday,

WEDNESDAY

THURSDAY

July 2-4, Hemlock Archery Club.


40 targets. 7 a.m.-1 p.m. $12 for
adults, $8 for kids 13-17, free for
kids 12 and under. Take Rte. 72
north over Pennsylvania Turnpike,
right on Spring Hill Lane.

n Little Explorer & Me: Yummy

n 3-D shoot: Hemlock Archery

n 3-D shoot: Sunday, July 3,

n Sporting clays shoot:

Elstonville Sportsmen. 4-7 p.m.


Take Rte. 72 north from Manheim,
left on Pinch Road.

n Follow Ad Crable on Twitter

at @AdCrableLNP. Email him at


acrable@lnpnews.com

the only population of rare


regal fritillary butterflies in
Pennsylvania at Fort Indiantown
Gap, near Annville, Lebanon
County: The free guided 2016
tours will depart promptly at
10 a.m. on July 1, 2, 8 and 9.
Those wishing to attend should
arrive no later than 9:30 a.m.
to fill out necessary paperwork,
attend a mandatory safety/
orientation, briefing and receive
driving instructions. Tours will
last approximately three hours,
but attendees can leave earlier
if needed. No reservations are
required and no rain dates will be
scheduled. For more information,
visit ftig.pa.gov and click on
Butterfly Tours under the
Trending section; or email RADMVA-Wildlife@pa.gov, or call
861-2449.

C10 SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

DAN MASSEY
FANTASY SPORTS

These youngsters could


make their debuts soon
Two milestones of
the baseball season,
the All-Star Game and
the non-waiver trading
deadline, are on the horizon, which means that
the time is nearing for
teams to decide whether
they are in serious contention for a postseason
spot and to address their
teams needs accordingly.
In addition to championship-caliber squads
gaining skilled players,
the trade deadline gives
rebuilding teams an opportunity to jettison
veterans and promote
young prospects.
We have already seen a
host of youngsters make
their major-league debuts in the last six weeks,
from teams hoping to be
in the pennant race Julio Urias (Dodgers), Will-

son Contreras (Cubs),


Tim Anderson (White
Sox), Jameson Taillon
(Pirates) and, after Saturdays call-up, A.J. Reed
(Astros) to teams who
reach the 2016 playoffs
only in their wildest
dreams Tommy Joseph (Phillies) and Cincinnati teammates Cody
Reed and Jose Peraza.
There is sure to be another crop of young talent that gets a call to The
Show in the next month,
and many of them will
have a positive fantasy
effect for owners. Here
are a few players for
owners to monitor.
Hunter Renfroe,
OF, Padres. San Diego
put all their chips to the
middle of the table a
couple years ago, and it
did not work out. Now
they have a significant

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.

BASEBALL
Keystone State Academy
independent instructor
Mark Chimel will offer
a full lineup of one-day
and ongoing clinics this
summer. Instruction covers
all aspects of proper
throwing mechanics
and arm strength for
position players as well
as all areas of pitching.
Contact 665-0091 or visit
keystonestatebaseball.com
for more information.
Manheim Central Little
Leagues Fall Baseball
registration dates for
players ages 4 to 16 (4
before Sept. 1, 2017, and
cannot turn 17 before May
1, 2017) are: Thursday,
June 30, from 6 to 8 p.m.;
Saturday, July 9, from 9
a.m. to noon; Thursday,
July 21, from 6 to 8 p.m.;
and Saturday, July 23,
from 9 a.m. to noon. All
will be at Manheim Grace
Brethren Church, 333 E.
High St., Manheim. For
more information, visit
manheimcentrallittleleague.
com.

BASKETBALL
Manheim Township Blue
Streaks Basketball Camp
for boys entering grades
1-8 will be held July 11-15
at Manheim Township High
School. Instruction and skill
development will be led by
the boys varsity coaches
and players. Cost is $75
for grades 4-8 and will
run from 9 a.m. to noon.
Cost is $50 for grades 1-3
and will run from 1 to 3
p.m. Registration includes
a T-shirt for all campers.
Registration forms are
available at the high school
office or MTWP.net under
the Athletics tab. Walkup registrations are also
welcome. Questions can
be directed to head coach
Matt Johns via email at
johnsma@mtwp.net or by
phone at 560-3107.
Coach Mary Fleig and the
Millersville womens team
will host the Lady Marauder
Elite Camp on July 31
in Pucillo Gymnasium.
Limited to 40 players,
the camp is designed to
evaluate and teach skill
development to players
that have interest in the
Millersville program. The
three-hour camp includes
individual workouts, an
NCAA academic session, a
strength and conditioning
session, position-specific
sessions and competitive
games. The cost is
$45. To register, visit
coachfleigbasketballcamps.
com.
Lamar Patterson of the
NBAs Atlanta Hawks will
serve as guest director
for a Spooky Nook Sports

camp for boys ages 9-16,


set for 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
June 27-30. Camp skill
sessions will be organized
by Nook Hoops Academy
Director John Leonzo. The
focus will be on building
fundamentals through
teaching, practice and
repetition. The camp will
include 5-on-5 games, a
3-on-3 tournament and
more. Daily lunches and a
camp shirt are included.
Cost is $225. For more
information, call 945-7087.
Bobby Hurley headlines the
list of coaches and players
conducting a basketball
coaches clinic at Solanco
High School on Aug. 6 from
8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. All
boys and girls high school
and college basketball
coaches are invited. The
clinic will feature in-depth
instruction on a variety
of basketball topics. A
discount is offered for
registration received prior
to July 22. The fee for
individual coaches is $100,
and $90 per coach for
two or more coaches from
the same staff ($125/$100
after July 22). Checks
can be made payable to
Solanco Boys Basketball
and mailed to: Solanco
Athletic Department, 585
Solanco Road, Quarryville,
PA 17566. For more
information, email Solanco
Athletic Director Anthony
Hall at anthony_hall@
solanco.k12.pa.us.

BUS TRIPS
Hempfield Rec Center is
running two trips to the
USTA Billie Jean King
National Tennis Center for
the U.S. Open. The first,
on Aug. 24 (departs at
6:30 a.m.) is for qualifying,
and the second on Sept. 2
(departs at 6:15 a.m.) for
the main draw. For more
information, call 898-3102.

COACHING
OPENINGS
Columbia High School
is seeking a varsity head
wrestling coach and a junior
high head girls volleyball
coach. Candiates should
have prior school coaching
experience. The varsity
head coach supervises the
entire program for grades
7 through 12. Applicants
should send a letter of
interest, a coaching resume,
and a list of three references
to Anthony Sottasante,
Athletic Director; Columbia
High School, 901 Ironville
Pike, Columbia, PA 17512.
All clearances required by
the state must be less than
one year old at the time
of employment. Contact
Sottasante with any
questions at asottasante@
columbia.k12.pa.us.
Annville-Cleona School

SPORTS

amount of money committed to Matt Kemp,


and he is signed through
2019, so he might be
tough to move, but Melvin Upton, Jr. is enjoying a resurgence and
is under team control
through the end of next
season. He is a possibly
attractive trade target,
which would open a spot
for Renfroe, one of the
Pacific Coast Leagues
best hitters.
Renfroe entered the
weekend batting .312
with 17 home runs and
61 RBIs in 70 games
for El Paso. He is tied
for first in the league in
homers, is second in ribbies and leads by a wide
margin in total bases. A
top-100 prospect, the
24-year-old Renfroe
has progressed steadily
through the minor
league ranks and is likely
to don Padre garb at
some point this summer.
Aaron Judge, OF,
Yankees. The Bronx
Bombers entered
Saturday just 2.5 games
out of the second wild
card, yet they have had
difficulty staying above
.500 and out of the cellar

in the competitive AL
East. Barring an unforeseen string of victories,
the Yankees could very
much be selling off
pieces at the trade deadline. The most logical
candidate to be bartered
for prospects is Carlos
Beltran. Moving Beltran, who is in the final
year of his contract, will
theoretically open up a
spot for Judge to enter
the lineup.
Judge is third in the
International league
with 13 home runs, fifth
in RBIs (41) and third
in total bases (121). In
his second season with
Scranton/Wilkes-Barre,
he is hitting markedly
better than his initial
61-game stint with the
RailRiders during the
second half of 2015.
Judges power bat can be
a boon to fantasy owners
needing outfield depth in
August and September.
Tyler Glasnow, SP,
Pirates. If Pittsburgh
is hoping to extend
their three-year streak
of postseason appearances, they will require
a strong second half to
do so; however, rely-

District is seeking a head


girls tennis coach and
assistant boys and girls
soccer coaches. Interested
candidates should send a
cover letter and resume to
Athletic Director/Assistant
Principal Tommy Long,
Annville-Cleona School
District, 500 S. White Oak
St., Annville PA 17003, or by
email at tlong@acschools.
org.

Manheim Central is in need


of assistant junior high
coaches for field hockey and
girls basketball. Interested
candidates should follow
the application guidelines
found on the district
website. Further details
are available by contacting
Athletic Director George
Derbyshire at 664-8429.

Elizabethtown Area
School District is accepting
applications for several
positions including: assistant
varsity cross country
coach, assistant varsity
boys basketball coach,
assistant junior high boys
basketball coach, assistant
junior high wrestling coach,
and assistant varsity boys
lacrosse coach. Interested
candidates should submit
a completed application,
resume, clearances (PA
criminal, PA child abuse, FBI
criminal) to Linda Ahern,
Athletic Director, EASD,
600 East High Street,
Elizabethtown, PA or linda_
ahern@etownschools.org.
Applications are available
at etownschools.org under
Employment Spotlight.
The Hempfield athletic
department has an opening
for a head varsity softball
coach and a head junior
high boys basketball coach.
Interested candidates must
apply online at hempfieldsd.
org. If you have any
questions, please contact
the Hempfield Athletic
Office at hsdathletics@
hempfieldsd.org.
Manheim Township School
District is seeking a junior
high head girls soccer
coach, a varsity assistant
girls soccer coach and
a varsity assistant cross
country coach. Send
completed support services
application, found at
mtwp.net, letter of interest
and resume to Manheim
Township School District,
Human Resources Dept,
PO Box 5134, Lancaster,
PA 17606-5134 or email
to WengerDe@mtwp.net.
Deadline for applications is
July 15, or until successful
candidate is selected.
Conestoga Valley School
District is accepting
applications for an
assistant girls soccer
coach and a secretary for
the athletic director. Visit
conestogavalley.org/jobs.
cfm for more information
on the application process,
or email Athletic Director
Zac Kraft at zac_kraft@
conestogavalley.org.
The Lampeter-Strasburg
Athletic Department has
the following vacancies:
junior high assistant cross
country coach, high school
assistant boys lacrosse
coach and high school JV
boys soccer coach. Qualified
candidates should have
previous playing and/
or coaching experience.
Interested candidates
should submit a letter of
interest, resume, clearances
(PA criminal, PA child abuse,
FBI criminal), and references
to: Branden Lippy, Director
of Athletics, LampeterStrasburg School District,
PO Box 428, Lampeter, PA
17537. Positions open until
filled. EOE.

The Garden Spot High


School Athletic Department
has the following vacancies:
high school JV boys soccer
coach, high school assistant
football coach, junior high
girls soccer coach, junior
high head and assistant field
hockey coaches, junior high
cross country coach, head
bowling coach, head rifle
coach, high school assistant
girls basketball coach, junior
high girls basketball coach,
and high school assistant
track and field coach.
Interested candidates
should send a resume,
cover letter, and fill out a
coaching application under
the athletic vacancies page
at elanco.org to Athletic
Director Ed Yapsuga,
Garden Spot High School,
669 E. Main St., PO Box
609, New Holland, PA 17557
or email ed_yapsuga@
elanco.org.
Lancaster Catholic High
School has immediate
openings for the following
positions this fall: junior
high head cross country
coach, freshman head
football coach, assistant
field hockey coach and
assistant boys soccer coach.
All clearances are needed. If
interested, email response
to Rich Hinnenkamp,
Lancaster Catholic AD at
rhinnenkamp@lchsyes.org.
Elizabethtown College
is currently seeking a
part-time head womens
volleyball coach to provide
leadership for and direct
all aspects of the womens
volleyball program. For
more information or
to apply, visit etown.
peopleadmin.com/
postings/771 .
Five Star Swim Club, a
local USS swim club, has
coaching openings for
the Fall-Winter 2016-17
season. Send resume to:
FSSC coach at docswim@
comcast.net.
The Diplomat Swim Club
is seeking a strength
& conditioning coach
(certified trainer) to lead its
dryland training. Applicant
must be able to develop a
strength and conditioning
program specific to
the training needs of
competitive swimmers.
Qualified individuals
can email resumes to
dscswimboard@gmail.com.

CYCLING
The Covered Bridge Metric
Century bike ride, hosted
by the Lancaster Bicycle
Club, will be held Aug. 21.
The casual ride features
three route options: 15, 31
and 62 miles. All routes
have been revised for 2016
to be even more scenic.
The starting location is the
HACC Lancaster Campus,
1641 Old Philadelphia
Pike. Ride support, rest
stops with refreshments,

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

ing on the trio of Jeff


Locke, Jonathon Niese
and Juan Nicasio is not
the best plan of attack.
Gerrit Cole is aiming
to return to the rotation before the All-Star
break, and Taillon looks
to have a long-term role
as a starter. Even if the
trade rumors that have
swirled around Francisco Liriano turn out
to have no merit, the
ineptitude in the back
end of the rotation begs
for the 6-foot-8 Glasnow to be beckoned to
Pittsburgh.
In 15 starts with
Class-AAA Indianapolis,
Glasnow is 6-2 with a
1.61 ERA. He is striking out 10.7 batters per
nine innings and has
allowed a mere 49 hits
in 84 innings pitched.
Unfortunately, he has
surrendered nearly as
many walks, resulting in
a WHIP of 1.143. In his
last 28 innings, he has
yielded just five hits but
walked 22 batters while
whiffing 31. Whether the

Buccos go for broke or


not, Glasnow will almost
certainly join them soon,
assuming he improves
his control.
Robert Stephenson,
SP, Reds. Technically,
Stephenson made his
debut for Cincinnati in
a pair of April outings,
and the 6-foot-2 righty
should be back in the
Queen City again this
season. He is a consensus top-35 prospect,
despite his own share of
control problems with
Triple-A Louisville,
where he is averaging 4.8
walks per nine innings.
Stephenson is player
more suited to longterm keeper leagues, although he may be worth
a few spot starts depending on the opponent,
once he is recalled.
Other players to watch
include Josh Bell, 1B,
Pirates; Josh Hader, SP,
Brewers; Braden Shipley,
SP, Diamondbacks; Nick
Williams, OF, Phillies
and Jose DeLeon, SP,
Dodgers.

n Dan Masseys fantasy sports column appears each Sunday


in LNP. Reach him at dmassey@lnpnews.com.

and lunch are provided.


Proceeds benefit the clubs
grant program, which
supports covered bridge
restoration and bike-related
initiatives. Registration
is $40. The deadline to
register is July 24. Register
at Lancasterbikeclub.net.

FLAG FOOTBALL
Spooky Nook Sports will
offer four age divisions
of youth flag football
leagues for children ages
6-15 this fall. Registration
includes a team shirt as
well as practices and
a nine-game season.
Team/player registration
is open. Register at
spookynooksports.com or
call 618-8513 for details.
The Lancaster Football
Association is currently
accepting registrations
for its Fall 2016 boys
competitive league. The
LFA offers two divisions,
Junior (K-Grade2) and
Youth (Grades 3-5). All
games are officiated by
PIAA /LFA officials. The fee
is $105 for a guaranteed
eight-game season. Space
is limited and registrations
will end on Aug. 15 or once
all teams are full. Game
dates are Sept. 10, 17 and
24, Oct. 1, 9, 15 and 29, and
Nov. 5. Game times run
from 1-5 p.m. Championship
games are from 6-8:30
p.m. Nov. 7. Contact LFA
Director Joe Galante at
892-7098 for additional
information or visit
lancasterfootballassociation.
org to download the
registration, waiver and
code of conduct forms.

FOOTBALL
Hempfield Youth Footballs
registration for players
ages 7-15 is now open. Visit
HempfieldFootball.com for
more information.

GOLF
The 22nd annual Disaster
Relief Golf Tournament,
hosted by Mechanic Grove
Church of the Brethren, is
set for Aug. 5 at Pilgrims
Oak Golf Club. This fourperson scramble format
event will have tee times of
7:30 a.m. or 12:30 p.m. Entry
fee is $70 per player and
includes green fees, cart,
snacks, dinner and prizes.
For more information, call
Linda Bledsoe at 341-2115 or
Earle Hershey at 951-9147.
The Moms House Annual
Golf Tournament will be
held, rain or shine, Aug. 15
at Foxchase Golf Club in
Stevens. The tournament
will be a four-person
scrambleCheck-in begins
at 11:30 a.m. and tee time
is 12:30 p.m. Fee is $80
per player, or $300 per
foursome and includes
lunch, green fees, range
balls and cart fees.
Proceeds support the
mothers and children at
Moms House of Lancaster.
To register an individual,
a team, or to become a
tournament sponsor visit
momshouselancaster.org.
Evergreen Golf Course
Junior Clinic and Foot Golf
for youth ages 6-14 is being

offered in conjunction with


Hempfield Rec. Instructors
will teach proper stance, set
up, basic swing, etiquette,
putting and chipping on a
pitch and putt course. Call
898-3102 to register.
The 11th annual Columbia
Education Foundation
Golf Tournament will be
held July 22 at Cool Creek
Golf Course in Wrightsville.
Registration opens at 7
a.m., with a tee time of 7:30
a.m. for the four-person
scramble. Fee is $75 per
person until July 15, then
$85 until the day of the
tournament. Cost includes
golf with cart, prizes and
a chicken BBQ dinner at
Susquehanna Fire Co. after
the tournament. For more
information or to register,
contact Ken Haverstick at
393-8500, Jack and Robin
Gamby at 615-4589, Rich
Gerfin at 684-4772, Dan
Martin at 295-2644, Tom
Lawson at 684-3371, Toni
Pittman at 449-1177 or Josh
Anderson at 572-8496.
The Chip-N-Sip Golf Event
will be held from 6 to 8 p.m.
June 29 at Manor Golf Club.
Head pro Patrick Spang will
offer ways to improve your
short game in an event that
combines tips, drills and a
contest with wine and beer
sampling on the practice
green. Participants must
be at least age 21. Cost is
$10 per person. Sign up in
the pro shop or online at
themanorgolfclub.com.
The Reinholds Lions
Clubs 26th annual golf
tournament will be held
July 22 at Manor Golf
Club, Bran Road, Sinking
Spring. Registration is at
7:30 a.m. for an 8 a.m.
shotgun start. Cost is $75
per golfer and includes
greens fees, cart, prizes,
food and refreshments. Six
flights (including womens),
with three winners in
each. Register by July 17,
space limited to the first
34 groups. Fivesomes ar
permitted. Registration
forms are available at Manor
Golf Course and Weaver
Markets, Adamstown. For
more information, call Bill
Crouse at 484-0212.
Crossgates Golf Club will
host several programs
in July covering the
fundamentals of putting,
chipping, irons and driver.
Registration is available
at crossgatesgolf.com,
and more infromation is
available by calling the
pro shop at 872-4500.
Programs include:
Ladies Golf Clinic, held on
Wednesday and Thursday
evenings, July 13, 14, 20 and
21 from 4 to 5:15 p.m. Cost
for all four sessions is $100.
Get Golf Ready! adult
beginner clinic, open
to men and women, on
Tuesday and Thursday
evenings, July 12, 14, 19 and
21 from 5:30 to 7 p.m. It will
include time on the course.
Cost for all four sessions is
$125 per golfer.

Beginner Junior Golf, held


on Monday and Tuesday
afternoons, July 11, 12, 18
and 19 from 4 to 5 p.m. The
cost for all four sessions is
$100 per golfer.

SPORTS

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

Books: Summer reading for all sports fans


Continued from C1

the coaching rivalry


between Dukes Mike
Krzyzewski, North Carolina States Jim Valvano
and University of North
Carolinas Dean Smith
in the 1980s, comparing and contrasting the
college basketball titans
and tracing their impact
on the game through
the present. Feinstein
taps into his expertise
to portray the growth of
the college basketball
landscape.
On the charts: The
Legends Club hit No. 20
on the April 3 New York
Times Bestseller List
for Combined Print &
E-Book Nonfiction and
has been on the Times
monthly list for Sports &
Outdoors in April, May
and June.
Critics say: The book
is one of (Feinsteins)
best, a beguilingly
personal, sometimes
heartbreaking look at
the psychic cost of doing battle in Americas
most brutally, nakedly
competitive (and actual)
arenas. Will Blythe,
The Wall Street Journal.
4. Barbarian Days:
A Surfing Life, by
William Finnegan.
The 2016 Pulitzer
Prize-winning autobiography serves as a love
letter to surfing from
Finnegan, an international journalist born in
New York City, raised in
Los Angeles and Hawaii,
and drawn to experi-

ences in different parts


of the world, including
South Africa and Mexico. He takes up surfing
as a middle-schooler in
Hawaii and carries the
obsession throughout
his life, telling his story
through the waves he
encounters and the experiences in between.
On the charts:
Finnegans memoir
reached No. 4 in The
New York Times list
of Sports and Fitness
books, remaining in the
top 20 ever since, climbing to No. 3 its highest
to date in June.
Critics say: Id
sooner press this book
upon on a nonsurfer, in
part because nothing
Ive read so accurately
describes the feeling
of being stoked or the
despair of being held
under. But also because
while it is a book about
A Surfing Life as the
subtitle states its also
about a writers life and,
even more generally,
a questers life, more
carefully observed and
precisely rendered than
any Ive read in a long
time. Ryan Bradley,
The Los Angeles Times.
5. The Only Rule is
it Has to Work: Our
Wild Experiment
Building a New Kind
of Baseball, by Ben
Lindbergh and Sam
Miller.
In a baseball experiment, the independentleague Sonoma Stomp-

Lancaster Scene
LACROSSE
Hempfield Girls Lacrosse
Camps, with two age
groups and two sessions,
will be held the weeks
of July 25 and Aug. 1.
Participants will learn basic
fundamentals and build
skills such as catching,
passing and picking up
ground balls. A colored,
molded mouth guard is
required; bring a water
bottle. All other equipment
will be provided. Call 8983102 to register.
A lacrosse summer camp,
open to girls in grades 3-12,
will be held at Millersville
University from June 27-29.
More detailed information
and a link to register may
be found at maxlaxcamps.
com/overnight-camp.cfm.

LIFEGUARDING
The Lititz recCenter is
offering an American Red
Cross Lifeguarding Review
Course for lifeguards
with current certificates
who need to renew. The
course will be held from
8 a.m. to 6 p.m. August 7.
Cost is $110 for members,
$155 for nonmembers.
For more information, call
626-5096 ext. 227 or email
meganvulatic@lititzrec.
com.

POLO
Lancaster Polo Club hosts
regional matches each
Sunday until Oct. 9 at
Forney Field on Church
Street in Rothsville,
between Lititz and
Brownstown, two blocks
south off Route 772. This
week, June 26, is the clubs
Work to Ride benefit
match. 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
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 509-1342 or
come in.
Ephrata Rec Center, 130
S. Academy Drive, offers a

wide variety of programs


for all ages including
sports, fitness, wellness,
aquatics and special events.
For more information visit
ephratarec.com or call
738-1167.
Greater Elizabethtown
Area Recreation &
Community Services offers
programs and activities
for all ages. Registration
is accepted online at
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,
PA 17022. Registration is on
a first-come, first-served
basis.
Hempfield Rec Center,
950 Church St., Landisville,
offers instructional,
group exercise and
sports programs for
all ages. Opportunities
include aquatics, fitness,
lifeguarding, personal
training, sport-specific
training, tennis, wellness
and special events. For
more information, visit
hempfieldrec.com or call
898-3102.
Lampeter-Strasburg
YMCA, 800 Village
Road, West Lampeter
Township, offers a variety
of leagues and programs.
Call 464-4000 or visit
lancasterymca.org.
Lancaster Family YMCA
offers a wide variety of
youth and adult sports
programs, including
basketball, roller hockey,
soccer and more. For
more information, visit
lancasterymca.org or
contact Deric Hafer, sports
director, at Dhafer@
lancasterymca.org or 4644000, ext. 1212.
Lancaster Rec offers
instructional, exercise and
recreational programs. Call
392-2115, ext. 147, or visit
lancasterrec.org.
Lititz recCenter offers a
variety of programs for
all ages including sports,
fitness, wellness, aquatics
and special events. For
more information visit
lititzrec.com or call 6265096.
Manheim Township
Recreation Department
offers a selection of sports
leagues and programs. Call
290-7180, ext. 3100, or visit
manheimtownship.org.
Masonic Life Center,
Elizabethtown, has fitness
programs, pool classes and
swim times. For details,
visit masonicvillagespa.
org (click on Elizabethtown

ers gave two baseball


analysts the chance
to run their baseball
operations for the 2015
season. The two men
behind the Effectively
Wild podcast apply
their knowledge of
baseball analytics to the
everyday workings of
the team and describe
their journey through
the season.
On the charts: The
Only Rule is it Has to
Work comes in at No. 4
on The New York Times
Sports and Fitness best
sellers list and No. 5 on
Amazons baseball books
list.
Critics say: Where
Moneyball had a feelgood Hollywood ending,
The Only Rule is it has
to Work has a much
deeper and broader
knowledge of the game
itself, making it a mustread for any baseball
fan. Tucker Warner,
The Free Lance-Star.
6. Back from the
Dead: Searching for
the Sound, Shining the
Light, and Throwing it
Down, by Bill Walton.
One of basketballs most
iconic figures, Walton
shares lessons from John
Wooden, his experiences
as a player and broadcaster, his passion for The
Grateful Dead and his
recovery from a spinal
collapse in 2008. Walton
shares his struggles and
his triumphs in a memoir
that reveals him to be
a modern renaissance

man in the opinion of


one Amazon reviewer.
Walton traces his story
through his San Diego
upbringing in the 1950s
and 1960s, his basketball
career at UCLA and in the
NBA, and his broadcasting career while overcoming a stuttering affliction.
On the charts: Waltons memoir reached
No. 3 on The New York
Times list of Sports and
Fitness books in May
and ranks sixth among
basketball books on
Amazon.
Critics say: Walton
has always been a study
in contradictions: An
unreconstructed hippie
who thrilled to the martial dictums of U.C.L.A.s
John Wooden, a champion at every level who
is also one of the N.B.A.s
great what-if stories, a
lifelong stutterer who
found a second career in
broadcasting. This is a
book only Walton could
have written, and not
just because he liberally
seeds the prose with
lyrics from his beloved
Grateful Dead. Its a
celebration of a life in
sports that is also a frank
assessment of the toll
basketball took on his
body. John Swansburg, The New York
Times.
7. Concussion, by
Jeanne Marie Laskas.
Inspiring the 2015
movie starring Will
Smith, Laskas follows
Dr. Bennet Omalu, a

forensic pathologist
who discovered brain
deterioration in former
football player Mike
Webster after the gridiron legends death in
2002. Omahu continued
to investigate the brain
damage stemming from
repeated blows to the
head and challenged
the National Football
League in the way it
approached concussion
research and treatment.
On the charts: Concussion sat at No. 2 in
The New York Times
list of Sports and Fitness
best sellers in January and February and
currently ranks No. 14
in football books on
Amazon.
Critics say: Laskas book compares
the NFLs activities to
the shenanigans of Big
Tobacco, and reasonably so. Omalu began to
suspect racism in the
way he was treated; even
an ally told the pathologist that he didnt have
the believability factor.
Jim Higgins, The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
Bonus book: Check
out Hairs vs. Squares:
The Mustache Gang,
the Big Red Machine
and the Tumultuous
Summer of 72, by LNP
sportswriter Ed Gruver.

under Location).
Southern End Community
Association SECA in
Quarryville, offers a wide
variety of recreational,
exercise, sports programs
and leagues. Call 806-0123
or see secarec.org.
Town Square Health Club
in Manheim offers land and
water exercise activities.
Call Haley Brumbach at
664-6306.
YMCA at New Holland,
123 N. Shirk Road, offers
personal fitness class and
programs, swim instruction,
league and a wide variety
of programs for youth,
adult and seniors. Visit
lancasterymca.org.

Questions or requests for


application can be emailed
to runwiththedonegal
indians@gmail.com.
Runners Pentathlon
will be held July 30 at
Millersville University.
Each runner competes in
five track races (3,000m,
200m, 1,500m, 100m,
and 400m/800m) with
about 30 minutes recovery
between races. Scoring will
be similar to scoring for a
decathlon. Points will be
awarded to each individual
for their performance in
each event. Performance
will be adjusted for age
and gender. Applications
available at local running
stores or on the MU
Athletics website. Contact
Andrea Kramer at: andrea.
kramer@pennmanor.net for
more information.
Former McCaskey cross
country runners are
invited to participate in an
alumni race against current
McCaskey runners at 9 a.m.
on Saturday, Aug. 13, at
the Kiwanis Pavilion #21 at
Lancaster Country Park. To
register, join the McCaskey
Cross Country Facebook
page or the McCaskey
Cross Country Alumni
Facebook page.

and contact information,


and Penn Legacy will be
in contact to set up a
tryout evaluation. More
information can be found
at pennlegacy.org.
Lancaster Bible College
will hold an advanced
soccer camp July 14-16
on its campus. Offering
college-level coaching, the
resident camp will feature
technical and small-side
tactical sessions and
competitive games. Cost
is $250 per player. For
more information, visit
lbcchargers.com, and go to
the Lancaster Bible College
Camps page under the
Fan Zone tab.

RUNNING
The Lancaster Road
Runners Club invites
runners of all ages and
abilities to participate in
its spring fun runs, held
throughout the area every
Tuesday evening at 6:15
p.m. This week the club
will be running from 224
Beech St., Denver. For more
information, contact Patti
at 606-2016. Information
about Thursday evening
and Sunday morning trail
runs can also be found on
the club website, lrrclub.
org.
The 25th annual Shoe Fly
5-Mile Race will be held at
8 a.m. July 16 in Terre Hill.
Early discount registration
by July 1 for $20. Eventday registration of $25
is welcomed beginning
at 6:45 a.m. Race starts
and ends at Terre Hill
Community Center. Prize
money to top three
overall males/females plus
age group medals. For
more information, visit
GSrunning.org or Active.
com to register. Free kids
half-mile race will be held
during the 5-mile race.
Must register day of race.
Questions may be directed
to Brent at 351-0403 or
coachwatkins2003@
hotmail.com.
The Donegal High Scool
Boys Soccer Booster Club
is excited to present the
second annual Run With
The Donegal Indians 5K
and 10K Race at 9 a.m.
July 23 at River Front Park
in Marietta. The races are
along the Susquehanna
River on the Northwest
Lancaster County River
Trail, which is a paved flat
fast trail. Cash awards for
the top overall male and
female finisher for each
race. Age group awards
also. Online registration
or down loadable
application available at
pretzelcitysports.com/.

SOCCER
Soccer Camps by UK
Soccer will be held at
Hempfield Recs outdoor
fields the week of June 27.
Different camps for youth
ages 3-14 are available.
Includes free camp ball,
T-shirt and certificate or
evaluation. Times and
prices vary, and instruction
is by professional British
coaches. Call 898-3102 to
register.
The Lancaster Inferno and
Harrisburg City Islanders
will hold a boys and girls
camp at Lancasters Red
Rose Arena on July 18-22,
from 9 a.m. to noon each
day. The camp, for youth
in grades 5-12, will be
directed by City Islanders
Youth Academy Director
Dave Kern. Professional
players from both teams
will attend. Fee is $120
per player. To register
or for more information,
visit cityislanders.com/
campsclinics/summercamps/.
The Penn Legacy Soccer
Club currently has
openings on several of its
travel teams for 2016-17.
The group fields teams
from U8 (Pre-travel)
through U19 for both boys
and girls. If interested in
a position, email travel@
pennlegacy.org with the
players name, date of birth

n Tim Gross is a sports-

writer for LNP. Reach him at


tgross@lnpnews.com. Follow
him on Twitter @TimGrossLNP.

