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WILKES-BARRE, PA SATURDAY, MARCH 17, 2012 50
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Kitchens have become
too sterile, some say
AT HOME, 1C
Cooking up
some kitsch
No. 15 seed Lehigh tops
powerhouse Duke
SPORTS, 1B
Basketball
shocker
EDITORS NOTE: An oc-
casional look at some of the
19 Luzerne County projects
to receive a portion of $12.2
million in gaming revenues
in 2012 from the Common-
wealth Financing Authority
to improve communities and
economic activities.
GT Fabrication Inc. Chief
Operating Officer Gino
Tighe is credit-
ing a casino-tax
loan fund with
providing
needed capital
to his flood-
damaged Pitt-
ston company.
We applied
pretty swiftly because of all
the problems we had If
there wasnt the $100,000
loan we would have had
problems, he said of the
newly created Luzerne
County Flood Recovery Loan
Program to help business
damaged by Septembers
flooding. The quick infu-
sion of cash really helped us
get back on our feet.
The program is adminis-
tered by nonprofit MetroAc-
tion of Scranton, which has
been allocated $4 million of
the $12.2 million in casino
revenue targeted this year to
help fund 19 Luzerne County
projects.
GAMI NG TAX
Flood-hit
Pittston
business
helped
A loan program provides
$100,000 to help recovery
at GT Fabrication.
By JOE DOLINSKY
Times Leader Intern
CASINO
CASH
See GAMING, Page 12A
Continued payment of former
state Sen. Robert Mellows nearly
$139,000 annual pension will be
dependent upon whether the
charges hes facing are deemed to
be substantially similar to any
of the 22 state crimes that trigger
a pension forfeiture, according to
pension law.
Federal prosecutors an-
nounced Thursday that Mellow,
70, has agreed to plead guilty to
charges of conspiracy to commit
mail fraud and tax evasion.
Its not known yet if the plea
will affect his rights to an $11,579
per month pension, which he
earned through his 40 years rep-
resenting the 22nd Senatorial
District.
That decision will be up to the
State Employees Retirement
System, which will review court
documents to determine if the
charges warrant forfeiture of the
pension.
Under state pension law, per-
sons convicted of any of 22 state
crimes related to their public em-
ployment can be required to for-
feit their pension. Those crimes
include forgery, extortion, perju-
ry, tampering withpublic records
and several variations of theft
charges.
In federal cases, a determina-
tion must be made whether the
specific federal charge is equiva-
lent to one of the specified state
charges.
F EDERAL I NVESTI GATI ON Former longtime state senator expected to plead guilty to conspiracy
Mellow loss of pension uncertain
DON CAREY/THE TIMES LEADER
As a state
senator, Rob-
ert Mellow
represented
the areas
22nd Sen-
atorial Dis-
trict for 40
years. He has
been charged
with conspir-
acy to com-
mit mail
fraud and tax
evasion.
By TERRIE MORGAN-BESECKER
tmorgan@timesleader.com
INSIDE: Mellow name adorns area,
Page 12A
See PENSION, Page 12A
READY FOR THE BIG GREEN DAY
AIMEE DILGER/THE TIMES LEADER
M
embers of the Wyoming Valley Pipe and Drum Band stopped at various bars, including Cork Bar & Restaurant on
Elm Street in Wilkes-Barre, on St. Patricks Eve to play and bring good cheer. Many musical groups and other
organizations will be helping to celebrate the traditional Irish holiday today.
WILKES-BARRE A for-
mer superintendent in the
Wilkes-Barre Area School Dis-
trict and a well-known Demo-
cratic Party leader are among
the people who were alleged-
ly victimized by attorney An-
thony Lupas as part of a bo-
gus investment scheme, ac-
cording to court papers filed
Friday.
Leo Solomon of Wilkes-
Barre, who
served 18
years as su-
perintendent
before retir-
ing in 1993,
and the es-
tate of the
late James
Bach, who
headed the Luzerne County
Democratic Party for 15 years,
are among 10 plaintiffs named
in a lawsuit filed by attorney
Gavin Lentz of Philadelphia.
Lentz filed a writ of sum-
mons against Lupas on behalf
of his clients. A writ notifies a
person he or she is being
sued, but does not contain
specific allegations. That in-
formation will be contained in
a complaint filed at a later
date.
The suit joins a separate
lawsuit filed Monday by at-
torney Ernest Preate of Scran-
ton on behalf of three per-
Alleged
victims
surfacing
Big names are among those
victimized by lawyer Lupas,
investigators say.
By TERRIE MORGAN-BESECKER
tmorgan@timesleader.com
Lupas
See NAMES, Page 4A
INSIDE
A NEWS: Local 3A
Nation & World 5A
Obituaries 8A
Editorial 11A
B SPORTS: Scoreboard 2B
Business 7B
C AT HOME: Birthdays 4C
Crossword 5C
Movies/TV 6C
D CLASSIFIED: Funnies 26D
WEATHER
Jared McGuire
Mostly sunny, warm.
High 67. Low 47.
Details, Page 8B
A mild winter thats ending
with an early warm-up can be a
great thing for sun lovers and
folks withanaversionto the cold.
But it canalsocausesomeprob-
lems:
a potential for ruined fruit
crops.
an early start for some aller-
gies.
and the early appearance of
some stinging insects.
WNEP-TVChief Meteorologist
TomClarksaidthewinter of 2011-
12 has been the third warmest on
record for Wilkes-Barre/Scran-
ton. And the consistently warm
weather weve seen so far in
Marchis very unusual, he said.
Temperatures have been20 to
25 degrees above average, not on-
ly the highs, but the lows, which
A boon or a bane?
High temps here
CLARK VAN ORDEN/THE TIMES LEADER
Greg Heller of Hellers Orchards in Wapwallopen checks plum
trees. He worries that a late frost could hit and damage his crops.
By STEVE MOCARSKY
smocarsky@timesleader.com
See WARM, Page 12A
INSIDE: Anchorage overflowing with
snow, Page 2A
WASHINGTON Afghan
President Hamid Karzai says hes
at the endof the rope, anda ma-
jority of Americans feel the same
way.
Of all the past decades set-
backs in the endeavor to form a
solid alliance with Afghanistan
anddefeat the Taliban, the war ef-
fort has been driven to a newlow
by the slaughter of nine Afghan
children and seven adults alleg-
edly by a U.S. soldier whose iden-
tity had been kept secret until
late Friday.
A senior U.S. official said the
suspect is Army Staff Sgt. Robert
Bales, 38. The official spoke on
condition of anonymity because
of the sensitivity of the legal case
that is in its early stages.
The soldier was on his way Fri-
day from a U.S. military deten-
tion facility in Kuwait to the max-
imum security prison in Fort
Leavenworth, Kan., though Kar-
zai demanded anew that he be
tried under the Afghan justice
system.
War effort hitting new low in Afghanistan
AP PHOTO
Boxes and a U.S.
flag sit Fridayin
Lake Tapps,
Wash., on the
front porch of
the home of U.S.
Army Staff Sgt.
Robert Bales,
who is accused
of killing 16 civil-
ians in Afghan-
istan.
.
Slaughter of nine children and
seven adults allegedly by U.S.
soldier is latest setback.
By ROBERT BURNS
AP National Security Writer
See WAR, Page 4A
K
PAGE 2A SATURDAY, MARCH 17, 2012 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
McCloskey, Wanda
McKeon, Helen
Nesbitt, Willard
Panowicz, Stanley
Parrella, Helen
Shandra, Walter
Sura, Brian
Toler, Marjorie
OBITUARIES
Page 8A
BUILDING
TRUST
The Times Leader strives to
correct errors, clarify stories
and update them promptly.
Corrections will appear in this
spot. If you have information
to help us correct an inaccu-
racy or cover an issue more
thoroughly, call the newsroom
at 829-7242.
HARRISBURG No player
matched all five winning
numbers drawn in Fridays
Pennsylvania Cash 5 game
so the jackpot will be worth
$225,000.
Lottery officials said 71
players matched four num-
bers and won $213 each and
2,985 players matched three
numbers and won 8.50
each.
LOTTERY
MIDDAY DRAWING
DAILY NUMBER 7-3-8
BIG FOUR 3-4-2-9
QUINTO 7-2-4-6-4
TREASURE HUNT
07-08-11-12-23
NIGHTLY DRAWING
DAILY NUMBER 7-5-3
BIG FOUR 6-6-5-2
QUINTO 5-0-6-6-7
CASH FIVE
11-15-16-19-23
MEGA MILLIONS
28-29-43-51-53
MEGA BALL 7
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Issue No. 2012-077
WILKES-BARRE Police
Friday morning reported seizing
2 ounces of marijuana, $3,200 in
cash, a .45-caliber handgun and
drug paraphernalia during a raid
on a residence at 16 E. Jackson
St.
Members of the state police
vice and narcotics unit, Kingston
police narcotics unit and Wilkes-
Barre police served a search
warrant on the property around
11:30 a.m.
The investigation is ongoing
and an arrest is pending, police
said.
HANOVER TWP. Township
police are investigating a vehicle
crash on state Route 309 that
sent a woman to a hospital
Thursday night.
Police said a 2004 Saab was
traveling south on Route 309 and
struck a concrete wall near Le-
high Street at about 8:55 p.m.
The womans name was not re-
leased by police.
Police said Friday the woman
sustained moderate injuries that
are not life-threatening.
Anyone with information or
who may have witnessed the
crash is asked to call Hanover
Township police at 825-1254 or
825-1248.
The Saab was towed from the
scene.
SALEMTWP. A man was
arraigned Friday in Wilkes-Barre
Central Court on charges he
assaulted a woman during an
argument about cigarettes.
Theodore J. Luciw, 50, of Hos-
icks Road, was charged with
aggravated assault, reckless en-
dangerment and harassment. He
was jailed at the Luzerne County
Correctional Facility for lack of
$10,000 bail.
According to the criminal
complaint:
Township police investigated a
domestic dispute at Luciws resi-
dence just before 8:30 Thursday
night.
Catherine Hack told police
Luciw "smacked her several
times in the face" and choked her
during an argument about ciga-
rettes, according to the criminal
complaint.
Luciw denied he assaulted
Hack, claiming she got caught on
his wedding ring.
HAZLETON City police
reported the following:
Police arrested Magdiel
Delarosa Alverez, 25, of East
Cranberry Street, on charges he
assaulted a former girlfriend on
Thursday.
Alverez allegedly assaulted the
woman after he smashed a win-
dow and crawled into her resi-
dence on North James Street. He
was charged with aggravated
assault, criminal trespass, simple
assault and harassment, and
jailed at the Luzerne County
Correctional Facility for lack of
$30,000 bail.
Police said they are investi-
gating an assault on a 13-year-old
girl who claimed she was forced
into a vehicle in the area of Ninth
Street and Manhattan Court on
Thursday. The girl said she es-
caped the vehicle in the area of
the Altmiller Playground on 13th
Street where she was kicked and
punched at about 4 p.m.
Police said the girl was trans-
ported to Hazleton General Hos-
pital.
Anyone with information about
the incident is asked to call Ha-
zleton police at 459-4940.
Police said they cited Eric
McAdams, 43, of Muir Avenue,
with disorderly conduct after he
made comments in Hazleton
General Hospital that he had a
firearm on Thursday. The hospi-
tal was placed on lockdown dur-
ing a search.
WRIGHT TWP. A man was
arraigned Friday in Wilkes-Barre
Central Court on charges he stole
tools and a boat motor from the
Auto Bus garage on South Moun-
tain Boulevard.
Michael Chitswara, 32, of
Creek Road, Wapwallopen, was
charged with two counts each
with burglary, theft, criminal
trespass, receiving stolen proper-
ty and criminal conspiracy. He
was jailed at the Luzerne County
Correctional Facility for lack of
$10,000 bail.
Township police allege Chit-
swara and Laura Brush, 25, of
Archer Road, Wapwallopen, used
a garage door opener to enter the
garage and steal numerous tools
from Nov. 11 to Nov. 14. Brush
had access to the door opener,
according to the criminal com-
plaint.
Police further allege Chitswara
stole a motor from a boat at the
same garage on Jan. 15 or Jan. 16.
Chitswara and Brush sold the
stolen tools and boat motor at a
pawn shop in Hazleton, the crim-
inal complaint says.
Brush is facing criminal con-
spiracy charges in county court.
HANOVER TWP. State po-
lice Bureau of Liquor Control
Enforcement reported the follow-
ing:
VFW Post 283 Canteen, Inc.,
753-757 Wyoming Ave., King-
ston, was recently cited with
possessing or operating gambling
devices or paraphernalia.
Fifteenth Street Beer Ware-
house Corp., 802 W. 15th St.,
Hazleton, was recently cited with
possessing or operating gambling
devices or paraphernalia.
WILKES-BARRE TWP. State
police at Wyoming said a black
BWM sport utility vehicle struck
a Ford Ranger, operated by Der-
rick Ogden, of Virginia, while
traveling south on Interstate 81 at
about 1:30 a.m. Friday. The driver
of the BMW drove away.
Ogden, a passenger and a dog
in his vehicle were not injured.
WILKES-BARRE City police
reported the following:
Leah Cronauer, of Wilkes-
Barre, reported Friday morning a
window was smashed on her
vehicle and a cable box was sto-
len on Scott Street, near the
Anthracite Caf.
WILKES-BARRE City police
reported the following:
Patricia Reddick, of South
Welles Street, reported Wednes-
day a window was shot three
times by a pellet gun.
Police said they cited Robert
Hood, of Philadelphia, with pub-
lic drunkenness when he was
allegedly found highly intoxicat-
ed in the area of 221 S. Main St.
at 11:30 p.m. Wednesday. Police
said Hood refused medical treat-
ment for a laceration on his head.
HANOVER TWP. State po-
lice Bureau of Liquor Control
Enforcement reported the follow-
ing:
Alexander E. Saba, doing
business as Januzzis, 76 N.
Mountain Blvd., Fairview Town-
ship, was recently cited with
possessing or operating gambling
devices or permitted gambling or
lotteries.
Pitchers Mound, 311 Black-
man St., Wilkes-Barre, was re-
cently cited with permitting
smoking in a public place where
smoking is prohibited and failure
to post signage as required by the
Clean Indoor Air Act.
Dennis Bruce Miller, doing
business as Millers, 811 S. Johns
Rd., Butler Township, was re-
cently cited with permitting
smoking in a public place where
smoking is prohibited and failure
to post signage as required by the
Clean Indoor Air Act.
Duryea Veterans Home Asso-
ciation, 492 Stephenson St.,
Duryea, was recently cited with
possessing fortified or contam-
inated liquor.
MONROE TWP. State police
at Tunkhannock reported a blue-
and-white 2005 Yamaha YZ 250
motorcycle, owned by Timothy
Clark of Old Forge, was stolen
from 2305 state Route 29 in
Wyoming County in March.
PLYMOUTH TWP. - State
police at Wyoming are investigat-
ing an armed robbery at the
Carousel adult club Thursday
morning. Two black males with
firearms entered the club and
demanded money from two safes
at about 9:15 a.m. They drove
away in an unknown vehicle and
were last seen traveling north on
state Route 11. The club was
closed at the time of the robbery.
POLICE BLOTTER
ANCHORAGE, Alaska
Even by Alaska standards, this
winter is unusual for the hardy
residents of the states largest
city.
Near-record snowfall buried
Anchorage neighborhoods,
turning streets into canyons
with walls of snowon each side.
Thesnowsweightcollapsedthe
roofs of some buildings. Moose
are fleeing into the city to get
away fromtoo-deep snow.
And the city dumps are close
to overflowing with snow that
may not melt entirely before
next winter.
Love or hate it, some resi-
dents are hoping for more, at
least another 3.3 inches. Then
they could say they made it
through the winter when the
nearly 60-year record of 132.6
inches was broken.
I want it destroyed, resident
MelissaBlair said. I want tosee
another foot and knock that re-
cordout of the park.
The extreme weather has not
just struck Alaska this winter. It
has also hit the Lower 48.
Thefirst threemonthsof 2012
have seen twice the normal
number of tornadoes. And 36
states set daily high temper-
ature records Thursday. The
Lower48haditsfourthwarmest
winter on record, while Alaska
had its coldest January on re-
cord.
Two different weather phe-
nomenon La Nina and its
northern cousin the Arctic Os-
cillationare mostlytoblame,
meteorologists say. Global
warming could also be a factor
because it is supposed to in-
crease weather extremes, cli-
mate scientists say.
Whenyoustart tosee the ex-
treme events become more
common, thats when you can
say that it is a consequence of
global warming, University of
Victoria climate scientist An-
drewWeaver said.
Nearly11feet of snowhas fall-
en on Anchorage this winter,
forcing the city to haul away at
least 250,000 tons of snowor
around500millionpoundsto
its six snowdisposal sites.
Snow record for Alaska
Anchorages city dumps are
close to overflowing with
snow that may not melt.
Love or hate it, some resi-
dents are hoping for more, at
least another 3.3 inches, to
break nearly 60-year record.
The Associated Press
THE RECYCLING OF THE GREEN
CLARK VAN ORDEN/THE TIMES LEADER
I
n keeping with his green lifestyle, Dave Darby of Wilkes-Barre took several barrels
of yard clippings from his home on Madison Street to the recycling center on North
Pennsylvania Boulevard using no fossil fuels but only his pedal power. He said he and
his wife, Jennifer Lavery, are glad to live in Wilkes-Barre where there are several
transportation options, among them walking, cycling or taking a bus to various desti-
nations. He ordered the bike trailer from bikesatwork.com.
WILKES-BARRE A Me-
chanicsburg man convicted of
second-degree murder and
sentenced to two consecutive
life sentences in prison has
appealed his case to the state
Superior Court.
Izel Garrett, 20, filed the
appeal Friday through his
attorneys, Brian Corcoran and
Allyson Kacmarski. Garrett
and his brother, Isiah Garrett,
22, were convicted by a Lu-
zerne County jury in Decem-
ber of five counts each relating
to a robbery that left 30-year-
old Abdul Shabazz dead.
Investigators say the broth-
ers intended to rob Shabazz of
$300 worth of marijuana in
December 2010 in their fa-
thers West Hazleton home
WILKES-BARRE A Pitt-
ston man was sentenced Fri-
day to six days of time already
served to 12 months in county
prison on charges stemming
from a case in which police say
he used a wet towel to whip a
5-year-old boy.
Ducarmel Louis, 29, of Car-
roll Street, was sentenced on a
charge of simple assault by
County Judge Joseph Skla-
rosky, Jr. Louis pleaded guilty
to the charge in January.
Sklarosky said Louis must
also serve four years proba-
tion. According to court pa-
pers, in March 2011, Louis was
charged after a school nurse
notified Luzerne County Chil-
dren & Youth that a 5-year-old
boy may have been the victim
of child abuse.
The boy told police that
Louis would "whip" him with
a wet towel because he was
crying or got in trouble at
school. The boy further told
police that Louis would make
him hold a heavy book if he
didnt do well in school, and
he had been previously hit
with a belt.
COURT BRIEFS
THE ARTS OF THE BRAVE
CLARK VAN ORDEN/THE TIMES LEADER
W
orks from the Veterans Creative Arts Competition are displayed at the Depart-
ment of Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Plains Township. The works were cre-
ated by people who have received treatment at the facility.
C M Y K
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com SATURDAY, MARCH 17, 2012 PAGE 3A
LOCAL
timesleader.com
SCRANTON
Charity collection planned
A special collection supporting Ca-
tholic Social Services of the Diocese of
Scranton will be taken at all weekend
Masses throughout the Diocese this
weekend.
The collection
supports an array of
programs including
adoption and post-
adoptive services;
emergency food,
clothing, housing and
shelter for homeless
men, women and
children and the elder-
ly; foster care; family enrichment; im-
migration services; refugee and reset-
tlement services; drug and alcohol
treatment; and Big Brothers/Big Sis-
ters.
The agency also provides daily meals
to more than 600 men, women and
children.
The Most Rev. Joseph C. Bambera,
bishop of Scranton, is asking all faithful
to help the agency meet the needs of
the people in the area.
WASHINGTON, D.C.
Hunlock Creek gets money
U.S. Rep. Lou Barletta, R-Hazleton,
announced Hunlock Creek Volunteer
Fire Company will receive almost
$29,735 through the U.S. Department
of Homeland Securitys Federal Emer-
gency Management Agency Assistance
to Firefighters Grants
program.
The primary goal of
the Assistance to
Firefighters Grant
program is to meet
the firefighting and
emergency response
needs of fire depart-
ments and nonaffil-
iated emergency medical service orga-
nizations.
WILKES-BARRE
Services to play for cause
GOALS Foundation has partnered
with the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Pen-
guins for the 1st annual Hockey for
Heroes game at the Mohegan Sun at
Casey Plaza Arena to benefit the chil-
dren of police, fire, and military service
members. The game will pit the
Wilkes-Barre area police, fire and mil-
itary members versus the Binghamton
area police, fire and military members.
The game begins at 10:30 a.m. Sunday.
Tickets for the game are on sale now
and proceeds will go to GOALS Foun-
dation, a local nonprofit organization
that offers financial support to youth
athletics. All proceeds will be used to
establish a scholarship fund for area
youth hockey players and figure skaters
whose parents are police officers, fire-
fighters or members of the armed ser-
vices.
Donations are also being accepted at
www.goalsfoundation.com. The maxi-
mum grant will be $100 per child and
can be used to pay registration costs,
league fees, purchase skates, hockey
sticks or other related expenses.
DUNMORE
Sobriety checks planned
The Pennsylvania Department of
Transportation said sobriety check-
points will be conducted this weekend
by police departments in Dallas, Ha-
nover Township, Kingston Township,
Pittston Township and Wright Town-
ship.
WILKES-BARRE
Kings College wins honor
The Corporation for National and
Community Service has named Kings
College to the Presidents Higher Edu-
cation Community Service Honor Roll
for the sixth consecutive year. About 80
percent of Kings students participated
in service efforts last year and the aver-
age student dedicated more than 82
hours to public ser-
vice.
During the 2010-
2011 academic year,
Kings students com-
bined for more than
174,000 service hours.
The student service
hours do not include
the efforts of many
Kings faculty, administrators and staff
members who participated alongside
students in service activities and aca-
demic service learning, said the Rev.
John Ryan, president.
I N B R I E F
Barletta
Bambera
Ryan
WILKES-BARRE Arthur Stoss told
investigators he was with Lillian Cala-
bro the night prosecutors allege he
killedher inMarch2011, a county detec-
tive testified Friday.
They went to a Pittston bar, to a
friends home and then to purchase co-
caine, Detective James Noone testified
Stoss told him in an interview.
But, Stoss told Noone, after Calabro
got into a red Mitsubishi Eclipse in a
parking lot onNorthMainStreet inPitt-
ston, he never sawher
again.
Noone was one of
the last witnesses to
be called by prosecu-
tors Friday in the
fourth day of Stoss
trial on homicide
charges in Calabros
death.
Defense attorneys began calling wit-
nesses Friday afternoon and will contin-
ue to do so Monday. Judge William
Amesbury said he expects to send the
jury of eight men and four women to de-
liberate sometime Monday.
Prosecutors allege Stoss brutally as-
saulted Calabro at the Riverfront Park
in Pittston on March11, 2011 and threw
her body into the Susquehanna River.
Her body was found washed up 10 days
later on a river bank near Wilkes-Barres
Kirby Park.
Noone testified he interviewed Stoss
the day after Calabro went missing and
investigators learned the two had been
together.
When Noone, who had obtained in-
formation that Stoss had killed Calabro,
asked what Stoss did to the woman,
Stoss allegedly said, I cant.
Stoss toldNoone that he was withCa-
labroandanother womanat Stephanies
Bar in Pittston.
The trio left a short time later to go to
a friends home a fewblocks away where
they drank beer and whiskey.
Video surveillance shown to the jury
Friday showed the three walking to the
home and then Stoss walking with
Luzerne County detective testifies that suspect saw victim before alleged murder
Stoss said he was with Calabro
By SHEENA DELAZIO
sdelazio@timesleader.com
Stoss
See VICTIM, Page 4A
BERWICK The Nuclear Regulatory
Commission will hold two public meet-
ings Wednesdayregardingthe annual as-
sessment and supplemental inspection
of the PPL Susquehanna nuclear power
plant.
The meetings will be held at the Eagle
Building, 107 S. Market St., Berwick.
The first meeting at 4 p.m. will ad-
dress the safetyperformance of the plant
in Salem Township during 2011. The
public will have an opportunity to ask
questions of the NRC staff on the plants
performance and the agencys oversight
of the facility.
The second meeting will begin at 7
p.m. and will address the results of the
supplemental inspection conducted at
the plant between Feb. 13 and Feb. 27.
The NRCevaluated the actions taken by
PPL during the manual shutdown of the
Unit1reactor due tointernal floodingon
July 16, 2010.
The event received a White designa-
tion, placing it in the low to moderate
safety significance range following an
initial inspection in 2010.
Unit 1 came under additional over-
sight of the NRC when at the end of the
first quarter of 2011it experienced more
than three unplanned shutdowns or
scrams during its previous 7,000 hours
of operation. The NRCchangedthe reac-
tors performance indicator to White
from Green.
But overall, the Unit 1 and the plants
other reactor, Unit 2, operated safely
during 2011, the NRC said.
Unit 2 reactor had neither inspection
findings nor performance indicators ris-
ing to the level of additional oversight.
As a result, for the remainder of this year
Unit 2 will be subject to the detailed in-
spection regime for plants operating
well.
PPL spokesman Joe Scopelliti said
there is no danger to the public and the
plants people have been hard at work
making improvements.
Nuke plant
will be focus
of meetings
The two Wednesday sessions in
Berwick will address safety
performance and an inspection.
By Times Leader staff
WILKES-BARRE If the Irish
couldnt poke fun at themselves, they
wouldnt have muchfun, andthey poked
and laughed Friday night.
John and Kevin Corcoran took aim at
their father JohnSr., whowashonoredas
Man of the Year at the 67th Anniversary
Banquet of the Friendly Sons of St. Pa-
trick of Greater Wilkes-Barre at the Ra-
mada Inn in the citys downtown.
Approximately 450 men and boys
gathered at the dinner on the eve of St.
Patricks Day.
The Corcoran brothers thanked their
mothers side of the family for giving
themfull heads of hair, unlike their bald-
ing father.
KevinCorcorannotedthesignificance
of the honor given his father, owner and
operator of Corcorans Funeral Home in
Plains Township.
You know that you made it when a
crematory offers you congratulations,
he said.
The Sunlight Crematory of Wilkes-
Barreplacedanadintheprogramfor the
dinner.
He served 11 years on the Wilkes-
Barre Area School Boardwithout any in-
vestigations, he added.
The school board has received un-
wanted attention in the ongoing public
corruption probe in Luzerne County.
But the honoree took the ribbing in
stride and humbly accepted the award.
Youre looking at a multi-billionaire,
not in money, but in family and friends,
he said.
U.S. Rep. TimHolden, D- St. Clair, pre-
sentedCorcoranwitha citationfromthe
Houseof Representatives. Holdenis run-
ning for re-election in the 17th Congres-
sional District.
Former U.S. Rep. Patrick Murphy of
Bristol, a Democratic candidate for state
attorney general and a Kings College
graduate, served as toastmaster.
Murphy, whose brother J.J. was a for-
mer Wilkes-Barre city administrator, at-
tended the dinner in 1996 and acknowl-
edgedhenever thought hewouldreturn.
Its really an honor and a privilege, he
said.
While many dressed formally for the
dinner, principal speaker Nick Lowery,
former kicker for the NFLs Kansas City
Chiefs, wore a green football jersey with
a white number 8 under his tuxedo coat.
F RI ENDLY SONS OF ST. PATRI CK
FRED ADAMS/FOR THE TIMES LEADER
Jody Fletcher dances around the Friendly Sons dinner dressed as an Irish lassie selling 50-50 tickets. About 450
people attended the annual event at the Ramada Hotel in downtown Wilkes-Barre on Friday.
A night for the Irish
By JERRY LYNOTT
jlynott@timesleader.com
Youre looking at a multi-
billionaire, not in money, but
in family and friends.
John Corcoran Sr.
Dinner honoree
WILKES-BARRE In a 5-4 vote,
Wilkes-Barre Area School Board hired
Mary Claire Corcoran as a 20-hour-per-
week teacher associate. Board presi-
dent Mary Ann Toole said after Thurs-
days meeting the new hire is the soon
to be ex-wife of board member Robert
Corcoran.
Problems in the Corcoran family be-
came public in December 2010 when
Mary Claire Corcoran sought and re-
ceived a Protection From Abuse order
against her husband on behalf of their
son, then 13. She alleged her husband
and son had gotten into a fight, with
Robert Corcoran pinning the boy to the
floor and hitting him repeatedly.
Robert Corcoran filed a counter-PFA,
claiminghe broke upa fight betweenhis
two sons and started to turn away when
one of them sucker punched him. The
couple eventually agreed to a separa-
tion.
In Thursdays vote, Corcoran, Toole,
James Susek and Lynn Evans voted no,
though Evans was absent and had given
her voting proxy to Toole.
The board also voted to accept a Vol-
untary Resolution Agreement to settle
a complaint filed against the district
with the U.S. Department of Educa-
tions Office of Civil Rights. Assistant
Solicitor Ray Wendolowski gave no de-
tails of the complaint, but noted the
board had opted for a voluntary agree-
ment even though he believed the dis-
trict had a strong case if it chose to fight
the complaint.
The agreement requires the board to
create a notice of nondiscrimination
and ensure all print and electronic pub-
lications of general distribution contain
the notice. The district must also create
a policy prohibiting racial harassment
including, among other things, a re-
quirement that school personnel report
incidents of alleged racial harassment
they may witness, and that such reports
be investigated.
The district must offer counseling
and/or academic services to anyone
subjected to such harassment and de-
velop a comprehensive training pro-
gram for school personnel responsible
for implementing and enforcing federal
anti-discrimination and anti-harass-
ment laws.
And the district must provide staff
and student training on racial harass-
ment.
The board also received an update
from Wilkes-Barre City Attorney Bill
Vinsko on the citys sale of the former
Old River Road Bakery property. The
boardhadpreviouslybalkedat forgiving
more than $400,000 in back taxes owed
onthe property but agreedtoa newdeal
with several strings attached, including
being kept abreast of developments and
receiving 20 percent of the money the
city gets for the building, after city ex-
penses are paid.
Vinsko said city council has agreed to
sell the building to Harrolds Pharmacy,
and that an attorney for the pharmacy
will attend the April school board meet-
ing to explain development plans that
could cost more than $1 million in pri-
vate funding.
SCHOOL DI STRI CT AF FAI RS
W-B Area hires board members kin, settles with feds on civil rights issue
By MARK GUYDISH
mguydish@timesleader.com
The school boards work session is set for
April 10 and regular meeting is April 11,
both at 6 p.m.
W H AT S N E X T
C M Y K
PAGE 4A SATURDAY, MARCH 17, 2012 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
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Henry shortly after 11 p.m.
Stoss told Noone when he
returned, Calabro had re-
ceived a phone call and told
him she wanted to go pick up
cocaine at a nearby mini mart.
Stoss told Noone he last
saw Calabro when she got into
a red Mitsubishi in a parking
lot near a Joyce Insurance of-
fice.
Noone said nearly two
hours of surveillance video of
the parking lot from11 p.m. to
1 a.m. did not show any peo-
ple or a red vehicle.
Defense attorneys Allyson
Kacmarski and David Lamp-
man began calling witnesses
with Stoss landlord, Doris
Hutz.
Hutz testified she fed Stoss
cat, Angel, on March 11 and
went to his home sometime in
the evening to let him know
she did so.
Hutz said Stoss would not
let her in when she knocked
on his door and that he quick-
ly closed the door.
I did a quick scan and
saw two females, Hutz said.
Defense attorneys also
called two Pittston brothers,
William and Jamie Nicholson,
who were along Kennedy Bou-
levard on March 11 looking
down into Riverfront Park.
The men testified they saw
a man and woman arguing,
but there was no physical con-
tact between the two.
The brothers said they
called police the following day
when they heard on TV news
that blood had been found in
the same area they saw the
two people arguing.
VICTIM
Continued from Page 3A
sons: Joseph DeSanto, John Pi-
sano and Frank Pisano.
Lentzs lawsuit was filed on
behalf of Solomon and Trudy
Zawatski of Shickshinny, the
daughter of Bach, who died in
September 2009.
Other plaintiffs are: Chester
Cognigni, John and Michael
Cognigni and Susan Cognigni
Leonard, all of Plains Town-
ship; Gail Brennan, Edwards-
ville; Thelma Andreoni, Plains
Township; Edward Pedana,
Willingboro, N.J., Ted Quare-
quio, Wilkes-Barre and Jean
Bohac, Plains Township.
Lupas, 77, of Plains Town-
ship, is accused of bilking cli-
ents out of potentially millions
of dollars by falsely portraying
he had invested their money in
a trust fund. In reality, Lupas
used the money for his person-
al gain, the Lentz and Preate
filings say.
Lentz and Preate said the
writ of summons will allow
them to obtain certain records
and gather other information
for the lawsuit.
NAMES
Continued from Page 1A
The suit joins a separate law-
suit filed Monday by attorney
Ernest Preate of Scranton on
behalf of three people: Joseph
DeSanto, John Pisano and
Frank Pisano.
Karzai also is now insisting
that U.S. forces retreat fromrural
areas immediately and let Af-
ghans take the lead in security
next year. But the White House
andthe PentagonsaidFridaythat
nothing would collapse the war
plan, even after the massacre, the
inadvertent Quran burnings by
U.S. soldiers and the deaths of
seven American servicemen at
the hands of their allies.
Polls have shown that up to 60
percent of Americans sayits time
to end the war in Afghanistan.
And thats not lost on the admin-
istration.
TheAfghanpeoplearetiredof
war, Defense Secretary Leon Pa-
netta, just back from Afghanis-
tan, acknowledged on Friday.
The American people share
some of that tiredness after 10
years of war, as well. All of thats
understandable.
But he also said he is confident
that Americans realize the U.S.
needs tofinishits workof stabiliz-
ing Afghanistan to ensure that al-
Qaida cannot against use that
country as a launch pad to attack
the United States. His theme
patience is likely to dominate
the discourse in Washington and
in allied capitals in the lead-up to
a NATO summit meeting in Chi-
cago in May.
President Barack Obama
called Karzai on Friday seeking
clarification on the demand con-
cerning U.S. troops inrural areas,
and White House press secretary
Jay Carney said the leaders
agreed to keep discussing the
matter, which is at the heart of
the military strategy.
I think that the two men were
very much on the same page
about gradually handing over se-
curity responsibility to Afghan
forces, with U.S. and other inter-
national troops switching to a
support role throughout Afghan-
istan sometime in 2013, Carney
said. A final transition to Afghan
control is supposed to happen by
the end of 2014.
Another pillar of thewar strate-
gy is creating meaningful peace
talks with the Taliban insurgents,
but that, too, suffered cracks in
the aftermath of the village mas-
sacre. The Taliban said it was no
longer talkingonterms set by the
Americans.
A senior U.S. official familiar
with the discussions said Ameri-
can officials presume that the
timing of the Taliban announce-
ment following Sundays killings
was an attempt to gain greater
leverage. Officials have long cal-
culated that the Taliban would
not engage seriously in peace
talks unless it had lost more
ground militarily.
U.S. analysts, meanwhile, see a
lackof clarityandcommitment in
the Obama administrationstrate-
gy for winding down the war.
WAR
Continued from Page 1A
AP PHOTO
The home of U.S. Army Staff Sgt. Robert Bales, who is accused of
killing 16 Afghan civilians, is shown, Friday in Lake Tapps, Wash.
K
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com SATURDAY, MARCH 17, 2012 PAGE 5A
CENTRAL POINT, ORE.
Electric driving gets boost
E
lectric car owners riding along
Oregons Interstate 5 dont have to
worry about running out of juice on the
open road.
The first major stretch of whats been
dubbed an Electric Highway on the
West Coast from Canada to Mexico
went operational Friday with the open-
ing of a series of fast-charging stations
along 160 miles of the interstate.
The eight stations stretch from the
California border north to the Oregon
city of Cottage Grove and are located at
gas stations, restaurants and motels
just off I-5, the nations second-busiest
interstate. One station is at an inn that
was once a stage coach stop.
They are spaced about every 25
miles, so a Nissan Leaf with a range of
about 70 miles can miss one station
and still make it to the next.
ORANGEBURG, S.C.
Mom says she killed sons
A South Carolina mother pleaded
guilty Friday to killing her two young
sons by suffocating them and putting
their bodies into a car, rolling it into a
river. The case had eerie similarities to
that of another mother from the state
now serving life in prison.
Shaquan Duley pleaded guilty with-
out making a deal with prosecutors.
She faces between 30 years and life in
prison when she is sentenced later this
month.
Duley, 30, has been held without
bond since her August 2010 arrest in
the deaths of her boys, 2-year-old De-
vean and 18-month-old Javan.
The tragic scene of a car found sub-
merged with childrens bodies inside
was reminiscent of the 1994 case of
Susan Smith, who is serving life in
prison for killing her young sons by
rolling her car into a lake in the north-
west part of the state.
LEON, MEXICO
Papal visit a huge task
One hundred fifty-thousand commu-
nion wafers? Check.
Campsites for 350,000? Check.
Three hand-embroidered papal sou-
venir sombreros? Check.
Official song? Check.
The visit of Pope Benedict XVI, his
first to Spanish-speaking Latin Amer-
ica, begins in just a week in Mexicos
central state of Guanajuato, where he
will spend three days and give an out-
door Mass for some 300,000 people
before heading to Cuba on March 26.
PYONGYANG, NORTH KOREA
U.S. raps satellite plan
North Korea plans to blast a satellite
into space next month to mark the
centenary of the birth of its founder,
Kim Il Sung, which the U.S. quickly
called a deal-breaker for a new agree-
ment where the U.S. would exchange
food aid for nuclear concessions.
After Fridays surprise announce-
ment, the United States warned it
would not send food aid to North Ko-
rea if it goes ahead with the long-range
rocket launch, and U.N. Security Coun-
cil members said it may violate sanc-
tions.
The North agreed to a moratorium
on long-range launches as part of the
food deal with Washington, but argues
that satellite launches are part of a
peaceful space program that is exempt
from international disarmament obliga-
tions.
I N B R I E F
AP PHOTO
Smile when you say Hound Dog
This photo provided by Sothebys
shows Andy Warhols portrait of Elvis
Presley depicted as a cowboy. The
painting, with a silver background,
Double Elvis [Ferus Type] is estimated
to sell for between $30 million to $50
million at Sothebys in New York on
May 9.
NEWBRUNSWICK, N.J. Aformer
Rutgers University student accused of
using a webcamto spy on his gay room-
mates love life was convicted Friday of
invasion of privacy and anti-gay intimi-
dation in a case that exploded into the
headlines when the victim threw him-
self to his death off a bridge.
Dharun Ravi, 20, shook his head
slightly after hearing guilty verdicts on
all 15 counts against him. He and his
lawyers left the courthouse without
comment, his fathers arm around his
shoulders.
He could get up to 10 years in prison
by some estimates and could be de-
ported to his native India, even though
he has lived legally in the U.S. since he
was a little boy for
an act that cast a spot-
light on teen suicide
and anti-gay bullying
and illustrated the In-
ternets potential for
tormenting others.
Prosecutors said
Ravi set up a webcam
in his dorm room in September 2010
and captured roommate Tyler Clementi
kissing another man, then tweeted
about it and excitedly tried to catch
Clementi in the act again two days later.
A half-dozen students were believed to
have seen the live video of the kissing.
Within days, Clementi realized he
had been watched and leaped from the
George Washington Bridge after post-
ing one last status update on Facebook:
Jumping off the gw bridge, sorry.
At a courthouse news conference af-
ter the verdict, Clementis father, Joe,
addressed himself to college students
and other young people, saying: Youre
going to meet a lot of people inyour life.
Some of these people you may not like.
Just because youdont like themdoesnt
mean you have to work against them.
Rutgers saidina statement: This sad
incident shouldmake us all pause torec-
ognize the importance of civility and
mutual respect in the way we live, work
and communicate with others.
During the trial, Ravis lawyer argued
that the college freshman was not moti-
vated by any hostility toward gays and
that his actions were just those of an im-
maturekid. Thedefensealsocontend-
ed Ravi initially set up the camera be-
cause he was afraid Clementis older,
sketchy-looking visitor might steal
his belongings.
Ex-Rutgers student found guilty
Dharun Ravi, 20, was accused of
using webcam to spy on gay
roommates love life.
WASHINGTONAnewanal-
ysis of President Barack Obamas
budget for next year says the def-
icit scenario for next year isnt as
rosy as the White House figured
last month.
Fridays Congressional Budget
Office report said Obamas bud-
get would produce a $977 billion
deficit next year $75 billion
more than predicted by the
White House.
Over the coming decade, CBO
says Obamas policies would re-
sult in deficits totaling $6.4 tril-
lion. Deficits would be even high-
er were it not for Obamas propos-
als to raise taxes on higher-in-
come people.
TheWhiteHouseseizedonthe
figures as validation of its claims
that Obamas budget brings the
deficit under control at least
when measured against the econ-
omy, the measure used by most
economists in evaluating the def-
icit.
CBO found that by 2016 defi-
cits as a share of the economy
would be below 3 percent a
key milestone of fiscal sustaina-
bility, said White House budget
office acting director Jeffrey
Zients. Debt held by the public
will decrease and then stabilize
as a share of the economy, also a
key indicator of improving fiscal
health.
The nonpartisan CBO said
Obamas budget office consis-
tently overestimates tax reve-
nues over the coming decade.
Analysis
predicts
a higher
deficit
CBO: Obamas budget would
produce $977B deficit $75B
more than White House said.
By ANDREWTAYLOR
Associated Press
Several members of Congress also
were arrested, including Massachusetts
Reps. James McGovern and John Olver,
Texas Rep. Al Green and Rep. JimMoran
of Virginia. They were handcuffed and
placed into a U.S. Secret Service van.
WASHINGTON George Clooney
and his father were arrested Friday dur-
ing a protest outside the Sudanese Em-
bassy, and the actor said he has asked
President BarackObamatoengageChina
on stopping a humanitarian crisis in
northern Africa.
The protesters accuse Sudanese Presi-
dent Omar al-Bashir of provoking a hu-
manitarian crisis and blocking food and
aid fromentering the Nuba Mountains in
the countys border regionwithSouthSu-
dan.
Clooney, his father, Nick Clooney, and
others were arrested after being warned
three times not to cross a police line out-
side the embassy. Those takeninto custo-
dy included NAACP President Ben Jeal-
ous, Martin Luther King III, and actor
and comedian Dick Gregory.
Clooney was released several hours lat-
er after paying a $100 fine.
The arrests came after Clooney met
this week with Obama, testified in the
Senate and attended a state dinner for
British Prime Minister David Cameron.
Actor arrested in D.C. protest
AP PHOTO
Actor George Cloo-
ney, center, and Rep.
Jim Moran, D-Va.,
left, are led to a po-
lice vehicle after
being arrested during
a protest at the Su-
dan Embassy in
Washington, Friday.
The demonstrators
were protesting the
escalating human-
itarian emergency in
Sudan.
By BRETT ZONGKER
Associated Press
DEXTER, Mich. The twister
that took aim at this Michigan vil-
lage unleashed winds of 135 mph
and lingered on the ground for a
full half-hour, plowing a path of de-
struction that stretched for 10
miles.
But after the tornado melted
back into the clouds, townspeople
emerged to a remarkable surprise:
Not a single person was seriously
hurt. Authorities credited storm
sirens that provided more than 20
minutes of warning.
The twister damaged more than
100 homes and destroyed 13. Yet
everyone emerged unscathed.
When you look at the path and
you look at the physical destruc-
tion ... its amazing, Washtenaw
County Sheriff Jerry Clayton said
Friday.
Sometime after Thursday eve-
nings tornado, Deputy Ray Yee
was surveying the rubble when a
solitary hand rose from debris. He
reached for it and pulled out an el-
derly man who was shaken but
able to walk.
Thats the best part, Yee said.
Every place I went to, I would
have thought I would have found
somebody laying there de-
ceased or whatever. But, knock on
wood, everybody was OK.
Authorities had accounted for
the entire population of 4,000.
Storm warnings spare Michigan village from tornado injuries
The twister
damaged more
than 100 homes
and destroyed
13. Yet,
everyone
emerged
unscathed.
AP PHOTO
Neighbors looks over the scene
in Dexter, Mich., Friday.
By MIKE HOUSEHOLDER
Associated Press
N A T I O N & W O R L D
7
4
4
0
4
5
Look in THE TIMES LEADERfor todays valuable inserts from these advertisers:
Some inserts, at the advertisers request, only appear in selected neighborhoods. If you would like to receive an insert that you do not currently receive, please call the advertiser.
By GEOFF MULVIHILL
Associated Press
AP PHOTO
Dharun Ravi, center,
is helped by his
father, Ravi Pazhani,
as they leave court
around in New Brun-
swick, N.J., Friday.
Defense attorney
Philip Nettl follows,
second left. Ravi, a
former Rutgers
University student,
was accused of
using a webcam to
spy on his gay
roommates love life.
Clementi
Coffins of bus crash victims displayed in Belgium
AP PHOTO
In this photo released by the Belgian Department of Defense, coffins of children and teachers who were killed
in a deadly bus crash in Switzerland are displayed at a hangar at the military airport of Melsbroek, Belgium,
Friday. A coach accident in Switzerland left 28 dead, including 22 children traveling home after a skiing holiday.
C M Y K

PAGE 6A SATURDAY, MARCH 17, 2012 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com


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MONDAY - FRIDAY 10-8; SATURDAY 10-6; SUNDAY 12-5
C M Y K
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com SATURDAY, MARCH 17, 2012 PAGE 7A
N E W S
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TL
The Municipality of Kingstons Public Works
Department will begin street sweeping on Monday,
March 19, 2012, in accordance with the posted street
sweeping signs. Warning tickets will be issued for
the rst week. Beginning Monday, March 26, 2012,
street sweeping regulations will be enforced.
STREET SWEEPING
BEGINS IN KINGSTON
NEWTOWN CAFE
724 Hazle St., Ashley 824-5054
New Hours: Wed. & Thurs. Open 4 - 9:30PM;
Fri. Noon - 3:30 (Take-Out Only) 3:30-10 (Eat-In); Sat. & Sun. 3 - 9:30PM
ST. PATRICKS DAY
HAM & CABBAGE................ $7.95
SHEPHERDS PIE................ $7.95
THE KERRY DANCERS (7:45PM)
BUTLER TWP. High school
and college age students will get
a chance to grow organic foods
and learn how to market and
prepare them through an intern-
ship program being
offered this spring,
summer and fall.
The Center for
Landscape Design &
Stewardship has sev-
eral internship open-
ings available for its
new Growing Mar-
kets initiative a
farm to fork pro-
gram designed to
teach young people
about sustainable
agriculture and
small-scale food busi-
ness entrepreneur-
ship.
This is a real ex-
citing opportunity
for young people in-
terested in entering one of the
fastest growing sectors of our
economy organic and locally
produced foods, said Krista
Schneider, center president and
founder.
Organic food is raised natural-
ly, without chemicals. We rely
only on natural fertilizers and
try to improve the soil as best
we can because healthy roots
make a healthy plant that will
better resist diseases, Schneid-
er said.
Interns who enroll in the pro-
gram will get the opportunity to
grow food at the Butler Town-
ship Community Garden under
the direction of Mark Hetman,
an experienced organic farmer
and owner of Happy Patch Orga-
nics. They will also learn howto
market and sell that food direct-
ly to customers.
Last year the
landscape center
partnered with
the Greater Ha-
zleton Cham-
ber of Com-
merce to initi-
ate the Down-
town Hazleton
Farmers Mar-
ket.
Thanks to
the chambers
hard work and
commitment,
this years mar-
ket will have
more special
events, pro-
grams, and pre-
pared foods. The internship is
part of this as students will be
selling their own foods at the
CLDS stand, Schneider said.
In addition to selling their
raw produce, interns will learn
to prepare simple foods such as
salsas, pesto, sauces, chutneys
and seasonings with the gar-
dens ingredients at the culinary
arts kitchen at the Hazleton Ar-
ea Career Center thanks to a
partnership with the school dis-
trict.
We are hoping this will help
attract students interested in
science, culinary arts, nutrition
and small-business entrepre-
neurship, Schneider said.
Mary-Lee Hood, a science and
biology teacher at MMI Prepara-
tory School in Freeland, will
oversee the kitchen component
of the internship. Hood, a volun-
teer master gardener at the
Penn State Cooperative Exten-
sion, plans to focus on healthy
cooking.
The internship is broken
down into three, eight-week ses-
sions spring, summer and fall
and is designed to accommo-
date the academic schedule.
Students can apply for one or all
three, depending upon their in-
terests.
Details of internships can var-
y to meet personal academic
needs such as a senior project or
other curriculumcredit if autho-
rized through the students
school.
The program is supported by
grants from the Luzerne Foun-
dation and Archer Daniels Mid-
land.
Farm to fork offers organic internships
FRED ADAMS FILE PHOTO/THE TIMES LEADER
Heather Cole uses a hoe to break up dirt in her plot of the Butler Township Community Garden in
this August 2009 photo.
For more information on
the program or to apply,
visit www.DigCLDS.org or
contact Schneider at
578-5903 or kschneid-
er@DigCLDS.org.
Applications will also be
available at the Greater
Hazleton Chamber of
Commerce Job Fair, from
10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Wednes-
day, Genetti Best Western
in Hazle Township.
The spring internship will
run April 30-June 23, so
interested students are
urged to get their applica-
tions in soon.
L EARN MORE
OR APPLY
Growing Markets initiative
teaches students about
agriculture and business.
By STEVE MOCARSKY
smocarsky@timesleader.com
SUGARLOAF TWP. Seven
of the eight West Point cadets
injured when their van crashed
on Interstate 80 here Thursday
night were treated and released
from local hospitals by late Fri-
day morning, with the eighth
cadet expected to be released
soon thereafter, West Point said.
The cadets from the U.S. Mil-
itary Academy in New York
were injured when their van
crashed after a boxing competi-
tion, officials said Friday.
State police said the van car-
rying nine cadets flipped after
swerving to miss a car that had
illegally used a cross-over path
for emergency vehicles. The
crash happened around 8 p.m.
Thursday in the eastbound
lanes.
The nine cadets in the van
were members of the boxing
team leaving the East Regional
Championship competition at
Penn State, the West Point pub-
lic affairs office said in a written
statement.
The vans driver wasnt hurt.
West Point said.
The accident remains under
investigation. The other driver
left the scene, state police said.
Authorities urged anyone
with information on the identity
of the other driver, or the loca-
tion of the other vehicle that
used the cross-over road, to
contact state police.
7 West Point
cadets released
from hospitals
The Associated Press
K
PAGE 8A SATURDAY, MARCH 17, 2012 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
O B I T U A R I E S
The Times Leader publish-
es free obituaries, which
have a 27-line limit, and paid
obituaries, which can run
with a photograph. A funeral
home representative can call
the obituary desk at (570)
829-7224, send a fax to (570)
829-5537 or e-mail to tlo-
bits@timesleader.com. If you
fax or e-mail, please call to
confirm. Obituaries must be
submitted by 9 p.m. Sunday
through Thursday and 7:30
p.m. Friday and Saturday.
Obituaries must be sent by a
funeral home or crematory,
or must name who is hand-
ling arrangements, with
address and phone number.
We discourage handwritten
notices; they incur a $15
typing fee.
O B I T U A R Y P O L I C Y
G enettis
AfterFu nera lLu ncheons
Sta rting a t$7.95 p erp erson
H otelBerea vem entRa tes
825.6477
M .J. JUD G E
M ON UM EN T CO.
M ON UM EN TS -M ARK ERS -L ETTERIN G
8 2 9 -4 8 8 1
N extto the Big Co w o n Rt. 309
ASHFORD George III, funeral
services 10:30 a.m. today in the
Harold C. Snowdon Home for
Funerals Inc., 420 Wyoming Ave.,
Kingston.
BUTLER Charles, funeral Mass 10
a.m. Saturday, March 24, at St.
Thereses Church, Shavertown.
There will be a calling hour in the
church vestibule starting at 9
a.m.
DAVIS Stanley, funeral noon today
in the Nat & Gawlas Funeral
Home, 89 Park Ave., Wilkes-Barre.
Friends may call 11 a.m. to noon in
the funeral home.
FALLS Josephine, funeral 10 a.m.
today in the S.J. Grontkowski
Funeral Home, 530 W. Main St.,
Plymouth. Mass of Christian
Burial at 10:30 a.m. in All Saints
Parish, Plymouth.
GRITMAN Paul, funeral services
9:30 a.m. Monday in the Harold
C. Snowdon Funeral Home Inc.,
140 N. Main St., Shavertown. Mass
of Christian Burial at 10 a.m. in
Gate of Heaven Church, Dallas.
Friends may call 4 to 7 p.m.
Sunday at the funeral home.
HVOZDOVIC Michael, funeral
services 9:30 a.m. today in the
John V. Morris Funeral Home,
625 N. Main St., North Wilkes-
Barre. Procession to Mount Olivet
Roman Catholic Cemetery, Carv-
erton, will follow, where inter-
ment with Military Honors and
Rites of Committal shall take
place.
LAPSANSKY Frances, funeral
services 9 a.m. Monday in the
Peter J. Adonizio Funeral Home,
251 William Street, Pittston. Mass
of Christian Burial at 9:30 a.m. in
St. John the Evangelist Parish,
Pittston. Friends may call 7 to 9
p.m. today and 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
p.m. Sunday at the funeral home.
LOTHRIDGE Lois, funeral services
noon today in the Metcalfe and
Shaver Funeral Home Inc., 504
Wyoming Ave., Wyoming. Friends
may call 11 a.m. until time of
service.
MINKOFF Charles, the family will
sit Shiva at the Minkoff residence,
587 Gibson Avenue, Kingston,
through Tuesday morning.
NARDONE Josephine, Mass of
Christian Burial 10:30 a.m. today
in Our Lady of Sorrows Church of
St. Monicas Parish, West Wyom-
ing. There will be no calling hours
PIAZZA Matthew, funeral services
10 a.m. Monday in the Kopicki
Funeral Home, 263 Zerbey Ave.,
Kingston. Friends may call 2 to 4
p.m. Sunday.
SCHIMMEL Robert, funeral ser-
vice 11 a.m. Monday in the Davis-
Dinelli Funeral Home, 170 E. Broad
St., Nanticoke. Friends may call
from 5 to 8 p.m. Sunday and
after 10 a.m. Monday at the
funeral home.
SZCZUPSKI Stanley, funeral
services 9:30 a.m. today in the
Jendrzejewski Funeral Home, 21
N. Meade St., Wilkes-Barre.
VINO Michael III, funeral services
8:45 a.m. Monday in the Nat &
Gawlas Funeral Home, 89 Park
Avenue, Wilkes-Barre. The Office
of Christian Burial at 9:30 a.m. in
St. Marys Byzantine Catholic
Church, Wilkes-Barre. Friends
may call 4 to 7 p.m. Sunday at
the funeral home.
VINOVRSKI Anna, 10:30 a.m.
Monday in the Betz-Jastremski
Funeral Home Inc., 568 Bennett
St., Luzerne. Mass of Christian
Burial at 11 a.m. in Holy Family
Parish, Luzerne. Friends may call
4 to 7 p.m. Sunday.
WILLIAMS John, funeral services
11 a.m. today in the Clarke Piatt
Funeral Home Inc., 6 Sunset Lake
Rd., Hunlock Creek. Friends may
call 9 a.m. until the time of ser-
vice at 11 a.m. in the funeral home.
FUNERALS
WILLARDJ. JACK NESBITT,
72, of Ashley, passed away Thurs-
day at Geisinger Wyoming Valley
Medical Center, Plains Township.
He was borninWilkes-Barre onJu-
ly 9, 1939. He was the son of the
late Leroy and Helen Nesbitt. He
was a member of the Ashley Fire
Department and was employed by
Certain Teed, Mountain Top. He
was precededindeathby wife, Ma-
ry Barbara Sweitzer Nesbitt; son,
Willard Nesbitt; brothers, Robert,
Walter, James and David Nesbitt.
Surviving are grandchildren, Key-
lee, Evan, JaredandDaron; sisters,
Lois Chado, Marian Kornacki and
Ruth Davis; brother, William Nes-
bitt, nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be held
Monday at 11a.m. fromthe George
A. StrishInc. Funeral Home, 105N.
MainSt., Ashley, withtheRev. Car-
ol Coleman officiating. Interment
is in Albert Cemetery, Mountain
Top. Friends may call Sunday 6 to
8 p.m. and Monday 10 to 11 a.m.
S
tanley J. Panowicz, 85, of Plains
Township, passed away on Mon-
day in the Department of Veterans
Affairs Medical Center, Plains
Township, following an illness.
Born in Miners Mills on October
28, 1926, Stanley was the son of the
late LeonandVictoria MockPanow-
icz. He was raised in the Hudson
section of Plains Township and at-
tendedPlains Townshipschools. He
joined the Navy and had served in
the South Pacific Theater during
World War II as a Fireman First
Class on five different vessels. He
was wounded and was awarded the
Purple Heart, among other decora-
tions.
After his service of duty, he found
work in Penn Yan, New York, with
Comstock Canning. There he met
his future bride, Lucille Mae Deck-
er, and they were married in 1948.
Stanley and Lucille moved to Chica-
go so that he could pursue a trade in
Tool & Die manufacturing. During
their 50-plus years in Chicago, they
raised four children, Sheila, Vin-
cent, Mary Ann and Karen.
In 1991, Lucille passed away and
Stanley met Maria Baron, whom he
married in 2004. He fulfilled his
wish to move back to Pennsylvania
in 2007, so he and Maria pulled up
stakes and moved to Plains. His joy
was short-lived when Maria died
one month later.
Stanley was preceded in death by
two wives, the former Lucille Deck-
er and Maria Baron; by brothers,
Raymond, Thomas and Bernard.
Surviving are a son, Vincent Pa-
nowicz, Wentzville, Missouri;
daughters, Sheila Bell, Hoffman Es-
tates, Illinois; Karen Watson, Auro-
ra, Illinois; Mary Ann Ballek, Ro-
zelle, Illinois; grandchildren, James
and Heather Ballek; sisters, Leona
Svabandher husband, Robert, Hud-
son; Delphine Wejkszner, Hudson;
Bernadine Yencha, Wilkes-Barre;
AliceMorganandher husband, Har-
ry, Warren, New Jersey; attorney
Robert Panowicz and his wife, Che-
ryl, Forty Fort; Joseph Panaway and
his wife, Mary Ann, Hanover Town-
ship; sisters-in-law, Merle Panaway,
Plains Township; Ena Panowicz,
Medford, Massachusetts, and many
nieces and nephews.
Stanleys funeral will be con-
ducted on Monday at 9 a.m.
from the Mark V. Yanaitis Funeral
Home, 55StarkStreet, Plains Town-
ship, witha Mass of ChristianBurial
at 9:30 a.m. in Ss. Peter and Paul
Church, Plains Township. Inter-
ment will followwith Military Hon-
ors accorded in St. Joseph Cemete-
ry, Hudson. Friends may call on
Sunday from2 to5 p.m. at the funer-
al home.
Condolences may be offered or
directions accessed at www.yanai-
tisfuneralhome.com.
Stanley J. Panowicz
March 12, 2012
H
elen T. Parrella, 97, of Exeter,
passed away Wednesday,
March14, 2012at the GreenMoun-
tain Nursing Home in Colchester,
Vermont, surrounded by her fam-
ily.
Born in Alden, she was the
daughter of the late Bartholomew
and Pauline (Maday) Pierzchala.
Helen attended Newport Town-
ship schools and was a member of
St. Barbara Parish of St. Anthony
of Padua Church, Exeter.
She hadworkedas a spinner and
bobbin girl in local silk mills, as a
nurses aide, and for the American
Red Cross.
She cherished her time with her
children and their families. They
were her greatest joy.
She was predeceased by her sec-
ond husband, Nicholas Parrella, in
2001, her first husband, Eugene
Warchal, in 1946 and by her broth-
ers, Bartholomew and Henry
Pierzchala, sisters, Mary Butchko,
Josephine Rusczyk, Bernadine
Vance; sisters-in-law, Josephine
Cefalo, Angela Parrella, Margaret
Valenti and brother-in-law Joseph
Parrella.
Surviving are her son, Eugene
Warchal and his wife, Rosemarie,
Freehold N.J.; her daughter, Debo-
rah Parrella and her husband, Ev-
erett Marshall, Huntington, Vt.; a
brother, Chester Pierzchala, and
sisters, Blanche Frankievich, The-
odoraPlocicki andEleanor Hudak;
five grandchildren, Michael and
Kenneth Warchal, Patricia White-
head and Nicholas and Hannah
Marshall; four great-grandchildren
Nicholas, Brianna and Hunter
Warchal andElizabethWhitehead.
Also surviving is her dear friend
and neighbor, Ann Barni, Exeter.
Funeral will be held on Monday
at 9 a.m. fromthe Gubbiotti Funer-
al Home, 1030 Wyoming Ave., Exe-
ter, witha Mass of ChristianBurial
at 9:30 a.m. from St. Anthony of
Padua Church (St. Barbara Par-
ish), 28 Memorial Ave., Exeter.
The Rev. Joseph Adonizio will
be celebrant.
Interment will be in St. Cecilias
Cemetery, Schooley Street, Exe-
ter.
Relatives and friends may call
on Sunday from 6 to 8 p.m. at the
funeral home.
To send the family expressions
of sympathy or an online condo-
lence, please visit www.gubbiot-
tifh.com.
Helen T. Parrella
March 14, 2012
W
anda McCloskey, 88, of Moun-
tain Top, entered into eternal
rest on Friday, March 16, 2012, at
Smith Health Care, Mountain Top.
Born in Kingston, she was a
daughter of the late Charles andSte-
phanie (Yesson) Kowalewski.
Wanda attended Kingston
schools, and she worked for Flory
Fashions, Swoyersville, as a seam-
stress. She was a member of St. Pa-
tricks Catholic Church, White
Haven, and St. Judes Catholic
Church, Mountain Top. Wanda was
a devoted wife, mother and grand-
mother and she loved to cook and
was a terrific baker.
Wanda was preceded in death, in
addition to her parents, by her hus-
band, Louis A. McCloskey, brother
Charles Kowalewski, and sisters,
Ceilia Stonik, Pauline Evans and
Irene Bator.
She is survived by her son Louis
and his wife, Lynn, Wilmington,
Del.; her daughter Ruth Ann Fedor-
chak and her husband, Peter, Moun-
tain Top; her sister Dorothy Wash-
ko, McLain, Va.; her nine grandchil-
dren, and 11 great-grandchildren.
The funeral will be held on Mon-
day, March 19, at 10:30 a.m. from
McCune Funeral Home, 80 S.
Mountain Blvd., Mountain Top, fol-
lowed by a Mass of Christian Burial
at 11a.m. at St. Jude Church, Moun-
tain Top. Interment will immediate-
ly follow in Holy Trinity Cemetery,
Bear Creek. Relatives and friends
are invited to call on Monday from9
to 10:30 a.m. at the funeral home.
The family wouldlike to thank all
of the Health Care Providers at
Smith Health Care, Ltd., Mountain
Top, for their extraordinary kind-
ness and thoughtfulness extended
to Wanda.
In lieu of flowers, the family
would appreciate memorial dona-
tions be made to the St. Judes
Church Building Fund, 422 S.
Mountain Blvd., Mountain Top, PA
18707. View obituaries online at
mccunefuneralserviceinc.com.
Wanda McCloskey
March 16, 2012
WALTER SHANDRA, of Pitt-
ston, passed away on Friday after-
noon March 16, 2012.
Calling hours will be held on
Sunday, March18, 2012 from5 to 8
p.m. at Graziano Funeral Home
Inc., Pittston Township. All other
services will be listed in Sundays
paper.
M
y dear son, Brian, who resided
in Larksville, has unexpectedly
passedfromthis life intothe arms of
Jesus on Friday, March 9, 2012. Mis-
sing him more than anyone can
imagine, but knowing Home is
Heaven with God and his father
Nick, gives us great comfort and
peace.
He was a wonderful and dedicat-
ed son. He always wanted to do
what was morally right and always
stood by my side. Brian was honest
and righteous with every decision
he made. He loved his brother Nick.
Only God can make two such beau-
tiful gifts as Nick and Brian. The
time we spent withBrianwas much,
much shorter than we could have
imagined, but I thank God for the
beautiful memories we had togeth-
er.
Almost a lifetime member of St.
Marys Church, Our Lady of Fatima
Parish on Washington Street in
Wilkes-Barre, he servedunder Mon-
signor Thomas Banick from fourth
gradeto12thgradeas anacolyte. He
had the utmost respect for Monsig-
nor Banick. In grade school he
played soccer, basketball and base-
ball. He enjoyed wood carving and
Boy Scouts. Going through to high
school, he played the violin for sev-
en years. He was a long distance
runner, running five to six miles a
day up to the day he passed.
Brian graduated from Holy Re-
deemer High School. He attended
Wilkes University for two years and
then transferred to Kings College
for business. He earned scholar-
ships at both colleges and was set to
graduateKings inMayof 2012, with
a bachelors degree in accounting.
He was on the Presidents List and
Deans List. Brian was a member of
the Alpha Beta Sigma Honor Socie-
ty and served on the Student Advi-
sory Board. He worked part-time tu-
toring other students. He liked the
staff at both Kings and Wilkes and
frequently mentioned how im-
pressed he was with Dr. Barry Wil-
liams. There were others I cant re-
member at this time.
After graduation, Brian planned
to continue his education to be a
Math High School teacher and/or
get his CPA. He was a motivated
self-learner and passed quite a few
CLEP tests for college credits.
When his father was alive, but
deathly ill, (Nick was away at
school), it was Brians sense of hu-
mor that would make his dad smile
and laugh. Brian was supportive
and strong, even while attending
school full-time and working part-
time jobs at Redners and United
Check Cashing. He enjoyed manual
labor to stay fit and he also worked
other outdoor jobs and in construc-
tion.
He loved learning about tools
from his father, then his grandfa-
ther. Grand Pop could fix anything
and no one compared to Grandmas
cooking, it was the best.
He was preceded in death by his
father, Nick Sura Jr.
Survivingarehis mother, Barbara
Dervin Sura and his loving brother,
Nick Sura III. Also surviving are
grandparents, Edward and Theresa
Dervin; Nick and Joan Sura; aunts
and uncles, Debby Makos and hus-
band, Joe; James Dervin and wife,
Brenda; Richard Dervin, Cathy
Pack and husband, John; Karen
McHale and husband, Sean; special
cousins, Eric, Carrie, Michelle,
Chris, Heather, Stephanie, Becky,
Kirsten and Christian. He also left
behind dear friends that were just
like family, Millie Monie, Diane
Wasserott, Bill and Donna Koscin-
ski. His little dog Tiffany will surely
miss his presence. Please join our
prayers for him.
Missing Brian is almost unbeara-
ble, only God will get us through it.
He has joined his father in eternal
life with God in Heaven.
Out of respect for the family, fu-
neral arrangements were private at
St. Marys of the Immaculate Con-
ceptionChurch, Our Lady of Fatima
Parish. There were no calling hours.
Brian believed hunger in the
world was not due to a lack of food
but rather a disbursement of it. Do-
nations can be made in Brians
memory tocharitable foodbank/or-
ganization.
Brian Sura
March 9, 2012
H
elenA. McKeon(nee Nebus), of
Springville, Pa., died March 15,
2012 at home, surrounded by her
family.
She was the daughter of the late
Charles and Rose Nebus.
Helen was born in South Amboy,
N.J. and resided in Sayreville, N.J.,
for many years before moving to
Pennsylvania.
She was predeceased by four
brothers, Peter, William, Edmund
and Charles Jr., and one sister, Rose
Baumgartner, all of New Jersey.
She is survived by her husband of
61 years, Francis Sr., and their five
children, Sharon Fallon and hus-
band, Edward of Farmingdale, N.J.;
Francis Jr. of Springville, Pa.; David
and wife, Georgeann, of Burlington,
N.J.; Mary Ann Jennings and hus-
band, David, of Meshoppen and Jef-
frey and wife, Amy, of Toms River,
N.J. She was a loving grandmother
to 14 grandchildren and nine great-
grandchildren.
Helen was a member of Nativity
of the Blessed Virgin Mary Roman
Catholic Church in Tunkhannock.
During her lifetime, she served as
an extraordinary minister, lector
and religious education teacher.
A Mass of Christian Burial will
be held on Monday, March 19, at 10
a.m. fromthe Churchof the Nativity
BVM, Tunkhannock. Family and
friends are requested to go directly
to the church. Friends may call at
the Sheldon-Kukuchka Funeral
Home, 73 W. Tioga St., Tunkhan-
nock, on Sunday from 4 to 7 p.m.
In lieu of flowers, donations can
be made in her memory to the
Church of the Nativity BVM, 99 E.
Tioga St., Tunkhannock, PA 18657,
or to the Tunkhannock Public Li-
brary, 220 W. Tioga St., Tunkhan-
nock, PA, 18657.
Online condolences may be sent
to the family at www.sheldonku-
kuchkafuneralhome.com.
Helen A. McKeon
March 15, 2012
MARJORIE TOLER, of Lake
Winola, passed away Friday,
March 16, 2012.
Funeral arrangements are
pending fromthe Howell-Lussi Fu-
neral Home, 509 Wyoming Ave-
nue, West Pittston.
HERSHEY Penn State has
startedimplementing newguide-
lines borne of recommendations
by former FBI director Louis
Freeh that it hopes will improve
theprotocols involvedinidentify-
ingandreportingchildsexabuse.
The steps outlined to universi-
tytrustees Fridaybyschool Presi-
dent RodneyEricksonfocusedon
areas such as the prompt report-
ing of allegations and a newcom-
pliance offer. They were initially
put forwardbyFreeh, whos head-
ing the trustees internal investi-
gationintoachildsexabusescan-
dal involving former assistant
football coachJerry Sandusky.
The details came amid what
proved to be another busy legal
day in the case against Sandusky.
The schools lawyer said that a
number of Penn State employees
had received subpoenas fromthe
state attorney generals office,
while Sanduskys lawyer told a
judge he needs psychological re-
ports, juvenile
arrest records
and other docu-
ments about his
clients accusers
to prepare for
trial.
Erickson said
he knows the
names of some
of the staffers
who received
subpoenas. He
declined to re-
lease their
names but said
at least a half-
dozen people
got them, rang-
ing from senior
officials to low-
level staffers. He
said he wasnt
subpoenaed,
and trustees chair Karen Peetz
said she hadnt heard of trustees
being subpoenaed, either.
The school wasnt officially no-
tified of the subpoenas; instead
leaders found out after recipients
contacted the schools general
counsel. Theywereadvisedtoget
their ownlawyers, Peetz said.
We expected it, knowing that
there was an (investigation) go-
ing on. ... No one was alarmed,
Peetz said. We expect this will
take some time to play out.
The university, embroiled in
the scandal since Sanduskys ar-
rest Nov. 5, is trying to move for-
ward while still dealing with the
legal implications that keep refo-
cusing attention on the past.
Some vocal alumni remain angry
with the boards actions in the
frantic week that followed Sand-
uskysarrest, includingtheouster
of the late Hall of Fame football
coach Joe Paterno and then-
school President Graham Span-
ier.
University leaders have said
they hope the Freeh-inspired gui-
delines confirm their dedication
to addressing head-on questions
and research about child sex
abuse. Changes include enhanc-
ing background checks for staff-
ers working with children and
adding employees to help with
compliance with various federal
laws andNCAArules.
Erickson said Penn State will
immediatelyretrievekeys, access
cards and other property from
peoplewhoarenolongerformally
associatedwiththe university.
New abuse
guidelines
under way
at PSU
Schools lawyer says number
of employees had received
subpoenas from the state AG.
By GENARO C. ARMAS
and MARK SCOLFORO
Associated Press
The school
wasnt offi-
cially notified
of the sub-
poenas; in-
stead leaders
found out
after recip-
ients contact-
ed the
schools gen-
eral counsel.
They were
advised to get
their own
lawyers, Peetz
said.
INSIDE: Poll: Voters favor naming
stadium for Paterno, Page 1B
SCRANTON A Moscow
man involved in a custody dis-
pute has filed a federal lawsuit
against Lackawanna County
Court, alleging the court sys-
tem allowed a guardian ap-
pointed to represent his son to
run roughshod over the mans
constitutional rights.
Dr. Michael Stefanov alleges
attorney Danielle Ross, a court-
appointed guardian ad litem,
abused her authority, allowing
her to rack up thousands of dol-
lars in fees for conducting un-
necessary evaluations and
home visits.
Stefanov also takes aimat the
court system, which he says cre-
ated a policy that resulted in
the appointment of a guardian
in virtually all custody cases,
despite a state Superior Court
decision that says a guardian
should be appointed only in
extraordinary circumstances.
The suit, filed Friday by at-
torney Paul Cianci of Hunting-
don Valley, comes several
months after federal authorities
subpoenaed records from the
family court division seeking in-
formation on payments that
were made to Ross.
A guardian ad litem is a per-
son, usually an attorney, ap-
pointed to represent the inter-
est of a child, independent of
their parents.
Guardians are most common-
ly appointed in abuse and ne-
glect cases involving Children
and Youth, but a judge can ap-
point a guardian in a private
custody if its believed the ac-
tion is in the childs best inter-
est.
In private cases, parents are
required to pay a fee to the
guardian for their services, re-
gardless if they agree the ap-
pointment of a guardian was
necessary.
In his suit, Stefanov contends
he paid Ross more than $9,000
over a several-year period that
she was involved in a custody
dispute between himself and
his ex-wife.
According to the suit, Ross
coerced Stefanov into abiding
by every recommendation she
made, regardless of whether it
was reasonable, by threatening
he would lose visitation if he re-
fused.
Stefanov claims he was also
forced to provide private med-
ical records regarding himself
and his son, despite his objec-
tions. The court system provid-
ed no meaningful review as it
routinely rubber stamped
Ross recommendation, he says.
Ross has served as guardian
ad litem for Lackawanna Coun-
ty since 2008. She could not be
reached for comment Friday.
Area man in custody dispute
sues over guardians actions
By TERRIE MORGAN-BESECKER
tmorgan@timesleader.com
C M Y K
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com SATURDAY, MARCH 17, 2012 PAGE 9A
N E W S
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DALLAS TWP. In an effort to
spreadawareness about Ugandanmili-
tia leader Joseph Kony, human rights
group Invisible Children stopped by
Misericordia University on Friday to
bring to the foreground the issue of
child violence in Africa.
In addition to the airing of the docu-
mentary, Kony 2012, the one-hour
presentation featured the firsthand
testimony of native Ugandan Sharon
Poscovia, a survivor of Konys violence
against children.
After the 30-minute documentary,
Poscovia spoke to the audience of
nearly 500 about her difficult child-
hood in Uganda.
I had serious fear, she said. Fear
of being killed at any time.
Poscovia said she grew up in Gulu,
an area outside northern Uganda
where Kony and his Lords Resistance
Army sought out and abducted young
children, using the males as soldiers
and the females as sex slaves.
Poscovia saidshe spent the majority
of her childhood living day to day in
constant fear.
Duringmychildhood, whenpeople
offered me food, I had to wonder if
they were doing it out of goodness or
because they were trying to abduct
me, she said.
According to reports, more than
30,000 children have been abducted
throughout the 26-year conflict in
northern Africa.
Poscovia said she was one of the few
able to avoid capture.
Thanks to the efforts of Invisible
Children, she was given a scholarship
and graduated college in February.
About 1 percent of Ugandan women
are college graduates, according to
Poscovia.
Poscovia now travels throughout
the United States telling her story
with Invisible Children team mem-
bers.
Coordination between Invisible
Children and Misericordia University
was due in large part to junior elemen-
tary education major, Sarah Munley.
As student activities coordinator,
Munley said she was initially contact-
ed by officials at the non-profit and
that once she started spreading the
word, response from students and fac-
ulty was overwhelming.
It kind of exploded -- in a good
way, she said.
Munley said she was eager to re-
spond because it was such an impor-
tant cause for young people to know
about.
Children are children. We need to
help them out, she said.
Kony 2012 has gone viral largely
through social media since it was first
released on March 5, exceeding
79,927,048 views to date on YouTube.
The documentary hopes to energize
people into action by persuading U.S.
government officials to continue pro-
viding military support for Ugandan
troops seeking to arrest Kony.
It was narrated by director and In-
visible Children co-founder Jason
Russell.
Area gets glimpse into Konys terror
A woman who knows firsthand of
violence against African children
brings message to Misericordia.
By JOE DOLINSKY
Times Leader Intern
SUBMITTED PHOTO
Native Ugandan Sharon Poscovia,
spoke at Misericordia on Friday.
SAN DIEGO The co-founder of Invis-
ible Children, a San Diego-based nonprofit
that produced the viral "Kony 2012" video,
was detained in San Diego on Thursday
night, police said.
JasonRussell appeared
to be masturbating in
public and vandalizing
cars, San Diego police
said. He may have been
under the influence of
drugs or alcohol, police
Lt. Andra Brown said.
Russell was taken to a
mental health facility for
observation. Ben Keesey, CEO of Invisible
Children, said that Russell was hospital-
ized and suffering from exhaustion, dehy-
dration and malnutrition.
"He is nowreceiving medical care and is
focused on getting better. The past two
weeks have taken a severe emotional toll
on all of us, Jason especially, and that toll
manifested itself in an unfortunate inci-
dent.
Kony co-creator
detained by cops
Russell
By TONY PERRY and
RICHARD WINTON
Los Angeles Times
A federal appellate court has
upheld the15-month prison sen-
tence imposed upon former Lu-
zerne County Human Re-
sources Director Doug Ri-
chards.
Richards, of Wilkes-Barre,
pleaded guilty in January 2010
to corrupt receipt of a reward
for official ac-
tion.
Federal pros-
ecutors said
Richards ac-
cepted money
from a compa-
ny in exchange
for his support
in helping the
firm win a county contract. He
was sentenced in December
2010.
Richards had challenged U.S.
District Judge James Munleys
determination that Richards fit
the definition of a high ranking
public official, a designation
that significantly increased the
sentencing guidelines for the
crime. Had Munley determined
Richards was not a high ranking
official, he would have been eli-
gible for a sentence of as little as
probation.
Attorney William Ruzzo, who
represented Richards, appealed
the sentence to the Third Cir-
cuit Court of Appeals. Ruzzo
maintained Richards did not fit
the definition of a high ranking
official because he was an ad-
ministrator who made recom-
mendations, but had no author-
ity to make policy decisions or
bind the county to a contract.
The Third Circuit Court dis-
agreed. The court said the in-
quiry focused on whether Ri-
chards could exercise substan-
tial influence over the decision-
making process in Luzerne
County. The court said it be-
lieves the facts presented sup-
ported Munleys determination.
Richards admitted that, as
part of his job duties, he would
refer three or four of the top
candidates for a job to the coun-
ty commissioners, the court
said. He also administered his
own department and made rec-
ommendations to his superi-
ors.
Richards has been free pend-
ing resolution of the appeal. Its
expected Munley will nowissue
an order setting a report date
for himto begin serving the sen-
tence.
Ruzzo could not be reached
for comment Friday regarding
whether he will seek to a fur-
ther appeal of Munleys ruling.
Richards
loses on
appeal,
faces jail
The former county human
resources chief contended he
should get only probation.
By TERRIE MORGAN-BESECKER
tmorgan@timesleader.com
Richards
C M Y K
PAGE 10A SATURDAY, MARCH 17, 2012 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
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March Membership Madness
Stop by the YMCA today and
save up to $75 on New Annual
Memberships through March!
Wilkes-Barre YMCA Members
Receive An Extra $450 Value
ONE FREE SEASON PASS FOR EVERY NEW
& RENEWING ANNUAL MEMBERSHIP
Enjoy 7 Months
Of Outdoor Adventures!
Once A Month Enjoy:
Whitewater Rafting
Mountain Bike Trips
Zip-Line Rides
Overnight Camping
Choose the membership
that supports your
communitys well-being!
Wilkes-Barre Family YMCA
40 W. Northampton St.
Wilkes-Barre, Pa 18701
823-2191
7
4
5
2
4
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The Woodlands Inn
1073 Highway 315 | Wilkes-Barre, PA 18702 | 570-824-9831 | 570-824-2512, Fax
www.thewoodlandsresort.com
Easter Brunch
Sunday, April 8, 2012 in the Grand Ballroom
Seatings at 11:00 am | 12:45 pm | 2:30 pm
Served at all seatings
Fluffy omelettes prepared to order
Belgian wafes made to order with maple syrup, whipped cream & berries
Maple glazed ham sliced to order
Smoked kielbasa with assorted mustards & horseradish
Fresh vegetable medley
Hickory smoked bacon
Greek salad
Honey glazed sesame chicken
Assorted fresh fruit
Danish, breakfast breads and bagels
Coffee, tea, juices, soft drinks and milk
Included is our Famous Dessert Table & Chocolate Fountain
with decadent owing chocolate surrounded by
assorted fruits & homemade items to dip
Served at the 11:00 am seating:
Cinnamon raisin French toast prepared to order on our Evo grill
Ham, vegetable and Gruyere cheese quiche
Homefries
Served at the 12:45 and 2:30 pm seatings:
Fusilli pasta and broccoli alfredo
Stir-fried shrimp creole prepared to order on our Evo grill
Roasted baby red potatoes
$24.95 Adults | All children pay their age up to 12
Plus 20% gratuity and 6% sales tax
Reservations are required. Please call 570-824-9831
New for 2012 - Available at all three seatings
Special Childrens Buffet featuring: Macaroni and Cheese,
Chicken Fingers, French Fries and Pizza
EDWARDSVILLE A build-
ing at Hilltop Apartments on
Roosevelt Street was evacuated
Thursday night after a man al-
legedly poured bleach and an
ammonia-basedsolvent onthree
people, sendingtwotoahospital
withchemical burns.
Jeremiah Hightower, 39, was
arraignedFridayinWilkes-Barre
Central Court on six counts of
simple assault, twocounts of ag-
gravated assault and one count
each of terroristic threats and
reckless endangerment. He was
jailed at the Luzerne County
Correctional Facility for lack of
$100,000 bail.
Deputy Fire Chief Frank Sli-
mock condemned the building
due to a strong odor of bleach
and ammonia, displacing about
10 tenants. It could not be
learned Friday if they had been
allowedto return.
Police said there were two
empty containers of bleach in
the apartment, as well as clean-
ingsolvent andpuddles of clean-
ing chemicals with traces of
blooddroplets.
According to the criminal
complaint:
Kim Malesinski told police
Hightower earlier in the day
asked her to have sex. When she
refused,
Hightower left
the apart-
ment, taking
her cell phone.
When
Hightower re-
turned to the
apartment,
Malesinski, Mallory Corcoran
andJohnDePrimo lockedthem-
selves ina bedroom.
Hightower forced open the
door and sat on Corcorans legs,
slamming her head against a
wall numerous times, the crimi-
nal complaint says.
Malesinski claimed Hightow-
er left the bedroom and Corco-
rancalled911. Hightowerreturn-
ed to the bedroom, dousing the
three with bleach and ammonia
and burning their eyes and skin,
the criminal complaint says.
Malesinski claimed Hightow-
er smashed a drinking glass and
stabbedher inthe chest, accord-
ing to the criminal complaint.
Police arrested Hightower at
gunpoint when he was spotted
leaving the apartment.
Malesinski and Corcoran
were treated at an area hospital
for chemical burns, police said.
Inanunrelatedcase, Hightow-
er was free on $5,000 unsecured
bail ona drugoffenseinSeptem-
ber. He is facing a charge of pos-
session of crack cocaine when
Wilkes-Barre police allegedly
found three bags of crack inside
his vehicle at a motel on Kidder
Street, according to court re-
cords.
Building evacuated
after bleach attack
Man allegedly pours solvents
on three people in incident
at Edwardsville apartments.
By EDWARD LEWIS
elewis@timesleader.com
Hightower
AIMEE DILGER/THE TIMES LEADER
People stand
near carpeting
from a building
at Hilltop Apart-
ments in Ed-
wardsville
Thursday night
after a man
reportedly
doused three
people with
solvents.
DALLAS There are programs
that can reduce child abuse,
crime, delinquency and drug
abuse, Clay Yeager, a nationally
known expert on evidence-based
programs for delinquent children
told a professional social workers
conference onFriday.
But great programs can fail
due to poor implementation, he
said.
Yeager brought his 36 years of
experience with children and the
juvenile justice system to Miser-
icordia Universitys campus for a
lecture called, The Importance
of Evidence Based Approaches in
WorkingwithDependent andDe-
linquent Children.
The lecture held Friday morn-
ingwas attendedby40areasocial
workers and probation officers.
Theprogramwas part of National
Social Worker Month by the Na-
tional Associationof Social Work-
ers.
Investing in evidence-based
models toreachout andhelpfam-
iliesandchildrenislessexpensive
and more productive than invest-
ingmoneyintoprisonsanddeten-
tionfacilities totreat the problem
once it occurs.
Cheryl Sobeski-Reddy, alawyer
with the Juvenile Defender Unit
intheOfficeof thePublic Defend-
er for LuzerneCounty, addedthat
more programs are needed to
help children adjust to living in
their communities after being re-
leasedfromjuvenile detention.
Lockingupchildrenisuniquely
American and expensive, Yeag-
er said.
A rough estimate shows it
wouldcost thestateof Pennsylva-
niabetween, $142,715to$213,890
for each juvenile placement a
year.
The theory is you could send
about 10 or more kids to college
for the same amount, he said.
Yeager said the average age
childrentake their first steptode-
linquency is 7, moderately seri-
ousbehaviorbeginsaround9, and
serious issues at 12.
The average age for a child to
appear in juvenile court is 14, he
said. That gives us a seven-year
windowtohelpmake a change by
intervening.
Expert on delinquent children says good programs can fail if not done right
Implementation key to success
CHARLOTTE BARTIZEK/FOR THE TIMES LEADER
Clay Yeager, a leader in juvenile justice challenges, addresses area social workers at Misericordia
University Friday during a lecture presented by National Association of Social Workers.
By EILEEN GODIN
Times Leader Correspondent
The race for the Democratic
nomination in the 17th Congres-
sional District will likely include
at least onedebate, accordingtoa
campaign spokesman for U.S.
Rep. Tim Holden. But the con-
gressman does
not have the time
to participate in
the six forums re-
quested by his
challenger,
Moosic attorney
Matt Cartwright.
In a letter sent to Holden
Thursday, the Cartwright cam-
paign said that running a cam-
paign through commercials is
not the best way to reach voters.
Cartwright said holding a debate
only to be viewed by those in at-
tendance also is not a good op-
tion. So he is proposing weekly
debates to be broadcast onthe In-
ternet.
Clearly, a 30-secondtelevision
ad is a horrible way to communi-
cate. Lets look voters in the eye
and tell them what weve done
and what we seek to do, and if we
cant, because of scheduling and
travel restrictions, lets use our
best technology, Cartwright
said. People want to know who
they are voting for, but with work
and family, most folks cant come
to an event, so lets go to them in
their communities or on their
home computers.
The Cartwright campaign has
asked Holden to schedule a de-
bate in each of the six counties
that the 17th Congressional Dis-
trict now includes: Lackawanna,
Luzerne, Carbon, Schuylkill,
Monroe and Northampton. As a
result of the redistricting process
that will go into effect this year,
about 78 percent of the new17th
district was previously represent-
ed by other Congressional mem-
bers.
Eric Nagy, Holdens campaign
manager, said the campaign re-
ceived the letter Friday.
While holding six debates is
unlikely due to the congress-
mans schedule in Washington,
we will be reaching out to the
Cartwright campaign with avail-
able dates beginning early next
week, Nagy said. He noted that
Congress does not recess to ac-
commodate elections since the
primaries are held over the
course of months across the na-
tion.
Nagy agreed that citizens in
the district would benefit from
hearing from the candidates so
they can make an informed deci-
sioninthe upcomingDemocratic
primary. Congressman Holden is
proud to be able to address his
long record of public service and
fierce advocacy on behalf of se-
niors, veterans and the middle
class in a public forum.
The winner of the Democratic
primary will likely face Laureen
Cummings of Old Forge in the
November general election.
Cummings is the only Republi-
can on the ballot.
Democratic nominees to have 1 debate in 17th Congressional District
Cartwright Holden
20 1 2
ELECTION
By ANDREWM. SEDER
aseder@timesleader.com
I rarely miss council meetings,
and I dont want to miss two in a
row.
Bill Barrett
The Wilkes-Barre councilman explained why he
requested, and was granted, a rescheduling of the
next city council meeting. Critics say the session, now set for shortly
after 5 p.m. Thursday, will inconvenience would-be attendees and seems
to have been orchestrated.
Writer: Experience joy,
promote more adoptions
W
omb survivors are people who made
it from conception to birth without
being aborted (killed) by either self-
ish people, Planned Parenthood and/or
the Obama administration.
The present administration seemingly is
looking to reduce the number of womb
survivors by using our tax dollars to pro-
mote and fund abortions. The lead person
for this effort is U.S. Health and Human
Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius.
During his campaign, the president,
while talking about abortion, said that he
had given his daughters morals, but in the
event that something happened (unwanted
pregnancy), he would not want them to be
punished with children.
We need to challenge this attitude and
promote adoptions. It is a win-win sit-
uation.
One of our four children is adopted. It is
hard to describe the joy in the adoption
process. As examples, a phone call from
the agency told us: We have a baby girl for
you, but you dont have to take her. By the
time we returned home with our new baby,
our neighbors had put up signs saying,
Welcome home, (Name).
The greatest people, who we never met,
were the birth parents. They had the un-
selfish courage and faith to give up their
child for adoption and added not only a
daughter to our family, but also, eventu-
ally, two additional loving grandchildren.
As opposed to abortion, there is no guilt
in the birth parents hearts and much joy
in ours.
Mike Langan
Stroudsburg
Brominski asks to know
about levee fee concerns
I
t has been brought to my attention by
several residents of Luzerne County that
they believe they are charged levee fees
and reside out of the flood plain or have
never been flooded.
If there are people who feel that the fee
should not apply to them, please write to
me at this email address: eabrominski@lu-
zernecounty.org.
Edward A. Brominski
Member, Luzerne County Council
Swoyersville
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K
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com SATURDAY, MARCH 17, 2012 PAGE 11A
PENNSYLVANIA HAS one
of the largest natural gas
deposits in the world. Its
responsible development
can enhance national securi-
ty and heighten economic
recovery for our country,
state and citizenry all while moving us
toward a sounder environment.
While Gov. Tom Corbetts budget propos-
als and related Comprehensive Shale Legisla-
tion outline successes, plans for recovery and
updates to shale development regulations,
other actions are needed to continue the
momentum. These actions are straight-
forward and can yield significant benefits.
Some benefits already are being realized.
Increased use of gas from domestic sources
is reducing dangerous dependence on for-
eign oil sources that are subject to both
political conflicts and growing competition.
A recent Penn State study shows that gas
exploration already has added 156,000 jobs
to the Pennsylvania economy with the poten-
tial of another 250,000 by 2020.
Although Pennsylvania has reaped benefits
and its regulatory structure is a model for
others, there are still areas that need to be
addressed.
Fears need to be addressed. Many people
are scared of hydraulic fracturing and its
effects. While few of these fears are support-
ed by good science and experience, they are
real to many people. Both industry and the
government must explicitly recognize their
existence and continually demonstrate that
they are being addressed in a responsible
manner.
The regulatory structure needs to be
streamlined. The good news is that all crit-
ical aspects of gas exploration (seismic ac-
quisition, site selection, construction, drill-
ing and completion, well startup, production
and release) are regulated by a combination
of federal, state and local agencies. As shown
in the Governors Marcellus Shale Advisory
Commission Report, these regulations
involve more than 11 organizations each
with its own regulations and bureaucracy.
The complexity of this structure makes
understanding the regulations difficult, and
it leaves open opportunities for problems to
drop between the cracks. It also creates
both unnecessary expense and time delays.
These problems could be avoided by es-
tablishing a state-level organization a sin-
gle focal point with responsibility for over-
seeing the entire gas development process.
The thrust of the regulations must be
revised to encourage ongoing improvements.
Current regulations focus on what can and
cannot be done. They ignore focusing on
what they are trying to achieve. A natural
consequence is that operators are discour-
aged or prevented from introducing techno-
logical advances that could improve the
processes and profitability. The existing
regulatory structure should be reviewed and
revised to focus on intent.
Gas exploration in some portions of the
state is subject to additional regulations
imposed by interstate commissions (e.g., the
Susquehanna River Basin Commission or
the Delaware River Basin Commission).
These organizations set their own regu-
lations and administrative structures, some-
times ignoring explicit agreements that they
have with the states. This can result in prob-
lems that damage both the state and its
regulations.
As an example, the Delaware River Basin
Commission is holding Northeastern Penn-
sylvania hostage because it has established a
moratorium on gas exploration pending
issuance of revised regulations and support-
ing procedures. They have been unable to
develop these regulations despite two years
of work and they have no published time-
table for getting closure. Pennsylvania and
its residents are being hurt, and the Corbett
administration has the responsibility to take
strong action that will force closure.
Local communities bear the burden of
natural gas exploration. Their physical and
human infrastructures must deal with the
sudden growth of new industry, an influx of
workers, displaced residents, emergency
services, etc. The Corbett administration has
an obligation to make sure that there are
community plans building on the opportuni-
ties provided by natural gas exploration.
All of the above suggestions are straight-
forward. They can be implemented quickly
and yield significant benefits.
Mike Uretsky, of Damascus, is a retired professor
at New York University, where he also was co-
director of the Center for Advanced Technology. He
served on a U.S. Department of Energy Task Force
charged with proposing energy policies that would
take the country to 2050.
Straightforward action required for shale industry
COMMENTARY
M I K E U R E T S K Y
W
ELL, LOOK AT
that. The Trans-
portation Securi-
ty Administra-
tion is testing a more com-
mon-sense way to handle air
travelers age 75 and older.
Four airports will try out
new procedures for treating
older passengers in a more
dignified way. Travelers 75
and older will not have to re-
move their shoes or light jack-
ets to clear security at Chica-
gos OHare International Air-
port, Denver International,
Orlando International and
Portland International.
Anyone following air-travel
incidents knows senior citi-
zens as a group are very low
risk, much like children 12
and under. Passengers in that
age group do not have to take
off their shoes either.
Obviously, the first granny
who tries to go through secu-
rity, knowingly or unknow-
ingly, carrying a harmful item
will kill this idea in an in-
stant.
But good for TSA for mov-
ing forward with what is now
understood about this group
of passengers. Older people
are part of the vast ocean of
individuals trying to clear se-
curity while hoping to experi-
ence minimum indignities.
The pilot project is smart
and timely policy. If it works
it should this new approach
should spread quickly to the
rest of the country.
The Seattle Times
OTHER OPINION: AIRPORT CHECKS
Treat older fliers
with more class
T
HE PUBLIC HAS a
right to know. Or put
another way, informa-
tion should freely flow.
Its a simple tenet of democracy,
or at least of our idyllic notionof
democracy.
While newspapers have long
been the principles foremost
champion, no desk-pounding
editor forged this free-society
keystone.
Rather, the idea that an in-
formed public makes
for a sound govern-
ment is widely credit-
edtoFoundingFather
James Madison.
(A) popular gov-
ernment, without
popular information,
or the means of ac-
quiring it, is but a pro-
logue to a farce or a
tragedy; or, perhaps, both, Ma-
dison said. Knowledge will for-
ever govern ignorance.
Weve said this before, but in
honor of this weeks annual
American Society of News Edi-
tors Sunshine Week, well say it
again: Some public officials con-
tinue to pay too little heed to
Pennsylvanias flimsy Sunshine
Act, and they do so at the pub-
lics peril.
They continue to contemptu-
ously disregard the right-to-
knowlaws despite the states in-
creased punishments for viola-
tions. They continue to ignore it
with too little, if somewhat
larger, consequences. And they
continue to disrespect the pub-
lic, whose business they are pur-
portedly conducting, each time
they do it.
This problembynomeans ap-
plies to all who serve the public.
Nor have newspapers long-run-
ning complaints fallen entirely
upon deaf ears.
Gov. TomCorbetts signing of
Senate Bill 101has increasedthe
first-offense fine for Sunshine
Act violations froma flat $100 to
a minimum of $100 and maxi-
mumof $1,000; has bumped the
fine for second-offense and sub-
sequent violations to between
$500and$2,000; andhasprohib-
itedthepublic bodyfrompaying
the costs of which-
ever of its elected
officials commits
the violation.
Its a start. But
its clearly not
enough. Want
proof? Theres
plenty.
Statewide, the
most prominent
right-to-know abuse might have
occurred at Penn State as the
Jerry Sandusky child sex-abuse
scandal broke. The board of
trustees failed to announce its
closed November sessions and
held closed-door votes, treading
on thin legal ice. The meetings
eventually and famously led to
the late Joe Paternos ousting
and former President Graham
Spaniers forced resignation.
Thesteeper SunshineAct-vio-
lation fees clearly remain little
more than a nuisance to public
officials.
If we are to avoid Madisons
farce, if knowledge is to contin-
ue togovernignorance, our pub-
lic officials must stop flouting
the Sunshine Act. Some of them
simply wont do it without more
severe consequences.
Reading Eagle
OTHER OPINION: SUNSHINE WEEK
Sunshine Law
needs more bite
Some public
officials continue
to pay too little
heed to
Pennsylvanias
flimsy Sunshine
Act
QUOTE OF THE DAY
PRASHANT SHITUT
President and CEO/Impressions Media
JOSEPH BUTKIEWICZ
Vice President/Executive Editor
MARK E. JONES
Editorial Page Editor
EDITORIAL BOARD
MALLARD FILLMORE DOONESBURY
S E RV I NG T HE P UB L I C T RUS T S I NC E 1 8 81
Editorial
C M Y K
PAGE 12A SATURDAY, MARCH 17, 2012 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
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a pair of Phonak Digital Hearing Instruments
are normally in the upper 20s
have been in the 40s to near 50s,
Clark said.
Of course, wehavent seenany
recordhighs inthe afternoon, but
it has been warm enough to ele-
vateour averagetemperaturethis
month to the warmest since
1955, he said.
Clark pointed out that some
lakes near Scranton, such as
Moosic Lake, are totally ice-free.
This is the earliest in nearly 40
years that those lakes have been
without ice. Andthe springflood-
ing potential is still well below
normal because theres no snow
to melt, he said.
But also due to the warm
weather, our growing season is
about threeweeksaheadof sched-
ule, Clark said.
The warm, dry weather will
giveareavegetablefarmers anop-
portunity for an early start on
theirplowingandtilling, saidVin-
cent Cotrone, a forester and edu-
cator withthePennStateCooper-
ative Extension.
But Cotrone said he wouldnt
start planting before May 15 in
case there is a late coldsnap.
Theearlygrowingseasonisnot
good news, however, for local
fruit tree farmers.
Fruit growersareveryworried
at this point, said Quentin Hell-
er, owner of Heller Orchards in
the Wapwallopen section of Co-
nynghamTownship.
The worst freeze-out we ever
had here was in the last week of
May, soyoucanimaginehowlong
wehavetowait til wereout of the
coop here, Heller said.
Heller saidthe buds onsome of
his apple, peach, pear and plum
trees arestartingtoswell. If those
budsbloomandasubstantial cold
snaphits, it couldruinhis cropfor
the growing season.
Heller said some farmers have
used heaters in the fields when
cold snaps threatened early
blooms in the past, but nobody
can afford the fuel for the heaters
thesedays. I thinkwerejust going
to have to wait and see what hap-
pens, he said.
And pollinating trees through-
out the area can mean the early
onset of allergic reactions for al-
lergy sufferers.
I think were starting to see
moreallergicrhinitissymptoms
drippy, watery noses, itchy, wa-
tery eyes, stuffy noses, conges-
tion, sneezing, post-nasal drip,
said Dr. Patricia Hutchinson, an
allergy and immunology special-
ist with Geisinger Medical Cen-
ter.
Hutchinson said the National
Allergy Bureau is reporting high
levels of tree pollen in Pennsylva-
nia, oneof themost commontrig-
gers for allergic rhinitis. Those
levels normally appear in later
spring or early summer, she said.
She said February and March
are not all that uncommon to see
the beginning of allergy symp-
toms, but it is a little early in the
year toseesuchhighlevels of tree
pollen.
People who are allergic to bee
stingsshouldalsobeputtingtheir
guardup a little earlier this year.
Tony Best, of Best Pest Control
in Pittston, said hes already had
somecallsfromcustomerstodeal
withbee problems.
Hutchinson said its bees and
other insects that pollinate most
flowers. So allergy sufferers
shouldnt throwtheblameat pret-
ty spring flowers for their sneez-
ing anditchy eyes.
As for thereasonbehindall this
warm weather, Clark said he
wont point a finger at global
warming.
As a whole, the globe was not
warmer. The polar jet stream is
way upnorthandthey allowed90
percent of the country to have
above-normal temperatures this
month. Its dropping all the cold
air in the far northern latitudes,
Clark said.
WARM
Continued from Page 1A
CLARK VAN ORDEN/THE TIMES LEADER
Buds sprout on a plum tree at Hellers Orchards in Wapwallopen.
1931-1932, 36.1 degrees
2001-2002, 35.0 degrees
2011-2012, 34.0 degrees
(Average winter temperature
measured December through
February)
WA R M E S T W I N T E R S
1921 44.8 degrees
1973 44.6 degrees
1946 44.6 degrees
2012 43.5 degrees
1903 43.2 degrees
(Average monthly temperature
through March 15)
WA R M E S T M A R C H E S
Avoid outdoor activities on high
pollen-count days.
Pollen counts are usually higher
in the morning, so plan your
schedule accordingly.
Use air conditioning in the
house and car rather than keeping
windows open on high-pollen days.
Get children who have been
playing outside out of pollen-
covered clothes and give them a
bath or wipe them down with a
wet cloth after they come inside.
Start allergy medications at the
first sign of symptoms rather than
waiting for symptoms to get bad.
See an allergist to determine
exactly what youre allergic to and
how best to manage the allergy.
Learn more about allergies at
acaai.org and find a link to region-
al pollen counts at www.aaaai.org.
A L L E R GY T I P S
Prosecutors say Mellow, a
former Democratic Party
leader, illegally used Senate
staff to perform political cam-
paign and fundraising work
on state time. Hes charged
with mail fraud because those
staff members utilized the
Postal Service to send cam-
paign-related material in
question.
The government contends
the scheme cost the Senate
up to $120,000 based on the
salaries of the employees in-
volved. Given that, it appears
the most likely charges upon
which SERS might seek to
halt Mellows pension would
the theft of services or theft
by deception.
Pam Hile, spokeswoman for
PSERS, said the agency initi-
ates investigations into pen-
sion forfeitures whenever it
becomes aware of a case, ei-
ther through media reports or
employers.
Whatever the outcome of
the investigation into Mel-
lows pension, he will contin-
ue to receive payments up un-
til he enters a plea or is sen-
tenced, based on prior court
rulings that have held a con-
viction occurs only after the
plea has been officially en-
tered.
PENSION
Continued from Page 1A
With an agreement to plead
guilty to two federal felonies in
place, former state Sen. Robert J.
Mellow could be looking at up to
five years inprison. But his name,
which graces area roadways, col-
lege buildings, and parks, may
not be going anywhere.
And even with the details con-
tained in a federal information
showing how the 70-year-old
from Peckville allegedly used
Senate staff to perform political
campaign and fundraising work
on state time, those whom hes
helped have offered praise for his
career.
Mellow was integral in getting
the Scranton-based Common-
wealth Medical College up and
running and was conferred with
the schools first honorary degree
in2009. Whenaskedto comment
on Mellows legal issues, the
schools interim president and
dean chose to offer praise rather
than mention the charges.
Sen. Mellow has been a sup-
porter of the medical college
from its very beginning. We are
grateful for his support and com-
mitment to the advancement of
health care in our region, Dr.
Lois Margaret Nora said.
Blue Cross director
While the legal proceedings
are moving forward, Mellow re-
mains onthe boardof directors at
Blue Cross of NortheasternPenn-
sylvania. Its a paid position hes
held since 2008.
In a statement issued Friday,
the Wilkes-Barre-based health
care organization said, Our
boardincludes industry andcom-
munity leaders who have been
publicly recognized for their
commitment to help those who
most need it and have dedicated
themselves to improve health
care for the residents of North
Central and Northeastern Penn-
sylvania. Sen. Mellow has a dis-
tinguished track record of ad-
vancing the quality of health care
in our region. The matter cur-
rently facing Sen. Mellow has
been referred to our board.
Amessage left withboardpres-
ident and local attorney John
Moses was not returned. Blue
Cross of NortheasternPennsylva-
nia spokesman Anthony Matris-
ciano said he was unsure how
long Mellows term was and de-
clined to say how much Mellow
was compensated.
Mellows successor as the sen-
ator representing the 22nd dis-
trict, John Blake, D-Archbald,
said he was saddened and disap-
pointed.
It is obviously difficult for me
and for the people of the 22nd
District to see this as the final
chapter inwhat was anotherwise
a remarkable and successful 40-
year career in public service,
Blake said in a statement.
Support from Costa
Senate Minority Leader Jay
Costa, D-Allegheny County, is-
sued a brief statement wishing
Mellowthe best inbattling anun-
specified health issue and added,
I am glad to see that Sen. Mel-
low and federal authorities have
come to an agreement to resolve
their differences. Sen. Mellow
has had a long and distinguished
career in public service.
The best known building that
bears his name is the Mellow
Theater at Lackawanna College
in Scranton. But its far from the
only tribute to Mellow in the re-
gion. Theres Mellow Park in
Blakely, Bob Mellow drives in
Jessup andMoosic, The Robert J.
Mellow Center for Athletics and
Wellness at Marywood Universi-
ty and The Mellow Family Chil-
drens Campus at Keystone Col-
lege.
Juneann Greco, a Marywood
spokeswoman, said there will
likely be discussion on the con-
tinued use of Mellows name on
the athletics center on the Scran-
ton schools campus but no offi-
cial conversations have occurred.
Messages left with Blakely
Borough Council President Jo-
seph Quinn and Borough Manag-
er Thomas J. Wascura were not
returned. Multiple messages left
with Chris Kucharski, spokes-
man for Lackawanna College,
were also not returned.
In an interview on the subject
in 2010, shortly after the FBI
searched Mellows home and of-
fices, Kucharski said that placing
Mellows name on the theater
was a way to honor one of our
most distinguished alumni. At
that time, he said school officials
have had no discussions (about
what to do if the senator were to
find himself in legal trouble).
A Jessup borough secretary
said theres been no internal dis-
cussionabout changingthe name
of the road inside the Mid-Valley
Industrial Park. She said a Times
Leader reporter was the first to
even bring up the matter.
Mellow name remains badge of honor
BILL TARUTIS/FOR THE TIMES LEADER
Former state Sen. Robert Mellows name adorns Lackawanna
Colleges theater in the main building in Scranton.
The longtime political powers
name adorns the area despite
a pending guilty plea.
By ANDREWM. SEDER
aseder@timesleader.com
State law mandates some
gaming tax revenue be used to
improve communities near ca-
sinos like Mohegan Sun at Po-
cono Downs in Plains Town-
ship. The funds, released on
Tuesday, were awarded by the
Commonwealth Financing Au-
thority.
Now businesses damaged by
Tropical Storms Irene or Lee
may apply for loans up to
$100,000.
There has been a need for fi-
nancial assistance.
MetroAction Vice President
Kristine Augustine said 31 pre-
qualifications where a busi-
ness was flooded, and MetroAc-
tion ensures they qualify for the
program have been complet-
ed, totaling $2.2 million.
We have physically closed
seven loans totaling $650,000
with four additional loans
pending at $160,000, she said.
And there are several more ap-
plications in house and waiting
to be processed.
According to MetroActions
website, funds can be used for
working capital, replacing or re-
pairing damaged heating, venti-
lation and air-conditioning sys-
tems, waste recycling systems,
auxiliary power units deployed,
solvent recovery systems, in-
ventory or general flood clea-
nup.
Funding also may be used to
refinance previous loans ob-
tained for flood cleanup.
Servicing nine counties in
Northeastern Pennsylvania in-
cluding Luzerne and Lackawan-
na, MetroAction typically pro-
vides loans to small businesses
unable to secure finances
through traditional sources.
GAMING
Continued from Page 1A
AIMEE DILGER/THE TIMES LEADER
Gino Tighe, owner of GT
Fabrication, purchased a
machine used to bend up
to a 10-foot- piece of
sheet metal after his was
ruined in the September
flooding. The money came
from a loan program fund-
ed through the states
gaming tax revenues.
Projects in communities
near the Plains Township
casino can get help for
their projects. Throughout
Luzerne County, 19 pro-
jects qualified for the
assistance.
C M Y K
SPORTS S E C T I O N B
THE TIMES LEADER SATURDAY, MARCH 17, 2012
timesleader.com
LEWISBURG -- The longest of
days gave Jake Chielli enough
time to turna bit of individual de-
spair into team delight.
Which seemed fitting, since
Chiellis grown accustomed to
celebrating success with his Dal-
las High School teammates.
After beingedgedout of a med-
al in the boys 50-yard freestyle,
Chielli came back to help Dallas
secure a sixth-place medal in the
200-yard freestyle relay as the
Class 2A portion of the PIAA
Swimming and Diving Cham-
pionships began Friday at Buck-
nell Universitys KinneyNatatori-
um.
"It was great to go out there
with my teammates and grab an-
other medal," said Chielli, a key
performer for Dallas three con-
secutive District 2 team titles. "I
was very satisfied with my time
here and had a great time doing
it."
In girls action, Holy Redeemer
senior Elizabeth Finnegan made
her last time the best. She an-
chored a Royals 200-yard frees-
tyle relay team that captured a
sixth-place medal in the same
race in which Scranton Prep fin-
ished third.
Meanwhile, Pittston Areas
Mia Nardone made it to the con-
solation heat of the 100 butterfly,
where she finished seventh in the
race and 15th in the state.
Crestwoods Josh Grzech -- a
state swimmer without a team
this season -- finished second in
the consolation race of the boys
200 IM. And Dallas diver Sarah
Zerfoss placed11th, but out of the
medal awards ceremony, with an
accumulated score of 349.45.
But Scranton Preps girls did
everyone from District 2 a little
prouder, with a pair of second-
P I A A S W I M M I N G C H A M P I O N S H I P S
Dallas Chielli, Redeemer relay earn medals
Pair of sixth-place finishes
top days events for WVC
swimmers in Lewisburg.
By PAUL SOKOLOSKI
psokoloski@timesleader.com
See MEDALS, Page 4B
DON CAREY/THE TIMES LEADER
Holy Redeemers George Evans swims the butterfly leg of the
200 medley relay at the PIAA championships in Lewisburg.
LOS ANGELES Pennsylva-
nia may be a political battle-
ground state, but when it comes
to some things like football
voters have a somewhat clearer, if
still nuanced, message: Former
Penn State football coach Joe Pa-
terno deserves to be honored.
According to
a Quinnipiac
University Poll
released Friday,
voters in the
Keystone State
said they favor
renaming Penn
States Beaver
Stadium after
the late iconic coach by a 46 per-
cent to 40 percent margin. Pater-
no was fired in November by the
universitys board of trustees for
failing to act aggressively enough
in dealing with the child sexual-
abuse charges against former as-
sistant coach Jerry Sandusky.
But the overall number masks
some interesting divisions. For
example, voters who identified
themselves as football fans
backed honoring Paterno by 55
percent to37percent. Those who
were not fans said they opposed
renaming the stadium by 44 per-
cent to 37 percent.
Age also seems to be a factor in
support for Paterno, who died in
January of lung cancer at age 85.
According to the survey, those 65
and older strongly backed Pater-
no by 51 percent to 32 percent.
The poll was conducted by tel-
ephone and cellphone from
March 7 to March 12, and 1,256
registeredvoters were contacted.
The poll has a margin of error of
plus or minus 2.8 percentage
points.
"There is lingering respect for
Joe Paterno," Tim Malloy, assist-
ant director of the Quinnipiac
University Polling Institute, said
in a statement.
"One has to wonder: If the
Sandusky scandal had never hap-
pened whether support for re-
naming the stadium would have
approached100percent," hesaid.
Sandusky, 68, is awaiting trial
on charges that he sexually
abused at least 10 boys over a 15-
year period. In one incident,
Sandusky, who was no longer a
coach at the time, was allegedly
observed with a young boy in the
showers of a Penn State facility.
The graduate coach who said he
sawSandusky took the matter to
Paterno.
Paterno contacted his superi-
or, but neither one of themcalled
the police. The board of trustees
later fired Paterno and the uni-
versity president for failing to act
forcefully enough.
P E N N S TAT E
Pa. poll:
Name it
Paterno
Stadium
Statement: Without scandal,
support for change might
have approached 100 percent.
By MICHAEL MUSKAL
Los Angeles Times
Paterno
GREENSBORO, N.C. The Lehigh Moun-
tain Hawks said they werent afraid of mighty
Duke.
Maybe no one believed them at the time, but
the Patriot League champions provedthey were
serious.
C.J. McCollum scored 30 points and Lehigh
upset Duke 75-70 to become the second No. 15
seed to beat a No. 2 during a wild Friday in the
NCAA tournament.
It means a lot as a team, a family and as the
Patriot League ingeneral, McCollumsaid. We
wanted to come out here and protect this team
and this family, get the win and we did that to-
night.
LehighforwardJohnAdams saidit was a mat-
ter of believing in each other.
We saw on the selection show we had Duke
and we thought we could match up very well
against them, Adams said. We all believed it
and we showed it on the floor. Everybody
bought into that idea that we could beat them.
NCAA MENS TOURNAMENT
Cinn.
65
Texas
59
Fl. St.
66
S. Bon.
64
NC St.
79
SDSU
65
Creig.
58
Ala.
57
Gtwn
74
Belmt
59
UNC
77
Vermt
58
Fla.
71
Virg.
45
Norlk
86
Mizzou
84
Lehigh
75
Duke
70
Ohio
65
Mich.
60
St. Lo.
61
Mem.
54
Purd.
72
SMC
69
Mi. St.
89
LIU
67
Xavier
67
N.D.
63
USF
58
Temple
44
Kan.
65
Detroit
50
TERRIBLE 2S
AP PHOTO
Lehighs Gabe Knutson dunks as Dukes Andre Dawkins (20) watches during the second half Friday in
Greensboro, N.C. Lehigh won 75-70.
Duke unable to
handle Patriot
champs Lehigh
By STEVE REED
AP Sports Writer
OMAHA, Neb. Welcome to the NCAA
tournament, Norfolk State.
Might as well stick around a while.
Kyle OQuinn had 26 points and14 rebounds,
makingseveral keyplays inthe closingminutes,
and the gritty No. 15 seed Spartans held on
through a tense final minute to topple second-
seededMissouri 86-84 onFriday inthe West Re-
gional.
Pendarvis Williams andChris McEachineach
added 20 points for the MEAC champion Spar-
Norfolk St. stuns
Mizzou in debut
By DAVE SKRETTA
AP Sports Writer
See LEHIGH, Page 3B
See DEBUT, Page 3B
Brandon Whee-
less celebrates
after defeating
Missouri.
K
PAGE 2B SATURDAY, MARCH 17, 2012 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
S P O R T S
NBA
Favorite Points Underdog
CLIPPERS [6] Rockets
Raptors 2 BOBCATS
PACERS 4 Knicks
BULLS 6 76ers
NETS NL Hornets
MAVERICKS 2 Spurs
NUGGETS 5.5 Celtics
JAZZ 6.5 Warriors
[]-denotes a circle game. A game is circled for a va-
riety of reasons, withtheprimefactor beinganinjury.
When a game is inside a circle, there is limited wa-
gering. The line could move a fewpoints in either di-
rection, depending on the severity (probable, ques-
tionable, doubtful, out) of the injury.
College Basketball
Favorite Points Underdog
NCAA Tournament
Third Round
Syracuse 5 (134.5) Kansas St
Ohio St 7.5
(136.5)
Gonzaga
Marquette 5 (142.5) Murray St
Kentucky 11.5
(140.5)
Iowa St
Vanderbilt PK
(120.5)
Wisconsin
Baylor 8 (133.5) Colorado
Indiana 6 (138.5) Virginia Comm
Louisville 1.5
(128.5)
New Mexico
Sunday
Georgetown 3 (NL) NC State
Florida St 1 (NL) Cincinnati
NIT
Second Round
SETON HALL 7.5
(149.0)
Massachusetts
DREXEL 7 (119.5) Northern Iowa
NEVADA 3.5
(132.5)
Bucknell
OREGON 7 (153.5) Iowa
College Insider
Tournament
Second Round
Georgia St 1.5
(125.5)
MERCER
OAKLAND 2.5
(164.5)
Buffalo
Robert Morris 2 (138.5) TOLEDO
RICE 5 (136.5) Drake
UTAH ST 6 (133.5) Idaho
Note: The number inside the bracket is the over/un-
der total
NHL
Favorite Odds Underdog
Penguins -$135/
+$115
DEVILS
BRUINS -$140/
+$120
Flyers
Hurricanes -$110/-
$110
WILD
CANADIENS -$125/
+$105
Islanders
SENATORS -$155/
+$135
Maple Leafs
RANGERS -$180/
+$160
Avalanche
Blues -$150/
+$130
LIGHTNING
PANTHERS -$125/
+$105
Sabres
CANUCKS -$280/
+$240
Blue Jackets
SHARKS -$140/
+$120
Red Wings
KINGS -$125/
+$105
Predators
AME RI C A S L I NE
BY ROXY ROXBOROUGH
CIRCULAR REPORT: On the NBA board, all the circled games and the no line
game are for the various trades and the numerous injuries.
Check out www.americasline.com for all the injuries.
Follow Eckstein on Twitter at www.twitter.com/vegasvigorish.
BOXING REPORT: In the WBA super welterweight title fight on May 5 in Las
Vegas, Nevada, Floyd Mayweather Jr. is -$700 vs. Miguel Cotto at +$500; in the
WBA/IBF welterweight title fight on May 19 in Las Vegas, Nevada, Amir Khan is
-$500 vs. Lamont Peterson at +$400; in the WBO welterweight title fight on June 9
in Las Vegas, Nevada, Manny Pacquiao is -$400 vs. Timothy Bradley at +$300.
L O C A L
C A L E N D A R
TODAY'S EVENTS
H.S. GIRLS BASKETBALL
PIAA Class A quarterfinals
Old Forge vs. Marian Catholic, 1 p.m. at Hazleton
Area H.S.
H.S. BOYS BASKETBALL
PIAA Class 2A quarterfinals
Holy Cross vs. Pine Grove, 2:30 p.m. at Hazleton
Area H.S.
COLLEGE SOFTBALL
Misericordia at Marywood, 1 p.m.
Eastern at Wilkes, 1 p.m.
COLLEGE BASEBALL
Wilkes at Eastern, Noon
Gwynedd-Mercy at Misericordia, 1 p.m.
Manhattanville at Kings, 1 p.m.
WOMEN'S COLLEGE LACROSSE
Albright at Kings, 1 p.m.
PSU Abington at Wilkes, 1 p.m.
MEN'S COLLEGE LACROSSE
Bethany at Kings, 4 p.m.
COLLEGE TENNIS
Kings at Lebanon Valley, Noon
Elizabethtown at Wilkes, 1 p.m.
SUNDAY, MARCH18
MEN'S COLLEGE LACROSSE
Mount St. Vincent at Misericordia, 1 p.m.
COLLEGE BASEBALL
Marywood at PSU Wilkes-Barre (doubleheader),
Noon
Kings at Manhattanville, 1 p.m.
MONDAY, MARCH19
No Events
TUESDAY, MARCH 20
H.S. BOYS TENNIS
Berwick at GAR, 4 p.m.
Coughlin at Pittston Area, 4 p.m.
Meyers at Hazleton Area, 4 p.m.
Dallas at Holy Redeemer, 4 p.m.
Wyoming Area at Wyoming Seminary, 4 p.m.
Wyoming Valley West at Tunkhannock, 4 p.m.
Crestwood at MMI Prep, 4:15 p.m.
COLLEGE SOFTBALL
Delaware Valley at Misericordia, 3 p.m.
WOMEN'S COLLEGE LACROSSE
Misericordia at Scranton, 4 p.m.
Kings at Lancaster Bible, 4 p.m.
COLLEGE BASEBALL
Penn College at Wilkes, 3:30 p.m.
Marywood at Kings, 4 p.m.
COLLEGE TENNIS
Wilkes at Bloomsburg, 3:30 p.m.
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 21
COLLEGE SOFTBALL
Misericordia at Gwynedd-Mercy, 3 p.m.
Kings at Manhattanville, 3 p.m.
Wilkes at Alvernia, 3 p.m.
COLLEGE BASEBALL
Scranton at Misericordia, 3:30 p.m.
MEN'S COLLEGE LACROSSE
PSU-Abington at Misericordia, 4 p.m.
MEN'S COLLEGE GOLF
FDU-Florham at Kings, 1 p.m.
COLLEGE TENNIS
Keystone at Kings, 3 p.m.
W H A T S O N T V
AUTO RACING
9:30 a.m.
SPEEDNASCAR, Sprint Cup, practice for Food
City 500, at Bristol, Tenn.
10:30 a.m.
SPEEDNASCAR, Nationwide Series, pole qual-
ifying for Ford EcoBoost 300, at Bristol, Tenn.
Noon
SPEEDNASCAR, Sprint Cup, Happy Hour Se-
ries, final practice for Food City 500, at Bristol,
Tenn.
2 p.m.
ESPN NASCAR, Nationwide Series, Ford Eco-
Boost 300, at Bristol, Tenn.
1:30 a.m.
SPEED Formula One, Australian Grand Prix, at
Melbourne, Australia
BOXING
10 p.m.
HBO Middleweights, Edwin Rodriguez (20-0-0)
vs. Donovan George (22-1-1);champion Sergio
Martinez (48-2-2) vs. MatthewMacklin (28-3-0), for
WBC Diamond middleweight title, at New York
COLLEGE WRESTLING
11 a.m.
ESPNU NCAA Division I Wrestling Champion-
ships
7:30 p.m.
ESPN Finals, NCAA Division I Championships
GOLF
9 a.m.
TGC European PGA Tour, Open de Andalucia,
third round, at Marbella, Spain
1 p.m.
TGCPGATour, Transitions Championship, third
round, at Palm Harbor, Fla.
3 p.m.
NBCPGATour, Transitions Championship, third
round, at Palm Harbor, Fla.
4 p.m.
TGCLPGA, Founders Cup, third round, at Phoe-
nix
7:30 p.m.
TGCChampions Tour, Toshiba Classic, second
round, at Newport Beach, Calif. (same-day tape)
MEN'S COLLEGE
BASKETBALL
11 a.m.
ESPN NIT, second round, UMass at Seton Hall
Noon
CBS NCAA Division I tournament, third round,
quadrupleheader, Syracuse vs. Kansas State and
Ohio State vs. Gonzaga, at Pittsburgh;Marquette
vs. Murray State and Kentucky vs. Iowa State, at
Louisville, Ky.
6 p.m.
TNT NCAA Division I tournament, third round,
doubleheader, Wisconsin vs. Vanderbilt and Baylor
vs. Colorado at Albuquerque, N.M.
7 p.m.
TBS NCAA Division I tournament, third round,
doubleheader, Indiana vs. VCU and Louisville vs.
New Mexico at Portland, Ore.
MEN'S COLLEGE HOCKEY
8 p.m.
NBCSN Hockey East Tournament, final, Provi-
dence-Boston winner vs. Maine-Boston U. winner,
at Boston
MINOR LEAGUE HOCKEY
7 p.m.
WQMY Worcester at Wilkes-Barre/Scranton
MLB BASEBALL
1 p.m.
WPIX Preseason, Atlanta at N.Y. Mets
YES --- Preseason, Houston at N.Y. Yankees
MOTORSPORTS
2:30 p.m.
SPEED Daytona Bike Week, at Daytona Beach,
Fla. (same-day tape)
5 p.m.
SPEEDAMAPro Racing, at Daytona Beach, Fla.
(same-day tape)
7:30 p.m.
SPEED Supercross, at Indianapolis
NBA BASKETBALL
7 p.m.
MSG New York at Indiana
8 p.m.
CSN Philadelphia at Chicago
YES --- New Orleans at New Jersey
NHL HOCKEY
1 p.m.
CSN, NHLN Philadelphia at Boston
PLUS, ROOT --- Pittsburgh at New Jersey
7 p.m.
MSG2 Colorado at N.Y. Rangers
NHLN --- Toronto at Ottawa
PLUS --- N.Y. Islanders at Montreal
10:30 p.m.
NBCSN Detroit at San Jose
TENNIS
2 p.m.
ABCATP World Tour/WTA, BNP Paribas Open,
mens semifinals, at Indian Wells, Calif.
WOMEN'S COLLEGE
BASKETBALL
11 a.m.
ESPN2 NCAA Division I tournament, first round,
Kansas St. vs. Princeton, at Bridgeport, Conn.;Na-
vy at Maryland;West Virginia vs. Texas, at Norfolk,
Va.;South Carolina vs. E. Michigan, at West La-
fayette, Ind.
1:30 p.m.
ESPN2 NCAA Division I tournament, first round,
UConnvs. PrairieView, at Bridgeport, Conn.;Louis-
ville vs. Michigan St., at College Park, Md.;Stanford
vs. Hampton, at Norfolk, Va;South Dakota St. at
Purdue
4 p.m.
ESPN2 NCAA Division I tournament, first round,
Kentucky vs. McNeese St., at Ames, Iowa;Tennes-
see vs. UT-Martin, at Rosemont, Ill.;Arkansas vs.
Dayton, at College Station, Texas;Rutgers at Gon-
zaga
6:30 p.m.
ESPN2 NCAA Division I tournament, first round,
GreenBay at IowaSt.;BYUat DePaul;Albany (NY) at
Texas A{M}Miami vs. Idaho St., at Spokane, Wash.
T R A N S A C T I O N S
BASEBALL
American League
BOSTONREDSOXOptionedOFChe-HsuanLin
and3BWill Middlebrooks toPawtucket (IL) andLHP
DrakeBrittonand2BOscar TejedatoPortland(EL).
Reassigned RHP Tony Pena Jr., RHP Chorye
Spoone, RHP Alex Wilson and OF Juan Carlos Li-
nares to their minor league camp.
NEW YORK YANKEESAgreed to terms with
LHP Andy Pettitte on a minor league contract.
National League
HOUSTON ASTROSOptioned RHP Juan Abreu
and RHP Paul Clemens to Oklahoma City (PCL).
Reassigned C Chris Wallace, C Rene Garcia, INF
Jonathan Singleton, INF Diory Hernandez, OF
Brandon Barnes, OF Jacob Goebbert and RHP
Lance Pendleton to their minor league camp.
PHILADELPHIA PHILLIESReleased LHP Don-
trelle Willis. Reassigned CSteven Lerud to their mi-
nor league camp.
SANFRANCISCOGIANTSReassignedOFGary
Brown to their minor league camp.
WASHINGTONNATIONALSAgreed to two-year
player development contract extensions with Syra-
cuse (IL), Harrisburg (EL), Potomac (Carolina) and
the Auburn (NY-Penn) through 2014.
BASKETBALL
National Basketball Association
HOUSTONROCKETSReleasedFTerrenceWil-
liams.
NEW JERSEY NETSSigned G Jerry Smith to
10-day contract.
SANANTONIOSPURSSigned F Eric Dawson to
a second 10-day contract.
FOOTBALL
National Football League
ATLANTA FALCONSAgreed to terms with DE
John Abraham.
ARIZONA CARDINALSAgreed to terms with OT
Levi Brown on a five-year contract.
CAROLINA PANTHERSSigned S Haruki Na-
kamura to a three-year contract.
CLEVELAND BROWNSReleased DE Jayme
Mitchell.
NEW YORK JETSSigned QB Drew Stanton to a
one-year contract. Agreed to terms with WR Chaz
Schilens.
OAKLAND RAIDERSReleased LB Kamerion
Wimbley.
SANFRANCISCO49ERSSigned RBRock Cart-
wright to a one-year contract.
WASHINGTON REDSKINSSigned CB Cedric
Griffin. Announced TE Fred Davis signed his fran-
chise tender.
HOCKEY
National Hockey League
BOSTON BRUINSAssigned F Trent Whitfield to
Providence (AHL).
CAROLINA HURRICANESReassigned F Je-
romeSamsonandDBobby Sanguinetti toCharlotte
(AHL).
CHICAGO BLACKHAWKSRecalled G Carter
Hutton from Rockford (AHL).
DETROIT RED WINGSRecalled G Jordan
Pearce from Grand Rapids (AHL).
WINNIPEG JETSSigned D Julian Melchiori to a
three-year contract.
COLLEGE
MARY HARDIN-BAYLORNamed Lisa Curliss-
Taylor womens basketball coach.
MIAMISuspended senior womens basketball G
Riquna Williams because of conduct detrimental to
the team.
H O C K E Y
National Hockey League
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
N.Y. Rangers............... 70 44 19 7 95 194 155
Pittsburgh .................... 69 43 21 5 91 224 175
Philadelphia ................ 70 41 22 7 89 226 199
New Jersey ................. 71 41 25 5 87 196 182
N.Y. Islanders.............. 71 28 32 11 67 166 214
Northeast Division
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Boston.......................... 70 40 27 3 83 225 176
Ottawa.......................... 71 36 25 10 82 218 209
Buffalo.......................... 71 33 29 9 75 178 201
Toronto ........................ 71 31 32 8 70 205 218
Montreal....................... 71 28 32 11 67 188 198
Southeast Division
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Florida.......................... 70 34 23 13 81 177 195
Washington................. 70 36 28 6 78 189 197
Winnipeg...................... 70 33 29 8 74 186 197
Tampa Bay................... 70 32 31 7 71 198 237
Carolina ....................... 71 27 29 15 69 185 211
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Central Division
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
St. Louis....................... 72 45 19 8 98 186 141
Detroit .......................... 71 44 24 3 91 219 171
Nashville...................... 70 41 21 8 90 201 181
Chicago........................ 71 38 25 8 84 213 209
Columbus .................... 70 22 41 7 51 161 226
Northwest Division
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Vancouver ................... 70 42 20 8 92 219 177
Colorado...................... 73 38 30 5 81 191 194
Calgary ........................ 71 34 25 12 80 180 194
Minnesota.................... 70 29 31 10 68 150 194
Edmonton.................... 70 27 36 7 61 185 209
Pacific Division
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Dallas ........................... 71 39 27 5 83 188 188
Phoenix........................ 72 35 26 11 81 188 186
San Jose...................... 70 35 25 10 80 191 179
Los Angeles ................ 70 33 25 12 78 159 154
Anaheim ...................... 71 30 30 11 71 177 196
NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime
loss.
Thursday's Games
New Jersey 1, Colorado 0, SO
San Jose 2, Nashville 1, SO
Philadelphia 3, N.Y. Islanders 2
Pittsburgh 5, N.Y. Rangers 2
Carolina 2, St. Louis 0
Toronto 3, Tampa Bay 1
Florida 6, Boston 2
Calgary 4, Phoenix 1
Friday's Games
Ottawa 2, Montreal 1 OT
Washington at Winnipeg, late
Chicago at Dallas, late
Calgary at Edmonton, late.
Los Angeles at Anaheim, late
Today's Games
Philadelphia at Boston, 1 p.m.
Pittsburgh at New Jersey, 1 p.m.
Carolina at Minnesota, 2 p.m.
N.Y. Islanders at Montreal, 7 p.m.
Toronto at Ottawa, 7 p.m.
Colorado at N.Y. Rangers, 7 p.m.
St. Louis at Tampa Bay, 7 p.m.
Buffalo at Florida, 7:30 p.m.
Columbus at Vancouver, 10 p.m.
Nashville at Los Angeles, 10:30 p.m.
Detroit at San Jose, 10:30 p.m.
Sunday's Games
Pittsburgh at Philadelphia, 12:30 p.m.
Washington at Chicago, 7 p.m.
Columbus at Calgary, 8 p.m.
Phoenix at Edmonton, 8 p.m.
Nashville at Anaheim, 8 p.m.
Carolina at Winnipeg, 8:30 p.m.
American Hockey League
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
GP W L OL SL Pts GF GA
St. Johns .............. 61 38 16 5 2 83 208 172
Manchester ........... 63 31 29 0 3 65 166 181
Worcester.............. 60 26 23 4 7 63 157 164
Portland ................. 61 28 27 3 3 62 174 207
Providence............ 63 27 29 3 4 61 156 182
East Division
GP W L OL SL Pts GF GA
Norfolk ................... 64 43 18 1 2 89 230 165
Penguins.............. 63 36 20 2 5 79 201 192
Hershey................. 61 31 20 4 6 72 200 181
Syracuse............... 62 27 27 4 4 62 196 199
Binghamton........... 62 24 34 2 2 52 164 198
Northeast Division
GP W L OL SL Pts GF GA
Bridgeport ............. 60 32 20 3 5 72 185 173
Connecticut........... 61 31 20 5 5 72 182 169
Albany.................... 61 27 24 6 4 64 155 176
Adirondack............ 62 30 29 2 1 63 168 174
Springfield............. 62 28 28 3 3 62 175 193
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Midwest Division
GP W L OL SL Pts GF GA
Peoria .................... 64 35 26 2 1 73 193 170
Charlotte................ 60 32 20 3 5 72 168 158
Chicago................. 62 33 24 2 3 71 170 159
Milwaukee ............. 60 30 26 2 2 64 167 159
Rockford................ 62 28 27 2 5 63 173 195
North Division
GP W L OL SL Pts GF GA
Toronto.................. 62 34 21 4 3 75 181 146
Lake Erie............... 63 32 25 2 4 70 155 174
Rochester.............. 61 30 22 6 3 69 181 177
Grand Rapids........ 60 27 23 6 4 64 194 191
Hamilton ................ 62 27 28 2 5 61 150 189
West Division
GP W L OL SL Pts GF GA
Oklahoma City...... 62 37 17 4 4 82 179 143
San Antonio .......... 61 33 24 3 1 70 155 165
Houston................. 61 29 20 3 9 70 170 168
Abbotsford ............ 63 32 25 3 3 70 151 168
Texas..................... 61 27 30 2 2 58 182 198
NOTE: Two points are awarded for a win, one point
for an overtime or shootout loss.