Spooky Nook Soccer and


Fustal Camps will hold
a World Cup-themed
camp at the Nook from
June 27 through July 1.
It will feature a guest
appearance by pro players
from the City Islanders. All
campers will also receive
one free youth ticket to an
upcoming match at FNB
Stadium on City Island
in Harrisburg. Full day
and half-day options are
available. Register online at
nooksports.com, and use
promo code Camp25 when
registering for $25 off any
soccer/futsal camp this
summer.
The Lancaster Torch, a
womens premier soccer
team that plays its home
games at Lancaster
Mennonite College, will
hold a camp for children
ages 6-12 from 9 a.m. to
noon daily from July 5-8
at Dayspring Christian
Academy, 120 College Ave.,
Mountville. The cost is
$60 per camper. For more
information or to register,
visit BuxMontTorch.com.

SOFTBALL
ASA Lanco Umpires will
meet Sunday, June 26 at
Grace Lutheran Church,
located at the corner of
North Queen and East
James Streets in Lancaster.
Any questions, contact
president Jim Gerz at 2882095.

SWIMMING
Marauder Aquatic
Club, a year-round USA
Swimming-affiliated team
at Millersville University,
has opened registration
for the 2016-17 season.
The fall/winter season
starts in September. More
information can be found
at marauderaquaticclub.
org. Open house dates
will be announced on the
website. Children who

C11

COLLEGE
WORLD SERIES

Arizona
advances
to finals

OMAHA,
Neb.
(AP) Bobby Dalbec pitched seven innings of four-hit ball,
Zach Gibbons drove
in three runs and Arizona beat Oklahoma
State 5-1 on Saturday
to advance to the College World Series finals.
The
Wildcats,
who forced a second
Bracket 1 final by beating the Cowboys 9-3
on Friday, returned to
the best-of-three finals in their first CWS
appearance
since
winning the 2012 national championship.
They are 6-0 in NCAA
Tournament elimination games.
Arizona
(48-22)
will face the winner
Saturday nights TCU
vs. Coastal Carolina
game beginning on
Monday.
Dalbec (11-5), a
fourth-round draft
pick of the Boston
Red Sox, allowed only
two baserunners over
his last four innings.
He struck out six and
is leading the NCAA
Tournament with 33
in five appearances.
Gibbons is 9 for
19 (.473) with seven
RBIs in five games in
Omaha.

can swim 1 length/25


yards, from preschool/
kindergarten up through
high school seniors, are
invited to join. Contact
marauderaquaticclub@
gmail.com with questions.
The Lititz recCenter is
offering outdoor swim
lessons at the Lititz Springs
pool Monday through
Thursday mornings for two
weeks. Sessions are July 1121, July 25-Aug. 4, and Aug.
8-18. Levels (for ages 3-12)
will determine lesson times.
For details, visit lititzrec.
com/outdoorpools or email
megvulatic@lititzrec.com.

TRIATHLON
The second annual Lititz
recCenter Triathlon will be
held at 8 a.m. Aug. 7. Swim
300 meters in the Lititz
Springs Pool, bike 15.8
miles in the farmland area
and run 3.1 miles. Benefits
the Lititz recCenter.
Register by July 22. $70
Individual and $90 Team
(2-3 people). For more
details, visit lititzrec.com
or call Simon at 626-5096,
ext. 239.

VOLLEYBALL
Summer collegiate pickup
volleyball begins June 29
from 7 to 9 p.m. on the
hardwood courts at Spooky
Nook Sports. Open, A- or
AA-level players of any age
are eligible. $10/night, no
registration required. Call
618-8513 for more details.

YOUTH SPORTS
Spooky Nook Sports will
hold an open house from 3
to 5 p.m. June 26 in which
children ages 6-11 may pick
two sports to try for free.
Each activity baseball,
basketball, cheerleading,
climbing, field hockey,
gymnastics, soccer/
futsal, softball, sports
performance, and volleyball
will be led by the Nook
coaching staff and will last
45 minutes. Register for
this free event online at
nooksports.com.
The Lititz recCenter
is offering weekly and
evening sports camps and
programs for children ages
3-12. Weekly camps include
Warriors Synergy, Olympic
Swim (ages 9-12) and Boat
Camp (ages 9-12). Youth
tennis programs (ages
4-Teen) will start the week
of July 18 and registration
starts June 29. For details
on dates and times, visit
lititzrec.com or contact
RonStief@lititzrec.com.

C12

SCOREBOARD

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

SPORTS SLATE
SWIMMING
LANCASTER SUMMER LEAGUE
Marauder Mini Meet at Landisville
Community Pool, 8:30 a.m.

TRANSACTIONS
BASEBALL
American League
BALTIMORE ORIOLES Recalled LHP
T.J. McFarland from Norfolk (IL). Sent RHP
Vance Worley to Bowie (EL) for a rehab
assignment.
BOSTON RED SOX Optioned INF Deven
Marrero to Pawtucket (IL). Recalled RHP
William Cuevas from Pawtucket.
DETROIT TIGERS Assigned OF Wynton
Bernard outright to Erie (EL).
HOUSTON ASTROS Optioned 2B Tony
Kamp to Fresno (PCL). Designated C Alfredo
Gonzalez for assignment. Selected the
contract of 1B A.J. Reed from Fresno.
KANSAS CITY ROYALS Optioned OF
Brett Eibner to Omaha (PCL). Reinstated
OF Alex Gordon from the 15-day DL. Sent
RHP Kris Medlen to Omaha for a rehab
assignment.
MINNESOTA TWINS Sent OF Miguel
Sano to Rochester (IL) for a rehab assignment.
NEW YORK YANKEES Designated 1B
Ike Davis for assignment. Reinstated 1B
Mark Teixeira from the 15-day DL. Agreed
to terms with LHP Trevor Lane on a minor
league contract.
OAKLAND ATHELTICS Optioned LHP
Eric Surkamp to Nashville (PCL). Transferred
RHP Henderson Alvarez to the 60-day DL.
Selected the contract of LHP Dillon Overton
from Nashville. Sent LHP Sean Manaea to
Stockton (Cal) for a rehab assignment.
SEATTLE MARINERS Sent LHP Wade Miley to Everett (NWL) for a rehab assignment.
TAMPA BAY RAYS Optioned RHP Steve
Geltz to Durham (IL). Recalled RHP Danny
Farquhar from Durham. Sent OF Brandon
Guyer to Charlotte (FSL) for a rehab assignment.
TORONTO BLUE JAYS Optioned OF
Darrell Ceciliani to Buffalo (IL). Selected
the contract of OF Junior Lake from Buffalo.
Sent LHP Brett Cecil to Buffalo for a rehab
assignment. Agreed to terms with RHP
Mark Eveld on a minor league contract.
National League
ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS Placed OF
Socrates Brito on the 15-day DL. Optioned
RHP Zack Godley to Reno (PCL). Recalled
RHP Silvino Bracho and 1B Brandon Drury
from Reno (PCL).
ATLANTA BRAVES Optioned RHP Aaron
Blair to Gwinnett (IL). Recalled LHP Matt
Marksberry from Gwinnett. Sent RHP Mike
Foltynewicz to Gwinnett for a rehab assignment. Agreed to terms with OF Matt Hearn,
Cs Jordan Pacheco and Brett Cumberland,
LHPs Taylor Hyssong and Drew Harrington
and RHPs Bryse Wilson and Ian Anderson
on minor league contracts.
COLORADO ROCKIES Optioned RHP
Miguel Castro to Albuquerque (PCL).
Selected the contract of LHP Yohan Flande
from Albuquerque.
LOS ANGELES DODGERS Designated
RHP Nick Tepesch for assignment. Recalled
SS Chris Taylor from Oklahoma City (PCL).
MIAMI MARLINS Agreed to terms with
OF Alex Glenn on a minor league contract.
MILWAUKEE BREWERS Reinstated 3B
Hernan Perez from paternity leave. Agreed
to terms with RHP Jeremy Newton, OF Corey Ray and LHP Daniel Brown on minor
league contracts.
NEW YORK METS Optioned OF
Michael Conforto to Las Vegas (PCL).
Recalled OF Brandon Nimmo from Las Vegas.
Agreed to terms with INF Jose Reyes and LHP
Darin Gorski on minor league contracts. Assigned Reyes to Brooklyn (NYP).
SAN DIEGO PADRES Assigned C Hector
Sanchez outright to El Paso (PCL).
SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS Agreed to
terms with LHP Matt Reynolds on a minor
league contract.
HOCKEY
National Hockey League
BUFFALO SABRES Traded D Mark Pysyk
and the 38th and 89th picks in this years
draft to Florida for D Dmitri Kulikov and the
33rd pick in this years draft.
COLORADO AVALANCHE Traded D
Nick Holden to the N.Y. Rangers for a 2017
fourth-round draft pick.
COLUMBUS BLUE JACKETS Traded LW
Kerby Rychel to Toronto for D Scott Harrington and a conditional 2017 draft pick.
DALLAS STARS Traded G Jack Campbell
to Los Angeles for D Nick Ebert.
LOS ANGELES KINGS Agreed to terms
with F Trevor Lewis on a four-year contract
extension.
PITTSBURGH PENGUINS Traded F Beau
Bennett to New Jersey for the 77th pick in
this years draft.
TAMPA BAY LIGHTNING Traded D Anthony DeAngelo to Arizona for the 37th
pick in this years draft.
SOCCER
United Soccer League
NEW YORK RED BULLS II Signed M
Florian Valot.

GOLF
PGA

QUICKEN LOANS NATIONAL


Saturday
At Congressional Country Club (Blue
Course)
Bethesda, Md.
Purse: $6.9 million
Yardage: 7,569; Par: 71
Third Round
Billy Hurley III...................... 66-65-67198
Ernie Els............................... 66-69-65200
Jon Rahm............................. 64-67-70201
Bill Haas............................... 66-69-68203
Webb Simpson.................... 67-68-68203
Harold Varner III.................. 66-69-70205
Vijay Singh........................... 68-66-71205
Erik Compton....................... 68-70-68206
Robert Garrigus................... 67-69-70206
Aaron Baddeley................... 73-68-66207
Wes Roach........................... 72-69-66207
Wesley Bryan....................... 66-74-67207
Gary Woodland................... 69-69-69207
Kevin Chappell..................... 70-69-69208
Kevin Streelman.................. 71-68-69208
Nick Taylor........................... 69-70-69208
Patrick Reed......................... 68-70-70208
Justin Thomas...................... 69-69-70208
Rob Oppenheim.................. 69-71-69209
Daniel Summerhays............. 70-69-70209
Sam Saunders...................... 67-70-72209
David Hearn......................... 70-67-72209
Byeong Hun An.................... 69-68-72209
Mark Hubbard..................... 67-69-73209
Rickie Fowler....................... 68-68-73209
Andres Gonzales.................. 69-72-69210
Smylie Kaufman................... 67-73-70210
Robert Streb........................ 69-70-71210
Hudson Swafford................. 70-69-71210
Tyrone Van Aswegen........... 69-70-71210
Keegan Bradley.................... 70-68-72210
Michael Kim......................... 68-70-72210
Jason Kokrak........................ 69-69-72210
Marc Leishman.................... 67-71-72210
Brendan Steele.................... 73-69-69211
Francesco Molinari.............. 69-73-69211
Shawn Stefani...................... 71-70-70211
Chesson Hadley................... 68-73-70211
Chad Collins......................... 72-69-70211
Sean OHair.......................... 68-72-71211
Jim Herman......................... 69-71-71211
Charley Hoffman................. 67-72-72211
Patrick Rodgers.................... 70-69-72211
Kyle Reifers.......................... 66-71-74211
John Senden........................ 67-70-74211

Chez Reavie......................... 72-70-70212


Kyle Stanley......................... 69-73-70212
Brian Harman...................... 69-73-70212
Tony Finau........................... 69-73-70212
Steve Marino....................... 67-74-71212
Jim Furyk............................. 73-68-71212
Patton Kizzire....................... 70-71-71212
Bryson DeChambeau........... 70-71-71212
Derek Fathauer.................... 71-70-71212
Chris Stroud......................... 69-71-72212
Martin Laird......................... 68-72-72212
Lucas Glover........................ 68-71-73212
Chris Kirk............................. 72-70-71213
James Hahn......................... 70-72-71213
Fabian Gomez...................... 67-74-72213
Rod Pampling...................... 70-71-72213
Dawie van der Walt............. 70-70-73213
Ben Martin.......................... 72-68-73213
Arjun Atwal.......................... 70-70-73213
Jhonattan Vegas................... 65-76-73214
Blayne Barber...................... 68-73-73214
John Huh............................. 72-69-73214
Will MacKenzie.................... 68-71-75214
Roberto Castro.................... 71-71-73215
Zac Blair............................... 71-70-74215
Charles Howell III................. 74-66-75215
Camilo Villegas.................... 66-72-77215
Luke Guthrie........................ 71-71-74216
Anirban Lahiri...................... 71-71-75217
Jamie Lovemark................... 66-75-76217
Tom Hoge............................ 69-72-76217
Scott Langley....................... 68-73-77218
Jon Curran........................... 69-73-77219
PGA CHAMPIONS

AMERICAN FAMILY INSURANCE


CHAMPIONSHIP
Saturday
At University Ridge Golf Club
Madison, Wis.
Purse: $2 million
Yardage: 7,056; Par: 72
Second Round
Jean-Francois Remesy.............. 67-64131
Bart Bryant............................... 66-66132
Gene Sauers............................. 63-69132
Mike Goodes............................ 67-66133
Kirk Triplett............................... 68-66134
Billy Andrade............................ 67-67134
Kevin Sutherland...................... 65-69134
Scott Hoch................................ 67-68135
Fred Funk.................................. 66-69135
Duffy Waldorf........................... 66-69135
Fran Quinn................................ 64-71135
Wes Short, Jr............................. 72-64136
Jeff Sluman............................... 69-67136
Doug Garwood......................... 68-68136
Kenny Perry.............................. 68-68136
Joe Durant................................ 68-68136
Tom Pernice Jr........................... 67-69136
Bernhard Langer....................... 67-69136
Tom Byrum............................... 65-71136
Jay Haas.................................... 71-66137
Jerry Smith............................... 69-68137
Brandt Jobe.............................. 68-69137
Jeff Maggert............................. 68-69137
John Huston.............................. 68-69137
Mark Calcavecchia.................... 67-70137
Craig Parry................................ 68-69137
Mark Brooks............................. 67-70137
Miguel Angel Martin................. 70-68138
Skip Kendall.............................. 70-68138
John Inman............................... 69-69138
John Riegger............................. 67-71138
Loren Roberts........................... 66-72138
Todd Hamilton.......................... 70-69139
Scott McCarron......................... 69-70139
Woody Austin........................... 69-70139
Jim Carter................................. 73-67140
Mike Grob................................. 71-69140
Grant Waite.............................. 71-69140
Steve Pate................................. 69-71140
Tommy Armour III..................... 68-72140
Scott Verplank.......................... 67-73140
Tom Lehman............................. 71-70141
Gary Hallberg............................ 71-70141
Jay Don Blake............................ 71-70141
Carlos Franco............................ 70-71141
Rod Spittle................................ 70-71141
Scott Parel................................ 72-70142
Brian Henninger....................... 72-70142
Brad Bryant............................... 72-70142
Clark Dennis............................. 71-71142
Marco Dawson......................... 71-71142
Scott Dunlap............................. 70-72142
Olin Browne.............................. 70-72142
Joey Sindelar............................ 70-72142
Peter Senior.............................. 69-73142
David Frost............................... 69-73142
Jim Schuman............................ 68-74142
Paul Goydos.............................. 67-75142
Esteban Toledo......................... 63-79142
Jeff Hart.................................... 73-70143
John Daly.................................. 71-72143
Rocco Mediate.......................... 71-72143
John Cook................................. 70-73143
Gibby Gilbert III........................ 70-73143
Mark Wiebe.............................. 68-75143
Jim Rutledge............................. 70-74144
Bobby Wadkins......................... 75-70145
Stephen Ames.......................... 73-72145
Steve Lowery............................ 72-73145
Mike Springer........................... 71-74145
Jose Coceres............................. 71-74145
Wayne Levi............................... 71-74145
Dan Forsman............................ 72-74146
Willie Wood.............................. 74-73147
Bob Gilder................................. 77-71148
Mark Mielke............................. 74-74148
Stan Utley................................. 70-78148
Lee Janzen................................ 69-79148
Tom Purtzer.............................. 72-78150
Larry Mize................................. 69-82151
Ken Green................................. 75-77152

BMW INTERNATIONAL OPEN


LEADERBOARD
Saturday
At Golf Club Gut Laerchenhof
Pulheim, Germany
Purse: $2.27 million
Yardage: 7,229; Par: 72
Third Round
Play suspended by rain

SCORE THRU
Raphael Jacquelin, France.......... -11
Henrik Stenson, Sweden............. -11
Kiradech Aphibarnrat, Thailand.....-11
Thorbjorn Olesen, Denmark....... -10
Zander Lombard, South Africa...... -9
Darren Fichardt, South Africa....... -7
Pablo Larrazabal, Spain................. -7
Joost Luiten, Netherlands............. -7
Felipe Aguilar, Chile...................... -7
Clement Berardo, France.............. -6
4
Bernd Wiesberger, Austria........... -6
Johan Carlsson, Sweden............... -6
Anders Hansen, Denmark............. -6
Mike Lorenzo-Vera, France........... -6
LPGA

WALMART NORTHWEST ARKANSAS


Saturday
At Pinnacle Country Club
Rogers, Ark.
Purse: $2 million
Yardage:6,330; Par:71
(a-amateur)
Second Round
Lydia Ko.................................... 66-62128
Morgan Pressel......................... 65-63128
Alena Sharp.............................. 65-65130
Jing Yan..................................... 65-65130
Candie Kung.............................. 64-66130
Haeji Kang................................. 68-63131
Giulia Molinaro......................... 66-65131
Sandra Gal................................ 65-66131
Moriya Jutanugarn................... 66-66132
Kelly Tan................................... 67-66133
Sun Young Yoo.......................... 65-68133
Carlota Ciganda........................ 65-68133
So Yeon Ryu.............................. 65-68133
Brittany Altomare..................... 70-64134
Nontaya Srisawang................... 68-66134
Lindy Duncan............................ 67-67134
Lee-Anne Pace.......................... 67-67134
Minjee Lee................................ 65-69134
Danielle Kang............................ 70-65135
Jennifer Song............................ 69-66135
Xi Yu Lin.................................... 69-66135
Marina Alex.............................. 67-68135
Angela Stanford........................ 65-70135
Brittany Lang............................ 69-67136
Jodi Ewart Shadoff.................... 69-67136
Brittany Lincicome.................... 68-68136
Amy Yang.................................. 68-68136
Jane Park.................................. 68-68136
Julieta Granada......................... 67-69136

Pornanong Phatlum.................. 66-70136


Pannarat Thanapolboonyaras..... 66-70136
Eun-Hee Ji................................. 66-70136
Chella Choi................................ 65-71136
Ai Miyazato............................... 65-71136
Ayako Uehara........................... 62-74136
Caroline Hedwall...................... 70-67137
Sydnee Michaels....................... 70-67137
Juli Inkster................................ 70-67137
Min Lee..................................... 70-67137
Meena Lee................................ 69-68137
Demi Runas.............................. 69-68137
Megan Khang........................... 69-68137
Gerina Piller.............................. 69-68137
Austin Ernst.............................. 69-68137
Paula Reto................................ 69-68137
Haru Nomura............................ 68-69137
Sarah Jane Smith...................... 68-69137
Mi Hyang Lee............................ 68-69137
Joanna Klatten.......................... 67-70137
Stacy Lewis............................... 67-70137
Su Oh........................................ 67-70137
Sadena A Parks......................... 67-70137
Ariya Jutanugarn....................... 66-71137
Vicky Hurst............................... 65-72137
Alison Lee................................. 73-65138
In-Kyung Kim............................ 72-66138
Min Seo Kwak........................... 70-68138
Felicity Johnson........................ 69-69138
Hyo Joo Kim.............................. 69-69138
Becky Morgan........................... 69-69138
Karine Icher.............................. 68-70138
Beatriz Recari............................ 68-70138
Jenny Shin................................. 68-70138
Mina Harigae............................ 68-70138
Dori Carter................................ 67-71138
Mi Jung Hur.............................. 72-67139
Maude-Aimee Leblanc............. 71-68139
Brianna Do................................ 70-69139
Ji Young Oh............................... 69-70139
Stephanie L Meadow................ 69-70139
Jessica Korda............................ 69-70139
Kris Tamulis............................... 69-70139
Sandra Changkija...................... 69-70139
Gaby Lopez............................... 68-71139
In Gee Chun.............................. 68-71139
Mo Martin................................ 68-71139
Cristie Kerr................................ 67-72139
Failed to Qualify
Paula Creamer.......................... 74-66140
Laura Davies............................. 72-68140
Ryann OToole.......................... 72-68140
Lee Lopez.................................. 72-68140
Sakura Yokomine...................... 71-69140
Sei Young Kim........................... 70-70140
Pernilla Lindberg....................... 70-70140
Maria McBride.......................... 69-71140
Caroline Masson....................... 69-71140
Celine Herbin............................ 69-71140
Dani Holmqvist......................... 69-71140
Belen Mozo............................... 68-72140
Mika Miyazato.......................... 67-73140
Holly Clyburn............................ 74-67141
Katherine Kirk........................... 72-69141
Christel Boeljon........................ 72-69141
Tiffany Joh................................ 72-69141
Azahara Munoz......................... 72-69141
Mariajo Uribe........................... 71-70141
Samantha Richdale................... 71-70141
Alejandra Llaneza..................... 71-70141
Amelia Lewis............................. 70-71141
a-Maria Fassi............................ 73-69142
Budsabakorn Sukapan.............. 72-70142
Jaye Marie Green...................... 72-70142
Hee Young Park......................... 71-71142
Michelle Wie............................ 71-71142
Lisa Ferrero............................... 71-71142
Q Baek...................................... 70-72142
Brooke M. Henderson.............. 69-73142
Julie Yang.................................. 75-68143
Yani Tseng................................. 75-68143
Se Ri Pak................................... 74-69143
Casey Grice............................... 72-71143
a-Regina Plasencia.................... 72-71143
Cheyenne Woods..................... 72-71143
Daniela Iacobelli....................... 71-72143
Christine Song........................... 71-72143
Jacqui Concolino....................... 70-73143
Ashleigh Simon......................... 70-73143
Natalie Gulbis........................... 69-74143
P.K. Kongkraphan...................... 65-78143
Cyna Marie Rodriguez.............. 75-69144
Mirim Lee................................. 75-69144
Benyapa Niphatsophon............ 73-71144
Marion Ricordeau..................... 73-71144
Kelly W Shon............................. 72-72144
Annie Park................................ 71-73144
Bertine Strauss......................... 68-76144
Stephanie Kono........................ 75-70145
a-Alana Uriell............................ 70-75145
Laetitia Beck............................. 68-77145
Nannette Hill............................ 76-70146
Na Yeon Choi............................ 75-71146
Ssu-Chia Cheng......................... 74-72146
Anne Catherine Tanguay.......... 72-74146
Alison Walshe........................... 72-74146
Ashlan Ramsey......................... 71-75146
Giulia Sergas............................. 75-72147
Amy Anderson.......................... 74-73147
Sarah Kemp.............................. 73-74147
Grace Na................................... 73-75148
Briana Mao............................... 75-74149
Simin Feng................................ 73-76149
Rachel Rohanna........................ 76-76152
Ilhee Lee................................... 72-81153
Hannah Collier.......................... 81-79160

LANCO
Janney Montgomery Scott Amateur
At Conestoga
Par 70
Final Round
Ryan Dornes............................. 66-69135
Marc Oliveri Jr.......................... 69-67136
Aaron Fricke............................. 74-66140
Brandon Detweiler................... 72-71143
Peter Chieppor......................... 72-71143
Jarred Texter............................. 71-73144
Chris Fieger............................... 73-72145
Ken Phillips............................... 73-72145
Connor Sheehan....................... 73-73146
Ben Berger................................ 72-76148
Bunky Burgess.......................... 77-72149
Craig Kliewer............................. 75-74149
Deryl Denlinger......................... 76-75151
Matthew Maurer...................... 73-78151
David Richards.......................... 76-77153
Derek McCarty.......................... 77-76153
Alan Over.................................. 76-77153
John Sweeney........................... 75-79154
Corey Wenger........................... 75-79154
Benjamin Smith........................ 77-77154
Ron Weaver.............................. 78-77155
Jon Chronister.......................... 78-78156
Marlin Detweiler...................... 74-82156
Jud Gemmill.............................. 77-80157
Jon Ressler................................ 75-82157
Jim Mastromatteo.................... 76-81157
Steve Tretter............................. 77-80157
Seth Johnston........................... 77-81158
Jeffrey Wintersteen.................. 78-83161
William Gately.......................... 77-85162
J.D. Carroll................................ 78-84162

BENT CREEK

MENS 18-HOLE GROUP Saturday


Sweeps: Better Ball of Partners, Gross, (t)
Jerry Eckert and John Whitehead, Bob Wolf
and Dan Kessler 72, Ron Yarnell and Milt
Drennen 73; Net, (t) Luis Torres and Larry
Sherman, John Backof and Jody Shelby 59,
(t) Jeff Lawrence and Rob Allen, Jim Gibson
and Ed Supple 60, (t) John Filak and Mike
Smoker, Ray Butterworth and Jack Kelley,
Bob Ford and Ed Supple 61.

LANCASTER

MENS 18-HOLE GROUP Saturday


Sweeps: One Best Ball of Four, Garth
Sprecher, Bob Belser, Joe Bidus and Ron
Juvonen 58, Rick Gunning, Harry Yost and
Ron Kellam 59, (t) Terry Jones, Robert
Good, Dwight Wagner and Jerry Glenn,
Ron McKinney, Merrell Clark, Mark Hessinger and Dave Berndt, Jay Myers, Howard
Livingston, Tom Decker and Bill Haiges 60.
Better Ball of Partners, Harry Yost and Ron
Kellam 60, Merrell Clark and Mark Hessinger 61, Ron McKinney and Merrell Clark
62, (t) Merrell Clark and Dave Berndt, Keith
Cenekofsky and Devin Cenekofsky, Joe
Roda and Clarence Kegel 64.

MEADIA HEIGHTS

WOMENS 18-HOLE GROUP Blind Better Ball Partners: Juli Moose and Blind Draw
65, Constance Murphy and Robin Stauffer
66, Julie Walsh and Joyce Hathaway 67.

TANGLEWOOD

MIXED 18-HOLE GROUP Match Play


vs. Par: Gross, Jason Lyon 71, (t) Steve Amspacher, Rich McKee 75; Net, Don Mills plus
8, Jamie Doan plus 7, (t) Deb Amspacher,

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

Matt Campbell, Mac Souders plus 5, (t) Dick


Kneisley, Sandy Kneisley plus 4, (t) Josh Berczik, Lenny Ciufo, Mike Dings, Rick Jackson,
Mike Murry plus 3, (t) Max Fraker, Doug
Finkbiner, Greg Minnich plus 2, (t) Dave
Herr, Jim Howell, III plus 1, (t) Bob Berczik,
Les Ressel even, (t) Jim Fuhrman, Mark Riley minus 1, Ted Hershey minus 2, (t) Cyndi
Howell, Jim Howell, Jr. minus 3, Earle Hershey minus 5, John Rosa minus 6.

AUTO RACING
NASCAR SPRINT CUP

TOYOTA/SAVE MART 350


After Saturday qualifying; race Sunday
At Sonoma Raceway
Sonoma, Calif.
Lap length: 1.99 miles
(Car number in parentheses)
1. (19) Carl Edwards, Toyota, 95.777 mph.
2. (47) AJ Allmendinger, Chevrolet, 95.676.
3. (78) Martin Truex Jr., Toyota, 95.672. 4.
(41) Kurt Busch, Chevrolet, 95.654. 5. (42)
Kyle Larson, Chevrolet, 95.362. 6. (11)
Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 95.308. 7. (22) Joey
Logano, Ford, 95.276. 8. (18) Kyle Busch,
Toyota, 95.233. 9. (27) Paul Menard, Chevrolet, 95.134. 10. (14) Tony Stewart, Chevrolet, 95.041.
11. (10) Danica Patrick, Chevrolet, 95.035.
12. (2) Brad Keselowski, Ford, 94.967. 13.
(88) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, 95.329.
14. (13) Casey Mears, Chevrolet, 95.217.
15. (48) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 95.027.
16. (24) Chase Elliott, Chevrolet, 94.954.
17. (31) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 94.906.
18. (15) Clint Bowyer, Chevrolet, 94.897.
19. (5) Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet, 94.886. 20.
(95) Michael McDowell, Chevrolet, 94.817.
21. (1) Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet,
94.712. 22. (44) Brian Scott, Ford, 94.704.
23. (20) Matt Kenseth, Toyota, 94.521. 24.
(3) Austin Dillon, Chevrolet, 94.501. 25. (4)
Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 94.445. 26. (21)
Ryan Blaney, Ford, 94.436. 27. (17) Ricky
Stenhouse Jr., Ford, 94.422. 28. (6) Trevor
Bayne, Ford, 94.401. 29. (43) Aric Almirola,
Ford, 94.360. 30. (23) David Ragan, Toyota,
94.356.
31. (7) Regan Smith, Chevrolet, 94.271.
32. (16) Greg Biffle, Ford, 94.207. 33. (83)
Matt DiBenedetto, Toyota, 94.154. 34. (32)
Patrick Carpentier, Ford, 93.858. 35. (98)
Cole Whitt, Toyota, 93.668. 36. (34) Chris
Buescher, Ford, 93.657. 37. (38) Landon
Cassill, Ford, 93.257. 38. (93) Dylan Lupton,
Toyota, 93.082. 39. (30) Josh Wise, Chevrolet, 93.027. 40. (46) Michael Annett, Chevrolet, 91.997.
Failed to qualify
41. (55) Cody Ware, Chevrolet, 91.676.
INDYCAR

ROAD AMERICA LINEUP


After Saturday qualifying; race Sunday
At Road America
Elkhart Lake, Wis.
Lap length: 4.048 miles
(Car number in parentheses)
1. (12) Will Power, Chevrolet, 1:42.2105,
141.379 mph. 2. (9) Scott Dixon, Chevrolet,
1:42.3759 (141.150. 3. (10) Tony Kanaan,
Chevrolet, 1:42.7279, 140.667. 4. (22)
Simon Pagenaud, Chevrolet, 1:42.8573,
140.490. 5. (3) Helio Castroneves, Chevrolet, 1:42.9449, 140.370.
6. (15) Graham Rahal, Honda, 1:43.7782,
139.243. 7. (8) Max Chilton, Chevrolet,
1:42.7519, 140.634. 8. (28) Ryan HunterReay, Honda, 1:42.8318, 140.525. 9. (18)
Conor Daly, Honda, 1:43.1073, 140.149.
10. (26) Carlos Munoz, Honda, 1:43.201,
140.023.
11. (83) Charlie Kimball, Chevrolet,
1:43.2649, 139.935. 12. (11) Sebastien
Bourdais, Chevrolet, 1:43.3291, 139.848.
13. (7) Mikhail Aleshin, Honda, 1:43.4024,
139.749. 14. (2) Juan Pablo Montoya, Chevrolet, 1:44.3570, 138.471. 15. (14) Takuma
Sato, Honda, 1:43.5357, 139.569.
16. (98) Alexander Rossi, Honda,
1:45.0840, 137.513. 17. (20) Spencer
Pigot, Chevrolet, 1:43.6432, 139.424. 18.
(41) Jack Hawksworth, Honda, 1:45.5110,
136.956. 19. (19) Gabby Chaves, Honda,
1:43.6672, 139.392. 20. (21) Josef Newgarden, Chevrolet, 4:19.1862, 55.753.
21. (27) Marco Andretti, Honda,
1:43.7289, 139.309. 22. (5) James Hinchcliffe, Honda, 4:29.0408, 53.711.
NHRA

SUMMIT RACING EQUIPMENT


NATIONALS PAIRINGS
After Saturday qualifying; final
eliminations Sunday
At Summit Racing Equipment
Motorsports Park
Norwalk, Ohio
Top Fuel
1. Doug Kalitta, 3.719 seconds, 327.51
mph vs. Bye. 2. Antron Brown, 3.733,
320.51 vs. 15. Luigi Novelli, 13.639,
190.54. 3. Brittany Force, 3.735, 324.28
vs. 14. Chris Karamesines, 4.341, 210.77.
4. Richie Crampton, 3.735, 317.79 vs. 13.
Leah Pritchett, 4.309, 200.17. 5. J.R. Todd,
3.759, 324.44 vs. 12. Terry McMillen, 3.968,
249.86. 6. Tony Schumacher, 3.766, 321.12
vs. 11. Tripp Tatum, 3.948, 303.03. 7.
Shawn Langdon, 3.795, 322.73 vs. 10. Troy
Buff, 3.832, 310.48. 8. Pat Dakin, 3.820,
308.14 vs. 9. Clay Millican, 3.821, 319.60.
Funny Car
1. Del Worsham, Toyota Camry, 3.875,
328.70vs. Bye. 2. Ron Capps, Dodge Charger, 3.882, 324.90 vs. 15. Jeff Diehl, Toyota
Solara, 7.204, 182.62. 3. Robert Hight,
Chevy Camaro, 3.886, 327.03 vs. 14. Brandon Welch, Chevy Monte Carlo, 4.519,
210.67. 4. Courtney Force, Camaro, 3.889,
326.63 vs. 13. John Hale, Charger, 4.066,
313.22. 5. Jack Beckman, Charger, 3.891,
326.63 vs. 12. Alexis DeJoria, Camry, 4.002,
314.61. 6. Matt Hagan, Charger, 3.909,
320.74 vs. 11. John Force, Camaro, 3.979,
324.12. 7. Cruz Pedregon, Camry, 3.955,
315.49 vs. 10. Chad Head, Camry, 3.970,
310.70. 8. Tommy Johnson Jr., Charger,
3.959, 321.96 vs. 9. Tim Wilkerson, Ford
Mustang, 3.968, 323.74.
Pro Stock
1. Greg Anderson, Chevy Camaro, 6.565,
211.26 vs. 16. Charlie Westcott Jr., Ford
Mustang, 6.818, 204.11. 2. Jason Line, Camaro, 6.569, 211.00 vs. 15. Curt Steinbach,
Camaro, 6.762, 204.94. 3. Drew Skillman,
Camaro, 6.593, 209.30 vs. 14. V. Gaines,
Dodge Dart, 6.750, 205.72. 4. Bo Butner,
Camaro, 6.597, 210.08 vs. 13. Allen Johnson, Dart, 6.743, 207.34. 5. Shane Gray, Camaro, 6.603, 209.43 vs. 12. John Gaydosh
Jr, Chevrolet Camaro, 6.686, 206.13. 6.
Vincent Nobile, Camaro, 6.606, 209.65 vs.
11. Kenny Delco, Camaro, 6.672, 206.29.
7. Chris McGaha, Camaro, 6.624, 209.04
vs. 10. Erica Enders, Dart, 6.656, 207.37. 8.
Alex Laughlin, Camaro, 6.640, 209.36 vs. 9.
Jeg Coughlin, Dart, 6.653, 206.99.
Did Not Qualify: 17. Mark Hogan, 6.830,
201.01. 18. Dave River, 11.931, 73.50.
Pro Stock Motorcycle
1. Eddie Krawiec, Harley-Davidson, 6.822,
195.31 vs. 16. Chip Ellis, Buell, 6.977,
191.92. 2. Andrew Hines, Harley-Davidson,
6.853, 194.69 vs. 15. Michael Phillips, Suzuki, 6.972, 194.77. 3. Matt Smith, Victory,
6.854, 194.58 vs. 14. Michael Ray, Buell,
6.969, 194.16. 4. Jerry Savoie, Suzuki,
6.861, 195.48 vs. 13. Jim Underdahl, Suzuki, 6.965, 192.49. 5. LE Tonglet, Suzuki,
6.875, 195.22 vs. 12. Angie Smith, Victory,
6.955, 189.31. 6. Angelle Sampey, Buell,
6.876, 195.08 vs. 11. Steve Johnson, Suzuki,
6.932, 191.97. 7. Cory Reed, Buell, 6.884,
192.99 vs. 10. Scotty Pollacheck, Buell,
6.918, 193.27. 8. Hector Arana Jr, Buell,
6.890, 193.65 vs. 9. Hector Arana, Buell,
6.897, 194.97.
Did Not Qualify: 17. Karen Stoffer, 6.978,
194.35. 18. Brian Pretzel, 7.003, 190.75. 19.
Melissa Surber, 7.005, 190.78. 20. Joe DeSantis, 7.077, 188.78.