Thursday's Games
No games scheduled
Friday's Games
Norfolk 7, Charlotte 2
Connecticut 3, Bridgeport 2
Toronto 2, Grand Rapids 0
Hershey 6, Adirondack 3
Binghamton 4, Albany 2
Springfield 5, Portland 1
Worcester 5, Providence 2
Milwaukee 5, Lake Erie 4 OT
Syracuse 4, Rochester 3
Abbotsford 3, San Antonio 1
Oklahoma City 4, Texas 3
Rockford at Houston, late
Today's Games
Milwaukee at Toronto, 3 p.m.
Manchester at St. Johns, 6 p.m.
Albany at Hershey, 7 p.m.
Springfield at Connecticut, 7 p.m.
Bridgeport at Portland, 7 p.m.
Hamilton at Grand Rapids, 7 p.m.
Rochester at Binghamton, 7:05 p.m.
Worcester at Penguins, 7:05 p.m.
Chicago at Lake Erie, 7:30 p.m.
Adirondack at Syracuse, 7:30 p.m.
Oklahoma City at Texas, 8 p.m.
Rockford at San Antonio, 8 p.m.
Abbotsford at Houston, 8:35 p.m.
Sunday's Games
Manchester at St. Johns, 2:30 p.m.
Bridgeport at Worcester, 3 p.m.
Chicago at Toronto, 3 p.m.
Portland at Connecticut, 3 p.m.
Norfolk at Charlotte, 3 p.m.
Binghamton at Penguins, 3:05 p.m.
Hershey at Albany, 4 p.m.
Springfield at Providence, 4:05 p.m.
Oklahoma City at Houston, 6:05 p.m.
B A S K E T B A L L
National Basketball
Association
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
W L Pct GB
Philadelphia ................. 25 18 .581
Boston........................... 23 19 .548 1
1
2
New York...................... 19 24 .442 6
New Jersey .................. 15 29 .341 10
1
2
Toronto ......................... 14 29 .326 11
Southeast Division
W L Pct GB
Miami .............................. 31 11 .738
Orlando........................... 28 16 .636 4
Atlanta............................. 24 19 .558 7
1
2
Washington.................... 10 32 .238 21
Charlotte ........................ 6 36 .143 25
Central Division
W L Pct GB
Chicago.......................... 36 9 .800
Indiana............................ 25 16 .610 9
Milwaukee...................... 19 24 .442 16
Cleveland ....................... 16 25 .390 18
Detroit ............................. 16 27 .372 19
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Southwest Division
W L Pct GB
San Antonio.................. 28 13 .683
Memphis....................... 24 17 .585 4
Dallas ............................ 25 20 .556 5
Houston ........................ 24 20 .545 5
1
2
New Orleans ................ 10 34 .227 19
1
2
Northwest Division
W L Pct GB
Oklahoma City ............. 33 10 .767
Denver .......................... 24 20 .545 9
1
2
Minnesota..................... 22 22 .500 11
1
2
Utah............................... 21 22 .488 12
Portland......................... 20 23 .465 13
Pacific Division
W L Pct GB
L.A. Lakers..................... 27 16 .628
L.A. Clippers.................. 24 18 .571 2
1
2
Phoenix .......................... 21 22 .488 6
Golden State.................. 18 22 .450 7
1
2
Sacramento ................... 14 29 .326 13
Thursday's Games
Washington 99, New Orleans 89
Dallas 101, Charlotte 96
Oklahoma City 103, Denver 90
Utah 111, Minnesota 105, OT
Phoenix 91, L.A. Clippers 87
Friday's Games
Orlando 86, New Jersey 70
Miami 84, Philadelphia 78
Atlanta 102, Washington 88
New York 115, Indiana 100
Portland 100, Chicago 89
Toronto at Memphis, late
San Antonio at Oklahoma City, late
Boston at Sacramento, late
Detroit at Phoenix, late
Milwaukee at Golden State, late
Minnesota at L.A. Lakers, late
Today's Games
Houston at L.A. Clippers, 3:30 p.m.
Toronto at Charlotte, 7 p.m.
New York at Indiana, 7 p.m.
Philadelphia at Chicago, 8 p.m.
New Orleans at New Jersey, 8 p.m.
Boston at Denver, 9 p.m.
Golden State at Utah, 9 p.m.
San Antonio at Dallas, 9 p.m.
Sunday's Games
Atlanta at Cleveland, 3 p.m.
Detroit at L.A. Clippers, 3:30 p.m.
Minnesota at Sacramento, 6 p.m.
Washington at Memphis, 6 p.m.
Orlando at Miami, 7 p.m.
Houston at Phoenix, 9 p.m.
Utah at L.A. Lakers, 9:30 p.m.
Portland at Oklahoma City, 9:30 p.m.
College Basketball
NCAA Tournament Glance
FIRST ROUND
At UD Arena
Dayton, Ohio
Tuesday, March 13
Western Kentucky 59, MVSU 58
BYU 78, Iona 72
Wednesday, March 14
Vermont 71, Lamar 59
South Florida 65, California 54
EAST REGIONAL
Second Round
Thursday, March 15
At The CONSOL Energy Center
Pittsburgh
Kansas State 70, Southern Mississippi 64
Syracuse 72, UNC Asheville 65
Gonzaga 77, West Virginia 54
Ohio State 78, Loyola (Md.) 59
At The Pit
Albuquerque, N.M.
Wisconsin 73, Montana 49
Vanderbilt 79, Harvard 70
Friday, March 16
At Bridgestone Arena
Nashville, Tenn.
Cincinnati 65, Texas 59
Florida State 66, St. Bonaventure 63
Third Round
Saturday, March 17
At The CONSOL Energy Center
Pittsburgh
Syracuse (32-2) vs. Kansas State (22-10), 12:15
p.m.
Ohio State (28-7) vs. Gonzaga (26-6), 30 minutes
following
At The Pit
Albuquerque, N.M.
Wisconsin (25-9) vs. Vanderbilt (25-10), 6:10 p.m.
Sunday, March 18
At Bridgestone Arena
Nashville, Tenn.
Florida State (25-9) vs. Cincinnati-Texas winner,
TBA
Regional Semifinals
At TD Garden
Boston
Thursday, March 22
Syracuse-Kansas State winner vs. Wisconsin-Van-
derbilt winner
Ohio State-Gonzaga winner vs. Florida State-Cin-
cinnati winner
Regional Championship
Saturday, March 24
Semifinal winners
SOUTH REGIONAL
Second Round
Thursday, March 15
At The KFC Yum! Center
Louisville, Ky.
Kentucky 81, Western Kentucky 66
Iowa State 77, UConn 64
At The Pit
Albuquerque, N.M.
Baylor 68, South Dakota State 60
Colorado 68, UNLV 64
At The Rose Garden
Portland, Ore.
VCU 62, Wichita State 59
Indiana 79, New Mexico State 66
Friday, March 16
At Greensboro Coliseum
Greensboro, N.C.
Lehigh 75, Duke 70
Notre Dame (22-11) vs. Xavier (21-12), 30 minutes
following
Third Round
Saturday, March 17
At The KFC Yum! Center
Louisville, Ky.
Kentucky (33-2) vs. Iowa State (23-10), 7:45 p.m.
At The Pit
Albuquerque, N.M.
Baylor (28-7) vs. Colorado (24-11), 8:40 p.m.
At The Rose Garden
Portland, Ore.
Indiana (26-8) vs. VCU (29-6), 7:10 p.m.
Sunday, March 18
At Greensboro Coliseum
Greensboro, N.C.
Lehigh (27-7) vs. Notre Dame-Xavier winner, TBA
Regional Semifinals
At The Georgia Dome
Atlanta
Friday, March 23
Kentucky-Iowa State winner vs. Indiana-VCU win-
ner
Baylor-Colorado winner vs. LehighNotre Dame-
Xavier winner
Regional Championship
Sunday, March 25
Semifinal winners
MIDWEST REGIONAL
Second Round
Friday, March 16
At Greensboro Coliseum
Greensboro, N.C.
Creighton 58, Alabama 57
North Carolina 77, Vermont 58
At Nationwide Arena
Columbus, Ohio
N.C. State 79, San Diego State 65
Georgetown 74, Belmont 59
At Bridgestone Arena
Nashville, Tenn.
Ohio 65, Michigan 60
Temple(24-7) vs. SouthFlorida(21-13), 30minutes
following
At CenturyLink Center
Omaha, Neb.
Purdue 72, Saint Marys (Calif.) 69
Kansas (27-6) vs. Detroit (22-13), 30 minutes fol-
lowing
Third Round
Sunday, March 18
At Greensboro Coliseum
Greensboro, N.C.
North Carolina (30-5) vs. Creighton (29-5), TBA
At Nationwide Arena
Columbus, Ohio
Georgetown (24-8) vs. N.C. State (23-12), TBA
At Bridgestone Arena
Nashville, Tenn.
Ohio (28-7) vs. Temple-South Florida winner, TBA
At CenturyLink Center
Omaha, Neb.
Kansas-Detroit winner vs. Purdue (22-12), TBA
Regional Semifinals
At Edward Jones Dome
St. Louis
Friday, March 23
North CarolinaVermont-Creighton winner vs.
OhioTemple-South Florida winner
Georgetown-N.C. State winner vs. Kansas-Detroit-
Purdue winner
Regional Championship
Sunday, March 25
Semifinal winners
WEST REGIONAL
Second Round
Thursday, March 15
At The KFC Yum! Center
Louisville, Ky.
Murray State 58, Colorado State 41
Marquette 88, BYU 68
At The Rose Garden
Portland, Ore.
Louisville 69, Davidson 62
New Mexico 75, Long Beach State 68
Friday, March 16
At Nationwide Arena
Columbus, Ohio
Saint Louis 61, Memphis 54
Michigan State (27-7) vs. LIU(25-8), 30 minutes fol-
lowing
At CenturyLink Center
Omaha, Neb.
Florida 71, Virginia 45
Norfolk State 86, Missouri 84
Third Round
Saturday, March 17
At The KFC Yum! Center
Louisville, Ky.
Marquette (26-7) vs. Murray State (31-1), 5:15 p.m.
At The Rose Garden
Portland, Ore.
Louisville (27-9) vs. New Mexico (28-6), 9:40 p.m.
Sunday, March 18
At Nationwide Arena
Columbus, Ohio
Michigan State-LIU winner vs. Saint Louis (26-7),
TBA
At CenturyLink Center
Omaha, Neb.
Norfolk State (26-9) vs. Florida (24-10), TBA
Regional Semifinals
Thursday, March 22
At US Airways Center
Phoenix
Michigan State-LIU-Saint Louis winner vs. Louis-
ville-New Mexico winner
Marquette-Murray State winner vs. Norfolk State-
Florida winner
Regional Championship
Saturday, March 24
Semifinal winners
FINAL FOUR
At The Superdome
New Orleans
National Semifinals
Saturday, March 31
East champion vs. Midwest champion
South champion vs. West champion
National Championship
Monday, April 2
Semifinal winners
WB/Heights, today and Sunday
from 3-5 at Stanton Lanes, WB.
Cost is $85 per player. Eligible
players are ages 13-18. From the
Wyoming Valley area. Also looking
for teams in the 13-15age bracket.
For further info call Jim at 983-
9877 or John at 817-3555.
LEAGUES
County Line Girls Softball League is
a newly formed ASA rec league
comprised of teams from Dupont,
Taylor, Minooka and Scranton. The
league is looking for teams in age
groups from 7-17. For more in-
formation, call Bob at 881-8744.
Lehman Golf Club is now open for
the season. Memberships are
available for this season. Contact
the pro shop for details.
UPCOMING EVENTS
Curry & Powlus Quarterback Camp,
8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m. on May 26, at
Bloomsburg University. The camp,
under the direction of George
Curry, will featured top coaches on
the high school and college level
as well as college quarterbacks.
Fee is $50 and can be sent to
Curry Quarterback Camp Inc., 305
Summerhill Ave., Berwick, Pa.,
18603. For more information, go to
www.curryqbcamps.org.
The Dallas High School Softball
Developmental Skill Clinic for
girls ages 7-14 will be held on
March 25 at the Dallas Area Middle
School Gym. There will be two
sessions: girls ages 7-10 (clinic will
run from10 a.m. to noon) and girls
ages 11-14 (clinic will run from1-3
p.m.). The clinic will focus on
fielding, throwing, and hitting.
Participants can register the day
of the clinic. For more information,
contact Bill Kern at (570) 498-5991
or email dallashighsoft-
ball@gmail.com for an application.
Electric City Baseball & Softball
Academy will hold a Hitters Video
Clinic for boys and girls ages 8-18
at their new facility at 733 Davis
Street, Scranton, on April 14-15.
Hitters receive instruction, drills
and video analysis. Cost is $75 for
both days; $65 if post-marked by
March 15. For more information,
call 955-0471 or visit www.electric-
citybaseball.com.
The Pace Setter Athletic Club of
Northeastern Pa. will conduct a
3-on-3 basketball tournament
along with shooting contest and
skills competition at the Greater
Scranton YMCA in Dunmore on
Sunday, April 1 beginning at noon.
The program is for both boys and
girls grades 6-8 and participants
enter as three-player teams. For
more information, contact the
Pace Setter Athletic Club at 347-
7018 or 575-0941. You may also
e-mail pacesetterbasketball@veri-
zon.net.
The Wilkes-Barre Fire Dept Athletic
Association invites all golfers to
participate in the 23rd annual Golf
Tournament on May 6 at Ron
Jaworskis Edgewood in the Pines
Golf Course in Drums. The cost per
golfer is $80. The fee includes
green fees, cart, a hot dog at the
turn and an Italian Buffet style
dinner at the end of the tourna-
ment. Complimentary beverages
will be offered throughout the
course. It is a captain and crew
format. It begins at 1 p.m. with a
shotgun start. Special prizes
include closest to the pin and
longest drive. Our organization
contributes to various charities
throughout the year that support
less fortunate children. In previous
years donations have gone to
Camp Dost, Special Olympics
Bowling, Kids Wish Network Gift
Bank at John Heinz Institute of
Rehabilitation, and many others. If
you would like to golf, please
contact tournament chairman
Shawn Williams at (570) 885-
3026.
MEETINGS
The Checkerboard Inn Golf League
will hold an organizational meeting
on Monday, April 2 at 7 p.m. at the
Checkerboard Inn in Trucksville. All
members must attend or contact
the league. Dues for 2012 will be
collected and the starting date will
be April 10. Any questions can be
directed to Frank at 675-7532.
County Line Girls Softball League
will have a coaches only meeting
on Wednesday at the Dupont Boro
Building. The meeting starts at
6:30 p.m. Call Bob at 881-8744 for
more info.
Hanover Area Youth Soccer will be
having a field clean-up and set-up
at 9 a.m. March 24 at the soccer
fields in preparation of the up-
coming spring soccer schedule.
Anyone who is willing to come up
and lend a hand is welcome. We
will also be holding the monthly
HAYS Board meeting at the field
after the clean up and setup is
finished. All are welcome to attend.
Wyoming Area Baseball will hold a
Meet the Warriors committee
meeting at 7 p.m. on Wednesday in
Room129 at the high school.
The Wyoming Valley West Baseball
Booster Club will meet 7 p.m.
Monday at Murphys Pub in
Swoyersville. Parents of all players
are encouraged to attend.
REGISTRATION/TRYOUTS
Dallas Jr. Mounts Football and
Cheerleading Program will be
holding registration for the Fall
Football Season. Registration will
be at the Dallas American Legion
from 9 a.m.-1 p.m. on March 31 and
from 6-9 p.m. on April 12. For more
information please check the
website www.dallasjuniormount-
s.com for more information.
Kingston Huskies Football and
Cheerleading are having sign ups
at the Black Diamond VFW Post
395 near Kost Tire on March 21
from 6-8 p.m. downstairs. First
time participants must bring a
small photo of each child (that will
be kept), a copy of the childs birth
certificate, and copies of two
proofs of residence. They will be
sizing the children for equipment
during the sign up. Meeting will
follow after sign ups.
Plains Little League will hold regis-
tration for children ages 4 and up
on Sunday from1-3 p.m. at Tokatch
Field.
Plains Yankees Football & Cheer-
leading Organization will hold
registration from1-3 p.m. on Sun-
day at the Plains American Legion,
101 E. Carey Street, Plains. Cost is
$60 for one child or $75 per
family.
Plymouth Little League will be
holding tryouts from1-3 p.m. today
at the Plymouth Little League
Field. If you have not done so
already you will still be able to
register your child. You will need
to bring a copy of birth certificate
and copies of three current proofs
of residency as these are required.
Registration fees are $45 per
player or $70 per family. All man-
agers and coaches are required to
attend. For more information
please contact Mike Spece at
570-328-4612.
South Wilkes-Barre Little League
will be holding tryouts for Little
League for players 10-12 years of
age on today at 10 a.m. at the field
on Richmont Ave. Players need to
be at tryouts to be selected for a
team.
Valley Regional Girls Softball
League will hold its final regis-
trations and draft today at the
Freedom Park softball complex in
Drums. The schedule for the
pre-draft skills showcase is 11 a.m.
for the 7-and-Under Division, 1 p.m.
for the 10-and-Under Division, and
3 p.m. for the 13-and-Under Divi-
sion. Its important the all girls who
wish to be drafted attend this
event. If you need to register your
daughter, please show up 30
minutes early. There will be soft-
ball equipment vendors on hand.
For additional information, contact
VRGSL media director John
McGran at 570-401-9544.
Wyoming Valley Babe Ruth Teener
League, will hold signups at S.
Bulletin Board items will not be
accepted over the telephone. Items
may be faxed to 831-7319, dropped off
at The Times Leader or mailed to The
Times Leader, c/o Sports, 15 N. Main
St., Wilkes-Barre, PA18711-0250.
BUL L E T I N BOARD
A U T O R A C I N G
NASCAR Sprint Cup
Food City 500 Lineup
After Friday qualifying; race Sunday
At Bristol Motor Speedway
Bristol, Tenn.
Lap length: .533 miles
(Car number in parentheses)
1. (16) Greg Biffle, Ford, 125.215.
2. (22) A J Allmendinger, Dodge, 125.207.
3. (39) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 125.158.
4. (24) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, 125.085.
5. (2) Brad Keselowski, Dodge, 124.865.
6. (78) Regan Smith, Chevrolet, 124.816.
7. (43) Aric Almirola, Ford, 124.719.
8. (99) Carl Edwards, Ford, 124.686.
9. (20) Joey Logano, Toyota, 124.662.
10. (5) Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet, 124.355.
11. (27) Paul Menard, Chevrolet, 124.339.
12. (9) Marcos Ambrose, Ford, 124.331.
13. (18) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 124.178.
14. (29) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 124.106.
15. (56) Martin Truex Jr., Toyota, 124.106.
16. (15) Clint Bowyer, Toyota, 124.002.
17. (1) Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet, 123.953.
18. (88) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, 123.865.
19. (10) David Reutimann, Chevrolet, 123.865.
20. (11) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 123.833.
21. (17) Matt Kenseth, Ford, 123.666.
22. (48) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 123.539.
23. (14) Tony Stewart, Chevrolet, 123.467.
24. (13) Casey Mears, Ford, 123.419.
25. (55) Brian Vickers, Toyota, 123.419.
26. (38) David Gilliland, Ford, 123.269.
27. (51) Kurt Busch, Chevrolet, 123.182.
28. (30) David Stremme, Toyota, 123.087.
29. (83) Landon Cassill, Toyota, 123.047.
30. (42) Juan Pablo Montoya, Chevrolet, 122.992.
31. (34) David Ragan, Ford, 122.968.
32. (33) Brendan Gaughan, Chevrolet, 122.866.
33. (31) Jeff Burton, Chevrolet, 122.78.
34. (93) Travis Kvapil, Toyota, 122.701.
35. (36) Dave Blaney, Chevrolet, 122.638.
36. (47) Bobby Labonte, Toyota, 122.623.
37. (26) Josh Wise, Ford, 122.38.
38. (74) Reed Sorenson, Chevrolet, 122.287.
39. (98) Michael McDowell, Ford, 121.968.
40. (49) J.J. Yeley, Toyota, 121.829.
41. (87) Joe Nemechek, Toyota, 121.713.
42. (32) Ken Schrader, Ford, Owner Points.
43. (23) Scott Riggs, Chevrolet, 121.374.
Odds to Win Food City 500
DRIVER.............................................................ODDS
Kyle Busch........................................................ 6-1
Jimmie Johnson............................................... 8-1
Tony Stewart .................................................... 8-1
Carl Edwards.................................................... 9-1
Jeff Gordon....................................................... 10-1
Kevin Harvick ................................................... 10-1
Denny Hamlin................................................... 12-1
Kasey Kahne.................................................... 12-1
Matt Kenseth..................................................... 12-1
Greg Biffle......................................................... 15-1
Brad Keselowski .............................................. 15-1
Clint Bowyer ..................................................... 25-1
Dale Earnhardt Jr............................................. 25-1
Ryan Newman .................................................. 25-1
Martin Truex Jr. ................................................ 25-1
Jamie McMurray............................................... 30-1
Jeff Burton......................................................... 35-1
Kurt Busch ........................................................ 35-1
A.J. Allmendinger............................................. 40-1
Juan Pablo Montoya........................................ 50-1
Joey Logano ..................................................... 55-1
Paul Menard...................................................... 65-1
Regan Smith..................................................... 80-1
Brian Vickers..................................................... 100-1
Field (All Others) .............................................. 100-1
Copyright 2012 World Features Syndicate, Inc.
C M Y K
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com SATURDAY, MARCH 17, 2012 PAGE 3B
N C A A B A S K E T B A L L
NASHVILLE, Tenn. Flor-
ida State beat North Carolina
twice this season. Did the same
to Duke, too.
But it was Andrew Nicholson
and little St. Bonaventure who
nearly sent the Seminoles home
in their first NCAA tournament
game.
Bernard James scored 19
points and Florida State barely
avoided a big upset, rallying to
beat the 14th-seeded Bonnies
66-63 on Friday.
The third-seeded Seminoles
(25-9) shook off a slow start and
won their sixth straight game,
including their run to the Atlan-
tic Coast Conference champion-
ship last week. They will play
sixth-seeded Cincinnati, a 65-59
winner over Texas, on Sunday
in the third round of the East
Regional.
Nicholson scored 20 points
and Demetrius Conger had 14
for St. Bonaventure (20-12),
which was trying to win an
NCAA tournament game for the
first time since 1970.
Florida State used a 16-2 run
to take its first lead with 5:15
left on a 3-pointer by Ian Miller.
The Seminoles led as much as
60-52 on a dunk by Okaro White
with 2:47 left.
The Bonnies hit three 3-point-
ers in the final 1:43 to stay close.
They had the ball down by three
in the closing seconds but
couldnt get a decent look from
beyond the arc.
Cincinnati 65, Texas 59
NASHVILLE, Tenn. Yancy
Gates had 15 points and 10 re-
bounds as Cincinnati withstood
a late rally by Texas.
The sixth-seeded Bearcats
(25-10) jumped out to a 16-2
lead while Texas opened the
game 1 of 14 and hit 16 percent
for the entire first half.
After trailing 31-17 at half-
time, the Longhorns attacked,
hitting five of their first seven
from 3-point range.
With 3:44 to play, Texas Jo-
nathan Holmes hit a layup to tie
it at 52, but the Longhorns
would get no closer. Gates hit a
shot over Clint Chapmans head
with 1:11 to give Cincinnati a
58-52 lead, and the Bearcats hit
five free throws in the final 36
seconds.
FSU survives Bonnies upset bid
AP PHOTO
St. Bonaventures Jordan Gathers (5) walks away as Florida
States Okaro White (10) and Ian Miller (30) celebrate Friday.
The Associated Press
EAST
R E G I O N A L
rassing first-round losses to
Virginia Commonwealth and
Ohio. The Hoyas werent go-
ing to let that happen a third
time to a pesky underdog.
NC State 79, SDSU 65
COLUMBUS, Ohio Ri-
chard Howell doubled his
average with 22 points and
11th-seeded North Carolina
State used its muscle inside
and sticky defense to upset
San Diego State.
The Wolfpack (23-12) ad-
vances to play Georgetown on
Sunday at Nationwide Arena.
Lorenzo Brown added 17
points, C.J. Leslie 15 and Scott
Wood 10 for the Wolfpack,
who are now12-5 in their first
NCAA games. N.C. State has
won at least a game in seven
of their last eight trips.
Creighton 58, Alabama 57
GREENSBORO, N.C.
Doug McDermott scored 16
points and Creighton over-
came an 11-point deficit in the
second half to beat Alabama
for its first NCAA tournament
victory in 10 years.
Alabama had a chance to
win during the frantic final
seconds, but Josh Jones
blocked Trevor Relefords
3-point attempt from the top
of the key as time expired.
McDermott, the MVP of the
Missouri Valley Conference
and the nations third-leading
scorer at 23.2 points per game,
was held scoreless for more
than 14 minutes but then
scored nine points in the
games final 14 minutes.
Purdue 72, Saint Marys 69
GREENSBORO, N.C.
Tyler Zeller had 17 points and
15 rebounds to help North
Carolina beat Vermont 77-58
on Friday in its NCAA tourna-
ment opener despite playing
without injured starter John
Henson.
Freshman forward James
Michael McAdoo added a
season-high 17 points for the
top-seeded Tar Heels (30-5),
who pushed ahead by double
figures late in the first half and
then broke the game open
after halftime.
Sandro Carissimo had 11
points for the 16th-seeded
Catamounts (24-12), who beat
Lamar in one of Wednesdays
First Four games. That earned
them a trip to Greensboro to
face the Tar Heels in front of a
home-state crowd wearing
plenty of light blue.
The Tar Heels didnt turn in
a rousing performance, but
they had a danger-free after-
noon and advanced to face
Creighton on Sunday in the
third round of the Midwest
Regional. They also bought
Henson another two days to
recover from that sprained left
wrist.
Georgetown 74, Belmont 59
COLUMBUS, Ohio Jason
Clark scored 21 points, Otto
Porter added 16 and George-
towns ruthless defense bottled
up Belmonts shooters, send-
ing the Hoyas into the next
round after early exits the past
two years.
Henry Sims had 15 points
for the third-seeded Hoyas
(24-8), who shot 62 percent
from the floor and will play
No. 11 seed North Carolina
State on Sunday.
Georgetowns previous two
seasons ended with embar-
OMAHA, Neb. Lewis
Jackson made the go-ahead
free throws with 22.8 seconds
left after Saint Marys had
rallied from11 points down
late to take its first lead, and
the Boilermakers defeated the
Gaels.
Jorden Page made a 3-point-
er with 44.2 seconds left to
finish a 14-2 run that brought
the Gaels back from a 66-55
deficit with 4:24 to play.
Purdues Terone Johnson
and Saint Marys Clint Steindl
were called for traveling before
Jackson made his free throws.
Ohio 65, Michigan 60
NASHVILLE, Tenn.
Walter Offutt grabbed a loose
ball, was fouled by Evan Smo-
trycz and sank both of his free
throws with 6.8 seconds left to
preserve Ohios upset of Michi-
gan in the second round of the
NCAA tournaments Midwest
Regional.
The 13th-seeded Bobcats
(28-7) had the Wolverines on
their heels throughout the
game, but Michigans Trey
Burke hit a 3 with 4:12 left to
cut it to 63-60. But the Wolve-
rines missed their final five
shots, four by Burke.
South Florida 58,
Temple 44
NASHVILLE, Tenn.
Victor Rudd Jr. and Anthony
Collins each scored 17 points,
and the South Florida Bulls
shook off a frigid first 20 min-
utes, upsetting fifth-seeded
Temple 58-44 Friday night in
the Midwest Regional.
The No. 12 seeded Bulls
(22-13) took it to the Atlantic
10 regular season champ with
their bruising, Big East-style
play and held Temple 20
points below its previous sea-
son low in scoring.
AP PHOTO
North Carolinas Tyler Zeller (44) blocks a shot by Vermonts Pat Bergmann (30) during the
first half Friday in Greensboro, N.C. North Carolina won 77-58.
UNC able to McAdoo
The Associated Press
MIDWEST
R E G I O N A L
The rest is history.
History indeed.
The Mountain Hawks are the
sixth 15 seed overall to pull off
the trick. Norfolk State edged
Missouri 86-84 in the West Re-
gional earlier in the day, and No.
13 seed Ohio knocked off Michi-
gan to add to the madness.
Duke dropped its first tourna-
ment game for only the second
time in the past 16 years, and this
one occurred just 55 miles from
its campus. The Blue Devils also
lost their opener against 11th-
seeded Virginia Commonwealth
in 2007.
The Blue Devils hadnoanswer
for the speedy McCollum, the
two-time Patriot League player
of the year and the nations fifth-
leading scorer.
They had the best player on
the court tonight in McCollum,
Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski
said. Hes been their player of
the year, andhes really one of the
outstanding players in the coun-
try. You could see why tonight.
It didnt help that the Blue
Devils hit just 6 of 26 shots from
3-point range.
Lehigh (27-7) led most of the
game, drawing support from
North Carolina fans who bor-
rowed brown signs from Moun-
tain Hawks supporters that read
Go Lehigh to root against their
rivals.
Ive never seen anything like
it, forward Justin Maneri said
with a deep laugh. We came to
the practice the other day and as
soon as you walked in they were
going crazy for us and were like,
Whats going on? They were
like, Go Lehigh, beat Duke!
They were screaming. It was nice
to have fans here that werent
Duke. Ive never seen two
schools that hate each other so
much.
The Mountain Hawks led
most of the first half despite
shooting just 38 percent fromthe
field.
Lehigh grabbed the lead for
good at the 8:21 mark of the sec-
ond half when Mackey
McKnight made a 3-pointer. The
momentum continued to build
as the game went on and the
Mountain Hawks started to pull
away in the final three minutes.
McCollum hit a 3-pointer off a
screen from Gabe Knutson and
John Adams followed with a
breakaway dunk to push the lead
to 61-54 with two minutes to go.
I told my teammates all year
whenever in doubt get me the
ball and Ill make a play for us,
McCollum said.
Duke would get as close as
three twice in the final 30 sec-
onds, including when Quinn
Cook hit a 3-pointer with1.2 sec-
onds left.
Duke fouled McCollum on the
inbounds pass and he made up
for two earlier misses from the
line by hittingbothshots toseal a
shocking victory that sent the
Greensboro Coliseum crowd in-
to a frenzy.
Were not a juggernaut or any-
thing like that, Krzyzewski said.
We have knownthat throughout
the whole season. You have to do
it pretty precise, and we just
didnt play well offensively the
last few weeks of the season. Ac-
tually we got better defensively,
but offensively we just werent
there. Lehigh got a huge game
from Knutson, who scored 17
points on 5-of-5 shooting from
the field and a 6-of-7 perform-
ance from the foul line.
McCollumwas 9of 24fromthe
field and 10 of 16 from the foul
line. He also handed out six as-
sists and grabbed six rebounds.
LEHIGH
Continued fromPage 1B
tans (26-9), who made their first
trip to the NCAA tournament a
memorable one. They became
the fifth No. 15 seed to beat a
No. 2 and the first since fellow
conference member Hampton in
2001.
When it was over, OQuinn
led Norfolk State back to the
locker room shouting, We
messed up some brackets! We
messed up some brackets!
As he turned the corner, he
looked over to a pack of report-
ers and said, We even messed
up my bracket.
OQuinn had a chance to take
some of the drama out of the
finish when he went to the free
throw line with 3.8 seconds to
go, but the 70-percent foul shoo-
ter missed both tries.
Missouri coach Frank Haith
called a timeout with 2.9 sec-
onds left to set up a final play,
and the ball wound up in the
hands of Phil Pressey. He took a
couple of hard dribbles and let
loose a 3-pointer from the wing
that clanked off the back iron as
the buzzer sounded.
OQuinn leaped for joy. Pres-
sey fell to the court in disbelief.
And the roar that rose inside
CenturyLink Arena from any-
body wearing anything other
than black and gold may have
drowned out the sound of brack-
ets getting torn up all over
America.
We just shocked everybody,
Brandon Wheeless said.
Michael Dixon led Missouri
(30-5) with 22 points, and Pres-
sey and fellow guard Marcus
Denmon finished with 20 points
each. Pressey also contributed
eight assists.
Im very disappointed, as
everyone in that locker room
was, Haith said. I hurt for
those seniors because they put
so much into this. They had
high expectations as we came
into this season, but lets under-
stand one thing they had a
hell of a year.
The Tigers rolled into the
tournament on the strength of a
dominant run to the Big 12
tournament title, rarely getting
tested in three games in Kansas
City. That was enough to make
Missouri a trendy Final Four
pick, something the school had
never before accomplished.
Norfolk State made sure it
wouldnt happen this year, ei-
ther.
The plucky Spartans shot 54.2
percent from the field 62.5
percent in the second half
and managed to knock down 10
of 19 3-point shots. They also
turned the ball over just 11
times against the Tigers quick-
handed guards, who had caused
fits for most teams this season.
We matched up with Mar-
quette earlier in the year. We
were accustomed to that style of
play, the running style of play,
getting shots up real quick,
Wheeless said.
Missouri knew right away
that Norfolk State wasnt going
away easily.
The Spartans opened the
game on 15-7 surge, turning
most of the folks dressed in
Florida blue and Virginia orange
into surrogate fans. And when
Missouri jumped ahead on the
strength of three consecutive
3-pointers, Norfolk State didnt
seem to be rattled.
Fifth-year coach Anthony
Evans simply called a timeout to
regroup, and McEachin curled
in a 3-pointer when play re-
sumed to push the Spartans
back ahead.
Things were going so well for
Norfolk State in the first half
that OQuinn, an 18-percent
shooter from beyond the arc,
swished one from the top of the
key.
Michigan State 89,
LIU Brooklyn 67
COLUMBUS, Ohio Dray-
mond Green scored 24 points in
a triple-double, Derrick Nix
added 18 points and top-seeded
Michigan State fought off the
upset bug that took down two
No. 2 seeds in the NCAA tour-
nament, advancing in the West
Regional with an 89-67 win over
LIU Brooklyn on Friday night.
The Spartans (28-7) finally
put away the pesky No. 16
Blackbirds (25-9) with a 14-4
run midway through the second
half.
Florida 71, Virginia 45
OMAHA, Neb. Bradley
Beal had 14 points and 11 re-
bounds, reserve Casey Prather
scored a career-high 14 and
Florida pulled away in the sec-
ond half for a victory over Vir-
ginia.
The Gators (24-10) finished
the first half on a 17-4 run to
shake off a slow start and get
out to a 30-22 lead. They shot
70 percent in the second half,
pushing their lead to more than
20 points.
Mike Scott had 15 points for
Virginia (22-10).
Florida, averaging a nation-
leading 9.9 3-pointers a game,
was 4 of 23 from long range but
made 24 of 30 from inside the
arc.
Saint Louis 61, Memphis 54
COLUMBUS, Ohio Kwa-
main Mitchell scored 22 points,
including three big 3-pointers,
and Saint Louis rode its gritty
defense past Memphis.
Mitchell closed the first half
by banking in a 3, then nailed
two others to help the ninth-
seeded Billikens (26-7) overturn
an eight-point second-half def-
icit. Theyll move on to play the
winner of LIU Brooklyn and
top-seeded Michigan State on
Sunday.
AP PHOTO
Memphis Will Barton, left, is fouled by Saint Louis Dwayne Evans
during the second half Friday in Columbus, Ohio.
DEBUT
Continued fromPage 1B
C M Y K
PAGE 4B SATURDAY, MARCH 17, 2012 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
S P O R T S
WILKES-BARRE --- For
Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Pen-
guins goaltender Scott Munroe,
a shootout has its perks.
A shootout puts the extra
point squarely on the goalten-
der, who can win it or lose it
with a single save.
And it also gives a goaltender
an opportunity to get his name
on one of the game pucks that
are postedona boardinthe Pen-
guins locker room after each
win.
Munroe has four, including
twofromlast weekendwhenthe
Penguins went to the shootout
in three straight games.
Thats the only time we can
get a puck up there, Munroe
said after Fridays practice. Its
nice they do recognize us in the
shootouts.
And rightly so. Without the
seven shootout wins, the Pen-
guins would be tied with Her-
shey at 72 points for third place
in the East Division.
Munroe stopped all 10 of the
shootout attempts he faced in
back-to-back games last week-
end, while backup Patrick Kil-
leen stopped four of five at-
tempts in the third game Sun-
day to earn his first AHL win.
I cant remember three
games in a row that all went to
the shootout, Munroe said.
We had some fans follow us
over the weekend, so we gave
them as much hockey as we
could.
Heading into tonights home
matchup against Worcester, the
Penguins have been in 11 shoo-
touts so far this season and won
seven. Last season they went to
the shootout eight times.
Three consecutive shootout
games is only one example of a
season that has strayed from
normalcy many times. Twice
theyve been in games with two
penalty shots, including one
while the Penguins were short-
handed. They also had eight-
game win streaks followed by
agonizinglosingstreaks, special
teams playthat has beenhorren-
dous at times and brilliant at
others, along with 24 road wins
tops in the AHL.
I dont think Ive ever had a
season like this, said winger
Colin McDonald, who netted
two shootout game-winners last
weekend. Weve kind of seen it
all, just about every situation. I
hope that going through all of
this prepares us for what lies
ahead.
Even Munroe couldnt help
notice how strange of a season
its been.
Theres been ups, downs,
win streaks, losing streaks,
shootoutsits beenaninterest-
ing year, he said. Were on the
winning end more often than
not, so thats a good thing.
Head coach John Hynes
agreed and said his players have
actually grown accustomed to
some of the odd circumstances.
For example, when the Pen-
guins went into their third
straight shootout against
Springfieldlast Sunday, his play-
ers were so used to it that they
were eager to jump over the
boards to take a shot.
By Sunday we were ina bit of
a rhythm, Hynes said. Its defi-
nitely been interesting how
weve wonsome games. It hasnt
been the traditional way.
MACINTYRE SUSPENSION
Winger Steve MacIntyre was
suspended four games after he
fought virtually every opponent
on the ice, including goaltender
Paul Dainton, during Sundays
game in Springfield. MacIntyre,
who wasnt at Fridays practice,
is eligible to return March 24
against St. Johns.
Hynes supported the leagues
rulingandalsocommendedMa-
cIntyre for ending things when
he did.
Its a situationwhere he went
out there and there couldve
been a fight. There wasnt one
and it spurred from there,
Hynes said. To his credit he
kept himself under control and
he stopped everything when he
couldve kept going.
We support the ruling by the
league. The situation was dealt
with very fairly and were mov-
ing on.
BRIEF PRACTICE
Fridays practice, which fol-
lowed a rest day Thursday, last-
ed less than an hour. Hynes said
the practices take a different fo-
cus this late in the season.
At this point in the year guys
know a lot of the drills and con-
cepts. Now, its just a quick rein-
forcement as opposed to having
to implement new things in
practice, he said.
INJURY UPDATE
Defenseman Joey Mormina
will likely miss tonights game
due to an illness, Hynes said. He
listed Mormina as day-to-day.
P E N G U I N S
Goalies enjoying
the extra rubber
Including 3 last weekend,
shootout wins mean game
pucks for netminders.
By TOMVENESKY
tvenesky@timesleader.com
Worcester at WBS Penguins
7:05 p.m. tonight
Mohegan Sun Arena, W-B Twp.
N E X T G A M E
KINGSTON -- Junior Zach
Lazar pitched six innings,
allowing just three runs on
six hits to record the win on
the mound as Wilkes posted
a 14-7 win over Eastern in
both teams Freedom Confer-
ence opener Friday after-
noon at Artillery Park.
Tay Sidler put Wilkes up
early with a two-run homer
over the centerfield fence in
the first inning.
Dallas graduate Scott
Skammer and Holy Redeem-
er product Stephen Ruch
hitting back-to-back singles
as both runners moved into
scoring position in the third.
From there, Carmen Lopres-
to (Pittston Area) connected
on a two-run double and
later scored on an RBI-triple
to right field by Matt Ruch
(Holy Redeemer) as Wilkes
extended its advantage to
6-0 through three.
Wilkes added two more
runs in the fourth and then
broke open the game in the
sixth, scoring six runs in the
frame capped by a three-run
homer from Ruch. Joel Wat-
son and Dan Pisanchyn add-
ed RBI hits to provide
Wilkes all the breathing
room it would need to seal
the Freedom victory.
Lazar, a Berwick alum,
stuck out six Eastern batters
to move to 1-1 in three
starts.
Wilkes returns to play
today to complete the series
with a doubleheader at East-
ern. First pitch is scheduled
for noon.
L O C A L C O L L E G E B A S E B A L L
Berwick grad Lazar
notches first win
The Times Leader staff
ST. LOUIS -- While wrestling
for Coughlin, Justin Accordino
had the most successful career of
any Crusader.
He has the most wins in school
history, four District 2 champion-
ships and a pair of state medals
among those accomplishments.
Now at Hofstra, hes contin-
uing his legacy.
The 149-pound redshirt junior
earned his first All-American sta-
tus on Friday at the NCAA Divi-
sion I Wrestling Championships
at St. Louis Scottrade Center.
Accordino (29-12) defeated
Nick Lester from Oklahoma, 11-3
in the mornings quarterfinals to
secure a medal and advance to
Friday nights semifinals. In the
semis, he faced last years runner-
up, Frank Molinaro from defend-
ing national champion Penn
State and lost 5-0 to fall into the
wrestleback round. Accordino,
who was the only unseeded wres-
tler in the country to advance to
the semis, only let the unbeaten
Molinaro (35-0) score five points,
which is his lowest total of his
four matches in the event.
Accordino will wrestle this
morning in the consolation semi-
finals and can finish no worse
than sixth in the nation.
The Coughlin grad is one of
four local wrestlers to participate
inSt. Louis. CrestwoodgradJake
OHara (Columbia157-pounder),
Wyoming Seminary alum Mike
McMullan (Northwestern, 285)
and Delaware Valley product Joe
Kennedy (Lehigh, 197) wrestled
in the wrestle backs Friday night.
Kennedy and McMullan will also
end their seasons as All-Ameri-
cans.
Like Accordino, McMullan
participated in Friday mornings
quarterfinals, but he ran into the
No. 2 seed in the bracket in Min-
nesotas Anthony Nelsonandwas
pinned to fall into the consola-
tions.
OHara and Kennedy each won
their first consolation match of
the day on Friday morning to ad-
vance to the next round.
But the junior OHara lost in
his next match and will have to
wait until next year totrytoreach
All-American status, finishing
just two wins shy of a medal. He
ends his season with a 30-17
mark, including two wins at the
national tournament.
Kennedy won his sixth round
consolation match and joins Ac-
cordino as District 2 alums be-
coming an All-American for the
first time as a collegiate. He will
wrestle for a medal this morning.
After losing in the quarters,
McMullandroppedintothewres-
tleback round and rebounded to
win his first consolation bout. As
a freshman for the Wildcats,
McMullan will become an All-
American after a pair of National
Prep championships wrestling
for Wyoming Seminary.
Penn State pulling away
Penn State has all but wrapped
up its second straight NCAA
wrestling championship, and
with a day to spare.
The Nittany Lions won all five
of their semifinal matches Friday
night, and have unbeaten top
seeds in three weight classes
heading into the finals.
Molinaro at 149 pounds, David
Taylor at 165 and Ed Ruth at 174
are a combined 93-0 after impres-
sive victories on Friday night.
The Nittany Lions also will have
finalists Saturday night at 125
pounds with No. 10 Nico Megalu-
dis and at 184 with No. 6 Quentin
Wright.
Penn State had 124 points and
a 23.5-point gap over Minnesota
in its bid to stay on top under
coachCael Sanderson, stretching
what had been a 17-point lead af-
ter the quarterfinals earlier Fri-
day.
Iowa had 93 points, followed
by Cornell with 86, Ohio State
with 60 and Illinois and Lehigh
with 57.5 apiece. Cornell and Io-
wa have three finalists apiece.
Cornell andIowa have three final-
ists apiece.
Eight of the 10 top seeds ad-
vanced to the finals, with 184
pounds the exception with
Wright, the defending champion,
facing No. 4 Steve Bosak of Cor-
nell. The biggest underdog from
the semifinals was 11th seed
BrandonHatchett of Lehigh, who
earned the right to face Taylor at
165.
Top seeded heavyweight Ryan
Flores of American appeared
dazed much of the time in a 6-2
loss tofourthseedZacharyReyof
Lehigh, the defending champion.
Flores used all of his injury time.
N C A A W R E S T L I N G C H A M P I O N S H I P S
Accordino an All-American after reaching semifinals
From staff, wire reports
Al Kopacz remembers getting
his letter of resignation ready to
end his 15 years as Hanover Areas
football coach.
And he remembers letting it sit
for a fewdays until he finally hand-
edit in.
That was back in the summer of
1997. Kopacz hasnt coached since
then, but his achievements will be
recognized 15 summers later with
his induction to the Pennsylvania
State Football Coaches Associ-
ationHall of Fame.
I just found out (Thursday),
Kopacz said. It was sort of unex-
pected after being out all these
years; 1996was mylast year coach-
ing. So Ive been out of it for 16
years, but some people nominated
me andit came through.
Its nice because its an unex-
pected gift and Im really honored
by it.
Kopacz will be inducted at a
breakfastonFriday, June17, inHer-
shey, as part of the Big 33 Game
weekend. Hell join a hall that in-
cludes several other Wyoming Val-
ley Conference coaches including
GARsLutherRichardsandCharlie
Fick, Meyers Mickey Gorham,
Wyoming Areas Paul Marranca
and Wyoming Valley Wests Jim
Fennell.
Kopacz posted a 101-70-2 career
record at Hanover Area. His 1990
teamwon the PIAAClass 2Astate
championship with a 20-19 over-
time victory over Canevin Cathol-
ic. His 1991 squad returned to the
statetitlegame, but lost 27-0toAli-
quippa.
Berwick, with seven appearanc-
es in the Class 3A championship
game, is the only other WVC pro-
gram to play for more than one
state title.
His teams won 30 consecutive
games from1989-1991.
The Hawkeyes also won four
WVC divisional titles and four
Eastern Conference champion-
ships under Kopacz. The1983 and
1984 Eastern Conference crowns
were particularly pleasing since it
was the highest achievement a
WVCteamcouldattainpriortothe
state playoffs startingin1988.
Whenwe wonit in83, the Har-
risburgPatriot-Newsjustrankedall
the teams in the state, Kopacz
said. We were the top-ranked B
school. They had A and B schools
back then, and didnt have 3A and
2Aandstuff like that.
So we were the top-ranked B
school and were like the mythical
state champs in1983.
The success never fueled Ko-
paczs desire to return to coaching
after he resigned in June 1997 as
Hanover Areas all-time victory
leader.
I really didnt, Kopacz said. I
did it for 15 years and had seven
years as anassistant prior to that. I
got to the point where we used to
put ina lot of time where it just got
overwhelming. I said, You know, I
thinkI hadenough.
Kopacz, 62, retiredafter 33years
asaneducatoratHanoverAreaand
moved to Florida seven years ago.
He resides in Venice, which is
about 12 miles south of Sarasota.
Hegets backtotheareaoneor two
times a year and still follows WVC
football byreadingnewspapers on-
lineandtalkingtohisformerassist-
ants andplayers.
Ireallyhavetothankalotofpeo-
ple who got me to this point, Ko-
paczsaid. Imtheonewhogetsthe
accolades, but its the players, the
coaches andall of Hanover Area.
Hanover Area School District
really treatedme nice andgave me
the opportunity. Im really appre-
ciative of all of them.
H I G H S C H O O L F O O T B A L L
Hanover Areas Kopacz gets Hall call
Coach who won a state title
retired in 1996 as all-time
leader in wins for Hawkeyes.
By JOHN ERZAR
jerzar@timesleader.com
place finishes in the 200 medley
relay and senior Rebekah Cam-
pos 55.97-second time in the100-
yard butterfly.
No butterflies for Cheilli,
though. Just a little bewilder-
ment.
His time of 21.80 in the morn-
ing preliminaries accomplished
his year-long goal of breaking 22
seconds in the 50 free and nor-
mally would have guaranteed
him a spot in the championship
medal swim.
But two other competitors
matchedChiellis markinthe pre-
liminaries, forcing a swim-off be-
tween the three for the final two
spots of the medal swim.
"That was my first time,"
Chielli saidof theracefor thetitle
race. "It was quite an experience,
pretty intense."
Chielli lost out, by six-hun-
dredths of a second.
That put him into the nights
consolation heat -- where he
placed second in the race and
10th in the state with a time of
21.78.
"It happens," Chielli, a senior,
said. "The swim-off was pretty
tough. But I got through it."
That meant Chielli swam five
50-yardraces ontheday-- threein
the individual race and two more
as part of his relay.
"I was tired by the end of the
prelims," Chielli said. "But I
came back tonight, I was pretty
rested."
Evidently.
After shooting for a time of un-
der 22 seconds all season while
swimming 50 yards, Chielli did it
five times in one day.
"He was on the edge of break-
ing 22 all season," Dallas coach
Romayne Mosier said. "Today, he
goes 21 five times. Thats a great
accomplishment."
At least one of Holy Redeem-
ers girls relay teams accom-
plished what it wanted.
After Redeemers 10th-seeded
girls 200-yard medley relay team
suffered the disappointment of a
disqualification in morning preli-
minaries, another Royals relay
made the school smile.
Especially senior Finnegan,
who finished with a flourish.
Anchoring the 200 freestyle
team, Finnegan darted past one
competitor and held off another
to secure a sixth-place medal for
Redeemer.
"Its my last high school swim
ever," said Finnegan, a four-time
competitor in the state cham-
pionships who wrapped up her
individual events earlier in the
day. "I just gave it my all."
That extra effort helped Re-
deemers 200 freestyle team to
finish in 1:41.33 and move up a
spot from its seventh-place seed-
ing accomplished in morning
preliminaries.
"Wegot theeighth-placemedal
last year, that was exciting," Fin-
negan said. "This is even more
exciting. We moved up two plac-
es (from 2011). We worked really
hardthis season. This is good. We
earned this."
She had plenty of help in get-
ting to the medal stand one final
time, from relay teammates Julie
Ann Mahle, Melissa Cruz and El-
izabeths younger sister, Rachel
Finnegan.
"Were really happy with their
swims," Holy Redeemer coach
Maura Pawlenok said. "Im just
so pleased we got to the medal
round."
For Zerfoss, the pleasure was
left in the past.
Athree-time state medalist do-
ing her final state dives, Zerfoss
scored low on a couple of dives
during the first round. And al-
though she rallied to make the
girls finals, it wasnt enough to
earn a fourth consecutive state
medal.
"I messeduptwoof mydives in
the first round and it kind of put
me in a slump," Zerfoss said. "I
just couldnt bounce back. I just
got too excited. But its not that
bad."
MEDALS
Continued from Page 1B
DON CAREY/THE TIMES LEADER
Jack Matusiak of Dallas swims the breastroke leg of the 200 individual medley at the PIAA Class
2A state championships Friday in Lewisburg.
C M Y K
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com SATURDAY, MARCH 17, 2012 PAGE 5B
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RALEIGH, N.C. Peyton
Manning wont be a Dolphin or
a Cardinal. But he could still
join the Titans, the Broncos or
even get ready for this the
49ers.
The race to sign the NFLs
only four-time MVP and the
most prized free agent of the
offseason heated up Friday as
Denver Broncos executive John
Elway and coach John Fox
watched the star quarterback
throw at Duke and San Francis-
co was revealed as a stealth
suitor.
A person familiar with the
situation said that Manning
worked out for 49ers coach Jim
Harbaugh on Tuesday night at
Duke.
Manning also threw the ball
at Dukes athletic fields Friday
afternoon for the Broncos. He
was seen leaving the Blue Dev-
ils indoor practice facility wear-
ing blue shorts, a gray t-shirt
and no helmet heading to the
outdoor practice field followed
by Elway and Fox.
Manning came off the field
about 4 p.m., and the Broncos
contingent left about the same
time.
Miami Dolphins
MIAMI Spurned by Peyton
Manning, the Miami Dolphins
turned Friday to their backup
plan backup quarterback
Matt Flynn.
Manning telephoned the
Dolphins on Thursday to advise
them he would sign elsewhere,
and the team began courting
free-agent Flynn.
Flynn, a backup last season
with Green Bay, was scheduled
to visit Miami by the weekend
after concluding a visit with the
Seattle Seahawks.
Arizona Cardinals
PHOENIX Out of the race
to nab Peyton Manning, the
Arizona Cardinals are moving
on with quarterback Kevin Kolb.
Kolb remained on the roster
at a 4 p.m. deadline Friday,
ensuring him a $7 million bonus
the team would not have paid if
it had landed Manning.
Coach Ken Whisenhunt is-
sued a statement saying that
acquiring Peyton Manning is
no longer an option for us.
N.Y. Jets
NEW YORK The Jets have
agreed to terms with free-agent
wide receiver Chaz Schilens,
giving New York a big and
speedy target.
They also signed quarterback
Drew Stanton to a $1.25 million,
one-year contract Friday.
The 6-foot-4 Schilens spent
the last four seasons with the
Oakland Raiders after being a
seventh-round draft pick out of
San Diego State in 2008.
Washington Redskins
WASHINGTON Free agent
cornerback Cedric Griffin has
signed with the Washington
Redskins, agreeing to a one-year
deal which could be worth as
much as $2.5 million.
Griffin was cut last week by
Minnesota, where he played for
six seasons.
The Redskins also announced
that tight end Fred Davis has
signed his franchise player ten-
der, a one-year deal worth
$5.446 million.
San Francisco 49ers
SAN FRANCISCO The San
Francisco 49ers have signed
running back and special teams
standout Rock Cartwright to a
one-year contract.
The team made the announ-
cement Friday, soon after re-
ports emerged that the Niners
and coach Jim Harbaugh had
worked out quarterback Peyton
Manning at Duke on Tuesday.
Baltimore Ravens
OWINGS MILLS, Md.
Six-time Pro Bowl center Matt
Birk agreed to three-year con-
tract with the Baltimore Ravens.
The 35-year-old Birk has start-
ed every game in three seasons
with Baltimore.
N F L
Manning
down to
his final 3
The Associated Press
PALM HARBOR, Fla.
Jason Dufner and Padraig Har-
rington felt cautious at times
for different reasons Friday in
the Transitions Championship.
They also had a far different
outcome.
Harrington was 12 shots
worse than his course-record 61
in the opening round.
Dufner, trying to play more
conservatively when he doesnt
feel confident about attacking,
made it through another round
at Innisbrook without a bogey
and posted a second straight
5-under 66 to take a two-shot
lead into the weekend.
Pretty stress-free round,
Dufner said.
Harrington didnt feel as
though he hit the ball much
worse in a round of 73. He
realized it would be difficult to
back up his record score on the
Copperhead course with anoth-
er low score, and it crept into
his putting, especially on the
back nine.
Im happy with my game,
but when you shoot a good
score, its hard to match the
next day, Harrington said.
When youre leading the tour-
nament, its hard not to be a
little bit cautious, and I think at
times I was on the greens.
William McGirt had a 68 and
joined Harrington at 8-under
134.
Luke Donald, who can return
to No. 1 in the world with a win,
had a 68 and was in the large
group at 7-under 135 that in-
cluded Puerto Rico winner
George McNeill.
LPGA Founders Cup
PHOENIX Top-ranked
Yani Tseng shot a 2-under 70 to
take a one-stroke over five play-
ers after the second round of
the LPGA Founders Cup.
A day after playing a seven-
hole stretch on the back nine in
7 under, the Taiwanese star
opened with nine pars on the
same nine. She had three bird-
ies and a bogey on her final
nine to reach 9-under 135 on
another perfect 80-degree day
at Wildfire Golf Club.
Second-ranked Na Yeon Choi
was second along with fellow
South Korean players I.K. Kim
and Meena Lee and Japans Ai
Miyazato and Mika Miyazato.
Kim had a 66, Lee and Mika
Miyazato shot 67, Ai Miyazato
had a 68, and Choi shot a 69.
Tseng successfully defended
her LPGA Thailand title in
February for her 13th LPGA
Tour victory. She led the tour
last season with seven victories
including major victories in
the LPGA Championship and
Womens British Open and
finished the year with 12 world-
wide titles.
Toshiba Classic
NEWPORT BEACH, Calif.
Bernhard Langer birdied the
final hole for a 6-under 65 and a
share of the first-round lead
with Bobby Clampett and Olin
Browne in the Champions
Tours Toshiba Classic.
Langer, the 2008 winner,
holed an 8-iron from143 yards
for an eagle on the par-4 sixth
hole in his bogey-free round at
Newport Beach Country Club.
Clampett birdied three of the
last four holes and finished with
eight birdies and two bogeys.
He holed a 30-foot birdie chip in
the sixth hole. Browne also
birdied the par-5 18th, and had
just 27 putts.
Loren Roberts, Tom Kite,
Steve Pate, Bill Glasson and
David Eger were a stroke back.
Fred Couples, the 2010 win-
ner, had a 67.
Defending champion Nick
Price shot a 70. He opened with
a career-best 60 last year.
G O L F
Transition at top of tournament as Dufner takes two-stroke lead
The Associated Press
PHILADELPHIA LeBron
James scored 29 points,
Dwyane Wade had 12 points
and 10 rebounds and the Mia-
mi Heat held on to beat the
Philadelphia 76ers 84-78 on
Friday night.
The Heat almost had an epic
collapse after leading by 29
points in the third quarter. Led
by a hard-charging Lou Wil-
liams and Evan Turner, the
Sixers sliced Miamis lead to
four points.
James, though, refused to let
the lead completely slip away.
He hit a pull-up jumper and
sank a pair of free throws in
the final 90 seconds to help the
Heat end a four-game road
losing streak. The Heat had
lost two straight games overall.
Sixers part owner Will Smith
brought his power family
wife Jada Pinkett Smith and
son Jaden Smith to the
Wells Fargo Center, and sat
courtside for the second time
this season. He stood and ap-
plauded when the Sixers went
on their burst, and waved and
smiled at fans.
Turner had 13 points, Wil-
liams 12, and Andre Iguodala
had 11 points and 10 rebounds.
Smith, filming a movie in the
area, showed up at halftime
and worked his movie star
mojo on the Sixers.
Down 61-32 early in the
third, the Sixers whittled the
lead to 13 by the end of the
quarter, then got hot in the
fourth. Jodie Meeks hit a 3-
pointer, followed with a dunk,
then Turner made a 3 to cut it
to 73-68.
Turner has turned into Phila-
delphias best player since his
recent promotion to the start-
ing lineup. He had six points
through three quarters, but
scored seven in the first 9 min-
utes of the fourth. His jumper
made it a five-point game, and
then he fought for an offensive
rebound and wiggled his way
through a pair of defenders to
make it 77-72.
Knicks 115, Pacers 100
NEW YORK Tyson Chan-
dler scored 16 points, Jeremy
Lin had 13, and the New York
Knicks rolled to their second
straight dominant victory
under Mike Woodson, beating
the Indiana Pacers.
Reserves JR Smith (16
points) and Steve Novak (12)
had big games again for the
Knicks in the opener of a
home-and-home series. Two
nights after beating Portland
by 42 on the day Mike DAnto-
ni resigned, New York led this
one by as much as 32 and shut
down Pacers star Danny Gran-
ger, who had angered them by
saying Friday and Saturday
were two very winnable
games.
Instead, the Pacers never led
and had their two-game win-
ning streak snapped. Granger
shot 4 of 15 for nine points,
while All-Star Roy Hibbert was
2 of 8 and scored four. Darren
Collison led Indiana with 15
points.
Magic 86, Nets 70
ORLANDO, Fla. Dwight
Howard scored 18 points, Ja-
meer Nelson and Glen Davis
each had 13 and the Orlando
Magic easily beat the New
Jersey Nets.
Ryan Anderson added 12
points and 11 rebounds for the
Magic, who built a 20-point
lead and cruised from there.
Orlando won for the fourth
time in five games and extend-
ed its winning streak against
the Nets to 10.
Reserve Gerald Green scored
15 points to lead the Nets.
DeShawn Stevenson, who
scored 11 points, was the only
New Jersey starter to reach
double figures.
Hawks 102, Wizards 88
ATLANTA Joe Johnson
matched his season high with
34 points, including the first
two baskets of a decisive 11-0
run in the fourth quarter, and
the Atlanta Hawks beat the
Washington Wizards.
Josh Smith had 23 points,
eight assists and seven re-
bounds for the Hawks.
Trevor Booker scored 18
points for the Wizards, who
have lost eight straight in At-
lanta since 2008.
After trailing 54-50 at half-
time, the Hawks took the lead
with a 24-8 run that turned a
60-56 deficit in the third quar-
ter into an 80-68 lead less than
3 minutes into the final period.
After the Wizards scored six
straight, the Hawks stretched
the lead with an 11-0 run which
started with back-to-back bas-
kets by Johnson.
Trail Blazers 100, Bulls 89
CHICAGO (AP) LaMar-
cus Aldridge scored 21 points
and Wesley Matthews added 18
and the revamped Portland
Trail Blazers defeated the Chi-
cago Bulls 100-89 on Friday.
After an emotional victory
against the Heat without Der-
rick Rose on Wednesday, the
Bulls were unable to win a
second straight game with the
reigning MVP sitting on the
bench with a strained groin.
One day after trading start-
ers Gerald Wallace and Marcus
Camby then firing head coach
Nate McMillan, the Blazers
hung with the Bulls through
three quarters then pulled
away in the fourth quarter.
N B A
Heat avoid epic collapse in Philly
The Associated Press
AP PHOTO
Miami Heats LeBron James (6) drives around Philadelphia 76ers
Andre Iguodala during the first half Friday in Philadelphia.
BRISTOL, Tenn. GregBiffle
knows he wont be perfect all sea-
son.
Hell take what he can get right
now.
The Sprint Cup points leader
continued his strong start to the
season Friday by winning the
pole at Bristol Motor Speedway.
I know this isnt going to last
all season, but Im enjoying the
hell out of it right now, Biffle
said.
He turned a lap of 125.215 mph
in his Roush Fenway Racing Ford
to take the top qualifying spot for
Sundays race. Biffle has opened
the season with three third-place
finishes, and has not qualified
lower than ninth.
I gotta pinch myself. I think
Im dreaming, he said. Im hav-
ing a great time, the time of my
life.
Its the 10th pole of Biffles ca-
reer, but his first at Bristol. Hes
credited his strong start to the
season to an offseason overhaul
to his No. 16 team. Biffle has a
new crew chief in Matt Puccia,
and every crew member was
changed.
They are a great group of
guys, Im happy to have them,
Biffle said. Just plain and simply
Matt Puccia is the reason why
were running and competing
and finishing where we are. This
team needed leadership and he
was willing to step up and take
the taskonandhes done a fantas-
tic job so far.
AJ Allmendinger qualified sec-
ond in a Penske Racing Dodge.
Its his first top-10 starting posi-
tion of 2012, but third in10 previ-
ous Sprint Cup races at Bristol.
Allmendinger has had a rough
start to his first season with
Penske, opening the year with a
34th-place finish at Daytona fol-
lowedbyan18that Phoenixanda
37th at Las Vegas.
Ryan Newman qualified third
in a Chevrolet for Stewart-Haas
Racing.
Jeff Gordon qualified fourth in
a Hendrick Motorsports Chevro-
let. Brad Keselowski was fifth to
put both Penske cars in the top
five. Regan Smith was sixth, fol-
lowed by Aric Almirola, Carl Ed-
wards, Joey Logano and Kasey
Kahne.
Timmy Hill was the only driver
who failed to qualify. Robby Gor-
don withdrew because of me-
chanical problems.
N A S C A R
Biffle
wins his
first pole
at Bristol
The Associated Press
OTTAWA Filip Kuba
scored 3:07 into overtime Fri-
day night as the Ottawa Sen-
ators moved into first place in
the Northeast Division with a
2-1 victory over the Montreal
Canadiens.
After taking a pass from
Daniel Alfredsson, Kuba beat
Carey Price with a slap shot
from the top of the left faceoff
circle. Erik Karlsson assisted
on Kubas winner, giving him
four points in his last three
games and 71 points in 71
games on the season.
Kuba scored on Ottawas
33rd shot as the Senators
passed idle Boston for first
place in the Northeast, al-
though the Bruins have two
games in hand.
Colin Greening also scored
for the Senators, while Tomas
Plekanec had a goal for the
Canadiens.
The Senators snapped a
two-game skid and earned a
little redemption from their 3-2
shootout loss in Montreal on
Wednesday night. They have
also earned points in five
straight games.
Ben Bishop faced just 14
shots for Ottawa.
Despite the loss, the Cana-
diens also have points in five
straight games, including three
wins, as they continue to climb
from the basement of the East-
ern Conference.
Blackhawks 4, Stars 1
DALLAS Dave Bolland
and Patrick Sharp scored in the
games first two minutes, Corey
Crawford made 21 saves, and
the surging Chicago Black-
hawks beat the Dallas Stars 4-1
on Friday night.
Bollands 18th goal of the
season came 10 seconds in, and
Sharp made it 2-0 at 1:42 with
his 27th.
N H L
Kuba lifts Senators into first in Northeast with overtime tally
The Associated Press
C M Y K
PAGE 6B SATURDAY, MARCH 17, 2012 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
S P O R T S
100
ANNOUNCEMENTS
150 Special Notices
MONTY MONTY SA SAYS YS
Welcome to
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522 Education/
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PART-TIME
CLINICAL INSTRUCTOR
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PLEASE CONTACT:
Mary Elizabeth
Pacuska, Director
Practical Nursing
Program, WILKES-
BARRE AREA CTC
P.O. Box 1699
Wilkes-Barre, PA
18705
(570) 822-6539
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Part-Time/
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SURGERY CENTER
RECEPTIONIST
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vision.com
subject: Scheduler
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700
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Lake, close to Grot-
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950 Half Doubles
KINGSTON
3 bedroom, 1.5 bath
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746 Garage Sales/
Estate Sales/
Flea Markets
nings. He didnt have any strike-
outs.
Santana retired his first four
batters, but seven of the next 10
hitters reached base against the
left-hander.
Orioles 3, Twins 1
FORT MYERS Nick Black-
burn had another impressive
start, striking out three and
allowing just one hit in four
scoreless innings for a Minneso-
ta Twins split squad in a loss to
Baltimore.
The right-hander, who is
coming off an inconsistent,
injury-slowed 7-10 season, has
given up four hits and no runs
through seven innings this
spring.
Orioles first baseman Chris
Davis, who struggled late last
year with a slight right labrum
tear after coming over in a
trade from the Rangers, went 2
for 4 with a double.
Blue Jays 5, Rays 0
DUNEDIN, FLA. Ricky
Romero pitched four hitless
innings and Toronto beat Tam-
TAMPA, Fla. Gio Gon-
zalez pitched into the fourth
inning and allowed one run for
the Washington Nationals in a
4-3, 10-inning loss to the New
York Yankees on Friday.
Gonzalez gave up two hits
and three walks in 3
1
3 innings.
He had six strikeouts. The
Nationals new starter called
the outing a good stepping
stone.
Alex Rodriguez hit a two-run
homer and Brandon Laird had a
10th-inning sacrifice fly for the
Yankees. After opening-day
starter CC Sabathia was tou-
ched for three runs and six hits
over three innings, rotation
candidate Phil Hughes gave up
three hits in four scoreless
innings.
Pirates 3, Phillies 2
BRADENTON, Fla. Cliff
Lee allowed two home runs in
4
2
3 innings and was out pitched
by Kevin Correia, who gave up
one hit in four scoreless and led
Pittsburgh to a win over Phila-
delphia.
Starling Marte took Lee deep
in the first and later singled
against the former Cy Young
winner. Lee allowed three runs
on five hits and a walk. He
struck out five.
Correia, Pittsburghs opening-
day starter last year, breezed
through a Philadelphia lineup
without most of its stars. Hun-
ter Pence was one of only a few
Phillies regulars in the lineup,
and he struck out twice in three
at-bats.
Cardinals 5, Marlins 0
JUPITER, Fla. Marlins
newcomer Mark Buehrle was
tagged for five runs in 2
1
3 in-
nings and the St. Louis Cardi-
nals defeated Miami 5-0 Friday.
Buehrle allowed six hits and
walked two in his second spring
training start. He threw 70
pitches against what could be
the Cardinals opening day
lineup.
Matt Holliday hit his first
home run of the spring and is
batting .500 in exhibition play.
Tigers 9, Mets 0
PORT ST. LUCIE, Fla.
New York Mets ace Johan San-
tana struggled for the first time
this spring and was pulled in
the third inningof a loss to
Detroit.
Out of the majors last year
while recovering from shoulder
surgery, Santana had not al-
lowed a run in his first two
exhibition starts. But the two-
time Cy Young gave up five
runs four earned on four
hits and two walks in 2
2
3 in-
pa Bay.
Jeff Niemann, in the three-
way scramble for one of the last
two spots in Tampa Bays rota-
tion, gave up four runs in 3
1
3
innings. Niemann had allowed
just two hits and no runs over
five innings in two previous
starts, but he gave up eight hits
this time, including a pair of
RBI singles to J.P. Arencibia.
Romero struck out four. Tra-
vis Snider hit his fourth spring
home run, off Jhonny Nunez in
the sixth inning.
Giants 3, Cubs 2
MESA, Ariz. Eric Sur-
kamp pitched four effective
innings and the San Francisco
Giants beat the Chicago Cubs.
Surkamp, who went 2-2 in six
starts for San Francisco as a
rookie last season, is a long
shot to make the rotation this
year. He gave up one run and
four hits, striking out four.
Dbacks 4, White Sox 2
SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. Paul
Goldschmidt hit a two-run
triple and Geoff Blum drove in
two runs, leading the Arizona
Diamondbacks to a win over
the Chicago White Sox.
Diamondbacks starter Daniel
Hudson allowed two runs and
two hits in four innings. He
walked one, hit a batter and
struck out six.
Brad Zeigler worked a perfect
ninth for the save.
Mariners (ss) 6,
Brewers (ss) 1
TUCSON, Ariz. Felix
Hernandez limited Milwaukee
to one hit in six scoreless in-
nings in his second-to-last out-
ing before Seattle leaves for
Japan, helping the Mariners
beat the Brewers.
Hernandez threw 80 pitches,
50 for strikes. He struck out six
and walked one.
Royals 9, Brewers (ss) 4
SURPRISE, Ariz. Luis
Mendoza held Milwaukees split
squad hitless until the fifth
inning and the Kansas City
Royals beat the Brewers.
Mendoza struck out seven in
4
2
3 innings. He allowed one run
on two hits without a walk.
Angels (ss) 7, Indians 0
TEMPE, Ariz. Albert
Pujols hit his third home run of
the spring and Garrett Richards
kept up his push for the fifth
spot in the Los Angeles Angels
rotation in a split-squad win
over the Cleveland Indians.
Erick Aybar hit a leadoff
homer in the first inning for the
Angels. Two batters later, Pu-
jols connected against Kevin
Slowey.
Dodgers 5, Rangers 2
GLENDALE, Ariz. James
Loney returned to the Dodgers
lineup and hit a three-run
homer and made a nifty stop
that led Los Angeles over the
Texas Rangers.
Dodgers starter Ted Lilly
threw four scoreless innings,
allowing one hit without a
walk.
Braves 9, Astros 5
KISSIMMEE, Fla. Jason
Heyward hit a grand slam off
Wandy Rodriguez for his sec-
ond homer in three games and
Michael Bourn hit a two-run
shot as the Atlanta Braves beat
the Houston Astros 9-5 on
Friday night.
Tommy Hanson, making his
spring debut after having his
first start cut shot by rain,
pitched three innings and gave
up two runs, including a homer
by Travis Buck. The right-hand-
er struck out three, walked
none and gave up five hits.
S P R I N G T R A I N I N G R O U N D U P
Gonzalez sharp against Yanks
The Associated Press
AP PHOTO
New York Yankees second baseman Robinson Cano throws to
first after putting out Washington Nationals Mark DeRosa (7)
during a game Friday at Steinbrenner Field in Tampa, Fla.
TAMPA, Fla. Pitcher Andy
Pettitte has ended his one-year
retirement and is making a
comeback with the New York
Yankees.
The Yankees announced Fri-
day that Pettitte had signed a
minor league deal with an in-
vitation to big league spring
training. If added to the major
league roster, Pettitte would get
a $2.5 million, one-year con-
tract.
Yankees general manager
Brian Cashman said there are no
incentives in the deal and that
Pettitte who is expected in
camp Tuesday will only be a
starter.
Cashman believes Pettitte will
not be ready to break camp with
the team when spring training
ends early next month.
The 39-year-old Pettitte last
played in 2010. The left-hander
sat out last season, but was with
the Yankees in camp this spring
as aninstructor. He threwbatting
practice several times, and also
had a private bullpen session for
team officials, including Cash-
man, manager Joe Girardi and
pitching coach Larry Rothschild
last Tuesday.
Pettitte first expressed interest
in pitching again last December.
Pettitte is 240-138 lifetime. In
his last season with the Yankees,
he was an All-Star and went 11-3.
Derek Jeter will be out until
Tuesday because of a stiff left
calf, an injury the shortstop says
is not that big of an issue.
NewYork manager Joe Girardi
announced the news before Fri-
days spring training game
against Washington. Girardi says
he wants to avoid unnecessary
risks. Jeter spent time on the dis-
abled list last season with a right
calf injury.
Philadelphia Phillies
BRADENTON, Fla. The
Philadelphia Phillies have re-
leased left-handed pitcher Don-
trelle Willis.
The teamannouncedthe move
Friday on Twitter.
The 30-year-old Willis signed a
deal with the Phillies this offsea-
son and was competing for a bull-
pen spot this spring.
A two-time All Star with the
Florida Marlins, Willis has
pitched for four teams in nine
seasons, all of them as a starter.
The Phillies signed himto a non-
guaranteed contract in Decem-
ber and he will receive $139,000
in severance pay.
In three appearances this
spring, Willis has allowed five
earned runs on five hits and four
walks in 2
2
3 innings. The Phillies
also reassigned catcher Steven
Lerud to minor league camp on
Friday.
St. Louis Cardinals
JUPITER, Fla. Ailing St.
Louis Cardinals ace Chris Car-
penter has thrown off a mound
for the first time in nearly two
weeks.
Carpenter had been limited in
workouts since March 3 because
of a stiff neck.
Carpenter threw30 fastballs at
about 75 percent on Friday. He
said he felt better than he had ex-
pected and was happy with the
session. If he feels well Saturday,
he could try to throw off the
mound again Sunday or Monday,
and pitch batting practice.
Kansas City Royals
SURPRISE, Ariz. Royals
catcher Salvador Perez had sur-
gery Friday to repair a torn me-
niscus in his left knee and will
miss at least three months.
The surgery was performed at
the Kerlan-Jobe Clinic in Los An-
geles by Dr. Clarence Shields and
team physician Dr. Vincent Key.
The doctors said Perez will need
12-14 weeks to recover.
The 21-year-old Perez hurt his
knee while warming up pitcher
Jonathan Sanchez prior to a
spring training game Tuesday.
A R O U N D T H E C A M P S
AP FILE PHOTO
The Yankees announced Friday that Andy Pettitte had signed a
minor league deal with the team.
Retirement on hold
for Yankees Pettitte
The Associated Press
C M Y K
Mount Airy tables strong
Table games revenue at Mount Airy
Casino Resort near Mount Pocono
jumped 46 percent in February com-
pared to a year ago, according to fig-
ures released Friday by the state Gam-
ing Control Board. The $3.4 million in
revenue ranked Mount Airy sixth out of
the 10 casinos in Pennsylvania.
Mohegan Sun at Pocono Downs saw
a 4 percent increase, to $3.2 million.
Statewide table games revenue was up
30 percent, led by the Sands Bethle-
hem, which took in $10.7 million.
Pennsylvania collected $9.2 million
in taxes on $56.6 million in table
games revenue in February.
Direct Air files Chapter 11
Just three days after abruptly stop-
ping service and leaving travelers
stranded, the parent of discount airline
Direct Air has filed for bankruptcy
protection.
Southern Sky Air & Tours LLC late
Thursday filed for Chapter 11 protec-
tion in Massachusetts. Court docu-
ments show the company has between
$10 million and $50 million in debt and
just $500,000 to $1 million in assets.
The airline abruptly stopped flying
Monday afternoon, apparently because
it couldnt pay its fuel bills.
Direct Air began flying in March of
2007. It serves 17 cities in the Midwest,
East and South, including Allentown.
Sears closing 62 stores
Sears Holdings Corp plans to close
62 retail stores in the first half of this
year to reduce expenses.
The closings include 43 Sears Home-
town stores, 10 Sears Hardware stores
and 9 The Great Indoors stores, the
company said in a filing with the Secu-
rities and Exchange Commission on
Wednesday. The company, which also
owns the Kmart chain, had 4,010 stores
as of Jan. 28.
None of the stores slated to close are
in Northeastern Pennsylvania.
Germany aims at balance
Germany will speed up its plans to
reduce new borrowing as it works to
balance its budget by 2016, an official
said Friday.
The federal government will reduce
its new borrowing between 2013 and
2016 by about 38 percent, the senior
official said.
A robust economy has helped in-
crease Germanys tax intake, allowing
the country to run up less new debt.
I N B R I E F
$3.79 $3.55 $3.65
$4.06
07/17/08
JohnsnCtl 32.66 -.25 +4.5
Kellogg 52.62 -.30 +4.1
Keycorp 8.54 ... +11.1
KimbClk 72.92 ... -.9
KindME 82.51 +.26 -2.9
Kroger 24.37 -.04 +.6
Kulicke 11.91 +.01 +28.8
LSI Corp 8.80 -.15 +47.9
LancastrC 65.02 -.52 -6.2
LillyEli 40.20 -.08 -3.3
Limited 46.93 -.60 +16.3
LincNat 26.77 -.52 +37.8
LizClaib 12.20 -.13 +41.4
LockhdM 89.32 -.98 +10.4
Loews 39.48 -.08 +4.9
LaPac 9.93 +.21 +23.0
MDU Res 22.22 -.09 +3.5
MarathnO s 34.61 +.96 +18.2
MarIntA 38.14 -.24 +30.8
Masco 13.38 -.21 +27.7
McDrmInt 13.45 -.13 +16.9
McGrwH 47.54 +.52 +5.7
McKesson 87.56 +.09 +12.4
Merck 38.03 -.03 +.9
MetLife 38.38 -.03 +23.1
Microsoft 32.60 -.25 +25.6
NCR Corp 21.26 -.19 +29.2
NatFuGas 49.99 +.68 -10.1
NatGrid 50.99 +.03 +5.2
NY Times 6.80 +.01 -12.0
NewellRub 18.47 -.25 +14.4
NewmtM 53.75 -.09 -10.4
NextEraEn 60.16 -.09 -1.2
NiSource 23.61 -.29 -.8
NikeB 111.22 +.49 +15.4
NorflkSo 68.98 +.45 -5.3
NoestUt 36.43 -.28 +1.0
NorthropG 61.99 +.02 +6.0
Nucor 44.23 +.78 +11.8
NustarEn 58.34 -.64 +3.0
NvMAd 14.20 -.25 -3.3
OGE Engy 52.96 +.02 -6.6
OcciPet 100.58 +1.68 +7.3
OfficeMax 5.66 +.16 +24.7
ONEOK 82.85 -.72 -4.4
PG&E Cp 43.29 +.04 +5.0
PPG 93.59 -.05 +12.1
PPL Corp 28.31 +.13 -3.8
PennVaRs 24.89 +.11 -2.5
PepBoy 14.99 -.04 +36.3
Pfizer 21.94 +.03 +1.4
PitnyBw 18.15 -.23 -2.1
Praxair 110.72 +.24 +3.6
ProgrssEn 53.60 -.05 -4.3
ProvEn g 12.03 +.03 +24.1
PSEG 30.12 -.01 -8.8
PulteGrp 9.29 -.32 +47.2
Questar 19.60 -.09 -1.3
RadioShk 6.62 -.15 -31.8
Raytheon 52.12 -.15 +7.7
ReynAmer 41.35 +.04 -.2
RockwlAut 83.71 -.59 +14.1
Rowan 37.03 +1.14 +22.1
RoyDShllB 72.31 +.07 -4.9
RoyDShllA 71.48 +.02 -2.2
Safeway 22.17 ... +5.4
SaraLee 21.39 +.13 +13.1
Schlmbrg 76.76 +1.84 +12.4
Sherwin 106.64 -1.22 +19.5
SilvWhtn g 33.18 -.31 +14.6
SiriusXM 2.26 -.02 +24.2
SonyCp 21.81 +.06 +20.9
SouthnCo 44.34 -.53 -4.2
SwstAirl 8.31 -.14 -2.9
SpectraEn 32.06 -.03 +4.3
SprintNex 2.89 +.09 +23.5
Sunoco 40.31 +.08 +18.1
Sysco 29.63 -.06 +1.0
TECO 17.75 ... -7.3
Target 58.41 -.34 +14.0
TenetHlth 5.58 -.10 +8.8
Tenneco 38.95 -.46 +30.8
Tesoro 29.63 +.04 +26.8
Textron 27.48 -.23 +48.6
3M Co 89.56 -.44 +9.6
TimeWarn 35.91 +.07 -.6
Timken 54.13 -.44 +39.8
UnilevNV 34.20 +.17 -.5
UnionPac 113.15 +.07 +6.8
Unisys 21.43 +1.29 +8.7
UPS B 78.41 -.53 +7.1
USSteel 29.75 +.10 +12.4
UtdTech 85.48 -1.41 +17.0
VarianMed 70.57 -.23 +5.1
VectorGp 17.51 -.13 -1.4
ViacomB 47.62 +.52 +4.9
WestarEn 27.67 +.05 -3.9
Weyerhsr 22.01 -.16 +17.9
Whrlpl 76.84 -1.98 +61.9
WmsCos 30.46 +.44 +13.0
Windstrm 12.09 -.05 +3.0
Wynn 126.96 -1.04 +14.9
XcelEngy 26.40 +.01 -4.5
Xerox 8.32 -.12 +4.5
YumBrnds 68.40 -.22 +15.9
Mutual Funds
Alliance Bernstein
BalShrB x 15.79 ... +9.2
CoreOppA m 13.63 +.02 +12.7
American Cent
IncGroA m 27.16 -.03 +12.1
ValueInv 6.24 +.01 +10.5
American Funds
AMCAPA m 21.23 +.01 +12.7
BalA x 19.65 -.08 +8.4
BondA m 12.62 +.01 +1.2
CapIncBuA x 51.27 -.41 +5.1
CpWldGrIA x 35.76 -.07 +11.8
EurPacGrA m39.95 +.15 +13.6
FnInvA x 39.41 -.03 +11.7
GrthAmA m 32.84 +.06 +14.3
HiIncA m 11.09 +.01 +5.7
IncAmerA x 17.49 -.15 +5.3
InvCoAmA m 30.01 +.02 +11.3
MutualA m 27.62 -.03 +7.4
NewPerspA m29.73 +.07 +13.6
NwWrldA m 52.35 +.11 +13.5
SmCpWldA m38.80 +.10 +16.9
WAMutInvA m30.65 +.02 +7.9
Baron
Asset b 51.98 +.11 +13.7
BlackRock
EqDivI 19.65 ... +8.0
GlobAlcA m 19.69 +.04 +8.4
GlobAlcC m 18.32 +.04 +8.2
GlobAlcI 19.78 +.04 +8.4
CGM
Focus 30.38 -.10 +18.4
Mutual 28.22 ... +15.6
Realty 29.43 +.09 +9.8
Columbia
AcornZ 31.87 -.01 +15.6
DFA
EmMktValI 31.08 -.10 +19.7
DWS-Scudder
EnhEMFIS d 10.64 ... +6.7
HlthCareS d 26.58 -.02 +10.0
LAEqS d 42.99 ... +15.3
Davis
NYVentA m 36.42 +.07 +12.1
NYVentC m 35.11 +.06 +11.9
Dodge & Cox
Bal 75.06 +.19 +11.3
Income 13.65 +.01 +2.6
IntlStk 33.42 +.24 +14.3
Stock 115.80 +.37 +13.9
Dreyfus
TechGrA f 35.62 +.04 +19.3
Eaton Vance
HiIncOppA m 4.38 -.01 +5.1
HiIncOppB m 4.39 ... +4.9
NatlMuniA m 9.90 -.02 +6.3
NatlMuniB m 9.90 -.02 +6.1
PAMuniA m 9.09 -.02 +3.7
Fidelity
AstMgr20 13.13 +.01 +3.4
Bal 19.82 +.02 +9.0
BlChGrow 50.03 +.03 +17.9
CapInc d 9.23 ... +7.7
Contra 76.78 +.05 +13.8
DivrIntl d 28.95 +.18 +13.4
ExpMulNat d 23.38 +.02 +13.1
Free2020 14.18 +.02 +8.1
Free2030 14.09 +.02 +9.7
GNMA 11.80 ... +0.2
GrowCo 96.53 -.06 +19.3
LatinAm d 55.87 +.12 +14.3
LowPriStk d 40.71 +.06 +13.9
Magellan 73.14 +.07 +16.1
Overseas d 30.84 +.25 +16.5
Puritan 19.45 ... +9.9
StratInc 11.05 ... +3.2
TotalBd 10.95 ... +0.9
Value 72.79 +.07 +14.7
Fidelity Advisor
ValStratT m 26.99 -.01 +15.8
Fidelity Select
Gold d 41.39 -.20 -2.0
Pharm d 14.30 +.01 +5.3
Fidelity Spartan
500IdxAdvtg 49.91 +.05 +12.2
500IdxInstl 49.92 +.06 +12.2
500IdxInv 49.91 +.06 +12.2
First Eagle
GlbA m 49.15 +.02 +8.9
FrankTemp-Franklin
CA TF A m 7.26 -.02 +2.8
GrowB m 47.96 -.02 +12.5
Income A m 2.18 ... +5.5
Income C m 2.20 ... +5.3
FrankTemp-Mutual
Beacon Z 12.99 +.03 +11.2
Discov Z 29.80 +.01 +8.5
Euro Z 20.97 +.05 +10.7
Shares Z 21.87 +.04 +9.6
FrankTemp-Templeton
GlBond A m 13.23 +.02 +7.8
GlBond C m 13.25 +.01 +7.7
GlBondAdv 13.19 +.02 +7.9
Growth A m 18.58 +.09 +14.1
GMO
QuVI 23.90 +.01 +8.4
Harbor
CapApInst 43.50 +.01 +17.9
IntlInstl d 61.21 +.41 +16.7
Hartford
CpApHLSIA 43.31 +.09 +16.4
INVESCO
ConstellB m 22.10 +.03 +16.0
GlobEqA m 11.43 +.05 +11.2
YTD
Name NAV Chg %Rtn
YTD
Name NAV Chg %Rtn
YTD
Name NAV Chg %Rtn
YTD
Name NAV Chg %Rtn
YTD
Name NAV Chg %Rtn
YTD
Name NAV Chg %Rtn
52-WEEK YTD
HIGH LOW NAME TKR DIV LAST CHG %CHG
52-WEEK YTD
HIGH LOW NAME TKR DIV LAST CHG %CHG
Combined Stocks
AFLAC 46.87 -.63 +8.3
AT&T Inc 31.59 -.05 +4.5
AbtLab 59.42 +.31 +5.7
AMD 8.20 -.05 +51.9
Alcoa 10.54 +.19 +21.8
Allstate 32.68 +.09 +19.2
Altria 30.03 ... +1.3
AEP 38.73 +.32 -6.2
AmExp 56.55 -.17 +19.9
AmIntlGrp 28.03 -.05 +20.8
Amgen 67.38 -.88 +4.9
Anadarko 84.68 +.78 +10.9
Apple Inc 585.57 +.01 +44.6
AutoData 55.10 -.28 +2.0
AveryD 29.91 +.10 +4.3
Avnet 35.80 -.35 +15.1
Avon 18.95 -.09 +8.5
BP PLC 46.83 +.14 +9.6
BakrHu 48.95 +1.36 +.6
BallardPw 1.52 -.01 +40.7
BarnesNob 14.05 -.13 -3.0
Baxter 59.81 +.03 +20.9
Beam Inc 56.82 -.58 +10.9
BerkH B 81.07 -.27 +6.3
BigLots 45.42 -.14 +20.3
BlockHR 16.91 +.17 +3.6
Boeing 75.20 -.23 +2.5
BrMySq 33.18 -.05 -5.8
Brunswick 26.30 -.40 +45.6
Buckeye 61.75 +.66 -3.5
CBS B 31.59 +.07 +16.4
CMS Eng 21.65 -.20 -1.9
CSX s 22.25 +.33 +5.7
CampSp 32.80 -.24 -1.3
Carnival 32.32 -.07 -1.0
Caterpillar 113.58 +.13 +25.4
CenterPnt 19.07 -.15 -5.1
CntryLink 39.08 -.13 +5.1
Chevron 110.28 +.25 +3.6
Cisco 20.03 +.12 +11.2
Citigrp rs 36.69 +.42 +39.5
Clorox 68.21 -.54 +2.5
ColgPal 94.79 -.63 +2.6
ConAgra 26.43 -.15 +.1
ConocPhil 77.18 +.55 +5.9
ConEd 57.62 -.46 -7.1
Cooper Ind 63.86 -.35 +17.9
Corning 14.33 +.13 +10.4
Cummins 127.54 +.55 +44.9
DTE 55.04 +.32 +1.1
Deere 83.22 +1.58 +7.6
Diebold 38.67 -.36 +28.6
Disney 43.19 -.28 +15.2
DomRescs 50.32 -.16 -5.2
Dover 64.14 -.03 +10.5
DowChm 35.30 +.30 +22.7
DryShips 3.64 +.25 +82.0
DuPont 53.38 -.18 +16.6
DukeEngy 21.07 -.06 -4.2
EMC Cp 28.89 -.12 +34.1
Eaton 51.02 +.37 +17.2
EdisonInt 42.64 -.36 +3.0
EmersonEl 52.37 +.37 +12.4
EnbrEPt s 31.43 -.06 -5.3
Energen 52.50 +.88 +5.0
EngyTEq 43.96 +.24 +8.3
Entergy 67.87 -.08 -7.1
EntPrPt 50.57 -.42 +9.0
Exelon 38.86 -.09 -10.4
ExxonMbl 86.44 +.35 +2.0
Fastenal s 52.22 -.33 +19.7
FedExCp 94.34 -.27 +13.0
FirstEngy 44.50 +.08 +.5
FootLockr 29.73 -.62 +24.7
FordM 12.51 -.39 +16.3
Gannett 15.21 -.07 +13.8
Gap 25.39 -.25 +36.9
GenDynam 72.90 -.44 +9.8
GenElec 20.20 +.04 +12.8
GenMills 38.83 +.14 -3.9
GileadSci 46.73 -.43 +14.2
GlaxoSKln 45.18 +.17 -1.0
Goodrich 125.97 +.17 +1.8
Goodyear 12.16 -.19 -14.2
Hallibrtn 34.54 +.63 +.1
HarleyD 49.39 +.06 +27.1
HarrisCorp 44.40 +.20 +23.2
HartfdFn 21.83 +.14 +34.3
HawaiiEl 25.30 -.04 -4.5
HeclaM 4.53 -.02 -13.4
Heico s 53.44 -.28 -8.5
Hess 62.55 +1.06 +10.1
HewlettP 24.49 +.09 -4.9
HomeDp 49.05 -.15 +16.7
HonwllIntl 60.37 -.48 +11.1
Humana 86.64 -.38 -1.1
INTL FCSt 22.25 -.23 -5.6
ITT Cp s 22.97 -.06 +18.8
ITW 57.91 +.03 +24.0
IngerRd 41.08 +.24 +34.8
IBM 206.01 +.01 +12.0
IntPap 35.57 -.37 +20.2
JPMorgCh 44.57 -.13 +34.0
JacobsEng 46.89 +.02 +15.5
JohnJn 65.12 +.05 -.7
Name Last Chg %YTD Name Last Chg %YTD Name Last Chg %YTD Name Last Chg %YTD Name Last Chg %YTD Name Last Chg %YTD
Stocks of Local Interest
98.01 72.26 AirProd APD 2.56 91.71 +.09 +7.7
34.67 25.39 AmWtrWks AWK .92 33.80 -.14 +6.1
48.49 36.76 Amerigas APU 3.05 40.00 -1.25 -12.9
23.28 19.28 AquaAm WTR .66 22.04 -.04 0.0
37.28 23.69 ArchDan ADM .70 31.80 -.02 +11.2
386.00 256.86 AutoZone AZO ... 378.87 -.13 +16.6
14.35 4.92 BkofAm BAC .04 9.80 +.56 +76.3
30.77 17.10 BkNYMel BK .52 24.14 -.14 +21.2
16.31 2.23 BonTon BONT .20 8.76 +.14 +159.9
45.77 31.30 CVS Care CVS .65 45.28 +.40 +11.0
52.95 38.79 Cigna CI .04 46.82 +.01 +11.5
71.77 61.29 CocaCola KO 2.04 70.16 -.17 +.3
30.05 19.19 Comcast CMCSA .65 29.50 -.30 +24.4
28.95 21.67 CmtyBkSy CBU 1.04 28.34 -.01 +1.9
41.09 14.61 CmtyHlt CYH ... 24.45 +.37 +40.1
42.74 29.57 CoreMark CORE .68 40.66 -.23 +2.7
61.29 39.50 EmersonEl EMR 1.60 52.37 +.37 +12.4
11.97 4.61 Entercom ETM ... 6.09 -.11 -1.0
21.02 10.25 FairchldS FCS ... 14.44 -.10 +19.9
8.97 3.81 FrontierCm FTR .40 4.33 +.07 -15.9
18.16 13.09 Genpact G .18 15.94 -.15 +6.6
12.39 7.00 HarteHnk HHS .34 9.00 -.06 -1.0
55.00 48.12 Heinz HNZ 1.92 53.43 +.16 -1.1
62.38 52.22 Hershey HSY 1.52 60.14 -.16 -2.7
39.06 30.43 Kraft KFT 1.16 38.38 +.08 +2.7
30.80 18.07 Lowes LOW .56 30.41 -.28 +19.8
90.76 66.40 M&T Bk MTB 2.80 85.69 +.74 +12.2
102.22 72.89 McDnlds MCD 2.80 97.66 -.38 -2.7
24.10 17.05 NBT Bcp NBTB .80 22.19 +.07 +.3
10.28 5.53 NexstarB NXST ... 8.44 -.17 +7.7
64.37 42.70 PNC PNC 1.40 63.42 +.42 +10.0
30.27 24.10 PPL Corp PPL 1.44 28.31 +.13 -3.8
17.34 6.50 PenRE PEI .60 15.35 +.15 +47.0
71.89 58.50 PepsiCo PEP 2.06 64.47 +.30 -2.8
85.90 60.45 PhilipMor PM 3.08 85.81 -.09 +9.3
67.95 57.56 ProctGam PG 2.10 67.25 -.43 +.8
65.30 42.45 Prudentl PRU 1.45 63.71 +.47 +27.1
2.12 .85 RiteAid RAD ... 2.00 +.01 +58.7
17.11 10.91 SLM Cp SLM .50 16.27 +.12 +21.4
60.00 39.00 SLM pfB SLMBP 4.63 49.00 +1.28 +25.6
44.65 26.90 SoUnCo SUG .60 43.99 -.06 +4.5
38.44 24.13 TJX s TJX .38 37.91 -.28 +17.5
33.53 24.07 UGI Corp UGI 1.04 27.52 -.26 -6.4
40.48 32.28 VerizonCm VZ 2.00 39.57 +.03 -1.4
62.63 48.31 WalMart WMT 1.59 60.84 -.39 +1.8
44.85 36.52 WeisMk WMK 1.20 43.06 -.01 +7.8
34.08 22.58 WellsFargo WFC .88 33.89 -.18 +23.0
USD per British Pound 1.5832 +.0109 +.69% 1.5788 1.6026
Canadian Dollar .9916 +.0003 +.03% .9798 .9916
USD per Euro 1.3171 +.0074 +.56% 1.3791 1.3906
Japanese Yen 83.36 -.02 -.02% 76.87 80.11
Mexican Peso 12.6706 +.0244 +.19% 12.9950 12.1449
CURRENCY CLOSE PVS. %CH. 6MO. 1YR.
Copper 3.87 3.89 -0.46 -1.17 -10.52
Gold 1655.50 1659.10 -0.22 -8.64 +16.92
Platinum 1675.50 1683.90 -0.50 -7.63 -2.78
Silver 32.57 32.69 -0.37 -20.13 -7.09
Palladium 700.20 708.40 -1.16 -4.24 -4.27
METALS CLOSE PVS. %CH. 6MO. 1YR.
Foreign Exchange & Metals
PacGrowB m 19.95 +.04 +11.8
JPMorgan
CoreBondSelect11.82 ... +0.4
John Hancock
LifBa1 b 13.30 +.01 +8.9
LifGr1 b 13.29 +.02 +11.6
RegBankA m 14.43 +.05 +19.5
SovInvA m 17.24 ... +11.7
TaxFBdA m 10.18 -.02 +2.1
Lazard
EmgMkEqtI d 19.92 -.01 +18.6
Longleaf Partners
LongPart 30.37 ... +14.0
Loomis Sayles
BondI 14.67 +.01 +6.1
MFS
MAInvA m 21.26 ... +13.8
MAInvC m 20.54 ... +13.6
Merger
Merger b 15.81 +.02 +1.4
Metropolitan West
TotRetBdI 10.50 +.01 +2.2
Neuberger Berman
SmCpGrInv 19.82 -.08 +12.4
Oakmark
EqIncI 29.22 +.09 +8.0
Oppenheimer
CapApB m 42.75 +.09 +13.8
DevMktA m 33.90 +.23 +15.6
DevMktY 33.53 +.24 +15.7
PIMCO
AllAssetI 12.26 ... +6.2
ComRlRStI 6.94 +.03 +6.1
HiYldIs 9.31 ... +5.0
LowDrIs 10.38 ... +1.4
RealRet 11.95 +.01 +1.6
TotRetA m 11.05 ... +2.3
TotRetAdm b 11.05 ... +2.3
TotRetC m 11.05 ... +2.1
TotRetIs 11.05 ... +2.3
TotRetrnD b 11.05 ... +2.3
TotlRetnP 11.05 ... +2.3
Permanent
Portfolio 48.81 +.09 +5.9
Principal
SAMConGrB m14.07+.01 +9.6
Prudential
JenMCGrA m 31.59 +.05 +13.7
Prudential Investmen
2020FocA m 17.02 +.05 +14.5
BlendA m 18.74 +.03 +14.1
EqOppA m 15.51 +.08 +14.0
HiYieldA m 5.54 ... +4.9
IntlEqtyA m 6.03 +.04 +12.5
IntlValA m 19.68 +.14 +12.2
JennGrA m 21.32 +.01 +17.9
NaturResA m 51.20 +.64 +10.5
SmallCoA m 22.27 ... +11.9
UtilityA m 11.32 +.02 +4.7
ValueA m 15.57 +.04 +12.9
Putnam
GrowIncB m 14.22 +.02 +14.2
IncomeA m 6.83 ... +1.5
Royce
LowStkSer m 16.19 +.02 +13.1
OpportInv d 12.12 -.01 +17.4
ValPlSvc m 13.89 ... +15.8
Schwab
S&P500Sel d 21.95 +.03 +12.2
Scout
Interntl d 31.83 +.17 +13.8
T Rowe Price
BlChpGr 45.27 +.08 +17.1
CapApprec 22.56 +.01 +9.4
DivGrow 25.59 +.01 +9.6
DivrSmCap d 17.69 -.02 +14.5
EmMktStk d 32.80 +.03 +15.0
EqIndex d 37.99 +.05 +12.1
EqtyInc 25.67 ... +11.3
FinSer 14.27 -.01 +20.2
GrowStk 37.41 +.08 +17.5
HealthSci 37.77 +.01 +15.9
HiYield d 6.76 -.01 +5.7
IntlDisc d 43.44 +.27 +16.4
IntlStk d 14.17 +.10 +15.3
IntlStkAd m 14.11 +.10 +15.2
LatinAm d 45.39 +.07 +16.9
MediaTele 54.26 +.08 +15.7
MidCpGr 59.87 +.04 +13.5
NewAmGro 35.81 +.03 +12.6
NewAsia d 15.92 -.03 +14.5
NewEra 46.51 +.68 +10.6
NewHoriz 35.89 -.08 +15.7
NewIncome 9.68 ... +0.7
Rtmt2020 17.57 +.03 +10.4
Rtmt2030 18.58 +.04 +12.3
ShTmBond 4.84 ... +1.0
SmCpVal d 38.20 -.08 +10.8
TaxFHiYld d 11.28 -.01 +3.9
Value 25.37 +.03 +12.6
ValueAd b 25.11 +.03 +12.4
Thornburg
IntlValI d 27.77 +.20 +13.0
Tweedy, Browne
GlobVal d 23.98 +.04 +9.7
Vanguard
500Adml 129.90 +.15 +12.2
500Inv 129.87 +.15 +12.2
CapOp d 32.72 +.04 +10.9
CapVal 11.15 +.09 +20.8
Convrt d 13.02 +.01 +10.0
DevMktIdx d 9.58 +.07 +12.8
DivGr 16.52 -.03 +7.1
EnergyInv d 65.40 +.74 +9.1
EurIdxAdm d 58.61 +.57 +13.6
Explr 81.71 -.09 +14.4
GNMA 11.02 +.01 +0.2
GNMAAdml 11.02 +.01 +0.2
GlbEq 18.17 +.04 +14.2
GrowthEq 12.49 ... +15.8
HYCor d 5.86 ... +4.4
HYCorAdml d 5.86 ... +4.4
HltCrAdml d 57.65 +.01 +6.1
HlthCare d 136.62 +.02 +6.1
ITGradeAd 10.10 ... +1.9
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Wells Fargo
DvrCpBldA f 6.91 +.03 +8.6
DOW
13,232.62
-20.14
NASDAQ
3,055.26
-1.11
S&P 500
1,404.17
+1.57
RUSSELL 2000
830.18
-1.28
6-MO T-BILLS
.14%
...
10-YR T-NOTE
2.29%
+.01
CRUDE OIL
$107.06
+1.95
q q n n p p p p
p p q q p p q q
NATURAL GAS
$2.33
+.05
BUSINESS S E C T I O N B
THE TIMES LEADER SATURDAY, MARCH 17, 2012
timesleader.com
WASHINGTON A sharp
jump in gas prices drove a
measure of U.S. consumer
costs up in February. But out-
side higher pump prices, in-
flation stayed mild.
The Labor Department said
Friday the consumer price in-
dex rose 0.4 percent in Febru-
ary, the largest increase in 10
months. Gas prices rose 6 per-
cent to account for most of
the gain.
Food prices were un-
changed for the first time in
19 months. And excluding
food and energy, so-called
core prices rose just 0.1 per-
cent.
Mild inflation allows the
Fed to maintain its low inter-
est-rate policy.
Not much to stew about on
the inflation front, Robert
Kavcic, an economist at BMO
Capital Markets, wrote in a
note to clients.
Most economists expect in-
flation to remain in check this
year. The prices of agricultu-
ral commodities such as corn
and cotton have come down.
And while more Americans
are working, few are getting
big pay raises. That has limit-
ed retailers ability to charge
more.
In the past 12 months, con-
sumer prices have risen 2.9
percent, the same year-over-
year change as last month.
Core prices have increased 2.2
percent over the same period.
Still, gas prices keep rising.
The jump at the pump could
slow growth if consumers are
forced to cut back on other
purchases. The average price
for a gallon of gas on Friday
was $3.83, according to AAA.
Thats 32 cents higher than a
month ago.
Consumers are seeing relief
elsewhere.
Grocery store prices appear
to be leveling off after increas-
ing for most of the past two
years. Consumers paid less
last month for vegetables,
dairy products, and meat, fish
and eggs.
Clothing costs dropped by
the most in more than five
years in February and airfares
dipped.
And natural gas prices drop-
ped sharply last month and
have declined nearly 10 per-
cent in the past year.
Gas drives
consumer
price hike
By CHRISTOPHER S. RUGABER
AP Economics Writer
CHICAGO Package food
makers are thinking outside
thebottleandcan. Moretothe
point, theyre increasingly
partial to pouches.
Kitchen staples fromCamp-
bell Soup Co. and H.J. Heinz
will be joining other consum-
er products in pouches this
year. The trendis beingdriven
by savings on packaging and
shipping costs as well as aes-
thetics an upscale pouch
sporting elaborate graphics
offers a modernized look and
premium appeal, marketers
say.
John Kalkowski, editorial
director of Packaging Digest,
said pouches also are becom-
ing more prevalent because
technology has improved,
doubling average shelf life
from one year to two.
Manufacturers can cut
packaging costs 10 to 15 per-
cent by going to the pouch, he
said.
For Campbell, the move is
part of a battle for credibility
withmillennials, agedapprox-
imately 18 to 34, who tend to
associate its iconic red-and-
white cans with Grandmas
house.
This summer, the company
will launch Campbells Go
Soup, a premium line with
trendy flavors like coconut
curry with chicken and shii-
take mushrooms. Go Soup
comes in an edgy, graphically
intense pouch with funky
fonts and pictures of young
people making quirky faces,
seeming to enjoy the soup.
For the H.J. Heinz Co., how-
ever, a flexible pouch is being
used to introduce a smaller
size of its namesake ketchup.
With a squeezable pouch and
nozzle, the 10-ounce product
will sell for 99 cents compared
with $1.99 for a 20-ounce bot-
tle.
While pouches have been
prominent in Europe, Central
and South America for five
years or more, theyre begin-
ning to gain traction in the
United States, which is noto-
riously slow in adapting to
trends, said Lynn Dornblaser,
director of CPG insights at
Mintel.
More foods go to pouch packaging
By EMILY BRYSON YORK
Chicago Tribune
MCT PHOTO
Heinz has a new10 oz pouch
of its signature ketchup.
MADISON, Wis. Apples latest iPad
drewthe customary lines of die-hardfans
looking to be first and entrepreneurs
looking to make a quick profit.
Many buyers lined up for hours before
the 8 a.m. release, and in some cases
overnight, as the tablet computer went
on sale in the U.S. and nine other coun-
tries.
The new model comes with a faster
processor, a much sharper screen and an
improved camera, though the changes
arent as big as the upgrade fromthe orig-
inal model to the iPad 2.
As with the previous models, prices
start at $499 in the U.S.
DanKrolikowski, 34, was first inline at
a Madison, Wis., mall. He arrived 14
hours before the stores opening and was
buying an extra one to sell on the gray
market.
Last year I soldone oneBay andmade
over $500 in profit, Krolikowski said,
leaning back in a reclining lawn chair he
brought. Imhopingtodothat againthis
year.
At the Best Buy in Wilkes-Barre Town-
ship, employees handed out vouchers at
8 a.m., good for one iPad after the store
opened at 10 a.m. A store employee de-
clined to say how many vouchers were
given out.
Those who ordered iPads online start-
edgettingthemdeliveredFriday. Howev-
er, Apple nowsays theres a two- to three-
week shipping delay for online orders.
Theres also demand in countries where
the new iPad isnt yet available.
In Hong Kong, a steady stream of
buyers picked up their new devices at
preset times at the citys sole Apple store
after entering an online lottery.
The system, which required buyers to
have local ID cards, helped thwart vis-
itors from mainland China, Apples fas-
test growing market. A release date in
China has not been announced. Apple
will begin selling the iPad in 25 addition-
al countries next Friday, mostly in Eu-
rope.
Despite competition fromcheaper tab-
let computers suchas Amazon.comInc.s
Kindle Fire, the iPad remains the most
popular tablet computer. Apple Inc. has
sold more than 55 million iPads since its
debut in 2010.
Panic over the iPad
By PETER SVENSSON
Associated Press
AP PHOTO
One of the first shoppers at Apples flagshop store shows off his new iPad, in
New York. Apples latest iPad drew die-hard fans to stores in the U.S. and nine
other countries Friday, many of whom lined up for hours to be among the first to
buy one.
C M Y K
PAGE 8B SATURDAY, MARCH 17, 2012 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
W E A T H E R
1
9
6
6
0
0
Find the car you want fromhome. timesleaderautos.com m
ALMANAC
REGIONAL FORECAST
NATIONAL FORECAST
For more weather
information go to:
www.timesleader.com
National Weather Service
607-729-1597
Forecasts, graphs
and data 2012
Weather Central, LP
Yesterday 67/43
Average 46/27
Record High 76 in 1990
Record Low 7 in 1916
Yesterday 10
Month to date 329
Year to date 4178
Last year to date 5146
Normal year to date 5113
*Index of fuel consumption, how far the days
mean temperature was below 65 degrees.
Precipitation
Yesterday 0.05
Month to date 0.87
Normal month to date 1.19
Year to date 3.80
Normal year to date 5.59
Susquehanna Stage Chg. Fld. Stg
Wilkes-Barre 5.62 -0.15 22.0
Towanda 3.68 -0.20 21.0
Lehigh
Bethlehem 3.07 0.75 16.0
Delaware
Port Jervis 3.77 -0.17 18.0
Todays high/
Tonights low
TODAYS SUMMARY
Highs: 57-69. Lows: 42-45. Sunny skies
today and clear skies tonight.
The Poconos
Highs: 51-58. Lows: 43-47. Becoming
sunny by the late morning; staying clear
overnight.
The Jersey Shore
Highs: 67-72. Lows: 43-52. Partly to most-
ly sunny today; partly cloudy tonight.
The Finger Lakes
Highs: 65-66. Lows: 48-49. Sunny today
and clear tonight.
Brandywine Valley
Highs: 55-66. Lows: 47-52. Sunny today
and clear tonight.
Delmarva/Ocean City
Anchorage 25/11/.00 30/13/pc 30/13/c
Atlanta 81/59/.00 82/58/t 82/60/t
Baltimore 63/50/.00 69/48/s 67/51/pc
Boston 44/37/.05 49/39/s 66/51/s
Buffalo 64/52/.06 68/50/pc 68/55/t
Charlotte 82/54/.00 80/61/t 75/55/t
Chicago 81/46/.00 79/58/pc 77/57/pc
Cleveland 71/56/.30 71/54/s 75/55/t
Dallas 79/67/.00 79/68/c 79/66/c
Denver 74/41/.00 80/48/s 71/36/pc
Detroit 72/55/.00 72/54/pc 70/54/t
Honolulu 78/71/.00 83/68/sh 82/68/sh
Houston 81/65/.00 82/70/pc 82/68/c
Indianapolis 77/54/.00 81/60/pc 79/61/t
Las Vegas 75/62/.00 72/51/r 57/44/sh
Los Angeles 59/54/.00 60/46/r 58/44/sh
Miami 79/70/.57 82/70/pc 82/70/pc
Milwaukee 54/45/.00 63/50/pc 63/54/pc
Minneapolis 77/42/.00 78/60/pc 76/60/s
Myrtle Beach 77/57/.00 76/60/t 71/57/t
Nashville 71/55/.26 81/59/pc 83/60/pc
New Orleans 83/65/.00 79/64/pc 80/64/pc
Norfolk 81/64/.04 68/53/pc 64/49/pc
Oklahoma City 75/60/.00 75/60/w 78/61/t
Omaha 76/52/.00 79/60/pc 78/61/pc
Orlando 83/62/.00 83/62/pc 83/64/pc
Phoenix 82/56/.00 82/55/pc 62/44/sh
Pittsburgh 69/55/.04 76/54/pc 75/55/t
Portland, Ore. 53/42/.00 48/38/sh 46/36/sh
St. Louis 75/58/.22 81/63/t 83/65/pc
Salt Lake City 66/55/.00 65/40/t 47/32/sn
San Antonio 79/68/.00 81/67/c 82/68/t
San Diego 60/56/.00 59/52/r 54/47/sh
San Francisco 57/55/.10 54/42/sh 53/43/sh
Seattle 48/39/.28 47/36/sh 45/34/sh
Tampa 84/66/.00 84/59/pc 84/63/pc
Tucson 83/47/.00 81/56/pc 60/43/sh
Washington, DC 59/51/.00 73/50/pc 67/53/pc
City Yesterday Today Tomorrow City Yesterday Today Tomorrow
Amsterdam 50/41/.00 53/46/sh 48/38/sh
Baghdad 69/55/.00 61/41/pc 60/38/s
Beijing 52/37/.00 55/29/pc 45/29/s
Berlin 68/30/.00 64/43/s 59/42/c
Buenos Aires 79/54/.00 78/64/s 83/71/s
Dublin 52/45/.00 47/29/sh 48/35/pc
Frankfurt 70/34/.00 65/44/s 58/41/sh
Hong Kong 81/68/.00 75/67/pc 77/67/pc
Jerusalem 50/39/.28 50/34/s 54/36/s
London 50/46/.00 48/36/sh 50/35/pc
Mexico City 75/46/.00 75/48/sh 74/49/sh
Montreal 39/34/.00 60/43/pc 63/49/sh
Moscow 27/7/.00 37/34/c 39/33/c
Paris 73/39/.00 59/41/sh 52/39/sh
Rio de Janeiro 81/75/.00 83/69/t 84/67/pc
Riyadh 81/61/.00 86/54/s 65/41/s
Rome 63/41/.00 69/51/pc 66/46/pc
San Juan 87/73/.00 83/73/sh 82/72/sh
Tokyo 52/39/.00 55/48/sh 55/45/sh
Warsaw 54/36/.00 61/38/s 58/41/pc
City Yesterday Today Tomorrow City Yesterday Today Tomorrow
WORLD CITIES
River Levels, from 12 p.m. yesterday.
Key: s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sn-snow, sf-snowurries, i-ice.
Philadelphia
66/49
Reading
67/47
Scranton
Wilkes-Barre
69/45
69/45
Harrisburg
69/49
Atlantic City
53/46
New York City
61/46
Syracuse
69/49
Pottsville
68/46
Albany
65/46
Binghamton
Towanda
70/45
68/45
State College
69/49
Poughkeepsie
66/41
79/68
79/58
80/48
84/59
78/60
60/46
55/44
79/62
68/44
47/36
61/46
72/54
82/58
82/70
82/70
83/68
39/26
30/13
73/50
Sun and Moon
Sunrise Sunset
Today 7:11a 7:13p
Tomorrow 7:09a 7:14p
Moonrise Moonset
Today 4:14a 2:32p
Tomorrow 4:49a 3:37p
New First Full Last
March 22 March 30 April 6 April 13
We've now gone
ve straight
days with having
temperatures
well above nor-
mal and that
trend will contin-
ue into next
week. This is our
warmest March
since 1955, but
so far there have
been no record
high tempera-
tures. But out
west, records are
being shattered
this month with
readings near 80
in places like
Chicago, Madison
and Minneapolis.
Since 1872, there
have been only
ten 80 degree
days in Chicago
in March.
Already this
month there
have been three.
Here at home, in
addition to the
warm weather,
our rainfall
decit continues
to grow and is
now at 1.8"
below normal for
the year.
- Tom Clark
NATIONAL FORECAST: A potent storm system will bring rain, mountain snow and gusty winds to a
large portion of the West Coast and Intermountain West today. Locally heavy rain is possible across
portions of southern California, while snow totals in excess of two feet are possible in portions of the
Sierra Nevada. To the east, scattered thunderstorms are expected across a large portion of the
Southeast.
Recorded at Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Intl Airport
Temperatures
Heating Degree Days*
Precipitation
TODAY
Mostly sunny, warm
SUNDAY
Partly
sunny to
cloudy
67
48
TUESDAY
Cloudy
70
50
WEDNESDAY
Partly
sunny
70
50
THURSDAY
Sun, a
shower
70
50
FRIDAY
Showers
possible
65
50
MONDAY
Sun, a
shower
70
50
67

47

C M Y K
AT HOME S E C T I O N C
THE TIMES LEADER SATURDAY, MARCH 17, 2012
timesleader.com
W
ith so many perky little crocuses
popping out premature hellos,
the seasonally affected among
us have a golden opportunity to get right
with our qi early this year.
Ignore the skeptics who say winter
hasnt left us yet. I find all this premature
outdoor frolicking most idoneous.
So what if this was the winter that
wasnt? The previous recent winters that
certainly were indeed justify any of us
saying enowalready.
Yeah, enow. (Archaic for enough.)
And, yeah, idoneous (i.e., appropriate).
And, yeah, qi. (Our essence, baby.)
What? I have plenty more where those
came from, you know.
Please excuse me, but it seems Ive
developed somewhat of an addiction,
and if I dont get it under control soon
Imafraid this can quickly turn into the
spring that wasnt. The spring I never
left my house at night, even with all the
extra daylight, because I just couldnt rip
myself away fromWords With Friends.
Familiar? (Alec Baldwin? Booted froma
plane?) Yes, WWF is the torturous little
app brought to us by Zynga, connecting
the world through games and, arguably,
destroying it, one unwitting victimat a
time.
If I dont break myself away, I fear for
my annual great spring projects list,
which historically has seen only about a
25 percent completion rate by summers
end anyway. Will I dip below10 percent
for the first time in half a decade, all
because of a kind of Scrabble on ste-
roids? And what of the resultant shame
and self-loathing?
This is a cry for help, if anyones listen-
ing. If youre in my vicinity any time soon
the sooner the better and you see me
staring into my phone catatonically, but
seemingly not doing anything, scream,
loudly: Step away fromthe smartphone,
maam. Your life is waiting to be lived.
Now, I might seemwrapped up in
something important, especially if my
fingers are moving and my face reveals
intense concentration, extreme pain or
both, but nowyou knowthe truth. More
than likely, Imjust engaged in some
mortal lexical combat, sometimes across
state lines, with one of my fiercest com-
petitors, perhaps three or four of themat
once.
You might catch some whispery mut-
tering or maybe an occasional louder,
non-repeatable exclamation, say if Har-
vard, as I call my white whale of an
opponent sitting all too highly and
mightily up in Massachusetts, has just
somehowlaid down qi for 84 points
even though I was sure all the qs were
gone. When I start talking to myself?
Thats howyoull knowImfar gone.
Qi, in case you dont knowbut care, is
an essential force or vital energy believed
to exist within all of us, a very breath of
life that perhaps you havent heard of
because of its key place in Chinese, not
Western, medicine. Funny howsuch a
thriving, pulsing little word can actually
suck the life out of those who nowen-
counter it on an almost daily basis.
Yep, any self-respecting Words With
Friends board left on my electronic log-
book usually contains the word qi,
probably lounging somewhere near the
word ka, which hey! is another
spiritual word, this time rooted in an-
cient Egypt. Our ka is akin to our soul,
believed to live within our bodies while
we walk the earth but to survive our
mortal coils after death.
Sure hope so because right nowthis
silly little game is seriously eating away
at at least one struggling soul, so its
good to hear what a fighter this ka is. Its
also good to knowit can rack up some
major points when the chips are down.
So can jo, which did you know? is
just a cute synonymfor sweetheart.
You can use it sarcastically against
someone like me:
Put down the phone, jo. Your rose-
buds are calling. Something about gath-
ering. Harness your qi nowand save
your ka later.
SANDRA SNYDER
W A L L T O W A L L
Whats a word
for this cruel
new addiction?
Reach Sandra Snyder, the editor of At Home,
at 831-7383 or ssnyder@timesleader.com.
K
itchens have become so serious.
All that granite, dark wood and stainless steel. The heart of the home
these days is more like a sleek and severe shrine to haute cuisine.
But kitchens dont have to be as stressful as an episode of Top Chef. Designers
are increasingly turning to retro, whimsical touches such as coffee-cup wallpaper,
bright vintage dishware patterns, and colorful appliances and electronics to bring
the fun back into this increasingly streamlined room.
I think were reaching back to simpler times, when America was kind of on track
and things were looking up. ... Its something that hits an emotional chord, says
Rosanna Bowles, founder and owner of the Seattle-based Rosanna Inc. tableware
line.
Here are some fun and simple ways to put the kitsch back into your kitchen.
By SARAH WOLFE For The Associated Press
See KITCHEN, Page 2C
Just about every home has an eye-
sore.
Maybe its a wonky window or
flooring thats seen better days. It
grates on your nerves, but fixing or
replacing it is too expensive, too im-
practical or too far down the priority
list.
Still, that doesnt mean you have
to look the other way. Weve gath-
ered a few solutions for disguising
some commondecorating problems,
so put on your can-do attitude and
get ready to tackle that trouble spot.
Weird windows
Windows that are oddly shaped or
just plain unattractive can get a
greatly improved view with clever
window treatments.
Bath Township, Ohio, interior de-
signer Alan Garren offers this trick
for hiding those too-short, too-high,
too-plain windows that are common
in ranch homes from the 1960s: Ex-
tendthe windowframe all the way to
the floor, theninstall a two-part shut-
ter. One part covers the window; the
other covers the wall below it. Keep
the bottom part closed, and no one
will know there isnt a window be-
hind it.
Or cover the window with an at-
tractive shade that extends below
the window, suggested Christine
Haught, who operates Christine
Haught Ltd. Interior Design in Bath.
Adding drapery panels oneither side
would give the windows more visual
weight, she said.
Haught took a similar tack on an
80s-style round-top window for
which a client had lost the love. She
mounted a woven wood shade to
cover both the half-round window
and the window below it, and
flanked the shade with silk panels
that extended from ceiling to floor.
The shade didnt entirely obscure
the window when the sun shone
through, but it madethewindowless
apparent.
Uneven walls
A plain coat of paint wont do
muchtohide anunevenwall surface,
but an eye-fooling paint finish can
make the flaws seem to disappear.
In the book The Decorators
Decorating disguises for tough spots
By MARY BETH BRECKENRIDGE
Akron Beacon Journal
MCT ILLUSTRATION
Renters, in particular, are
often stuck with carpet that
doesnt suit their taste.
See DISGUISES, Page 2C
C M Y K
PAGE 2C SATURDAY, MARCH 17, 2012 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
A T H O M E
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EASTER
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28
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7 OUNCE BAG
$
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Pink & Green Egg
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Bunny and Egg
Sculptured Egg
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PRESENT COUPON AT TIME OF SERVICE
For a getaway that has both sleek style
and a comfortable open layout, discover
plan HMAFAPW01236 from Homeplan-
s.com.
Thehomecovers1,498squarefeet of fin-
ished living area on two levels. An unfin-
ished basement provides an additional
1,042 square feet that can be finished later
or used as storage.
The wall of windows in the vaulted liv-
ing-dining room lets light pour into the
space and allows visitors to gaze out on a
scenic view. Get cozy by the fireplace or
step out to the wide deck.
TheU-shapedkitchen, withanadjoining
laundry room, opens to the main living
roomwithaseatedsnackcounter. Notethe
smaller deck beyond the kitchen a great
place to stomp off mud before entering.
With any vacation home, youll want
storage for a heavy winter wardrobe, and
this plandelivers witha wide closet just in-
side the entrance, another in the bedroom
hallway and a large linen closet by the
downstairs bathroom, in addition to bed-
room closets and more linen storage up-
stairs.
The master bedroom to the rear has a
full bath. Two family bedrooms upstairs
share another bathroom, which has a sky-
light.
COOL DIGS
AP ILLUSTRATIONS
This home contains 1,498 square feet of finished living area on two levels. An unfinished base-
ment provides an additional 1,042 square feet that can be finished later or used as storage.
ProblemSolver: 100 Creative An-
swers to Your Most Common
Decorating Dilemmas, author
Sacha Cohen recommends creat-
ing a mottled paint finish with a
masonry roller and matte latex
paint intwocolors that look good
together. The more uneven the
walls, the stronger the contrast
between the paint colors should
be, she says.
Pour a pint of each color into
opposite sides of a roller tray, so
they sit next to each other with-
out mixing too much. Working in
sections about 3 feet square, roll
the roller once through the paint
tray, and then roll the paint onto
the wall in single, long, spaced-
apart strokes.
Once most of the paint has
been transferred from the roller
to the surface, roll over the first
strokes to gently blend the col-
ors. Roll at different angles to cre-
ate a subtle, dappled effect.
Cruddy carpet
Renters, in particular, are often
stuck with carpet that doesnt
suit their taste. You can cover
part of it with a rug, but its pretty
hard to blanket an entire room
without spending just as much as
you would to replace the carpet.
Thats when a little distraction
is called for.
Interior designer and home
stager Lynn Koerner of Interiors
byLynninStreetsboro, Ohio, rec-
ommended starting by anchor-
ing a seating area with an area
rug. Choose a solid-color rug if
the carpeting is busy, or a pat-
terned rug on solid-color carpet-
ing. A budget-friendly approach
is to buy a carpet remnant and
have the carpet store bind the
edges to create a rug, Haught
said.
Then performa little sleight of
hand, Koerner said. Create inter-
est higher in the roomto drawat-
tention up and away from the
floor. She did that in one clients
living room by covering a fire-
place wall in a subtle patterned
wallpaper and creating an eye-
catching arrangement of artwork
and accessories on the mantel.
Ugly wall tile
The durability of ceramic tile is
bothablessingandabane. It lasts
and lasts and lasts, even decades
after your tastes have changed.
Painting it is possible, but its
important to do so carefully so
the paint job doesnt look obvi-
ous.
Before you paint, clean the tile
thoroughly with trisodium phos-
phate, a heavy-duty cleaner sold
at paint stores. Then prime both
tile andgrout witha goodprimer.
Author Cohen recommends
using a paintbrush to cover the
tile edges and grout with the
primer, and a roller on the tiles to
create a smooth finish. Then
paint only the tiles with satin
paint and a gloss roller, applying
in thin layers and avoiding the
grout lines, she says.
When all the layers are dry, roll
over the tiles with a high-gloss
clear enamel, again avoiding the
grout lines.
This isnt the best approach for
surfaces such as shower walls
that are subjectedto a lot of mois-
ture, however. In that case, you
can use a marine-grade coating
such as a polyurethane oil-based
enamel on both tile and grout. If
you want contrasting grout lines,
youll need to paint them in by
hand.
It might just be easier to hide
unsightly tub or shower tile by
hanging a pretty shower curtain,
Haught said. Its also a good way
to hide an unattractive shower
door, she said.
Too-high ceilings
Cathedral ceilings lookgreat in
photographs, but sometimes
they can make a roomfeel too ca-
vernous for comfort.
Haught recommended making
the ceiling less obvious by paint-
ing it the same color as the walls,
but in a lighter tint. Ask the paint
store to mix the ceiling paint in a
half formula of whats usedonthe
walls. And choose flat paint for
ceilings, so it doesnt draw atten-
tion by reflecting light.
You also can create the percep-
tion that the ceiling is lower by
hanging a large-scale lighting fix-
ture that brings the eye down,
she said. Drapery panels that ex-
tend only partway up the tall
walls will also help bring the liv-
ing space down to human scale.
Overbearing fireplaces
Brick fireplaces that cover
most or all of a wall were the rage
a fewdecades ago. Nowthat look
can seem dated and the dark
brick oppressive.
Neither Koerner nor Haught
has any qualms about painting
the brick. Usually a neutral color
is best, Koerner said, so the fire-
place becomes less dominant in
the room.
If you like a more contempo-
rary appearance, consider remov-
ing or changing the mantel or
other moldings, Haught said. She
once filled in the flutings in an
oak fireplace surround and paint-
ed it to create the more updated
appearance her client wanted.
Open layouts
Rooms that are open to one an-
other create a great flow, but they
can make varying the wall colors
difficult. Where does one color
start and the next begin?
In cases like that, its better to
choose a single wall color for all
the adjoining spaces and then
add color to surfaces that arent
walls, Haught said. In an adjoin-
ing kitchen and great room, for
example, you might be able to
add a pop of color in the cabinets
or the backsplash. Or perhaps
choose one accent wall topaint in
a color thats different from the
other walls, she said.
Dont worry about the single
wall color being too boring.
Haught said the continuity cre-
ates a more relaxing backdrop
than one thats chopped up by a
variety of colors.
DISGUISES
Continued from Page 1C
Rooms that are open to
one another create a
great flow, but they can
make varying the wall
colors difficult.
Wallpaper and wallcoverings
Ditch the staid neutrals in fa-
vor of a fun wallpaper, says Gina
Shaw, a designer with Pennsyl-
vania-based York Wallcoverings.
The companys new Bistro
750 collection contains a savory
mix of fanciful fruit, cutlery,
kitchen utensils and coffee cups
in cheery colors such as teal,
salmon and lime.
We really wanted to create
wallpapers that would work in
todays kitchens, where families
gather, eat, drink and socialize
a fun, bistro atmosphere,
Shaw says.
Anthony Carrino and John
Colaneri, hosts of HGTVs
Kitchen Cousins, introduced a
retro feel in one of their recent
kitchen makeovers by attaching
panelingfromInhabit Livingina
basket-weave pattern to the
walls.
After you install the panels,
you can caulk the seams, sand
themdown a bit, put some prim-
er on and add a big pop of color,
Carrino says.
Appliances
Also big in kitchens right now
are retro appliances that look
like they belong in grandmas
1950s kitchen but run like their
modern-day cousins.
Carrino and Colaneri brought
some quirk to a country kitchen
by installing a retro range and
hood set from Colorado-based
Big Chill, which offers fridges,
stoves and even dishwashers in
any color but stainless steel, ac-
cented by chrome trim.
It looks like a classic car. ...
Its like having a Bosch or Frigi-
daire with that kind of depend-
ability but youve got that cool,
retro feel to the whole thing,
Carrino says.
Kitchenaid and some small
manufacturers also now make
blenders, mixers and other ap-
pliances in funky colors such as
pistachio and tangerine to add
panache to countertops.
Countertops
Speaking of counters, dont
think youre relegated to granite,
solidsurface or laminate choices.
Try something fresh and
unique such as the Motivo em-
bossed collection by California-
based CaesarStone, which is pri-
marily advertised as a wall treat-
ment but which Carrino used as
a surface for kitchen counter-
tops.
We saw it and bought it on
the spot, he said. We designed
it into the first kitchen we could
find. It is absolutely gorgeous.
The collection comes in lace
and crocodile patterns and adds
texture to a space by combining
matte and glossy finishes in an
unusual way, Carrino said.
Dishware
Carry the kitschy feel to your
cupboards and display shelves
with dishes bedecked in whimsi-
cal floral or bird patterns, and
glassware in Depression-era
hobnail or Mid-century Modern
lines, Bowles says.
Even a quirky red polka-dot-
ted cookie tray or serving piece,
as featured in Bowles new Flea
Market Chic collection for
spring, can dress up an other-
wise traditional all-white table.
Those looking to save money
can look to family heirlooms,
Bowles says. Shop either your
mothers closet or your grand-
mothers closet and youll find
amazing things, she notes.
Accents
Atlanta-based artist Jordan
Sandlin and her husband, Jeff,
have embraced the kitchen in
their mid-century, split-level
home by doing away with its old
buyer-friendly neutral color
scheme in favor of robins-egg-
blue cabinets, red Formica coun-
tertops, vintage light fixtures
and plenty of thrift-store and es-
tate-sale finds.
A collection of screen-printed
serving trays dating to the1950s
line the wall above the kitchen
cabinets, while a recent find
an original, signed Charlie Har-
per print of two white eagles set
against a light gray background
dresses up a barren wall.
A red-and-white, 1950s formi-
ca table, vinyl chairs, old bour-
bon bottles and vintage plates
further separate their kitchen
from todays pack of granite-
covered kitchen monstrosities,
the couple says.
Jeff Sandlinsaidtheyhopedto
transform the room from a
bland space with no identity to
one we hoped would be better
called a kitsch-en. We feel that
our kitchen is a space that de-
fines our home and design style,
while declaring our enjoyment
and respect for the past.
KITCHEN
Continued from Page 1C
AP PHOTO
Try a fun wallpaper such as this lemon design.
To build this house, order a complete set of
construction documents at www.houseofthe-
week.com or call toll free (866) 772-1013 and
reference the plan number.
Bedrooms: 3
Baths: 2
Upper floor: 456 sq. ft.
Main floor: 1,042 sq. ft.
Total living area: 1,498 sq. ft.
Standard basement: 1,042 sq. ft.
Dimensions: 38-0 x 43-8
Exterior wall framing: 2x6
Foundation options: standard basement,
crawlspace
HMAFAPW01236 DETAILS:
On the shelf
A good home repair manual
is arguably just as valuable to a
toolbox as a hammer or screw-
driver. StephenFanuka andEd-
ward Lewine have teamed up
on one thats easy for a first-
time homeowner to under-
stand and use.
Whats a Homeowner to
Do? combines the know-how
of Fanuka, a Manhattan con-
tractor featured on DIY Net-
works Million Dollar Con-
tractor, and Lewine, author of
the Domains and Ask the
Contractor columns in the
New York Times Magazine.
Their book contains informa-
tion for people fromrawnovic-
es to more seasoned do-it-your-
selfers, addressing everything
from how to hammer a nail to
how to replace a window.
They provide basic informa-
tion on how the parts of a
house are constructed or oper-
ate the roof, the foundation,
the plumbing system, etc.
and include sections titled
The Dark Side to warn of
things to avoid or problems
that might arise. They also of-
fer lots of handy tips you dont
see in every home-repair
manual. Whats a Homeowner
to Do? is published by Artisan
Books and sells for $17.95 in
softcover.
-- McClatchy-Tribune
Information Services
IN BRIEF
C M Y K
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com SATURDAY, MARCH 17, 2012 PAGE 3C
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Baptist
Religious Service Calendar
To AdvertiseYour Church, Call Tara at 970-7374
Apostolic Baptist Bible Episcopal Lutheran Orthodox Presbyterian United Methodist
Apostolic Faith
Tabernacle
536 Village Rd, Orange
Pastor Frank Chorba
333-5172
Sunday School 10 a.m.
Sunday Evening
Worship 7 p.m.
Bible Study
Wednesday 7:30 p.m.
Messages-To-Go Ministry
apostolicfaith.net
MEADE ST.
BAPTIST
50 S. Meade St.
Wilkes-Barre, PA
Chester F. Dudick, Pastor
(570) 820-8355
SUNDAY SCHOOL
9:30 a.m.
WORSHIP SERVICE
10:30 a.m.
PRAYER, BIBLE STUDY
& PIONEER CLUB
Wed 6:30 p.m.
WOMENS FELLOWSHIP
2nd Tuesday of the month
6:30 p.m.
AFTERNOON
FELLOWSHIP
12 noon last Sunday of the
Month
EXPOSITORY PREACHING:
EXPLAINING GODS TRUTH,
ONE VERSE AT A TIME.