TENNIS
ATP

WORLD TOUR AEGON OPEN


NOTTINGHAM

Saturday
At Nottingham Tennis Center
Nottingham, England
Purse: $730,725 (WT250)
Surface: Grass-Outdoor
Singles
Championship
Steve Johnson (6), United States, def.
Pablo Cuevas (2), Uruguay, 7-6 (5), 7-5.
Doubles
Championship
Dominic Inglot, Britain, and Daniel Nestor
(2), Canada, def. Ivan Dodig, Croatia, and
Marcelo Melo (1), Brazil, 7-5, 7-6 (4).
WTA

AEGON INTERNATIONAL
EASTBOURNE
Saturday
At Devonshire Park
Eastbourne, England
Purse: $711,778 (Premier)
Surface: Grass-Outdoor
Singles
Championship
Dominika Cibulkova (12), Slovakia, def.
Karolina Pliskova (10), Czech Republic, 7-5, 6-3.
Doubles
Championship
Darija Jurak, Croatia, and Anastasia
Rodionova, Australia, def. Chan Hao-ching
and Yung-jan (2), Taiwan, 5-7, 7-6 (4), 10-6.

WIMBLEDON SEEDS
At The All England Lawn Tennis &
Croquet Club
London
June 27-July 10
(Ranking in parentheses)
Men
1. Novak Djokovic, Serbia (1)
2. Andy Murray, Britain (2)
3. Roger Federer, Switzerland (3)
4. Stan Wawrinka, Switzerland (5)
5. Kei Nishikori, Japan (6)
6. Milos Raonic, Canada (7)
7. Richard Gasquet, France (10)
8. Dominic Thiem, Austria (8)
9. Marin Cilic, Croatia (13)
10. Tomas Berdych, Czech Republic (9)
11. David Goffin, Belgium (11)
12. Jo-Wilfried Tsonga, France (12)
13. David Ferrer, Spain (14)
14. Roberto Bautista Agut, Spain (15)
15. Nick Kyrgios, Australia (18)
16. Gilles Simon, France (20)
17. Gael Monfils, France (16)
18. John Isner, United States (17)
19. Bernard Tomic, Australia (19)
20. Kevin Anderson, South Africa (24)
21. Philipp Kohlschreiber, Germany (22)
22. Feliciano Lopez, Spain (21)
23. Ivo Karlovic, Croatia (31)
24. Alexander Zverev, Germany (28)
25. Viktor Troicki, Serbia (27)
26. Benoit Paire, France (23)
27. Jack Sock, United States (26)
28. Sam Querrey, United States (33)
29. Pablo Cuevas, Uruguay (25)
30. Alexandr Dolgopolov, Ukraine (32)
31. Joao Sousa, Portugal (30)
32. Lucas Pouille, France (29)
Women
1. Serena Williams, United States (1)
2. Garbine Muguruza, Spain (2)
3. Agnieszka Radwanska, Poland (3)
4. Angelique Kerber, Germany (4)
5. Simona Halep, Romania (5)
6. Victoria Azarenka, Belarus (6) - withdrew
6. Roberta Vinci, Italy (7)
7. Belinda Bencic, Switzerland (8)
8. Venus Williams, United States (9)
9. Madison Keys, United States (10)
10. Petra Kvitova, Czech Republic (11)
11. Timea Bacsinszky, Switzerland (12)
12. Carla Suarez Navarro, Spain (13)
13. Svetlana Kuznetsova, Russia (14)
14. Sam Stosur, Australia (16)
15. Karolina Pliskova, Czech Republic (17)
16. Johanna Konta, Britain (18)
17. Elina Svitolina, Ukraine (19)
18. Sloane Stephens, United States (20)
19. Dominika Cibulkova, Slovakia (21)
20. Sara Errani, Italy (22)
21. Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova, Russia (23)
22. Jelena Jankovic, Serbia (24)
23. Ana Ivanovic, Serbia (25)
24. Barbora Strycova, Czech Republic (26)
25. Irina-Camelia Begu, Romania (27)
26. Kiki Bertens, Netherlands (28)
27. CoCo Vandeweghe, United States (29)
28. Lucie Safarova, Czech Republic (30)
29. Daria Kasatkina, Russia (31)
30. Caroline Garcia, France (32)
31. Kristina Mladenovic, France (33)
32. Andrea Petkovic, Germany (34)

COLLEGE
BASEBALL
NCAA COLLEGE WORLD SERIES
At TD Ameritrade Park Omaha
Omaha, Neb.
Double Elimination
Saturday, June 18
Oklahoma State 1......... UC Santa Barbara 0
Arizona 5........................................ Miami 1
Sunday, June 19
TCU 5........................................Texas Tech 3
Coastal Carolina 2.......................... Florida 1
Monday, June 20
UC Santa Barbara 5......................... Miami 3
Oklahoma State 1......................... Arizona 0
Tuesday, June 21
Texas Tech 3................................... Florida 2
TCU 6...............................Coastal Carolina 1
Wednesday, June 22
Arizona 3...................... UC Santa Barbara 0
Thursday, June 23
Coastal Carolina 7.....................Texas Tech 5
Friday, June 24
Arizona 9.........................Oklahoma State 3
Coastal Carolina 4...............................TCU 1
Saturday, June 25
Arizona 5.........................Oklahoma State 1
TCU (49-17) vs. Coastal Carolina (52-17)....(n)
Championship Series
(Best-of-3)
x-if necessary
Monday, June 27
Arizona (48-22) vs. TCU or Coastal Carolina, 7 p.m.
Tuesday, June 28
Arizona vs. TCU or Coastal Carolina, 8 p.m.
x-Wednesday, June 29
Arizona vs. TCU or Coastal Carolina, 8 p.m.

BOWLING

CLEARVIEW
THURSDAY BREAKFAST SENIORS
Ken Olsen...................... 216-279-235730
Walt Haubenreisser....... 192-228-182602
Gussie Good.................. 190-174-158522
Ruthie Garman.............. 153-158-193504
THURSDAY SUMMER CLASSIC
Kurtis Stidd.............246-199-243-275963
Mike Sheeler...........209-249-266-213937
EJ Farwell................212-269-227-217925
Butch Derr..............257-247-216-185905
Lisa Farwell.............215-197-193-246851

LEISURE
MILLERSVILLE SENIORS
Ron Bearley................... 160-238-209607

SCOREBOARD

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

HORSE RACING
PENN NATIONAL RESULTS

1st$20,000,6f
7-Thriller Diller (Hrnndz).... 20.00,10.60,4.20
2-Queen Patron (Rodriguez A.).... 6.80,6.40
1-Culminating (Whitney D.).................. 3.60
Also Ran: Eaglet, Not So Silver, Lady A.
G., Lorilee. Race Time: 1:11.75. Exacta (72) Paid $76.30; Superfecta (7-2-1-6) Paid
$46.71; Trifecta (7-2-1) Paid $96.20.
2nd$14,300,5f
7-Bears Cowboy (Wlfsnt)..... 4.40,3.40,3.00
5-Timetogivein (Hernandez J.)...... 5.80,5.20
4-Trouble With Girls (Worrie A.)........... 6.80
Also Ran: Chasing Stars, Karobushka,
Corundum, Small Giant, Megalith, Pacific
Ridge, Kool Kat Strut, Backdoor Strike, Our
Posse. Race Time: :56.13. Daily Double (77) Paid $39.60; Exacta (7-5) Paid $10.60;
Superfecta (7-5-4-11) Paid $81.17; Trifecta
(7-5-4) Paid $29.75.
3rd$19,000,1 1/16m
2-Heiko (Hernandez J.)......... 8.40,4.80,4.00
4-Picadilly Pete (Conner T.)........... 6.60,4.60
7-Avilord (Rodriguez A.)..................... 10.40
Also Ran: Craving Carats, Devilknowsmyname, Out of the Fire, Kitten in May, Road
to Hope, Red Light District, Casual Creeper
(IRE), Vito Tony N Billy. Race Time: 1:40.58.
Daily Double (7-2) Paid $15.60; Exacta (24) Paid $26.90; Superfecta (2-4-7-6) Paid
$165.70; Trifecta (2-4-7) Paid $115.55; Pic
3 (7-7-2) Paid $37.50.
4th$20,000,1m70yds
9-An Imaginary Road (Cnnr)..... 7.20,4.40,3.40
10-Ebreeq (Potts C.)..................... 4.00,3.00
12-Cuadrante (Bisono J.)...................... 3.00
Also Ran: Ventura Highway, Information
Center, Lorax, Just Another Toy, Epic Sails.
Late Scratches: I Feel Great, Pohda Pohda,
C Em Smile, J Cs Not Brown. Race Time:
1:37.54. Daily Double (2-9) Paid $26.80;
Exacta (9-10) Paid $10.30; Superfecta (910-12-3) Paid $9.01; Trifecta (9-10-12) Paid
$10.20; Pic 3 (7-2-9) Paid $21.75; Pic 4 (7-72-9) Paid $180.05.
5th$11,400,6f
7-I Say I Will (Conner T.)....... 8.80,5.00,3.40
1-Hereosaurus Rex (Hrnndz)........ 8.40,5.80
6-Juanchosa Bro (Gonzalez E.).............. 5.60
Also Ran: Buzzing by Them, April Color, North Forest Star, Distinctivelyfouru,
OShaughnessy, Crypto Coyote, Jersey King,
Hisnameisjon. Race Time: 1:12.15. Daily
Double (9-7) Paid $37.20; Exacta (7-1) Paid
$50.70; Superfecta (7-1-6-3) Paid $430.40;
Trifecta (7-1-6) Paid $287.35; Pic 3 (2-9-7)
Paid $53.30.
6th$33,300,6f
7-Im Zonin (Cora D.)............ 4.20,3.00,2.60
8-Downhill Dale (Gonzalez E.)...... 4.60,3.00
2-Grande Heist (Bisono J.).................... 3.60
Also Ran: Blue Marauder, Lay Down the
Law, Nacho Macho Man, Red Toro, Molten
Steel, Wild Willy Dean. Race Time: 1:10.90.
Daily Double (7-7) Paid $27.60; Exacta (78) Paid $9.10; Superfecta (7-8-2-9) Paid
$15.53; Trifecta (7-8-2) Paid $20.65; Pic 3
(9-7-7) Paid $36.15.
7th$12,400,1m
7-Citis Barometer (Cnnr)...... 6.20,3.20,2.20
5-Briteliteinthecity (Trntfyllou)..... 5.00,3.20
6-Nice Surprise (Rodriguez A.).............. 2.40
Also Ran: Parabola, Sweeping Victory,
Hand Picked. Late Scratches: Voter, King
Touch. Race Time: 1:38.69. Daily Double
(7-7) Paid $10.40; Exacta (7-5) Paid $10.40;
Superfecta (7-5-6-4) Paid $8.08; Trifecta (75-6) Paid $12.95; Pic 3 (7-7-7) Paid $25.00.

OFF-TRACK WAGERING

Following is a list of tracks and post times


for todays off-track wagering at Penn Nationals Lancaster Off-Track site:
GB3-Uttoxeter.................................. 9 a.m.
GB1-Windsor............................... 9:10 a.m.
IR1-Curragh................................. 9:15 a.m.
GB2-Cartmel................................ 9:20 a.m.
Saratoga H................................. 12:15 p.m.
Buffalo....................................... 12:30 p.m.
Harrahs Phila............................. 12:40 p.m.
Churchill Downs......................... 12:45 p.m.
Monmouth................................ 12:50 p.m.
Parx Racing................................ 12:55 p.m.
Woodbine T...................................... 1 p.m.
Pimlico......................................... 1:10 p.m.
Gulfstream................................... 1:15 p.m.
Belmont....................................... 1:30 p.m.
Belterra Park................................ 1:30 p.m.
Tioga Downs................................ 1:30 p.m.
Canterbury.................................. 1:45 p.m.
Fort Erie....................................... 1:50 p.m.
Prairie Meadows T............................ 2 p.m.
Arlington...................................... 2:15 p.m.
Arapahoe.......................................... 3 p.m.
Lone Star...................................... 3:05 p.m.
NCF- Pleasanton.......................... 4:15 p.m.
Santa Anita.................................. 4:30 p.m.
Hastings....................................... 4:50 p.m.
Presque Isle................................. 5:25 p.m.
Mountaineer.................................... 7 p.m.
Ocean Downs.............................. 7:20 p.m.
Pocono Downs............................. 7:30 p.m.
Australia A........................................ 8 p.m.
Hawthorne H............................... 8:20 p.m.
Australia B...................................... 10 p.m.
Australia C...................................... 11 p.m.

EASTERN
LEAGUE
Eastern Division

W L Pct. GB
Reading (Phillies)............53 22 .707
Trenton (Yankees)...........45 29 .608 71-w
Hartford (Rockies)...........40 32 .556 111-w
New Hampshire (Jays)....32 40 .444 191-w
Binghamton (Mets)........29 42 .408 22
Portland (Red Sox)..........26 47 .356 26
Western Division

W L Pct. GB
Akron (Indians)...............43 32 .573
Altoona (Pirates).............41 32 .562 1
Harrisburg (Nationals)....39 33 .542 21-w
Erie (Tigers).....................33 43 .434 101-w
Bowie (Orioles)...............32 42 .432 101-w
Richmond (Giants)..........27 46 .370 15
Saturdays Games
Hartford 2.......................................... Erie 1
Trenton 4........................................ Akron 3
Reading 8.................................... Portland 4
Erie 6.......................................... Hartford 4
Bowie 4........................................ Altoona 1
Harrisburg 4.................... New Hampshire 0
Binghamton 4.......................... Richmond 3
Trenton at Akron.....................................(n)
Sundays Games
Reading at Portland.......................... 1 p.m.
Richmond at Binghamton............ 1:05 p.m.
Erie at Hartford............................ 1:35 p.m.
Harrisburg at New Hampshire..... 1:35 p.m.
Altoona at Bowie......................... 2:05 p.m.
Trenton at Akron......................... 2:05 p.m.
Mondays Games
Akron at Richmond...................... 6:35 p.m.
Binghamton at Altoona.................... 7 p.m.
Bowie at Harrisburg.......................... 7 p.m.
Portland at Trenton.......................... 7 p.m.
Erie at Reading............................ 7:05 p.m.
Hartford at New Hampshire........ 7:05 p.m.

LITTLE
LEAGUE
DISTRICT 23

8/9-YEAR-OLD TOURNAMENT
At Garden Spot Little League
Lampeter-Strasburg 3........... Garden Spot 1
Garden Spot 11..........Lampeter-Strasburg 1

9/10-YEAR-OLD TOURNAMENT
At Octorara Little League
Garden Spot 30........... Manheim Central 10
Manheim Twp. 12......Lampeter-Strasburg 2
Solanco 24.................................. Warwick 0
Octorara 13.................... Conestoga Valley 3

INTERMEDIATE (50/70)
TOURNAMENT CHAMPIONSHIP
At Warwick Little League
Warwick 10................................. Octorara 1

MLS
EASTERN CONFERENCE

W L T Pts GF GA
Philadelphia............7 5 5 26 29 25
New York City FC.....6 5 6 24 27 31
New York................7 8 2 23 28 23
Montreal.................5 4 6 21 24 22
D.C. United.............5 6 5 20 16 16
Toronto FC..............5 5 4 19 15 15
New England..........4 5 7 19 21 28
Orlando City...........3 3 8 17 25 23
Columbus...............3 5 7 16 19 22
Chicago...................2 7 5 11 14 20
WESTERN CONFERENCE

W L T Pts GF GA
Colorado.................9 2 5 32 19 11
FC Dallas.................8 5 4 28 24 24
Real Salt Lake..........8 4 3 27 27 24
Vancouver...............7 7 3 24 27 29
Sporting K.C............6 8 4 22 18 20
Los Angeles.............5 3 7 22 27 17
San Jose..................5 4 6 21 18 18
Portland..................5 6 5 20 25 27
Seattle....................5 9 1 16 13 19
Houston..................3 7 5 14 20 22
NOTE: Three points for victory, one point
for tie.
Wednesdays Games
Philadelphia 4.............................. Chicago 3
Real Salt Lake 2......................... New York 1
Colorado 0...................... Los Angeles 0(tie)
Saturdays Games
New York City FC 2........................ Seattle 0
D.C. United 2...................... New England 0
Vancouver 3.......................... Philadelphia 2
New York 1....................... Columbus 1 (tie)
Orlando City 3........................ Toronto FC 2
Sporting Kansas City 2....... Montreal 2 (tie)
Real Salt Lake at FC Dallas.......................(n)
Los Angeles at San Jose...........................(n)
Sundays Games
Houston at Portland......................... 6 p.m.
Friday, July 1
San Jose at Chicago.......................... 8 p.m.
D.C. United at Real Salt Lake...... 10:30 p.m.
Saturday, July 2
New England at Montreal........... 5:30 p.m.
Seattle at Toronto FC................... 7:30 p.m.
Philadelphia at Houston................... 9 p.m.
Sunday, July 3
New York at New York City FC........ 12 p.m.
Columbus at Sporting Kansas City.... 7 p.m.
Vancouver................................. 2
13
Philadelphia.............................. 1
12
First half1, Philadelphia, Roland Alberg
5(Sebastien Le Toux) 14th minute; 2, Vancouver, Andrew Jacobson 1, 19th minute;
3, Vancouver, Kekuta Manneh 5(Pedro Morales) 41st.
Second half4, Vancouver, Christian
Bolanos 5,(Erik Hurtado), 84th; 5, Philadelphia, Chris Pontius, 94th.
GoaliesDavid Ousted; Andre Blake.
Yellow CardsTranquillo Barnetta, Vancouver, 36th; Kekuta Manneh, Vancouver,
51st.
Red CardsNone.
RefereeArmando Villarreal. Assistant
RefereesDaniel Belleau, Jose da Silva. 4th
OfficialGeoff Gamble.
A17,225 (18,500)
Lineups
VancouverDavid
Ousted;
Jordan
Smith, Andrew Jacobson, Tim Parker, Jordan Harvey; Matias Laba, Pedro Morales(
Russell Teibert, 65th), Christian Bolanos,
Nicolas Mezquida(Blas Perez, 75th), Kekuta Manneh(Cristian Techera, 79th); Erik
Hurtado.
PhiladelphiaAndre Blake; Keegan
Rosenberry, Joshua Yaro, Richie Marquez,
Fabinho(Leo Fernandes, 82nd); Brian Carroll, Tranquillo Barnetta, Ilsinho(Chris
Pontius, 65th), Roland Alberg, Sebastien
Le Toux; Fabian Herbers(Walter Restrepo,
75th).
New England............................. 0
00
D.C. United................................ 2
02
First half1, D.C. United, Lamar Neagle
3(Luciano Acosta) 20th minute; 2, D.C.
United, Sean Franklin 1(Lamar Neagle, Alvaro Saborio) 27th minute.
Second halfNone.
GoaliesBrad Knighton; Bill Hamid.
Yellow CardsKofi Opare, D.C. United,
22nd; Fabian Espindola, D.C. United, 57th;
Luciano Acosta, D.C. United, 67th.
Red CardsNone.
RefereeMarcos de Oliveira. Assistant
RefereesPeter Balciunas, Eric Weisbrod.
4th OfficialRobert Sibiga.
A16,051 (45,596)
Lineups
New EnglandBrad Knighton; Andrew
Farrell, London Woodberry, Jos Gonalves, Chris Tierney(Je-Vaughn Watson,
82nd); Scott Caldwell, Daigo Kobayashi(
Diego Fagundez, 61st), Teal Bunbury (Juan
Agudelo, 57th), Lee Nguyen, Kelyn Rowe;
Kei Kamara.
D.C. UnitedBill Hamid; Sean Franklin,
Jalen Robinson, Kofi Opare, Taylor Kemp;
Luciano Acosta(Jared Jeffrey, 73rd) Marcelo
Sarvas, Nick DeLeon; Lamar Neagle(Rob
Vincent, 84th), lvaro Saborio(Alhaji Kamara, 82nd), Fabian Espindola.

NHL
2016 DRAFT SELECTIONS
June 24-25
New Jersey Devils
1. (12) Michael McLeod, C, Mississauga
(OHL)
2. (41) Nathan Bastian, RW, Mississauga
(OHL)
3. (73) Joseph Anderson, RW, USA U-18
(USHL)
3. (80) Brandon Gignac, C, Shawinigan
(QMJHL)
4. (102) Mikhail Maltsev, LW, Russia U-18.
4. (105) Evan Cormier, G, Saginaw (OHL)
5. (132) Yegor Rykov, D, SKA St. Petersburg 2 (Russia)
6. (162) Jesper Bratt, LW/RW, AIK (Sweden)
7. (192) Jeremy Davies, D, Bloomington
(USHL)
New York Islanders
1. (19) Kieffer Bellows, LW, USA U-18
(USHL)
4. (95) Anatoli Golyshev, LW, Yekaterinburg (Russia)
4. (120) Otto Koivula, LW, Ilves Jr. (Finland)
6. (170) Collin Adams, LW, Muskegon
(USHL)
7. (193) Nick Pastujov, LW, USA U-18
(USHL)
7. (200) David Quenneville, D, Medicine
Hat (WHL)
New York Rangers
3. (81) Sean Day, D, Mississauga (OHL)
4. (98) Tarmo Reunanen, D, TPS Jr. (Finland)
5. (141) Timothy Gettinger, LW, Sault Ste.
Marie (OHL)
6. (171) Gabriel Fontaine, C, RouynNoranda (QMJHL)
6. (174) Tyler Wall, G, Leamington (GOJHL)
7. (201) Ty Ronning, RW, Vancouver
(WHL)
Philadelphia Flyers
1. (22) German Rubtsov, C, Russia U-18
(Russia)
2. (36) Pascal Laberge, C, Victoriaville
(QMJHL)
2. (48) Carter Hart, G, Everett (WHL)
2. (52) Wade Allison, RW, Tri-City (USHL)
3. (82) Carsen Twarynski, LW, Calgary
(WHL)
4. (109) Connor Bunnaman, C, Kitchener
(OHL)
5. (139) Linus Hogberg, D, Vaxjo Jr. (Sweden)
6. (169) Tanner Laczynski, C, Lincoln
(USHL)
6. (172) Anthony Salinitri, C, Sarnia (OHL)
7. (199) David Bernhardt, D, Djurgarden
Jr. (Sweden)

Pittsburgh Penguins
2. (55) Filip Gustavsson, G, Lulea Jr. (Sweden)
2. (61) Kasper Bjorkqvist, RW, Blues Jr.
(Finland)
3. (77) Connor Hall, D, Kitchener (OHL)
4. (121) Ryan Jones, D, Lincoln (USHL)
5. (151) Niclas Almari, D, Jokerit Jr. (Finland)
6. (181) Joseph Masonius, D, UConn
(Hockey East)
Washington Capitals
1. (28) Lucas Johansen, D, Kelowna (WHL)
3. (87) Garrett Pilon, C, Kamloops (WHL)
4. (117) Damien Riat, LW, Geneve (Switzerland)
5. (145) Beck Malenstyn, LW, Calgary
(WHL)
5. (147) Axel Jonsson-Fjallby, LW, Djurgarden Jr. (Sweden)
6. (177) Chase Priskie, D, Quinnipiac
(ECAC)
7. (207) Dmitriy Zaitsev, D, WBS Knights
(NAHL)

SOCCER
COPA AMERICA
QUARTERFINALS
Thursday, June 16
At Seattle
United States 2............................ Ecuador 1
Friday, June 17
At East Rutherford, N.J.
Colombia 0........................................ Peru 0
Columbia advanced on penalty kicks 4-2
Saturday, June 18
At Foxborough, Mass.
Argentina 4...............................Venezuela 1
At Santa Clara, Calif.
Chile 7............................................Mexico 0
SEMIFINALS
Tuesday, June 21
At Houston
Argentina 4......................... United States 0
Wednesday, June 22
At Chicago
Chile 2....................................... Colombia 0
THIRD PLACE
Saturday, June 25
At Glendale, Ariz.
Colombia 1..........................United States 0
CHAMPIONSHIP
Sunday, June 26
At East Rutherford, N.J.
Argentina vs. Chile............................ 8 p.m.
Colombia 1, United States 0
Colombia................................... 1
01
United States............................. 0
00
First half1, Colombia, Carlos Bacca 1
(Santiago Arias, James Rodrguez).
Second halfNone.
Yellow cardsJeisen Murillo, Colombia,
13th; Matt Besler, United States, 22nd;
Jermaine Jones, United States, 41st; Juan
Cuadrado, Colombia, 73rd; Michael Orozco,
United States, 87th; Santiago Arias, Colombia, 93rd; Michael Orozco, United States,
93rd; Santiago Arias, Colombia, 94th.
Red cardsNone.
RefereeDaniel Fedorczuk, Uruguay.
LinesmenRichard Trinidad, Uruguay; Luis
Sanchez, Venezuela.
AUA.
Lineups
ColombiaDavid Ospina; Santiago Arias,
Cristian Zapata, Jeison Murillo, Frank Fabra;
Daniel Torres, Guillermo Celis(John Stefan Medina, 87th), Juan Cuadrado(Marlos
Moreno, 74th), Edwin Cardona, James
Rodriguez; Carlos Bacca(Roger Martinez,
79th).
United StatesTim Howard; Matt
Besler, DeAndre Yedlin, Geoff Cameron,
Michael Orozco; Gyasi Zardes, Michael
Bradley(Darlington Nagbe, 79th), Alejandro
Bedoya(Christian Pulisic, 74th), Jermaine
Jones; Bobby Wood, Clint Dempsey.

UEFA EUROPEAN CHAMPIONSHIP


SECOND ROUND
Saturday, June 25
At Saint-Etienne, France
Poland 1..................................Switzerland 1
Poland advanced on penalty kicks 5-4
At Paris
Wales 1.......................... Northern Ireland 0
At Lens, France
Portugal 1.............................. Croatia 0 (OT)
Sunday, June 26
At Lyon, France
France vs. Ireland.............................. 9 a.m.
At Lille, France
Germany vs. Slovakia.......................... Noon
At Toulouse, France
Hungary vs. Belgium.......................... 3 p.m.
Monday, June 27
At Saint-Denis, France
Italy vs. Spain...................................... Noon
At Nice, France
England vs. Iceland............................ 3 p.m.
QUARTERFINALS
Thursday, June 30
At Marseille, France
Poland vs. Portugal............................ 3 p.m.
Friday, July 1
At Lille, France
Wales vs. Toulouse winner................ 3 p.m.
Saturday, July 2
At Bordeaux, France
Lille winner vs. Saint-Denis winner.... 3 p.m.
Sunday, July 3
AT Saint-Denis, France
Lyon winner vs. Nice winner.............. 3 p.m.
SEMIFINALS
Wednesday, July 6
At Lyon, France
Marseille winner vs. Lille winner....... 3 p.m.
Thursday, July 7
At Marseille, France
Bordeaux winner vs. Paris winner..... 3 p.m.
FINAL
Sunday, July 10
At Saint-Denis, France
Semifinal winners.............................. 3 p.m.