Bible
Christ
Community
Church
100 West Dorrance St.
Kingston, PA 18704
Sunday School/ABF
9:30 a.m.
Sun Worship 10:30 a.m.
Radio Ministry
Searching the Scriptures
Sunday 7:30-8:30 AM
WRKC 88.5 FM
website: www.ccchurchtoday.org
Pastor: John Butch
Phone: 283-2202
Cross Creek
Community Church
Sunday Services 9am &
10:45am
With Jr. Church & Nursery
Available.
Wed 6:30 Family Night
with Awana for ages 18
months - 6th grade.
College & Career,
CrossRoads for Teens,
Deaf Ministry, Small
Groups, Mens & Womens
Ministry, Groups.
Celebrate Recovery for
Hurts, Habits, Hang-Ups -
Tuesdays 6:30pm
Discover the difference!
370 Carverton Road,
Trucksville 696-0399
www.crosscreekcc.org
River Of Life
Fellowship
Church
22 Outlet Road
Lehman, PA
675-8109
www.rolfministries.org
Sunday School 9:15am
Service 10:30am
Nursery provided
Thursday Night
6:30pm Bible study
& Youth Groups
Coffee house
Fridays 6 to 9 pm
with live music.
Catholic
Church of
Christ Uniting
MERGED PRESBYTERIAN
& METHODIST
Corner of Market St. & Sprague
Ave. Kingston
570-288-8434
Devotional Line:
570-288-2334
Rev. Dr. Carol Ann Fleming
Rev. Dr. James L. Harring
Morning Worship
10:00 AM
Youth Sunday School During
Worship
Adult Sunday School
11:30 AM
Child Care Provided
Choirs - Children, Adult,
Bell Ringers
Air Conditioned
www.churchofchristuniting.org
PARISH OF ST.
ANDRE BESSETTE
Vigil (Saturday)
4:00 p.m. at Holy Saviour
Worship Site,
56 Hillard St, East End
(570)823-4988
5:30 p.m. at St. Stanislaus
Worship Site,
668 N. Main St., North End
Sunday
8:30 a.m. at St. Stanislaus
Worship Site,
668 N. Main St., North End
10:30 a.m. at Holy Saviour
Worship Site,
56 Hillard St, East End
Weekday Mass
7:00 a.m. at Holy Saviour
Worship Site,
56 Hillard St, East End
8:00 a.m. at St. Stanislaus
Worship Site,
668 N. Main St., North End
Confessions
3:00 p.m. at Holy Saviour
Worship Site,
56 Hillard St, East End
4:30 p.m. at St. Stanislaus
Worship Site,
668 N. Main St., North End
St. Martin
In-The-Fields
3085 Church Rd.,
Mountaintop
Rev. Dan FitzSimmons
CHORAL EUCHARIST
10AM
HEALING SERVICE
Last Sunday
each month
Serving through Faith,
Praise & Good Works
ST. CLEMENT &
ST. PETERS
EPISCOPAL
CHURCH
165 Hanover St., W-B
822-8043
Holy Eucharist 10a.m.
Sunday School 10:00a.m.
WELCOME ALL TO
GROW IN GODS
LOVE
www.stclementstpeter.org
Episcopal
Lutheran
Good Shepherd
Lutheran Church
190 S. Main Street, W-B
Pastor Peter D. Kuritz
Pastor Janel D. Wigen
Saturday Service
6:00 p.m.
Sunday Worship
8:30 a.m. & 11:00 a.m.
SCS
9:45 a.m.
570-824-2991
Holy Trinity
Lutheran Church
813 Wyoming Avenue, Kingston
Saturday
Contemporary Holy Communion 5:30
Sunday
Holy Communion 10:00
Rev. Paul Metzloff
Handicapped Accessible
Messiah
Lutheran Church
453 S. Main Street, W-B
Rev. Mary E. Laufer
Sunday Holy Communion
8:00 and 10:45 a.m.
St. Johns
Lutheran Church
410 S. River St.
Wilkes-Barre
Worship
11 AM
Ofce Phone 823-7139
St. Marks
Lutheran Church
56 S. Hancock St., W-B
Pastor - Rev. Mary Lauffer
Sunday Worship 9:15 a.m.
Sunday School 10:15 a.m.
St. Matthew
Lutheran Church
667 N. Main St., W-B
822-8233
Worship Schedule:
Sun 7:30 a.m. 9:45 a.m.
Sunday School 10:45 a.m.
Adult Bible Class 11:00 a.m.
Rev. Gary Scharrer
Chairlift Available
Missouri Synod
St. Paul
Lutheran Church
474 Yalick Road
(Rt. 118)
Dallas, PA
Rev. Charles Grube
Sat. Worship
5:30pm
Sunday Worship
8:30 am & 11 am
Sunday School
9:45am
570-675-3859
St. Peters
Lutheran Church
1000 S. Main St., W-B
823-7332
Pastor Michael Erickson
Sun. Worship - 9:00 a.m.
Sunday School &
Adult Bible Study
10:30 - 11:30 a.m.
Missouri Synod
Mennonite
Nanticoke
Christian
Fellowship
112 Prospect St.
Sunday Celebration 9:30 a.m.
Sunday School - Sept. - May
9:00 a.m.
Pastor D. Pegarella
735-1700
Nazarene
Mountain View
Church Of The
Nazarene
WE HAVE MOVED!!
667 N. River St., Plains
Pastor Bryan Rosenberg
Sunday Worship 9:30 a.m.
Childrens Church & Child Care
Provided.
570-821-2800
Everyone is Welcome!
Annunciation
Greek Orthodox
Church
32 E. Ross St.,
Wilkes-Barre, PA 18702
Phone: 570-823-4805
Father George Dimopoulos
Sunday Orthos 8:30 a.m.
Divine Liturgy 9:45 a.m.
www.greekorthodox.com
Saint Mary
Antiochian
Orthodox Church
905 South Main Street
Wilkes-Barre
Very Rev, David Hester
Deacon John Karam
Saturday - Great Vespers 6 p.m.
Sunday - Divine Liturgy 10 a.m.
Parish Ofce 824-5016
All Are Welcome
Website:
www.antiochian.org
Presbyterian
First United
Presbyterian
Church
115 Exeter Ave.,
West Pittston
654-8121
Worship 11:00 AM
at St. Cecilias Roman
Catholic Church, Wyo-
ming Avenue, Exeter
Rev. James E.
Thyren, Pastor
Forty Fort
Presbyterian
Church
1224 Wyoming Ave., Forty Fort
Pastor William Lukesh
287-7097
Sunday School 9:15 a.m.
Sunday Worship 10:30 a.m.
6 p.m. Praise Band
Handicap Accessible
Nursery Provided
Air Conditioned
Visitors Welcome
Primitive
Methodist
New Life
Community
Church
570 South Main Rd.,
Mountaintop, PA
868-5155
Pastor Dave Elick
Sunday School
9:30 a.m.
Sunday Worship Service
8:30 a.m. & 10:30 a.m.
Bible Services Thurs. 7 p.m.
All Are Welcome
Seventh Day
Adventist
Seventh Day
Adventist
Church
17 Second Ave., Kingston
Saturday Services
Sabbath School 9:30 a.m.
Children SS 9:45 a.m.
Worship Hour 11 a.m.
Fellowship Lunch 12:15 p.m.
Guests Are Welcome
Every Sabbath
United Methodist
Central United
Methodist
65 Academy Street, W-B
Rev. Dr. Paul C. Amara
SUN. WORSHIP SERVICE
11:15 am
Sunday School 9:45 a.m.
Child Care Provided
For Infants
& Toddlers
822-7246
Dallas United
Methodist
4 Parsonage Street, Dallas
Pastor:
Rev. Robert G. Wood
675-5701
Sunday School 9 a.m.
Church Services
10:30 a.m.
Choir Wed. 7pm
675-0122
Handicapped Accessible
First United
Methodist
West Pittston
A Place Where All Are Welcome
400 Wyoming Ave.
Worship 10 a.m.
Sun School 10:15 a.m.
Rev. Joshua
Masland-Sarani, Pastor
Air Conditioned,
Handicapped Accessible
Nursery Provided
655-1083
Luzerne United
Methodist Church
446 Bennet St., Luzerne
Sunday Worship
10:30 a.m.
Church School
during Worship
Carol E. Coleman
Pastor 287-6231
Shavertown United
Methodist Church
shavertownumc.com
163 N. Pioneer Ave.,
Shavertown
Phone-a-prayer 675-4666
Pastor:
Rev. M. Lynn Snyder
Organ/Choir Director
Deborah Kelleher
Saturday Service 5:30 p.m.
Chapel Service
Sunday Service
9:30 a.m. - Worship Service
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
Prayer & Praise
Service - 2nd Monday
of the month at 7 p.m.
Nursery Care
Available during
Sunday Service
For more information call
the ofce at
570-675-3616
Trucksville United
Methodist
Rev. Marian Hartman, Pastor
Dr. Stephen L. Broskoske,
Director of Music
Making Disciples for
Jesus Christ
Sunday Schedule
8:30 a.m. and 11:00 a.m.
Church School for all ages
9:45 a.m.-10:45 a.m.
Church Road off
Route 309, Trucksville
Phone: 696-3897
Fax: 696-3898
Email:
ofce@trucksvilleumc.com
Unitarian
Universalist
Unitarian Universalist
Congregation of
Wyoming Valley
Worship & Childrens
Program
Sunday 11 a.m.
20 Church Road
Kingston Twp.
For Directions go to:
www.uucwv.org
Unity
Unity: A Center for
Spiritual Living
140 S. Grant St., W-B
Rev. Dianne Sickler
Sunday Service &
Childrens Church
10 a.m.
Church 824-7722
Prayer Line 829-3133
www.unitynepa.com
Loyalville United
Methodist Church
Loyalville Rd., Lake
Township
Sunday Worship
9:30 am
Community Dinner
2nd Saturday Each Month.
Call For Menu
570-477-3521
St. Johns
Lutheran
Nanticoke
231 State St.
www.stjohnslutheranchurch.net
Holy Communion
Sunday 8 am & 9:30 am
Ofce 735-8531
Christian Education
10:30 am
ONE-HOLY-
CATHOLIC-APOSTOLIC
WHERE GODS GRACE IS
TRANSFORMING LIVES
SUNDAY SERVICES:
9:30 AM - Bible Studies for all ages
10:30 AM - Worship &
Rootz Childrens Ministry
6:00 PM - Pulse Youth Ministry
DURING THE WEEK:
Small Group Bible Studies
Vertical Parenting Ministry
Mens Fraternity
JAM - Jr. High Ministries
Cub Scouts
..........................................
1919 Mountain Road
Larksville, PA 18651
Phone (570) 371-4404
www.highpointchurch.info H
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First
Presbyterian
Church
14 Broad St.
Pittston
Sun Worship 9:15 am
Rev. William N Lukesh
All Are Welcome
Living Hope
Bible Church
35 S. Main St.
Plains, PA
Pastor Mark DeSilva
Sunday Service
10:00 a.m.
Sunday School for
all ages 9:00 a.m.
Mid Week Bible
Study every Wed
at 6:30pm
Youth Group Mens
& Womens
Bible Studies
For information call
570-406-4295
www.lhbcpa.org
WHERE HOPE COMES
TO LIFE AND THE
SON ALWAYS SHINES
Catholic
Holy Cross Episcopal Church
373 N. Main Street, W-B
Father Timothy Alleman, Rector
SUNG SUNDAY EUCHARIST - 9:00 AM
SUNDAY SCHOOL - 9:00 AM
SATURDAY HOLY EUCHARIST - 4:30 PM
WEDNESDAY - 7:00 PM
HEALING SERVICE & HOLY EUCHARIST
St. Stephens
Episcopal Pro- Cathedral
35 S. Franklin St., W-B
Holy Communion
8:00
Church School
10:00
Choral Eucharist
10:30
Nursery 9:00 - 12:15
Call 825-6653 for information
about Worship Music
Programs and
Community Ministries
St. John The
Baptist Church
126 Nesbitt St.
Larksville, PA 18651
570-779-9620
A WELCOMING, GROWING,
FAITH COMMUNITY
Saturday 4 p.m.
Sunday
7 a.m., 9 a.m. & 11 a.m.
Ample, Easy Parking
Handicapped Accessible
Confessions:
Saturday 3 p.m.
THE REFORMED
PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH OF
WYOMING VALLEY
1700 Wyoming Ave
Forty Fort
Sunday Morning
Worship, 10:30
Bible School 11:45
Teaching the Reformed Faith
570-693-1918
Firwood United
Methodist Church
Cor. Old River Rd. &
Dagobert St.
Rev. Barbara Pease
Safe Sanctuary Policy
Morning Service
11:00 a.m.
Sunday School
9:45-10:45 a.m.
Handicap Elevator
Available
You are invited to
attend.
823-7721
Orthodox
Holy
Resurrection
Cathedral
Orthodox Church In America
591 N. Main St., Wilkes-Barre
Very Rev. Joseph Martin, Pastor
822-7725
Saturday Vespers 5:00 p.m.
Sunday Divine Liturgy 9:00 a.m.
Feast Day Vespers 6 p.m.
Feast Day Divine
Liturgy 9:00 a.m.
ALL ARE WELCOME
web site: www.oca.org
Holy Trinity
Russian
Orthodox Church
Orthodox Church In America
401 East Main St., W-B
Phone: 825-6540
Rev. David Shewczyk
Sunday Divine Liturgy 9:00 a.m.
Feast Days 9:00 a.m.
Saturday Vespers:
Summer 6:00 p.m. - Winter 4:00 p.m.
St. John Baptist
Orthodox Church
106 Welles St. (Hanover Section)
Nanticoke, PA
570-735-2263
www.stjohnsnanticoke.org
stjohnsnanticoke@gmail.com
Saturday
Great Vespers 4 pm
Sunday
Divine Liturgy 9:30 am
Fr. Adam Sexton
First
Presbyterian
Church
S. Franklin &
Northhampton Sts.,
W-B
10:00 a.m. Worship
Rev. Dr. Robert M.
Zanicky, Minister
Nursery provided
Handicapped Access
John Vaida - Minister of
Music
Pamela Kerns - Christian
Education Director
A Friendly Inclusive,
& Welcoming Church
Audio Sermons
available on web
@ www.fpcwb.com
11:00 am Sunday School
Trinity
Presbyterian
105 Irem Road, Dallas
Sunday School
9:30 a.m.
Worship Service
11:00 a.m.
Pastor Roger Grifth
Nursery Provided
570- 675-3131
Wyoming
Presbyterian
Church
Wyoming Ave.
at Institute St.,
570-693-0594
Laura Lewis, Pastor
Worship Service: 11 a.m.
Sunday School: 10 a.m.
Forty Fort United
Methodist Church
Church Ofce 287-3840
Wyoming & Yeager Ave
Pastor Donald A.
Roberts, Sr.
Handicapped Accessible
9:00 am
Sunday School
(All Ages)
9:45 am
Pre Worship Music
10 am
Traditional Worship
Prayer Line
283-8133
Four Square
Gospel
489 N. Main St.
Wilkes-Barre
570-208-1281
Sunday Service 10:30am
NewHopenepa.com
Pastors Richard &
Susanne Bolt
NEW HOPE CHURCH
Friends &
Quakers
Friends & Quakers
Wyoming Seminary
Lower School
1560 Wyoming Ave.
Forty Fort
570-824-5130
10 a.m.
Adult Discussion
11 a.m. Worship
http://northbranch.
quaker.org
Wyoming United
Methodist
Wyoming Ave
Sunday Worship 10:30 a.m.
Sunday School 10:30 a.m.
693-2821
wyomingumc@netscape.com
Ample Parking
United Church
Of Christ
St. Lukes UCC
471 N. Main St.
Wilkes-Barre 822-7961
Rev. Justin Victor
Sun. Worship 10 am
Sunday School 10:15 am
Communion service
the 1st Sunday of every
month.
RIDES AVAILABLE: CALL
Miner
Congregational UCC
137 Abbott St.
PLAINS
Pastor Joan Mitchell
Sun. Service 9am
Sun School 10am
570-829-6363
SAINT MARYS CHURCH OF THE IMMACULATE CONCEPTION
Our Lady of Fatima Parish
134 S. Washington Street, Wilkes-Barre, PA
(570) 823-4168
Saturday: 4:00PM
Sunday: 8AM, 10AM, 12:10PM & 7PM
Monsignor Thomas V. Banick, Pastor
Christian
Evangelical
Free Church
Fellowship
Evangelical
Free Church
Gods Glory Our Passion
45 Hilderbrandt Rd.
(Near the Dallas Schools)
Sundays
WORSHIP - 10:30 a.m.
Fellowship - 10:00 a.m.
Discipleship Class - 9 a.m.
Wednesday Evenings
Pioneer Clubs (K-5th)
6:30 p.m.
Womens Study - 6:30 p.m.
(Nursery provided For All)
Thursdays
Womens Study - 9:30 a.m.
TNT (Youth 6th-12th Grade)
6 p.m.
For More Information
Please call 675-6426 or
Visit Us Online at
www.fellowshipfreechurch.org
Senior Pastor:
Marc Ramirez
Independent
Second Welsh
Congregational
Church
475 Hazel St., Wilkes-Barre
829-3790
Sunday Services 9:30 a.m.,
10:45 a.m. Sunday School
6 p.m. Sunday Eve
Wednesday 7 p.m. Bible Study
Prayer and Youth Groups
Limited Van Service
Available, Please Call.
Independent...
Fundamental...
Friendly
Wyoming Ave.
Christian
881 Wyoming Ave.,
Kingston
570-288-4855
Pastor Dennis Gray
Come Hear The
Word Of God,
Let It Change
Your Life!
Sunday School
9:45 a.m.
Morning Worship
11 a.m.
Communion
Every Sunday
Wednesday Bible
Study 7:00 p.m.
ELEVATOR
ACCESSIBLE
Baptist
Tabernacle
63 Division St., W-B
Kenneth P. Jordan, Pastor
Chris Hamilton, Youth Pastor
Sunday Worship 9:30 a.m.
Sunday School 10:45 a.m.
570-823-3083
First Baptist
52 E. 8th Street, Wyoming
Sunday School All Ages 9:30
Worship Service 10:45 a.m.
Tues 7 p.m. prayer meeting
Pastor: Jeffery Klansek
693-1754
Visitors Welcome
Luzerne
Assembly of God
649 Bennett St.
570-338-2415
SUNDAY WORSHIP
11AM
COME WORSHIP
CHRIST JESUS.
All Are Welcome.
Slocum Chapel
1024 Exeter Avenue
Exeter, PA 18643
Pastor Guy Giordano
(570) 388-5213
SUNDAY SERVICES
Intercessory Prayer
9:30am
Worship Service
10:00am
Sunday School/
Nursery Provided
WEDNESDAY SERVICES
Bible Study & Prayer 7pm
Visitors Welcome!
Encounter Christ in a
historical church in a
new & relevant way.
Assembly of God
Back Mountain
Harvest Assembly
340 Carverton Rd. Trucksville
Pastor Dan Miller
570-696-1128
www.bmha.org
Saturday Evening Worship
6:30PM
Sunday Morning Worship
8AM 9:45AM & 11AM
Sunday School
9:45AM
Sunday Evening Worship
6:30PM
Wednesday Mid-Week
7:00PM
Other meetings,
ministries and events for
children, youth, men, and women.
Please call for days and times
SUNDAY SERVICES
Celebration Service
9 & 10:45AM
Christian Education
9AM
Kidz Church
10:45AM
Intercessory Prayer
8:15AM
TUESDAY
Womens Bible
Study 10AM
WEDNESDAY
Family Night
Ministries 7PM
THURSDAY
Evidence Youth
Group 6:30PM
570-829-0989
www.wilkesbarreag.com
First Assembly
Of God
424 Stanton Street
Wilkes-Barre, PA 18702
Dallas Baptist
Harveys Lake
Highway, Dallas
639-5099
Pastor Jerry Branch
Sun. Worship 9:15 & 11 am
www.dallasbaptist
church.org
First Baptist
Church
Water Street Pittston
654-0283
Rev. James H. Breese, Pastor
Sunday Worship
9:30 a.m.
Childrens Sun School
9:30 a.m.
Adult/Teen Sun School
10:45 a.m.
Bible Study/Prayer
Meeting Wed at 7:15 p.m.
Chairlift Available
Nebo Baptist
Church of
Nanticoke
75 Prospect St.
Nanticoke 735-3932
Pastor Tim Hall
www.nebobaptist.org
Worship Service
Sun. 8:30 a.m. & 11 a.m.
Sun School 9:45 a.m.
Nursery Junior Church
Youth Groups
Great Bible Seminars
Everyone is Welcome
Welsh Bethel
Baptist
Parish & Loomis St. W-B
Sunday Worship 10 a.m.
Sunday School 11:15 a.m.
Bible Study Wed 6:30 p.m.
Pastor Don Hartsthorne
822-3372
First Baptist
48 S. River St. W-B
Pastor Shawn Walker
822-7482
Sunday Service at 11 a.m.
Sunday School 10:00 a.m.
The Place for a New Beginning..
Mt. Zion
Baptist Church
105 HILL ST...WILKES-BARRE
Sunday School 9:30 a.m.
Sunday Service 11 a.m.
We offer Childrens Church
Prayer Service Wednesday 7p.m.
Bible Study Wednesday 8 p.m.
Rev. Michael E. Brewster, Pastor
Christian
Church Of
Christ Uniting
Grace
Community
Church
A Bible Teaching Ministry
Memorial Hwy. Dallas
Sunday Services:
11 a.m., 6 p.m.
(570) 675-3723
www.gracechurchdallas.org
ELLISON CARPET
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570-823-5199
189 Barney Street Wilkes-Barre
Barney Inn
OPEN SATURDAY
AND SUNDAY AT 11AM
ST. PATRICKS DAY
MENU
HAM OR CORNED BEEF & CABBAGE
Served with Parsley Potatoes & Carrots
& Salad
$9.95
CORNED BEEF ON RYE
w/ Potato Salad
$6.95
HOMEMADE IRISH STEW
w/ Salad & Bread
$8.95
SATURDAY, 3/17 AT 8:30 PM
WYOMING VALLEY PIPE
AND DRUM BAND
SATURDAY 3/17, 4PM
DJ - THE BIG MAN
OAK ST PITTSTON TWP.
654-1112
SAT. 8:30-12:30
St. Pattys Party
SOMETHIN
ELSE
The Most Rev. Joseph C.
Bambera, bishop of Scranton,
will be the principal celebrant
and homilist
for a solemn
pontifical Mass
on the Solem-
nity of Saint Jo-
seph at 7 p.m.
Monday in the
Oblates of St.
Joseph Semina-
ry Chapel, Route 315, Laflin.
Concelebrating with Bishop
Bambera will be the Oblates of
St. Joseph priests and clergy
of the Diocese of Scranton. Li-
turgical music for the Mass
will be provided by the adult
choir of St. Joseph Marello
Parish, Pittston. Masses will
also be celebrated on the Feast
Day in the seminary chapel at
7 and 10:30 a.m. The Feast Day
festivities mark the conclu-
sion of the annual nine-day no-
vena honoring the spouse of
the Blessed Virgin Mary and
the earthly father of Jesus.
This years novena was
preached by the Rev. Robert
Dwyer of the Diocese of Syra-
cuse, N.Y.
The Rev. Paul A. McDon-
nell, seminary rector, invites
all the area faithful to partici-
pate in the Feast of St. Joseph,
patron of the Universal
Church. For further informa-
tion, contact the seminary of-
fice at 654-7542.
Feast Day Mass
to be celebrated
by bishop Monday
Bambera
ASHLEY: The Holy Name
Society of St. Leo the Great/
Holy Rosary Parish, 33 Man-
hattan St., will hold a ham
and kielbasa game party on
Sunday in the church hall.
Games begin at 1p.m.
The kitchen will be open.
Pirohy, halushki, clamchowd-
er, mushroomsoup, and tuna
hoagies will be available.
HANOVERTWP.: Gorzkie
Zale, a traditional Polish
Bitter Lamentations, will be
held at 3 p.m. March 25 at
Exaltation of the Holy Cross
Church, 420 Main Road,
Buttonwood section.
The Rev. Kevin Mulhern,
pastor, invites everyone to
this Lenten service. Acollec-
tion will be taken and given
to charity. Alight reception
will followin the church hall.
IN BRIEF
See BRIEFS, Page 4C
Tuesday
DALLAS: Pro-life group, 6:30 p.m.,
Gate of Heaven Church. For
information, call Donna Baloga
at 239-9404.
March 28
LUZERNE: Knights of Columbus,
Our Lady of Czestochowa Fourth
Degree Assembly 1928, 7:30
p.m., Assumpta Council Home,
57 Parry St. All members are
urged to attend.
MEETINGS
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PAGE 4C SATURDAY, MARCH 17, 2012 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
Editors note: Childrens birthdays (ages 1-16) will be published
free of charge. Photographs and information must be received
two full weeks before your childs birthday. Include your childs
name, age and birthday, parents, grandparents and great-grand-
parents names and their towns of residence, any siblings and
their ages. Send to: Times Leader Birthdays, 15 North Main St.,
Wilkes-Barre, PA 1871 1-0250.
C O M M U N I T Y N E W S
Carly Rae Kappler, daughter of
Chas and Leah Kappler, Dallas, is
celebrating her ninth birthday
today, March 17. Carly is a grand-
daughter of Joseph and Jean
Mikush, Kingston, and Charles
and Nell Ann Kappler, Saddle
Lake. She has a brother, Charlie,
6.
Carly R. Kappler
Alyssa Evans, daughter of John
and Nicole Evans, West Nanti-
coke, is celebrating her sixth
birthday today, March 17. Alyssa
is a granddaughter of Alan and
Karen Sklaney, Glen Lyon, and
David and Ruth Evans, Tyrone.
She is a great-granddaughter of
Pauline Sklaney, Alden. Alyssa
has a sister, Olivia, 3.
Alyssa Evans
Dominic Lingle, son of Gina and
Ted Lingle, Plymouth, is cele-
brating his first birthday today,
March 17. Dominic is a grandson
of Holly and Ted Lingle, Larks-
ville; Debbie Worth, Plymouth;
and Tom Worth, Wilkes-Barre. He
is a great-grandson of Joan
Malicki and the late John Mal-
icki, Jennie Worth and the late
Thomas Worth and June Krei-
dler and the late Raymond Krei-
dler, all of Wilkes-Barre, and
Edward Lingle Sr. and the late
Gertrude Lingle, Larksville.
Dominic Lingle
Ava Marie Shaffer, daughter of
Luke and Wendy Shaffer, Wyom-
ing, is celebrating her third
birthday today, March 17. Ava is a
granddaughter of Russel and
Lorain Bilby, West Wyoming, and
William and MaryEllen Shaffer,
Exeter. She is a great-grand-
daughter of Gerald Shaffer,
Harding.
Ava M. Shaffer
Nathan Reilly Wright, son of
Jessica Sprow and Shawn
Wright, Hanover Township, is
celebrating his fourth birthday
today, March 17. Nathan is a
grandson of Gary and Doreen
Sprow, Nanticoke, and Nancy
Wright and the late Francis
Wright, Bear Creek. He is a
great-grandson of Nadine and
Earl Speary, Lois Sprow, Jeanne
Sprow and the late William
Sprow.
Nathan R. Wright
Michael David Gober Jr., son of
Michael and Millissa Gober,
Luzerne, is celebrating his fourth
birthday today, March 17. Michael
is a grandson of Patricia and
Gary French, Larksville; Ray-
mond Davenport and Judy
Gober, both of Luzerne; and the
late Robert P. Gober.
Michael D. Gober
HAPPY BIRTHDAY!
For further information or direc-
tions, call 823-6242.
KINGSTON: Christ Commu-
nity Church, 100 W. Dorrance
St., will conduct Invite AFriend
Sunday at 10:30 a.m. Sunday.
There will be a special message
to share and welcoming of new-
comers. Following the service,
there will be a free luncheon
featuring various soups and a
chili cook-off. All are invited to
attend.
For more information, visit
the website at ccchurchtoday.org
or call 283-2202.
LAFLIN: The sixth annual
Celebration of Divine Mercy will
be April 15 at the Oblates of St.
Joseph Seminary.
This years theme is Be Apos-
tles of Divine Mercy. Principal
celebrant of the Feast of Mercy
will be the Rev. Paul McDonnell,
seminary rector.
The sacrament of reconcil-
iation will be at 1p.m. The vener-
ation of the Image of Divine
Mercy will be at 2 p.m. followed
by the Holy Sacrifice of the
Mass.
At 3 p.m., there will be the
exposition of the Blessed Sacra-
ment Chaplet of Divine Mercy in
Song, rosary, benediction, and
blessing of the first class relic of
St. Faustina.
Remarks by Cathy Mack,
cennacle leader of Eucharistic
Apostles of Divine Mercy, will be
given prior to the service.
LUZERNECOUNTY: St
Johns Lutheran Church, 231
State St., Nanticoke, and St.
Marks Lutheran, Pond Hill,
announce their remaining
Wednesday evening Lenten
service schedule. At each 7:30
p.m. service, a different crafts-
man in the life of Christ will be
represented as noted in the
schedule: Wednesday, The Car-
penter, St. Marks, Pond Hill;
March 28, The Stone Mason, St.
Johns, Nanticoke.
For more information, contact
the Rev. North at 735-8531or
735-1760.
MOUNTAINTOP: Christ
United Methodist Church, 175 S.
Main Road, is conducting the
following activities:
Orders for Easter lilies are
being taken until March 30. Each
plant costs $7.50 and will be
delivered for Easter Sunday. The
plant may be dedicated in honor
or in memory of someone. Leave
an envelope in the basket in the
narthex or give it directly to Judi
Stanton.
Nursery care is expanding to
cover infants and toddlers from
9:30 a.m. until noon. Children
are welcome in the sanctuary at
any time, but there will be a
nursery throughout the second
service. Volunteers are needed.
The following items are
needed for the food bank: may-
onnaise, coffee, peanut butter,
jelly, canned vegetables, tomato
soup, pudding and gelatin mixes.
For information on any of the
activities, call the church office
at 474-6060 between 9 a.m.-2
p.m. weekdays.
The parsonage phone number
is 474-6645.
NANTICOKE: The annual St.
Josephs Table Celebration will
be Monday at St. Faustina Par-
ish, (main site) Hanover Street,
Nanticoke.
The celebration begins with
evening prayer at 6 p.m. in the
church and is followed by a cov-
ered dish meal in the lower level
church hall. Parishioners are
asked to bring a covered dish to
share. Food may be brought to
the church hall after 5 p.m.
This event is sponsored by the
Blessed Teresa of Calcutta Social
Concerns Ministry. All are wel-
come and, if you can, wear red in
celebration of St. Josephs Feast
Day.
NANTICOKE: St. Faustina
Kowalska Parish, South Hanover
Street, will hold its monthly
bingo March 25 at St. Marys
Hall, 1030 S. Hanover St.
Doors open at 12:30 p.m. with
early birds at 1:45 p.m. and regu-
lar games at 2 p.m.
There will be door prizes, cash
prizes and refreshments.
PLYMOUTH: SS. Peter and
Paul, Ukrainian Catholic
Church, 20 NottinghamSt., is
conducting the following Lenten
services:
Stations of the Cross are
conducted by the Rev. Roman
Petryshak at 7 p.m. Wednesdays.
Presanctified Gifts services
are at 9 a.m. Fridays.
All are welcome to attend.
SUGARNOTCH: The Chris-
tian Mothers and Women Orga-
nization of Holy Family Church
has announced the following
events:
Abake sale will be conduct-
ed March 31after the 4 p.m.
Mass and after the 8:30 and11
a.m. Masses on April 1.
ASpiritual Retreat will be at
The Villa of Our Lady in Mount
Pocono on April 29. Those at-
tending are asked to meet at the
Holy Family Church parking lot
by 7:30 a.m. The bus will leave at
7:45 a.m. and return at 4:30 p.m.
Cost is $40 per person and in-
cludes breakfast, lunch and bus.
For reservations or information,
call Fran Romanowski at 678-
7169. Deadline is April 22.
SWEET VALLEY: The Sweet
Valley Church of Christ, 5439
Main Road, has announced the
following events:
Avideo presentation titled,
Streetlight Missions, will be
conducted at 6 p.m. Sunday. The
video shows the heartbreaking
story of young girls and women
rescued fromsex trafficking in
America. For information, call
477-2320.
Jews for Jesus, an agency
that proclaims that Jesus is the
Messiah of Israel and Savior of
the world, will be at the church
at 7 p.m. April 4. Topic will be
the Model Seder with Jhan Mos-
kowitz. There is no admission
but a free-will offering to benefit
Jews for Jesus will be taken. For
information, call 477-2320.
BRIEFS
Continued fromPage 3C
The parish communities of St. Robert Bellarmine at St. Aloysius Church and Exaltation of the Holy Cross will present the Living Stations of
the Cross as part of their Lenten observance. The Stations will be presented at 7 p.m. March 30 at Exaltation of the Holy Cross Church, But-
tonwood section of Hanover Township, and at 7 p.m. April 6, Good Friday, at St. Aloysius Church, Barney and Division streets, Wilkes-Barre.
Both performances are open to the public free of charge. The presentation is under the direction of Debbie Castrignano, Alicia Kravabloski,
Karen Mather, Judy McCarroll, Tony Wozinski and Colleen Zupancic, who have been working with the youth of both parishes to present this
dramatic and moving depiction of Christs passion, death, and resurrection. Shown are those participating in the Living Stations, from left,
first row: The Rev. Kevin Mulhern, pastor of both churches; the Rev. Joseph Kumor, Christa Gumbravich, Destiny Castrignano, Nicholas Zaro-
la, Genevieve Thomas, Peter Shay, Sarah Dule, Kailey Kravabloski. Second row: Mary Kate Hannon, Meighan Hannon, Bridget Hannon, Dayna
Belsky, Derek Belsky, Jared Fulginiti, Anthony Zarola, Jacob Kwiatkowski, Lauren Blazaskie, Bethany Hannon. Third row: Nicholas McCarroll,
Grace Sipler, Hope Sipler, Erica Shay, Tyler Benson, Nicholas James, Jeremy Heiser, Andrew McCarroll, Daniel Jones, Sarah Bottger, Mary
Slusser, Tony Wozinski. Absent: Alyssa Arnone, Chester Brennan, Joseph Brennan, Eric Flower, Kaelee Kane, Kiara Langan, Melissa Steininger,
Cindy Vo, and Michael Zarola.
Living Stations scheduled at St. Aloysius and Exaltation of the Holy Cross
C M Y K
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com SATURDAY, MARCH 17, 2012 PAGE 5C
D I V E R S I O N S
UNIVERSAL SUDOKU
MINUTE MAZE
W I T H O M A R S H A R I F & T A N N A H H I R S C H
CRYPTOQUOTE
GOREN BRIDGE
B Y M I C H E A L A R G I R I O N & J E F F K N U R E K
JUMBLE
B Y H O L I D A Y M A T H I S
HOROSCOPE
CROSSWORD
PREVIOUS DAYS SOLUTION
HOW TO CONTACT:
Dear Abby: PO Box 69440, Los Ange-
les, CA 90069
For more Sudoku go to www.timesleader.com
O N T H E W E B
Dear Abby: One
of my sisters best
friends, Tara, has
had a crush on me
since we were kids.
Shes 21 and Im 25.
My sister always
knew about it, but
never told me. I had a crush on Tara,
too, but I was too shy to tell her.
I moved out of state when I turned
18, but Tara still lives there. She and
my sister keep in touch. Now that Im
back in town, Tara has been coming
to visit. We have no physical contact,
only verbal. During one of the visits
she confessed her crush and so did I.
The trouble is, Tara got married a
year ago and has a 2-month-old baby
with her husband. She says she hasnt
been happy in her marriage and has
filed for a divorce. We want to be
together, but want to wait for the
divorce to be final before starting a
relationship.
I suspect that shes only divorcing
her husband to be with me. Am I be-
ing too quick to judge? Is it a bad idea
to be with her? Should we just remain
friends? I need a womans opinion.
Uncertain in Texas
Dear Uncertain: If you and Tara are
serious about not starting a relation-
ship until her divorce is final, then
the answers to your questions will
become apparent during that process.
But please remember, ending her
marriage will probably not cause her
husband to vanish into the ether. Be-
cause hes the father of her baby, he
will be part of your lives forever.
Dear Abby: My husband, Simon, is
a workaholic. I didnt know him long
before I married him, which was a
mistake. He never adapted to being
part of a couple. His rewards all came
from work the paychecks, kudos
from clients and fellow employees,
and others saying what a good provid-
er he was. He bought our kids love
with presents, not presence.
He was gone at dawn, came home
after the kids were in bed, volun-
teered to work on his off days and
usually stayed later than scheduled.
He kept busy with everyone and
everything except us. I raised our
children alone and worked outside
the home as well. I took them to
their sports events, extra activities
and to the synagogue. We didnt need
the extra money, but he was never
satisfied, always wanting more. I was
faithful to a ghost, living alone and
crying for too long. After 30 years I
realized I didnt miss him anymore.
He had broken my heart and frac-
tured my dreams.
Its too late for me to start again
and find love. Abby, tell young wives
to trust their hearts and priorities.
They deserve warmth, not cold cash.
Alone Now by Choice in
Pennsylvania
Dear Alone: What a sad story. You
married someone who may have had
such an overwhelming fear of poverty
that he sacrificed the joys of family
for financial security. While you may
not have had romance, Im sure you
have earned the love of your children.
Allow yourself to enjoy what your
husband has accumulated.
And if youve had enough of soli-
tude, consider this: Its never too late
to find love. People of every age do it
every day, but first you need to find it
within yourself. Unless you do, your
bitterness will spill over.
DEAR ABBY
A D V I C E
Man fears womans divorce is triggered by a mutual childhood crush
To receive a collection of Abbys most memo-
rable and most frequently requested po-
ems and essays, send a business-sized, self-
addressed envelope, plus check or money
order for $3.95 ($4.50 in Canada) to: Dear
Abbys Keepers, P.O. Box 447, Mount Mor-
ris, IL 61054-0447. (Postage is included.)
ARIES (March 21-April 19). You are
becoming wiser as you get to
know yourself better. Research
your past, and compare it to
the present. Family pictures and
mementos will be a springboard
to broaden your sense of who
you are.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20). You
often get accused of being stub-
born. However, that same fixed
quality may be your saving grace
today. Besides, you have earned
the right to be unreasonable
once in a while.
GEMINI (May 21-June 21). Youll be
attracted to the tasks that take a
herculean effort. You may have
the sense that a job is too over-
whelming to even know where
you should start.
CANCER (June 22-July 22). Each
new generation has the sense
that what worked for their par-
ents isnt going to work for them.
And theyre mostly right. But
past generations still have much
to offer you today, so listen up.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). Taking
care of household tasks is more
challenging than you thought it
would be. Devote twice as much
time to getting your surround-
ings in order than you think it
will take.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). You
strive to listen more than you
talk. People love it when you
listen to them. You might be the
only one who makes someone
feel heard.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). Your aes-
thetic is honed now, and youll
be most attracted to people who
have similarly strong tastes and
a definitive style. However, be
sure to look deeper.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). Gender
differences will be a part of
todays story. You may real-
ize your own subtle biases and
make slight adjustments to your
approach with the opposite sex.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21).
Using your charming social grac-
es may just help you get exactly
what you want. However, youll
only be able to keep your object
of desire if you also happen to
be qualified to receive it.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). A
project is coming together, and
there are many people around
you who could help you move
things along. The one whose
skills are equal to your own will
be the perfect partner.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). Your
body is getting stronger, and
because of this you also feel
more in control of your emotions
than you did earlier in the week.
There will be a sense that a pres-
sure is off you for now.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). Loved
ones may have expectations
that you are unaware of, and its
important to be open. Inquire
about what they think should
happen and what they are really
wanting from you.
TODAYS BIRTHDAY (March 17).
People will like what youre doing
and giving. Receiving compli-
ments with grace takes practice,
and youll get plenty of it this
year. Your connection with a
special friend grows continually
stronger. Spring brings different
ways of getting around and new
rituals and habits. Taurus and
Sagittarius people adore you.
Your lucky numbers are: 5, 1, 24,
19 and 40.
C M Y K
PAGE 6C SATURDAY, MARCH 17, 2012 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
T E L E V I S I O N
310 Allegheny Street, White Haven
570.956.1174 570.443.8769
Located in That Corner Mall
Wednesday 5pm - 8pm
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3 Hrs. Free Parking At Participating Park & Locks with Theatre Validation
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(Parenthesis Denotes Bargain Matinees)
All Showtimes Include Pre-Feature Content
Avoid the lines: Advance tickets available from Fandango.com
Rating Policy Parents and/or Guardians (Age 21 and older) must
accompany all children under 17 to an R Rated feature
*No passes accepted to these features.
**No restricted discount tickets or passes accepted to these features.
***3D features are the regular admission price plus a surcharge of $2.50
D-Box Motion Seats are the admission price plus an $8.00 surcharge
First Matinee $5.25 for all features (plus surcharge for 3D features).
SPECIAL EVENTS
Special Midnight Show of the Hunger Games
Thursday Night 22nd / Friday Morning March 23rd
Ken Davis - Fully Alive Comedy Tour
Thursday, March 22nd at 7:00pm
Sunday, March 25th at 2:00pm
Rascal Flatts: Changed
Thursday, April 5th at 8:00pm
The Metropolitan Opera: Manon LIVE
Saturday, April 7 at 12:00pm only
The Metropolitan Opera: La Traviata
Saturday, April 14 at 12:55pm only
Grateful Dead Meet Up 2012
Thursday, April 19th at 7:00pm
*21 Jump Street - R - 120 min
(1:30), (2:00), (4:00), (4:30), 7:00, 7:30,
9:30, 10:00
***John Carter in 3D - PG13 -
140 min
(1:30), (4:20), 7:10, 10:00
John Carter in DBox Motio
Seating - PG13 - 140 min
(1:30), (4:20), 7:10, 10:00
John Carter - PG13 - 140 min
(1:50), (4:40), 7:30, 10:20
Silent House - R - 95 min
(2:00), (4:10), 7:25, 9:30
A Thousand Words - PG13 - 100 min
(1:55), (4:05), 7:10, 9:20
***The Lorax in 3D - PG - 105 min
(1:40), (4:00), 7:00, 9:15
The Lorax - PG - 105 min
(2:05), (4:30), 7:20, 9:35
Project X - R - 100 min
(2:15), (4:30), 7:20, 9:40
Gone - PG13 - 105 min
(2:10), (5:00), 7:30, 9:50
Act of Valor - R - 110 min
(1:50), (4:15), 7:35, 10:00
***Ghost Rider: Spirit of Vengeance
in 3D PG-13 - 105 min
7:20, 9:40
***Journey 2: The Mysterious Island
in 3D - PG - 105 min.
(1:40), (4:25)
Safe House - R - 125 min.
(1:50), (4:40), 7:15, 10:05
The Vow - PG13 - 115 min.
(2:05), (4:30), 7:30, 10:10
FRIDAY, MARCH 16TH - WEDNESDAY, MARCH 21ST ONLY!
You must be 17 with ID or accompanied by a parent to attend R rated features.
Children under 6 may not attend R rated features after 6pm
NO PASSES
21 JUMP
STREET
21 JUMP STREET (XD) (R)
2:05PM, 4:50PM, 7:35PM, 10:20PM
21 JUMP STREET (DIGITAL) (R)
12:15PM, 1:10PM, 3:00PM, 3:55PM, 5:45PM,
6:40PM, 8:30PM, 9:25PM
A THOUSAND WORDS (DIGITAL) (PG-13)
12:10PM, 2:30PM, 4:50PM, 7:10PM, 9:30PM
ACT OF VALOR (DIGITAL) (R)
1:30PM, 4:30PM, 7:30PM, 10:30PM
ARTIST, THE (DIGITAL) (PG-13)
12:40PM, 8:35PM
CHRONICLE (DIGITAL) (PG-13)
12:55PM, 3:35PM, 5:50PM
DR. SEUSS THE LORAX (3D) (PG)
12:20PM, 1:00PM, 2:30PM, 3:15PM, 4:45PM,
5:30PM, 7:00PM, 7:50PM, 9:15PM, 10:00PM
DR. SEUSS THE LORAX (DIGITAL) (PG)
1:45PM, 4:05PM, 6:15PM
FRIENDS WITH KIDS (DIGITAL) (R)
1:15PM, 4:20PM, 7:15PM, 10:15PM
GONE (DIGITAL) (PG-13)
1:40PM, 4:00PM
JEFF WHO LIVES AT HOME (DIGITAL) (R)
12:05PM, 2:15PM, 4:25PM, 7:40PM, 9:55PM
JOHN CARTER (3D) (PG-13)
1:25PM, 2:25PM, 4:25PM, 5:25PM, 7:25PM,
8:25PM, 10:25PM
JOHN CARTER (DIGITAL) (PG-13)
3:25PM, 6:25PM, 9:35PM
JOURNEY 2: THE MYSTERIOUS ISLAND (3D) (PG)
(12:00PM, 2:20PM, 4:55PM DOES NOT PLAY ON
WED. 3/21)
PROJECT X (DIGITAL) (R)
12:30PM, 2:45PM, 5:10PM, (6:20PM DOES NOT
PLAY ON THURS. 3/22), 7:30PM, (8:40PM DOES
NOT PLAY ON THURS. 3/22), 10:05PM
RAMPART (DIGITAL) (R)
11:55AM, 2:35PM, 5:05PM, 7:45PM, 10:35PM
SAFE HOUSE (DIGITAL) (R)
(4:15PM DOES NOT PLAY ON SUN. 3/18), 9:45PM
SILENT HOUSE (DIGITAL) (R)
12:35PM, 2:50PM, 5:00PM, 7:55PM, 10:10PM
THIS MEANS WAR (DIGITAL) (PG-13)
(12:45PM DOES NOT PLAY ON SUN. 3/18), 7:05PM
VOW, THE (DIGITAL) (PG-13)
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(570) 379-3176
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take Rt. 93 S. 5 ml. from
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6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30
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(CC)
(TVG)
Austin &
Ally (CC)
(TVG)
E!
The Voice The Battles, Week 2 Deciding
which vocalists will advance. (TVPG)
The Hot Chick (PG-13, 02) Rob Sch-
neider, Anna Faris. Premiere.
Khloe &
Lamar
Khloe &
Lamar
The Soup Chelsea
Lately
ESPN
(4:30) SportsCenter (N) (Live)
(CC)
College Wrestling NCAA Championship, Final. From St. Louis.
(N) (Live) (CC)
SportsCenter (N) (Live) (CC)
ESPN2
Womens College Basketball NCAA Tournament, First
Round. (N) (Live) (CC)
Basketball The Fab Five (CC) College GameDay
(CC)
SEC Storied
FAM
Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire (5:30) (PG-13, 05)
Daniel Radcliffe, Rupert Grint, Emma Watson.
Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix (PG-13, 07)
Daniel Radcliffe, Rupert Grint, Emma Watson.
FOOD
Restaurant Stakeout Diners,
Drive
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Drive
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Drive
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Drive
Diners,
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Drive
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FOX Report (N) Huckabee (N) Justice With Judge
Jeanine (N)
The Five Journal
Editorial
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News
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Honeymoon for One (11) Nicollette
Sheridan, Greg Wise. (CC)
Chasing Leprechauns (12) Adrian Pas-
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Chasing Leprechauns (12) Adrian Pas-
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Swamp People (CC)
(TVPG)
Swamp People (CC)
(TVPG)
Swamp People (CC)
(TVPG)
Swamp People (CC)
(TVPG)
Swamp People
Avenged (TVPG)
Swamp People (CC)
(TVPG)
H&G
House
Hunters
Hunters
Intl
House
Hunters
Hunters
Intl
Dream
Home
Genevieve Color
Splash
Interiors
Inc (TVG)
House
Hunters
Hunters
Intl
House
Hunters
Hunters
Intl
LIF
Trapped (R, 02) Charlize Theron,
Courtney Love, Stuart Townsend. (CC)
Home Invasion (11) Haylie Duff, Lisa
Sheridan. Premiere. (CC)
Abducted (07) Sarah Wynter,
Andrew Walker. (CC)
MTV
16 and
Pregnant
Jersey Shore We
Are Family (TV14)
Hustle & Flow (R, 05) Terrence Howard. A
pimp wants to rap his way out of his dead-end life.
ATL (PG-13, 06) Tip Harris. Four
Atlanta teens face challenges.
NICK
Victorious Victorious Big Time Movie (12) Kendall
Schmidt. (CC)
How to
Rock (N)
Bucket,
Skinner
Fred That 70s
Show
That 70s
Show
Friends
(TV14)
Friends
(TV14)
OVAT
The Lost World (5:30) (01) Bob
Hoskins, James Fox, Tom Ward.
Dazed and Confused (R, 93) Jason London,
Wiley Wiggins, Sasha Jenson.
Dazed and Confused (R, 93)
Jason London.
SPD
Monster Jam (N) SPEED
Center
AMA Supercross Racing Indianapolis. (N) (Live) NASCAR Perfor-
mance
Dumbest
Stuff
SPIKE
Jurassic Park III (PG-13, 01) Sam
Neill, William H. Macy, Tea Leoni.
The Rock (R, 96) Sean Connery. Premiere. Alcatraz
Island terrorists threaten to gas San Francisco.
The Rock (R, 96)
, Ed Harris
SYFY
Leprechaun 2
(5:00) (R, 94)
Leprechaun 3 (R, 95) Warwick Davis,
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Leprechauns Revenge (12) Billy Zane,
William Devane. Premiere.
Leprechaun (R, 92)
Warwick Davis.
TBS
Big Bang
Theory
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2012 NCAA Basketball Tournament Indiana vs. Vir-
ginia Commonwealth. (N) (Live)
2012 NCAA Basketball Tournament Louisville vs.
New Mexico. Third round. From Portland, Ore. (N)
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Young Cassidy (65) Rod Taylor,
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Alice Adams (35) Katharine Hep-
burn, Fred MacMurray. (CC)
The Magnificent Amber-
sons (42) (CC)
Present-
ing Lily
TLC
Dateline: Real Life
Mysteries (TV14)
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TNT
2012 NCAA Basketball Tournament Vanderbilt vs.
Wisconsin. Third round. From Albuquerque, N.M.
2012 NCAA Basketball Tournament Baylor vs. Colo-
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Leverage (CC) (TV14)
TOON
Advent.
Time
Advent.
Time
Garfield Gets Real (07) Voices of Jason
Marsden, Frank Welker.
God/Devil King of
the Hill
King of
the Hill
Family
Guy (CC)
Aqua
Teen
Metaloca-
lypse
TRVL
Extreme Terror Rides
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Toy Hunters (CC)
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TVLD
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M*A*S*H
(:23)
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Improve.
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Love-Ray-
mond
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targeted. (TVPG)
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VH-1
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Jeepers Creepers (R, 01) Gina Phil-
ips, Justin Long, Jonathan Breck.
Jersey Shore (CC)
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(TV14)
WE
Ghost Whisperer Do
Over (TVPG)
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WGN-A
Law & Order: Crimi-
nal Intent (TV14)
Americas Funniest
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NBA Basketball Philadelphia 76ers at Chicago Bulls.
From the United Center in Chicago. (N) (CC)
News at
Nine
30 Rock
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Scrubs
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Beaten
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YOUTO
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lina
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lina
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lina
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lina
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lina
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lina
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lina
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lina
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lina
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Green Lantern (PG-13, 11) Ryan
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Boxing Matthew Macklin vs. Sergio Marti-
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HBO2
The
X-Files
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Hereafter (6:45) (PG-13, 10) Matt Damon,
Ccile de France, Jay Mohr. Death touches three
people in different ways. (CC)
East-
bound &
Down
Enlight-
ened
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Bored
to Death
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Make-
America
Curb Your
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asm
Entourage
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MAX
Cop Out
(4:30) (R,
10)
Housesitter (6:20) (PG, 92)
Steve Martin, Goldie Hawn,
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Big Stan (8:05) (R, 07) Rob Sch-
neider. A con artist learns martial arts to
protect himself in jail. (CC)
Hall Pass (R, 11) Owen
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Eurotrip (04) Scott Mech-
lowicz, Michelle Trachtenberg,
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(:35) Forbidden Science Feature
4: Dark Secrets A compilation
of episodes. (TVMA)
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The Heart Specialist (6:15) (R, 06)
Wood Harris. iTV. A doctor bets he can
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The Switch (PG-13, 10) Jennifer
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Holy Rollers (R, 10)
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Peep World (R, 10)
Michael C. Hall, Sarah Silver-
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Spike (R, 08) Edward Gusts. A
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Albino Farm (R, 09) Chris
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6 a.m. CNBC Options Action
6 a.m. FNC FOX and Friends Sat-
urday(N)
7 a.m. 28 Today Travel; inside the
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7 a.m. 53 The Hunt Doctor
8 a.m. 16 Good Morning America
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9 a.m. 22 CBS This Morning Eating
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10 a.m. FNC Bulls and Bears
10:30 a.m. FNC Cavuto on Business
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1 1 a.m. 44.2 State of Pennsylvania
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TV TALK TODAY
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com SATURDAY, MARCH 17, 2012 PAGE 1D
412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale
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06 Subaru Impreza ...........$11,900
02 Chevy Trailblazer.......... $5,995
02 VW Cabrio Convertible.. $4,995
06 Dodge Dakota Ext ........$12,995
04 Ford Explorer ..............$10,995
05 Jeep Liberty................$11,595
03 Jeep Liberty................. $8,995
05 Kia Sedona................... $7,995
07 Ford Focus 4Dr ............. $8,995
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MANY MORE TO CHOOSE FROM
04 Mazda RX8...............................
$
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06 Kia Spectra 54K.......................
$
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08 Chevy Cobalt 61K...................
$
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07 Chevy Aveo 84K.....................
$
6,950
00 VW Passat Wagon 72K .
$
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06 Dodge Stratus 4 Cyl............
$
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04 Pontiac Grand Am 4 Cyl
$
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04 Hyundai Elantra 84K........
$
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04 Chevy Malibu........................
$
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04 Hyundai Sonata.................
$
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04 Suzuki Forenza 86K...........
$
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00 Mitsubishi Eclipse..........
$
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00 Buick Regal 86K....................
$
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02 Pontiac Sunre Moonroof..
$
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01 Nissan Sentra......................
$
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99 Dodge Stratus 4 Cyl............
$
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04 Chevy Venture.....................
$
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02 Ford Windstar 55K Miles.....
$
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03 Chevy Tracker 4x4.........
$
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4x4s & Vans
GAS SAVER SPECIALS
The Volkswagen Passat has long found
favor among automotive buyers who favor
European handling and aesthetics at some-
thing less than BMW, Mercedes-Benz or
Audi prices.
And while the Passats upscale aesthetic
differentiated the car from its midsize com-
petition, it was trounced by less-expensive
offerings in the U.S. market. In 2011, Volk-
swagen sold 22,835 Passats. Compare that
to the Toyota Camry, which found 33,506
buyers in December 2011 alone.
So, when Volkswagen unveiled its new
Passat, the company also lowered the
price. Most models cost thousands less
than previous models in a bid to match
lower-cost competitors from Hyundai and
Kia.
As a result of the market shift, Volkswa-
gen no longer offers the Passat sold in
Europe. Instead, the company designed a
Passat with an eye towards pleasing Amer-
ican consumers, much the way Toyota and
Honda have with the Camry and Accord:
by building a larger specific model for
North America.
The new Passat, built in a new plant in
Chattanooga, Tenn., is five inches longer
and marginally wider and taller than the
model it replaces. The cars handsomely
conservative slab-sided styling pays divi-
dends inside. Once seated there, youll find
the cabin is exceptionally roomy, without
any styling compromises to block the view.
The firm, supportive seats are wide, and
legroom is generous.
The instrument panel has a generally
pleasing appearance, with the same sensi-
bly conservative design that characterizes
the exterior.
But longtime VW fans will find that the
accountants have been at work.
Like their tonier Audi cousins, the mate-
rial quality of Volkswagen interiors have
set the standard for the industry, something
other automakers benchmark. But the Pas-
sats price cut has dictated otherwise.
While the interior is well assembled, its
feel is no longer a cut above the competi-
tion. Pop open the trunk, and youll find
that its not fully lined. Lift up the trunk
floor handle, and youll find a temporary
spare tire. Most people wont mind; theyll
gladly trade on the little things to save a lot
of money.
Thats why Volkswagen bid auf wieder-
sehen to the 200-horsepower turbocharged
4-cylinder offered in previous Passats as
the base engine. In its place is the 170-hp
2.5-liter engine five-cylinder engine that
powers the smaller Jetta. Unless youre
price-sensitive, opt for the pricier 280-hp
V-6 or the turbocharged 140-hp 2.0-liter
four-cylinder diesel engine. Both offer the
power youd expect without a penalty in
fuel economy.
A six-speed manual transmission is
offered with the five-cylinder and the
diesel engines. A six-speed automatic is
offered on the five-cylinder, while Volk-
swagens six-speed automated manual dual
clutch gearbox is the sole transmission
with the V-6 and optional on diesel models.
Volkswagen of America sent a turbo-diesel
in top-of the-line SEL trim for testing.
Of the different engines offered, I would
encourage you to try the diesel. While
rated at a mere 140 hp, it possesses 236
foot-pounds of torque, making this engine
feel faster than it is. Power is adequate off
the line, but the turbo quickly spools up,
making the engine feel lively and furnish-
ing good power at speed. The transmission
rumbled unhappily at slower speeds, but
seemed responsive otherwise.
Considering my lead foot, fuel economy
is impressive, with a mix of city and high-
way driving returning mileage that would
make hybrid owners jealous.
Handling feels less European than before,
with steering that lacks road feel, although
its crisp, nicely weighted and feels ade-
quately responsive. The suspension ably
absorbs most bumps, although theres a
surprising amount of softness revealed dur-
ing cornering or after hitting a large bump,
which can cause the rear to step sideways.
Overall, the new Passat lacks some of the
old models grace, while still being fairly
poised. Road noise is well-suppressed, as
is diesel clatter.
Prices start at $19,995 with the five-
cylinder engine and manual transmission.
Standard gear includes Bluetooth, dual-
zone climate control, six airbags and elec-
tronic stability control. Expect to start at
least five or six grand higher for the V-6 or
diesel engines.
While longtime VW enthusiasts might
view this as a car fit only for a warehouse
club, the 2012 Passat should attract those
who value space, good fuel economy, con-
servative looks and decent handling at a
price will capture the hearts.

2012 VOLKSWAGEN PASSAT:


Engine: Turbocharged 2.0-liter four-
cylinder diesel
Wheelbase: 110.4 inches
Length: 191.6 inches
Weight: 3,396 pounds
Cargo space: 15.9 cubic feet
EPA rating (city/highway): 30/40 mpg
Fuel consumption: 44 mpg
Fuel type: Diesel
Base price, base model: $19,995
(excluding destination charge)
Base price, test model: $32,195
As tested: Not available

ABOUT THE WRITER


Larry Printz is automotive editor at The
Virginian-Pilot in Norfolk, Va. He can be
reached at larry.printzpilotonline.com.

(c)2012 The Virginian-Pilot (Norfolk, Va.)


Visit The Virginian-Pilot (Norfolk, Va.) at
pilotonline.com
Distributed by MCT Information Services
LARRY PRINTZ
W H E E L S
The 2012 Volkswagen Passat
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120 Found
FOUND GIFT CARD:
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Call to describe.
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FOUND
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FOUND young adult
cat, long hair, top
1/2 grey bottom 1/2
white, gold eyes.
Kingston 570-288-
3153 after 2 pm
FOUND. DOG
Pomeranian mix.
Floppy ears. Black
and tan. Female
about 7 yrs old.
Near Ricketts Glen.
570-696-9809
FOUND. Schnauzer
gray & white. Male.
Black collar and flea
collar. Very well
groomed. Call SPCA
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Berwick Area
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replacement on
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mation, please visit
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Section On our web-
site: berwicksd.org.
LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE IS HEREBY
GIVEN that Letters
Testamentary have
been granted in the
Estate of HELEN W.
JACOBS LOGAN
a/k/a HELEN J.
LOGAN., Late of
Kingston, Pennsyl-
vania, who died
January 28, 2012.
All persons indebted
to said Estate are
required to make
payment and those
having claims or
demands to present
the same without
delay to Basil G.
Russin, Executor.
BASIL G. RUSSIN,
ESQUIRE
1575 Wyoming Ave.
Forty Fort, PA 18704
135 Legals/
Public Notices
ESTATE NOTICE
NOTICE IS HEREBY
GIVEN THAT Letters
Testamentary have
been granted in the
Estate of MARIE
HORNICK, a/k/a
MARIE C.
HORNICK, late of
Duryea, Luzerne
County, Pennsylva-
nia, who died on
February 7, 2012.
All persons indebt-
ed to said estate
are required to
make payment and
those having claims
or demands to
present same with-
out delay to Euge-
nia Marie Hunt, 629
Foote Avenue,
Duryea, Pennsylva-
nia, 18642, or her
attorney, Michelle L.
Guarneri, Esquire,
48 S. Main Street,
Ste. 506, Pittston,
Pennsylvania,
18640
MICHELLE L.
GUARNERI,
ESQUIRE
48 S. Main Street,
Ste. 506
Pittston, PA 18640
(570) 654-4626
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135 Legals/
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ESTATE NOTICE
Letters Testamen-
tary were granted
on the Estate of
ALYCE C.
LOPUHOVSKY
A/K/A ALYCE
LOPUHOVSKY,
deceased late of
Swoyersville Bor-
ough, Luzerne
County, Pennsylva-
nia, who died on
February 5, 2012.
Carol Ann Dreve-
nak a/k/a Car-
olann Drevenak
and Joseph
Lopuhovsky, Co-
Executors. Frank J.
Aritz, Esquire, 23
West Walnut Street,
Kingston, PA 18704,
attorney. All per-
sons indebted to
said Estate are
required to make
payment and those
having claims and
demands to pres-
ent same without
delay to the Execu-
tor or Attorney.
FRANK J. ARITZ,
ESQUIRE
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AUTO
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Pickup
570-301-3602
570-301-3602
CALL US!
TO JUNK
YOUR CAR
472 Auto Services
$ WANTED JUNK $
VEHICLES
LISPI TOWING
We pick up 822-0995
LINE UP
A GREAT DEAL...
IN CLASSIFIED!
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
WANTED
Good
Used
Cars &
Trucks.
Highest Prices
Paid!!!
Call V&G
Anytime
574-1275
WANTED
Cars & Full Size
Trucks. For prices...
Lamoreaux Auto
Parts 477-2562
LAW
DIRECTORY
Call 829-7130
To Place Your Ad
Dont Keep Your
Practice a Secret!
310 Attorney
Services
BANKRUPTCY
FREE CONSULT
Guaranteed
Low Fees
Payment Plan!
Colleen Metroka
570-592-4796
Atty. Mike Anthony
Vehicle Accidents
D.U.I., Bankruptcy
Reasonable Fees
825-1940 W-B
Bankruptcy $595
Guaranteed LowFees
www.BkyLaw.net
Atty Kurlancheek
825-5252 W-B
310 Attorney
Services
DIVORCE No Fault
$295 divorce295.com
Atty. Kurlancheek
800-324-9748 W-B
Say it HERE
in the Classifieds!
570-829-7130
Free Bankruptcy
Consultation
Payment plans.
Carol Baltimore
570-822-1959
SOCIAL SECURITY
DISABILITY
Free Consultation.
Contact Atty. Sherry
Dalessandro
570-823-9006
To Place Your Ad, Call 829-7130
150 Special Notices
250 General Auction
150 Special Notices
250 General Auction
Octagon Family
Restaurant
375 W Main St, Plymouth, PA 18651
570-779-2288
SA SATURDA TURDAY Y & & SUNDA SUNDAY Y SPECIAL SPECIAL
$13.95 $13.95 for a Large Plain
Pie & a Dozen Wings
Dine in only. Valid Saturday & Sunday.
One coupon per party/table.
Present coupon upon ordering.
Home of the Original O-Bar Pizza
All New Building & Remodeling Materials
HUGE 1-DAYAUCTION
OUR SUPPLIER IS SENDING US EXTRA
INVENTORY FOR THIS AUCTION
SPECIAL - SPRING FEVER
REMODELING AUCTION
14 Terrace Drive
Conklin, NY 13748
Saturday, March 24, 2012
10:00 AM
A SUPER AUCTION OF ALL TYPES OF
NEWHOME IMPROVEMENT ITEMS &
LOTS OF NEWITEMS
Including: (35) Complete New Kitchen Sets,
Granite Counter Tops, HUGE Quantity Hardwood
(Finished & Unfinished), Lots of Laminate
Flooring, Porcelain & Ceramic Tile, Fancy Center
Entrance Doors, Interior and Exterior Doors,
Vanities, Plywood & Sheet Material, Dimensional
Lumber, Stone Veneer, Paneling, Railroad Ties,
Vinyl Siding, Architectural Asphalt Roofing
Shingles, Molding, Cross Country Trailer,
Quantity of Name Brand Tools, Etc. Removal
with 2 Hours of End of Auction. Terms: 13%
Buyers Premium, 3% Waived for Payment in
Cash or Good Check. Payment in Full Day of
Auction.
Auctioneers & Licensed Real Estate
Brokers
MEL MANASSE & SON
Whitney Point, NY 14862
607-692-4540/1-800-MANASSE
www.manasseauctions.com
135 Legals/
Public Notices
LEGAL NOTICE
DEADLINES
Saturday
12:30 on Friday
Sunday
4:00 pm on
Friday
Monday
4:30 pm on
Friday
Tuesday
4:00 pm on
Monday
Wednesday
4:00 pm on
Tuesday
Thursday
4:00 pm on
Wednesday
Friday
4:00 pm on
Thursday
Holidays
call for deadlines
You may email
your notices to
mpeznowski@
timesleader.com
or fax to
570-831-7312
or mail to
The Times Leader
15 N. Main Street
Wilkes-Barre, PA
18711
For additional
information or
questions regard-
ing legal notices
you may call
Marti Peznowski
at 570-970-7371
or 570-829-7130
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
135 Legals/
Public Notices
PUBLIC NOTICE
Public notice is
hereby given that
the Luzerne County
Board of Elections &
Registration shall
observe the follow-
ing schedule of
meetings in consid-
eration of the April
24, 2012 General
Primary:
Monday, 03/19/2012
at 5:00 pm
Regular Business -
Recess
Monday,
04/02/2012
at 5:00 pm
Regular Business -
Recess
Monday, 04/16/2012
at 5:00 pm
Regular Business -
Recess
Monday,
05/07/2012 at
5:00 pm
1st Opportunity for
Certification of
Election Adjourn
or Recess
Thursday,
05/10/2012 at 5:00
pm
2nd Opportunity for
Certification of
Election Adjourn
All meetings shall be
held at the Luzerne
County Emergency
Management
Agency, 185 Water
Street Wilkes-Barre,
PA 18702.
BY ORDER,
H. Jeremy Packard,
Chairman
Thomas J. Baldino,
PhD
John C. Ruckno
John F. Newman
Barbara J. Williams
Luzerne County
Board of Elections &
Registration
ATTEST:
Leonard C. Piazza III
Director of Election
Collect cash, not dust!
Clean out your
basement, garage
or attic and call the
Classified depart-
ment today at 570-
829-7130!
135 Legals/
Public Notices
LEGAL NOTICE
The West Side
Career and Techni-
cal Center solicits
bids from responsi-
ble vendors until
Monday, March 25,
2012, at 1:00 P.M.
at which time same
will be opened in
the Administrative
Directors Office of
said school, 75
Evans St., Kingston,
PA 18704-1899 for
the following:
General and Edu-
cational Supplies
and Equipment
for the 2012-
2013 school
year.
Specifications and
all rules governing
bidding may be
obtained by con-
tacting the schools
business office dur-
ing normal school
hours. The school
reserves the right
to reject any and all
bids or to waive any
informality in the
bids received.
Elaine Pallone,
Secretary
ESTATE NOTICE
NOTICE IS HEREBY
GIVEN that Letters
Testamentary have
been issued to
Sharon Molyneux of
Shavertown,
Luzerne County,
Pennsylvania,
Executrix of the
Estate of Bette Von-
savage a/k/a Bette
Lilohas Vonsavage
a/k/a Gloria Lilohas
Vonsavage a/k/a
Florence Lilohas
Vonsavage, De-
ceased, who died
on February 7, 2012,
late of the Borough
of Kingston,
Luzerne County,
Pennsylvania. All
creditors are
requested to pres-
ent their claims and
all persons indebted
to the decedent will
make payment to
the aforementioned
Executrix or her
attorney.
ROSENN, JENKINS
& GREENWALD, LLP
15 South Franklin St.
Wilkes-Barre, PA
18711-0075
150 Special Notices
ADOPT
Adoring couple
longs to adopt your
newborn. Promis-
ing to give a secure
life of unconditional
and endless love.
Linda & Sal
1 800-595-4919
Expenses Paid
How about that
cupcake tree!
Only an in
house pastry
chef does it
justice!
bridezella.net
DO YOU ENJOY
PREGNANCY ?
Would you like
the emotional
reward of helping
an infertile
couple reach
their dream of
becoming
parents?
Consider being a
surrogate. All
fees allowable by
law will be paid.
Call Central
Pennsylvania
Attorney,
Denise Bierly,
814-237-7900
GUARDIAN
ANGEL
Hardtimes uponyou?
Down on your luck?
Need help & dont
know where to turn?
We care and are
willing to help. Serious
problems only. Write
to: PO Box 3238, W.
Pittston, PA 18643
WANTED
Good
Used
Cars &
Trucks.
Highest Prices
Paid!!!
Call V&G
Anytime
574-1275
MONTY MONTY SA SAYS YS
Welcome to
summer...Amazing.
Gentle back to
work...The Gulf is
only 9 months
away...
P PA AYING $500 YING $500
MINIMUM
DRIVEN IN
Full size 4 wheel
drive trucks
ALSO PAYING TOP $$$
for heavy equip-
ment, backhoes,
dump trucks,
bull dozers
HAPPY TRAILS
TRUCK SALES
570-760-2035
542-2277
6am to 8pm
380 Travel
2012
GROUP
CRUISES
New Jersey to
Bermuda
Explorer of
the Seas
09/09/12
New York
to the
Caribbean
Carnival Miracle
10/13/2012
New York to the
Caribbean
NCLs Gem
11/16/2012
Includes Trans-
portation to Piers
Book Early, limited
availability!
Call for details
300 Market St.,
Kingston, Pa 18704
570-288-TRIP
(288-8747)
Black Lake, NY
Come relax & enjoy
great fishing &
tranquility at its finest.
Housekeeping
cottages on the water
with all the
amenities of home.
NEED A VACATION?
Call
Now!
(315) 375-8962
daveroll@black
lakemarine.com
www.blacklake4fish.com
LOOKING FOR
others who
booked a trip
going to England,
Netherlands &
Belgium May 18-
28. Anyone with
information as to
the status of the
trip or how to
obtain a refund
please contact me
at stomko @veri-
zon.net Your help
is greatly appreci-
ated.
406 ATVs/Dune
Buggies
HAWK `11 125CC
Auto, key start, with
reverse & remote
control. $700. OBO
570-674-2920
HONDA`09 REKON
TRX 250CC/Electric
shift. Like New.
REDUCED
$3,650.
(570) 814-2554
POLARIS`03
330 MAGNUM
Shaft ride system.
True 4x4. Mossy
oak camo. Cover
included. $3,000
negotiable. Call
570-477-3129
409 Autos under
$5000
DODGE `02 NEON
SXT. 4 door. Auto-
matic. Yellow with
black interior. Power
windows & locks.
FWD. $3,500. Call
570-709-5677 or
570-819-3140
FORD `97 WINDSTAR
GL. 71K miles.
3.8V6 A1 condition.
Auto, cruise, tilt. All
power accessories.
Traction control. 3
remotes. Like new
tires & brakes.
Reduced to
$2,950. 570-313-
8099/457-5640
LEOS AUTO SALES
92 Butler St
Wilkes-Barre, PA
570-825-8253
01 FORD F150 XLT
Pickup Triton V8,
auto, 4x4 Super
Cab, all power,
cruise control,
sliding rear window
$6,250.
04 CHEVY MALIBU
CLASSIC
4 door, 4 cylinder,
auto, good condi-
tion. 120k. $3,250
Current Inspection
On All Vehicles
DEALER
OLDSMOBILE 98 88
Runs great. $2800.
All power, power
windows & door
locks, security sys-
tem, cruise control
570-740-2892
SUZUKI 06
SWIFT RENO
4 cylinder. Automat-
ic. 4 door. $4,800
(570) 709-5677
(570) 819-3140
412 Autos for Sale
ACME AUTO SALES
343-1959
1009 Penn Ave
Scranton 18509
Across from Scranton Prep
GOOD CREDIT, BAD
CREDIT, NO CREDIT
Call Our Auto Credit
Hot Line to get
Pre-approved for a
Car Loan!
800-825-1609
www.acmecarsales.net
11 AUDI S5 CONV.
Sprint blue, black
/ brown leather
int., navigation,
7 spd auto turbo,
AWD
09 CHEVY IMPALA LS
SILVER
09 CHRYSLER SEBRING
4 door, alloys,
seafoam blue.
07 CHRYSLER PT
Cruiser white,
auto, 4 cyl
07 BUICK LUCERNE
CXL, silver, grey
leather
07 HYUNDAI SONATA
GLS, navy blue,
auto, alloys
06 VW PASSAT 3.6
silver, black
leather, sunroof,
66k miles
06 MERCURY MILAN
PREMIER, mint
green, V6, alloys
05 VW NEW JETTA
gray, auto, 4 cyl
04 NISSAN MAXIMA LS
silver, auto,
sunroof
03 DODGE STRATUS SE
Red
03 AUDI S8 QUATTRO,
mid blue/light grey
leather, naviga-
tion, AWD
01 VOLVO V70 STATION
WAGON, blue/grey,
leather, AWD
99 CHEVY CONCORDE
Gold
SUVS, VANS,
TRUCKS, 4 X4s
09 DODGE JOURNEY
SXT white, V6,
AWD
08 JEEP LIBERTY SPORT
green, auto, 4x4
07 CADILLAC SRX
silver, 3rd seat,
navigation, AWD
07 DODGE DURANGO
SLT, blue, 3rd seat
4x4
06 CHEVY TRAILBLZAER
LS, SILVER, 4X4
06 FORD EXPLORTER
LTD black/tan
leather, 3rd seat,
4x4
06 BUICK RANIER CXL
burgundy & grey,
leather, sunroof,
AWD
06 PONTIAC TORRENT
black/black
leather, sunroof,
AWD
06 DODGE GRAND
CARAVAN ES, red,
4 dr, entrtnmt cntr,
7 pass mini van
05 FORD ESCAPE XLT
Silver V6, 4x4
05 HYUNDAI SANTAFE
silver, V6, AWD
05 DODGE DAKOTA
CLUB CAB SPORT,
blue, auto, 4x4
truck
04 DODGE RAM 1500
QUAD CAB SLT SILVER,
4 door, 4x4 truck
04 JEEP GRAND
CHEROKEE LAREDO
blue 4x4
04 FORD EXPLORER XLS
Blue V6 4x4
04 FORD FREESTAR,
blue, 4 door, 7
passenger mini
van
04 JEEP GRAND
CHEROKEE OVERLAND
graphite grey,
2 tone leather,
sunroof, 4x4
03 SATURN VUE
orange, auto,
4 cyl, awd
03 DODGE DURANGO RT
red, 2 tone black,
leather int, 3rd
seat, 4x4
03 FORD EXPLORER
SPORT TRAC XLT, 4
door, green, tan,
leather, 4x4
03 FORD WINDSTAR LX
green 4 door, 7
pax mini van
02 FORD F150 SUPER
CREW LARIET white,
grey leather 4
door, 4x4 truck
02 CHEVY TRAILBLAZER
LS white,V6 auto
4x4
02 NISSAN PATHFINDER
SE, Sage, sun
roof, autop, 4x4
02 CHEVY 2500 HD
reg. cab. pickup
truck, green,
auto, 4x4
01 CHEVY BLAZER
grey, 4 door, 4x4
01 FORD EXPLORER
sport silver, grey
leather, 3x4 sunroof
01 CHEVY BLAZER
black, 4 door
01 FORD RANGER
XLT X-CAB, red,
auto,V6, 4x4
00 CHEVY BLAZER LT
black & brown,
brown leather 4x4
99 ISUZI VEHIACROSS
black, auto,
2 door AWD
96 CHEVY BLAZER,
black 4x4
89 CHEVY 1500,
4X4 TRUCK
ONE
YEAR
WARRANTY
On Most Models
lousgarage.com
570-825-3368
AUDI `01 A6
QUATTRO
123,000 miles, 4.2
liter V8, 300hp, sil-
ver with black
leather,heated
steering wheel, new
run flat tires, 17
rims, 22 mpg, Ger-
man mechanic
owned.
$6,495. OBO.
570-822-6785
412 Autos for Sale
AUDI `04 A6 QUATTRO
3.0 V6. Silver. New
tires & brakes. 130k
highway miles.
Leather interior.
Heated Seats.
$7,500 or best offer.
570-905-5544
AUDI `05 A4 1.8T
Cabriolet Convert-
ible S-Line. 52K
miles. Auto. All
options. Silver.
Leather interior.
New tires. Must
sell. $17,500 or best
offer 570-954-6060
AUDI `96 QUATTRO
A6 station wagon.
143k miles. 3rd row
seating. $2,800 or
best offer. Call
570-861-0202
09ESCAPE XLT $11,495
10Suzuki sx4 $11,995
09JourneySE $12,495
07 FOCUS SE $8995
08 ESCAPE 4X4 $11,995
10 FUSION SEL $13,995
Full Notary Service
Tags & Title Transfers
BENS AUTO SALES
RT 309 W-BTwp.
Near Wegmans
570-822-7359
BMW `99 M3
Convertible with
Hard Top. AM/FM. 6
disc CD. 117 K miles.
Stage 2 Dinan sus-
pension. Cross
drilled rotors. Cold
air intake. All main-
tenance records
available. $11,500
OBO. 570-466-2630
BMW 98 740 IL
White with beige
leather interior.
New tires, sunroof,
heated seats. 5 cd
player 106,000
miles. Excellent
condition.
$5,300. OBO
570-451-3259
570-604-0053
CADILLAC 08 DTS
EXTRA CLEAN &
SHARP!
$20,900
WARRANTY
MAFFEI AUTO
SALES
570-288-6227
CHEVROLET `08
IMPALA
Excellent condition,
new tires, 4 door,
all power, 34,000
miles. $13,500.
570-836-1673
CHEVROLET 06
CORVETTE
CONVERTIBLE
Silver beauty, 1
Owner, Museum
quality. 5,900
miles, 6 speed. All
possible options
including Naviga-
tion, Power top.
New, paid $62,000
Must sell
REDUCED!
$39,500 FIRM
570-299-9370
CHEVY 07 IMPALA LS
Only 40k miles
$12,280
560 Pierce St.
Kingston, PA
www.wyoming
valleymotors.com
570-714-9924
CHEVY 08 IMPALA LT
Alloys, CD player
power seat
$9440
560 Pierce St.
Kingston, PA
www.wyoming
valleymotors.com
570-714-9924
CHEVY 08 IMPALA LTZ
Metallic gray, sun-
roof, leather, Bose
Satellite with CD
radio, heated seats,
traction control, fully
loaded. Remote
Start. 50k miles.
$14,975 or trade.
(570) 639-5329
CHRYSLER 04
SEBRING CONVERTIBLE
Silver, 2nd owner
clean title. Very
clean inside &
outside. Auto,
Power mirrors,
windows. CD
player, cruise,
central console
heated power
mirrors. 69,000
miles. $4900.
570-991-5558
DODGE `02 DURANGO
SPORT
4.7 V8, 4WD, 3rd
row seat, runs
good, needs body
work 570-902-5623
DODGE 07 CALIBER
AWD, Alloys, PW
& PL, 1 Owner
$12,450
560 Pierce St.
Kingston, PA
www.wyoming
valleymotors.com
570-714-9924
412 Autos for Sale
11 DODGE
DAKOTA CREW
4x4, Bighorn 6 cyl.
14k, factory
warranty.
$21,999
11 HYUNDAI
ELANTRA 3950
miles. Factory
Warranty. New
Condition $17,499
10 Dodge Nitro
SE 21k alloys,
cruise, tint, factory
warranty $18,599
09 JEEP LIBERTY
LIMITED Power
sunroof. Only 18K.
Factory Warranty.
$19,199
09 DODGE
CALIBER SXT
2.0 AutomatiC
24k Factory
Warranty!
$11,399
08 SUBARU
Special Edition
42K. 5 speed
AWD. Factory
warranty.
$12,499
08 CHRYLSER
SERBIN
CONV TOURING
6 cyl. only 32k
$11,999
08 CHEVY
IMPALA
LS 4 door, only
37K! 5 Yr. 100K
factory warranty
$11,199
05 HONDA CRV EX
One owner. Just
traded. 65K.
$12,799
06 FORD FREESTAR
Rear air, 62k
$7999
02 DODGE
CARAVAN 87k,
7 passenger
$4499
01 LINCOLN TOWN
CAR Executive 74K
$5,599
CROSSROAD
MOTORS
570-825-7988
700 Sans Souci
Highway
W WE E S S E L L E L L
F O R F O R L L E S S E S S ! ! ! !
TITLE TAGS
FULL NOTARY
SERVICE
6 MONTH WARRANTY
FORD `91 MUSTANG
GT Hatchback. 5.0
Auto. Rebuilt drive-
train. New profes-
sional paint job.
Good looking. Runs
strong. $5,500
570-283-8235
FORD `93 MUSTANG
Fox Body 5.0L. 5
speed. Dark blue.
White top & interior.
Totally original.
$6,500. Call
570-283-8235
FORD `95
CROWN VICTORIA
V-8, power windows
& seats, cruise con-
trol. Recent inspec-
tion. Asking $1,000.
Call 570-604-9325
FORD 02 MUSTANG
GT CONVERTIBLE
Red with black
top. 6,500 miles.
One Owner.
Excellent Condi-
tion. $17,500
570-760-5833
35
40
MPG
lousgarage.com
570-825-3368
HONDA `09 CIVIC LX-S
Excellent condition
inside & out. Garage
kept. Regularly
serviced by dealer,
records available.
Option include alloy
wheels, decklid
spoiler, sport seats,
interior accent light-
ing (blue), Nose
mask and custom
cut floor mats. Dark
grey with black inte-
rior. 56K highway
miles. REDUCED!
$13,300. Call
570-709-4695
HONDA 01 CIVIC
Sedan, gold exterior
5-speed great on
gas comes with a 3-
month power train
warranty $ 4,500.
SPRING
STREET AUTO
570-825-3313
HONDA 03 ACCORD EX
Leather,
moonroof
$9,977
560 Pierce St.
Kingston, PA
www.wyoming
valleymotors.com
570-714-9924
HONDA 05 CIVIC
COUPE
4 cylinder, auto
Gas $aver!
$9,450
WARRANTY
MAFFEI AUTO
SALES
570-288-6227
SATURN 07 ION2
Newly inspected,
good condition.
Dealer price $7500.
Asking $5500.
570-574-6880
412 Autos for Sale
HONDA 05 CIVIC
Sedan, red exterior,
102k, automatic,
reliable & economi-
cal car comes with
a 3-month power
train warranty Clean
title. $5,999.99
SPRING
STREET AUTO
570-825-3313
HONDA 08 ACCORD
4 door, EXL with
navigation system.
4 cyl, silver w/
black interior. Satel-
lite radio, 6CD
changer, heated
leather seats, high,
highway miles. Well
maintained. Monthly
service record
available. Call Bob.
570-479-0195
VITOS
&
GINOS
Wanted:
WANTED
ALL JUNK
CARS,
TRUCKS &
HEAVY
EQUIPMENT
DUMPTRUCKS
BULLDOZERS
BACKHOES
Highest
Prices
Paid!!
FREE PICKUP
288-8995
HYUNDAI 04
ELANTRA
Black exterior, auto-
matic , 4-door,
power doors, win-
dows, mirrors R-title
$4,500
SPRING
STREET AUTO
570-825-3313
HYUNDAI 04
SONATA
Maroon exterior,
spoiler, power win-
dows,doors, r-title
$4,999.99
SPRING
STREET AUTO
570-825-3313
HYUNDAI 07
SANTE FE
AWD, auto, alloys
$15,950
560 Pierce St.
Kingston, PA
www.wyoming
valleymotors.com
570-714-9924
HYUNDAI 11 SONATA
GLS, 1 Owner,
only 11k miles
$18,800
560 Pierce St.
Kingston, PA
www.wyoming
valleymotors.com
570-714-9924
JAGUAR `00 S TYPE
4 door sedan. Like
new condition. Bril-
liant blue exterior
with beige hides.
Car is fully equipped
with navigation sys-
tem, V-8, automatic,
climate control AC,
alarm system,
AM/FM 6 disc CD,
garage door open-
er. 42,000 original
miles. $9,000
Call (570) 288-6009
LEXUS `01 ES 300
80,000 miles,
excellent condi-
tion, all options.
Recently serv-
iced. New tires.
$9,300.
570-388-6669
LINCOLN 05
TOWN CAR
39K miles. Looks &
runs perfect!
$13,500
WARRANTY
MAFFEI AUTO
SALES
570-288-6227
WANTED!
ALL
JUNK
CARS!
CA$H
PAID
570-301-3602
MERCEDES 99 BENZ
S320
Silver exterior,
loaded r-title.
$6,999.99
SPRING
STREET AUTO
570-825-3313
412 Autos for Sale
MERCURY 03 SABLE
White exterior, 48k
miles R-Title.
$4,500.
SPRING
STREET AUTO
570-825-3313
PONTIAC `02 FIRE-
BIRD
42,000 miles,
garage kept
18 chrome wheels,
Raptor hood with a
Ram Air package.
$10,000, negotiable
(570) 852-1242
SAAB 9.3 99
5 speed convert-
ible. 130,000 miles
Runs excellent,
everything works,
25 mpg. Like new,
recently inspected,
new tires. Depend-
able, fun & eco-
nomical transporta-
tion. $3,250.
570-639-1121 or
570-430-1095
SAAB 900`98
Low mileage, 25
mpg, 5 speed
convertible. Perfect
shape, everything
works. New
stereo, recent
inspection, good
tires. Very
dependable, no rust
FUN IN THE SUN!
$3,950
570-639-1121 or
570-430-1095
SUBARU
FORESTERS
6 to choose
From
starting at $11,450
560 Pierce St.
Kingston, PA
www.wyoming
valleymotors.com
570-714-9924
TOYOTA 00
SOLARA SE
SUPER CLEAN
All power, new
tires, new back
brakes. 125,000
miles.
$6,400 negotiable.
570-417-8353
TOYOTA 02 CAMRY SE
1 Owner,
only 38k miles
$9,995.
560 Pierce St.
Kingston, PA
www.wyoming
valleymotors.com
570-714-9924
TOYOTA 04 CELICA GT
112K miles. Blue,
5 speed. Air,
power
windows/locks,
CD/cassette, Key-
less entry, sun-
roof, new battery.
Car drives and
has current PA
inspection. Slight
rust on corner of
passenger door.
Clutch slips on
hard acceleration.
This is why its
thousands less
than Blue Book
value. $6,500
OBO. Make an
offer! Call
570-592-1629
412 Autos for Sale
TOYOTA 09 COROLLA S
Auto. 4 Cylinder.
$12,880
560 Pierce St.
Kingston, PA
www.wyoming
valleymotors.com
570-714-9924
VOLKSWAGEN `00
JETTA
All power, 4 door,
A/C, CD changer,
sun roof. 89,000
miles $4,400
570-283-5654
VOLKSWAGEN 04
TOUREG
95k, V-8 , HID
Headlights, 1 owner
never in accident,
loaded super clean,
$13,999.
SPRING
STREET AUTO
570-825-3313
415 Autos-Antique
& Classic
CHEVROLET `76
PICKUP
4 CYLINDER
Very Good
Condition!
$5,500.
570-362-3626
Ask for Lee
CHEVY 30 HOTROD COUPE
$49,000
FORD 76 THUNDERBIRD
All original $12,000
MERCEDES 76 450 SL
$24,000
MERCEDES 29
Kit Car $9,000
(570) 655-4884
hell-of-adeal.com
CHRYSLER 48
WINDSOR
4 door, completely
original, trophy win-
ner. $11,200 FIRM
570-472-3710
Chrysler 68 New Yorker
Sedan. 440 Engine.
Power Steering &
brakes. 34,500
original miles.
Always garaged.
Reduced to $5995
Firm. 883-4443
DESOTO CUSTOM
49 4 DOOR SEDAN
3 on the tree with
fluid drive. This All
American Classic
Icon runs like a top
at 55MPH. Kin to
Chrysler, Dodge,
Plymouth, Imperial
Desoto, built in the
American Midwest,
after WWII, in a
plant that once
produced B29
Bombers. In its
original antiquity
condition, with
original shop &
parts manuals,
shes beautifully
detailed and ready
for auction in Sin
City. Spent her
entire life in Ari-
zona and New
Mexico, never saw
a day of rain or
rust. Only $19,995.
To test drive, by
appointment only,
Contact Tony at
570-899-2121 or
penntech84th@
gmail.com
Collect cash, not dust!
Clean out your
basement, garage
or attic and call the
Classified depart-
ment today at 570-
829-7130!
Job Seekers are
looking here!
Where's your ad?
570-829-7130 and
ask for an employ-
ment specialist
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com SATURDAY, MARCH 17, 2012 PAGE 3D
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229M UN DY S TRE E T
W IL K E S -BA RRE , P A .
1-8 66-70 4-0 672 K E N P OL L OCK
www.ke n polloc kn is s a n .c om
N IS S A N
Th e #1 N is s a n De a le rin N .E. PA
*Ta x a nd Ta g a d d itio na l. Prio rSa les Ex c lu d ed . N o tR es po ns ib le fo rTypo gra phic a l Erro rs . All reb a tes & inc entives a pplied . **0 % APR in lieu o f reb a tes .
As k fo rd eta ils . **As perN is s a n M o nthly Sa les V o lu m e R epo rta s o f O c t2 0 11. All Pric es b a s ed o n im m ed ia te d elivery in s to c k vehic le o nly. All o ffers ex pire 4 /2 /12 .

You r
Pen n sylva n ia
MASSIV E
IN V EN TO RY!
2012N IS S A N JUK E S V FW D 6S P E E D
T u rb o 4 Cyl, 6 S p eed , A/ C, All Po w er,
S electa b le Drive M o d es , A Bla s tT o Drive!!
B U Y FO R
$
20 ,990
*
W / $50 0 N M AC
CAP TIVE CAS H
*Price is p lu s ta x a n d ta gs .
STK#N21664
M O DEL# 20362
M SRP $22,490
2011N IS S A N P A THFIN DE R
S V 4X4
V6, Au to , A/ C,
PW , PDL , P. S ea t,
AM / F M / CD,
Cru is e, T ilt,
F lo o rM a ts ,
M u ch M o re
*$299 Perm o n th p lu s ta x, 39 m o n th lea s e; 12,000 m iles p eryea r; Res id u a l= $14415.60;
M u s tb e a p p ro ved thru NM AC @ T ier1; $1999 Ca s h Do w n o rT ra d e E q u ity (+) p lu s
regis tra tio n fees ; T o ta l d u e @ d elivery= $2202.50. $3950 Nis s a n L ea s e Reb a te in clu d ed .
B U Y FO R
$
28 ,160
*
W / $250 0 N IS S AN R EB ATE
O R $
299
*
P ER M O.
P lu s Ta x.
L EAS E FO R
STK#N21048
M O DEL# 25211
M SRP $35,160
O NLY 4 2011S LEFT!! SA VE $7000
O R M O R E O N A NY IN STO C K 2011!
THE NUM BER 1NISSAN DEAL ER IN THE
NE AND C ENTRAL PA REGIO N**
K E N P OL L OCK N IS S A N
M
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M
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N

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M
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D
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M
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2012N IS S A N TITA N K C
S V 4X4
B U Y FO R
$
28 ,195
*
W / $20 0 0 N IS S AN R EB ATE, $1350 VAL U E TR K P K G CAS H
& $50 0 S T. P ATR ICK S D AY B O N U S CAS H
*Price p lu s ta x a n d ta gs . In clu d es $500 S t. Pa tricks Da y Bo n u s Ca s h.
2012N IS S A N A L TIM A
2.5S S E DA N
4 Cyl, CVT , PW , PDL , Cru is e, T ilt, I-K ey, F lo o rM a ts & S p la s h Gu a rd s
B U Y FO R
$
18 ,460
*
W / $150 0 N IS S AN R EB ATE, $750 N M AC CAP TIVE
CAS H & $50 0 S T. P ATR ICK S D AY B O N U S CAS H
O R
$
179
*
P ER M O.
P lu s Ta x.
L EAS E FO R
*$179 PerM o n th p lu s ta x, 39 m o n th lea s e; 12,000 m iles p eryea r; Res id u a l= $12,459.20; M u s tb e
a p p ro ved thru NM AC @ T ier1; $1,999 Ca s h Do w n o rT ra d e E q u ity (+) p lu s regis tra tio n fees ; T o ta l d u e
@ d elivery $2,202.50. $1330 Nis s a n L ea s e Reb a te & $500 S t. Pa tricks Da y Bo n u s Ca s h in clu d ed .
SA VE $5500 O N
A NY IN STO C K
2012 A LTIM A NO W !
STK#N21107
M O DEL# 13112
M SRP $23,960
IN STO C K
O NLY
50 IN
STO C K
2012N IS S A N M A XIM A 3.5S
S E DA N
V-6, CVT , M o o n ro o f,
Pw rS ea t, Allo ys , A/ C,
PW , PDL , Cru is e,
T ilt& F lo o rM a ts
B U Y FO R
$
27,495
*
W / $150 0 N IS S AN R EB ATE
& $50 0 S T. P ATR ICK S D AY B O N U S CAS H
O R
$
259
*
P ER M O.
P lu s Ta x.
L EAS E FO R
*$259 Perm o n th p lu s ta x, 39 m o n th lea s e; 12,000 m iles p eryea r; Res id u a l= $18,881.25;
M u s tb e a p p ro ved thru NM AC @ T ier1; $1,999 Ca s h Do w n o rT ra d e E q u ity (+) p lu s
regis tra tio n fees ; T o ta l d u e @ d elivery= $2,202.50. $1000 Nis s a n L ea s e Reb a te
a n d $500 Nis s a n S t. Pa tricks Da y Bo n u s Ca s h.
W H A T A DEA L! LEA SE O R B U Y NO W
STK#N21280
M O DEL# 16112
M SRP $33,125
IN STO C K
O NLY
2012N IS S A N ROGUE
S FW D
4 Cyl, CVT , AC,
AM / F M / CD,
PW , PDL ,
Cru is e, T ilt,
F lo o rM a ts &
S p la s h Gu a rd s
B U Y FO R
$
19,499
*
W / $750 N IS S AN R EB ATE &
$50 0 S T. P ATR ICK S D AY B O N U S CAS H
O R
$
18 9
*
P ER M O.
P lu s Ta x.
L EAS E FO R
*$189 Perm o n th p lu s ta x, 39 m o n th lea s e; 12,000 m iles p eryea r; Res id u a l= $12,216.50; M u s tb e
a p p ro ved thru NM AC @ T ier1; $1,999 Ca s h Do w n o rT ra d e E q u ity (+) p lu s regis tra tio n fees ; T o ta l d u e
@ d elivery= $2,202.50. $1000 Nis s a n L ea s e Reb a te & $500 S t. Pa tricks Da y Bo n u s Ca s h in clu d ed .
50 R O G U ES IN STO C K
M O R E A R R IVING DA ILY !
STK#N21519
M O DEL# 22112
M SRP $23,050
IN STO C K
O NLY
30 IN
STO C K
2012N IS S A N M URA N O S
A W D
V-6, CVT , A/ C, PW , PDL ,
Cru is e, T ilt, S p la s h
Gu a rd s & F lo o rM a ts !
B U Y FO R
$
27,499
*
W / $150 0 N IS S AN R EB ATE
& $50 0 S T. P ATR ICK S D AY B O N U S CAS H
O R
$
28 9
*
P ER M O.
P lu s Ta x.
L EAS E FO R
*$289 Perm o n th p lu s ta x, 39 m o n th lea s e; 12,000 m iles p eryea r; Res id u a l= $16,913; M u s tb e
a p p ro ved thru NM AC @ T ier1; $1999 Ca s h Do w n o rT ra d e E q u ity (+) p lu s regis tra tio n fees ; T o ta l d u e
@ d elivery= $2,202.50. In clu d es $725 Nis s a n L ea s e Reb a te & $500 S t. Pa tricks Da y Bo n u s Ca s h.
STK#N21472
M O DEL# 23212
M SRP $32,525
M A SSIVE SA VING S O N A LL IN STO C K 2012 M U R A NO S!
A W ESO M E
LEA SE!!
W H A T A
LEA SE!!
2012N IS S A N A RM A DA S V
4X4
V8, Au to m a tic,
8 Pa s s en ger, Rea rAir,
Ba cku p Ca m era ,
F o ld in g S ea ts , All
Po w er, M u s tS ee!!
*$489 Perm o n th p lu s ta x, 39 m o n th lea s e; 12,000 m iles p eryea r; Res id u a l= $20973.70; M u s t
b e a p p ro ved thru NM AC @ T ier1; $1999 Ca s h Do w n o rT ra d e E q u ity (+) p lu s regis tra tio n fees ;
T o ta l d u e @ d elivery= $2202.50. In clu d es $500 S t. Pa tricks Da y Bo n u s Ca s h.
B U Y FO R
$
38 ,495
*
W / $20 0 0 N IS S AN R EB ATE
& $50 0 S T. P ATR ICK S D AY B O N U S CAS H
O R $
48 9
*
P ER M O.
P lu s Ta x.
L EAS E FO R
STK#N21418
M O DEL# 26212
M SRP $45,595
SA VE $7000 O R M O R E O N A LL 2012
A R M A DA S IN STO C K O NLY !! 10 A VA ILA B LE
W H A T A
LEA SE!!
SA VE O N A LL JU KES IN STO C K
10 A VA ILA B LE!! NO W !!
STK#N21429
M O DEL# 34412
M SRP $35,180
SA VE O VER $6000 O FF M SR P
IN STO C K O NLY !!
V8, Au to , A/ C, PW , PDL , Cru is e, T ilt, Va lu e T ru ck. Pkg.,
F lo o rM a ts & S p la s h Gu a rd s
E
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JUST JUST JUST
AN N O UN CED AN N O UN CED AN N O UN CED
$
500
$
500
$
500
ST.PATRICKS DAY ST.PATRICKS DAY ST.PATRICKS DAY
W EEKEN D BO N US W EEKEN D BO N US W EEKEN D BO N US
CASH! CASH! CASH!
PAGE 4D SATURDAY, MARCH 17, 2012 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale
412 Autos for Sale
415 Autos-Antique
& Classic
FORD `52
COUNTRY SEDAN
CUSTOM LINE
STATION WAGON
V8, automatic,
8 passenger,
3rd seat, good
condition, 2nd
owner. REDUCED TO
$6,500.
570-579-3517
570-455-6589
MAZDA `88 RX-7
CONVERTIBLE
1 owner, garage
kept, 65k original
miles, black with
grey leather interior,
all original & never
seen snow. $7,995.
Call 570-237-5119
MAZDA `88 RX-7
CONVERTIBLE
1 owner, garage
kept, 65k original
miles, black with
grey leather interior,
all original & never
seen snow. $7,995.
Call 570-237-5119
MERCURY `79
ZEPHYR
6 cylinder
automatic.
52k original miles.
Florida car. $1500.
570-899-1896
OLDSMOBILE
`68
DELMONT
Must Sell!
Appraised
for $9,200
All original
45,000 miles
350 Rocket
engine
Fender skirts
Always
garaged
Will sell for
$6,000
Serious
inquires only
570-
690-0727
421 Boats &
Marinas
MIRRORCRAFT 01
FISHING BOAT
LOADED. 30 hp
Johnson, Bow
mounted trolling
motor, 2 fish find-
ers, live well, bilge,
lights, swivel seats
and trailer. Garage
kept. $6500.
Call Chuck at
570-466-2819
SEA NYMPH 91
17 Deep V, 40 HPH
Johnson electric
motor, electric
anchor, 3 fish finder
manual downrigger,
excellent condition.
$3295
570-675-5873
427 Commercial
Trucks &
Equipment
CHEVY 08 3500
HD DUMP TRUCK
2WD, automatic.
Only 12,000 miles.
Vehicle in like
new condition.
$19,000.
570-288-4322
439 Motorcycles
BMW 07 K1200 GT
Low mileage. Many
extras. Clean.
$9,000
(570) 646-2645
HARLEY 2011
HERITAGE SOFTTAIL
Black. 1,800 miles.
ABS brakes. Securi-
ty System Package.
$16,000 firm. War-
ranties until 2016
SERIOUS INQUIRIES ONLY
570-704-6023
HARLEY
DAVIDSON 01
Electra Glide, Ultra
Classic, many
chrome acces-
sories, 13k miles,
Metallic Emerald
Green. Garage
kept, like new
condition. Includes
Harley cover.
$12,900
570-718-6769
570-709-4937
HARLEY DAVIDSON
03 Dyna Wide Glide
Excellent condition -
garage kept! Gold-
en Anniversary - sil-
ver/black. New
Tires. Extras.
19,000 miles.
Must Sell!
$10,000.
570-639-2539
HARLEY DAVIDSON 05
SCREAMING EAGLE
V-ROD
Orange & Black.
Used as a show
bike. Never abused.
480 miles. Excellent
condition. Asking
$13,500 or best
offer. 570-876-4034
HARLEY DAVIDSON 05
V-ROD VRSCA
Blue pearl,
excellent condition,
3,100 miles, factory
alarm with extras.
$10,500.
or best offer.
Tony 570-237-1631
HARLEY DAVIDSON
2004 FLSTF FAT BOY
Original owner - only
9,500 miles! Excel-
lent condition.
Never dumped or
abused. Stage one
carb kit installed
along with exhaust
and air filter. Sissy
bar. 2 full face hel-
mets included. Lots
of chrome. $9,999
or best offer. Call
570-332-2285
HARLEY DAVIDSON 80
Soft riding FLH.
King of the High-
way! Mint origi-
nal antique show
winner. Factory
spot lights, wide
white tires,
biggest Harley
built. Only
28,000 original
miles! Never
needs inspec-
tion, permanent
registration.
$7,995 OBO
570-905-9348
HONDA 84
XL200R
8,000 original miles,
excellent condition.
$1,000.
570-379-3713
SUZUKI 02
INTRUDER
VS 800 CRUISER
Mileage 6,300
$3000
388-2278
YAMAHA 97
ROYALSTAR 1300
12,000 miles. With
windshield. Runs
excellent. Many
extras including
gunfighter seat,
leather bags, extra
pipes. New tires &
battery. Asking
$4,000 firm.
(570) 814-1548
412 Autos for Sale
412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com SATURDAY, MARCH 17, 2012 PAGE 5D
7
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www.Tun kA utoM a rt.c om
W E HA ND PIC K THE BEST NEW C A R TRA DE-INS & LEA SE TURN-INS & SELL THEM
RIG HT HERE IN TUNKHA NNO C K A T A FRA C TIO N O F THEIR O RIG INA L PRIC E.
THEY DRIV E LIKE NEW & SO M E SM ELL LIKE NEW BUT C O ST THO USA NDS LESS.
DON T RIS K PA YIN G TOO M UCH S OM EW HERE EL S E! DON T RIS K PA YIN G TOO M UCH S OM EW HERE EL S E!
Prices a re Plu s T a x, Regis tra tio n F ees a n d Do cu m en ta tio n F ees . All p a ym en ts a re fo r72 m o n ths to q u a lified b u yers w ith excellen tcred it@ 6.99 APR. Y o u rra te m a y
va ry d ep en d in g o n cred itra tin g s ta tu s . $2499 d o w n p a ym en to rtra d e eq u ity. In a d d itio n to ta x a n d regis tra tio n , d o c fees . M u s tta ke d elivery b y 3/ 24/ 12.
N OW
$
23,200
2011 CHRYS L E R 200
TOURIN G CON V E RTIBL E
888-371-7769
Cle a ra n c e Pric e d
ForQuic k S a le !
M ore V a lue s ... Ha n d Pic ke d Jus tforYou!
N OW
$
20,9 00
2011 JE E P W RA N GL E R
S P ORT 4X4
2010 DODGE
CA L IBE R HE A T
N OW
$
14,9 00
N OW
$
27,9 00
2011 N IS S A N
M URA N O S V
A W D
S tk #111208A
N OW
$
23,9 00
2010 HON DA
CR-V E X-L
N OW
$
20,800
N OW
$
26,600
2011 DODGE DURA N GO
E XP RE S S A W D
2012 CHRYS L E R 200
TOURIN G CON V E RTIBL E
N OW
$
20,9 00
2011 DODGE
CHA RGE R
S tk #111214C
N OW
$
34,400
2011 JE E P W RA N GL E R
UN L IM ITE D RUBICON 4X4
S tk #120220B
N OW
$
19 ,9 00
2007 DODGE RA M 1500
THUN DE R ROA D 4X4
2010 JE E P L IBE RTY
L IM ITE D 4X4
S tk #111215C
N OW
$
22,000
2012 JE E P GRA N D
CHE ROK E E L IM ITE D
N OW
$
39 ,9 00
2011 DODGE RA M
1500 S L T 4X4
S tk #120308D
N OW
$
25,300
N OW
$
22,9 00
S tk #111231F
2010 JE E P
W RA N GL E R 4X4
N OW
$
14,9 00
2007 JE E P GRA N D
CHE ROK E E 4X4
S tk #120305H
N OW
$
15,9 00
2009 CHRYS L E R
TOW N & COUN TRY L X
S tk #111201H
N OW
$
20,600
S tk #120224A
2007 TOYOTA TA COM A V 6 S R5
TRD OFFROA D CRE W CA B 4X4
N OW
$
14,9 00
2008 S UZUK I XL 7
A W D L UXURY
A S L OW A S
$
313
S tk #111129I
A L L
W HEEL
DRIV E
N OW
$
11,700
2006 HYUN DA I
S A N TA FE A W D
S tk #120216A
N OW
$
25,9 00
2011 DODGE JOURN E Y
CRE W A W D
S tk #120207E
08 CHRYS L E R 300L X
6 Cyl, On ly 33,570 M iles ,
$14,400 Ben tly S tyle Grill, L o ca l T ra d e..................................... $14,400 $14,400
08 CHE V ROL E T COBA L T L S CP E
2 Do o r, S p o rty, L o ca l T ra d e,
$8,400 Ga s S a ver, On e Ow n er................................................... $8,400 $8,400
11 K IA S OUL
Ca rfa x Certified On e Ow n er,
$15,900 L o ca l T ra d e, On ly 5,922 M iles .................................... $15,900 $15,900
10 N IS S A N CUBE 1.8s
Au to m a tic, 27,799 M iles ,
$12,900 S ilver...................................................................... $12,900 $12,900
06 DODGE CA RA V A N S E
L o ca l T ra d e, 6 Cyl,
$7,900 On ly 58,900 M iles ......................................................... $7,900 $7,900
10 CHRYS L E R 300 TOURIN G S E DA N
V6, L ea therS ea tin g, Hea ted F ro n tS ea ts ,
$17,900 On ly 23,053............................................................ $17,900 $17,900
07 RA M 1500 THUN DE R ROA D 4X4 QUA D CA B
On e Ow n er, Hem i V8,
$19,900 31,000 M iles ........................................................... $19,900 $19,900
11 DODGE DA K OTA 4X4 E XT CA B
F o rm erChrys lerE xecVehicle,
$19,900 5,708 M iles ............................................................. $19,900 $19,900
10 CHE V ROL E T M A L IBU L S
On ly 15,923 M iles ,
$14,400 4 Cyl....................................................................... $14,400 $14,400
08 A UDI A 4 2.0T
All W heel Drive, Au to m a tic, W ell M a in ta in ed ,
$19,800 On ly 40,000 M iles .................................................... $19,800 $19,800
11 N IS S A N M URA N O S V A W D
On ly 11,137 M iles , All W heel Drive,
$27,900 On e L o ca l Ow n er, Nicely E q u ip p ed ................................... $27,900 $27,900
10 DODGE N ITRO S XT 4X4
L o ca l T ra d e, In fern o Red ,
$17,400 30,433 M iles , 6 Cyl.................................................. $17,400 $17,400
10 JE E P P A TRIOT 4X4
27,152 M iles ,
$17,900 Au to m a tic, PW , PDL .................................................. $17,900 $17,900
09 S UBA RU FORRE S TE R L L BE A N A W D
S p ecia l E d itio n W a go n ,
$22,900 All Nicely E q u ip p ed , 12,740 M les ............................... $22,900 $22,900
07 JE E P GRA N D CHE ROK E E 4X4
L ea therS ea tin g, S u n ro o f, Rem o te S ta rter,
$17,200 On e Ow n er, L o ca l T ra d e, 49,000 M iles ............................. $17,200 $17,200
10 JE E P P A TRIOT L IM ITE D 4X4
F o rm erChrys lerE xecu tive Vehicle,
$21,600 L ea therS ea tin g, S u n ro o f, 24,778 M iles ...................... $21,600 $21,600
08 S UZUK I XL 7 L UXURY A W D
L ea therS ea tin g, T hird Ro w S ea t,
$14,900 V6, All W heel Drive................................................... $14,900 $14,900
11 JE E P GRA N D CHE ROK E E 4X4
8,957 M iles , Na viga tio n ,
$29,900 L ea therS ea tin g, S u n ro o f.......................................... $29,900 $29,900
10 TOYOTA TUN DRA CRE W CA B L IM ITE D 4X4
5.7L V8, Ca rfa x On e Ow n er, L o ca l T ra d e,
$37,800 36,984 M iles ............................................................ $37,800 $37,800
12 JE E P P A TRIOT L A TITUDE 4X4
On ly 674 M iles , Au to m a tic, On e Ow n er,
$21,900 Ca rF a x Certified ...................................................... $21,900 $21,900
11 RA M 1500 QUA D CA B S L T 4X4
4.7L V8, Au to m a tic, 16,725 M iles ,
$24,900 BrightW hite............................................................. $24,900 $24,900
11 CHRYS L E R 200 L X S E DA N
4 Cyl, Au to m a tic, 16,306 M iles ,
$15,900 F lo rid a Ca r.............................................................. $15,900 $15,900
11 CHRYS L E R 200 TOURIN G S E DA N
V8, Au to m a tic,
$16,800 16,341 M iles ......................................................... $16,800 $16,800
11 CHRYS L E R 200 L IM ITE D
F o rm erChrys lerAu to S ho w Dis p la yVehicle,
$21,500 On ly 764 M iles , L ea ther............................................ $21,500 $21,500
11 DODGE CHA RGE R R/T A W D
All W heel Drive, On ly 10,000 M iles ,
$31,700 5.7L V8, F o rm erChrys lerE xecu tive Vehicle............... $31,700 $31,700
08 JE E P L IBE RTY L IM ITE D 4X4
V6, Ju s tT ra d ed ,
$14,900 On ly 49,763 M iles .................................................... $14,900 $14,900
A S L OW A S
$
317
N OW
$
24,9 00
S tk #120209F
2011 JE E P
W RA N GL E R 4X4
N OW
$
12,9 00
2010 N IS S A N
CUBE 1.8S
S tk #111201D
A S L OW A S
$
177
A S L OW A S
$
325
N OW
$
14,400
2008 CHRYS L E R
300L X
S tk #11230A
10 DODGE GRA N D CA RA V A N S XT
S ilver, S to w N Go S ea tin g, S iriu s S a tellite Ra d io ,
$16,900 28,298 M iles ........................................................... $16,900 $16,900
10 DODGE GRA N D CA RA V A N S XT
Deep W a terBlu e, S to w N Go S ea tin g,
$16,700 S iriu s S a tellite Ra d io , 28,787 M iles ............................ $16,700 $16,700
10 DODGE GRA N D CA RA V A N S XT
F o rm erChrys lerE xecu tive Vehicle, 20,536 M iles ,
$19,900 Rea rDVD, 3.8L V6, Hea ted S ea t, Po w erL iftga te.......... $19,900 $19,900
11 DODGE GRA N D CA RA V A N M A IN S TRE E T
F o rm erChrys lerE xecu tive Vehicle,
$20,400 Da rk Cha rco a l, On ly 12,848 M iles .............................. $20,400 $20,400
11 DODGE GRA N D CA RA V A N CRE W
11,251 M iles , RrDVD,
$23,400 M a n go T a n go E xterio r............................................... $23,400 $23,400
11 DODGE GRA N D CA RA V A N CRE W
15,030 M iles , Rea rDVD, Rea rBa cku p Ca m era ,
$21,900 Po w erL iftga te, Po w erS lid in g Do o rs ........................... $21,900 $21,900
09 CHRYS L E R TOW N & COUN TRY L X
On ly 35,539 M iles , On e Ow n er,
$15,900 S to w -N-Go S ea tin g.................................................. $15,900 $15,900
11 CHRYS L E R TOW N & COUN TRY TOURIN G
On ly 13,420 M iles , Rea rDVD, Blin d S p o t
$20,800 & Cro s s Pa th Detectio n , Rea rPa rk As s is t.................... $20,800 $20,800
10 CHRYS L E R TOW N & COUN TRY TOURIN G
L ea therS ea tin g, Rea rDVD w / 2 S creen s ,
$24,600 19,000 M iles ........................................................... $24,600 $24,600
11 CHRYS L E R TOW N & COUN TRY TOURIN G
On ly 13,727 M iles , Po p la rDeep Cherry E xterio r,
$22,600 Rea rDVD, Blin d S p o tDetectio n ................................. $22,600 $22,600
Cle a ra n c e Pric e d
L ow M ile a ge V a n s
S tk #120124E
A S L OW A S
$
202
S tk #120313C
S tk #120228B
S OL D S OL D S OL D
A S L OW A S
$
388
A S L OW A S
$
211
A S L OW A S
$
381
A S L OW A S
$
347
S OL D S OL D S OL D
A S L OW A S
$
39 8
CA L L OF
DUTY
EDITION
A S L OW A S
$
410
A L L
W HEEL
DRIV E
A S L OW A S
$
308
S tk #12310E
S tk #120316A
S OL D S OL D S OL D
S OL D S OL D S OL D
A S L OW A S
$
228
A S L OW A S
$
211
S OL D S OL D S OL D
S OL D S OL D S OL D
S OL D S OL D S OL D
S OL D S OL D S OL D
A S L OW A S
$
364
A S L OW A S
$
311
A S L OW A S
$
211
A S L OW A S
$
335
A S L OW A S
$
29 7
V 8
EXIT 170B OFF I-81 TO EXIT 1. BEAR RIGHT ON BUSINESS ROUTE 309 TO SIXTH LIGHT. JUST BELOW WYOMING VALLEY MALL.
V A L L E Y
CHE V ROL E T
K E N W A L L A CE S
*Prices plus tax & tags. Prior use daily rental on select vehicles. Select pictures for illustration
purposes only. XM Satellite & OnStar fees applicable. Not responsible for typographical errors.
821-2772 1-800-444-7172
601 K id d e rS tre e t, W ilke s -Ba rre , P A
Scan
From
M obile
Device
For
M ore
Specials
V isitu s24/ 7
w w w .va lleych evro let.co m
V AL L EYS V AL L EYS
GOTEM GOTEM
2006 GM C CANYON SL
R EGU L AR CAB 4W D
$
14,999
*
#Z2582,3.5L,A utom atic,A ir,PW ,PD L,A lum .
W heels,C D ,Bedliner,Fog Lam ps,O nly 42K M iles
Sunroof 1-Ow ner
2007 FOR D R ANGER
SU P ER CAB 4W D
$
15,999
*
#12069A ,6 C yl.,A utom atic,A ir,Fog Lam ps,
Rear Jum p Seats,C D /M P3,PW ,PD L
ONLY
47K
M ILES
1-Ow ner
2006 JEEP L IBER TY
4X 4
$
12,995
*
#Z2596A ,3.7LV6 A utom atic,A ir C onditioning,
PW ,PD L,Tilt,A M /FM /C D ,A lloy W heels,42K M iles
2012 CH EV R OL ET SIL V ER AD O
2500 H D R EGU L AR CAB 4X 4
$
28,999
*
#12211A ,6.0LV8,A utom atic,A ir,Suspension Pkg.,
PW ,PD L,C ruise,Tow ing Pkg.,SteelW heels
6 Chrom e
Steps
ONLY
90K
M ILES
1-Ow ner
2004 CH EV Y SIL V ER AD O 2500
EX TEND ED CAB 4W D
$
18,999
*
#12177A ,V8 H D A utom atic,A /C ,PW ,PD L,Fog Lam ps,
Pow er Seats,W heelflares,H D Trailering Equipm ent,
C hrom e G rille,A lum inium W heels,6 D isc C D
ONLY
48K
M ILES
2009 CH EV R OL ET SIL V ER AD O
1500 EX TEND ED CAB Z71
$
25,590
*
#12398A ,V8,A utom atic,A ir,
C ruise,PW ,PD L,C hrom e G rill
1-Ow ner
2003 CH EV Y C4500 STAK E
BOD Y D U R AM AX D IESEL
#Z2647,D uram ax D iesel6600 A llison
1000 A utom atic Transm ission,A ir
C onditioning,Tilt,H i-Back BucketSeats
2003 CH EV R OL ET S- 10
EX TEND ED CAB X TR EM E P ICK U P
$
12,999
*
1-Ow ner
ONLY
38K
M ILES
#Z2583,V6,5 Speed M anualTransm ission,
A ir,PW ,PD L,Bedliner,Third D oor,
A lloy W heels,FrontBuckets
2004 CH EV R OL ET C4500 D U R AM AX
D IESEL R EGU L AR CAB D U M P TR U CK
$
28,999
*
ONLY
35K
M ILES
#Z2637,D uram ax 6600 D iesel,6 Speed
M anualTrans.,Rear Locking D ifferential,
C ruise C ontrol,H i-Back BucketSeats
2007 CH EV R OL ET 5500 4X 4 D U R AM AX
D IESEL CR EW CAB D U M P TR U CK
$
53,900
*
#Z2635,6.6LD uram ax D ieselA llison,A utom atic,
12D um p Body,A ir,C ruise,A M /FM Stereo
ONLY
19K
M ILES
2007 CH EV Y SIL V ER AD O 1500
EX TEND ED CAB 4W D
$
22,999
*
#12382A ,V8 A utom atic,A /C ,PW ,PD L,18
A lum inum W heels,Rem ote Start,Tow ing Package,
Locking Rear D ifferential
1-Ow ner
2008 GM C SIER R A 3500 4W D
EX TEND ED CAB D U R AM AX D IESEL
LTZ
#12238A ,D uram ax D ieselV8 Turbo A llison,A utom atic,
A ir,Sunroof,Rem ote Start,Pow er O ptions,Rear Parking
A ssistance,O nStar,XM Satellite & M ore.
$
36,895
*
ONLY
39K
M ILES
Leather
1-Ow ner
2007 GM C SIER R A SL E
EX TEND ED CAB 4W D
$
23,958
*
#Z2517,5.3LV8,A utom atic,
Rear Park A ssist,A utotrac Transfer C ase,
PD L,PW ,Rem ote Start,1-O w ner,Low M iles
1-Ow ner
2004 CH EV Y SIL V ER AD O
1500 R EGU L AR CAB 2W D
$
9,999
*
#111008A ,V6 4.3L5 Speed M anualTransm ission,D ual
A irbags,A /C ,Bedliner,TiltSteering W heel,O nly 46K M iles
1-Ow ner
2002 CH EV Y ASTR O
CAR GO V AN
$
12,995
*
#Z2658,Vortec 4300 V6 A utom atic w /
O verdrive,D eep Tinted G lass,FrontA uxiliary
Seat,H ich Back A uxiliary BucketSeats
ONLY
30K
M ILES
2005 CH EV Y EX P R ESS
3500 CAR GO
$
15,950
*
#Z2646,6.0LV8 4 Speed H D A utom atic,
FullFloor C overing,A ir,A M /FM /Stereo,
FrontReclining BucketSeats,Low M iles
2007 FOR D EX P L OR ER L TD
SP OR T TR AC 4W D
$
21,950
*
ONLY
38K
M ILES
#12523A ,V8,4.6LA utom atic,A ir,PW ,PD L,Tilt,
Leather,Running Boards,RoofRack,A lloys
$
27,887
*
2007 CH EV R OL ET COL OR AD O
EX TEND ED CAB 4W D Z71
#Z2505A ,3.7LI5,A utom atic,D eep Tinted
G lass,O ffRoad Pkg.,Insta-Trac 4x4,PW ,
PD L,A ir,C astA lum inum W heels,46K M iles
1-Ow ner
$
17,999
*
2007 CH EV R OL ET EX P R ESS
R EGENCY CONV ER SION V AN
$
17,900
*
#Z2661,4.3LV6 A utom atic,A ir,FullFloor C overing,
PW ,PD L,C loth Seats,O nStar,C ruise,O nly 49K M iles
2009 CH EV Y
AV AL ANCH E L T 4W D
$
24,950
*
#12467A ,5.3LV8 A uto.,A ir,PW ,PD L,
Running Boards,Keyless Start,O nStar,
XM Satellite,Tilt,C ruise
2008 H U M M ER
H 3 4W D
$
25,999
*
#Z2390,3.7LI5 A utom atic,A ir,PW ,PD L,Leather,
6 D isc C D ,M onsoon Stereo,Tinted W indow s,H eated
Seats,C hrom e Package,Keyless Entry,1 O w ner
Sunroof
ONLY
28K
M ILES
ONLY
31K
M ILES
1-Ow ner
Mon.-Thurs.8:30-8:00pm; Friday 8:30-7:00pm; Saturday 8:30-5:00pm
ONLY
32K
M ILES
2011 D OD GE D AK OTA
BIG H OR N CR EW CAB 4W D
$
21,999
*
#11908B,3.7LV6 A utom atic,A ir,PW ,PD L,
FrontBucketSeats,A M /FM /C D ,Fog Lam ps,
A lloy W heels,14K M iles,1 O w ner
7
4
5
0
4
0
442 RVs & Campers
FLAGSTAFF `08
CLASSIC
NOW BACK IN PA.
Super Lite Fifth
Wheel. LCD/DVD
flat screen TV, fire-
place, heated mat-
tress, ceiling fan,
Hide-a-Bed sofa,
outside speakers &
grill, 2 sliders,
aluminum wheels, ,
awning, microwave
oven, tinted safety
glass windows,
fridge & many
accessories &
options. Excellent
condition, $22,500.
570-868-6986
WINNEBAGO 02
ADVENTURER
35 Foot, double
slides, V-10 Ford.
Central air, full awn-
ings, one owner,
pet & smoke free.
Excellent condition
and low mileage.
$68,000.
Call 570-594-6496
451 Trucks/
SUVs/Vans
1518 8th Street
Carverton, PA
Near Francis
Slocum St. Park
FORD 04 EXPLORER
2V6. Clean,
Clean SUV!
$5995
WD. Extra cab.
Call For Details!
570-696-4377
1518 8th Street
Carverton, PA
Near Francis
Slocum St. Park
BUICK 04
Rendezvous
Heritage Edition,
leather, sunroof,
3rd seat
1 Owner, local
trade $7495
Call For Details!
570-696-4377
CHEVROLET `04
COLORADO Z71
Full 4 door, all wheel
drive, 5 cylinder,
automatic, A/C, all
power. 1 owner,
well maintained,
122K miles. $11,750.
570-466-2771
CHEVROLET `99
TAHOE
151,000 miles, 4
door, towing pack-
age. CD player,
good condition.
$2,600. Call
570-636-2523 after
4:00 p.m.
CHEVROLET 02
BLAZER
Maroon exterior,
4wd , looks & runs
great, 58k r-title.
$4,500.
SPRING
STREET AUTO
570-825-3313
CHEVROLET 05 TRAIL-
BLAZER EXT LS
White exterior,
entertainment pack-
age, front & rear
heat & A/C 119k R-
Title $8,999.99.
SPRING
STREET AUTO
570-825-3313
CHEVROLET 10
COLORADO
automatic, 2wd,
great on gas, clean
$6,999.
SPRING
STREET AUTO
570-825-3313
1518 8th Street
Carverton, PA
Near Francis
Slocum St. Park
CHEVY 03
SILVERADO
4x4. Extra clean.
Local new truck
trade! $5,995
Call For Details!
570-696-4377
1518 8th Street
Carverton, PA
Near Francis
Slocum St. Park
CHEVY 05
SILVERADO
2WD. Extra cab.
Highway miles.
Like new! $6,995
Call For Details!
570-696-4377
CHEVY 10
EQUINOX LT
Moonroof. Alloys.
1 Owner. $17,575
560 Pierce St.
Kingston, PA
www.wyoming
valleymotors.com
570-714-9924
PAGE 6D SATURDAY, MARCH 17, 2012 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale
www.simmons-rockwell.com
SIMMONS-ROCKWELL
AWESOME PRE-OWNED VALUES AT
570-879-5000
HALLSTEAD, PA
607-796-5555
BIG FLATS, NY HORSEHEADS, NY
607-398-6666 607-324-4444
HORNELL, NY BATH, NY
607-776-8100
Taxes and DMV fees are extra.
FACTORY AIR, AUTO, 4CYL.,
POWER SEAT-WINDOWS-LOCKS,
FASCIA WHEELS, CRUISE,
TILT, AM/FM/CD,
PREVIOUS RENTAL UNITS,
(30,000 TO 34,000 MILES)
2010 CHEVY HHR LT
$
1
0
,9
9
9
29 HMPG
38
AT
THIS
PRICE
$
1
3
,9
9
9
29 HMPG
FACTORY AIR, AUTO, V6.,
POWER SEAT-WINDOWS-LOCKS,
ALLOY WHEELS, AM/FM/CD,
CRUISE, TILT,
PREVIOUS RENTAL UNITS,
(26,000 TO 29,000 MILES)
2011 CHEVY IMPALA LT
40
AT
THIS
PRICE
$
1
5
,9
9
9
FRONT & REAR AIR, AUTO, V6,
STOW-N-GO QUADS, 3RD SEAT,
POWER WINDOWS-LOCKS,
CRUISE, TILT,
PREVIOUS RENTAL UNITS,
(24,000 TO 32,000 MILES)
2010 CHRYSLER TOWN & COUNTRY
41
AT
THIS
PRICE
$
1
7
,9
9
9
FACTORY AIR, AUTO, V6,
ALLOY WHEELS,
POWER WINDOWS-LOCKS,
CRUISE, TILT, AM/FM/CD,
PREVIOUS RENTAL UNITS,
(16,000 TO 23,000 MILES)
2011 JEEP LIBERTY SPORT 4X4
$
1
7
,9
9
9
FACTORY AIR, AUTO, 4CYL.,
POWER WINDOWS-LOCKS,
CRUISE, TILT, AM/FM/CD
PREVIOUS RENTAL UNITS,
(17,000 TO 24,000 MILES)
2011 NISSAN ROGUE S
15
AT
THIS
PRICE
13
AT
THIS
PRICE
$
2
3
,9
9
9
FACTORY AIR, AUTO, 4.7 V8,
ALLOY WHEELS,
POWER WINDOWS-LOCKS,
CRUISE, TILT, AM/FM/CD,
PREVIOUS RENTAL UNITS,
(13,000 TO 20,000 MILES)
2011 DODGE RAM 1500 4X4
$
2
2
,9
9
9
CLIMATE CONTROL, AUTO, V6,
18 ALLLOY WHEELS,
POWER SEAT-WINDOWS-LOCKS,
CRUISE, TILT,
PREVIOUS RENTAL UNITS,
(21,000 TO 24,000 MILES)
2011 FORD EDGE SEL
26
AT
THIS
PRICE
10
AT
THIS
PRICE
ALL WHEEL DRIVE SLT QUAD CAB
4DOOR
ALL WHEEL DRIVE
FACTORY AIR, AUTO, 4CYL.,
2-WHEEL DRIVE,
VINYL INTERIOR,
PREVIOUS RENTAL UNITS,
(18,000 TO 27,000 MILES)
2010 FORD RANGER XL
$
1
1
,9
9
9
19
AT
THIS
PRICE
REGULAR CAB WORK TRUCK
LX VANS
STOW
QUADS
4X4
VOLVO S60 CONQUEST SALE
Attention: All Acura, Audi, BMW, Inniti, Lexus, Saab, Mercedes, Honda, Toyota, Volkswagen and Volvo Owners!
Now thru February 29
th
, You qualify for $1,000 Conquest Bonus towards the purchase or lease of a New 2012 Volvo S60
0
.9%
48 months APR
2.5 LITRE TURBO, FRONT WHEEL DRIVE, DYNAMIC
STABILITY CONTROL, HEATED LEATHER SEATS, POWER
GLASS, MOONROOF, CITY SAFETY & MORE.
$
299
per month
36 month lease
#382072
LIST PRICE -
$
35,565
CONQUEST SAVINGS -
$
1,575
CONQUEST BONUS -
$
1,000
$
32,990
SANTO VOLVO
207-8149
All prices plus tax and tags.
Montage Auto Mile, 3514 Birney Ave., Moosic
VIEW OUR INVENTORY 24/7 AT WWW.SANTOCARS.COM
Pmt Based on 36 mo closed end lease. Tax and fees not included. $2,495 cash down or equal trade. First pmt and Bank Acquisition fee due on delivery. No security deposit required. 30,000 miles allowed. Balance due 3489. 0.9% APR available for 48
months with approved credit. Conquest bonus applies to any owner or lessee of noted vehicles. Vehicle does not have to be traded. Proof of current ownership required. Expires 3/31/12.
2012 Volvo S60 T5
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com SATURDAY, MARCH 17, 2012 PAGE 7D
*Tax and tags extra. Security deposit waived. All factory rebates applied **Lease payments based on 24 month lease
21,000 allowable miles. First months payment, $595 Bank Fee, and $2,500 down payment (cash or trade) due at delivery. Sale ends 3/31/12.
Safety Canopy, Side Impact
Air Bags, Pwr. Drivers Seat, Auto.,
PDL, PW, Fog Lamps, Privacy
Glass, Roof Rack, Air,
16 Alum. Wheels, CD,
Sirius Satellite Radio,
Keyless Entry, Rear Cargo
Convenience Pkg.,
NEW2012 FORDESCAPE XLT FWD
24
Mos.
SIRIUS SATELLITE RADIO
*Tax and tags extra. Security deposit waived. All factory rebates applied **Lease payments based on 24 month lease 21,000 allowable miles. First months payment, $595 Bank Fee, and $2,500 down payment (cash or trade) due at delivery. Sale ends 3/31/12.
AM/FM/CD
ALUMINUM WHEELS
SIDE IMPACT AIR BAGS
ANTI-THEFT SYSTEM
CALL NOW 823-8888 CALL NOW 823-8888
1-800-817-FORD 1-800-817-FORD
Overlooking Mohegan Sun Overlooking Mohegan Sun
577 East Main St., Plains 577 East Main St., Plains
Just Minutes from Scranton or W-B Just Minutes from Scranton or W-B
MESSAGE CENTER
KEYLESS ENTRY
WITH KEYPAD
24
Mos.
1ST & 2ND ROW
AIR CURTAINS
V6
ENGINE
NEW2012 FORDEXPLORER
*Tax and tags extra. Security deposit waived. All factory rebates applied **Lease payments based on 24 month lease
21,000 allowable miles. First months payment, $595 Bank Fee, and $2,500 down payment (cash or trade) due at delivery. Sale ends 3/31/12.
NEW2012 FORDFIESTA SE
Automatic, Air, Pwr. Mirrors, PDL, Advance Trac w/Electronic Stability
Control, Side Curtains, AM/FM/CD, Cruise Control, 15 Alum. Wheels,
Tilt Wheel, Keyless Entry w/Keypad,
*Tax and tags extra. Security deposit waived. All factory rebates applied **Lease payments based on 24 month lease
21,000 allowable miles. First months payment, $595 Bank Fee, and $2,500 down payment (cash or trade) due at delivery. Sale ends 3/31/12.
*Tax and tags extra. Security deposit waived. All factory rebates applied **Lease payments based on 24 month lease
21,000 allowable miles. First months payment, $595 Bank Fee, and $2,500 down payment (cash or trade) due at delivery. Sale ends 3/31/12.
Auto., AM/FM/CD, Anti-Theft
Sys.,Tilt, Side Curtain Air
Bags,Fog Lights, 16 Steel
Wheels, Instrument
Cluster, Message
Center, Keyless
Entry, Pwr. Side
Mirrors, PL, PW,
AC, MyKey Sys.
NEW2012 FORDFOCUS SE 4 DR
*Tax and tags extra. Security deposit waived. All factory rebates applied **Lease payments based on 24 month lease
21,000 allowable miles. First months payment, $595 Bank Fee, and $2,500 down payment (cash or trade) due at delivery. Sale ends 3/31/12.
Safety Canopy, Side
Impact Air Bags, Pwr. Drivers Seat, Auto.,
PDL, PW, Fog Lamps, Privacy Glass,
Roof Rack, Air, 16 Alum. Wheels,
CD, Sirius Satellite Radio,
Keyless Entry, Rear Cargo
Convenience Pkg.,
NEW2012 FORDESCAPE XLT 4X4
24
Mos.
24
Mos.
24
Mos.
24
Mos.
3.5L Engine,
MyFord Display, CD, Auto.
Climate Control, PL, Pwr.
Mirrors, PW, 17 Steel
Wheels, Keyless Entry,
MyKey,
Cruise Control
MPG
MPG
NEW2012 FORDTAURUS SEL
*Tax and tags extra. Security deposit waived. All factory rebates applied **Lease payments based on 24 month lease
21,000 allowable miles. First months payment, $595 Bank Fee, and $2,500 down payment (cash or trade) due at delivery. Sale ends 3/31/12.
24
Mos.
Auto., 3.5L V6, SYNC, Reverse Sensing Sys., CD,
Keyless Entry w/Keypad, PDL, PW, 18 Alum.