BOXING
June 25
At O2 Arena, London (SHO), Anthony
Joshua vs. Dominic Breazeale, 12, for Joshuas IBF heavyweight title; George Groves
vs. Martin Murray, 12, WBA super middleweight eliminator; John Wayne Hibbert
vs. Andrea Scarpa, 12, for the vacant WBC
Silver super lightweight title; Chris Eubank
Jr. vs. Tom Doran, 12, for Eubanks British
middleweight title.
At Barclays Center, Brooklyn, N.Y. (CBS),
Keith Thurman vs. Shawn Porter, 12, for
Thurmans WBA World welterweight title;
Jarrett Hurd vs. Oscar Molina, 10, junior
middleweights.
June 28
At Sands Bethlehem (Pa.) Event Center
(FS1), Edner Cherry vs. Lydell Rhodes, 10,
lightweights; Omar Douglas vs. Alexei Collado, 10, featherweights.
July 1
At Belasco Theater, Los Angeles, Oscar Negrete vs. Jose Bustos, 10, bantamweights.
July 11
At DIVS Palace of Sports, Ekaterinburg,
Russia, Sergey Kovalev vs. Isaac Chilemba, 12, for Kovalevs IBF/WBA-WBO light
heavyweight title.
July 16
At Max-Schmeling-Halle, Berlin, Giovanni
De Carolis vs. Tyron Zeuge, 12, for De Caro-

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

lis WBA World super middleweight title;


Arthur Abraham vs. Tim-Robin Lihaug, 10,
for the vacant WBO International super
middleweight title.
At Legacy Arena, Birmingham, Ala. (FOX),
Deontay Wilder vs. Chris Arreola, 12, for
Wilders WBC World heavyweight title.
July 23
At the MGM Grand, Las Vegas (PPV),
Terence Crawford vs. Viktor Postol, 12, for
the WBO/WBC junior welterweight title
unification; Gilberto Ramirez vs. Dominik
Britsch, 12, for Ramirezs WBO super middleweight title; Oscar Valdez vs. Matias
Adrian Rueda, 12, featherweights; Jose
Benavidez vs. Francisco Santana, 10, welterweights; Lenny Zappavigna vs. IK Yang,
10, junior welterweights; Ryota Murata
vs. George Tahdooahnippah, 10, middleweights.
July 30
At Barclays Center, Brooklyn, N.Y. (SHO),
Carl Frampton vs. Leo Santa Cruz, 12, for
the WBA featherweight title.

ATLANTIC
LEAGUE
Freedom Division

W L Pct. GB
York.................................36 26 .581
Sugar Land......................31 30 .508 41-w
Lancaster........................30 31 .492 51-w
Southern Maryland........22 38 .367 13
Liberty Division

W L Pct. GB
Somerset........................35 26 .574
Long Island.....................34 28 .548 11-w
New Britain.....................30 31 .492 5
Bridgeport......................27 35 .435 81-w
Saturdays Games
Long Island 2.......................... Bridgeport 1
York 5........................ Southern Maryland 2
Lancaster 13.......................... New Britain 3
Sugar Land 6............................. Somerset 2
Somerset at Sugar Land.......................... (n)
Sundays Games
Long Island at Bridgeport............ 1:12 p.m.
York at Southern Maryland......... 2:05 p.m.
New Britain at Lancaster.................. 5 p.m.
Somerset at Sugar Land............... 7:05 p.m.
Mondays Games
York at Long Island....................... 6:35 p.m.
Bridgeport at Lancaster.................... 7 p.m.
Sugar Land at S. Maryland........... 7:05 p.m.
New Britain at Somerset............. 7:05 p.m.

Barnstormers 13, Bees 3


NEW BRITAIN
LANCASTER

ab r h bi
ab r h bi
Skelton c
3 1 0 0 Jackson 2b 5 0 1 1
Murphy c
1 0 0 0 Ahrens 3b 4 3 3 1
Carrillo ss
5 1 3 0 Gindl cf
5 3 3 2
Rosa 3b
5 1 2 2 Whitaker lf 5 1 1 0
Maddox dh 5 0 1 0 Zawadzki ss 4 2 1 4
Roof 2b
4 0 1 1 Halton rf
5 1 3 1
Golson lf
3 0 2 0 McDade 1b 5 1 1 0
Hewitt lf,ph 1 0 0 0 Cutler c
4 1 2 1
Jones cf
4 0 1 0 Hobson dh 4 1 1 1
Crouse rf
2 0 0 0
Griffin 1b
4 0 1 0
Totals
37 3 11 3 Totals
41 13 16 11
New Britain...........003 000 000 3 11 2
Lancaster...............430 000 600 13 16 0
2BCarrillo, Rosa; Ahrens, Gindl, Halton,
McDade. HRGindl, Zawadzki, Hobson. HP
Crouse. SBCrouse, Cutler. LOBNew Britain
10, Lancaster 6.

IP H R ER BB SO
New Britain
Johnson (L, 5-6)......... 5.0 9 7 7 1 4
Marzi......................... 1.0 0 0 0 0 0
Stem.......................... 0.1 3 5 3 1 0
Gleason...................... 1.2 4 1 0 0 0
Lancaster
De La Cruz (W,5-6)..... 5.1 8 3 3 2 7
Munson..................... 1.2 1 0 0 0 4
Gracey....................... 1.0 0 0 0 0 1
Yevoli......................... 1.0 2 0 0 0 3
SOSkelton, Murphy, Carillo 2, Rosa 2,
Maddox 2, Roof 2, Golson, Crouse 2, Griffin 2;
Jackson, Zawadzki, Cutler, Hobson. BBSkelton, Crouse; Ahrens, Zawadzki.
T2:56. A4,785.
FRIDAYS LATE BOX

Bees 4, Barnstormers 1

NEW BRITAIN
LANCASTER

ab r h bi
ab r h bi
Skelton c
4 1 1 1 Gailen cf
4 0 0 0
Carrillo ss
4 0 2 1 Ahrens ss 3 0 0 0
Rosa 3b
4 0 0 0 Gindl rf
3 0 1 0
Maddox dh 4 1 1 0 Whitaker lf 4 0 2 0
Roof 2b
4 0 2 0 Bell 3b
4 0 1 0
Golson lf
4 0 0 0 Zawadzki 2b 4 0 1 0
Jones cf
4 1 1 0 Halton dh 2 0 0 0
Crouse rf
3 0 0 1 Cutler c
4 1 2 0
Griffin 1b
4 1 2 1 Hobson 1b 4 0 1 0
Totals
35 4 9 4 Totals
32 1 8 1
New Britain...........011 000 200 4 9 0
Lancaster...............000 000 001 1 8 3
2BCarrillo, Roof, Griffin; Whitaker. HR
Skelton; Cutler. SFCrouse. LOBNew Britain
5, Lancaster 9.

IP H R ER BB SO
New Britain
Dupra......................... 3.0 1 0 0 4 2
Leverett (W,1-3)......... 3.2 4 0 0 1 4
Fry............................. 0.1 0 0 0 0 0
Fornataro................... 1.0 2 0 0 0 1
Patterson................... 1.0 1 1 1 0 1
Lancaster
Evans (L,3-3).............. 5.0 6 2 1 0 3
Wall........................... 1.1 2 2 2 0 1
Smith......................... 0.2 1 0 0 0 1
Gracey....................... 1.0 0 0 0 0 1
Jackson...................... 1.0 0 0 0 0 1
SOSkelton, Golson, Jones, Crouse; Gailen
2, Ahrens, Gindl, Whitaker, Bell, Zawadzki.
BBGailen, Ahrens, Gindl, Halton 2.
T2:39. A4,896.

WNBA
EASTERN CONFERENCE

W
L Pct GB
New York....................10
4 .714
Atlanta..........................8
6 .571
2
Washington..................7
8 .467 31-w
Chicago.........................6
8 .429
4
Indiana..........................5
9 .357
5
Connecticut..................3 11 .214
7
WESTERN CONFERENCE

W
L Pct GB
Minnesota..................13
1 .929
Los Angeles.................12
1 .923
1-w
Dallas............................7
7 .500
6
Phoenix.........................5
9 .357
8
Seattle..........................5
9 .357
8
San Antonio..................3 11 .214 10
Fridays Games
Phoenix 91........................... Washington 79
New York 80...............................Chicago 79
Los Angeles 94....................... Minnesota 76
Seattle 98............................. Connecticut 81
Saturdays Games
San Antonio 73............................Atlanta 69
Indiana at Dallas......................................(n)
Sundays Games
Phoenix at New York......................... 3 p.m.
Minnesota at Washington................. 4 p.m.
Connecticut at Los Angeles............... 5 p.m.
Mondays Games
No games scheduled

INTERNATIONAL
LEAGUE
North Division

W L
Rochester (Twins)...........45 30
Lehigh Valley (Phillies)....44 32
Scranton/W-B (Yankees).44 32
Buffalo (Blue Jays)..........42 34
Pawtucket (Red Sox).......39 37
Syracuse (Nationals).......35 39
South Division

W L
Charlotte (White Sox).....36 40
Durham (Rays)................34 43
Gwinnett (Braves)...........33 42

Pct.
.600
.579
.579
.553
.513
.473

GB

11-w
11-w
31-w
61-w
91-w

Pct.
.474
.442
.440

GB

21-w
21-w

C13

Norfolk (Orioles).............27 49 .355 9


West Division

W L Pct. GB
Indianapolis (Pirates)......40 35 .533
Columbus (Indians).........40 36 .526
Louisville (Reds)..............37 37 .500 21-w
Toledo (Tigers)................32 42 .432 71-w
Saturdays Games
Pawtucket 7....................... Scranton/W-B 3
Lehigh Valley 7............................ Durham 1
Buffalo 4............................... Indianapolis 0
Charlotte 8................................. Gwinnett 6
Louisville 3............................... Rochester 2
Syracuse 6...................................... Toledo 4
Columbus 7.................................. Norfolk 4
Sundays Games
Norfolk at Columbus.................... 1:05 p.m.
Scranton/W-B at Pawtucket........ 1:05 p.m.
Toledo at Syracuse....................... 1:05 p.m.
Buffalo at Indianapolis................. 1:35 p.m.
Louisville at Rochester................. 1:35 p.m.
Charlotte at Gwinnett.................. 2:05 p.m.
Lehigh Valley at Durham.............. 5:05 p.m.
Mondays Games
Scranton/W-B at Syracuse........... 6:35 p.m.
Buffalo at Louisville..................... 7:05 p.m.
Columbus at Lehigh Valley........... 7:05 p.m.
Durham at Charlotte.................... 7:05 p.m.
Gwinnett at Indianapolis............. 7:05 p.m.
Norfolk at Toledo......................... 7:05 p.m.
Pawtucket at Rochester............... 7:05 p.m.

NEW YORK-PENN
LEAGUE
McNamara Division

W L Pct. GB
Staten Island (Yankees).....7 2 .778
Hudson Valley (Rays)........4 5 .444 3
Brooklyn (Mets)................3 6 .333 4
Aberdeen (Orioles)...........3 6 .333 4
Pinkney Division

W L Pct. GB
State College (Cardinals).....6 3 .667
West Virginia (Pirates)......6 3 .667
Auburn (Nationals)...........6 3 .667
Williamsport (Phillies)......4 5 .444 2
Mahoning Val. (Indians)...1 7 .125 41-w
Batavia (Marlins)..............0 8 .000 51-w
Stedler Division

W L Pct. GB
Lowell (Red Sox)...............9 0 1.000
Connecticut (Tigers).........6 3 .667 3
Vermont (Athletics)..........4 5 .444 5
Tri-City (Astros).................3 6 .333 6
Saturdays Games
Lowell 9........................................ Tri-City 3
Hudson Valley 6......................... Brooklyn 4
Vermont 8............................ Staten Island 6
Mahoning Valley 10...................... Batavia 4
Connecticut 5........................... Aberdeen 2
State College 5.................... West Virginia 2
Auburn 5.............................. Williamsport 4
Sundays Games
Hudson Valley at Brooklyn................ 4 p.m.
Batavia at Mahoning Valley......... 4:05 p.m.
State College at West Virginia..... 4:05 p.m.
Staten Island at Vermont............. 5:05 p.m.
Tri-City at Lowell.......................... 5:05 p.m.
Williamsport at Auburn............... 5:05 p.m.
Connecticut at Aberdeen............ 5:35 p.m.
Mondays Games
Hudson Valley at Brooklyn................ 7 p.m.
Batavia at Mahoning Valley......... 7:05 p.m.
Connecticut at Aberdeen............ 7:05 p.m.
State College at West Virginia..... 7:05 p.m.
Staten Island at Vermont............. 7:05 p.m.
Tri-City at Lowell.......................... 7:05 p.m.
Williamsport at Auburn............... 7:05 p.m.

ARENA
FOOTBALL
NATIONAL CONFERENCE

W L T Pct PF PA
Arizona.............. 9 3 0 .750 805 585
Cleveland........... 6 6 0 .500 635 673
Los Angeles........ 5 6 0 .455 498 508
Portland............. 1 10 0 .091 438 680
AMERICAN CONFERENCE

W L T Pct PF PA
Orlando........... 11 2 0 .846 742 611
Philadelphia....... 9 3 0 .750 718 566
Jacksonville........ 5 6 0 .455 562 535
Tampa Bay......... 1 11 0 .083 420 670
Fridays Game
Orlando 56............................ Tampa Bay 33
Saturdays Game
Cleveland at Jacksonville........................ (n)
Sundays Game
Arizona at Los Angeles...................... 6 p.m.
Mondays Game
Philadelphia at Portland................. 10 p.m.
Saturday, July 9
Cleveland at Philadelphia................. 6 p.m.
Jacksonville at Arizona................. 9:30 p.m.
Orlando at Portland........................ 10 p.m.
Sunday, July 10
No games scheduled
Monday, July 11
Tampa Bay at Los Angeles.............. 10 p.m.

NWSL

W L T Pts GF GA
Portland..................5 0 5 20 14 5
Chicago...................5 2 3 18 11 8
West. New York......6 4 0 18 20 11
Washington............5 1 2 17 11 6
Orlando..................5 5 0 15 10 8
Seattle....................3 3 3 12 8 7
Sky Blue FC.............2 3 4 10 9 12
FC Kansas City.........2 4 3 9 6 7
Houston..................2 6 1 7 6 10
Boston....................1 8 1 4 3 22
NOTE: Three points for victory, one point
for tie.
Wednesdays Game
Portland 2.................................... Chicago 0
Thursdays Game
Orlando 1.................................... Houston 0
Fridays Game
Western New York 7..................... Boston 1
Saturdays Games
Sky Blue FC 2......................... Washington 1
Kansas City 0.................................. Seattle 0
Sundays Game
Portland at Orlando.......................... 5 p.m.
Friday, July 1
Chicago at Western New York.......... 7 p.m.
Saturday, July 2
FC Kansas City at Washington........... 7 p.m.
Boston at Seattle............................ 10 p.m.
Sky Blue FC at Portland.............. 10:30 p.m.

NFL

NFL Calendar
July 15 Franchise players must sign
multiyear contract or can only sign a oneyear contract with his club for the 2016
season.
Aug. 6 Pro Football Hall of Fame inductions, Canton, Ohio.
Aug. 7 Hall of Fame game, Green Bay.
vs. Indianapolis, Canton, Ohio.
Sept. 8 Season opener, Carolina at
Denver.
Sept. 11-12 Opening weekend.

YOUTH
BASEBALL
LANCASTER YOUTH 12U
Section Two
PM Gold 11...............................Hempfield 3
LANCASTER YOUTH 10U
Section Two
PV Red 12...................... Ephrata Squires 10
PV Red 5......................... Hempfield Black 1
Mt. Joy Blue 3.........................Mt. Joy Red 0

C14

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

Lancaster Weather
TODAY

MONDAY

86
60

TUESDAY

84
67

Wind: SW 4-8 mph

REGION

24HOUR TEMPERATURE RECORD

LANCASTER
Mostly sunny today. High 84 to 88.
Winds south-southwest 4-8 mph.
Mainly clear tonight. Low 58 to 62.
Winds south-southwest 4-8 mph.

80
60
12 AM 3

9 NOON 3

Brownstown
Columbia
County Park
Ephrata
Flory Mill
Manheim
Mount Joy
Smoketown
Truce

3.57
33.94

13.43
15.06

3.56
2.08

Wind: SSW 6-12 mph

Wind: WNW 4-8 mph

Wind: W 4-8 mph

Wind: W 6-12 mph

NATION

Moderate
Absent
Moderate
High

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
65/46

San Francisco
73/55

Jul 11

Toronto
88/66

Atlanta
91/74

Chihuahua
93/63
Monterrey
94/71

T-storms

For up-to-the-minute weather, visit

LancasterOnline.com AccuWeather Forecast

Rain

-10s

Showers

-0s

New York
86/66
Washington
86/65

Kansas City
87/67

El Paso
95/73

Jul 19

Detroit
91/68

Denver
86/58

Los Angeles
89/63

TODAY
MON
Sunrise
5:38 a.m. 5:38 a.m.
Sunset
8:38 p.m. 8:38 p.m.
Moonrise 12:10 a.m. 12:45 a.m.
Moonset
11:59 a.m. 1:06 p.m.
Last
New
First
Full

Jul 4

Montreal
90/75

Minneapolis
85/62
Chicago
88/67

SUN AND MOON

Jun 27

Harrisburg
88/64

Seattle
78/58

Source: Dr. Robert Zuckerman

7.44

0s

Snow

10s

Flurries

20s

Houston
94/75

Ice

30s

Miami
91/78

Cold Front

40s

50s

Warm Front

60s

70s

80s

NATION
TODAY

Hi/Lo/W

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.

MON

Hi/Lo/W

65/54/c
68/55/c
91/74/t 90/73/pc
77/62/s 78/68/pc
85/61/s 83/69/pc
78/62/s 82/65/pc
90/70/pc 83/61/pc
94/72/pc 89/67/pc
88/67/t
87/59/s
88/69/pc
89/69/t
96/79/pc
97/78/t
86/58/s
87/60/t
88/64/s 86/69/pc
85/73/pc 85/74/sh
110/87/s 112/89/pc
89/63/s 90/64/pc
94/74/pc
86/69/t
96/79/pc
93/78/c
86/66/s 84/69/pc
93/75/t
90/75/t
88/64/s 85/69/pc
111/87/s 111/89/pc
90/71/s 84/68/pc
92/65/s 101/72/s
73/55/s
74/56/s
86/65/s 85/72/pc

SATURDAY EXTREMES

100s

110s

High:
Low:

110 at Needles, CA
24 at Stanley, ID

Weather (W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy,


c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms,
r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.

Harrisburg

MANHEIM
E-TOWN

NOBODY BE ATS OUR DE AL


2016 FORD ESCAPE SE

Atlantic City: Mostly sunny and


nice today. Wind east at 4-8 knots.
Seas 2-4 feet. Visibility clear. Water
temp 64.
Cape May: Mostly sunny today.
Wind east-northeast 6-12 knots.
Seas 2-4 feet. Visibility clear. Water
temp 71.
Rehoboth Beach: Mostly sunny
and pleasant today. Wind east 6-12
knots. Seas 2-4 feet. Visibility clear.
Water temp 70.
Ocean City, MD: Mostly sunny
today. Wind east-northeast 6-12
knots. Seas 2-4 feet. Visibility clear.
Water temp 68.
Outer Banks: Mostly sunny today.
Wind north-northeast 7-14 knots.
Seas 3-5 feet. Visibility clear. Water
temp 72.

For the 48 contiguous states


Stationary Front

90s

HONDRUAUTO.COM
$750 Military/Veterans
Rebate on all new Fords

BEACH REPORT

Scranton
88/62

Billings
86/55

Grasses
Trees
Weeds
Mold

Levels as of 7:00 a.m. yesterday


Below
Flood

Clearing

POLLEN

RIVER STAGES

POP: 25%

New York City


Allentown
86/66
Pittsburgh
90/62
90/71
Philadelphia
Lancaster
88/64
Hagerstown
86/60
York
Morgantown
86/65
85/59 Wilmington
89/67
Martinsburg
Baltimore 85/61
Atlantic City
86/60
85/61
77/62
Washington
Cape
May
Forecasts and
86/65
76/62
graphics provided by
Rehoboth Beach
Shown is todays weather. Temperatures
AccuWeather, Inc.
are todays highs and tonights lows.
2016
78/62

Source: Pennsylvania Department of


Environmental Protection

Source: Lancaster County Emergency


Management Agency

Feet

500

0-50: Good. 51-100: Moderate. 101-150: Unhealthy


for sensitive groups. 151-200: Unhealthy. 201-300:
Very unhealthy. 301-500: Hazardous.

0.00
N.A.
0.04
0.04
0.59
N.A.
0.24
0.00
N.A.

Susquehanna
at Harrisburg
at Marietta
Conestoga
at Lancaster
at Conestoga

300

Yesterdays readings
Main Pollutant
Particulates
Particulates
60
Ozone
55

Total precipitation for the 24-hour


period ending 7 p.m. yesterday

POP: 25%
Partly sunny

Altoona
84/62

Todays forecast

PRECIPITATION

POP: 15%

Williamsport
Punxsutawney
90/63
Wilkes-Barre
86/65
88/61
State College
85/63

Butler
87/66

AIR QUALITY

Source: www.atmos.millersville.edu/~wic

87
64

Partly sunny

Bradford
85/61

Oil City
88/66

POCONOS
Mostly sunny today. High 79 to 83.
Mainly clear tonight. Low 55 to 59.

0 50 100 150 200

85
64

POP: Probability of Precipitation

DELAWAREMARYLAND
Mostly sunny today. Very warm in
the Maryland panhandle; pleasant
at the Delaware coast. High 74
to 88.

TEMPERATURE
Lancaster
83/60
Ephrata
86/61
New Holland
84/63
Lancaster (last year)
78/58
Normals for the day
83/62
Year to date high 91 on June 11
Year to date low
5 on Feb. 14
PRECIPITATION
24 hours ending 7 p.m.
0.22
Month to date
3.08
Normal month to date
3.23
Month to date departure
-0.15
Year to date
18.24
Normal year to date
19.18
Year to date departure
-0.94
Greatest June total 14.14 (1972)
Least June total
0.54 (1966)

83
62

Times of clouds and sun

Erie
90/70

9 12 AM

Lancaster statistics through 7 p.m. at


Millersville University Weather Station

POP: 25%

A couple of showers and a


t-storm
Wind: S 6-12 mph

ALMANAC

100

82
63

POP: 60%

A t-storm in spots in the


afternoon
Wind: S 6-12 mph

Mostly sunny

WEDNESDAY

85
65

POP: 40%

POP: 0%

Todays weather brought to you by: HONDRUAUTO.COM


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Money

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

n SEND STORY TIPS & INFO TO: TIM MEKEEL, 481-6030, TMEKEEL@LNPNEWS.COM

ALSO INSIDE: BUSINESS

TRANSPORTATION

MICHELLE SINGLETARY
THE COLOR OF MONEY

How well do
you know the
person youre
about to
marry?
If youre fighting about
money in your marriage, what do you wish
you had known about
your spouse before you
exchanged vows?
Would you have gotten
out of the relationship
had you known your
partner was an unrepentant spendthrift and that
his or her attitude would
cause you great stress in
your marriage?
Had you discovered
your other half was
hiding a great amount
of debt, would you still
have gotten married?
Those of us who give
financial advice often
urge couples to take
a premarital class to
address any potential
issues prior to tying the
knot.
But for many couples,
a premarital class is too
late. The engagement
ring has been given, the
wedding dress ordered
and the nonrefundable
deposit made on the
reception hall. Some
couples are already living with each other, perhaps in a home theyve
purchased together.
Its often because of
these financial entanglements that people arent
willing to split up even
when theres late-breaking evidence that their
partner might not be the
right person for them.
They needed earlier
intervention.
Ive long been a fan of
a 10-week course at my
church for couples who
are contemplating marriage. The couples must
finish this class before
they can even take premarital classes.
Its a smart concept
developed by Skip
and Beverly Little, the
directors of the couples
ministry at First Baptist
Church of Glenarden,
Maryland. To complement the course, the
Littles have written So
You Think You Want to
Get Married? ($11.99,
Xulon Press).
So You Think You
Want to Get Married?
is a biblically based
premarital class prequel.
Its very conservative in
its views. And while it
might not appeal to you
if you arent religious, I
nonetheless wanted to
highlight the work the
Littles do because of
their unique concept.
When you are considering getting married,
you need to rely on facts,
not just feelings, the
Littles contend.
Many troubled
marriages began with
false expectations and
a misunderstanding
of marital roles, they
write. Imagine being on
a job without clearly defined roles and responsibilities. You would
constantly show poor
performance, which is
what happens in marriage.
Numerous surveys
indicate that fights
about money top the list
of concerns for couples.
But its not the money

SINGLETARY, page D6

SOUTHERN STYLE

RICHARD HERTZLER | STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

Nevin Spade, manager of quality control for Southern Airways Express at Lancaster Airport, works on the turbo prop of the Cessna 208 aircraft.

Unconventional new carrier its pilots wear blue suede shoes


looks to boost business, preserve subsidy for Lancaster Airport
TIM STUHLDREHER

TSTUHLDREHER@LNPNEWS.COM

On a sunny afternoon last week, Bruce


Oudenhoven was waiting for his flight on
Southern Airways Express to WashingtonDulles at Lancaster Airport.
Oudenhoven works for Appleton, Wisconsin-based Pierce Manufacturing,
which builds fire trucks. A few times a year,
Oudenhoven delivers a fire truck to Glick
Fire Equipment Co. in Bird-in-Hand,
bringing it in from Appleton or another
Pierce dealer.
The airport in Manheim Township
makes his trip home a lot easier.
This is much, much more convenient,
he said. For me, its the perfect thing.
The flights Oudenhoven and others take
into and out of Lancaster are supported by
the federal Essential Air Service program.
Set up in 1978 to cushion small airports
through airline deregulation, it subsidizes
commercial airline service in communities where it otherwise wouldnt be viable.
Lancaster Airport has received funding
since 2004; the money currently underwrites multiple daily flights to and from
Dulles and Pittsburgh. But the U.S. Department of Transportation wants to take
Lancaster and 21 other airports out of the
program because theyre not meeting its
minimum criteria.
The department previously proposed
eliminating the airports subsidy in 2014.
Thanks in part to lobbying by U.S. Sen. Bob
Casey, D-Pa., the funding was preserved.

Thorough turnaround
Airports that receive the funds are supposed to have at least 10 round-trip pas-

sengers or enplanements per day and a


maximum per-passenger subsidy of $200.
Lancaster Airports figures for the year
ended Sept. 30 were 4.2 enplanements and
a $764 per passenger subsidy.
Keith Sisson is chief operating officer of
Southern Airways Express, based in Memphis, Tennessee. In March, it acquired Sun
Air, the carrier serving Lancaster and five
other small-city airports in Pennsylvania,
New York and Maryland.
The feds are looking at the fiscal year that
ended Sept. 30. Since then, Lancaster Airport has been enjoying what Sisson calls
the best turnaround in the country.

This is
much,
much more
convenient.

Bruce Oudenhoven,
Southern Airways Express user

Airports can remain in the federal program if they can demonstrate that their
problems were temporary and are being
resolved. Thats the case here, Sisson and
airport officials say.
Lancaster Airports passenger numbers
are rebounding, a process that began even
before Southern Airways bought Sun Air.
From January through May this year,
enplanements were about 3.75 times what
they were during the same period in 2015:
2,534 versus 669. Two of the past three
months were above the 10-enplanementper-day threshold, and the third was close:

9.7 in April.
As for the $200 per-passenger subsidy
cap, Sisson said Southern Airways can
meet that requirement with just one more
passenger per flight: Its so attainable you
can taste it.
Thats especially so with the capital and
personnel investments Southern Airways
is making, which it is confident will take
the gains to the next level.
Its hiring more pilots, to make it easier
to staff flights, and its introducing roomier
nine-passenger Cessna Caravan turboprop aircraft, which Sisson says have the
feel of corporate jets.
Three Cessnas will arrive this week, and
nearly a dozen more will be serving the former Sun Air routes by October, he said.
Southern Airways is phasing in new
flight times to maximize flight connections
in Pittsburgh and Dulles. For the same reason, its looking at shifting the Dulles route
to Baltimore-Washington.
The goal is to come into compliance with
Essential Air Service criteria and remain
eligible for the subsidy, Sisson said. While
Southern Airways hopes to grow the market as much as possible, it would be difficult for an air service provider to provide
consistent scheduled service at Lancaster
without the subsidy help, he said.

New carrier

Sun Air had a lot of problems in 2015,


Sisson said. It switched from single-pilot
to two-pilot crews, but Federal Aviation
Administration staff shortages led to long
wait times for the flight tests that pilots
need to earn certification.

AIRPORT, page D6

Italian restaurant opens on Main Street in Mount Joy


ROSIES
TAVOLA
n Address: 114 E.

CHAD UMBLE

Main St., Mount


Joy.
n Hours: 11 a.m.
to 10 p.m. Monday
through Thursday,
11 a.m. to
midnight Friday
and Saturday.
n Phone: 9284083.
n Online:
facebook.com/
Rosiestavola

WHATS IN STORE

Rosies Tavola has


opened in Mount Joy,
taking a space in the
middle of town that is
the former home of Pub
Dunegal, which closed in
March 2015.
The new restaurant
at 114 E. Main St. has a
menu heavy on Italian
dishes with some personal twists by chef Bob
Linkens, who owns it
with his wife, Rose Ann.
In addition to appetizers and salads, there are

WHATS IN STORE, page D2

DAN MARSCHKA | STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

Chef and owner Bob Linkens stands at the bar of Rosies Tavola in Mount Joy.

D2

MONEY

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

Whats in Store: Sugar on Top


Continued from D1

chicken dishes such as chicken


Marsala and chicken Parmesan
in addition to lasagna, ravioli
and some create-your-own pasta
options.
Linguini-and-clams, mussels
and grilled salmon are among the
seafood options, while there are
several veal dishes as well as some
steaks and pork chops.
The lunch menu includes soups,
salads and smaller pasta dishes in
addition to sandwiches including
chicken Parmesan, pulled pork
and meatballs-and-cheese.
Most dinner entrees are
around $20, but some some
entrees are closer to $30. Sandwiches are $7 to $8, while lunchsize pasta dishes are $7.
A Sunday brunch is slated to
begin by the end of July.
Bob Linkens has worked in
food service for nearly 40 years,
including in Colorado and New
York. Locally, hes worked at the
former Restaurant at Doneckers
in Ephrata as well as at Portofino
Italian Ristorante in Lancaster.
Linkens said he and his wife
were looking for a place to open
their own restaurant when they
were drawn to the spot in the
middle of Mount Joy and the
opportunity to offer a sit-down
restaurant with options that are
unique to the area.
They bought the restaurant
property in November 2015 for
$135,000 and have since been
overseeing renovations, including some structural repairs,
the installation of new kitchen
equipment and some cosmetic
updates.
As part of the work, they
rebuilt the bar, shortening it on
one end with a counter that can
accommodate people who use
wheelchairs.
Linkens declined to disclose the
projects cost.
The restaurant has seating
for around 120, equally divided
between a bar room, dining room
and patio that that fronts Main
Street.
The dining room features wood
booths and tables, while the long,
narrow bar room has some hightop tables near the bar.
Linkens said there are plans to
eventually turn some apartments
upstairs into additional dining
space.

Sugar on Top opens


downtown
Sugar on Top, a gourmet
doughnut shop which began in
Strasburg, has opened a new
franchise location in downtown
Lancaster.
The doughnut shop at 25 N.
Prince St. takes part of the space
previously occupied by Carmen & Davids Creamery, which
closed in January 2015.
Sugar on Top offers a variety
of signature doughnuts, such
as chocolate-covered pretzel,
Snickers bar and salted caramel.
It also gives customers the
option of customizing doughnuts, beginning with a vanilla
or chocolate cake doughnut and
then selecting from 25-plus toppings.
The 1,200-square-foot shop,
which has seating for about 15,
also sells coffee and a variety of
other drinks.
The owners of the new location are Cheryl Smucker and her
husband, Eli. Cheryl is a former
registered nurse who will manage the shop. She is helped by
two employees.
The downtown Lancaster shop
is the second franchise location
for Sugar on Top, which was
opened in Strasburg in May 2014
by Patty Rutter and her husband, Brian. The first franchise

Tuesday, July 5
n Wheatland-Conestoga ABWA

monthly dinner meeting, 6 p.m.,


at Heritage Hotel, 500 Centerville
Road. Speaker: Dan Barber, a critical
care registered nurse, on changing
professions. For more information
and reservations, contact Kim
Warner at 475-0677.

Tuesday, July 12
n Lancaster Chamber consortium
for Lancaster city and Lancaster
Township, 7:30 a.m., at Southern
Market Center, 100 S. Queen
St. Subject: challenges and
opportunities facing the School

location opened in September in


Millersville.