Wheels,Anti-Theft Perimeter
Alarm, Sirius Satellite Radio,
*Tax and tags extra. Security deposit waived. All factory rebates applied **Lease payments based on 24 month lease
21,000 allowable miles. First months payment, $595 Bank Fee, and $2,500 down payment (cash or trade) due at delivery. Sale ends 3/31/12.
Auto., CD, Alum Wheels, Tilt, PW, PDL,
Pwr. Seat, Safety Pkg., Side Impact Air
Bags, 1st & 2nd Air Curtains,
Anti-Theft Sys., Sirius
Satellite Radio, Keyless
Entry, Message
Center, ,
NEW2012 FORDFUSION SE
24
Mos.
REARVIEW CAMERA
SAFETY PACKAGE
TILT WHEEL
NEW2012 FORDEDGE
*Tax and tags extra. Security deposit waived. All factory rebates applied **Lease payments based on 24 month lease
21,000 allowable miles. First months payment, $595 Bank Fee, and $2,500 down payment (cash or trade) due at delivery. Sale ends 3/31/12.
Pwr. Windows,
Pwr. Door Locks, Air,
Advance Trac w/Roll
Stability Control,
Remote Keyless
Entry, CD, MyFord
24
Mos.
NEW2012 FORDEDGE SEL AWD
*Tax and tags extra. Security deposit waived. All factory rebates applied **Lease payments based on 24 month lease
21,000 allowable miles. First months payment, $595 Bank Fee, and $2,500 down payment (cash or trade) due at delivery. Sale ends 3/31/12.
24
Mos.
V6, Remote Keyless Entry w/Keypad,
Rear Spoiler, PW, PDL, Air, Anti-Theft Sys., CD,
Side Impact Air Bags, Personal Safety Sys.,
Sirius Satellite Radio, Auto. Headlamps,
Reverse Sensing, 18 Alum. Wheels.,
MyKey, Dual Elec. Climate Control,
MyFord LCD Display, Safety Canopy,
Cruise Control,
M
O
S.
APR
P
L
U
S
M
O
S.
APR
PLUS
M
O
S.
APR
PLUS
M
O
S.
APR
PLUS
M
O
S.
APR
PLUS
PAGE 8D SATURDAY, MARCH 17, 2012 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
(570) 341 -1 400 1 -800-822-21 1 0 (570) 341 -1 400 1 -800-822-21 1 0 (570) 341 -1 400 1 -800-822-21 1 0
M onda y - T hu rs da y 9-8:00 F rida y 9-5 & S a tu rda y 9-3:30 M onda y - T hu rs da y 9-8:00 F rida y 9-5 & S a tu rda y 9-3:30
1 1 1 0 W Y O M I N G A V E . S C R A N T O N , PA 1 8509 1 1 1 0 W Y O M I N G A V E . S C R A N T O N , PA 1 8509
w w w .m a ttbu rnehonda .com
M ATT B U R N E H O N D A PR E -O W N E D CE N TE R M ATT B U R N E H O N D A PR E -O W N E D CE N TE R
SH OP AT W W W .M ATTBURNE H OND A.COM SH OP AT W W W .M ATTBURNE H OND A.COM CAL L :1-800-NE XTH OND A CAL L :1-800-NE XTH OND A
M ATT BURNE H O NDA
M ATT BURNE H O NDA M ATT BURNE H O NDA
1110 WYOMINGAVE. SCRANTON 1-800-NEXT-HONDA
www.MattBurneHonda.com
*BAS E D ON 2008-2009 E PA M IL E AGE E S T IM AT E S , RE F L E CT ING NE W E PA F UE L E CONOM Y M E T HODS BE GINNING W IT H 2008-2009 M ODE L S . US E F OR COM PARIS ON PURPOS E S ONL Y . DO NOT
COM PARE T O M ODE L S BE F ORE 2008. Y OUR ACT UAL M IL E AGE W IL L VARY DE PE NDING ON HOW Y OU DRIVE AND M AINT AIN Y OUR VE HICL E . AL L OF F E RS E XPIRE 4/ 30/ 2012.
G AS
M ILEAG E
17CITY/ 24HW Y
250-hp 24-V alve SO HC i-V TEC 5-Speed A utom atic Transm ission 8 Passenger
Seating V ariable Torque M anagem ent 4-W heelDrive System (V TM -4 )
V ehicle Stability A ssist
TM
(V SA ) w ith Traction C ontrol Pow er W Indow s/Locks/
M irrors Front and Rear A ir C onditioning w ith A ir-Filtration System 229-W att
A M /FM /C D A udio System w ith 7 Speakers including Subw oofer Rem ote Entry
A BS Dual-Stage,M ultiple-Threshold Front A irbags (SRS) Front Side A irbags
w ith Passenger-Side O ccupant Position Detection System (O PDS)
2012 Hon d a
A CCORD L X
M odel#C P2f3C EW 177-hp 16-V alve DO HC i-V TEC Engine 5-Speed
A utom atic Transm ission Pow er W indow s/Locks/M irrors Rem ote Entry
C ruise C ontrol A ir C onditioning w ith A ir-Filtration System 160-W att A M /
FM /C D A udio System w ith 6 Speakers V ehicle Stability A ssist
TM
(V SA )
w ith Traction C ontrol A BS Sual-Stage,M ultiple-Threshold Front A irbags
(SRS) Dual-C ham ber Front Side A irbags w ith Passenger-Side O ccupant
Position Detection System (O PDS) Side C urtain A irbags
G AS
M ILEAG E
22CITY/ 30HW Y
M odelRM 4H5C JW 185-hp 2.4-Liter,16-V alve SO HC i-V TEC 4-C ylinder Engine
RealTim e A W D w ith Intelligent C ontrolSystem V ehicle Stability A ssist (V SA ) w ith Traction C ontrol
A utom atic Transm ission C ruise C ontrol A /C O ne-Touch Pow er M oonroof w ith Tilt Feature
Rem ote Entry System Bluetooth HandsFreeLink M ulti-angle rearview cam era w ith guidelines
160-W att A M /FM /C D A udio System w ith 6 Speakers Bluetooth Stream ing A udio Pandora Internet
Radio com patibility SM S Text M essage Function USB A udio Interface A nti-Lock Braking System (A BS)
Dual-Stage,M ultiple-Threshold Front A irbags (SRS) Front Side A irbags w ith Passenger-Side O ccupant
Position Detection System (O PDS) Side C urtain A irbags w ith Rollover Sensor
M odel#FB2F5C EW 140-hp 16-V alve SO HC i-V TEC 5-Speed A utom atic
Transm ission A ir C onditioning w ith A ir-Filtration System Pow er W indow s/
Locks/M irrors C ruise C ontrol Rem ote Entry 160-W att A M /FM /C D A udio
System w ith 4 Speakers A BS Dual-Stage,M ultiple-Threshold Front
A irbags (SRS) Front Side A irbags w ith Passenger-Side O ccupant Position
Detection System (O PDS) Side C urtain A irbags
G AS
M ILEAG E
28CITY/ 39HW Y
****LEAS E 3 6 M ONTHS THROUG H AHFC . $0 DOW N PAY M ENT. 1S T PAY M ENT AND TAG S DUE AT DELIV ERY . RES IDUAL $17,601.60
2012 Hon d a
P IL OT L X
$
319/M O.****
$
319/M O.****
$
319/M O.****
D isclosure:1.9% - 36 m os,2.9% - 60 m osthru A .H .F.C .W -A -C on C ertified A ccords.C ertified H ondashave
1yr - 12k B asic W arranty.B alance of7yr - 100K P ow ertrain W arranty from in-service date.
09 PILO T EXL R DV D B urgandy,62K.............NO W $23,950
09 PILO T EX S ilver,34K........................................NO W $25,950
09 PILO T EX G old,35K.........................................NO W $24,950
09 PILO T EXL B lack,38K.....................................NO W $26,950
09 PILO T EXL N avy,40K.....................................NO W $26,950
09 PILO T EXL-DV D N avy,33K........................NO W $27,950
10 PILO T EXL-DV D S ilver,13K.......................NO W $32,500
11 PILO T EXL W hite,10K....................................NO W $32,500
PIL OT 4W D
H O N D A S
08 ELEM ENT LX S ilver,56K...............................NO W $15,750
08 ELEM ENT EX B lack,43K...............................NO W $17,500
10 ELEM ENT EX Om inP earl,24K........................NO W $20,950
EL EM EN T 4W D
10 INSIG HT EX G ray,22K...................................NO W $17,950
IN S IGHT HYBRID
CRV 4W D
$
219/M O.**
$
219/M O.**
$
219/M O.**
**LEAS E 3 6 M ONTHS THROUG H AHFC . $0 DOW N. 1S T PAY M ENT PAID BY HONDA. TAG S DUE AT DELIV ERY . RES IDUAL $13 ,081.50
ACCORDS
2.9%
60 m os
1.9%
36 m os
09 O DY SSEY EX D k.C herry,25K...........................NO W $20,950
10 O DY SSEY TO URING DV D/NA V IS ilver,29K....NO W $32,500
ODYS S EY
CIV IC
08 C IV IC EX 5-SPD SDN W hite,42K.............NO W $14,750
09 C IV IC EX SDN B lue,23K................................NO W $16,750
09 C IV IC LX-S Titanium ,9K...................................NO W $16,950
09 C IV IC EXL SDN W hite,29K...........................NO W $18,950
G AS
M ILEAG E
23CITY/ 34HW Y
***LEAS E 3 6 M ONTHS THROUG H AHFC . $0 DOW N.
1S T PAY M ENT PAID BY HONDA. TAG S DUE AT DELIV ERY . RES IDUAL $12,043 .50
$
199/M O.***
$
199/M O.***
$
199/M O.***
$0DO W N
PAYM EN T
0.9% for24 to 36 m on ths a n d
1.9% for37 to 60 m on ths on
n e w 2012 A c c ord , Civic ,
Cros s tour, Od ys s e y, P ilot,
a n d Rid ge lin e m od e ls .
2012 Hon d a
CIV IC L X
IN S TO CK!
A CCO R D S
1
.9%
1
.9%
36 M O S. 36 M O S. 2
.9%
2
.9%
60 M O S. 60 M O S.
08A C C O RD LXP SDN G ray,30K..............................NO W $15,950
09A C C O RD LX SDN B urgandy,31K..........................NO W $16,500
09A C C O RD LX SDN W hite,20K................................NO W $16,950
10A C C O RD LX SDN W hite,24K................................NO W $17,500
09A C C O RD EX C PER ed,34K....................................NO W $18,500
09A C C O RD EXLSDN N avy,36K..............................NO W $18,950
09A C C O RD EXLSDN G old,21K..............................NO W $18,950
10A C C O RD EXLNAV IB lack,24K............................NO W $21,500
11A C C O RD EXLV 6SDN G ray,25K.....................NO W $23,500
$0DO W N
PAYM EN T
$0DO W N
PAYM EN T
You Neednt B e L u cky
You Neednt B e L u cky
To G et A G ood Us ed Ca r
To G et A G ood Us ed Ca r
At B u rne H onda !
At B u rne H onda !
06 C A DILLA C
SRX A W D
W hite,52K M iles
Now $17,750
08 C RV LX Lt B lue,63K...........................................NO W $15,750
07 C RV LX N avy,47K.............................................NO W $15,950
07 C RV EX Lt B lue,47K...........................................NO W $16,350
08 C RV EX B eige,60K.............................................NO W $16,950
07 C RV EX Lt B lue,63K...........................................NO W $16,950
07 C RV EX S ilver,53K.............................................NO W $17,950
07 C RV EX S ilver,50K.............................................NO W $17,950
07 C RV EX G reen,46K............................................NO W $17,950
09 C RV LX G reen,36K............................................NO W $18,500
09 C RV EX B lack,48K.............................................NO W $18,950
08 C RV LX B eige,17K.............................................NO W $18,950
08 C RV EXLR ed,65K............................................NO W $18,950
08 C RV EX N avy,43K.............................................NO W $18,950
07 C RV EXLB lue,39K...........................................NO W $19,350
07 C RV EXLS ilver,19K..........................................NO W $19,950
09 C RV EX W hite,21K............................................NO W $20,500
08 C RV EXL NA V IW hite,53K...........................NO W $20,950
09 C RV EX W hite,19K............................................NO W $20,950
09 C RV EXLLt.B lue,28K.......................................NO W $22,500
10 C RV EXLB lack,30K..........................................NO W $23,500
10 C RV EXLLt B lue,23K.......................................NO W $23,750
2012 Hon d a
CR-V E X
HO N DA W ILL
M AKE 1S T PAYM EN T
*M u stfin a n ce o rlea se AHFC.
HO N DA W ILL
M AKE 1S T PAYM EN T
*M u stfin a n ce o rlea se AHFC.
04 HY UNDA IXG
350 SDN
S ilver,97K M iles
Now $6,950
07 HY UNDA I
SO NA TA SE SDN
B eige,89K M iles
Now $9,950
07 SUBA RU
IM PREZA A W D
S ilver,27K,W as$17,950
Now $13,950
07 M A ZDA C X-7
TO URING A W D
B lack,58K M iles
Now $15,250
02 HO NDA
C IV IC LX C PE
S ilver,67K M iles
Now $8,750
09 HY UNDA ISO NA TA
G LS SDN V 6
S ilver,45K M iles
Now $11,950
05 JEEP G RA ND
C HERO KEE 4W D
Laredo,Khaki,68K M iles
Now $12,500
09 TO Y O TA
M A TRIX S
S ilver,36K M iles
Now $14,950
04 HO NDA A C C O RD
EX SEDA N
B lack,101K M iles
Now $10,500
06 TO Y O TA TUNDRA
DO UBLE C A B 4W D
S R -5,G ray,77K M iles
Now $17,950
05 TO Y O TA
C A M RY LE SDN
S ilver,67K M iles
Now $10,950
08 C HRY SLER
A SPEN LTD 4W D
B lack,42K M iles
Now $22,500
08 HY UNDA I
V ERA C RUZ A W D
B lack,29K M iles
Now $20,950
09 TO Y O TA
M A TRIX S A W D
R ed,56K M iles
Now $15,950
09 TO Y O TA
C A M RY LE SDN
G old,29K M iles
Now $15,950
08 NISSA N
V ERSA SDN
W hite,42K M iles
Now $11,950
05 C HEV Y C O BA LT
LS SDN
W hite,76K M iles
Now $8,950
03 BUIC K
PA RK A V E SEDA N
B row n,76K M iles
Now $8,950
B lack,20K $16,750
08 JEEP LIBERTY 4W D
R ed,40K $16,250
05 HO NDA
A C C O RD EX SDN
G ray,56K M iles
Now $12,500
06 NISSA N
FRO NTIER XC A B 4X4
S ilver,68K M iles
Now $15,950
10 TO Y O TA C O RO LLA
S SEDA N
W hite,21K M iles
Now $16,950
07 SUBA RU
O UTBA C K S/W A W D
G old,71K M iles
Now $13,950
10 V W
RO UTA N V A N
D V D ,N avi,R ed,33K M iles
Now $20,950
05 C HEV Y
TA HO E 4X4
N avy,59K M iles
Now $14,950
06 HO NDA PILO T
EX 4W D
B lack,71K M iles
Now $16,500
06 HY UNDA I
A ZERA LTD
P earl,50K M iles
Now $13,750
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com SATURDAY, MARCH 17, 2012 PAGE 9D
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PAGE 10D SATURDAY, MARCH 17, 2012 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
USED CARS
HOURS: Monday Thru Thursday 8:00am - 7:00pm
Friday & Saturday 8:00am - 5:00pm
1-888-307-7077
*In stock vehicles only. Prices plus tax & Tags, All rebates applied. See Salesperson for Details. Financing must be approved thru ally bank. See dealer for details.
All vehicles plus tax & tags. All rebates applied. Customers must qualify for rebates. See salesperson for details. Sale ends 3/31/12. Customer must nance thru Ally Bank with approved credit to get Low Finance Rates.
1-888-307-7077
NEW CARS
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0% FINANCING
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FOR 60 MONTHS On All
2012 GMC Sierras
Available
SERVICE SPECIALS
NEW 2011 BUICK ENCLAVE
CXL
$
40,480
All Wheel Drive,
Leather, Moonroof,
Chrome Wheels
MSRP $44,385
-$3,905
Sale
Price
Discount
& Rebate
NEW 2011 GMC SIERRA
1500 EXT CAB 4X4
$
33,919
SLT Pkg, Z-71,
Leather,
Convenience Pkg
MSRP $41,385
-$7,466
Sale
Price
Discount
& Rebate
0%
Financing
Available
NEW 2011 GMC ACADIA
SLT
$
41,900
All Wheel Drive,
Moonroof,
Tow Package
MSRP $45,995
-$4,095
Sale
Price
Discount
& Rebate
DEMO
SAVE
NEW 2012 GMC ACADIA
DENALI
$
43,578
All Wheel Drive,
White Diamond
Beauty
MSRP $47,485
-$3,907
Sale
Price
Discount
& Rebate
0%
Financing
Available
NEW 2012 BUICK
LACROSSE
$
29,397
V6 Engine,
Convenience
Group
MSRP $31,290
-$1,893
Sale
Price
Discount
& Rebate
0%
Financing
Available
NEW 2011 GMC YUKON
DENALI AWD
$
51,995
Sun & Entertainment
Pkg, Side Blind
Zone Alert
MSRP $60,230
-$3,235
Sale
Price
Discount
& Rebate
NEW 2012 GMC SIERRA
1500 REG CAB 4X4
$
22,168
Work Truck
Package,
Automatic
MSRP $26,930
-$4,762
Sale
Price
Discount
& Rebate
0%
Financing
Available
NEW 2012 GMC CANYON
REG CAB 4X4
$
21,462
W/T Package, Auto,
Air, Tilt & Cruise
MSRP $23,115
-$1,653
Sale
Price
Discount
& Rebate
1.9%
Financing
Available
NEW 2012 BUICK VERANO
$
22,792
White Diamond
Beauty, 1SD Pkg
MSRP $23,970
-$678
Sale
Price
3.9%
Financing
Available
Discount
& Rebate
NEW 2012 GMC TERRAIN
$
26,967
All Wheel Drive,
SLE-One Package
MSRP $28,040
-$1,073
Sale
Price
Discount
& Rebate
2.9%
Financing
Available
NEW 2012 GMC CANYON
CREW CAB 4X4
$
28,251
SLE Package,
Chrome Wheels,
Z-71, Off Road Pkg
MSRP $31,025
-$2,774
Sale
Price
Discount
& Rebate
1.9%
Financing
Available
NEW 2012 BUICK ENCLAVE
$
39,480
All Wheel Drive,
Convenience
Group
MSRP $40,825
-$4,905
Sale
Price
Discount
& Rebate
0%
Financing
Available
0%
Financing
Available
0%
Financing
Available
2009 CADILLAC CTS
$
25,900
Stk# 1431
2010 MERCEDES 300C
AWD
$
29,900
Stk# 1833
2011 CHEVY SUBURBAN
AWD
$
36,900
Stk# 1649
2010 CHEVY TAHOE 4x4
$
33,995
Stk# 1654, Leather
2011 GMC ACADIA AWD
$
33,900
Stk# 1858
2011 BUICK
ENCLAVE CXL
$
34,995
All Wheel Drive, 19K Miles
2008 FORD F-150
CREW CAB 4X4
$
24,995
FX-4, Just 43K Miles, Black Beauty
2010 CHRYSLER SEBRING
$
14,995
Stk# 1811,
Choose From 2
2011 HYUNDAI TUCSON
AWD
$
21,900
Stk# 1836
2010 MITSUBISHI
ENDEAVOR AWD
$
18,900
Stk# 1734
2011 NISSAN ROGUE
AWD
$
21,900
Stk# 1907, 12K Miles, Silver Beauty
2010 MERCURY GRAND
MARQUIS
$
16,900
Stk# 1542
2010 HONDA CIVIC
$
16,900
Stk# 1537
2010 CHRYSLER SEBRING
CONVERTIBLE
$
16,900
Stk# 1782
2012 CHEVY IMPALA
LTZS
Choose From 2, Miles As LowAs 13K
2010 CHEVY HHR
$
13,995
Choose From 2, LT
Package, Nice Miles!
2010 FORD FOCUS SDNS
$
13,995
Choose From 2,
SE Package
2011 GMC TERRAIN AWD
SLE/2 PKG.
$
24,900
Stk# 1857
2011 JEEP LIBERTY
SPORT 4X4
$
19,995
White Beauty Just 19K Miles
2010 FORD TAURUS
LIMITED
$
23,900
Stk# 1521
2011 CHEVY CAMARO LT
$
22,995
Power Galore, Tons of Warranty
2010 KIA RIO
$
11,900
Stk# 1684
2003 GMC YUKON
DENALI
$
12,995
Must See Local Trade,
One Owner
2010 CHEVY AVEO SDNS
Starting @
$
12,995
Choose From 4,
Tons of Warranty
From
$
13,995
2010 DODGE AVENGER
SXT SDNS
Choose From 4,
All The Toys
2010 VW BEETLE CPE
$
13,995
Just 33K Miles
2010 DODGE
CHARGER SXTS
From
$
16,995
Choose From 3
2007 FORD F-150 CREW
CAB 4X4
$
20,900
Black Beauty, Nice Miles
2011 MAZDA CX-7
ALL WHEEL DRIVE
$
24,995
Balance of Warranty, Black Beauty
2011 VW JETTA SEDAN
$
16,995
New Body Style, Extra Sharp!
2011 DODGE NITRO
AWD
$
18,900
Stk# 1732
2011 DODGE
CHALLENGER SE
$
21,995
15K Miles, Black Beauty
2003 FORD EXPLORER
SPORT TRAC 4X4
$
12,995
Local One Owner Trade, Just 64K Miles
2010 & 2011
HYUNDAI ACCENTS
$
12,995
Choose From 6, Tons of Warranty
FROM
2011 DODGE CALIBER
MAIN STREET
$
14,995
Balance of Warranty, Extra Sharp!
2007 GMC ACADIA
ALL WHEEL DRIVE
$
22,995
SLT, Navigation, Moonroof,
Rear DVD, 7-Passenger
2011 DODGE DAKOTA
QUAD CAB 4X4
$
21,995
SLT Equipment, Miles As Low
As 14K, Choose From 3
Starting
At
2010 CHEVY TRAVERSE
AWD
$
23,900
Stk# 1731
2011 HYUNDAI SANTA FE
4X4
$
21,995
Just 16K Miles, Tons of Warranty
2011 FORD ESCAPE AWD
$
22,900
Stk# 1791
2010 DODGE JOURNEY
RT4 AWD
$
22,900
Stk# 1783
2011 BUICK REGAL
$
22,900
Stk# 1801
FROM
2010 JEEP WRANGLER
4DR
$
22,900
Stk# 1794
2004 HYUNDAI SONATA
$
5,995
Just Traded, Looks & Runs Great!
$
6,995
XLT Pkg, Local Trade!
2006 CHRYSLER PACIFICA
S/W
$
11,995
All Wheel Drive, Local Trade, 51K Miles
$
11,995
Auto, Air, Low Miles, Just Traded!
2008 FORD EXPLORER
XLT 4X4
$
18,995
Local One Owner, Just 46K Miles
2002 FORD EXPLORER
4X4
2005 GMC SIERRA 1500
REG CAB
4X4
V V
State Inspection $.99
Must Present Coupon Prior To Service. Expires 3/31/12 Av.
$24.95
Emissions Inspection
$24.95 Lube Oil Filter
Must Present Coupon. Expires 1/31/08
$24.95 Rotate & Balance
Coolant System Services
$89.95
Automatic Transmission Service
$124.95
Must Present Coupon Prior To Service. Expires 3/31/12 Av.
Must Present Coupon Prior To Service. Expires 3/31/12 Av.
Must Present Coupon Prior To Service. Expires 3/31/12 Av.
Must Present Coupon Prior To Service. Expires 3/31/12 Av.
Must Present Coupon Prior To Service. Expires 3/31/12 Av.
From
$
22,995
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com SATURDAY, MARCH 17, 2012 PAGE 11D
INTERSTATE
ROUTE 315
KEN
POLLOCK
SUZUKI
81
ROUTE 315
EXIT 175
CLOSE TOEVERYWHERE!
WERE EASY TOFIND!
JUST OFF EXIT 175
RTE I-81 PITTSTON
*Tax and tags additional. Buy now for sale price includes Suzuki Manufacturer rebates of $1,000 on 2012 Suzuki SX4 AWD, Grand Vitara 4x4, Sportback, SX4 Sedan, and Kizashi.
Buy now sale price includes Suzuki Manufacturer rebate of $2,000 on Suzuki Equator. $500 Suzuki Owner Loyalty on 2012 Suzuki SX4 Sedan and Equator. $1,000 Suzuki Owner
Loyalty on 2012 Suzuki Kizashi, Grand Vitara, Sportback, and SX4 Crossover. All Ken Pollock Suzuki discounts applied. Artwork for illustration pursposes only. Not responsible for
typographical errors. 0$ nancing in lieu of Suzuki Manufacturers rebates, Owner Loyalty is applicable. Buy now for sale prices valid on IN STOCK vehicles only.
** 2 Years Running based on Suzuki Presidents Club standings for 2010 and 2011.
0
%
APR
FINANCING AVAILABLE
TO QUALIFIED
BUYERS*
2012 SUZUKI
GRAND VITARA 4WD
4 Wheel Drive, Voice
Activated Navigation w/ Blue
Tooth, Automatic Transmission,
Power Windows, Power Locks,
Power Mirrors,
Electronic Stability Control
Stk# S1963
LE Popular Package, 8 Standard
Airbags, 6 Speed Transmission,
Power Windows, Power Locks,
Power Mirrors, Alloy Wheels
2012 SUZUKI
SX4 SEDAN
$
13,999*
$
20,499*
2012 SUZUKI SX4
SPORTBACK
8 Standard Airbags, Alloy Wheels,
Electronic Stability Control, Power
Windows, Power Locks,
Power Mirrors, Fog Lamps,
6 Speed Transmission
$
13,999*
Stk# S1734
BUY NOW FOR:
BUY NOW FOR:
BUY NOW FOR:
3-Mode Intelligent All-Wheel
Drive, 8 Standard Airbags, Power
Windows, Power Locks, Power
Mirrors, 6 Spd Transmission
2012 SUZUKI
SX4 CROSSOVER AWD
$
14,499*
BUY NOW FOR:
Stk#S1838
Advanced Intelligent All-Wheel
Drive, 8 Standard Airbags, Dual
Zone Digital Climate Control,
Automatic CVT Transmission,
TouchFree Smart Key, Power
Windows, Power Locks
2012 SUZUKI
KIZASHI S AWD
Stk#S1802
$
19,999*
BUY NOW FOR:
$
19,999*
BUY NOW FOR:
MSRP
$
23,519*
Ken Pollock Sale Price
$
21,999*
Manufacturer Rebate -
$
1,000*
Owner Loyalty Rebate -
$
1,000*
MSRP
$
18,019*
Ken Pollock Sale Price
$
16,499*
Manufacturer Rebate -
$
1,000*
Owner Loyalty Rebate -
$
1,000*
MSRP
$
16,570*
Ken Pollock Sale Price
$
15,499*
Manufacturer Rebate -
$
1,000*
Owner Loyalty Rebate -
$
500*
MSRP
$
24,284*
Ken Pollock Sale Price
$
22,499*
Manufacturer Rebate -
$
1,000*
Owner Loyalty Rebate -
$
1,000*
MSRP
$
17,689*
Ken Pollock Sale Price
$
15,999*
Manufacturer Rebate -
$
1,000*
Owner Loyalty Rebate -
$
1,000*
MSRP w/ Accessories
$
23,889*
Ken Pollock Sale Price
$
22,499*
Manufacturer Rebate -
$
2,000*
Owner Loyalty Rebate -
$
500*
2.5L DOHC 4 Cylinder w/ Auto-
matic Transmission, Dual Stage
Airbags, 16 Aluminum Wheels,
4-Wheel Anti-Lock Braking
System, Six Standard Airbags
2012 SUZUKI EQUATOR
EXT CAB
Stk#S2006
NEW NEW NEW
NEW NEW
NEW
A TOP 10 IN THE NATION SUZUKI SALES VOLUME DEALER 2 YEARS RUNNING**
ONLY AT
I
L
ove
M
y
S
u
zu
k
i
C
a
r
C
lu
b
!
J
o
in
th
e
...
Stk#S2009
PAGE 12D SATURDAY, MARCH 17, 2012 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
Over 172,000mobile
readers per month.
Advertise your business on
The Times Leaders mobile website.
Call 970-7101
timesleader.com
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com SATURDAY, MARCH 17, 2012 PAGE 13D
412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale
YOUR ULTIMATE PRE-OWNED STORE
7
4
3
4
4
0
7
4
3
4
4
0
KEN
POLLOCK
SUPER CENTER
PRE-OWNED
Ken Pollock AT
339 HWY 315, PITTSTON, PA Hours
M-F 9-8pm
Sat 9-5pm
1-800-223-1111
www.kenpollocksuzuki.com
CLOSE TO EVERYWHERE
WERE EASY TO FIND
JUST OFF EXIT 175
RTE I-81 PITTSTON
*All Prices Plus Tax, Tags, & Fees. Artwork for illustration purposes only. Dealer not responsible for typographical errors. All Value Vehicle Outlet Cars pass PA State Inspection.
See sales person for complete details. **1.99% on bank approved credit for 60 month term. Just Traded As Traded Vehicles are sold as is where is with no warranty.
SCAN HERE FOR
MORE INFO
LUCKY YOU! SAVE
SOME CHANGE
LUCKY YOU!
AT OUR POT OF GOLD
SALES EVENT
3 Day or 150 Mile Money Back Guarantee**
30 Day/1000 Mile Limited Warranty**
All Value Vehicle Outlet Cars Pass
PA State Inspection**
Value
Vehicle Outlet
St
GOLD CHECK CERTIFIED VEHICLES
JUST TRADED
AS TRADED!
RATES AS LOW AS
1.99%
**
The Best Vehicle At The
Absolute Lowest Prices.
$
10,699
* 2010 CHEVY COBALT SEDAN
Stk# P14512, Automatic, CD, Dual Airbags, Great On Gas!
2009 CHEVY MALIBU LT SEDAN
Stk# P14584, Sunroof, Automatic, Power Windows/Locks, Power Seat
$
13,799
*
$
10,999
* 2007 DODGE NITRO SXT 4X4
Stk# S1968A, Alloy Wheels, Auto, Power Windows & Locks, CD
2009 SUZUKI SX4 CROSSOVER AWD
Stk# P14586, Alloy Wheels, Power Windows & Locks, CD, 5 Speed
$
11,799
*
2006 SUBARU OUTBACK WAGON AWD
Stk# S1895A, Alloy Wheels, Automatic, CD, PW, PL
$
11,899
*
2010 VOLKSWAGEN JETTA SEDAN
Stk# P14511, Automatic, Power Windows & Locks, Power Mirrors, Gas Saver!
$
13,599
*
2008 SUBARU LEGACY SEDAN
Stk# S1958A, All Wheel Drive! Sunroof, Auto, PW, PL
$
13,999
*
2010 SUZUKI SX4 CROSSOVER AWD
Stk# S1947A, Tech Package w/ Navigation, Auto, PW, PL
$
14,299
*
2007 CHEVY TRAILBLAZER 4X4
Stk# S1947A, Sunroof, DVD Player, Power Windows & Locks
$
15,999
*
2012 SUZUKI SX4 CROSSOVER AWD
Stk# S1993A, Only 442 Miles! Automatic, Alloy Wheels, PW, PL
$
16,899
*
2009 JEEP WRANGLER 2DR 4X4
Stk# P14440, Wheel Package, Fog Light Package, Ready for Fun!
$
17,799
*
2011 SUZUKI KIZASHI SE AWD
Stk# P14566A, Power Drivers Seat, Auto, Power Windows & Locks, Alloys, 1-Owner!
$
18,799
*
2011 SUZUKI KIZASHI GTS AWD
Stk# S1808A, Sunroof, Power Memory Seat, Auto, PW, PL, Only 10K Miles, Save Big!
$
20,699
*
2011 SUZUKI GRAND VITARA LIMITED 4X4
Stk# S1854A, Sunroof, Heated Seats, 18 Alloys, Navigation w/ Blue Tooth!
$
21,899
*
2011 SUZUKI KIZASHI SLS AWD
Stk# S1625B, Leather, Sunroof, All Wheel Drive, Power Seats, Blue Tooth, Auto, Only 9K Miles!
$
22,599
*
2009 NISSAN ARMADA LE 4X4
Stk# P14614A, Navigation w/ Rear Camera, DVD Player, 3rd Row, Leather, Sunroof
$
31,899
*
1999 DODGE
CARAVAN
Stk# S1921A, Automatic, PW, PL
$
1,999
*
2000 FORD
ESCORT COUPE
Stk# P14408A, ZX2 Model, Automatic, Power Locks
$
1,999
*
1997 FORD F350
REG CAB 4X4
Stk# P14453C, Plow! Dual Rear Wheels, Automatic
$
3,399
*
1998 SUBARU
FORESTER AWD
Stk# S1928A, Automatic, P. Windows & Locks, All Wheel Drive
$
3,299
*
2001 FORD F150
SUPER CREW 4X4
Stk# S1936B, XLT Pkg, PW, PL, Automatic, V8
$
4,799
*
Stk# S1736A, Automatic,
A/C, Great On Gas!
NOW
$
4,999
*
2002 SATURN SL1
SEDAN
Stk# P14624, Leather, Sunroof,
Alloy Wheels, Automatic
NOW
$
7,999
*
2006 MITSUBISHI
GALANT GTS SEDAN
Stk# P14623, Automatic, CD,
A/C, Dual Airbags
NOW
$
8,499
*
2008 MAZDA 3 SDN
Stk# P14627, Automatic,
Power Windows & Locks, CD
NOW
$
8,999
*
2007 HYUNDAI
ACCENT HATCHBACK
Sunroof, Automatic, CD,
Power Windows & Locks
NOW
$
8,999
*
2003 HYUNDAI
SANTA FE AWD
Stk# S2017A, Automatic, CD,
Power Windows & Locks, Alloy Wheels
NOW
$
9,999
*
2007 SUBARU
IMPREZA SEDAN AWD
Stk# P14619, Leather, Automatic,
Alloy Wheels, Power Windows & Locks
NOW
$
9,999
*
2007 JEEP
COMPASS LIMITED
2008 HYUNDAI
SONATA GLS SEDAN
Stk# 14587, Auto, Power Windows &
Locks, 4 Cylinder, A/C
NOW
$
8,999
*
2008 HYUNDAI TIBURON GT COUPE
Stk# P14621, Leather, Sunroof, Automatic, PW, PL
$
12,999
*
2007 DODGE RAM QUAD CAB 4X4
Stk# P14612, 5.7L V8 Hemi, Tonneau Cover, Thunder Road Edition
$
16,499
*
2006 DODGE RAM 2500 QUAD CAB 4X4
Stk# P14595, 7 1/2 Foot Plow, Alloy Wheels, Auto, PW, PL, SLT Pkg, 5.7L V8 Hemi
$
17,999
*
2011 HONDA CIVIC EX-L SEDAN
Stk# P14615, Leather, Sunroof, Automatic, Alloy Wheels, Only 11K Miles!
$
18,399
*
2008 FORD MUSTANG GT COUPE
Stk# S1826A, 18 Wheels, 5 Speed, Leather, Ready For Summer!
$
20,499
*
2008 GMC ACADIA AWD
Stk# S1997B, 3rd Row, Power Windows/Locks, CD, Automatic, Alloys
$
21,999
*
2011 TOYOTA VENZA
Stk# S1912A, Automatic, 4 Cyl, Low Miles! Power Windows/Locks, 1-Owner!
$
24,799
*
2011 SUZUKI EQUATOR CREW CAB RMZ-4 4X4
Stk# S1996A, Navigation, Alloy Wheels, Automatic, Off Road Pkg
$
24,999
*
1999 SATURN
SL2 SEDAN
Stk# S2008A, Automatic
$
1,799
*
Style, Class, Excellence
MOTORWORLD DRIVE, JUST OFF INTERSTATE 81, WILKES-BARRE
SALES HOURS: MONDAY - FRIDAY: 9AM-8PM SATURDAY: 9AM-5PM
SUNDAY: OPEN FOR OUTDOOR BROWSING NOON - 5PM
WWW.MOTORWORLDGROUP.COM
North Eastern Pennsylvanias y
#1 Luxury Vehicle Destination
*ALL OFFERS SUBJECT TO MANUFACTURER CHANGES. PRIOR SALES EXCLUDED. FINANCING ON SELECT MODELS WITH APPROVED CREDIT. 0.9%
APR FINANCING FOR 36 MONTHS = $28.18/$1,000 FINANCED. 1.9% APR FINANCING FOR 60 MONTHS = $17.50/$1,000 FINANCED.
PHOTOS ARE FOR DISPLAY PURPOSES ONLY. DEALER NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR TYPOGRAPHICAL ERRORS. PAYMENTS INCLUDE AL REBATES AND
INCENTIVES. SEE DEALER FOR DETAILS. ALL OFFERS 3/31/12.
www.motorworldacura.com
T W E N T Y F I F T H
A N N I V E R S A R Y
fnancing for 24 to 36 months
AND
fnancing for 37 to 60 months
0.9% APR
1.9% APR
ON ALL NEW 2012 MODELS
201 HP I VTEC ENGINE, 5 SPEED AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION WITH GRADE LOGIC, LEATHER INTERIOR, HEATED SEATS, PADDLE SHIFTERS, POWER MOONROOF,
BLUETOOTH, VEHICLE STABILITY ASSIST, ADVANCED COMPATIBILITY ENGINEERING, DUAL THRESHOLD FRONT AIR BAGS, SIDED AND SIDE CURTAIN AIR BAGS
WITH OCCUPANT POSITION DETECTION SYSTEM.
*LEASE WITH 36 MONTHLY PAYMENTS AT 10K MILES PERYEARWITH $999 DOWN. RESIDUAL: $18,417
PLUS TAX & TAGS FOR 36 MONTHS*
LEASE FOR
$
299
TSX
2012 ACURA
5-SPEED AUTO MODEL# CU2F4CJW
6CL I VTEC ENGINE, 6 SPEED AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION WITH GRADE LOGIC, LEATHER INTERIOR, HEATED SEATS, PADDLE SHIFTERS, POWER MOONROOF,
BLUETOOTH, VEHICLE STABILITY ASSIST, ADVANCED COMPATIBILITY ENGINEERING, DUAL THRESHOLD FRONT AIR BAGS, SIDED AND SIDE CURTAIN AIR BAGS
WITH OCCUPANT POSITION DETECTION SYSTEM.
*LEASE WITH 36 MONTHLY PAYMENTS AT 10K MILES PERYEARWITH $999 DOWN. RESIDUAL: $21,529
PLUS TAX & TAGS FOR 36 MONTHS*
LEASE FOR
$
359
TL
2012 ACURA
MODEL# UA8F2CJW
240 HP TURBO CHARGED I VTEC ENGINE, 5 SPEED AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION WITH GRADE LOGIC, LEATHER INTERIOR, HEATED SEATS, PADDLE SHIFTERS,
POWER MOONROOF, BLUETOOTH, VEHICLE STABILITY ASSIST, ADVANCED COMPATIBILITY ENGINEERING, DUAL THRESHOLD FRONT AIR BAGS, SIDED AND SIDE
CURTAIN AIR BAGS WITH OCCUPANT POSITION DETECTION SYSTEM.
*LEASE WITH 36 MONTHLY PAYMENTS AT 10K MILES PERYEARWITH $999 DOWN. RESIDUAL: $20,752
PLUS TAX & TAGS FOR 36 MONTHS*
LEASE FOR
$
379
RDX
2012 ACURA
MODEL#TB1H2CJNW SH-AWD
6CL I VTEC ENGINE, 6 SPEED AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION WITH GRADE LOGIC, LEATHER INTERIOR, HEATED SEATS, PADDLE SHIFTERS, POWER MOONROOF,
BLUETOOTH, VEHICLE STABILITY ASSIST, ADVANCED COMPATIBILITY ENGINEERING, DUAL THRESHOLD FRONT AIR BAGS, SIDED AND SIDE CURTAIN AIR BAGS
WITH OCCUPANT POSITION DETECTION SYSTEM.
*LEASE WITH 36 MONTHLY PAYMENTS AT 10K MILES PERYEARWITH $1,999 DOWN. RESIDUAL: $24,536
PLUS TAX & TAGS FOR 36 MONTHS*
LEASE FOR
$
499
MDX
2012 ACURA
MODEL#YD2H2CJNW SH-AWD
MSRP: $41,395
New2012 Mercedes-Benz
C300 SPORT SEDAN 4MATIC AWD
Plus Tax
for 33Mos.
Lease for Lease for
$
399
*
$4,059 TOTAL DUE AT DELIVERY. SECURITY DEPOSIT INCLUDED.
$2,865.00 CAP COST. 10K MILES PER YEAR. RESIDUAL $27,321.00.
MSRP: $42,705
New2012 Mercedes-Benz
GLK350 SUV
Plus Tax
for 30Mos.
Lease for Lease for
$
439
*
$4,623 TOTAL DUE AT DELIVERY. SECURITY DEPOSIT INCLUDED.
$3,389.00 CAP COST. 10K MILES PER YEAR. RESIDUAL $27,758.00.
MSRP: $53,465
New2012 Mercedes-Benz
ML350 SUV
Plus Tax
for 30Mos.
Lease for Lease for
$
629
*
$4,924 TOTAL DUE AT DELIVERY. SECURITY DEPOSIT INCLUDED.
$3,500.00 CAP COST. 10K MILES PER YEAR. RESIDUAL $34,752.00.
*ALL PRICES AND PAYMENTS, PLUS TAX, TAG AND TITLE. PHOTOS ARE FOR DISPLAY PURPOSES ONLY. DEALER NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR TYPO-
GRAPHICAL ERRORS. PRIOR SALES EXCLUDED. FINANCING AVAILABLE WITH APPROVED CREDIT. MINIMUM FINANCED $15K WITH APPROVED
CREDIT THRU DESIGNATED LENDER. SUBJECT TO MANUFACTURER PROGRAM CHANGES. FINANCING ON SELECT PRE-OWNED MODELS. QUALIFIED
CUSTOMERS ONLY. SEE DEALER FOR DETAILS. ALL OFFERS EXPIRE 4/2/12.
www.motorworldgroupmercedes.com
THERE IS MERCEDES-BENZ, AND THERE IS EVERYTHING ELSE.
IF YOU CURRENTLY OWN ANY OF THE SELECT COMPETITOR CONQUEST VEHICLES, YOU CAN GET UP TO
$2,000 TOWARDS THE 2012 MERCEDES-BENZ OF YOUR CHOICE.
DRIVING A MERCEDES-BENZ HAS NEVER BEEN MORE REWARDING
*QUALIFIED CUSTOMERS ONLY. OFFER EXCLUDES C & MCLASS AND ANY MODEL YEAR SPRINTER, SMART, AND SLS MODELS. SEE DEALER FOR DETAILS.
2008 MERCEDES-BENZ C300 SEDAN AWD
STK# BP15621, 24,590 MI, 2 TO CHOOSE FROM.................................................................................................................... SALE PRICE $26,995
2009 MERCEDES-BENZ C300 SEDAN AWD
STK# BP15268, 19,874 MI 2 TO CHOOSE FROM..................................................................................................................... SALE PRICE $28,599
2011 MERCEDES-BENZ C300 SEDAN AWD
STK# BS0338, 8,900 MI, 5 TO CHOOSE FROM........................................................................................................................ SALE PRICE $33,995
2010 MERCEDES-BENZ E350 SEDAN AWD
STK# BP15697, 39,136 MI.................................................................................................................................................... SALE PRICE $33,995
2009 MERCEDES-BENZ ML350 AWD
STK# B15261, 33,080 MI, NAVIGATION ................................................................................................................................. SALE PRICE $37,995
2010 MERCEDES-BENZ E350 SEDAN AWD
STK# BP15612, 19,876 MI.................................................................................................................................................... SALE PRICE $42,995
2009 MERCEDES-BENZ CLK CONVERTIBLE
STK# B9367A, 10,980 MI ..................................................................................................................................................... SALE PRICE $43,995
2010 MERCEDES-BENZ GL450 AWD
STK# SR0018A, 15,572 MI, NAVIGATION 1 TO CHOOSE FROM................................................................................................. SALE PRICE $53,995
Certied Pre-Owned LowAPRRates
NOWINSTOCK!
$
599
LEASEFOR36 MONTHS
NOWINSTOCK! NOW NOW NOWIN IN INST ST STOCK OCK OCK!!!
*LEASE WITH36 MONTHLYPAYMENTS AT 10K MILES PER YEAR WITH$4,980TOTAL AT DELIVERY, RESIDUAL $36,568(AWD).
THEALL NEW2013LEXUSGS350AWD MSRP: $55,407
PLUSTAX+TAGS
1.9%APR
FOR UP TO60 MONTHS
$
359
LEASEFOR36 MONTHS
1.9%APR
FOR UP FOR UP FOR UP TO60 TO60 TO60 MONTH MONTH MONTHSSSS
*LEASE WITH36 MONTHLYPAYMENTS AT 10K MILES PER YEAR WITH$4,980TOTAL AT DELIVERY, RESIDUAL $23,915(AWD).
NEW2012LEXUSIS250AWD MSRP: $38,572
PLUSTAX+TAGS
1.9%APR
FOR UP TO60 MONTHS
$
409
LEASEFOR36 MONTHS
1.9%APR
FOR UP FOR UP FOR UP TO60 TO60 TO60 MONTH MONTH MONTHSSS
*LEASE WITH36 MONTHLYPAYMENTS AT 10K MILES PER YEAR WITH$4,980TOTAL AT DELIVERY, RESIDUAL $23,026.
NEW2012LEXUSES350 MSRP: $39,027
PLUSTAX+TAGS
1.9%APR
FOR UP TO60 MONTHS
$
489
LEASEFOR36 MONTHS
1.9%APR
FOR UP FOR UP FOR UP TO60 TO60 TO60 MONTH MONTH MONTHSSS
*LEASE WITH36 MONTHLYPAYMENTS AT 10K MILES PER YEAR WITH$4,980TOTAL AT DELIVERY, RESIDUAL $27,495(AWD).
NEW2012LEXUSRX350AWD MSRP: $45,825
PLUSTAX+TAGS
1.9%APR
FOR UP TO60 MONTHS
ON ALL NEW 2012 RX350, ES350 & IS250/350 SEDANS*
*ALL PRICES AND LEASES ARE PLUS TAX, TAGS AND TITLE. PRICES AND PAYMENTS INCLUDE $129 PROCESSING FEE. SUBJECT TO CREDIT
APPROVAL. FINANCING ON SELECT MODELS WITH APPROVED CREDIT. 1.9% APR FINANCING FOR 60 MONTHS = $17.50/$1,000 FINANCED.
3.9% APR FINANCING FOR 60 MONTHS = $18.40/$1,000 FINANCED. OFFERS END 3/31/12.
www.motorworldlexus.com
EVERY LEXUS COMES WITH A 3 YEAR/100,000 MILE LIMITED WARRANTY*
2009 LEXUS ES350 CPO
STK# L11478A, 26K MI, LEATHER, SUNROOF 1.9% APR FOR UP TO 36 MOS. OR 3.9% APR FOR UP TO 60 MOS.................... SALE PRICE $26,579
2010 LEXUS IS350 CPO
STK# L11457A, 19K MI, LEATHER, SUNROOF, AWD 1.9% APR FOR UP TO 36 MOS. OR 3.9% APR FOR UP TO 60 MOS. .......... SALE PRICE $29,879
2010 LEXUS RX350 CPO
STK# LS0372, 23K MI, LEATHER, SUNROOF 1.9% APR FOR UP TO 36 MOS. OR 3.9% APR FOR UP TO 60 MOS....................... SALE PRICE $35,979
2010 LEXUS GS350 CPO
STK# L11497A, 13K MI, LEATHER, SUNROOF, NAV, AWD 1.9% APR FOR UP TO 36 MOS. OR 3.9% APR FOR UP TO 60 MOS.... SALE PRICE $33,979
2010 LEXUS GX460 CPO
STK# B9445A, 37K MI, LEATHER, SUNROOF, NAV, 4X4 .................................................................................................... SALE PRICE $44,479
1.9% APR FINANCING FOR UP TO 36 MONTHS & 3.9% APR
FINANCING FOR UP TO 60 MONTHS
ON ALL LEXUS ES350, IS250/350 & RX350 CERTIFIED PRE-OWNED VEHICLES!
*PRICES AND LEASES ARE PLUS TAX, TAGS & TITLE. PHOTOS ARE FOR DISPLAY PURPOSES ONLY. DEALER NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR TYPOGRAPHI-
CAL ERRORS. ALL PRICES INCLUDE APPLICABLE REBATES AND/OR INCENTIVES. SEE DEALER FOR DETAILS. PRIOR SALES EXCLUDED. ALL OFFERS
SUBJECT TO MANUFACTURES PROGRAM CHANGES. PRICES AVAILABLE ON ADVERTISED VEHICLES ONLY. MILEAGE CHARGE OF $.25/MILE OVER
30K MILES. LESSEE PAYS FOR EXCESS WEAR. NOT AVAILABLE WITH SOME OTHER OFFERS. SECURITY DEPOSIT IS NOT REQUIRED AT TIME OF
DELIVERY. FINANCING ON SELECT MODELS THRU ALLY FINANCIAL, MUST QUALIFY. SEE DEALER FOR DETAILS. ALL OFFERS EXPIRE 3/31/12.
www.motorworldgm.com
2012
CADILLAC SRX LUXURY COLLECTION AWD
*LEASE WITH 39 MONTHLY PAYMENTS AT 10K MILES PER YEAR WITH $1,995 DUE AT SIGNING. INCLUDES $2,000 CONQUEST REBATE.
MUST CURRENTLY BE IN A NON-GM LEASE TO QUALIFY. MUST QUALIFY FOR LEASE THROUGH ALLY FINANCIAL.
PLUS TAX/TAGS FOR 39 MONTHS*
LEASE FOR
$
429
*LEASE WITH 39 MONTHLY PAYMENTS AT 10K MILES PER YEAR WITH $1,995 DUE AT SIGNING. INCLUDES $2,000 CONQUEST REBATE.
MUST CURRENTLY BE IN A NON-GM LEASE TO QUALIFY. MUST QUALIFY FOR LEASE THROUGH ALLY FINANCIAL.
2012
CADILLAC CTS SEDAN AWD
PLUS TAX/TAGS FOR 39 MONTHS*
LEASE FOR
$
299
*LEASE WITH 39 MONTHLY PAYMENTS AT 10K MILES PER YEAR WITH $4,995 DUE AT SIGNING. INCLUDES $2,000 CONQUEST REBATE.
MUST CURRENTLY BE IN A NON-GM LEASE TO QUALIFY. MUST QUALIFY FOR LEASE THROUGH ALLY FINANCIAL.
2012
CADILLAC ESCALADE AWD PREMIUMCOLLECTION
STK# C3532
STK# C3528
STK# C3547
PLUS TAX/TAGS FOR 36 MONTHS*
LEASE FOR
$
329
START THE YEAR
OFF RIGHT
*LEASE WITH 39 MONTHLY PAYMENTS AT 10K MILES PER YEAR WITH $2,995 DUE AT SIGNING. INCLUDES $2,000 CONQUEST REBATE.
MUST CURRENTLY BE IN A NON-GM LEASE TO QUALIFY. MUST QUALIFY FOR LEASE THROUGH ALLY FINANCIAL.
2012
CADILLAC CADILLAC CTS COUPE PERFORMANCE COLLECTION AWD
STK# C3505
PLUS TAX/TAGS FOR 39 MONTHS*
LEASE FOR
$
449
MotorWorld Cadillac 1-866-356-9383
150 Motorworld Drive, Wilkes-Barre, PA 18703
MotorWorld Acura 1-866-356-9383
150 Motorworld Drive, Wilkes-Barre, PA 18703
MotorWorld Lexus 1-866-356-9383
150 Motorworld Drive, Wilkes-Barre, PA 18703
MotorWorld1-866-356-9383
150 Motorworld Drive, Wilkes-Barre, PA 18703
PAGE 14D SATURDAY, MARCH 17, 2012 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
290 M U N D Y S TR EET, W IL K ES - B AR R E AT TH E W YOM IN G VAL L EY M AL L CAL L 30 1- CAR S
B U Y B U Y
N ATIO N W ID E N ATIO N W ID E
A N D S AV E A N D S AV E
TH O U S A N D S ! TH O U S A N D S !
n a tion w id e c a rs a le s .n e t
CH ECK OU T OU R
FU L L IN VEN TOR Y AT
M on d a y- Frid a y 9a m - 8 p m S a tu rd a y 9a m - 5p m
*PRICES + TAX & TAGS. ARTWORK FOR ILLUSTRATION ONLY. NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR TYPOGRAPHICAL ERRORS.
OFFERS END 3/31/12. **UP TO 63 MONTHS WITH BANK APPROVAL.
AM ERICAS NEW CAR ALTERNATIVE AM ERICAS NEW CAR ALTERNATIVE
#18463, Au to, CD , P . W in d ows, K eylessEn try
2 010 NISSAN ALTIM A S
$
14,959
*
#18458, L eatherS eats,
M oon roof, Alloys, L ow M iles
2 011 FORD ESCAP E LIM ITED 4 X 4
$
23,8 50
*
#18502, Alloys, CD , P . W in d ows, P . L ocks
2 007 P ONTIAC G6 GT
$
9,548
*
#18342, P W , P L , CD , Au to
2 010 CHRYSLER
SEBRING TOURING
$
13,625
*
#18551, Au to, P W , P L , CD , K eyless
$
15,8 95
*
2 010 V W JETTA
$
13,998
*
2 010 M AZDA 6
#18460, Au to, Alloys, P . W in d ows,
K eylessEn try, L astOn e AtThisP rice
#18496P , 4X4, On ly5K M iles,
Alloys, Bed lin er, Au to
$
23,779
*
2 011 NISSAN FRONTIER
CREW CAB SV
1.99
%
AP R
**
#18552, P . W in d ows,
P . L ocks, 30 M P G
2 010 TOYOTA
COROLLA LE
#18575, P . W in d ows, P . L ocks, Au to,
K eylessEn try, GreatM P G!
2 011 CHEV Y
M ALIBU LT
N OW
$
16,360
*
N OW
$
13,998
*
N OW
$
14,8 8 8
*
2 011 M ITSUBISHI
GALANT
#18532, Alloys, P W , P L , CD , Au to
2 010 M AZDA 3
$
13,8 99
*
#18531, Alloy, P W , P L , CD , K eyless
2 011 FORD TAURUS SEL
$
21,318
*
#18555, 4 Cyl, Au to, CD ,
Alloys, GreatM P G!
2 011 FORD FUSION SE
$
16,995
*
2 011 DODGE RAM
1500 QUAD CAB SLT
4x4, Alloys, K eylessP W , P L , 3 L eft!
$
23,8 57
*
#18501, Alloys, L eatherS eats, P . W in d ows, K eylessEn try
2 010 DODGE AV ENGER R/T
$
14,575
*
#18563, K eylessEn try, CD , P . W in d ows,
Rem ain d erofF actoryW arran ty
2 011 TOYOTA
CAM RY LE
N OW
$
16,994
*
2 011 CHEV Y
IM P ALA LT
#18530, Rem ote S tart, Alloys, P W , P L
N OW
$
14,735
*
Au to, A/ C, CD , 6 To Choose F rom
N OW
$
12,8 8 0
*
2 011 HYUNDAI
ACCENT GLS
Au to, Alloys, CD , K eylessEn try, Rem ain d er
ofF actoryW arran ty, 3 To Choose F rom
N OW
$
19,98 9
*
2 010 NISSAN
X TERRA S 4 X 4
GET M ORE CAR FOR YOUR M ONEY
AN D L IK EIT!GUARAN TEED!
#18429, Alloys, P . W in d ows,
Rem ain d erofF actoryW arran ty
N OW
$
17,549
*
2 011 DODGE
NITRO 4 X 4
S P EC IA L P UR C HA S E
2 0 11Kia Optim a ( New B od y)
Alloy s,K e y le ss
E ntry ,CD
5 To Choose
From
NOW
$
17,9 3 0
*
2 0 11Hyund a i S ona ta
K e y le ssE ntry ,
P.W indow s,P.L ocks,CD
On ly 6 Left
A tThisPrice
NOW
$
17,8 9 6
*
FIN AN CIN G AS L OW AS
M ANAGERS SPECIAL!
2 006 HUM M ER H3 LUX URY 4 X 4
#18491A, L eather, M oon roof,
Heated S eats, On ly33K M iles
$
18 ,599
*
#18579,7Pa sse nge r,2ndRow Bu cke ts,Re a rAirConditioning,Alloy s
NOW
$
16 ,8 8 8
2 0 10 KIA S ED ONA L X
#18566,P.M oonroof,P.W indow s,L ow M ile s
NOW
$
14,56 9
*
2 0 10 HY UND A IEL A NTR A GL S
2 0 0 5 D OD GE
S TR A TUS S XT
NOW
$
6 ,9 79
*
#18535A,AW D ,Alloy s,CD ,K e y le ssE ntry
NOW
$
17,3 9 8
*
2 0 11KIA
S OR ENTO L X
#18505A,Au to,P.W indow s,P.L ocks,Only 58K M ile s,Ce rtifie d
Alloys, CD , 6 To Choose F rom ,
P . W in d ows, GreatM P G
P.W indow s,P.L ocks,K e y le ssE ntry ,12ToChoose From
NOW
$
16 ,59 5
*
2 0 11HY UND A I
EL A NTR A GL S
SP ECIAL FLEET P URCHASE
#18574,Au to,P.W indow s,CD ,30M PG!
NOW
$
16 ,76 0
*
2 0 10 HOND A
A C C OR D L X
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com SATURDAY, MARCH 17, 2012 PAGE 15D
EVEN WHEN
YOURE OUT
OF THE OFFICE.
DRIVE SALES
92% of consumers search online
before doing business with
a company.
*
Online business solutions from Impressions Media Digital
gives buyers 24/7 access to learn about your business.
POWER YOUR PROFILE. GROW YOUR PROFITS.
CALL ERICA AT 570.970.7201
OR VISIT IMPRESSIONSMEDIADIGITAL.COM
*Source: Internet Retailer
PAGE 16D SATURDAY, MARCH 17, 2012 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com SATURDAY, MARCH 17, 2012 PAGE 17D
412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale
412 Autos for Sale
412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale
412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale
412 Autos for Sale
412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale
412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale
796 Wanted to Buy
Merchandise
796 Wanted to Buy
Merchandise
39 Prospect St Nanticoke
570-735-1487
WE PAY
THE MOST
INCASH
BUYING
11am
to 6pm
451 Trucks/
SUVs/Vans
1518 8th Street
Carverton, PA
Near Francis
Slocum St. Park
CHEVY 99
SILVERADO 4X4
Auto. V8. Bargain
price! $3,995
Call For Details!
570-696-4377
LINE UP
A GREAT DEAL...
IN CLASSIFIED!
1518 8th Street
Carverton, PA
Near Francis
Slocum St. Park
CHEVY 04
MONTE CARLO
Silver with Black
Leather, Sunroof,
Very Sharp!
$5,995
Call For Details!
570-696-4377
DODGE `07
GRAND CARAVAN
A/C, 110,000 miles,
power locks, power
windows, $6,200.
570-696-2936
451 Trucks/
SUVs/Vans
CHRYSLER `02
TOWN & COUNTRY
Luxury people
mover! 87,300 well
maintained miles.
This like-new van
has third row seat-
ing, power side &
rear doors. Eco-
nomical V6 drive-
train and all avail-
able options. Priced
for quick sale
$6,295. Generous
trade-in allowances
will be given on this
top-of-the-line vehi-
cle. Call Fran
570-466-2771
Scranton
Line up a place to live
in classified!
1518 8th Street
Carverton, PA
Near Francis
Slocum St. Park
CHRYSLER 02
TOWN & COUNTRY
V6. Like new!
$4,995
Call For Details!
570-696-4377
451 Trucks/
SUVs/Vans
DODGE `01 RAM
4 x 4 off road & tow
package, after
market ram air
functional hood.
Headers, advanced
performance chip.
Oil always changed
with synthetic Royal
Purple. Satellite
radio with two
1,000 watt amps.
10 Memphis bass
speakers. Clarion
Speakers through-
out. Almost
200,000 miles, runs
good, some rust.
$2,800
570-499-5431
To place your
ad Call Toll Free
1-800-427-8649
FORD 02 ESCAPE
4WD V6
Automatic
Sunroof
Leather
Excellent
condition!.
116,000 Miles
$6400.
570-814-8793
GMC `01 JIMMY
Less than 5,000
miles on engine.
4WD. Power acces-
sories. Inspected.
Runs great. $4,800
or best offer. Call
570-696-9518 or
570-690-3709
451 Trucks/
SUVs/Vans
1518 8th Street
Carverton, PA
Near Francis
Slocum St. Park
FORD 02 F150
Extra Cab. 6
Cylinder, 5 speed.
Air. 2WD. $4,995
Call For Details!
570-696-4377
1518 8th Street
Carverton, PA
Near Francis
Slocum St. Park
FORD 06 ESCAPE XLT
4x4. Sunroof. Like
new. $6,995
Call For Details!
570-696-4377
FORD 08 ESCAPE XLT
Leather, alloys &
moonroof $16,995
560 Pierce St.
Kingston, PA
www.wyoming
valleymotors.com
570-714-9924
451 Trucks/
SUVs/Vans
1518 8th Street
Carverton, PA
Near Francis
Slocum St. Park
FORD 04 RANGER
Super Cab
One Owner, 4x4,
5 Speed,
Highway miles.
Sharp Truck!
$5,995
Call For Details!
570-696-4377
GMC `05 SAVANA
1500 Cargo Van.
AWD. V8 automatic.
A/C. New brakes &
tires. Price reduced
$10,250. Call
570-474-6028
Let the Community
Know!
Place your Classified
Ad TODAY!
570-829-7130
GMC 04 ENVOY
Good Miles. Extra
Clean.
$10,880
560 Pierce St.
Kingston, PA
www.wyoming
valleymotors.com
570-714-9924
451 Trucks/
SUVs/Vans
HONDA 09 CRV LX
AWD. 1 owner.
$16,670
560 Pierce St.
Kingston, PA
www.wyoming
valleymotors.com
570-714-9924
JEEP `08 LIBERTY
SPORT
45,000 miles, good
condition,
automatic. $13,500
570-675-2620
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
JEEP 07
Grand Cherokee
1 owner, alloys,
PW & PL $17,490
560 Pierce St.
Kingston, PA
www.wyoming
valleymotors.com
570-714-9924
451 Trucks/
SUVs/Vans
JEEP 08 LIBERTY
19,000 miles
4x4. Auto,
$17,7900
WARRANTY
MAFFEI AUTO
SALES
570-288-6227
MITSUBISHI `11
OUTLANDER SPORT SE
AWD, Black interi-
or/exterior, start/
stop engine with
keyless entry, heat-
ed seats, 18 alloy
wheels, many extra
features. Only Low
Miles. 10 year,
100,000 mile war-
ranty. $22,500. Will-
ing to negotiate.
Serious inquires
only - must sell,
going to law school.
(570) 793-6844
NISSAN `04
PATHFINDER
ARMADA
Excellent condition.
Too many options to
list. Runs & looks
excellent. $10,995
570-655-6132 or
570-466-8824
TOYOTA `90 PICKUP
High mileage with
new trans., carb,
tires. Silver body
with no rust. Excel-
lent throughout.
$2,200. Call
570-287-8498
451 Trucks/
SUVs/Vans
RANGE ROVER
07 SPORT
Supercharged
59,000 miles, fully
loaded. Impeccable
service record.
$36,000
570-283-1130
TOYOTA 02 TACOMA
SR5 V6 TRD 4WD
$10,220
560 Pierce St.
Kingston, PA
www.wyoming
valleymotors.com
570-714-9924
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
TOYOTA 09 TACOMA
TRD 4 WD
Extra Cab
$22,500
560 Pierce St.
Kingston, PA
www.wyoming
valleymotors.com
570-714-9924
457 Wanted to Buy
Auto
WANTED
Good
Used
Cars &
Trucks.
Highest Prices
Paid!!!
Call V&G
Anytime
574-1275
503 Accounting/
Finance
Accounts
Payable/Payroll
TEMPORARY
POSITION:
Candidate should
possess strong
computer and cus-
tomer service skills,
one year of general
Human Resource
experience in a
skilled nursing home
setting preferred.
LAKESIDE NURSING
CENTER, 245 OLD
LAKE RD. DALLAS, PA
18612, PHONE 570-
639-1885. E.O.E.
509 Building/
Construction/
Skilled Trades
LEAD CARPENTER
Wanted for com-
mercial work mostly
in Back Mountain
Area. Minimum 15
years experience.
All phases of car-
pentry a must. Pay
commensurate with
experience. Full
time. 570-675-5873
ROOFER
Experienced.
570-693-3877
518 Customer
Support/Client Care
ANSWERING SERVICE
2nd shift and week-
ends. 20-25 hours.
Apply in person
from 10AM-6PM at
Action Telephone;
Rear 58 S. Mountain
Blvd., Mountain Top.
LINE UP
A GREAT DEAL...
IN CLASSIFIED!
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
522 Education/
Training
Home School Teacher
Full time position.
Degree in Elemen-
tary Education
required. Federal &
State Criminal Back-
ground check, Child
Abuse Clearance &
fingerprinting
required.
Call 570-235-5997
PART-TIME
CLINICAL INSTRUCTOR
With Masters
Degree for Clinical
Instruction.
PLEASE CONTACT:
Mary Elizabeth
Pacuska, Director
Practical Nursing
Program, WILKES-
BARRE AREA CTC
P.O. Box 1699
Wilkes-Barre, PA
18705
(570) 822-6539
524 Engineering
Manufacturing
Engineer
Familiar with Auto-
CAD and modeling
software such as
SolidWorks or Pro/E
Experience pro-
gramming CNC tur-
rets and lasers
Ability to design fix-
tures and develop
manufacturing
processes
Experience with
setting up bill of
materials and shop
instructions
Experience with
estimating a plus
Experience in
machining , stamp-
ing or sheet metal
fabrication
Email Resume to:
memms7@aol.com
538 Janitorial/
Cleaning
Berwick Area-
Part Time Cleaner
General office
cleaning. 13 hours/
5 days a week.
8pm-10:30pm.
$10.50/hour to start.
Apply online at: www.
sovereigncs.com
EOE and Drug Free
Workplace
CLEANING
Part time. Wilkes-
Barre/Scranton
Area. Monday-Fri-
day after 5pm.
Some day time
hours available.
Floor care needed
on weekends.
Call 570-466-1054
542 Logistics/
Transportation
CDL CLASS A
DRIVERS
Regional and OTR
drivers needed.
Minimum $1,000
per week.
Teams welcome.
866-542-7464
or 570-417-4722
CDL-A DRIVER
Gas field/landscape
drivers plus hands
on labor required.
Operate dump
trucks & load equip-
ment on lowboy.
Deliver to job site.
Must operate skid
steer excavator,
hydro-seed truck,
etc. Will plow in win-
ter. Must have clean
driving record and
pass drug test. Top
Wages Paid.