SUGAR ON TOP
n Address: 25 N. Prince St.,
Lancaster.

n Hours: 7:30 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Monday and Friday (until 8 p.m. on


1st and 3rd Fridays), 7:30 a.m. to 2
p.m. Saturday.
n Phone: 874-7836.
n Online: facebook.com/
sugarontopdowntownlancaster;
sugarontopdonuts.com

Dunkin Donuts in
Ephrata
A new Dunkin Donuts has
opened in Ephrata, taking space
in a building at Route 272 and
Rothsville Road.
The Dunkin Donuts at 1111 S.
State St. sells doughnuts, bagels,
muffins, sandwiches and coffee
drinks, among other things. It
features a drive-thru and has
seating inside for around 30.
The restaurant is in front of
Kmart in a spot previously occupied by Shamrock Pre-owned,
a used-car dealership.
The franchise owner of the
Ephrata Dunkin Donuts is Kings
Point Ventures, a New Jerseybased company that operates
numerous Dunkin Donuts
franchises, including several in
Lancaster County.

DUNKIN DONUTS
n Address: 1111 S. State St., Ephrata.
n Phone: 466-2888.
n Hours: 5 a.m. to 8 p.m. Monday
through Saturday, 6 a.m. to 8 p.m.
Sunday.
n Online: dunkindonuts.com.

Campus Grille moves,


changes name
The Campus Grille has moved
from its spot on Harrisburg Avenue near Franklin & Marshall
College to a new spot in Manheim Township and shortened
its name to The Grille.
Now located at 241 W. Roseville
Road, The Grille is maintaining
a menu that features burgers,
wraps and sandwiches, including
cheesesteaks.
The restaurant, which takes
a space previously occupied by
Upohar, had operated for more
than 12 years at 430 Harrisburg
Ave., a spot where Mr. Bills Seafood plans to open a cafe.
In its new spot, The Grille has
seating for 46 at a mix of booths
and tables. It offers take-out and
has added lunchtime delivery.
It will operate with around six
employees.
The Grille is owned by Nicole
Thomas and George Bournelis.
Bournelis is a former owner of
Lancaster restaurants Alley Kat
and Steak Attack.
The Grille is currently being
operated by William Thomas.

THE GRILLE
n Address: 241 W. Roseville Road,
Lancaster.

n Hours: 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. daily.


n Phone: 509-7700.
n Online: thegrillemenu.com

Sheetz completes
renovation
The Sheetz at Oregon Pike
and Eden Road in Manheim
Township has reopened after it
was completely remodeled and
slightly expanded.
The 4,300-square-foot convenience store at 1699 Oregon Pike
was closed in mid-February for
work that added 900 square feet
of space.

In addition to overhauling all


aspects of the store, workers
added a seating area inside and
an outside patio facing Eden
Resort & Suites.
Mike LaCesa, director of real
estate for Sheetzs eastern region, did not have a cost estimate
for the project.
Opened in 1998, the store just
north of Route 30 is one of the
smaller stores for the Altoonabased chain, which now has 12
locations in Lancaster County.

SHEETZ
n Address: 1699 Oregon Pike,
Lancaster.

n Phone: 581-0830.
n Hours: 24 hours, daily.
n Online: sheetz.com

Thrift shop moves


The thrift shop at Pleasant
View Retirement Community
in Manheim has been moved
to a slightly larger, more accessible spot where it is now called
Esthers Collectibles.
Formerly housed on the
ground floor of the health center,
the on-campus thrift shop is now
on the ground floor of the Town
Square North Building, through
Door No. 8.
The shop, formerly called
Pleasant View Thrift Shop, was
renamed for Esther Henry, one
of Pleasant Views founders and
its first administrator.
The shop features gently used
clothing and housewares and
is open to the public. Staffed by
volunteers, its proceeds support
Pleasant View Auxiliary.

ESTHERS
COLLECTIBLES
n Address: Town Square North

Building, Door No. 8, Pleasant View


Retirement Community, 544 N.
Penryn Road, Manheim.
n Hours: 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Tuesday
through Thursday.
n Phone: 664-6288.
n Online: pleasantviewrc.org

New landlord for Best


Buy
Blackstone Real Estate Group
acquired Best Buys 1801 Hempstead Road building for $8.57
million earlier this month, courthouse records show.
The 46,000-square-foot store,
on 6.24 acres in Lancaster city,
opened in 2009.
A Best Buy spokeswoman said
Monday that the sale has no
impact on the store, which will
operate as usual under a longterm lease.
The Best Buy parcel is part of
the Pitney Road Plaza shopping
center. Other businesses there
include Lowes, Members 1st and
Mattress Warehouse.
The Best Buy site was among 49
U.S. properties sold by Torontobased RioCan to Blackstone for
$1.9 billion, so RioCan could concentrate on its Canadian holdings.
RioCan is Canadas largest real
estate investment trust, with 305
properties in Canada valued at $15
billion. Blackstone, based in New
York, is the worlds largest such
fund, with $92 billion in assets.
Attempts to get comment from
Blackstone were not successful.
Staff writer Tim Mekeel contributed to this report.

n Whats In Store, a roundup of

Lancaster County retail and restaurant


news, runs every Sunday. If you have
news tips, contact LNP staff writer
Chad Umble at 291-8718 or cumble@
lnpnews.com.

Calendar
District of Lancaster and how it is
connecting students to meaningful
career exploration. Cost: members
free, nonmembers $25. Register at
lancasterchamber.com calendar or
by calling 397-3531.

n Lancaster Chamber Get

Connected free, facilitated


networking opportunity for
members, 11:45 a.m., at Eden Resort
& Suites, 222 Eden Road. Register at
lancasterchamber.com calendar or
by calling 397-3531.

Wednesday, July 13
n Lancaster Chamber consortium
for Cocalico and Ephrata, 11:30
a.m., at Compleat Restorations,

702 Pointview Ave., Ephrata.


Speaker: Scott Standish, with an
overview of the Lancaster County
comprehensive plan. Cost: members
free, nonmembers $25. Register at
lancasterchamber.com calendar or
by calling 397-3531.

Thursday, July 14
n Lancaster Chamber ag issues

forum, 7:30 a.m, at Farm & Home


Center, 1383 Arcadia Road. Subject:
challenges and opportunities facing
the agriculture and agribusiness
industries. Cost: members $28,
nonmembers $40. Register at
lancasterchamber.com calendar or
by calling 397-3531.

Whos News

Gregory S. Lefever

Diane N. Hess

n S&T Bank has hired

n The Lancaster County

Gregory S. Lefever as
executive vice president,
managing director of S&T
Wealth Management.
Lefever, of Lancaster, has
more than 30 years of
experience in the financial
services industry.
Lefever most recently
spent eight years with
PNC, starting as a market
president for PNC Bank,
then managing director
of PNC Bank and finally
as wealth director of PNC
Wealth Managements
Lancaster office.
Before that, the Millersville
University graduate
spent 10 years at Sterling
Financial, concluding with
two years as president and
chief executive officer of its
Bank of Lancaster County.
S&T, based in Indiana,
Pennsylvania, acquired
Camp Hill-based Integrity
Bank in March.

Business Group on Health


has appointed Diane N.
Hess executive director.
Hess had served as interim
executive director since
the retirement of Jim
Schmucker last December.
She joined the organization
in February 2014 as a
project manager.
Prior to that, the Mohnton
resident served in both
sales and service capacities
for an insurance carrier, a
wellness vendor, several
insurance brokerage
operations and third-party
administrators.
Hess, a graduate of
Gettysburg College, is a
certified employee benefit
specialist.

Debra M. Scheidt

n United Disabilities

Zeta Smith

n Starbucks Coffee Co.

has promoted Zeta Smith


to divisional senior vice
president for the central
region.
Smith, of Hopkinton,
Massachusetts, joined
Starbucks in 2006. Most
recently she was Northeast
regional vice president.
Before that, she spent 15
years at ExxonMobil.
A Hempfield High School
graduate, Smith holds a
bachelors degree from
University of Maryland and
an executive MBA from
George Mason University.
Smith is the daughter of
Sylena and Curtis Sanks,
Landisville.

Services Foundation has


hired Debra M. Scheidt
as executive director for
its home and communitybased services division.
Scheidt, of Stevens, has
more than 25 years of
health care experience. She
was formerly employed
by Lancaster Regional
Hospital as director of
behavioral health services.
Scheidt has a masters
degree from West Virginia
University.

Robert S. Wolfkiel

n CoreSource, a
n At its recent annual

meeting, LancasterHistory.
org elected the following
officers for its coming fiscal
year.
They are: chair, Eugene
H. Gardner Jr.; first vice
chair, Deborah M. Martin;
second vice chair, Timothy
A. Mackey; third vice chair,
Hale A. Krasne; secretary,
Margot L. Brubaker; and
treasurer, Kenneth I. Huber.
The organization also
added Michael L. Abel,
Melvin C. Breaux, Huber
and Robert E. Patterson to
its board of directors.
Re-elected for three-year
terms are board members
Krasne, Michael W. Schmid
and Susan H. Stoudt.

national health benefits


administrator, has named
Robert S. Wolfkiel its
Northeast region president.
Wolfkiel succeeds Chip
Sernyak, who spent eight
years in the role. Sernyak
has joined sister company
HealthFitness as senior vice
president of growth and
development.
Wolfkiel, who will be
located in CoreSources
Lancaster office, joined
CoreSource in 2014 as
Southeast region president.
Prior to joining CoreSource,
Wolfkiel was vice president
and chief sales officer at
Blue Cross Blue Shield of
Rhode Island.
He attended Hofstra
University.

WHO TO EMAIL

Whos News, featuring promotions, hirings and


certifications of management-level employees, appears each
Sunday. Mail your news with an optional high-resolution jpg
photo to businessnews@lnpnews.com. Mailing address is
LNP Business News, P.O. Box 1328, Lancaster, Pa., 17608-1328.
Our offices are at 8 W. King St., just west of Penn Square.

Bankruptcies
Here is a list of Lancaster
County bankruptcies
recorded in U.S.
Bankruptcy Court, Eastern
District of Pennsylvania,
Reading, June 14-20.
Stephen M. and Deborah
L. Sarro, 700 block of
School Lane, New Holland.
Chapter 13.
Danielle N. Thompson,
600 block of Park Avenue.
Chapter 7.
Stephen P. Jarvis II, 400
block of Talon Drive,
Mountville. Chapter 7.
Jeremy A. and Tina M.
Waters, 2100 block of
Swarr Run Road. Chapter 7.
Jennifer Syzonenko, 700
block of Heather Ridge,
Manheim. Chapter 7.

Robert N. and Paulette


K. Grimsey, 100 block
of North Lime Street,
Quarryville. Chapter 7.
Paul T. Blankenbiller,
1600 block of Eshelman
Mill Road, Willow Street.
Chapter 7.
Thomas J. and Michele
M. Florio, 100 block
of Ridgewood Manor,
Manheim. Chapter 7.
Carole J. Patterson, 900
block of Holly Tree Road,
Manheim. Chapter 13.

n Under Chapter 7 of the

U.S. Bankruptcy Code, a


debtors assets are liquidated to pay creditors. Under
Chapter 11, the debtor, often
a company, reorganizes and
may pay some creditors.
Under Chapter 13, a debtor
proposes a repayment plan.

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

D3

Technology
DEVELOPERS CONFERENCE

KIM KOMANDO
CYBER SPEAK

How to boost your


Wi-Fi for $50
How many times have you clicked
a video or link and waited, and
waited? You cant know for sure if
it is your gadget, your Wi-Fi or the
website thats holding up progress.
All too often, the fault is your Wi-Fi
signal.
A weak Wi-Fi signal limits the
range, slows down your speed and
can cause a spotty connection,
if it even connects at all. There
are many circumstances that can
reduce your Wi-Fis range or create
dead spots in your home or office.
Odds are, the area you need to
cover is simply too large for just one
Wi-Fi router. In that situation, you
need additional hardware to extend
the wireless networks range. Fortunately, it wont cost you too much if
you know what youre looking for.

Range extender
The hardware is helpfully called a
range extender, or sometimes referred to as a repeater. Basically,
you put the gadget near the edge of
your routers range. It pulls in your
Wi-Fi signal and it rebroadcasts the
signal with more power on a different Wi-Fi channel.
Tip in a tip: Identifying Wi-Fi signal issues is easier when you know
exactly where the signal drops off.
HeatMapper is a free download that
helps you visualize Wi-Fi signals
on a map of your home or office.
Netspot does the same for Macs.
You can also use an app like the free
Wi-Fi Analyzer that has a real-time
signal strength meter.
Because the extender connects to
your network via Wi-Fi, it doesnt
need an internet cable connection.
You can place an extender anywhere you have a standard electrical socket.
Just one extender can help you
cover a huge area that your main
existing Wi-Fi doesnt reach well.
For an even bigger area, like a large
office, you can get a few extenders
and place them strategically out on
the extreme edges of your existing
signal to get the coverage you need.
Gadgets connected to an extender
will get a slower connection speed
than they do using your main router. Thats because the extender has
to receive the Wi-Fi signal and then
rebroadcast it to your gadget, and
do the same thing the other way. If
you need a super-fast connection
everywhere in your home or office,
a better idea is to set up multiple
routers, or access points, wired to
a central router. But thats a whole
other column.
Often you can choose whether
the extender clones your network, which means it uses the same
network name and password as
your router, or creates a separate
hotspot with its own network name
and password. A separate hotspot
network is good when you want to
share that with guests as it keeps
them off your private network.
Extender prices range from $20
to $120 depending on the features
and power. However, in most situations a $40 to $50 model will work
just fine. You just need to make sure
it has a few key features.
A signal meter on the extender
is helpful. At a glance, this tells
you how strong the Wi-Fi signal is
at the spot youre standing. Obviously it doesnt do any good to put
the extender outside the range of
your router, or close enough to the
router that the ranges overlap too
much.

Dual-band extenders
If you have a dual-band Wi-Fi
router, which means it broadcasts
a signal at both 2.4GHz and 5GHz,
consider getting a dual-band
extender. A single-band extender
will only boost the 2.4GHz signal.
Any gadgets that can also connect
via the faster 5GHz, which includes
many smartphones, tablets, computers and streaming gadgets now,
wont get as much benefit.
Similarly, every extender on the
market is going to support 802.11n
Wi-Fi, but only the more

KOMANDO, page D6

CAN APPLE THINK


OUTSIDE THE DEVICE?
FARHAD MANJOO

ingly. But thats a curious


thing to have to do. If Siri
is an intelligent assistant, why does she need
to be tied to apps you
have installed on your
device? Why cant she
call Uber from the cloud,
regardless of which device you happen to be
using?

NEW YORK TIMES

More than any other


company in tech, Apple
prizes physical objects
expensive, perfectly
designed, self-contained
nuggets of aluminum
and glass that you buy
today, use for a couple
years and replace.
Until recently, that
Complicated
view
worked
quite
questions
well. Over the past decade, through its own
The
device-centric
products and the many
view gets particularly
copycats that piled on,
limiting when you think
Apples device-centric
about asking your assisaestheticism has made
tant complicated quescomputers easier to use
tions. For instance, what
and more accessible to
if you ask, Can you see
more people around
if theres a room at my
the world and raked
favorite Seattle hotel for
in eye-popping profits
my wedding anniversary
while doing so.
weekend and can you
Yet Apples view inbook it if its less than
creasingly feels like an
$200 a night?
outdated way of thinking
Google, in its demo for
about tech.
Home, a forthcoming
Many of its competivoice assistant device
tors have been moving
meant to rival Amazons
beyond devices toward
Echo, seemed to be able
experiences that tranto handle such quesscend them. These new
tions. Two startups Viv,
technologies exist not
which was founded by
on distinct pieces of
members of the team that
hardware, but above and
created the original Siri
within them. They are
app that Apple bought in
things like Alexa, Ama2010, and SoundHound
zons ambient assistant,
have also unveiled syswhich lives on the intertems that can tackle such
net and is ready to help
ASSOCIATED PRESS
complex queries.
you on the Amazon Echo
To handle these quesbut also on any other de- Apple CEO Tim Cook speaks at the Apple Worldwide Developers Contions, an assistant would
vice that a programmer ference in the Bill Graham Civic Auditorium on June 13 in San Francisco.
need to pull information
adds it to. In an era of
from multiple online
flat iPhone sales, Apple,
services. For instance,
too, has been talking up
booking that Seattle hothe importance of online
tel would involve knowservices, which it sees as
ing your favorite place to
a crucial part of its future
payment apps and fitness apps. Yet Siri stay, your wedding anniversary date and
growth.
So the primary question Apple had to wont let you control music apps, for current hotel prices. It wouldnt make
answer at its annual developers con- example you cant ask Siri to play a sense if that question worked only on
ference earlier this month was wheth- song on Spotify, a feature reserved for certain devices or only if you had certain
er it could expand its worldview. Could use with Apples own music subscrip- apps installed; ideally, it should work on
any device.
it break free from the limiting perspec- tion service.
And that would be very useful. One of
This limitation could be relaxed with
tive of individual devices?
The answer: Yes, but slowly and time. Apple reps told me the third-par- the frustrations of the era ushered in by
its hard to tell if Apple is thinking big ty integrations they had outlined so far the iPhone is app overload there are
were the start of a new effort one that too many apps to download, install and
enough.
could be expanded to new app types in switch between to get anything done.
Cloud-based services
the future. Still, the lack of music sup- A lot of these apps are of little use: You
port was a letdown. Its hard to shake might tap that hotel-booking app once a
What was obvious in the hurricane of the suspicion that Apple is using Siri to year, so why does it have to sit there on
your phone?
new features unveiled by Timothy D. give its own apps a leg up.
Voice interfaces could usher in a new
Cook, Apples chief executive, and his
Another problem is that Siri is still
lieutenants was that they understood hopelessly tied to each Apple device. paradigm in computing, one that would
the importance of cloud-based ser- Siri on your iPhone doesnt really know break free of the tyranny of apps on devices. Many of Apples announcements anything about Siri on your Mac or Ap- vices. They could get a lot done for us
featured some role for the internet to ple TV. On each device, Siri has differ- without much tapping and switching.
integrate peoples experiences on dis- ent capabilities: On your iPhone it can Google, Amazon and several startups
parate Apple devices, often with the call an Uber, if you have the Uber app seem to be rushing headlong to build
help of artificial intelligence.
installed, but Siri on your Mac cant. such a system.
But based on its developer conferBut a lot of these features felt small Siri on your Apple TV can search Youbore. Apple still seems to view online Tube for clips of Stephen Curry, but ence, Im not sure Apple is. Its taking a
more moderate app-based, device-censervices as add-ons to its devices not Siri on your iPhone cant.
as products or platforms that rise above
For now, this isnt a big problem tric path. Many of its voice features will
them. The best way to see the short- you will learn what Siri can do on each be fine useful, even. But it sure isnt
comings of this position is through Siri, device and adjust your queries accord- pushing for a revolution.
the voice assistant that is Apples best
chance to create the kind of transcendent, cross-device experience that its
competitors are now pushing.

Tech giants emphasis on physical


objects seems more and more outdated

New Siri features


Before we get to the limitations, here
are the details on whats new with Siri:
First, the voice assistant can now control some third-party apps on your
phone. You can send text messages
through apps like WhatsApp or Slack
using your voice in the past, you
could do so only with Apples own messaging app. Depending on which developers add Siri to their apps, you might
also be able to use your voice to call a
ride from Uber or Lyft, to pay someone
through Venmo or to tell a fitness app
to start tracking your workout.
Siris other new trick is Mac compatibility. You can now ask your desktop
or laptop to search through your files
or email, for instance.
These are all fine improvements. But
I am struck by the deliberate way Apple is rolling them out. One problem is
that the new Siri will not integrate with
all kinds of apps. It will be able to control only a handful of app types, including messaging apps, ride-sharing apps,

D4

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

Spending Well

MANAGING YOUR MONEY,


WORK AND SUCCESS
Copyright 2016 The New York Times

Talking Points
The Games People Play,
And the Money They Make
The Chinese internet giant
Tencent just paid $8.6 billion for a
controlling stake in Supercell, the
Finnish
creator
of the
video
game
Clash
of the
Clans, and with
good reason.
SUPERCELL
Supercell posted
$2.4 billion in revenue
last year, and in April, its estimated revenue from Clash of the
Clans was just under $4 million
a day.

Fresh Legal Minds for Hire


While demand for other
white-collar jobs has grown
substantially since the start of
the recession, far fewer lawyers
are being hired by firms and big
corporations. The proportion of
recent graduates who find work
as a lawyer is down 10 percentage points since its peak of the
last decade. And though the upper end of the profession finally
shows some signs of recovering,
the middle and lower ranks
remain depressed, especially in
slower-growth regions like the
Rust Belt.

DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND AGEING, VIA


EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY

Hard on the Eyes,


Easy on the Lungs
In 2012, a market research company in Australia announced that
nearly 1,000 smokers had voted
that a drab greenish brown known
as opaque couch (number 448c
in the Pantone color matching
system) was the worlds most
repulsive color, described as
looking like death, filth, lung tar
or baby excrement. Australia
then mandated that cigarettes be
packaged in boxes of that color
with vivid pictures of rotted teeth,
tongues with tumors and the like.
Many smokers have since quit, so
officials in Britain, France and Ireland plan to imitate the packaging.

Cold Beans, Smooth Coffee


Researchers in Britain say you
can achieve more consistent
coffee flavor
by freezing
your beans
before
grinding
them. Colder beans
produce
NOOR KHAMIS/REUTERS
smaller, more
consistently
sized particles when ground,
yielding more flavor from less
coffee, according to the study, published in Scientific Reports.

Fears of Being Shut Out of Housing


ECONOMIC VIEW

ROBERT J. SHILLER

Concern about high


prices is understandable,
but greatly exaggerated.
Rising home prices set off fears
that real estate will become even
more expensive, making it impossible ever to buy a home in a
given city.
Its easy to understand how
such worries spread, but the
historical record suggests that
these fears are generally
exaggerated.
Cities with steep
price increases
today will probably have much
smaller upticks
in the future.
And for the most
part, differences
in price increases
among cities are well
explained by short-term
variations in employment growth.
Consider some
recent trends. In
the year ended in March,
cities like Denver, Seattle and
Portland, Ore.,
had employment
growth of more than 3 percent,
according to the Bureau of Labor
Statistics, along with double-digit
home price increases, according
to the S.&P./Case-Shiller indexes.
At the same time, employment
growth has been relatively tepid
in cities like Boston, Cleveland
and New York, and so have home
price increases.
This is not rocket science.
When businesses in a city have
an unusually successful year and
hire a lot more people, new employees arrive, but initially there
arent enough homes for them.
Home prices rise immediately so
that demand effectively equals
the existing supply, inevitably
causing ripple effects. Someone
with a new, high-paying job will
outbid someone else, who will
have to lower her sights and accept a less attractive house. People further down the ladder will
end up living with their parents
or roommates.
On a national scale, this suggests that weak employment
growth of the kind shown in
Mays jobs report, with only a
38,000 increase in nonfarm payrolls, could eventually hurt home
prices across the country. Thats
possible. But even without a national price slowdown or decline,
there is reason to believe that
double-digit increases wont continue for long in individual cities.
Short-term variations abound, but
for the most part, the differences
in long-term home price increases
in individual cities are about plus
or minus one percentage point
annually. (Exceptions include San
Francisco and Portland, whose
home prices have grown almost
two percentage points above average annually since 1987.)
Cities with big home price increases recently have issued
more building permits per capita.
This supply response has the potential to reverse at least some of

the prices: When housing supply


increases, it tends to bring high
real estate prices down, though
that takes time.
There is another wrinkle, however. Demand lately has tilted
toward homes in central cities,
where land is scarce, rather
than in more spacious distant
suburbs. This creates imbalances. New homes in the
suburbs have often remained
unsold for long intervals. Construction of apartment buildings has increased in cities since
the financial crisis, but new arrivals with good jobs often havent wanted to live in apartments.
This may explain 2016 data showing that permits for new buildings
with five or more units have
flagged. Despite these problems, the supply response to
higher home prices should
moderate or reverse some of
the biggest increases.
Yet many people assume
that home prices will rise ever
upward. These expectations are
more modest than in the years
leading up to the 2008 financial

Expectations vs. Reality


Historical data shows that buying
a home is not a rewarding
investment, especially outside of
wealthy cities.

3.7%

The average expected yearly


home price increase by 2026.

44%

The expected total home price


increase by 2026.

12%

The percentage that real prices of


existing homes decreased from
1975 to 2015.

30%

The percentage that real prices of


newly built homes decreased from
1975 to 2015.

crisis, but they are substantial.


The January 2016 Pulsenomics
U.S. Housing Confidence Survey
showed that expectations for
home price increases over the
next 10 years averaged 3.7 percent a year nationally, which implies a 44 percent total increase
by 2026. Expectations were a little higher for homeowners than
renters and higher yet for recent
buyers which appear to reflect
a wishful-thinking bias. They
were highest for recent buyers in
high-price-increase cities, peaking at almost 6.5 percent a year.
Historically, however, investing in homes just hasnt rewarded most homeowners that much.
As I have calculated, home prices corrected for Consumer Price

Index inflation nationally were


nearly flat for the century ending
in 1990. And when nominal home
prices are deflated by per capita
disposable personal income, it
turns out that real prices of existing homes fell 12 percent while
real prices of newly built homes
fell 30 percent from 1975 to 2015.
As their disposable income has
grown relative to home prices, individuals have bought more housing. Thats partly why average
household size declined to 2.5 people in 2015 from 2.9 in 1975. The
percent of households consisting
of a single person rose to 28 percent in 2015 from 20 percent in
1975. There are other explanations
for this, but one is certainly that
housing has been getting cheaper,
relative to income, so we are consuming much more of it.
New homes are larger: Median floor space has risen to 2,169
square feet in 2010 from 1,525 in
1973, census data shows. This
large increase generally holds
within major metropolitan areas
and outside them. While living
space is constrained in the heart
of large, high-priced cities like
New York, builders elsewhere
have usually been able to accommodate peoples demands for
cheap large homes.
Given these facts, why do people still worry that home prices
are getting out of reach? These
fears may reflect anxieties about

RICHARD BORGE

other issues like income inequality, globalization and the


threat of job losses because of
robots and artificial intelligence.
In prosperous cities, rising prices
may connote economic exclusion.
After all, American society is
increasingly divided according
to educational attainment and
income. In some circles, rarefied
home prices may set off worries about being unable to live
in choice locations shared with
successful people. Home prices
may, unfortunately, be viewed
as a measurement of success in
life rather than merely of floor
space, and fear of being priced
out of housing may well be rooted
in deeper broodings about maintaining a position in the social
hierarchy.

As Hedge Fund Trades Go South, Investors Head for Exits


INVESTING

ALEXANDRA STEVENSON
Hedge fund titans once ran their
firms like elite private clubs, picking who made it past the velvet
rope and how much they would
pay for access to supercharged
performance. Years of poor performance have led a number
of funds to consider something
more like general admission.
Some
big-name
investors
MetLife, American International Group and the New York
City pension plan, among them
have begun to withdraw their
money from hedge funds. The
investors who stay are getting a
chance to negotiate and dictate
lower fees and better terms for
sharing in the returns that managers make.
Its an unusual position for
many hedge fund managers,
who as a group are not known for
sharing well with others. For decades, hedge funds operated on a
2 and 20 model: Investors paid

fees of 2 percent of assets under


management and 20 percent of
any gain in a year. When performance was good, the founders of
the biggest firms were found at
the top of global wealth rankings.
Now, in a bid to persuade investors to stay, some managers
are lowering fees in return for
locking up investor money for
a longer period of time and setting performance targets that if
exceeded, investors would pay a
fee. For newcomers, managers
are offering the favorable terms
once exclusively offered to longtime clients.
High fees are like an expensive car, said Adam I. Taback of
Wells Fargo Investment Institute. It is fine as long as youre
getting performance out of it.
In recent years, investor criticism of hedge fund underperformance against a roaring stock
market was met with frustration
by managers. A hedge fund managers job was to protect in down
years, not outperform in good
years, the industry argued. But

roeconomic trends
were
caught
off
guard by wrong-footed bets and had to
shutter their firms.
And many hedge
fund managers found
themselves crowded
in the same stock.
That meant big returns as everyone
piled in but bigger
declines when everyCHANG W. LEE/THE NEW YORK TIMES
one sold out. Valeant
BETTER TERMS As big investors like MetLife
Pharmaceuticals
withdraw money from hedge funds, the investors
International,
for
who stay are able to get a better share of returns.
example, was one
of the most popular
stocks held by hedge
funds in 2015, and its stock price
when markets began to fall last
soared to more than $260 a share
summer, so did hedge fund reat one point. But when news of a
turns, rendering the point moot.
government investigation came
Over the last 18 months, some
to light and issues with the comof the best-known managers
panys pricing strategy became
including William A. Ackman of
apparent, the stock came crashPershing Square Capital Maning down. On June 22, Valeants
agement and Larry Robbins of
shares closed at $21.64.
Glenview Capital Management
Mr. Ackman, who has been
have consistently lost money.
Valeants biggest cheerleader,
Others that made bets on mac-

has lost billions. His Pershing


Square Holdings is down 15.10
percent this year through June
22 in large part because of the
Valeant position.
All of this has prompted some
self-reflection within the industry.
But for some investors, acknowledgment of poor performance is
not enough.
Investors pulled $15.1 billion
from the industry in the first
quarter of the year. But these exits are a drop in the ocean compared with the $2.9 trillion the
industry manages.
Still, the pressure is mounting.
Mr. Robbins recently apologized to investors in an attempt
to stem the outflow of investor
money from his firm. He pledged
to right the ship as quickly as
possible and even offered investors the opportunity to put more
money into a new fund that would
waive fees.
As long as performance continues to lag, hedge funds will
be scrutinized and hedge fund
giants will be at a disadvantage.

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

D5

| THE NEW YORK TIMES

Credentials to Check
In Picking an Adviser
WEALTH

PAUL SULLIVAN
A few years ago, the board that
administers the certified financial planner designation decided
to test the idea that investors
will ask pointed questions of a
prospective adviser and not be
fooled by a slick presentation.
So the Certified Financial Planner Board of Standards hired a
professional D.J. named Azmyth
Kaminski, shaved off his dreadlocks, removed his body piercings
and put him in a suit. It taught
him a few financial phrases and
sat him in a conference room.
Then it brought in people looking
for a financial adviser. We gave
him buzzwords, like 401(k) is the
way to go, said Joe Maugeri,
managing director for corporate
relations at the CFP Board.
After Mr. Kaminski spent about
15 minutes with each person, all
but one were ready to work with
him, Mr. Maugeri said.
The experience presents an
interesting conundrum for people seeking advice: how best to
determine if a financial adviser is
qualified for the job.
Too often people fixate on ferreting out the worst advisers. The

Financial Industry Regulatory


Authoritys BrokerCheck website
lists brokers who have had complaints filed against them. But
the broker does not appear on the
list until long after a problem has
been detected. The bigger issue is
whether the person advising you
is qualified to do the job.
John Bowman, managing director of the Americas at the CFA
Institute, which administers the
chartered financial analyst designation, said investors should
ensure that the person making
the investment decisions has the

Financial-planning
skills are not always
easy to judge.
qualifications, knowledge and experience to make those selections.
Aligning your interests with
someone who had a previous career, maybe one similar to what
you are doing now, makes a certain sense. But how do you know
if that person is truly qualified?
One answer is that credentials
help. They show seriousness
about the profession. And that,
mixed with the ability to listen
to and understand your position,

can help you reach your goals.


Gregory Kasten, an anesthesiologist, finished his medical residency at the University of Kentucky in 1983 and stayed on staff.
At the time, he said, the investing
options offered through the university were limited to an annuity
or a stock fund. Outside of that, he
was being bombarded by brokers
trying to sell him partnerships or
mutual funds with high fees.
I wondered if I couldnt do better, Dr. Kasten said.
That led to his talking about investments in the doctors lounge
and, initially, a second job advising
his fellow doctors as a registered
investment adviser. When he hit
$70 million of assets under management in 1992, he quit being
a doctor. Today, he runs Unified
Trust, a $4.5 billion trust company.
What Dr. Kasten brought to his
financial advisory practice was
the ability to connect with his fellow doctors. He knew how their
income came in. He understood
their concerns. But he backed up
that trust with adviser credentials, from a designation as a certified financial planner to a masters
in business administration. I see
the two professions as very similar, he said. There is a series of
best practices, a code of ethics, the

CFP BOARD

A GOOD IMPRESSION After Azmyth Kaminski, a D.J., cleaned up and learned

a few stock phrases, people were ready to trust their investments to him.

doctor-patient relationship.
But the measure of an adviser
should be the same for those who
have come from another career
and those who have been in the
business all along. There are a
lot of successful people who are
trying to leverage their success
in other businesses and apply it
to advice, Mr. Bowman said. I
would just challenge them with the
same question: How do you feel
prepared and competent to handle
this persons life savings?
The risk is that someone decided to become an adviser with
little knowledge or because a
previous career did not work out.
Our profession has a low barrier
to entry, Mr. Bowman said. We
need to start pulling up fortified
walls to protect people.

Rewards
To Save
For College
YOUR MONEY

ANN CARRNS
Does it make sense to use a cashback credit card to help save for
college? It can, for consumers
with the discipline to pay off their
card balance each month.
A small number of credit cards
offer cash-back rewards that
can be deposited directly into a
529 college savings account, the
state-sponsored accounts that
offer tax advantages. The cards
include the Fidelity Rewards Visa
Signature card, which offers 2 percent cash back when the reward
goes into an eligible Fidelity account. Others include the CollegeCounts 529 Rewards Visa card for
participants in Alabamas 529 plan
and the Bright Directions 529 Rewards Visa card, for participants
in the Illinois program. The cards,
issued by Union Bank & Trust, offer 1.529 percent back. The Bright
Directions website estimates that
a family spending $2,500 a month
would earn $458 a year in cashback savings.
The Upromise MasterCard,
offered through Sallie Maes Upromise college savings program,
offers a range of cash-back rewards, depending on where you
shop and what you buy. Users
can earn as much as 10 percent
back if they shop with the card
on Upromise.com, an online hub
for participating merchants. The
cash rewards can be swept automatically into many 529 accounts.
Part of the cards attraction is
the automatic savings they offer,
said Nicholas Clements of the financial website MagnifyMoney.
You could use general cashback credit cards, and deposit
the savings yourself. Some cards
have various rules to follow to
maximize their benefits.
When you automate something, Mr. Clements said, the
likelihood of doing it increases
dramatically.

Q&A
What 529 accounts does the
Fidelity cash-back card work
with?
Fidelity manages four 529
savings programs, in Arizona,
Delaware, New Hampshire
and Massachusetts.
If I use multiple cash-back
cards, how can I keep them
straight?
Mr. Clements noted that you
could potentially save at higher rates by obtaining multiple
cash-back cards and making
sure to use them in the appropriate category. If you go that
route, he suggested buying
little colored stickers for the
cards in your wallet to remind
you when to use them, like dining or buying gas or groceries.

JAMES OBRIEN

Which Reviews to Believe?


TECHNOLOGY

DAVID STREITFELD

Millions rely on online


ratings, but a study finds
them unreliable.
Botto Bistro is far from the worst
restaurant in America. But it
doesnt mind if you think so.
A small Italian place across the
bay from San Francisco, Botto is
just a few miles from my house.
The other night, I packed up the
family and headed off for dinner.
I remembered one of Bottos
reviews on Yelp said, The pizza
tastes like the rag at Dennys that
they use to wipe down the counters and tabletops, so we decided

to get that, plus a beet salad. The


attitude is brusque. We have no
ice, no butter, no ranch, no lemon, a sign behind the counter
warns. We charge for bread. We
charge for everything.
Give Botto five stars for undermining Yelp. The bistro did
not want to be reviewed and be
subjected to the whims of people
with no names but plenty of opinions. But Yelp doesnt allow businesses to opt out.
Some shady outfits try to load
the dice by buying favorable reviews, but Botto went in the other
direction. It asks people to trash
it. When we left, the co-owner and
chef, Davide Cerretini, gave me a
sticker that said, I gave Botto
one star on Yelp. If I did that, my
next pizza would be half price.
The restaurant has been fight-

ing Yelp for nearly two years.


More than half of its 250 reviews
are one-star. Mr. Cerretini seems
to enjoy the game. Our business
is up, he said.
If Bottos critical notices on
Yelp are often written to be outrageous (the pizza arrived at
the table with a dead rat under
the cheese), they also reflect the
confused state of reviewing on
the internet. Even as researchers
are finding that reviews are less
reliable, more people are relying
on them. On Yelp, the number of
reviews exceeds 100 million.
Reviews tell us what to read
next, where to eat dinner and
what to order there, where to go
on vacation and what doctor to
call. But if reviews are ubiquitous, there are also controversies
over how many were bought by

The chartered financial analyst


designation is about a persons
ability to assess investments and
provide advice. The certified financial planner credential speaks
to the persons ability to help clients create plans for their financial lives. Both groups are trying
to make the argument that their
designations mean more than the
176 or so others that can be placed
after a persons name with few or
not very rigorous requirements.
As to the D.J. who posed as a
financial adviser, Mr. Maugeri
said that one person still wanted
to use him as a financial adviser
even after finding out the truth.
It told us a lot about how consumers choose a financial adviser, Mr. Maugeri said. And how
so much of it is impressions.

the subject rather than written


as finely reasoned opinions from
a neutral party, and whether that
distorts all results.
In May, Yelp issued 59 new
Consumer Alerts, notices it puts
on a businesss page that it has
been caught trying to pay for
better reviews. Lifehacker.com
recently took on Rotten Tomatoes
and Metacritic, arguing that their
method of compiling reviews
was fundamentally flawed.
FiveThirtyEight.com
reported
that men are sabotaging the online reviews of TV shows aimed
at women.
Bart de Langhe, an assistant
professor of marketing at the
University of Colorado, used to
accept online numerical reviews
implicitly. Then, when his son was
born, he needed to buy a car seat.
Mr. de Langhe noticed that the
seat rated lowest by Consumer
Reports got a high rating on Amazon, and the one rated highest by
Consumer Reports received a low
rating on Amazon.
The more popular seat on Amazon was also more expensive.
Were reviewers, he wondered,
paying more attention to things
like price and brand than the ability of the seat to protect its occupant? With two other researchers, Mr. de Langhe began a study
that compared online reviews for
items like air-conditioners and
car batteries with the evaluations
in Consumer Reports.
Navigating by the Stars was
published in April in The Journal
of Consumer Research. After analyzing 344,157 Amazon ratings
of 1,272 products, the researchers
found a substantial disconnect
between the objective quality
information that online reviews
actually convey and the extent to
which consumers trust them.
In other words, the consumer
saw a number 4.6 stars out of
5 and took it much more seriously than it merited.
Julie Law, a spokeswoman for
Amazon, said Amazon customer reviews reflect the feedback,
tastes and concerns of real customers, not professional reviewers. Thats what makes them
powerful.
Mr. de Langhe stuck with this
recommendation: You should
rely much less on reviews than
you currently do.

How We Deal With Money Is a Science and an Art


SKETCH GUY

CARL RICHARDS
Money is an interesting actor
that plays two roles in our lives.
Its something to be calculated.
Its what we tell ourselves about
our relationship with money.
For six years, we have rented a
home in Park City, Utah, and put
off making any long-term real estate commitments. We knew we
would get to it eventually. Well,
eventually arrived.
Even after entering conservative assumptions about income,
savings, housing prices, and the
renting-versus-owning calculation in Utah, the numbers dont
lie. The spreadsheet shows that if

we want to stay in the community


we love, the best thing we can do
is buy. Thats great news, right?
But heres the story Ive told
myself: The moment I, Carl Richards, buy a single-family home,

this one action will


cause a global financial meltdown.
The housing market will crash. Its
a powerful story
based on strong
emotions around
my
experience
losing a home.
I know I am not
alone in telling
myself stories that
CARL RICHARDS
are not true. Maybe you have told
yourself that you dont need to
worry about the spreadsheet. If
you just try a little harder or get
a little luckier, things will be fine.
You dont need to bother with the
actual dollars and cents. I think

we know how that will turn out.


Or maybe your spreadsheet is
perfect. But that doesnt stop you
from telling the story that youre
a day away from living under a
bridge. Even when the numbers
add up, fear and anxiety can still
drive our stories. So dealing with
money is a science and an art. We
need the logic of the spreadsheet
to help us separate fact from fiction. But we cant ignore the stories we tell ourselves to figure out
how we relate to that money.
Paying attention to and understanding both roles can be the
difference between feeling good
or feeling miserable about money.
I choose to feel good. Check
back with me once we have
moved into our house.

D6

MONEY / TECHNOLOGY

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

LANCASTER AIRPORT

Pitts withdraws support for subsidy


Says market should determine viability of commercial air service
TIM STUHLDREHER

TSTUHLDREHER@LNPNEWS.COM

For more than a half-century,


airline flights out of Lancaster
Airport operated without a subsidy.
And though U.S. Rep. Joe Pitts
helped modify the federal Essential Air Service program so
that Lancaster would be eligible,
he no longer thinks the airport
should get the money.
Pitts went to bat for the airport
and supported continuing the
subsidy because the aftermath
of 9/11 was an exceptional time
for the airline industry and small
airports needed help, said Tom
Tillett, Pitts chief of staff.
However, 9/11 was 15 years
ago. At this point, Pitts believes
the market should determine
whether or not commercial service is economically sustainable at the airport, Tillett said.
Even before Colgan Air ended
its Lancaster-Pittsburgh flights,
which were not subsidized, in
March 2003, local officials had
begun to seek Essential Air Service support for the airport.

At first, Lancaster was ruled


ineligible because its within 70
miles of the major hub of Philadelphia. (Critics often point to
nearby Harrisburg International Airport as well.) Its admission
to the program required a 2003
amendment to the law, championed by Pitts and then-U.S. Sen.
Arlen Specter, requiring regulators to consider the most commonly used community-to-hub
route.
For Lancaster, thats a highway
route involving Route 222 and
the turnpike, about 85 miles.
Thus, when scheduled flights
started up again in September
2004, they were subsidized. The
federal support has persisted
through successive carriers, albeit with a few hiccups and funding scares.
A carrier serving Lancaster can
receive up to $2.5 million; last
year, Sun Air received about $2
million.
Commercial flights account for
just a small percentage of Lancaster Airports business, Lancaster Airport Director David

Eberly said.
On the other hand, theyre the
part thats of most interest to the
general public.
The Essential Air Service program has critics who contend it
is wasteful and overdue for elimination. Some specifically single
out Lancaster, with its limited
ridership and proximity to Philadelphia and Harrisburg.
Essential Air Service is funded with a roughly 60/40 mix of
taxpayer dollars and overflight
fees, paid by international
flights that traverse U.S. airspace.
Air travelers are generally affluent enough to have other options, and while airports like the
prestige of commercial flights,
tax dollars should go to more
critical needs, opponents argue.
Proponents say it helps local
economies stay viable.
The program currently costs
more than $250 million a year.
The money goes to more than
100 airports in the lower 48
states. (There is a separate program for Alaska. )

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

Airport: Carrier
Continued from D1

In addition, Sun Air


temporarily lost its reservation system when
the commuter airline
providing it closed up
shop. And a bad 2014-15
winter resulted in late
and canceled flights.
Southern Airways, by
contrast, has some of the
best flight-completion
statistics in the industry,
Sisson said.
The company was
founded just three years
ago, in June 2013. Its a
highly unconventional
airline: It sticks to small
airplanes and small airports, a practice that allows it to steer clear of
various regulations that
dont relate to safety but
add to costs. Its pilots
wear blue suede shoes.
Were everything the
legacy carriers arent,
Sisson told the online
magazine The Bitter
Southerner last year.
Other carriers may fly
faster planes, but air
time isnt what people

hate about flying. We just


cut out the hassle of the
big TSA (Transportation
Security
Administration) hub on either end,
he told the magazine.
In the mid-Atlantic,
unlike the Gulf, Southern Airways cant stick
to private terminals and
bypass TSA hubs: The
hubs are where people
want to go. Thats fine,
Sisson said: There is no
plan to remove TSA from
our process in Sun Airs
former footprint.
Lancaster
Airport
Director David Eberly
called Southern Airways
approach refreshing.
Its nice to see a company bringing back a focus
on customer service, he
said.
The bottom line is,
Southern Airways saw
value in Sun Airs midAtlantic business, Sisson
said.
Hes confident that
with the changes now
under way, we can really make something.

Singletary: Discussing finances before marriage


Continued from D1

thats the root of the


arguments. It is the fundamental issues that the
couples failed to address
or even notice before
their wedding.
A study released earlier this year found that
88 percent of adults 25
to 34 who are married or

living with a partner said


that financial decisions
are a constant source of
tension in their relationship. And yet, many
couples in the survey
which was conducted
by the American Institute of CPAs and the Ad
Council said they had
never discussed their

financial goals or habits.


The focus of So You
Think You Want to Get
Married? is broader
than finances, but
discovering who your
potential mate is financially is vital to a successful marriage.
Throughout the book,
the Littles share stories

about couples who have


gone through their program, such as Jimmy
and Susie. They, like
other participants, had
to share their credit
reports and credit scores
with each other.
Turns out, Susie was
an excessive spender
with a poor credit histo-

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Higbees work to the landfill.
The few remaining dogeared copies became a prized
fishermans possession. But
reprints were impossible
because the maps were printed
in non-photographic blue.
Higbee was even offered $400
for one of his last maps. And
state agencies were forced to
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key.
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ry. Although Jimmy was


aware of her spending
habits, he didnt know
she had been criminally
prosecuted for writing
bad checks.
Jimmy could not
believe he had come so
close to getting married
without taking a closer
look at the implications of Susies extreme
spending habits, the
Littles write.
Through various
exercises and questions,
the Littles get people to
explore and evaluate
their decision to love for
a lifetime. The Littles
also advise couples to
get parental guidance in
their decision to marry.
Dont think your family
dynamics wont impact
your marriage, they
write.

Spiritual or secular,
we should be encouraging serious couples to
really delve deep while
they are courting. In
relationships, wearing
masks causes people to
marry individuals they
do not really know.
The underlying theme
in So You Think You
Want to Get Married?
is: As you gain insight
about your partner,
when you find serious issues, you can and should
walk away from the relationship if the problems
are insurmountable or
you are unwilling to live
with what you discover.
It will save you a lot of
heartache and money.

n michelle.singletary@washpost.com

Komando: Wi-Fi
Continued from D3

expensive ones support the newer 802.11ac


standard. If you only
have an n router, you
can skip the ac extenders because you wont
get much benefit from
them.
Many extenders also
include an Ethernet port
or two. This lets you run
a cable to a gadget that
doesnt have a built-in
Wi-Fi receiver, like a
desktop or older smart
TV. This saves you the
hassle of running a cable
across the house.
While most range extenders plug right into a
wall outlet, some include
a pass-through outlet
so you can plug another
gadget into the extender.
In a home or office with
limited plug space, this
might be a handy option
to look for.

Advanced
features
Finally, some extenders have more advanced
special features like
built-in media streaming or file storage. Some
can even work with your
router to prioritize traffic for streaming video

or gaming. Unless you


really have some important media requirements, I wouldnt buy an
extender based on these
features.
If you arent sure
where to start, here are
a few models. TP-Links
$20 TL-WA850RE is
a good start. Its single
band, but it has an Ethernet port, signal meter
and plugs into a standard outlet. If you want
a dual-band solution and
802.11ac support, the
$50 TP-LINK RE200
is a good option. While
TP-Link is usually a
good budget option,
some people prefer to
buy a more recognizable brand. The Netgear
N300 WiFi Extender is a
basic single-band model
that normally goes for
$60 on Amazon. If you
want a dual-band model,
the Netgear AC1200
WiFi Range Extender is
$30 more.

n Kim Komando hosts the

nations largest talk radio


show about consumer
electronics, computers and
the internet. Locally it can
be heard on WHP-AM 580,
Harrisburg, from 7 to 10 p.m.
Sundays.

Name ____________________________________________________________
Address __________________________________________________________
City _______________________________ State _______ Zip ______________
Phone ___________________________________________________________
Mail to: LNP MEDIA GROUP, Inc.
Classified / Stream Map
PO Box 1328, Lancaster, PA 17608-1328
Check or money order payable to LNP MEDIA GROUP, Inc.

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with us

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LancasterOnline

Perspective

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

n CONTACT: SUZANNE CASSIDY, 291-8694, SCASSIDY@LNPNEWS.COM

ALSO INSIDE: GENERATION NEXT

MODERN-DAY
DILEMMA

MAYOR J. RICHARD GRAY

P.J. REILLY

SPECIAL TO LNP

LNP OUTDOORS WRITER

Gun violence requires


common sense and common ground

More gun laws not


the answer to mass shootings

Any productive attempt at working together to address the prevalence


of firearms and the frequency of mass shootings in the United States must
start with an examination of the Second Amendment: A well regulated
Militia, being necessary to the security of a free state, the right of the
people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed.
Extremist gun rights advocates argue that the Second Amendment conveys an unlimited right that cannot be regulated, even in the most modest
of ways. For example, the National Rifle Association opposes universal
background checks and has also stood in the way of attempts to impose
a limitation on the purchase of guns by potential terrorists named on a
no-fly list. The NRA argues that these regulations would be an infringement of the Second Amendment. Interpreting the Constitution in these
absolute, simplistic terms defies legal methods and common sense.
Every right conferred in the Bill of Rights includes exceptions that allow our society to function in a civilized manner. For example, the First
Amendments guarantee of free speech does not allow one to speak slander; freedom of the press does not license child pornography; and freedom
of religion does not permit polygamy. The Bill of Rights in our Constitution balances individual rights with preservation of the greater good.
Simply stated, with every right comes well-regulated limits so that the
exercise of individual rights is not harmful to society. The ability of those
who would abuse those rights, whether by hijacking a plane, shooting up a
nightclub or falsely yelling fire in a crowded theater, needs to be limited
as much as possible.
Extremists often argue that the solution to gun violence lies in the further proliferation of firearms in order to provide for self-defense. In some

Its a tough time to be a gun owner in America.


With each mass shooting, such as the one that killed 49 and injured 53 in
Orlando, it seems the vitriol against guns and those of us who have them
becomes louder and more pointed.
I get the anger. I understand the sentiment, We have got to do something to stop these killings.
But I am one who doesnt understand blaming the inanimate object.
I dont agree that the something we should do is to infringe upon the
Second Amendment right to keep and bear arms.
I am a firm believer that guns dont kill people; people kill people.
I have a semi-automatic rifle thats similar to the Sig Sauer MCX that
Omar Mateen used in the Pulse nightclub attack. The main difference is
mine has a solid stock, rather than the folding one employed by the MCX.
Ive heard it said many times the past several days that no civilian needs
such guns because they are solely intended for killing lots of people as fast
as possible.
I use mine for hunting and target shooting. I bought it for those reasons.
It has never killed anyone.
I have many friends with similar guns. Theirs also have never killed
anyone.
Owning those rifles is a freedom guaranteed to us under the U.S. Constitution. Using it for legal purposes is a responsibility that we shoulder.
And if the government is going to say we cant handle that responsibility,
then we really are opening up a can of worms that has no bottom.
Case in point, we all need water; we dont need beer.
REILLY, page E4

GRAY, page E4

n Rick Gray is the mayor of Lancaster.

WILLIAM P. KIEHL
SPECIAL TO LNP

Have faith in our system,


if not our candidates
As we approach the 240th
anniversary of American
independence next week, it
is customary to look back at
where weve come from and to
look ahead to what wed like to
become.
But this is a most unusual
year an election year in
which there are candidates of

the two major political parties


vying for the presidency who
are disliked, distrusted and
even feared by most of the
electorate.
Even some within their own
party ranks are wary of their
qualities as a candidate and as
a potential president.
I need not recount how this

n P.J. Reilly is an LNP outdoors writer. Email him at preilly@lnpnews.com.

state of affairs came to pass.


Unless you were in a coma
or living in a cave well off the
grid, you know exactly what
happened and you probably
have a good notion as to why it
happened.
But uncomfortable as it may
be to have candidates on the
ballot that perhaps a majority of the voters believe are
unworthy of the job they seek,
does it really matter?
Washington, D.C., is littered
with the failed ambitions of
men and women great and
small. Nearly every presidential contender believed that
he or she could change the
world or at least Washington.
High ambitions or unbridled

hubris, in the end, each has


realized that they are human
after all.
The Founding Fathers of our
nation were realists. They understood human nature very
well. They devised a system of
checks and balances, of a deliberative process that slows
down the rush to judgment
and prevents enthusiasm
from getting ahead of common sense.
No matter how persuasive,
silver-tongued, Svengalilike or policy-wonky a new
president may be, the checks
and balances of the system
will grind down the most
ambitious of plans. The three
coequal branches of government will work to thwart most

of the bad ideas and hopefully


permit at least some of the
good ones to survive.
And that is not a bad thing.
In fact, it is just how the system was designed to work.
So whether the victor in November is Republican Donald
Trump or Democrat Hillary
Clinton, or even perhaps Libertarian Party candidate Gary
Johnson, they will find

KIEHL, page E4

n William P. Kiehl is a retired

foreign service officer who served


35 years with the U.S. Information
Agency and U.S. Department of
State in Europe, Asia and Washington. He was also a diplomat in
residence at the U.S. Army War
College in Carlisle. He resides in
Lancaster County.

E2

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

Opinion

LNP | Founded 1794

FORMERLY KNOWN AS THE INTELLIGENCER JOURNAL/LANCASTER NEW ERA/SUNDAY NEWS

Beverly R. Steinman

Barbara Hough Roda

Robert M. Krasne

Suzanne Cassidy

Chairman Emeritus

Chairman of the Board

Executive Editor

Editor of the Opinion Page

Publishers: 1866-1917 Andrew Steinman | 1921-1962 J. Hale Steinman |


1921-1962 John F. Steinman (Co-Publisher) | 1963-1980 John F. Steinman |
2013- Robert M. Krasne

FOR THE LATEST UPDATES, GO TO LANCASTERONLINE.COM

In our words

Hoping history
doesnt repeat itself
THE ISSUE
There are signs of progress in the Pennsylvania Legislature toward a state
budget for 2016-17. Neither side wants a repeat of last fiscal years ninemonth impasse, which eventually amounted to very little by the time a
budget was passed in March. The deadline is Thursday. Both sides realize,
especially in an election year, that failure will be costly.
Expectations are not high. Thats the good
news for the Pennsylvania Legislature. The
bad news is our lawmakers set the bar for
progress toward a budget so low last year, that
any sort of faint rustling sound coming from
inside the state Capitol would be cause for
celebration.
Our cynical side says, of course, in an election year, when all state House members and
half of the Senate are up for re-election, the
Legislature is going to show signs of emerging from its fiscal stupor and do some actual
work. It certainly wont play well to the voters
if lawmakers return home to their districts to
report, Weve done absolutely nothing. Have
a nice summer.
But progress, whatever the motivation, is
still progress, and it must be acknowledged
and encouraged, if not celebrated.
The budget deadline is looming. Lawmakers and, more importantly, the people of
Pennsylvania, want desperately to put a year
of politically inspired nothingness behind
them. And if Goethe was right when he said
we learn when by seeking and blundering,
perhaps there is cause for genuine optimism.
Maybe, just maybe, we can get beyond the
accusations, endless meetings, finger-pointing, frustration and snarky press conferences
and really get something done.
Within the last few weeks, weve seen signs
of life a change to the liquor law, albeit a
modest one, and a pension reform bill that
has yet to be finalized. Its not loaves and fishes, but its something.
There are a lot of issues still on the table,
including Democratic Gov. Tom Wolfs proposed increase in education funding, $34
million for heroin addiction programs, and
gambling expansion, among other items. The
governor has backed off his proposals for
sales and income tax increases which, given
the timing, makes sense.
G. Terry Madonna, director of Franklin &
Marshall Colleges Center for Politics and Public Affairs, didnt see the governors tax increases going anywhere but in a drawer anyway.
There will be no income or sales tax hikes.
They havent done that in an election year in
40 years, he said.
There is also another potential deadline
more symbolic than actual beyond the June
30 fiscal deadline if both sides cant come to
an agreement: the Democratic and Republican national conventions in July. Lawmakers,
Madonna reminds, will attend those conven-

tions, and the last thing they want is to show


up without having completed a budget after
two years of trying. It simply doesnt look
good.
Coming up with a budget on which both
sides can agree shouldnt be as difficult as it
has been in Pennsylvania. But our expectations are realistic.
I think theres a sense were all going to
hold hands and sing Kumbaya and go home
and declare victory, Democratic state Rep.
Mike Sturla said.
Not sure who had that sense, but it wasnt
us, not after what we witnessed in the last
year. But something between nothing and a
love-in would be a good start toward a functioning state government.
It would be natural and understandable if
you were to look at these negotiations the way
you do the length of days in winter. In February, youre sick of the snow and cold. You
cant wait for spring. The days get longer by a
minute or so each day. You dont really notice.
Incremental progress, one minute at a time.
Then, before you know it, its spring! Of course,
sometimes were still freezing in March.
It wasnt until March this year that Pennsylvania, after a nine-month stalemate, finally had a 2015-16 budget, toothless as it
might have been. There was nothing about
liquor or pensions. It basically allowed public schools to remain open and funded prisons, health care and agriculture programs.
The bare minimum. A C-minus at best for
content and an F for timeliness. There was
no grand compromise and no real progress.
When the budget was finally finished, without the governors signature, Pennsylvania
was the next to last state (Illinois was last)
to have a budget for 2015-16. We cant afford
that again. There are practical implications
for real people and, beyond that, its just flatout embarrassing.
We are urging Pennsylvania lawmakers,
from both sides of the aisle, to come together
and carve out a budget that makes sense. Both
sides will have to give. Some pet projects will
be sacrificed. Neither side will get everything
it wants. Thats the nature of compromise, at
least when adults do it.
Deadlines do mean something, otherwise
we wouldnt have them. The budget deadline
arrives in four days. It is very important for
everyone involved that our elected representatives hear the ticking clock. At this point,
the sound should be deafening.

FIND MORE ONLINE


bit.ly/PABudget16-17

CHARLES
KRAUTHAMMER
THE WASHINGTON POST

The unscintillating rhetoric


belonging to Hillary Clinton
I believe in an America always moving toward
the future. Hillary
Clinton, June 21.
This was not the
most important line in
Clintons Ohio economic
policy speech, only the
most amazing. Surely
there cannot be a more
vacuous, meaningless
piece of political rhetoric.
Every terrestrial entity
from nematode to the
United States of America
moves forward into the
future quite on its own,
thank you. Where else is
there to go?
To be fair, however,
spouting emptiness is
tempting when you have
the impossible task of
running as the de facto
incumbent in a ragingly
change year. Clinton
is trapped by circumstance. Shes the status
quo candidate, Barack
Obamas heir, running
essentially on more of
the same when, after
two terms and glaring
failures both at home
and abroad, Americans
are hardly clamoring for
four more years.
Historically speaking,
they almost invariably
do not. Which is why for
the last 60 years, with
only one exception,
whenever one party has
held the White House
for two terms, its been
unceremoniously turfed
out. (The one exception:
1988, when Ronald Reagan was rewarded with
a third term to be served
by George H.W. Bush.)
How little does Clinton have to offer? In her
recent speeches, amid
paragraph upon paragraph of attacks on Donald Trump, she lists the
usual investments in
clean energy and small
business, in school construction and the power
grid, and of course more
infrastructure.
Thats about as tired
a cliche as taking the
country into the future.
Ever heard a candidate
come out against infrastructure? Even Trump
waxes poetic about the
roads and bridges he will
rebuild, plus erecting
that beautiful wall.
Havent we been here
before? All those shovelready infrastructure
projects to be funded by
Obamas $830 billion
stimulus? Where did the
money go? Yet the one
area of agreement among
all candidates of all parties is that our infrastructure is crumbling still.
Defending the status
quo today is a thankless
undertaking. It nearly
cost Clinton the Democratic nomination. Bernie Sanders campaigned
loudly and convincingly
against the baleful consequences of the Obama
years stagnant wages,
income inequality and a
squeezing of the middle
class. Clinton was forced
to echo those charges
while simultaneously
defending the president and policies that
brought on the miseries.
Not easy to do. She is

left, therefore, with a


pared and pinched rationale for her candidacy.
She promises no fundamental change, no relief
from the new normal of
slow growth, low productivity and economic
stagnation. Instead, she
offers government as
remediator, as gap-filler.
Hillaryism steps in to alleviate the consequences
of what it cannot change
with a patchwork of
subsidies, handouts and
small-ball initiatives.
Hence the $30 billion
she proposes to soften
the blow for the coal
miners she will put out
of business. Hence her
cure for stagnant wages.
Employers are reluctant
to give you a wage hike
in an economy growing
at 1 percent. So she will
give it to you instead by
decreeing from Washington a huge increase in
the minimum wage.
Hillaryism embodies
the essence of modern liberalism. Having
reached the limits of
a welfare state grown
increasingly sclerotic,
bureaucratic and dysfunctional, the mission of
modern liberalism is to
patch the fraying safety
net with yet more programs and entitlements.
It reflexively rejects
structural reform.
The triangulating Bill
Clinton was open to
structural change, most
notably in his 1996 welfare reform. Hillaryism
is not.
She is offering herself
as safety-net patcher.
A worthy endeavor,
perhaps, but, compared
to the magic promised first by Sanders,
now by Trump, hardly
scintillating. Hence
her campaign strategy:
platitudes (the future),
programs (a dozen for
every constituency) and
a heavy dose of negativity. Her speeches go
through the motions on
vision, while relentlessly attacking Trump
as radical, extreme and
dangerous.
Her line of argument
is quite straightforward: Im the devil you
know experienced,
if flawed; safe, if devious; reliable, if totally
uninspired. I give you
steady incrementalism.
Meanwhile, the other
guy is absurdly risky. His
policies on trade, immigration and national
security threaten trade
wars, social unrest and
alienation from friends
and allies abroad.
The only thing missing from the Clinton
campaign thus far is the
nuclear option. Lyndon
Johnson charged that
Barry Goldwater was going to blow up the world.
Literally. Johnsons
Daisy commercial
counts down to a mushroom cloud.
Somewhere in the
bowels of Clinton headquarters, a smart young
thing is working on a
modern version. Look
for it on a TV near you.

n Charles Krauthammer is a columnist for The Washington


Post. Twitter: @krauthammer

OP-ED/LETTERS

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

ISMAIL SMITH-WADE-EL
SPECIAL TO LNP

Inequality still present


in our legal system
In late May, the
Supreme Court of the
United States handed
down a 7-1 decision that
Georgia prosecutors
violated the Constitution by intentionally
eliminating all black
jurors from the trial of
Timothy Tyrone Foster, a black death-row
inmate.
Theres so much at
issue here, that its difficult to determine where
to start.
I should first say that
despite Fosters original
case having been tried
in 1987, when he was a
teenager, this is not a
30-year-old problem.
Prosecutors rarely
openly admit that race is
their reason for deploying peremptory challenges, which they can
use to remove jurors
from a trial without
offering a reason, and
yet many in the know
insist that race is a factor in jury selection. An
amicus brief, filed in
support of Foster by a
group of former prosecutors Republican
and Democrat, from
places as far apart as Los
Angeles County, Anoka
County, Minnesota, and
Floridas Fourth Circuit
reads: Numerous
studies demonstrate

that prosecutors use


peremptory strikes to
remove black jurors at
significantly higher rates
than white jurors.
It goes on to suggest that much of this
misconduct takes place
under the guise of supposedly race-neutral
decision-making.
Thurgood Marshall
opined in 1986 that
the only way to end
racial discrimination in
jury selection was by
eliminating peremptory
challenges entirely.
What, to me, is most
remarkable about this
case is the value of legal
representation to Foster.
Without the continued
assistance of competent
counsel, who found
the prosecutors notes
under the auspices of an
open-records request,
Timothy Foster might
well be dead now. Im
not suggesting Foster
shouldnt have been
convicted, but rather am
making two points.
First, racial discrimination in our
legal system is alive and
well. Maybe even more
importantly, the Sixth
Amendment, which
guarantees a speedy
trial and the assistance
of counsel, is as crucial
to protecting oneself

Gun control
not an answer
It is easy to call for gun control after
such an awful event as Orlando.
Gun control in place would not have
stopped the event.
A person can purchase legally or just
go to the neighborhood dealer.
Guns themselves do not kill people;
people kill people.
If the people had been allowed to
carry in Orlando, lives might have been
saved.
The killer knew he had the upper
hand.
This problem is never going away.
The question after is always, why?
There is no answer.
You are dealing with human beings
with minds of their own.
All you can do is be prepared.
Gary Lee Manning
Gap

How Clinton has


raised so much money
The media is gleefully reporting
that the Trump campaign is doing badly and almost broke. Hillary
Clinton, meanwhile has $50 million
banked and ready to spend on her
campaign.
When Donald Trump announced he
was going to run, he proposed changing the way politics is played rather
than selling influence. Hillary and her
husband, on the other hand, have a history of selling influence to anyone with
cash.
She has collected millions from
Arab leaders and helped Russia gain
a majority stake in a company called
Uranium One. This deal made Russia one of the worlds largest uranium
producers. It is interesting to read
about Hillary and the Clinton Foundations involvement in the Uranium
One fiasco and how much money
they made.
Is it any surprise Hillary has lots of
campaign cash and Trump doesnt?
Many politicians collect campaign
cash and hand out billions in government contracts to their friends.
Trump has said that he wants to stop
this form of politics.
Is it any surprise that big corporation hotshots are not donating to
Trumps campaign? They will only
contribute if they expect big government contracts in return thus Hillarys $50 million.
Choose your friends carefully.
Michael Rauch
Ephrata

from government
overreach as any other
amendment, including the Fourth and the
Second. Were he alive,
I might instruct you
to ask Kalief Browder,
who killed himself after
being abused by guards
and other inmates over a
three-year stay in Rikers
Island without trial. He
was never convicted of a
crime.
Second, make no
mistake: The unconstitutional actions of an
overzealous prosecutor, who is incentivized
to pursue convictions
and disincentivized to
protect the rights of the
defendant, do constitute
government overreach.
In a legal system where
we pay constant lip service to the presumption
of innocence, the assistance of counsel ought
to be unquestionable,
and yet often the poor
are denied meaningful
access to this right.
Surely we would all
agree that ones constitutional rights should
not be dependent on
the size of ones bank
account. A unanimous
Supreme Court affirmed
the right to counsel and
articulated the responsibility of federal and state
government to provide

In a legal system where we


pay constant lip service to the
presumption of innocence, the
assistance of counsel ought to be
unquestionable.
for indigent defense in
1963s Gideon v. Wainwright.
Yet, all over the country, the poor stand trial
for crimes without adequate representation.
In Minnesota, public defenders have previously
claimed not only that
they have less than 15
minutes to spend with
each client on a given
day, but that caseloads
sometimes literally require them to be in two
different counties at the
same time a situation
that puts them at risk for
contempt of court.
This is nowhere more
pronounced or more
public than in New
Orleans, where the
public defenders office
is refusing to take some
cases because its lawyers
simply do not have the
time to defend those
clients. That means
that many poor persons
must either stand trial
without a lawyer, a clear
violation of their right to
counsel, or wait indefinitely in jail for someone
to get around to them, a
clear violation of their
right to a speedy trial.
Our own state is not
immune.

In 2012, the American


Civil Liberties Union
filed an employment
lawsuit against Luzerne
County, claiming that
overwhelming caseloads, underfunding
and a hiring freeze have
led to unmanageable
conditions. This left 300
eligible persons without legal representation because the public
defenders office simply
could not handle all the
cases.
The Interbranch Commission on Juvenile
Justice found that public
defenders were responsible for 800 to 1,000
cases per year in Luzerne, four to five times
the recommended standard. Not irrelevantly,
this is the same county
in which the despicable
kids-for-cash scandal
took place.
These situations,
which leave the poorest
Americans without adequate representation, or
any representation at all,
are often combined with
situations where indigent defendants must
pay court fees whether
they are determined to
be innocent or guilty.
Combined with charges

Letters to the editor


LETTER POLICY
n Letters to the editor are welcome. All letters must include an address and telephone
number for verification purposes. Letters should be limited to 300 words and on topics
that affect the public. Writers are limited to one published letter every 14 days. Letters
will be edited for grammar, clarity and length. Material that has appeared elsewhere
and form letters are discouraged, and any detected will not be published.
How to submit letters:
Email LancasterLetters@lnpnews.com
Fax 399-6507
Mail to Letters, c/o LNP, P.O. Box 1328,
Lancaster, PA 17608-1328

No more Clintons
in the White House

No need for
assault rifles

Who thinks we need a woman for


president? Not I.
I have voted Democrat many years,
but not this year. I am 84 years old, and
I have worked many jobs. But I never
felt I was so valuable that I had to protest or start a court case. Too many
people today are in love with themselves; they need to teach their children to have common sense.
I wonder what other countries are
saying about the U.S. We need a man to
meet with them.
The United States needs someone
with spark, who tells it the way it is. We
have had enough of the Clintons.
The young women today do not remember what I witnessed on TV years
ago with Monica Lewinsky and Bill
Clinton. I knew then what was taking
place, and then it came out in the news
and people want to put them back in
there again.
Not I.
The White House needs to be honored each and every day, not dug in the
dirt. What took place there during the
first Clinton administration was a total
disgrace.
Nancy Probst
Ephrata

Allow me, first, to state my stance on


gun control.
I believe that it is the fundamental
right of every citizen to own a firearm;
however, let me also state that no individual should be allowed to possess an
assault rife. My reasoning is that it is
intended to be exactly what the name,
assault rifle, implies. In the spirit
of compromise, perhaps assault rifles
could be owned by a shooting range
and stored in a bank vault for people
who use it for target practice.
Let us not forget that in Arizona a
shooting instructor was killed by a
9-year-old girl who never should have
been allowed to use a gun.
My sincerest condolences to Rob
Kaufhold, who is apparently such a
lousy shot, he needs an assault rifle to
hit anything (Regarding the AR-15,
June 14).
William Horn
East Hempfield Township

It really can
happen here
Robert Ibolds letter (Similarities seen in German history, June 6)
about the similarities between Donald Trumps beliefs/comments and
fascist Germany are right on target. If
you want to know more about Trumps
plans, you can find them outlined in
his playbook, It Cant Happen Here,
written by Sinclair Lewis (1935). Scary!
Bob Stanley
Elizabethtown

A proper Christian
view of gay lifestyle
The attack on the gay nightclub in
Orlando caused me to attempt to help
those who wrestle with that issue.
As I saw the rise in same-sex relationships, I prayed for how to deal with
this. The Lord showed me that it is not
my job to judge rather, I was to show
love.
The Christian view of same-sex relationships varies by theological positions; Orthodox followers call it a sin,
liberals view is it as permissible. Those
who subscribe to the sin view sometimes get an attitude of preachiness
and tend to overdo self-righteousness
with ranting about it.
The proper thing would be to selfreflect on our personal relationship

E3

or a plea deal they are


often ill-equipped and
ill-assisted to negotiate,
this all seems more like
government bullying
than justice.
The issue exists at the
intersection of race, poverty and criminal justice,
three hot-button issues
this election cycle. Yet
none of the current
presidential candidates
has addressed indigent
defense or the Sixth
Amendment. Other issues have taken precedence over protecting
the constitutional rights
of the poor. That is a
shame.
But this is an issue
with a straightforward
solution: more money.
Indigent defense must
be funded, lest our legal
system go from demonstrably unfair to the
poor to a simple farce.
In The New York Times,
John Pfaff, professor of
law at Fordham University, suggests that
$4 billion could triple
investment here, all for
about 0.3 percent of the
federal discretionary
budget.
The alternatives are
not without cost: When
people languish in jail
without trial, we pay
financially.
But when the government, for that is what
the legal system is, can
freely push around or
punish those citizens
who have the least, we
suffer morally.

n Ismail Smith-Wade-El

is a Lancaster resident and


research associate for the
Mayors Commission to Combat Poverty.

with a righteous God who loves us and


wants us to have a relationship with
him. When we get our relationship
with him in proper order, then we can
reach out in love to help someone else
who may have difficulties.
All have sinned and come short of
the glory of God. We can love people
into the kingdom instead of preaching
against a particular problem.
If you dont have a problem that
your neighbor has, that doesnt make
you better than that person. In love,
point him to Jesus.
Encourage him to ask Jesus to guide
him to be born again. Then retreat to
God in prayer and ask the Holy Spirit
to give you an opportunity to help on
his behalf.
Dont be surprised at the result. The
Holy Spirit will work without needing
our help.
For God so loved the world, that he
gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not
perish, but have eternal life. John
3:16
Rev. Charles Kirstner (Ret.)
West Hempfield Township

Christians value
peace, not war

Milton Meltzers 1985 book titled


Aint Gonna Study War No More
may help readers understand why
the May 25 Peace and Goodwill, Not
War, Not Violence advertisement was
published in LNP.
For example, on pages 14-15, Meltzer
writes that Celsus sharply criticized
Christians for enjoying the benefits
of the Empire while doing nothing to
ensure its preservation. Celsus condemned them for what would today
be called conscientious objection to
participation in war. If all did as the
Christians, Celsus says, there would
be nothing to prevent things from getting into the hands of the barbarians.
Meltzer writes that the Christian
scholar Origen replied to Celsus as
follows: Christians have been taught
not to defend themselves against their
enemies; and because they have kept
the laws that command gentleness
and love of man, they have received
from God that which they would not
have achieved if they were permitted
to make war, though they might have
been quite able to do so. ... The more
devout the individual, the more effective he is in helping the Emperor,
more so than the soldiers who go into
the lines and kill all the enemy troops
they can. ... The greatest warfare, in
other words, is not with human enemies but with those spiritual forces
which make men into enemies.
Harold A. Penner
Akron

E4

PERSPECTIVE

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

Gray: Common sense, common ground


OJOMA EDEH HERR
MATTERS OF FAITH

A lesson in
the clouds
My younger son, Andrew,
just finished fourth grade,
and he is happy to be on
summer vacation. During the second half of his
school year, he became
very excited about his science class. He was learning
about different types of
clouds and I was his student at home. Everywhere
we went (and still go), he
would point out clouds and
educate me on the name
and purpose of each type
of cloud. He would repeat
the same information so
often that I started wishing
for Are we there yet-type
questions.
Naturally, I became more
interested in the different
types of clouds and their
purposes. I started looking at clouds even when
Andrew was not with me.
I cant believe how many
types of clouds there are,
both in the sky and in the
Bible.
One day, I saw a dark
rain cloud moving in
the sky. I drove to a safe
location and pulled over to
observe it.
As I observed the cloud,
it became clear that it was
moving rapidly, and soon it
dissipated without dropping any rain. This piqued
my interest, so I started to
read more about the clouds
and the purpose of each
type. I was trying to make
sense of the rain cloud that
did not produce rain, and
it turned out that the Bible
has something to say about
it.
Jude 12 states, They are
clouds without water, carried about by the winds.
The purpose of a rain cloud
is to produce rain for refreshment of the earth. But
when the rain cloud does
not produce rain, it gives
the false hope of refreshment.
People of faith, let us be
like the rain clouds that
produce water, having both
the appearance of refreshment and also the ability to
satisfy.
Another type of cloud I
found is in Exodus 13:21
and 22, which states, And
the Lord went before them
(His people) by day in a
pillar of cloud to lead the
way . He did not take away
the pillar of cloud by day.
The pillar of cloud in these
verses speaks of Gods
guidance for His people
and protection from their
enemies.
God uses a type of cloud
to show his guidance and
protection for us. How
contrary to what we think
when we go through any
type of clouds in our lives.
There may be clouds of
sickness, physical needs,
money problems, or sorrow
of any kind; but whatever
the cloud in your life may
be, God is still in the business of guiding and protecting his own.
Though we may not feel
this guidance and protection when we are in these
clouds, we need to trust in
the Lord that he will never
let go of us. Therefore, let
each of us give the weights
of our lives clouds to God,
for he is mighty and able
to deliver us always. He
is guiding us through the
unknown today as he did
during the time in Exodus.
First Peter 5:7 states,
Cast all your care upon
Him (God), for He cares
for you. It is comforting to know that the God
Almighty cares for us in
every situation we may find
ourselves.

n Ojoma Edeh Herr is a professor of special education at Millersville University. Her memoir,
Ojomas Song: Becoming a
Woman Nigerian Style, details
her struggles coming of age in
her native Nigeria.

Continued from E1

situations a firearm is useful for self-defense, and the law clearly defines those
situations in which such use is justified.
But to argue that we should all be armed
to ensure our own safety begs the question: What is the governments role in
providing for public safety? Shouldnt
we have a reasonable expectation that
government will take appropriate steps
to protect the public from those who
would abuse their right to bear arms?
To argue that any step to regulate is a
step toward government confiscation of
guns is just plain wrong. Confiscation,
in addition to being impossible, would
be unconstitutional. Productive sug-

gestions rather than knee jerk, alarmist


rhetoric from the gun lobby would be
extremely helpful in drafting reasonable
regulations that would have a minimal
effect on the legal ownership of firearms.
Absent any real compromise on the
part of gun-rights advocates, the public
will soon begin demanding far more
egregious controls than those most recently rejected by Congress. The failure
of the gun lobby to share responsibility
for solving the problems brought about
by the proliferation of firearms including military weaponry risks a backlash
of public opinion and political action
that can ultimately undermine the Second Amendment rights that the NRA so
single-mindedly defends.

Unwillingness to find common ground


is an ethical failure that makes us all
responsible for what happens in the
future. This is the time to follow the
direction of the Old Testament to come
and reason together. There have been
too many killed, too much suffering
and too many families impacted by too
many guns in the wrong hands. For far
too long, the NRA has been unwilling
to balance the individual right to bear
arms with the need to prevent the mass
shootings and the daily horrors of gun
violence that have become all too common across our country. We cannot and
will not allow this to become the new
normal.

Reilly: More laws are not the answer


Continued from E1

We want beer because we enjoy beer,


and as long as youre 21 or older, you can
have as much beer as you want.
According to the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention, about 100,000
people were killed in the U.S. last year
from alcohol-related causes, including
drunken-driving crashes, alcohol-related homicides and suicides.
Do you know how many gun-related
deaths there were in this country in
2013, the last year for which the CDC
had figures? About 33,636 homicides,
suicides and unintentional shootings.
Based on these figures, shouldnt we
be calling three times as loudly for some
sort of alcohol control as we are for gun
control?
Were not. And Im not suggesting we
should.
Alcohol is something that Americans
legally can enjoy, and we are asked to
enjoy it responsibly.
Not everyone does. Same goes for
firearms.
Its easy to blame guns for gun vio-

lence. They cant fight back.


The fact of the matter is, no gun ever
jumped up off a shelf and randomly
started killing people.
I get that the AR-15, and others like
it, look nasty. When people say these
high-capacity killing machines
shouldnt be in civilian hands, and with
the same breath proclaim they dont
want to ban normal guns used for
hunting and target shooting, I dont think
they realize what they are saying. There
is no clean way to separate the two.
For starters, as I mentioned, I use my
AR-style rifle solely for hunting and
target shooting. So they can be used for
those limited purposes. Secondly, ARstyle guns are just like many other guns
out there that people arent screaming
about. You pull the trigger on an AR-15
and it fires one round. You have to pull
it again to fire another. Thats called a
semi-automatic action, and its employed by countless handguns, shotguns
and rifles.
Look up the Remington 750 Woodsmaster and the Glock G40. They function exactly like the AR-15, but I havent

seen any politicians pointing to them and


calling them weapons of war.
AR-style rifles themselves hold only
one round. Its the magazines that hold
more. The magazines for my rifle hold
four rounds. So after four shots, my rifle
is empty. Generally, magazines that hold
more than 10 rounds are considered
high-capacity, and its believed Omar
Mateen was using them.
Eight states and the District of Columbia have laws outlawing high-capacity
magazines. Florida isnt one of them.
Such magazines are generally available
for any semi-automatic firearm that
employs detachable magazines. Look up
a list of such guns. Trust me, it goes way
beyond the AR-15.
But all of that is moot, in my view, because millions of Americans prove every
day that it is possible to own and use ARstyle guns responsibly. Guns dont kill
people; people kill people.
I dont know what the answer is to stop
these mass shootings. Im just as angered
by them as everyone else.
Attacking guns isnt the answer.

Kiehl: Have faith


Continued from E1

themselves far less powerful


than they now imagine and
less able to wield the mighty
sword of their ideas to make
things happen.
One need only look back to
2008 and newly elected President Barack Obamas mandate
for change you can believe
in.
The president had a postelection approval rating of
over 90 percent, solid majorities in both houses of Congress
and the brass ring of being the
first African-American to occupy the White House.
Do you recall the Obama
agenda of eight years ago and
also recall how few of these
to-do list items have been
attained?
Gitmo is still open, is it not?
Immigration is still a divisive
issue. Health care costs are

course of their presidencies.


Even Franklin Delano
Roosevelt, the four-term
still problematic. And as for the president who led the nawars in Iraq and Afghanistan,
tion through the Depresthey havent worked out too
sion years and World War
well either.
II, failed in his attempt at a
More Americans have died on Trifecta.
Obamas watch in Afghanistan
In a high-handed move to
than during the Bush years. And pack the Supreme Court
with additional justices to
the Nobel Peace Prize-winner
create a majority in his favor,
has perfected the drone strike
even FDR was seen to go too
as a means to wage war.
Or look to 2000 when George far, and his own Congressional Democrats helped to
W. Bush was the winning candidate and his compassionate block his unconstitutional
enlargement of presidential
conservative agenda was put
on hold following 9/11, the war power.
So should we be worried
in Afghanistan and the unnecabout the unstable Donald
essary distraction of Iraq. He
left office with scarcely 20 per- Trump or the dishonest
Hillary Clinton or to be
cent of the publics approval.
fair, that Libertarian
Similar stories can be told
should one of them attain
about the proposals and plans
the highest office in the
of earlier presidents. Whether
land?
they aimed to bring change to
Thanks to geniuses like
Washington or stabilize the status quo, factors largely beyond Hamilton, Madison, Jefferson and Jay, the system has
their control determined the

proven itself capable of allowing our nation to survive


some pretty awful presidents from time to time. The
United States can certainly
survive any of the less than
perfect choices before us
this year.
The Founding Fathers assumed that the nations leaders would be pulled from
the ranks of ordinary people
with modest skills and good
intentions.
There was no professional
political class with all the
answers!
The system they designed
was built to accommodate
leaders with flaws.
For more than two centuries, our nation has grown
and prospered, sometimes
despite the ill-advised plans
and foolish policies of elected
officials.
So on July 4th, lets celebrate our past and look
forward to our bright future.

HOW TO CONTACT YOUR ELECTED OFFICIALS


STATE
n Gov. Tom Wolf, Democrat.

Capitol office: 225 Main Capitol


Building, Harrisburg, PA 17120;
phone: 787-2500. Email: See
governor.pa. gov/contact/;
website: pa.gov

n Rep. Jim Cox, R-129, Berks

and Lancaster counties. Capitol


office: 210 Ryan Office Building
PO Box 202129, Harrisburg, PA
17120-2129; phone: 772-2435.
District Office: 2909 Windmill
Road, Suite 7, Sinking Spring, PA.
19608; phone: 1-866-538-2938.
Email: See www.repjimcox.com

n Rep. Bryan Cutler, R-100,

Lancaster County. Capitol office:


51A East Wing, PO Box 202100,
Harrisburg, PA 17120; phone:
783-6424. District office: 33G
Friendly Drive, Quarryville, PA
17566; phone: 284-1965. Email:
bcutler@pahousegop.com;
website: repcutler.com

n Rep. Mindy Fee, R-37,

Lancaster County. Capitol office:


51B East Wing, PO Box 202037,
Harrisburg, PA 17120; phone: 7725290. District offices: 47 Market
Square, Manheim, PA 17545;
phone: 664-4979; 503 Main St.,
Denver, PA 17517; phone: 3362199. Email: mfee@pahousegop.
com; website: repfee.com

n Rep. Mark Gillen, R-128, Berks


and Lancaster counties. Capitol
office: 408 Irvis Office Building,
PO Box 202128, Harrisburg, PA.
17120-2128; phone: 787-8550.
District office: 29 Village Center
Drive, Suite A-7, Reading, PA

19607; phone: 610-775-5130.


Email: See repgillen.com

n Rep. Keith Greiner, R-43,

Lancaster County. Capitol office:


54B East Wing, PO Box 202043,
Harrisburg, PA 17120; phone: 7836422, District office: 852 Village
Road, PO Box 268, Lampeter, PA
17537; phone: 464-5285. Email:
kgreiner@ pahousegop.com;
website: repgreiner.com

n Rep. Dave Hickernell, R-98,

Lancaster County. Capitol office:


43A East Wing, PO Box 202098,
Harrisburg, PA 17120; phone:
783-2076. District offices: 236
Locust St., Columbia, PA 17512;
phone: 684-5525; 222 S. Market
St., Suite 103, Elizabethtown, PA
17022; phone: 367-5525. Email:
dhickern@pahousegop.com;
website: rephickernell.com

n Rep. John Lawrence, R-13,

Chester and Lancaster counties.


Capitol office: 211 Ryan Office
Building, PO Box 202013,
Harrisburg, PA 17120-2013;
phone: 260-6117. District office:
1 Commerce Blvd., Suite 200,
West Grove, PA 19390; phone:
610-869-1602. Email: jlawrenc@
pahousegop.com; website:
replawrence.com

n Rep. Steven Mentzer, R-97,

Lancaster County. Capitol office:


54 East Wing, PO Box 202097,
Harrisburg, PA 17120; phone:
787-1776. District office: 1555
Highlands Drive, Suite 110, Lititz
PA 17543; phone: 626-1776. Email:
smentzer@ pahousegop.com;
website: repmentzer.com

n Rep. Brett Miller, R-41,

Lancaster County. Capitol


office: 54A East Wing, PO Box
202041, Harrisburg, PA 171202041. District office: Manor West
Commons, 2938 Columbia Ave.,
Suite 501, Lancaster, PA 17603;
phone: 295-5050; email: bmiller@
pahousegop.com website:
repmiller.com

n Rep. Mike Sturla, D-96,

Lancaster County. Capitol office:


414 Main Capitol Building, PO Box
202096, Harrisburg, PA 17120;
phone: 787-3555. District office:
150 E. King St., Suite B, Lancaster,
PA 17602; phone: 295-3157. Email:
msturla@pahouse.net; website:
pahouse.com/sturla

FEDERAL
n President Barack Obama,
Democrat. Oval Office: The White
House, 1600 Pennsylvania Ave.
NW, Washington, DC 20500;
phone: 1-202-456-1111. Email:
comments@whitehouse.gov
n Sen. Robert Casey, Democrat.

Capitol office: 393 Russell Senate


Office Building, Washington, DC
20510; phone: 1-202-224-6324.
Harrisburg office: 22 S. Third St.,
Suite 6A, Harrisburg, PA 17101;
phone: 231-7540. Email: See
casey.senate.gov

n Sen. Pat Toomey, Republican.

n Rep. David Zimmerman,

R-99, Lancaster County. Capitol


office: 51B East Wing, PO Box
202099, Harrisburg, PA 171202099; phone: 705-1951; email:
DZimmerman@pahousegop.com;
website: repzimmerman.com

Capitol office: 248 Russell Senate


Office Building, Washington, DC
20510; phone: 1-202-224-4254.
Harrisburg office: 228 Walnut
St., Suite 1104, Harrisburg, PA
17101; phone: 782-3951. Email: See
toomey.senate.gov

n Sen. Ryan Aument, R-36,

n Rep. Joseph R. Pitts, R-16th

Lancaster County. Capitol office:


352 Main Capitol, Senate Box
203036, Harrisburg, PA 171203036; phone: 787-4420. District
office: 301 E. Main St., Lititz,
17543; phone: 627-0036. Email:
raument@pasen.gov; website:
senatoraument.com

n Sen. Lloyd Smucker, R-13,

York and Lancaster counties.


Capitol office: 351 Main Capitol
Building, Harrisburg, PA 17120;
phone: 787-6535. District office:
123 N. Prince St., Lancaster, PA
17603; phone: 397-1309. Email:
lsmucker@pasen.gov; website:
senatorsmucker.com

District, Capitol office: 420


Cannon House Office Building,
Washington, DC 20515; phone:
1-202-225-2411. District office, 150
N. Queen St., Suite 716, Lancaster,
PA 17603; phone: 393-0667.
Email: See pitts.house.gov

n Rep. Patrick Meehan, R-7th

District, Capitol office: 204


Cannon House Office Building,
Washington, DC 20515; phone:
1-202-225-2011. District office:
940 W. Sproul Road, Suite 202,
Springfield, PA 19064; phone:
1-610-690-7323. Email: See
meehan.house.gov

OPINION

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

E5

Sunday Conversation
GEORGE WILL
THE WASHINGTON POST

The flawed logic behind


Brexits Remain campaign

Because white, conservative evangelical Christians


are an important part of the Republican base and
because many evangelicals have expressed qualms
or outright opposition to Trump, he tried to get them
onboard by hinting darkly that Clinton is an infidel.

E.J. DIONNE
THE WASHINGTON POST

Donald Trump reaches new


low on religion
Where religion is concerned, Donald Trumps bigotry is his biggest
problem, but his ignorance comes in
a close second.
We already know that Trump will
say whatever he thinks will appeal to
the crowd he is talking to, but calling
Hillary Clintons faith into question
before a group of evangelical leaders on Tuesday represented a new
low if such a thing is possible in a
campaign that hits those markers on
an almost-daily basis. Trumps comprehensive and often factually challenged attack on Clinton Wednesday
is drawing much attention. But his
comments on her faith say even more
about him.
Trump does not appear to be very
religious and seems uncomfortable
around the subject. In principle,
this is not a problem. The Constitution explicitly forbids religious tests
for federal office. Over our history,
presidents have varied in their attachment to religion, and there is no
sure-fire way to know whether what
a politician says about his or her
belief in God is true.
Moreover, many deeply religious
people dont talk much about their
faith outside intimate circles. One
of the years best statements on the
matter came from John Kasich (who
is, by all accounts, very religious)
when he explained why he had
not invoked religion much on the
campaign trail. Id rather have an
eternal destiny, he said, than try to
cheapen the brand of God.
Its hard to imagine that God worries about branding, but Kasichs
unease with the way politics can
devalue faith was admirable.
This is not something that bothers
Trump.
Because white, conservative
evangelical Christians are an important part of the Republican base
and because many evangelicals
have expressed qualms or outright
opposition to Trump, he tried to get
them onboard by hinting darkly that
Clinton is an infidel.
We dont know anything about
Hillary in terms of religion, he told
the evangelical leaders. Now, shes
been in the public eye for years and
years, and yet theres no theres
nothing out there. Theres like
nothing out there. Its going to be an
extension of (President) Obama but
its going to be worse, because with
Obama you had your guard up. With
Hillary you dont, and its going to be
worse.
No, we meaning anyone who has
taken the remotest interest in the

topic know quite a lot about Hillary Clintons Methodist faith. She
has spoken of it often and is a regular
churchgoer. In his 2007 biography
of Clinton, Carl Bernstein wrote that
other than her family, Methodism is
perhaps the most important foundation of her character. Just as even
George W. Bushs political adversaries freely acknowledge that faith
plays a central part in his life, so have
Clintons many detractors accepted
the role that faith plays in hers.
Trump might usefully check out
Clintons remarkably personal
speech to the United Methodist
Women Assembly in 2014, where
she argued that Methodism gave us
the great gift of personal salvation
but also the great obligation of social
gospel.
But of course trashing other
peoples faith is standard Trump
practice. His willingness to deny basic rights to Muslims is well-known.
In March, he said of Mitt Romney,
one of his sharpest critics: Are you
sure hes a Mormon? Are we sure?
Romneys loyalty to the Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints is as
defining for him as Clintons Methodism is for her.
And when Ben Carson looked to
be a serious challenger, Trump went
after the physicians allegiance to
Seventh-day Adventism. Im Presbyterian. Boy, thats down the middle
of the road, folks, in all fairness,
Trump said. I mean, Seventh-day
Adventist, I dont know about, I just
dont know about.
What exactly didnt he know
about Adventists? A presidential
candidate who uses ignorance as a
vehicle for peddling religious prejudice is condemning himself twice
over as both ill-informed and a
bigot.
Trumps indifference to truth, to a
basic decency toward the religious
convictions of his opponents, and to
any seriousness about how religion
should and should not be discussed
in the political arena ought to terrify
believers and nonbelievers alike.
But those who defend faiths role
in our nations public life should be
especially alarmed. Absent anything
substantive to say about his beliefsystem, Trump lashes out at others.
And lacking an affirmative vision, he
plays on fears and tells evangelicals,
as he did on Tuesday, that our nations leaders are selling Christianity down the tubes.
Well. If religion is being sold out,
its Trump who is orchestrating the
deal.

n E.J. Dionne is a columnist for The Washington Post. Twitter: @EJDionne

The Leave campaign won the referendum on withdrawing Britain from


the European Union because the arguments on which the Remain side
relied made Leaves case. The Remain
campaign began with a sham, was
monomaniacal with its Project Fear,
and ended in governmental thuggishness.
The sham was Prime Minister David Camerons attempt to justify Remain by negotiating EU concessions
regarding Britains subservience to
the EU. This dickering for scraps of
lost sovereignty underscored Britains servitude and achieved so little
that Remainers rarely mentioned it
during their campaign.
Project Fear was the relentless
and ultimately ludicrous parade of
Cassandras, experts all, warning
that Britain, after more than a millennium of sovereign existence, and
now with the worlds fifth-largest
economy, would endure myriad
calamities were it to end its 23-year
membership in the EU. Remain advocates rarely even feigned enthusiasm for the ramshackle, sclerotic EU.
Instead, they implausibly promised
that if Brexit were rejected, Britain
although it would then be without
the leverage of the threat to leave
would nevertheless somehow negotiate substantially better membership
terms than Cameron managed when
Brexit was an option.
Voters were not amused by the
Cameron governments threat of
what critics called a Punishment
Budget to inflict pain on pensioners (e.g., no more free bus passes)
and others because Brexit might
cause GDP to contract 9.5 percent
and home prices might plummet 18
percent. Voters did not like being
told that they really had no choice.
And that it was too late to escape
from entanglement in the EUs evermultiplying tentacles. And that the
very viscosity of the EUs statism
guarantees its immortality.
Voters chose the optimism of Brexit.
Sixty years after Britains humiliation in the Suez debacle, Britain has
a spring in its step, confident that it
will flourish when Brussels no longer
controls 60 to 70 percent of the British governments actions. Britain was
last conquered by an invading army in
1066. In 2016, it repelled an attempted
conquest by the EUs nomenklatura.
By breaking the leftward-clicking
ratchet that moves steadily, and only,
toward more pooled sovereignty
and centralization of power, Brexit
refutes the progressive narrative that
history has an inexorable trajectory

that experts discern and before


which all must bow. The EUs contribution to this fable is its vow to pursue
ever-closer union. Yes, ever.
To understand why Brexit could and
should be the beginning of an existential crisis for the EU, look across the
English Channel, to France. There,
King Clovis recently was invoked 1505
years after his death in 511.
Before a particular battle, Clovis
promised that if God, to whom his
Christian wife prayed, would grant him
victory, he would become a Christian.
He won the battle and converted.
Recently, Nicolas Sarkozy, Frances
once and perhaps future president,
said France was born of the baptism
of Clovis, it has a Christian tradition
and remains a country of churches,
cathedrals, abbeys and shrines.
Actually, 71 percent of the French say
religion is unimportant to them and
fewer than 4.5 percent attend weekly
church services. But Sarkozy was aligning himself with the palpable desire
in France and elsewhere in Europe to
resist the cultural homogenization that
is an intended consequence of EUs
pressure for the harmonization of
the laws and policies of its 28 disparate
member nations.
In Paris these days there are marches
by a group called Generation Identitaire, described as the hipster right. It
aims to rally young French and Europeans who are proud of their heritage.
A recent statement on its website declared that Islamist attacks and the
migrant invasion made 2015 a turning point in the history of our country.
The statement continued: The French
have been silent for too long. ... It is
time to show our determination to live
on our land, under our laws, our values
and with respect to our own identity.
Sarkozy, the son of Greek and Hungarian immigrants, sympathizes.
Euroskepticism is rising dramatically in many EU nations. There might be
other referendums. Or the EU might
seek to extinguish this escape mechanism. A poll in Sweden indicated that
it might follow Britain out. In France,
there could be a campaign for Frexit.
Such was the Remain sides intellectual sloth, it wielded the threadbare
aspersion that advocating withdrawal
amounted to embracing isolationism. Actually, Brexit was the choice
for Britains international engagement
as a nation. The revival of nationhood
is a prerequisite for the reinvigoration
of self-government through reclaimed
national sovereignty. Hence June 23,
2016, is now among the most important dates in post-war European
history.

n George Will is a columnist for The Washington Post. Twitter: @GeorgeWill

Euroskepticism is rising dramatically in many


EU nations. There might be other referendums.
Or the EU might seek to extinguish this escape
mechanism. A poll in Sweden indicated that it
might follow Britain out. In France, there could be
a campaign for Frexit.

E6

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

generation

BY,
FOR
AND
ABOUT
TEENS

FRESH TAKES

FEED OF THE WEEK

Instagram:

@whowhatwear
n The tag line for this

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton, left, speaks at a rally in Raleigh, N.C. Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump,
right, speaks in New York.

No closer to a qualified
presidential candidate

fashion website is Fashion


and style, decoded,
and that certainly seems
applicable to its Instagram
feed. The celebrity
street-style looks that dot
this page dont look too
difficult or expensive to
pull off, and they often
arent. Each picture is
accompanied by a link
to purchase the different
components of the outfit
on whowhatwear.com.
n Plus, the page is
currently in the middle of a
30-day summer challenge,
which encourages users
to revamp old-fashioned
pieces of their wardrobe
and share their new
looks online. Think of it
as the Vogue site on an
everymans budget.
Katie Weaver, 17

10-SECOND
MOVIE REVIEWS

Generation Next writer flashes back to his presidential wishes from 2014
BEN PONTZ, 18

GNEXT@LNPNEWS.COM

Dear America,
Exactly two years ago in this very
space, I penned a column describing
the candidate for whom I wanted to
cast my first-ever vote in 2016.
In that election, I would like to see
candidates who make Americans feel
like they have a choice between dedicated public servants each with their
own ideas of how America should operate, willing to articulate their viewpoints in spirited debate on the issues,
rather than off-topic drivel with little
relevance to how they would run the
country, I wrote.
I would like to see candidates who
genuinely want to serve the people,
rather than circumvent them the
president has a sworn duty to preserve,
protect and defend the Constitution of
the United States, which means he or
she should seek to work with Congress
rather than executively order his or
her way around it with condescending
remarks such as sue me if it does not
like the direction he or she pursues. He
or she should respect the authority and
jurisprudence of the Judiciary rather
than lambaste them.
Well, on one hand we have a candidate who brushes aside an FBI investigation as a conservative political stunt
even when the FBI is run by a Democratic appointee. On the other we have
a candidate who believes no one who
belongs to a group, er, actually, any-

one who has ancestors that belong to


a group that he has potentially offended, cannot possibly serve as a judge in
a case involving him. I suppose that
would limit our pool of potential judges to ... his children? Long story short,
we have no one meeting this criterion.
In 2014 I also wrote, I would like to
see candidates who would respect the
separation of powers when it comes
to declaring war and other foreign affairs, recognizing the adage that absolute power corrupts absolutely, and
thus seeing the need for broad input.
Concurrently, I would like to see candidates who are neither disingenuous
nor lacking intellectual capacity; the
President needs to be a smart individual, capable of understanding every
intricacy of the federal government
without needing droves of advisors interfering to promulgate their personal
agendas and essentially run the White
House without the President himself.
The Trump campaign is apt to point
out that the Clinton campaign employs
more than 700 staffers; then again the
Trump campaign just fired its manager
and Trump has no governmental experience that would help him understand
intricacies of the federal government.
So again, neither candidate seems to
meet this criterion.
I would like to see candidates with
strong moral values, who realize the
necessity in sharing those values with
those whom they represent the
entity from whom they derive their

power we the people. I am not saying that the


President ought to be the moral magistrate, but in
this age of media sensationalism, privacy infringement, etc., having skeletons in the closet that will
ultimately distract from the real issues facing
America is undoubtedly a negative, and should be
avoided if practicable, I wrote in 2014.
On one hand we have a candidate who thought
she was above the law and then lied about it, while
on the other, we have, well, Donald Trump. Thats
going to be a negative on this criterion as well.
An ideal candidate would focus on real issues,
not being afraid of them no matter how divisive
they have been in the past, and seek to find actual
solutions to them, rather than hosting photo-ops
of meetings with leaders from the other party at
which they discuss their golf handicaps for half
the time, and spew pre-packaged partisan rhetoric
for the other half of the time. The President of the
United States ought to care more about finding a
solution that works for the most people than winning an issue for their party. Country over party
it really is that simple, I wrote.
Honestly, I thought Id found that candidate; it
was Ohio governor John Kasich. He was smart and
pragmatic, experienced and positive, and openminded and moderate. Those traits killed him in
the GOP primary. So now were left with someone who engages in smarmy sanctimony against
someone who engages in bombastic demagoguery.
Yippee!
Sadly, most Americans could probably come
together on a more moderate ticket, but our system doesnt work that way. Perhaps its time for a
change. Im at a loss.
Sincerely,
Ben Pontz
A Disenchanted Young Voter

THE LIST
READ

Republicans
adjourn House as
Democrats pledge
not to give up gun
control fight

at bit.ly/TeamRead
n If you need an indication
of just how dysfunctional
our Congress is, one party is
literally camping out in the
chambers, while the other
went home. ... All of this
is over whether terrorists
should be able to own assault
weapons, which hardly seems
controversial. Sigh. The House
will reconvene on July 5, and it
seems highly likely Democrats
will continue their camping trip
while Republicans will continue
their vacations until then.
Ben Pontz, 18

LISTEN

Cant Stop the


Feeling

by Justin Timberlake
n The first time I heard
Justin Timberlakes newest
single, Cant Stop the
Feeling, I was immediately
reminded of Take Back the
Night, an early Timberlake
song. With sunny lyrics and
infectious dance loops, the
single embodies happiness
and contentment. But
without any clear story and
its repetition, the chorus
can become old. My favorite
part of the entire track is the
bridge. With a funky beat
and synthesized sounds, you
just cant stop feeling happy.
Caleb Weaver, 18

WATCH

The Tonight Show

on NBC
n If you are not already a
nightly follower of The Tonight
Show with Jimmy Fallon,
not only are you missing
comedic gold, youre also
missing celebrity guests and
shenanigans and the occasional
heartfelt social commentary.
Fallon captivates his audience
with his conversation-like
dialogue and unique segments.
He writes thank you notes to
inanimate objects and cracks
eggs on his guests heads. If
youre awake at 11:35 nightly,
turn on The Tonight Show. You
wont regret it.
Livy Beaner, 19

The Conjuring 2

n must see | don't see | just rent

Its stale in comparison to


its predecessor and it cant
help but feel like a series
of cliches, but there are
just enough scares in this
sequel to justify a trip to
the theater.

X-Men: Days of
Future Past

must see | don't see | n just rent

This superhero feature


is enhanced by its clever
premise and Michael
Fassbenders spellbinding
performance, even if it
cant match the heights of
its competitors at DC.
Damian Hondares, 20

SUMMER FUN
Its summer and
school is out and
there is much
fun happening all
around Lancaster
County. Generation
Next wants to
see your summer
fun and is asking
for photos of
teen life in the
summer. Send your
photos to gnext@
LNPnews.com and
we will use them in
a future Generation
Next section.
Include your
name and phone
number with your
submission. Include
names of all people
with each photo.
We are looking for
photos of teens at
their summer jobs,
enjoying downtime,
volunteering or
hanging with
family members.
For more stories
from Generation
Next, visit
LancasterOnline.
com/features/
generationnext.

FILE PHOTO

Comics & Puzzles


SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016 | LNP | LANCASTER, PA

PUZZLES/BRIDGE

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

Sunday Crossword Puzzle

Bridge Results
nThe Friday Morning Duplicate Bridge

Club meets at 11 a.m.

Section A North-South: 1. Ray Adelizzi


and Lynn Harris; 2. Alice Hyman and Alan
Abraham; 3. Richard and Roz Braunstein;
4. Andie Sheaffer and Barry Gorski;
2B.Mikki Martin and Ruth Witman.
East-West: 1. Dian Wise and Tim Sumner;
2. Jeanne Parrett and Tom Coxey; 3.
Bonnie Heilig and Charlie Wooten; 4.
Sally Buckwalter and Vernon Hester.
Section B: 1. Joyce Franz and Sally
Patterson; 2. Fran and Kathy Kostrub; 3.
Rosa Eshelman and Pat Latshaw; 4. Pat
Farmer and Jackie Wissler; 5. Sharon
Sherban and Donna Smoker.
nThe Maple Grove Players Club meets
at 12:15 p.m. Monday.
Section A North-South: 1. Ann Silverstein

Puzzle No. 1

K-9

and Bob Marsh; 2. Bruce and Carole


Silverstein; 3/4(tie)Kay Crawford and
Marv Burkhart,
Pam Rosenberger
and Mel Lubart; 2B.Richard and Roz
Braunstein; 2C.Justine Rogevich and
Eva Train.

nThe Tuesday Night Duplicate Bridge


Club meets at 7:15 p.m.

East-West: 1. Karen Diffenbach and


Alice Lafferty; 2. Lynn Harris and Ken
Meyer; 3. Bonnie Heilig and Charlie
Wooten; 4. Dorie Van Antwerp and Ron
Zimmerman; 1C.Nancy Peterson and
Dian Wise; 2C.Bob and Jane Larkin.

East-West: 1. Andie Sheaffer and Barry


Gorski; 2. Vernon Hester and Carl Huber;
3/4(tie) Jeanne Parrett and Tom Coxey,
Dian Wise and Steve Elinsky.

Section B North-South: 1. Brenda Miller


and Sally Patterson; 2. Marty Desch and
Dale Matt; 3. Karen Davis and Karen
Zimmerman; 4. Ed Jones and Allen
Mannon; 2C.Jane Church and Colette
Meyer.
East-West: 1. Fran and Kathy Kostrub;
2. Martha Matt and Jean Pryzbylkowski;
3. Mary Anne Aichele and Gayle Spicer;
4. Becky Brown and Georgia McCune;
1B.Marion Ong and Fran McCaffrey;
2C.Yaeko Shaub and John OBrien.

North-South: 1. Ray Adelizzi and Bill


Beakes; 2. Pam Rosenberger and Mel
Lubart; 3. Richard and Roz Braunstein;
1C.Kay Crawford and Alan Seltzer.

nThe Daytime Duplicate Bridge Club


meets at 12:15 Wednesdays.
Section A North-South: 1. Barry Gorski
and Ken Meyer; 2/3(tie) Pat Landis and Ray
Adelizzi, Kay Crawford and Dian Wise; 4.
Jeremy Lynch and Phil Monyer; 2B.Marty
Royce and Charlie Wooten; 1C.Ginny Bates
and Roy Grube.
East-West: 1. Jim Benson and Vernon
Hester; 2. Karen DIffenbach and Bonnie
Heilig; 3. Muriel Lepley and Bev Wagaman;
4. Bob and Jane Larkin.
Section B: 1. Sally Patterson and John

Puzzle No. 2

su l do l ku

@ Puzzles by Pappocorn

Fill in the grid so that every row, every


column, and every 3x3 box contains the
digits 1 through 9.

Todays Level: Easy

1
3
5 4

8 9
6

7
4 1
2 3
6
5
8 3
2

7
4
3 9
5 8
1
2
5 4
For the solutions to the puzzles, please see next page.

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

Ferranti; 2. Ed and Ruth Jones; 3. Pat


Latshaw and Jim Riccio; 4. Gayle
Spicer and Jackie Wissler; 5. Gail
Johnson and Ron Mundy; 6. Gerry
and Barby Richardson; 5B.Marty
Desch and Rosa Eshelman; 4C.Karen
Davis and John Rutter.
nThe Thursday Afternoon Ace of
Clubs meets at 12:15.
Section A: 1. Karen Diffenbach and
Alice Lafferty; 2. Lynn Harris and Mel
Lubart; 3. Joe Feifer and Gerry Weiss;
4. Ann Silverstein and John Klinger;

5. Russ Hannula and Bob Marsh; 6.


Debi Klinger and Dian Wise.
Section B North-South: 1. Carol
Feifer and Beth Menges; 2. Gail
Johnson and Kathy Myers; 3. Ed and
Ruth Jones; 3B.Colette Meyer and
John OBrien; 2C.Ron Mundy and Jim
Riccio.
East-West: 1. Jean Pryzbylkowski and
Allen Mannon; 2. Fran McCaffrey and
Ed Schoenberger; 3. Clare Mohn and
Theresa Stoeckl.

Daily Bridge Club


Changing times
In the past 30 years, bidding
philosophy has evolved. Because
accuracy in constructive bidding
has improved, players are more
focused on disrupting their
opponents auctions. I fear that
todays deal, from the 2016
Vanderbilt Teams, typifies what
top-level bridge has become.
Easts bid of two diamonds
conventionally showed a weak
two-bid in one of the major
suits. (If his hand had been any
weaker, it would have been
paralyzed.) When South doubled,
West judged to mention his
diamonds. He was in minus
1,100 territory at three diamonds
doubled.
But wait. To cope with
opponents constant
intervention, many pairs play all
kinds of action doubles. Norths
double of three diamonds
merely showed strength and
asked South to do something
intelligent. (If you think such
methods let the opponents enter
the auction with virtual impunity,
I might agree.)
South duly took out the double,
cue-bidding four diamonds, and
North then bid 5NT, asking his
partner to pick a slam contract.
South tried six clubs, passed out.
West found the killing defense:

He led the ace and a second


diamond. East came through by
ruffing with the eight of trumps,
and when South had to overruff
with an honor, Wests K-10 were
worth a trick. Instead of paying
out a major penalty for their fun,
East-West got a plus score.
Bridge has an undeniable luck
element. But when I see a deal
such as this in a late stage of a
major event, I wonder why we
dont just save time by letting

a coin-flip decide the


match.

East dealer
N-S vulnerable

PUZZLES/HOROSCOPE

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

ARTFUL THINKING

This is a Best of The New York Times puzzle that originally appeared in 2013.
ACROSS
62 Monetary bribes, in 119 Inclination
slang
1 Whammy
120 ___ Club
64 What a star probably 121 River that sweats oil
5 Where les enfants
has
might play
and tar in T. S. Eliots
9 Rendered speechless 65 N.R.A. piece?: Abbr.
The Waste Land
68 Artists favorite
15 Female lobsters
122 Predoctoral tests, for
Broadway musical?
19 Every which way
short
20 Subject for a mariachi 70 Revival meeting
123 Approximately
miracles
band
DOWN
71 ___ Zulu (warrior
21 Insubstantial
1 Tatooine race in the
dubbed Africas
22 Like Voldemort
Star Wars saga
Napoleon)
23 Artists favorite
2 Whats big at the
72
Atlantean
superhero
of
spiritual?
movies?
DC Comics
26 Ablution, e.g.
3
Like old unrecyclable
73
___
Field
27 Firefighters need,
bottles
75 Defrocked villain on
maybe
Buffy
the
Vampire
4
Certain Jaguar
28 Summer Olympics host
Slayer
5
Pre-exam feeling,
after London
76 Vista opener?
maybe
29 ___ vu
77 Roman of film
6 Playground retort
30 Food item a cook
81 Michigan college
7 South Koreas ___ Tae
might flip
82 ___ generis
Woo
32 Prescription pain
83 Part of an umpires
8
Buffet cabinet
medication
count
35 Nos. in a directory
9 Key of Schuberts
86 Put in writing
37 Look for
Trout Quintet: Abbr.
87 Parts of an orrery
38 Several, in Seville
89 Artists expression for 10 Bronze
40 Cool with what others
11 Topper
Such is life?
are doing
12 Ancient
92 Easter purchase
42 Go (for)
93 Worth all the hype, as 13 Patchwork quilts have
43 Christmas song line
a film
lots of them
from an artist?
94 Snorkeling aids
14 Good point
47 Batman villain
95 Tsk!
15 Artists line of weary
51 What Mississippi
98 Finger
resignation?
cheerleaders ask for 99 Cuts some slack
16
On This Night of
a lot
103 Zero Dark Thirty
a
Thousand Stars
52 How you might do
locale
musical
something gross
105 Castaways
17 Capones top
53 Cagney or Lacey: Abbr.
construction
henchman
54 Daughter of James II 107 Rough position?
18
Wintry mix
55 Where theres Wi-Fi 108 Sedona maker
24
Flawed, as mdse.
111 The Roman way
availability
112 How the expert artist 25 Party hosts
57 Get ready to drive
convenience
passed her exam?
60 Former six-term
senator from Indiana 116 The Cosby Show boy 31 Reposed
61 More yang than yin: 117 Last word in the Torah 33 Laborare ___ orare
118 Rain man?
(Freemasons motto)
Abbr.
THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

By Tracy BenneTT / Puzzles ediTed By Will shorTz

34 What Morehouse
College lacks
36 Before, poetically
38 Home of Kings Peak
39 Little muchacho
41 What the tipsy artist
had at the bar?
42 Liz of Garfield, e.g.
44 Pay to cross town,
maybe
45 First chimp to orbit
Earth
46 Pay to cross town,
maybe
47 Pop icon?
48 The Odd Couple role
49 Daft
50 Phooey!
53 Gauntlet throwers
challenge
56 What the artist
confused people with?
58 Norse source for Loki
lore
59 Dash
60 Dairy consumers
enzyme
62 Erotic
63 Good wife in The
Good Earth
65 Org. protecting music
copyrights
66 Congress ___ make
no law
67 Actress Hayek
69 Prefix with poise
74 Pain and suffering
77 Gay capital
78 Summer lawn sight
79 New Jerseys ___
University
80 QB mistakes: Abbr.
82 Holy mlle.
84 Turn to bone
85 Apiarists woe

NO. 0619
1

20

23

24

27

28
32

38

55

30
35

45

67

68

71

72

75

76

95

96

49

50

59

78

79

80

60

70
73

74

77

89

84

85

86

90

91

93

97

48

64

83

92

58

69

88

18

54

63

82

87

17

42

53

62

16

37

47

57

81

36

46

61
66

15

31

41

56

65

14

26

40

52

13

22

29

39

51

12

25

34

44

11

21

33

43

10

94

98

99

100 101 102

103

104

105 106

107

111

112

116

117

118

119

120

121

122

123

113

108 109 110

114

115

Stumped? Call: 1-900-285-5656, $1.49 each minute;


or, with a credit card, 1-800-814-5554.
88 Watchful ones?
89 Holy city of Iran
90 Access charge, of a sort
91 Debatable sighting
93 Words to live by
95 Blurts (out)
96 ___ yoga

97 Arabic name meaning


wise
98 J. Carrol ___, Oscar
nominee for Sahara
100 Phycologists study
101 Some templegoers
102 Pro vote
104 Birdbrain

106 ___ fair


109 Discoveries of Michael
Faraday
110 Regarding
113 Easter purchase
114 ___easter
115 Boardwalk Empire
network

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for


Sunday, June 26, 2016:

Check out the new, free JUST JUMBLE app

PRINT YOUR ANSWER IN THE CIRCLES BELOW

See answer on this page


LAST WEEKS New York Times
PUZZLE ANSWER
A S S UAnswer
M E
:A B A C
D O U B T S
P O M P
WEASEL
COWARD NOVICE
DCOUPLE
R P E P
P E R CRANKY
S P R
RATIFY
UWhen
T Eit came
R Oto teaching
T E chemE S
it
Pistry,
A the
R professor
C P had
A S
B
BDOWN
O O R TO
S AP E A
B O O N E
C O A L
SCIENCE
D R W H O S Y O U R D
O I L S
S E X T S
I B M
G E N E
P
E V A N S
D R J C
P R E O P
A L S
M I N O R C A
G R O S S
T H E W I
M E H
S L A Y S
T
S A B E
A T T
G E
D O D R N O H A R M
G O O G O O
M T A
I N H A S T E
T H E
F L O R E T S
N A V
S Y O S S E T
M A

K
O
A
L
A
S
A
M
O
R
C
Z
A
R
G
D
A
Y

P S Y
M
T E A
Y
A T S
O M
F I
B Y D R R
L E E
J A N E T
JUNE
D D Y
I
A Y I S E
T
T E R
E W
T R
H A H A
H O I R
A R D O F
L L
G R
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L E A
D E N T
M E N
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O C T O R
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A S

C
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H I C
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G N S
I T E
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O O N
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26,U 2016
N T E R
E
N S
E A T
N A B
A F R O
D R O Z
E A T
N N
C I G
R I C E
I S I N
C C E R
H O R E

NO. 0612

The Answers

get it.

This year your sensitivity


to others becomes one
of your hallmarks. Others
count on your empathy and
ability to help them find
solutions. Double-check
plans, and dont stand
on ceremony if there is a
mishap. Mistakes can be
easily made, and also easily
rectified. If you are single,
you could stumble from one
hot romance to another,
unless you are looking for
more. If so, people you
meet after summer could
be more significant. If you
are attached, the two of
you draw a lot of attention.
Together, you will manifest
an important mutual goal.
PISCES feels as intensely as
you do.

This Week: You might be


licking some old wounds.

The Stars Show the Kind of


Day Youll Have: 5-Dynamic;
4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-Soso; 1-Difficult

ARIES

(March 21-April 19)

Youll need some time


to yourself. Recognize your
limits. Indulge in a lazy day:
Read the paper, take a nap,
watch a baseball game or do
whatever knocks your socks
off. Just make sure that you
love whatever you are doing.
Tonight: Continue to hide
out, if you can.
This Week: Take a look at
your tendency to express
anger.

TAURUS

(April 20-May 20)

Zero in on what
you want, but know that a
friend might suggest a fun
activity that could force
you to compromise your
initial plans. What is wrong
with that? Be careful with a
younger person who seems
to think that you just dont

VIRGO

(Aug. 23-Sept. 22)

Tonight: Be unpredictable for


a change.

Deferring to others

might not be as easy as you


think. Nevertheless, you
seem to have managed to
do just that all weekend
long. End this period without
any hassles, and keep your
grumbling to yourself for
now.

GEMINI

(May 21-June 20)

Relating on an

individual level is far more


rewarding for you than being
out and about where you can
see all of your friends. Stay
home with a loved one. Make
a special Sunday brunch
together, or go out where
the two of you can be alone.

Tonight: Be more present in


the moment.
This Week: Express your
caring, and others will
respond.

Speak your mind,

Your imagination

goes haywire when dealing


with a problem. You might
feel confused at first, but
eventually a solution will
appear. Dont try to force an
answer. Allow greater giveand-take between you and a
loved one.

CANCER

(June 21-July 22)

Be willing to let

go and express your desire


to do something unusual,
or follow through on what
you consider to be a special
happening. In some way,
you might feel vulnerable.
Know that this is the case for
anyone who decides to try
something new.

Tonight: Delighted by a
friends true confessions.
This Week: Others want to
run with the ball. Let them.

SCORPIO

Tonight: Movie night.

(Oct. 23-Nov. 21)

This Week: Act on a dream


before you lose the window
of opportunity.

You feel like


a teenager again, and
probably have given others
a glimpse of this attitude,
especially today. A romantic
tie could start sizzling, even
if you have been with this
person for a long time. Allow
more carefree moments to
emerge.

LEO

(July 23-Aug. 22)

Plan on spending
quality time with a loved
one. You often are so
busy running around that
slowing down and focusing
on one person might be
uncomfortable at first.
This discomfort is only
momentary. Relax in the
company of this person.

Tonight: Ever playful.


This Week: Approach a hot
issue very carefully.

SAGITTARIUS
(Nov. 22-Dec. 21)

Tonight: Dream it up, then


do it.

Stay on top of a

personal matter. Your


understanding and growth

This Week: News comes in


that opens up your mind.

6
2
8
3
5
9
4
7
1

1
3
7
2
4
8
6
5
9

4
9
5
1
7
6
3
8
2

8
5
1
4
6
7
9
2
3

9
6
4
8
2
3
7
1
5

3
7
2
5
9
1
8
6
4

7
4
3
6
1
5
2
9
8

and be willing to back up


your words. Your integrity
and support mean a lot to
others. Refuse to get caught
up in any situation that
might be dramatic. Others
will understand your need to
stay out of petty arguments.
Tonight: Wherever there is
good music.
This Week: Stay close to
home.

AQUARIUS
(Jan. 20-Feb. 18)

Decide to treat a

child or dear friend to a fun


day involving a pastime that
you both love. Relax and
share more of your mutual
interests. Try to walk away
from any gossip. In the long
run, the less you know, the
better off you are.
Tonight: Let someone else
call the shots.
This Week: Be aware of the
financial implications of what
is coming up.

PISCES

(Feb. 19-March 20)

What you do
seems to work, with the
exception of one person who
tends to confuse situations
and create hassles. Dont
take this personally; just let
it roll off you. Whatever the
plans are, you naturally bring
family and friends together.
Tonight: As you like it.

Puzzle No. 2

Puzzle No. 1

This Week: Tap into your


imagination and go for what
you want.

(Dec. 22-Jan. 19)

(Sept. 23-Oct. 22)

This Week: Others join you


and support what you want
through Tuesday.

Tonight: Invite others over


for some fun.

CAPRICORN

LIBRA

Tonight: Keep it exclusive.

will not go unnoticed by


those close to you. A partner
or loved one could feel
threatened, as confusion
seems to surround him or
her. Let this person know
that you care.

2
1
9
7
8
4
5
3
6

5
8
6
9
3
2
1
4
7

This Week: An associate


could become difficult.

BORN TODAY
Baseball player Derek Jeter
(1974), actor Nick Offerman
(1970), actress Aubrey Plaza
(1984)

Answer :

Now arrange the circled letters


to form the surprise answer, as
suggested by the above cartoon.

A baby born today has a


Sun in Cancer and a Moon in
Pisces.

WEASEL
COWARD NOVICE
RATIFY
CRANKY
COUPLE
When it came to teaching chemistry, the professor had it

SAWLEE
KYRNAC

JUNE 26, 2016

TAYRIF

DOWN TO A
SCIENCE

CIVENO

19

WDORAC
PLUCEO

JACQUELINE BIGARS STARS

by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek

Unscramble these six Jumbles,


one letter to each square,
to form six ordinary words.

2016 Tribune Content Agency, LLC


All Rights Reserved.

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

LNP | LANCASTER, PA

8 SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

release dates: June 25-July 1, 2016

26 (16)

Next Week:
Summer
Olympics

Issue 26, 2016

Founded by Betty Debnam

Mini Fact:

Ups and
Downs of
Yo-yos

photo by Oliver Lopena

Your arm acts


as a lever
when you
bend at the
elbow before
throwing the
yo-yo. It gives
you greater
power.

In August, yo-yo competitors will meet


in Cleveland for the World YoYo Contest.
Teenagers and adults from more than 30
countries will compete in six divisions,
including tricks with one yo-yo, two
yo-yos and offstring yo-yos those not
attached to a string.

photo by Trevor Crawford

Are you a yo-yo fan? Do you carry a yo-yo


in your pocket and practice tricks for your
friends?
The Mini Page spoke with a yo-yo expert
to find out more about these timeless toys.

Modern yo-yos

Today, yo-yos can be taken apart to replace


the axle. Weights can be added to make a yoyo spin longer. Some axles have ball bearings,
which also increase the sleep time.
Spinning through time
Yo-yos are still made from wood and plastic,
The yo-yo you and your friends play with
but today many kids and competitors use an
is a modern version of a toy that goes back to
aluminum yo-yo with a ball-bearing axle.
500 B.C. or before. In ancient Greece, the toys
The string goes
were made of wood, metal or painted terra
around the bearing;
cotta, or clay. They were called discs.
the spacers hold
During the French Revolution in the 1700s, the string in place.
yo-yos were used as stress relief. It was called
Beginners can loop
the joujou de Normandie, which some people the string around the
think was the origin of the word yo-yo. In
axle a couple of times
England, it was known as a bandalore.
to help the yo-yo return to their hand. It wont
In the United States in
sleep with a double loop, but it will go up and
1866, two men received
down easily.
a patent for a weighted
The science of yo-yos
bandalore.
Do you study physics in school? Physics is
The yo-yo was also popular
the science of matter and energy and how they
in the Philippines, where it was
interact with each other. Yo-yos have a lot to
carved from wood. A man
do with physics!
named Pedro Flores started a
For example, we know that friction is
yo-yo company in California
created when two surfaces rub together. When
in 1928. Flores yo-yo was
a yo-yo string rubs on an axle, friction is
An illustration
different; it was the first one
from 1791
created between the string and the axle. But
that had the string looped
shows a
when the yo-yo is spinning on a bearing, less
around the axle, rather than young woman friction is created. The yo-yo spins longer!
playing with a
tied to it. This allowed the
Yo-yos also demonstrate kinetic and
bandalore.
yo-yo to spin at the end of the
potential energy. A yo-yo has potential, or
string, or sleep.
stored, energy when it is wound up. It has

Try a yo-yo trick

image courtesy yoyoexpert.com

When you are holding the yo-yo in your


palm, the string should come over the top
of the yo-yo. Hold your arm bent up, with
your hand next to your ear. Bring your
elbow down with a snap and let the yo-yo
fly out over the ends of your fingers. Turn
your hand over, and the yo-yo will return
up the string. Or, if the string is looped
only once, the yo-yo will sleep.
To Walk the Dog, make sure your yo-yo
is looped just once, so it will sleep. Throw
a fast sleeper, then lower the yo-yo until it
gently touches the floor. The yo-yo will start
walking forward. Jerk it back up before it
stops spinning!

Resources
On the Web:

yoyoexpert.com/learn
bit.ly/1V6A1EP
bit.ly/1ssFwTw

At the library:

Awesome Yo-Yo Tricks by Shar


Levine

kinetic, or moving, energy when it is released.

The Mini Page 2016 Universal Uclick

Try n Find

Mini Jokes

Words that remind us of yo-yos are hidden in this


puzzle. Some words are hidden backward, and some
letters are used twice. See if you can find:
ALUMINUM, AXLE,
BANDALORE, BEARING,
DISC, ELBOW, FRICTION,
KINETIC, LEVER, LOOP,
PHYSICS, PLASTIC,
POTENTIAL, SLEEP,
STRING, TOY, TRICK,
WEIGHTED, WOOD,
YOYO.

P
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B
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P
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A
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W
G

O
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N
C
E
B

T
T
Q
I
T
O
D
S
I
T

E
C
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T
S
W
A
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G
K

N
I
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E
A
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D
H
W

T
R
E
N
L
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U
T
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I
F
E
I
P
O
R
C
E
B

Frank: How do chubby


rabbits get fit?
Fiona: They do hare-robics!

A
P
P
K
L
P
E
A
D
L

L
Y
S
C
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H
P
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E
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A
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U
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U
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V
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O
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F
Q
C
U

E
O
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A
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R
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A

Eco Note
Leopards have
disappeared in 75
percent of their historical habitats
across Africa, Asia and the Middle
East, a new study says. The loss of
the big cats is because of expanding
agriculture, declining prey and poaching
for the illegal trade in the leopards
skins and teeth.
adapted with permission from Earthweek.com

1/3 cup Italian bread


Youll need:
crumbs
1 pound lean ground beef
1/8 teaspoon pepper
1 tablespoon Worcestershire sauce
1 egg
1 tablespoon Dijon mustard
1 (8-ounce) can
1/2 onion, chopped fine (1/2 cup),
tomato sauce
optional
What to do:
1. Mix together ground beef, Worcestershire sauce, mustard, onion, bread crumbs,
pepper and egg in a large bowl. Mold mixture into a regular loaf pan.
2. Bake at 350 degrees for 60 minutes until top is browned.
3. Drain away any visible fat.
4. Pour tomato sauce over top and continue cooking for 10 minutes more.
5. Slice and serve. Serves 6.

Puzzling
Unscramble the words below that remind us of physics.

itfcrino
isnp
eyrnge
trmate

Thank You
The Mini Page 2016 Universal Uclick

Meat-in-a-Loaf Pan

* Youll need an adults help with this recipe.

Cooks Corner

The Mini Page thanks


Val Oliver, vice president of the Science
of Spin in Fort Worth, Texas, for help
with this issue.

Teachers:
For standards-based activities to
accompany this feature, visit:
bbs.amuniversal.com/teaching_guides.html

Answers: friction, spin, energy, matter.

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