Call Harvis
Interview Service @
542-5330. Leave
message. Will send
an application.
Or forward resume:
varsity.harvis@
gmail.com
Employer is
Varsity, Inc.
No walk-ins. EOE
DRIVERS
Class A CDL drivers
needed. Dedicated
routes. Must have
clean MVR; doubles
endorsement.
Home every day, off
weekends. Full time
local work. One year
experience needed.
Call Todd
570-991-0316
542 Logistics/
Transportation
CDL Class A
Regional and
OTR Routes
HOME DAILY
Benefit package
includes:
paid holiday and
vacation; health,
vision, and den-
tal coverage.
Candidates must
be 23 years of
age with at least
2 years
tractor trailer
experience.
Drivers paid by
percentage.
Applications
can be filled
out online at
www.cdstrans
portation.com
or emailed to
jmantik@cds
transportation.
com
or you can
apply
in person at
Jerilyn Mantik
One Passan
Drive
Wilkes-Barre, PA
18702
570-654-6738
LOOKING TO GROW
DRIVERS WANTED!
Shopping for a
new apartment?
Classified lets
you compare costs -
without hassle
or worry!
Get moving
with classified!
NOW HIRING:
CLASS A OTR
COMPANY DRIVERS
Van Hoekelen
Greenhouses is a
family owned busi-
ness located in
McAdoo, PA.
We have immedi-
ate openings for
reliable full-time
tractor trailer driv-
ers, to deliver prod-
uct to our cus-
tomers across the
48 states. Our pre-
mier employment
package includes:
Hourly Pay-
including paid
detention time, and
guaranteed
8 hours per day
Safety Bonus-
$.05/mile paid
quarterly
Great Benefits-
100% paid health
insurance, vision,
dental, life, STD,
401K, vacation
time, and holiday
pay.
Pet & Rider
Program
Well maintained
freightliners and
reefer trailers
Continuous year-
round steady work
with home time
Requirements are:
Valid Class A CDL,
minimum 1 year
OTR experience,
must lift 40lbs, and
meet driving and
criminal record
guidelines
PLEASE
CONTACT
SHARON AT
(800)979-2022
EXT 1914,
MAIL RESUME TO
P.O. BOX 88,
MCADOO, PA
18237 OR FAX TO
570-929-2260.
VISIT OUR
WEBSITE AT
WWW.VHGREEN
HOUSES.COM
FOR MORE
DETAILS.
TRACTOR-TRAILER
DRIVERS
Home 48 hours
EVERY Week
Hiring company
drivers and
Owner-Operators
to run out of
Hazleton Pa.
Home 48 hours
weekly, run NY to
NC. Pickup &
delivery, drop &
hook, and termi-
nal-to-terminal
runs. Full company
benefit package.
Company $1,250
gross weekly,
Owner-operator
$2,350+ after fuel
take home weekly.
HOUFF TRANSFER
is well known for
outstanding cus-
tomer service,
safety, and reliabil-
ity. Requires 5+
years experience,
Hazmat, safe driv-
ing record. Owner-
Operator equip-
ment less than 5
years old. Info Ed
Miller @
877-234-9233 or
540-234-9233.
Apply
www.houff.com
PAGE 18D SATURDAY, MARCH 17, 2012 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
542 Logistics/
Transportation
O/O'S & CO
FLATBED DRIVERS
SIGN ON BONUS
Hazleton/
Scranton, PA
Growing dedi-
cated account
needs Drivers
Now! SIGN ON
BONUS: $1,000
after 3 months &
$1,000 after 6
months for Owner
Operators & com-
pany drivers. Dri-
ver Home Loca-
tions: Hazleton, PA,
or surrounding
Area. Miles per
Week Target is
2,275. Runs will go
into North east
locations. $1.15 all
dispatched miles
plus fuel surcharge
for ALL Dispatch/
Round Trip Miles at
$1.50 Peg, paid at
$.01 per $.06
increments. Truck
must be able to
pass a DOT
inspection. Plate
provided with
weekly settle-
ments and fuel
card.
Also needing up
to 10 Company
Drivers. Excellent
Benefits! .45cents
a mile, with tarp
pay. Flatbed freight
experience
required. Class A
CDL drivers with 2
years of experi-
ence.
Feel free to
contact
Kevin McGrath
608-207-5006
or Jan Hunt
608-364-9716
visit our web site
www.blackhawk
transport.com
GREAT PAY, REGU-
LAR/SCHEDULED
HOME TIME & A
GREAT/ FRIENDLY/
PROFESSIONAL STAFF
TO WORK WITH!
TRUCK DRIVER
Full Time
REQUIREMENTS:
2 years Truck
Driving Experience,
able to drive 20 box
truck, must be able
to meet DOT
requirements, must
be able to work flex-
ible hours, must be
able to meet physi-
cal requirements.
Pay based on expe-
rience. Standard
benefits available to
include medical,
dental and vacation.
Apply at:
USAGAIN RECYCLING
486 S. EMPIRE ST.
WILKES-BARRE
570-270-2670
TRUCK DRIVER
Located in
Tunkhannock we
are seeking experi-
enced drivers who
have a clean MVR
and excellent safety
record. Call
570-298-0924
Sign on bonus for
experienced
drivers working in
the gas & oil
industry
Looking for that
special place
called home?
Classified will address
Your needs.
Open the door
with classified!
548 Medical/Health
Part-Time/
Full-Time Dental
Assistant/EFDA
Immediate opening.
Benefits package
available. X-ray cer-
tification is required.
EMAIL RESUME TO
CASEYDENTAL@
COMCAST.NET
Ophthalmic Technician
COA/COT
PREFERRED
Ophthalmology
practice with ASC
and LASIK suite has
a full time opening
for an experienced
ophthalmic techni-
cian. Duties include
preliminary eye
exams, diagnostic
testing, professional
courteous patient
relations. Experi-
ence in retinoscopy,
A-scans and IOL
calculations and
LASIK screening
preferred. COA/COT
level a plus. Com-
petitive salary with
excellent benefits.
Travel to satellite
offices required.
Please email or
send your resume
with cover letter in
confidence to:
BUCCI LASER VISION
ATTN: GENO MAROLA,
ADMINISTRATOR
158 WILKES-BARRE
TOWNSHIP BLVD.
WILKES-BARRE, PA
18702
570-825-2645 FAX
GENE@BUCCIVISION.COM
Part-Time
Orthodontist
Assistant
Immediate opening
3 days per week.
X-ray certification is
required.
EMAIL RESUME TO
CASEYDENTAL@
COMCAST.NET
548 Medical/Health
SURGERY CENTER
RECEPTIONIST
Private surgery
Center has a part
time position for an
experienced recep-
tionist with strong
attention to detail,
phone & clerical
skills required. Prior
surgery/medical
office experience
preferred.
Email resume to
loretta@bucci
vision.com
subject: Scheduler
MARKETING ASSISTANT
Private Surgery
Center has part
time position for a
Marketing assistant.
Duties include
demographic,
media and patient
reporting. Applicant
should be customer
service oriented and
able to multitask.
Email resume to
amyjo@bucci
vision.com
551 Other
YOU CAN MAKE
A DIFFERENCE
in the life of a
child by becom-
ing a foster par-
ent. Full time and
weekend pro-
grams are avail-
able.
FCCY
1-800-747-3807
EOE
LANDSCAPER
8 hours/week for 8
months, $16/hour.
Grass mowing, trim-
ming, blowing,
weeding, power
washing, pool
cleaning, waterfall
maintenance.
Call 570-639-5208
Organist/Music Director
St. Pauls Lutheran
Church, Mountain
Top, is seeking part
time Organist/Music
Director. Candidate
will provide organ
and piano music for
Sunday Services,
occasional midweek
services, direct
adult and childrens
music programs.
Please contact 474-
6616 or kaufman
19@verizon.net
BE A RIVER GUIDE!
Friendly outdoor
people needed to
guide whitewater
raft trips on the
Lehigh River. Most-
ly weekends in the
Spring, Summer and
Fall. Some week-
day work available
in July & August.
Experience helpful
but not necessary.
Contact
Marc S. Brown
570-443-9728
OR
Check out our
website at:
www.whitewater
challengers.com
554 Production/
Operations
MANUFACTURING
POSITIONS
A well-established
local manufacturer
is looking for a
Full Time Weaver.
A comprehensive
benefit package,
which includes 401K.
Applications can be
obtained at:
American Silk Mills
75 Stark Street
Plains, PA 18705
Find Your Ideal
Employee! Place an
ad and end the
search!
570-829-7130
ask for an employ-
ment specialist
566 Sales/Retail/
Business
Development
SALES
WERE EXPANDING TO
MAKE ROOM FOR
PEOPLE LIKE YOU.
CMS East, Inc. one
of the largest family
owned and operat-
ed cemetery corpo-
rations in the coun-
try is looking for
qualified individuals
to service new and
existing accounts.
To be considered
for this position, you
must be self moti-
vated and sales ori-
ented with a posi-
tive attitude.
We provide:
$35-$45K first
year & more in
future years.
Paid Training
Life Insurance
Hospitalization/
Dental
Pension Plan, etc.
Call Rick for a
personal interview
Monday-Friday
9am-4pm.
(570) 675-3283.
Visit our website
www.CMSEAST.com
Fax your resume to
(570) 675-5749
566 Sales/Retail/
Business
Development
SALES JOBS!
No Resume?
No Problem!
Monster Match
assigns a
professional to
hand-match each
job seeker with
each employer!
This is a
FREE service!
Simply create your
profile by phone or
online and, for the
next 90-days, our
professionals will
match your profile
to employers who
are hiring right now!
CREATE YOUR
PROFILE NOW
BY PHONE OR
WEB FREE!
Call Today, Sunday,
or any day!
Use Job Code 39!
1-866-781-5627
or
www.
timesleader.com
NO RESUME NEEDED!
Call the automated
phone profiling
system or use our
convenient Online
form today so our
professionals can
get started
matching you with
employers that are
hiring - NOW!
Choose the
following
position to enter
your information:
Inside Sales &
Telemarketing
569 Security/
Protective Services
SECURITY OFFICERS
Join Vector Security
Patrol and become
a name on a winning
team. We have
career opportunities
for Security Officers
or for those wishing
to begin a career in
the security field
with openings for
Part Time/Weekend
hours in Wilkes-
Barre and Nanti-
coke. Previous
security experience
a plus! EOE
800-682-4722
573 Warehouse
WAREHOUSE WORKER
Dependable, hard-
working person
needed for heavy
unloading of trucks,
separating goods,
painting work. Full
time daily. 11 am to
7.30 pm. Flexible
hours. USAgain
730 Casey Avenue
Wilkes-Barre, PA
18702
570-270-2670
600
FINANCIAL
610 Business
Opportunities
FIRE FIRE YOUR BOSS!!!! YOUR BOSS!!!!
WORK FOR
YOURSELF
INVEST IN
YOURSELF
WITH
JAN PRO
*Guaranteed Clients
* Steady Income
*Insurance &
Bonding
* Training & Ongoing
Support
* Low Start Up
Costs
*Veterans Financing
Program
* Accounts available
through
0ut Wilkes-Barre
& Scranton
570-824-5774
Janpro.com
NEPA FLORAL &
GIFT SHOP
Including delivery
van, coolers, all
inventory, displays,
computer system,
customer list, web-
site and much more.
Turn key operation
in prime retail loca-
tion. $125,000
For more
information
Call 570.592.3327
PATENTED GOLF
TRAINING DEVICE
with 20 exclusive
claims, for sale by
Senior Individual.
Respond to
Box 3020
Times Leader
15 N. Main Street
Wilkes-Barre, PA
18711-0250
630 Money To Loan
We can erase
your bad credit -
100% GUARAN-
TEED. Attorneys
for the Federal
Trade Commission
say theyve never
seen a legitimate
credit repair opera-
tion. No one can
legally remove
accurate and timely
information from
your credit report.
Its a process that
starts with you and
involves time and a
conscious effort to
pay your debts.
Learn about manag-
ing credit and debt
at ftc. gov/credit. A
message from The
Times Leader and
the FTC.
700
MERCHANDISE
702 Air
Conditioners
AIR CONDITIONER
Frigidaire 110 volt
new, 10,000 btu
$60. OBO
570-383-2527
706 Arts/Crafts/
Hobbies
OIL PAINTINGS
3 are framed in gold
wood, carved beau-
tifully. Stone bridge
over a lily pond.
Never used. 28 XL
32 w. $55. Beach
scene & sea grass
$55. Street scene of
France & the arch of
trumph in back-
ground. 25x29
$30. 570-826-0830
708 Antiques &
Collectibles
ANTIQUES
3 piece Mahogany
stack bookcase
with drawer, 6ft x
20 hand carved
Hitler made of pine,
Dersuhrer carved
on bottom signed
by carver Gallagher.
Needs some repair.
Tiffany style lamps
with stained glass
shades, caramel in
color. 1912 Gustave
Stickley rocking
chair with new rush
seat, tag on bot-
tom. Jewelry
armoire, (4) 1912
chairs, original paint
with newly rushed
seats. 12 OldPA
metal hunting
licenses, 1927 &
up. Two Oak bow
china closets, one
very ornate. Lots of
smalls.
134 Route 11
Larksville, PA
570-283-3987
570-328-3428
$ ANTIQUES BUYING $
Old Toys, model kits,
Bikes, dolls, guns,
Mining Items, trains
&Musical Instruments,
Hess. 474-9544
BICYCLE. Schwinn,
Chopper. Red with
chrome. $100.
570-855-7197
DIE CAST REDUCED
1 Hess 03 mini
patrol car, 1 Hess
01 mini racer trans-
port, 1 Hess 04 mini
tanker truck, each
$6. 1 Sunoco 96
tow truck with plow,
1 mobil 95 tow
truck, 1 Ertle 92
true value 1930 dia-
mond T tanker bank,
1 Exxon humble
tanker truck 2nd
edition, 1 Exxon
tanker truck, 1 rac-
ing champion Citgo
#21 Elliot Sadler
nascar 1 matchbox
transporter Bill Elliot
each $8. 1 Racing
champion nascar
Richard Petty $5.
570-639-1653
RECORDS 78 RPM
in good condition
many, different
artists total of 177
records all for $100.
570-735-6638
VANITY, ANTIQUE 4
drawers, mirror,
detailed, good con-
dition $100 obo
570-793-9192
710 Appliances
Why Spend
Hundreds on
New or Used
Appliances?
Most problems
with your appli-
ances are usually
simple and inex-
pensive to fix!
Save your hard
earned money, Let
us take a look at it
first!
30 years in
the business.
East Main
Appliances
570-735-8271
Nanticoke
A P P L I A N C E
PA R T S E T C .
Used appliances.
Parts for all brands.
223 George Ave.
Wilkes-Barre
570-820-8162
DRYER, gas, May-
tag, bisque, com-
mercial quality,
super capacity,
quiet series, intel-
lidry sensor, 7 cycle,
$250. GE
MICROWAVE over
the stove bisque, 1
cu. ft. Spacemaker
XL 1800 $100.
Water cooler Sun-
beam, white, 3 tem-
perature options, 3
or 5 gallon bottles,
bottom refrigerator,
$35. All excellent
condition. 451-1612
GENES
RECONDITIONED
APPLIANCES
60 Day Warranty
Monday-Friday
8:00PM-5:00PM
Saturday
8:00AM-11:00AM
Gateway
Shopping Center
Kingston, PA
(570) 819-1966
REFRIGERATOR
Used as overflow
fridge. FREE
570-675-8262
710 Appliances
WASHER Estate
Whirlpool $170.
DRYER Queen $170.
both negotiable.
570-883-9454 or
570-468-6520
WASHER, Maytag
$75. Maytag Gas
Dryer $75.
570-760-9518
712 Baby Items
BIKE small Boys
$25. Bassinet $25.
Infant swing $20.
Exersaucer $20.
Travel system
stroller with infant
car seat & extra
base $75. Ocean
Wonders Aquarium
for crib $10. Infant
playmat $10.
570-696-3458
CRIB F.P. 3 In 1 trav-
el tender crib or
playpen $20.
570-654-4113
CRIB MATTRESS
$20 used for one
child.570-825-0569
714 Bridal Items
WEDDING GOWN
size 9-10 used
once, preserved in
box $30. 825-0569
716 Building
Materials
BATHROOM match-
ing sink set Gerber
white porcelain
bathroom sink with
mirror & medicine
cabinet $80.
570-331-8183
720 Cemetery
Plots/Lots
CEMETERY PLOTS
(3) together.
Maple Lawn Section
of Dennison Ceme-
tery. Section ML.
$450 each.
570-822-1850
726 Clothing
COAT
KENNETH COLE
Beige, size 6,
hardly worn. $75.
570-855-5385
COMMUNION SUIT
boys, worn twice,
black. size 14 $30.
570-654-4113
HANDBAG Miche. 5
handbags in one!
You keep interior
base & change the
outside shells to
the color & style you
want. Barely used
& most shells are
now retired! Retail
$250. Sell $120
OBO 288-2949.
WOMENS CLOTH-
ING size 14, 3 pair
slacks & 2 skirts $
10. Size large 10
tops & 1 skirt $20.
Size medium 8 Tops
$10. Mens Clothing-
size large & X-large,
camouflaged coat
plus 18 other items
$20. 474-6028
730 Computer
Equipment &
Software
DELL DESKTOP
Dimensions E510
with monitor, speak-
ers, keyboard, etc.
Windows XP plus
more software.
$190 OBO.
570-542-3215
LAPTOP Fujitsu
t4010 laptop/touch-
screen tablet/e-
reader:P4 centri-
no,new hard drive.
fresh new xp pro
tablet factory
install,office 2010
professional corpo-
rate edition,burning
software, e-reader
software & library,
antivirus & more!
has cdrw+dvd+ sty-
lus. comes with
good battery & ac
cord. free delivery.
$200..XP Pro P4
custom tower with
cdrw/dvd. has fresh
antivirus, office
2010,keyboard &
mouse $75. Older
xp pro mini tower-
loaded. has cd only.
good for internet/
etc. keyboard&
mouse $40. IBM
P4HT/1.0 gb ram/80
gb hd small desktop
with dvdrw, win-
dows 7, office 2010
antivirus & more. All
fresh clean installs,
comes with lcd
monitor, keyboard,
mouse, speakers
$175. 862-2236
732 Exercise
Equipment
TREADMILL GOOD
condition, $100 obo.
570-793-9192
UNIVERSAL WEIGHT
SYSTEM. Multiple
stations. Includes
200 lbs of weights.
Good condition.
$275 OBO.
570-474-0753
734 Fireplace
Accessories
FIREPLACE MAN-
TLES, GREAT condi-
tion, $100 for both
obo. 570-793-9192
PEA COAL, 4 tons,
valued $800. will
sell for $200. you
remove, easy take
away in yard. Also 1
ton chestnut $50.
570-383-2527
STOVE VENT: I had
a gas stove
removed without
even using it!
Snorkel Termination
Cap was $400. My
selling price - $199!
Call (570) 655-5419
738 Floor Care
Equipment
VACUUM Oreck XL
high speed, upright.
$150. 825-6086
742 Furnaces &
Heaters
HEATER, electric,
portable, $20 or
best offer. Yale fire-
proof safe 13x17.5
asking $50 OBO
570-825-5847
744 Furniture &
Accessories
ALL NEW
Queen P-Top Serta
Made Mattress Set,
still in original
plastic.
Must sell. $150.
Can Deliver
570-280-9628
COFFEE TABLE
walnut wood based,
kidney shaped,
glass top, excellent
shape $35. Glass
top for round table
42 $10. 779-3844
ENTERTAINMENT
CENTER Parker
House, solid oak
58w, 50h, 21d,
32 RCA TV excel-
lent condition $200
570-262-3967
FURNI SH FURNI SH
FOR LESS FOR LESS
* NELSON *
* FURNITURE *
* WAREHOUSE *
Recliners from $299
Lift Chairs from $699
New and Used
Living Room
Dinettes, Bedroom
210 Division St
Kingston
Call 570-288-3607
FURNITURE 6 piece
bedroom set with
mirror, $199 OBO
Maple dining room
set with 4 chairs &
inserts 60x36
$199 OBO.
570-824-7314
FURNITURE SALE
Virginia House -very
old all wood 6 piece
set. Maple finish
with Maple Leaf
design. Needs refin-
ishing $600. Small
Light color round
table 2 chairs $75.
Sage couch approx-
imately 6L 2 match-
ing throw pillows
$225. 2 Lamps, pair
of sage drapes,cof-
fee table $75. Free
rust color swivel
chair with pur-
chase.TAKE ALL
FOR $900.
570-299-7563
MAPLE DRESSER 4
drawer, $25. Walnut
night stand $20.
Oak table 45 drop
leaf, $25. 2 Cane
oak chairs $10 each.
22 round oak lamp
table $5. 639-1653
MATTRESS SALE
We Beat All
Competitors Prices!
Mattress Guy
Twin sets: $159
Full sets: $179
Queen sets: $199
All New
American Made
570-288-1898
PATIO SET, 5 piece,
outdoor table
chairs, & umbrella
base light brown,
must sell $30.
570-383-2527
ROCKER, wood/tap-
estry, $75. RECLIN-
ER, Burgundy velour
cloth, $125. SOFA,
chair, ottoman, 3
tables, great for
den. Wood and
cloth, all in excellent
condition. $450.
Call after 6 PM
570-675-5046
SOFA & matching
chair. Excellent con-
dition. $165.
570-824-6770
STORE CREDIT:
FOR SALE Ply-
mouth PA, Furniture
Store Credit. Value
$2,539.70. Selling
for $2,000.00. Cal
(570) 313-6784
TODDLER BED-
white plastic with
metal mattress
frame. Takes crib
mattress. Excellent
condition. $25.
570-706-1819
DALLAS
121 Sterling Ave.
Saturday, March 17
8am - 1pm
Antiques, col-
lectibles, advertis-
ing. Mr. Peanut, old
toys, games,
books, sports cards
and lots more
DALLAS
304 Country Club Rd
SATURDAY,
MARCH 17, 2012
8:00-4:00
DIRECTIONS:
OFF OF LAKE ST.
Entire Contents of
nice home including
beautiful oak dining
room set, beautiful
antique bedroom
set, antique oak
bookcase, gor-
geous mid 19th
century sideboard,
grandmother clock,
antique glassware
& porcelain, clocks,
antique lighting, pot-
terym linens, jewel-
ry, designer clothes,
holiday, decorator
items, many nice
craft items, lots
of sewing, Xbox
& Playstation items,
Agway 8hp snow-
blower, fishing items
and much more!
CREDIT CARDS
ACCEPTED!
SALE BY COOK &
COOK ESTATE
LIQUIDATORS
WWW.COOKAND-
COOKESTATELIQ-
UIDATORS.COM
744 Furniture &
Accessories
EDWARDSVILLE
591 Garfield St.,
Sat & Sun
8am-2pm
Something for
everyone. Multi
Family. Cheap,
Cheap, Chirp
Everything must go
EXETER
250 PEPE COURT
Jupiter Moon
Studios
March
15th, 16th, & 17th
9:00 am - 2:00 pm
(Wyoming Avenue
to Lincoln, left on
Memorial, right on
Pepe Court.)
Estate items added
weekly. Train track,
household, home
decor, jewelry &
vintage
HARVEYS LAKE
140 HILLSIDE AVE
located on Hillside
Ave in Harveys
Lake, close to Grot-
to & Villa Roma
SAT., MARCH 17TH
9am-1pm
Housewares, elec-
tronics, clothes,
DVDs, Jewelry,
Books & More!
Something for
everyone!
KINGSTON
567 Warren Ave.
Saturday, March 17
8am - 12pm
Many household
items, furniture, bar
items, much more.
KINGSTON
Spring Cleaning
Garage Sale
484 Market St.,
Rear
Sat., March 17th
8am - 2pm.
Antiques,
Longaberger
baskets, small
furniture, clairnet,
pictures, home
decor, crafts,
VHS/DVDs/CDs
LUZERNE
177 Main St.
Friday & Saturday
March 16 and 17
10am - 5pm
Furniture, knick
knacks, china,
much, much more
LUZERNE
INVENTORY
CLEARANCE
125 Main Street
03/17, 11 - 3
Music store fixtures
& displays. New &
used instruments,
parts, &
accessories.
Lets Make a Deal!
NANTICOKE
39 Hill Street
Sat., March 17th
8AM-4PM
Off Main Street,
across from Burger
King, on to Nanti-
coke St., left on to
Hill. 3 piece bed-
room set, single
beds, dressers,
tables, mirrors,
fans, metal cabi-
nets, books & mag-
azines, Christmas
items, blankets &
linens, lamps, sofa,
recliners, treadle
sewing machine,
desk & chairs, vacu-
ums, glass & china,
air conditioners.
Maytag washer,
tools, large collec-
tion of Country &
Western music to
include LPs, cas-
settes, CDs, &
DVDs. Gibson Epi-
phone bass guitar.
Peavey Amps, mus-
ic accessories, &
recording equip-
ment.
PITTSTON
351 S. Main Street
Sunday 9am - 4pm
Items: Househol d,
Appliances, cloth-
ing, tools, fishing,
doors, windows,
misc. Rain or Shine
744 Furniture &
Accessories
SHAVERTOWN
112 Village Drive
Fri., Mar. 16th 3-6
Sat., Mar. 17th, 8-12
HUGE Garage Sale!
Furniture, house-
wares, pictures,
frames, lamps,
exercise equipment,
wine cooler, kitchen
table & chairs, bak-
ers rack, TVs, VCRs,
CD players, lawn
furniture, book-
shelves, home
dcor, bar stools,
bar items, power
tools, hand tools,
saws (table, band,
radial arm), drill
press, and MUCH
more. Items priced
to sell.
CASH ONLY SALE!
Directions: Pioneer
Ave to W. Mt Airy
Road to Collins
Street to Village
Drive.
WEST PITTSTON
841 Foundry Street
between Luzerne &
Exeter Ave.
Saturday 9 to 2
Raindate Sun 3/18
Entire contents
must be sold.
Hospital bed, king
size bed, washer,
dryer, household
items, bedroom
suite, tools. No
early birds please.
WEST WYOMING
625 W. 8th St.
Fri., Sat., & Sun.
9 am to 3 pm
Kitchen set,
antique cribs, lift
chair, cedar closet
& chest, exercise
equipment & more
WEST WEST WYOMING WYOMING
6th Street
OPEN YEAR ROUND
SPACE
AVAILABLE
INSIDE & OUT
ACRES OF
PARKING
OUTSIDE
SPACES
- $10
Saturday
10am-2pm
Sunday
8am-4pm
FLEA
MARKET
WILKES-BARRE
304 Scott Street,
Saturday, March 17,
9:00 a.m. to noon.
Bedroom set,
queen mattress,
twin mattress,
kitchen table with
four chairs, recliner,
rocking chair,
kitchen items, toys,
books, and more.
WILKES-BARRE
315 Moyallen Street
Sat., March 17th
9 am - 2 pm
Huge Yard Sale
Wide Variety
Something for
Everyone!
WYOMING
145 2nd St
Saturday, March 17
8am - 2pm
Antiques, lots of
jewelry, tools,
depression glass,
girls toddler cloth-
ing, household
items, toys & more!
YATESVILLE
25 STOUT ST.
(Same Street as
Pittston Area HS)
HOUSE SALE:
Sat/Sun 3/17 & 3/18,
8:00 - 1:00
Household items,
furniture, jewelry,
clothing, purses,
and much more...
748 Good Things To
Eat
FRESH FRUITS &
VEGETABLES
DELIVERED TO
YOUR DOOR.
SIGN UP NOW
C.S.A. www.hails
familyfarm.com
570-721-1144
754 Machinery &
Equipment
REFRIGERATOR 06
Kenmore 29 cu. ft.t
side by side, water
ice on door. Stain-
less steel finish on
front. Used 2 years
& sat. Needs freon
charge. Paid $1300.
will sell $200. OBO
570-383-2527
758 Miscellaneous
WANTED
ALL JUNK CARS
& TRUCKS
HEAVY
EQUIPMENT
DUMPTRUCKS
BULLDOZERS
BACKHOES
Highest Prices
Paid!!!
FREE
REMOVAL
Call
Vito & Ginos
Anytime
288-8995
AUTO PAINT BASE
COAT, 1 gallon 6M
rally red Corvette
color sell for $100.
obo. 570-883-7007`
BATHTUB. White
clawfoot tub & toilet
with fixtures (repro-
duction). Was
$3,200, now
$1,800. 2 ladders,
28 aluminum $150,
16 ladder, $60, &
a tile cutter $40.
570-714-2032
570-852-9617
BEDDING/HOUSE
Items King com-
forter set, new,
ivory color $35
Glass coffee table
$25. Wilton Cake
Pans $1 each
570-443-8310
CHRISTMAS TREE
7 1/2 used 3 times
asking $50.
570-825-0569
COFFEE MAKE
green 12 cup $5.
Green toaster $5.4
cup coffee maker
$5.Tea for two
maker $5. Extra
Large George For-
man Grill $5. Coun-
try bench $12. Large
assortment of sun-
flower items, from
$1. to $10. each.
Large assortment of
pine trees for village
decorating $.50
each. Under count-
er mount TV with
remote $10. Under
counter mount
Radio & cassette
with clock $10.
570-868-5275
DEHUMIDIFIER GE
used about 5 hours
$50. OBO
570-383-2527
FREE AD POLICY
The Times Leader
will accept ads for
used private party
merchandise only
for items totaling
$1,000 or less. All
items must be
priced and state
how many of each
item. Your name
address, email and
phone number must
be included. No ads
for ticket sales
accepted. Pet ads
accepted if FREE
ad must state
FREE.
One Submission per
month per
household.
You may place your
ad online at
timesleader.com,
or email to
classifieds@
timesleader.com or
fax to 570-831-7312
or mail to Classified
Free Ads: 15 N.
Main Street, Wilkes-
Barre, PA. Sorry
no phone calls.
HOUSEHOLD
Revere Ware.
Clean, shiny, & very
good condition.
Corelle butterfly
gold, 72 pieces, .30
each. 570-639-1653
BEST PRICES
IN THE AREA
CA$H ON THE $POT,
Free Anytime
Pickup
570-301-3602
570-301-3602
CALL US!
TO JUNK
YOUR CAR
MEDICINE CABINET
Triple cabinet white
frame, tri-view mir-
ror, adjustable
shelves, surface
mount. 48x30x4 1/4
$35. Vanity top-cul-
tured marble, pink
with white veining,
single bowl with
backsplash, 60x 22
$45. 570-735-5147
MEDICINE CABINET.
Oak. 30x30.3 mir-
rored doors. 4
lights. 3 shelves.
Excellent condition
$25. 606-6624
MOTOR 2005 Mer-
cury Outboard
bought new in 06
used 10 times.
$800. 570-829-1541
MOVIE POSTERS:
genuine $15. 33
RPM records classi-
cal, movies etc $4.
each. IBM type-
writer electric $80.
570-280-2472
PERFIT incontinence
underwear Size
X-L 14 per package
$5 each. Adult
incontin underwear
XL size 14 per pack-
age $5. each.
570-288-9940
758 Miscellaneous
SEWING machine
Singer in cabinet,
attachments + 18
discs for various
patterns $50.
570-474-6028
TIRES SUV/Truck
Goodyear Rugged
Trail t/a 8000 miles
265/75r16. $500.
570-406-5857
TRUCK CAP. Fiber-
glass A.R.E. with
light. Forest green
sliding screen win-
dows & locking
door. 76x62. $250
OBO. Stepclimber,
425i Tunturi, $100.
570-574-0680
762 Musical
Instruments
KEYBOARD, Casio,
Model CTK-558.
$50. Like new.
(570) 287-0023
ORGAN Thomas
needs tuning $375.
570-654-4113
PIANO. Kawai.
Excellent condition.
Asking $1,500.
570-899-3390
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
776 Sporting Goods
GOLF CLUBS
Adams idea tech v3
hybrid golf clubs set
1 year old all 8 clubs
are senior flex
graphite shaft, 4-7
iron are hybrids 8-
gap wedge are
forged. New $800+
tax, asking $575.
570-287-0005
TURKEY BOX Calls,
assorted woods,
new listed $35. sell-
ing $20 each.
570-287-2073
780 Televisions/
Accessories
TV Sony Wega 42
$75. All in excellent
condition, moving
must sell. 760-9518
784 Tools
SCROLL SAW
Craftsman, $85.
Delta table saw
converted to a
router shaper table
with Craftsman
router attached.
$90. 570-288-9260
WORK TABLE
\wooden table with
cabinets & drawers
8.5X4 $500. OBO.
(570) 829-3303
786 Toys & Games
BICYCLE Girls 16
Barbie bike by
Dynacraft with train-
ing wheels. $45.
firm. 570-696-4020
HAND PUPPETS
Alf hand puppets
with records. $10.
each (new). ROD-
NEY & FRIENDS
$30. 570-779-3844
796 Wanted to Buy
Merchandise
ANTIQUE TOYS
WANTED
Lead soldiers, tin
wind-up, Ger-
man, cast iron,
large pressed
steel trucks,
Tootsie toy,
Dinky.
Larry - Mt. Top
474-9202
ANTIQUES
1 item or entire
contents of homes.
814-3371/328-4420
Carol
is paying
TOP DOLLAR
For your gold
and silver, gold
and silver
coins, rings,
bracelets,
scrap jewelry
Guaranteed
highest
prices paid.
Also Makes
Housecalls
570-855-7197
VITOS
&
GINOS
Wanted:
WANTED
ALL JUNK
CARS,
TRUCKS &
HEAVY
EQUIPMENT
DUMPTRUCKS
BULLDOZERS
BACKHOES
Highest
Prices
Paid!!
FREE
PICKUP
288-8995
Job Seekers are
looking here!
Where's your ad?
570-829-7130 and
ask for an employ-
ment specialist
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com SATURDAY, MARCH 17, 2012 PAGE 19D
2005 CHEVY TRAILBLAZER
LS 4W D
$
13,999
*
#Z2592A ,Vortec 4200 A utom atic,C lim ate C ontrol,Bose
Stereo,Keyless Rem ote D oor Lock,Running Boards,
17A lum inum W heels,PW ,PD L,Pow er H eated M irrors
ONLY
37K
M ILES
7
4
5
0
3
8
2006 JEEP LIBERTY
4X4
$
11,999
*
#Z2596A ,3.7LV6 A utom atic,A /C ,PW ,PD L,
A M /FM /C D ,A lloy W heels,O N LY 42K M ILES
ONE
OW NER
2007 CHEVY COBALT
LT Sedan
$
10,999
*
#12136A ,2.2LA uto.,A /C ,PW ,PD L,Spoiler,
C D ,Traction C ontrol
ONLY
46K
M ILES
TH E W E SE L L M OR E
TH AN P R E -OW NE D CH E V YS
C ars Trucks
R Vs M otorcycles
A TVs C om m ercial
TOP DOL L A R
FOR
TRA DE -IN S
EXIT 170B OFF I-81 TO EXIT 1. BEAR RIGHT ON BUSINESS ROUTE 309 TO SIXTH LIGHT. JUST BELOW WYOMING VALLEY MALL.
*Prices plus tax & tags. Prior use daily rental on select vehicles. Select pictures for illustration purposes only.
XM and OnStar fees applicable. Low APR to well qualified buyers.Not responsible for typographical errors.
Mon.-Thurs.8:30-8:00pm; Friday 8:30-7:00pm; Saturday 8:30-5:00pm
821-2772 1-800-444-7172
601 K id d e rS tre e t, W ilke s -Ba rre , P A
V A L L E Y
CHE V ROL E T
K E N W A L L A CE S
Scan
From
M obile
Device
For
M ore
Specials
V isitus24/ 7a twww.v a lleyc hev ro let.c o m
$
14,999
*
2010 HONDA CIVIC LX
Sedan
ONLY
24K
M ILES
#12172A A ,A uto,A ir,PW ,PD L,Keyless Entry,
A M /FM /C D ,1 O w ner
$
21,999
*
2009 FORD EDGE SEL
AW D
#11735A ,V6,A utom atic,A ir,Leather,
A M /FM /C D ,C hrom e W heels
ONE
OW NER
ONLY
26K
M ILES
2005 M INICOOPER S
$
14,999
*
#11812A ,4 C yl.,6 Speed M anualTransm ission,A ir
C onditioning,Leather,A lloy W heels,PW ,PD L,49K M iles
SUNROOF
2007 CHEVY TRAILBLAZER
SS 4X4
$
26,900
*
#Z2664,V8 A uto.,C lim ate C ontrol,Rem ote Keyless Entry,
D eep Tinted G lass,Bose 6 D isc C D Stereo & M ore
ONLY
34K
M ILES
$
17,999
*
2007 CHEVROLET COLORADO
EXTENDED CAB
4W D Z71
ONE
OW NER
#Z2505A ,3.7LI5,A utom atic,D eep Tinted G lass,O ffRoad Pkg.,
Insta-Trac 4x4,PW ,PD L,A ir,C astA lum inum W heels,46K M iles
$
14,999
*
#12131A ,V6 A utom atic,A /C ,PW ,PD L,Pow er Seat,
RoofRack,A lloy W heels,A M /FM C D
2006 PONTIAC TORRENT
AW D
ONE
OW NER
ONLY
46K
M ILES
2011 CHEVY HHR LT
$
14,999
*
#Z2663,2.2LA uto.,A /C ,PW ,PD L,O nStar,
Traction C ontrol,C D ,Luggage RoofRails
ONE
OW NER
2009 TOYOTA VENZA
W AGON
AW D
$
22,987
*
#12205A ,2.7L4 C yl.,A utom atic,A ir,
Fog Lam ps,PW ,PD L,Tinted W indow s,
A lloy W heels,Pow er Seat,30K M iles
$
12,999
*
2009 PONTIAC VIBE
ONE
OW NER
#12266A ,1.8LD O H C A uto.,A ir,PW ,PD L,
Rem ote Keyless Entry,45K M iles
2008 FORD ESCAPE
XLT AW D
$
15,888
*
#12195A ,V6,Suroof,A utom atic,A ir,
A lloy W heels,PW ,PD L
2005 JEEP
GRAND
CHEROKEE
4X4
$
14,999
*
#12305A ,V6 A uto.,A ir,PW ,PD L,Traction C ontrol,
A lloy W heels,Luggage Rack,45K M iles
$
22,900
*
#12541A ,4 C yl.,A utom atic,A /C ,PW ,PD L,Tinted
W indow s,Leather,FrontC aptain C hairs,31K M iles
ONE
OW NER
2010 HONDA CRV EX-L
SPORT 4W D
SUNROOF
2006 GM C CANYON
SL REG CAB
4x4
$
14,999
*
#Z2582,3.5LA utom atic,A ir,PW ,PD L,A lum inum W heels,
C D ,Bedliner,Fog Lam ps,O nly 42K M iles
SUNROOF
ONE
OW NER
$
21,500
*
2010 JEEP W RANGLER SPORT
4W D
#12221A ,V6 6 Speed M anualTransm ission,A /C ,
Prem ium W heels,H ardtop,PW ,PD L,C ruise,23K M iles
$
13,999
*
2007 SATURN AURA
XE
#Z2436,3.5LV8 A utom atic,A /C ,PW ,PD L,Pow er Seat
w /Lum bar A djustm ent,Steering W heelC ontrols,1 Ow ner
ONLY
39K
M ILES
$
12,999
*
2007 CHEVROLET IM PALA
LS
#Z2402,V6 A utom atic,A /C ,PW ,PD L,C ruise,
O nStar,Pow er Seat,SteelW heels,1 Ow ner
ONLY
37K
M ILES
$
15,900
*
#12004A ,V6 A utom atic,A /C ,PW ,PD L,Tilt,
C ruise,A lloy W heels
ONLY
37K
M ILES
2007 SUZUKIXL7
AW D
$
15,999
*
2007 FORD RANGER
SUPERCAB
4W D
#12069A ,6 C yl.,A uto,A ir,Fog Lam ps,
Rear Jum p Seats,C D /M P3,PW ,PD L,47K M iles
ONE
OW NER
$
19,999
*
2009 NISSAN ROGUE SL
AW D
#12287A ,A utom atic,A /C ,Sunroof,Leather,PW ,PD L,
C ruise,A lum inum W heels
ONLY
33K
M ILES
ONE
OW NER
468 Auto Parts 468 Auto Parts
AS ALWAYS ***HIGHEST PRICES***
PAID FOR YOUR UNWANTED
VEHICLES!!!
DRIVE IN PRICES
Call for Details (570) 459-9901
Vehicles must be COMPLETE!!
PLUS ENTER TO WIN $500 CASH!!
DRAWINGTO BE HELD LAST DAY
OF EACH MONTH
www.wegotused.com
BUYING JUNK
VEHICLES
$300 AND UP
$125 EXTRA IF DRIVEN,
DRAGGED OR PUSHED IN!
NOBODY Pays More
570-760-2035
Monday thru Saturday 6am-9pm Happy Trails!
412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale
WVONMO VALLEV
UV MEME PAV MEME UV MEME
415 Kidder Street
Wilkes-Barre, PA 18702
570.822.8870
Reliable
Cars
Use your tax refund to buy.
(See sales representative for details)
steve@yourcarbank.com
www.wyomingvalleyautomart.com
FREE GAS when you nance a vehicle
up to 36 months
Find your next
vehicle online.
timesleaderautos.com
468 Auto Parts 468 Auto Parts
PAGE 20D SATURDAY, MARCH 17, 2012 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
551 Other 551 Other 551 Other
Earn Extra Cash
For Just A Few
Hours A Day.
Deliver
To nd a route near you and start
earning extra cash, call Rosemary at
570-829-7107
Lehman/Lehman Twp.
(MOTOR ROUTE)
$1200 Monthly Prot + Tips
140 daily papers / 175 Sunday papers
Firehouse Road, Lehman Outlet Road,
Meeker Road, Loyalville Road, Red Oak Drive,
Spruce Tree Road
Duryea
$630 Monthly Prot + Tips
164 daily / 161 Sunday
Adams Street, Bluebery Hill Development,
Cherry Street, Foote Avenue, New Street
Nanticoke
$1000 Monthly Prot + Tips
223 daily papers / 282 Sunday papers
East Field Street, East Grand Street,
East Grove Street, Kosciuszko Street
South Market Street, East Union Street
Warrior Run
$700 Monthly Prot + Tips
133 daily / 151 Sunday
Allenberry Drive, Front Street, South Main Street,
Orchard Street, Somerset Drive
Forty Fort
$600 Monthly Prot + Tips
131 daily / 154 Sunday
E. Pettebone Street, W. Pettebone Street,
Slocum Street, Virginia Terrace, Welles Street
Available routes:
( No Col l ect i ons)
548 Medical/Health 548 Medical/Health 548 Medical/Health
566 Sales/Business
Development
566 Sales/Business
Development
The Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center is currently accepting
applications for full-time Registered Nurses at the VA Medical Center
Registered Nurses
Emergency Room Med/Surg
ICU/Telemetry Community Living Center (Geriatrics)
OR/ PACU Short Procedure Unit (SPU)
In addition to a competitive salary, we offer paid, vacation/sick leave,
health and life insurance coverage and an attractive retirement package
including a tax deferred savings plan.
Interested applicants must submit the following information: Application
for Nurses and Nurse Anesthetists, VAF 10-2850a; Declaration for Feder-
al Employment, OF-306; Curriculum Vitae, copy of Nursing Degree, and
License Verification. ACLS/BCLS Certification documentation required
upon joining the VA Medical Center staff or within the first 3-months of
employment.
Forms are available at http://www.vacareers.va.gov/job-search
For additional information please call
(570) 824-3521, EXTENSION 7209.
Please mail your complete application package to:
DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS AFFAIRS
Medical Center (05)
1111 East End Boulevard, Wilkes-Barre, PA 18711
VA IS AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER
AUTOMOTIVE SALES
CONSULTANTS
Valley Chevrolet is seeking
individuals who are self-starters,
team-oriented and driven.
(No experience necessary)
We Offer:
Salary & Commission Benefts
401k Plan 5 Day Work Week
Huge New & Used Inventory
Apply in person to:
Blake Gagliardi, Sales Manager
Rick Merrick, Sales Manager
601 Kidder Street, Wilkes-Barre
SHIPPING/RECEIVING DEPARTMENT
Part Time with potential for Full on
First & Second Shift (Sunday-Thursday)
We are seeking energetic individuals with
distribution experience and a great work ethic
for 1ST/2ND shift. We offer a competitive start-
ing wage with potential for rapid increase based
on performance.
Interested individuals should apply in person at:
Keystone Automotive Operations, Inc.
100 Slocum Ave., Exeter, PA 18643
570-655-4514
Fax: (570) 655-8115
E.O.E. M/F/D/V
533 Installation/
Maintenance/
Repair
533 Installation/
Maintenance/
Repair
566 Sales/Business
Development
557 Project/
Program
Management
566 Sales/Business
Development
557 Project/
Program
Management
MAINTENANCE
Girl Scouts are looking for an individual to
assist with maintenance at its camp proper-
ty in Kingsley, PA. Candidates should have
experience in construction trades, be able
to operate power tools and machinery, and
work independently. Candidates must be
able to lift up to 100 lbs, be comfortable
working on elevated surfaces, and traverse
rough terrain. This is a seasonal position
working 32 hours per week.
Please visit our website at
www.gshpa.org/aboutus/careers
to complete an application.
ASSOCIATE,
MEMBERSHIP SERVICES
Premier non-profit is seeking an individual to
develop and implement plans to recruit and
retain girl members and adult volunteers in
Lackawanna County. Responsibilities include
developing programs and trainings, conducting
outreach programs at area schools, and fostering
community partnerships.
Demonstrated abilities in planning, manage-
ment, evaluation, and analysis of youth pro-
grams are required. Candidates must have
excellent motivational and organizational skills
along with being able to work with diverse
teams. Some evenings and weekends are
required. Candidates must have a valid drivers
license to carry out assignments.
Please email resume, cover letter, and
salary requirements to
careers@gshpa.org
SALESPEOPLE
YOUR CHOICE 3 to 4 DAYS!
This is the perfect opportunity for
Students, Seniors, or ANYONE
with sales or retail experience.
Must have dependable transportation.
No telemarketing!
The Kiosk Program
A newspaper marketing company is seeking
Salespeople sell directly to non-
subscribers at local stores, explaining the
benefits of local newspaper subscriptions.
You must enjoy the following:
1. Averaging $10- - $17 per hour
2. Talking to people in person
3. Selling a quality product
4. Casual business attire
OPEN INTERVIEWS for
THE KIOSK PROGRAM
will be held at
The Times Leader Building,
located at 90 East Market St.
Wilkes-Barre, PA
Thursday March 22
10 am to 12 noon or
3pm to 5 pm only
No Phone Calls Please
796 Wanted to Buy
Merchandise
WANTED
JEWELRY
WILKES BARREGOLD
( 570) 48GOLD8
( 570) 484- 6538
Highest Cash Pay-
Outs Guaranteed
Mon- Sat
10am - 6pm
Cl osed Sundays
1092 Highway 315 Blvd
( Pl aza 315)
315N . 3 mi l es af t er
Mot orworl d
We Pay At Least
80% of the London
Fix Market Price
for All Gold Jewelry
Visit us at
WilkesBarreGold.com
Or email us at
wilkesbarregold@
yahoo.com
London PM
Gold Price
Mar. 16th: $1,658.00
Looking for Work?
Tell Employers with
a Classified Ad.
570-829-7130
800
PETS & ANIMALS
805 Birds
Now is the time for
all good men and
women to come to
the aid of their
country.
Now is the time for
all good men and
women to come to
the aid of their
country. some
fmore trest
810 Cats
CATS & KI TTENS
12 weeks & up.
All shots, neutered,
tested,microchipped
VALLEY CAT RESCUE
824-4172, 9-9 only
815 Dogs
PAWS
TO CONSIDER....
ENHANCE
YOUR PET
CLASSIFIED
AD ONLINE
Call 829-7130
Place your pet ad
and provide us your
email address
This will create a
seller account
online and login
information will be
emailed to you from
gadzoo.com
The World of Pets
Unleashed
You can then use
your account to
enhance your online
ad. Post up to 6
captioned photos
of your pet
Expand your text to
include more
information, include
your contact
information such
as e-mail, address
phone number and
or website.
LINE UP
A GREAT DEAL...
IN CLASSIFIED!
BEAUTIFUL LAB PUPS
AKC, Nice Pedigree.
8 weeks March 16.
Black Females and
Males avail. $350
Limited, $500 Full
Reg. 570-250-4977.
GOLDEN
RETRIEVER mix. 6
months. Male all
shots with crate.
Likes dogs, cats
and kids. Needs
room to run. $150.
570-287-0815
leave message
815 Dogs
GOLDEN SETTER
PUPPIES!!
1 female, 3 males
left, vet checked
and 1st shots
call 570-417-3107
SHIH TZU PUPPIES
YOU CAN BUY LOVE
ACA Registered
1 Black & while
male, available
now. Two females
& one male,
available 04/17/12.
570-714-2032
570-852-9617
SHIH-TZU PUPPIES
Pure Bred & Mixes
$400 and up
570-250-9690
Poms, Yorkies, Mal-
tese, Husky, Rot-
ties, Golden,
Dachshund, Poodle,
Chihuahua, Labs &
Shitzus.
570-453-6900
570-389-7877
845 Pet Supplies
FISH TANK with
hood, pump, heater,
all accessories $25.
570-287-0023
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
900
REAL ESTATE
FOR SALE
906 Homes for Sale
Having trouble
paying your mort-
gage? Falling
behind on your
payments? You
may get mail from
people who promise
to forestall your
foreclosure for a fee
in advance. Report
them to the Federal
Trade Commission,
the nations con-
sumer protection
agency. Call 1-877-
FTC-HELP or click
on ftc.gov. A mes-
sage from The
Times Leader and
the FTC.
906 Homes for Sale
ASHLEY
3 bedroom, 1 bath 2
story in good loca-
tion. Fenced yard
with 2 car detached
garage. Large attic
for storage. Gas
heat. $79,900
Call Ruth Smith
570-696-1195 or
570-696-5411
SMITH HOURIGAN GROUP
ASHLEY
TO SETTLE ESTATE
94 CAREY STREET
Great starter home.
Well cared for 2
story, 3 bedroom
half double. Gas
heat, low taxes.
$39,000
Call 570-735-8763
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
AVOCA
214 Gedding St.
Cozy Cape Cod
home with 2 bed-
rooms, 1st floor
laundry, nice yard
with deck. For more
info and photos
visit: www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 12-668
$59,900
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
906 Homes for Sale
AVOCA
901 Main St.
Stately 4 bedroom
home with beautiful
woodwork, extra
large rooms with
gas heat and
nice yard.
MLS 12-884
$79,900
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
AVOCA
REDUCED
314 Packer St.
Remodeled 3
bedroom with 2
baths, master
bedroom and
laundry on 1st
floor. New sid-
ing and shin-
gles. New
kitchen. For
more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 11-3174
$94,900
Call Tom
570-262-7716
P
E
N
D
I
N
G
BACK MOUNTAIN
Centermorland
529 SR 292 E
For sale by owner
Move-in ready. Well
maintained. 3 - 4
bedrooms. 1 bath.
Appliances includ-
ed. 2.87 acres with
mountain view. For
more info & photos
go to:
ForSaleByOwner.com
Search homes in
Tunkhannock.
$275,000. For
appointment, call:
570-310-1552
906 Homes for Sale
BEAR CREEK
Meadow Run Road
Enjoy the exclusive
privacy of this 61
acre, 3 bedroom, 2
bath home with
vaulted ceilings and
open floor plan. Ele-
gant formal living
room, large airy
family room and
dining room and
gorgeous 3 season
room opening to
large deck with hot
tub. Modern eat in
kitchen with island,
gas fireplace,
upstairs and wood
burning stove
downstairs. This
stunning property
boasts a relaxing
pond and walking
trail. Sit back
and savor
the view
MLS 11-3462
$443,900
Sandy Rovinski
Ext. 26
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
LINE UP
A GREAT DEAL...
IN CLASSIFIED!
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
BEAR CREEK TWP.
3 bedroom Ranch.
A/C, oil heat, hard-
wood floors. Fin-
ished basement.
Near golf course &
Charter School.
$199,900. 472-3710
BEAR CREEK TWP.
3 bedroom Tri-level.
Electric heat, hard-
wood floors, fin-
ished basement
near golf course.
$189,900
570-472-3710
DALLAS
143 Nevel Hollow
Road
Great country living
in this 3 bedroom, 2
& 1/2 bath home
with 1 car attached
garage, large enter-
tainment room
lower level. Plus a
30'x30' detached
garage with open
2nd floor ready to
finish & mechanics
pit in one stall.
MLS 11-4124
$195,000
570-675-4400
DALLAS
20 Fox Hollow Drive
Well maintained
two story with
fully finished lower
level awaits its
new family. 4-6
bedroom, 3.5 bath,
2 fireplaces. One
year home warranty
included. Wonderful
neighborhood.
$270,000
MLS #11-3504
Call Tracy Zarola
570-696-0723
906 Homes for Sale
DALLAS
244 Overbrook Rd.
Great starter home
- move-in condition
3 bedroom. All
appliances included.
Rear Deck with
Mountain View.
MLS 12-234
$109,000
570-675-4400
DALLAS
5 HEMLOCK ST.
Beautiful 4 bed-
room, 2.5 bath,
2,350 sq. ft. on
quiet street. Built in
2008 with hard-
wood floors, gran-
ite countertops,
fireplace, fenced
yard & more.
$309,000
Call 570-466-5968
GET THE WORD OUT
with a Classified Ad.
570-829-7130
DALLAS
Charming 2 bed-
room Cape Cod in
Franklin Township.
L-shaped living
room with hard-
wood floors, eat in
kitchen & private
driveway.
$119,900
MLS#11-3255
Call Joe moore
570-288-1401
DALLAS
Four bedroom
Colonial with hard-
wood floors in for-
mal dining and living
room. Modern eat
in kitchen, finished
basement with 24
x 30 recreation
room. Deck, hot tub
and ceiling fans.
MLS#11-4504
$229,900
Call Joe Moore
570-288-1401
DALLAS
HUGE REDUCTION
248 Overbrook Rd.
Lovely 4 bedroom
cape cod situated
in a private setting
on a large lot.
Vaulted ceiling in
dining room, large
walk in closet in 1
bedroom on 2nd
floor. Some
replacement win-
dows. Call Today!
MLS 11-2733
$114,900
Jay A. Crossin
Extension 23
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
906 Homes for Sale
DALLAS
NEWBERRY ESTATE
ORCHARD EAST
Two bedroom
condo, 2nd floor.
Living/dining room
combination. 1,200
square feet of easy
living. Two bal-
conies, one car
garage nearby.
Security system,
cedar closet, use of
in ground pool.
$109,000
MLS#11-4031
Call Joe Moore
570-288-1401
DALLAS
SCHOOL DISTRICT
100% Financing
Wooded and private
Bi-Level. This home
features 1 car
garage, 3 bed-
rooms, 1 3/4 bath &
nice updates. plenty
of room on your pri-
vate 2 acre lot.
100% USDA financ-
ing eligible. call for
details. REDUCED
PRICE $166,000
Call Cindy King
570-690-2689
www.cindykingre.com
570-675-4400
DALLAS TWP
Step out of your
spacious lower
level family room to
your large fenced
backyard with 2
tiered patio. This 3
bedroom country
setting on over
1 acre of land also
features 2 car
detached garage
with loft.
$230,000
MLS 11-3657
Barbara Young
Call 570-466-6940
COLDWELL BANKER
RUNDLE REAL ESTATE
570-474-2340
Ext. 55
Shopping for a
new apartment?
Classified lets
you compare costs -
without hassle
or worry!
Get moving
with classified!
DALLAS
Lush setting on
almost 5 acres with
magnificent stone
walls and fish pond!
This 4400SF home/
offices is in need of
TLC & lots of work.
Living room with oak
walls & coffered oak
ceiling, family room
with large wood
burning fireplace.
Large master suite
with master bath.
Four bedrooms with
three full baths and
two half baths.
Owners had offices
& storage adjacent
to house included in
the 4400SF. Large
two-car garage and
separate out-build-
ing. MLS#11-1628
REDUCED TO
$239,000
Maribeth Jones
570-696-6565
S
O
L
D
906 Homes for Sale
DRUMS
Practically new
ranch home in
beautiful St. Johns
Estates. Just a few
minutes from Rts.
80 & 81. This home
features tile floors
thruout the spa-
cious living area.
Green area behind
the property and no
building lots on one
side makes for a
beautiful country
setting with the con-
veniences of public
water & sewer. Spa-
cious back yard with
walk-in access to
basement. 2 decks
& a covered patio.
MLS 12-162
$237,000
Chris Jones
570-696-6558
ComeUpToQuailHill.
com
New Homes
From $275,000-
$595,000
570-474-5574
DURYEA
1107 Spring Street
Superb two story
with 3 bedrooms & 1
baths. Hardwood
floors, gas heat,
vinyl siding, large
yard with garage.
Call Jim for details.
Offered at $169,500
Towne & Country
Real Estate Co.
570-735-8932 or
570-542-5708
DURYEA
548 ADAMS ST.
Charming, well
maintained 3 bed-
room, 1 bath home
located on a quiet
street near Blue-
berry Hills develop-
ment. Features
modern kitchen
with breakfast bar,
formal dining room,
family room with
gas stove, hard-
wood floors in bed-
rooms, deck,
fenced yard and
shed. MLS#11-2947
$107,500
Karen Ryan
283-9100 x14
Looking for that
special place
called home?
Classified will address
Your needs.
Open the door
with classified!
DURYEA
REDUCED
548 Green St.
Are you renting??
The monthly mort-
gage on this house
could be under
$500 for qualified
buyers. 2 bed-
rooms, 1 bath, 1st
floor laundry. Off
street parking,
deep lot, low taxes.
For more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 11-3983
$64,900
Call Tom
570-262-7716
906 Homes for Sale
DURYEA
REDUCED
619 Foote Ave.
Fabulous Ranch
home with 3 bed-
rooms, 2 baths,
ultra modern
kitchen with granite
counters, heated
tile floor and stain-
less appliances.
Dining room has
Brazilian cherry
floors, huge yard,
garage and large
yard. Partially fin-
ished lower level. If
youre looking for a
Ranch, dont miss
this one. For more
info and photos
visit: www.atlas
realtyinc.com.
MLS 11-4079
$154,900
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
Collect cash, not dust!
Clean out your
basement, garage
or attic and call the
Classified depart-
ment today at 570-
829-7130!
DURYEA REDUCED!
38 Huckleberry Ln
Blueberry Hills
4 bedrooms, 2.5
baths, family room
with fireplace, 2 car
garage, large yard.
Master bath with
separate jetted tub,
kitchen with stain-
less steel appli-
ances and island,
lighted deck. For
more info and pho-
tos visit: www.atlas
realtyinc.com.
MLS 11-3071
$315,000
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
EDWARDSVILLE
OPEN HOUSE
Sunday, March 18th
1 - 2:30 pm
263 Lawrence St
Recently updated,
this 4 bedroom
home offers modern
kitchen with Oak
cabinets, 2 baths,
deck with a beautiful
view of the Valley,
fenced in yard and
finished lower level.
All appliances
included. A must
see. MLS#11-4434
$ 92,000
Call Christina @
(570) 714-9235
EXETER
102 IDA CIRCLE
Six year old 4
bedroom home, 3
baths. Two car
garage, eat-in
kitchen, living, din-
ing & family rooms,
office/study, utility
room & fireplace.
Gas forced air
furnace, central air,
unfinished base-
ment, fully land-
scaped, & deck.
$265,000.
forsalebyowner
.com
Call 800-843-6963
Listing #23758584
Looking for Work?
Tell Employers with
a Classified Ad.
570-829-7130
Looking for Work?
Tell Employers with
a Classified Ad.
570-829-7130
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com SATURDAY, MARCH 17, 2012 PAGE 21D
906 Homes for Sale 906 Homes for Sale 906 Homes for Sale 906 Homes for Sale
912 Lots & Acreage 912 Lots & Acreage
7
4
4
6
1
9
Linda Gavio
40 N. Mountain Blvd.,Mountaintop
(570) 474-2231 x19 (570) 956-0584 (cell)
Linda.Gavio@ColdwellBanker.com
FOR SALE
OPEN HOUSE
SUNDAY, MARCH 18
TH
1:30-3:30PM
43 Walden Drive, Mountaintop
$198,500
Move in ready 4 bedroom, 2 1/2 bath ranch. Formal dining
room, eat-in kitchen, 1st foor laundry. Central A/C. Walk
out the sliding door from large family room to yard. New
roof, patio/sliding door & carpet in family room. Most of
house recently painted. MLS#12-876
Dir: South on Rt 309, Mountain Top to Right into Walden
Park. Follow on Walden Drive to house on right.
Call Linda At
(570) 474-2231 x19 or (570) 956-0584 (cell)
OFFICENTERS - Pierce St., Kingston
Professional Ofce Rentals
Full Service Leases Custom Design Renovations Various Size Suites Available
Medical, Legal, Commercial Utilities Parking Janitorial
Full Time Maintenance Staff Available
For Rental Information Call: 1-570-287-1161
Custom Homes
Additions Remodeling
Roong Siding
Interior Damage
Fire, Water and Storm
Restoraton
We Will Work With Your
Insurance Company!
DOMBROSKI BUILDERS, LLC
Prompt Reliable Professional
570-406-5128 / 570-406-9682
Over 26 Years Experience
PA#088686 Fully Insured
906 Homes for Sale
EXETER
44 Orchard St.
3 bedroom, 1.5
bath single,
modern kitchen
with appliances,
sunroom, hard-
wood floors on
1st and 2nd
floor. Gas heat,
large yard, OSP.
For more info
and photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 11-1866
$137,999
Call Lu-Ann
570-602-9280
S
O
L
D
EXETER
530 Cherry Drive
Spacious 2 bed-
room townhome
with hardwood
floor, newer B dry
system, central air,
end unit with one
garage. All appli-
ances, move in
condition.
For more info and
photos visit: www.
atlasrealtyinc.com
MLS 12-712
$169,900
Call Tom
570-262-7716
Looking to buy a
home?
Place an ad here
and let the
sellers know!
570-829-7130
EXETER
Nice size four
bedroom home with
some hardwood
floors, large eat in
kitchen with break-
fast bar. 2 car
garage & partially
fenced yard. Close
to everything!
$92,900
Call
Christine Kutz
570-332-8832
906 Homes for Sale
EXETER
OPEN HOUSE
Sunday
12pm-5pm
362 Susquehanna
Ave
Completely remod-
eled, spectacular,
2 story Victorian
home, with 3 bed-
rooms, 1.5 baths,
new rear deck, full
front porch, tiled
baths and kitchen,
granite counter-
tops, all Cherry
hardwood floors
throughout, all new
stainless steel
appliances and
lighting, new oil fur-
nace, washer dryer
in first floor bath.
Great neighbor-
hood, nice yard.
$174,900 (30 year
loan, $8,750 down,
$887/month, 30
years @ 4.5%)
100% OWNER
FINANCING
AVAILABLE
Call Bob at
570-654-1490
Find Something?
Lose Something?
Get it back where it
belongs
with a Lost/Found ad!
570-829-7130
EXETER REDUCED
128 JEAN ST.
Nice bi-level
home on quiet
street. Updated
exterior. Large
family room,
extra deep lot.
2 car garage,
enclosed rear
porch and cov-
ered patio. For
more informa-
tion and photos
visit: www.
atlasrealtyinc.co
m
MLS 11-2850
$179,900
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
P
E
N
D
I
N
G
906 Homes for Sale
FORTY FORT
CHEAPER THAN
RENT!
38 Oak Street. Spa-
cious 1/2 double
block. Living room /
dining room combo.
3 bedrooms on sec-
ond floor, 3 on the
third. 1 1/2 baths. lst.
fl. laundry. 3 porch-
es. Large yard with
loads of parking.
Aluminum siding.
Concrete driveway.
Many extras! MLS #
12-711. Conventional
financing - ($3,250
dn., 4 1/4% int. , 30
yrs., $353 month).
$65,000.
Bob Kopec
HUMFORD REALTY
570-822-5126
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
HANOVER
Great multi-family
home. Fully rented
double block offers
large updated
rooms, 3 bedrooms
each side. Nice
location. MLS 11-
4390 $129,900
Call/text for Details.
Donna Cain
570-947-3824
HANOVER
TOWNSHIP
171 Boland Avenue
Motivated seller!
Well kept starter
home with nice size
rooms, 2nd floor
replacement win-
dows and great
yard with possible
off street parking
from alley access.
MLS 11-3043
$59,900
570-675-4400
906 Homes for Sale
HANOVER TOWNSHIP
235 Pfouts Street
Well cared for 1/2
double with gas
heat, modern
kitchen, 1st floor full
bath & laundry area.
Fenced yard,
detached garage,
front porch, back
yard patio & newer
roof. MLS 11-3436
REDUCED
$42,000
Call Florence
570-715-7737
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-474-6307
HANOVER TWP.
10 Lyndwood Ave
3 Bedroom 1.5 bath
ranch with new win-
dows hardwood
floors finished base-
ment 2 car garage
and a finished base-
ment. MLS 11-3610
$139,900
Call Pat Guesto
570-793-4055
CENTURY 21
SIGNATURE
PROPERTIES
570-675-5100
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
HANOVER TWP.
Open House
Sunday 3/18
12:30 - 2PM
12 Spring St.
Enjoy the nice yard
in this 2 bedroom
home in Newtown.
Double lot with off
street parking, 2
year old furnace,
nicely maintained.
Lots of possibilities.
Great value for
the price.
MLS 11-4488
$39,900
Call Connie
EILEEN R.
MELONE REAL
ESTATE
570-821-7022
906 Homes for Sale
HANOVER TWP.
146-148 Regal St..
Newer kitchens
Large baths
Tenant occupied
3 bedroom each
side.
Call for appointment
$74,900
MLS# 10-4598
Call Vieve Zaroda
(570) 474-6307
Ext. 2772
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-474-6307
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
HANOVER TWP.
285 Lyndwood Ave.
Brick 3 bedroom
Ranch with full fin-
ished basement.
Home features
large modern
kitchen, 3 nice size
bedrooms, all with
closets, hall coat
closet, w/w, mod-
ern bath, ceiling
fans, fenced yard.
Private driveway,
newer furnace.
Assessed value and
taxes recently
reduced!
MLS 12-222
$86,000
Patricia Lunski
570-814-6671
Antonik &
Associates, Inc.
570-735-7494
HANOVER TWP.
476 Wyoming St.
Nice 3 bedroom
single home. Gas
heat. Convenient
location. To settle
estate. Reduced to
$34,900
Call Jim for details
Towne & Country
Real Estate Co.
570-735-8932 or
570-542-5708
HANOVER TWP.
577 Nanticoke St.
Well maintained 3
bedroom, 2 story
home in quiet
neighborhood. This
home features an
enclosed patio with
hot tub, enclosed
front porch, walk up
floored attic with
electric. 2 coal
stoves and much
more. All measure-
ments approximate.
MLS 10-4645.
$80,900
Debbie McGuire
570-332-4413
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-287-0770
906 Homes for Sale
HANOVER TWP.
94 Ferry Road
Nice vinyl sided 2
story situated on a
great corner fenced
lot in Hanover Twp.
2 bedrooms, 2
modern baths,
additional finished
space in basement
for 2 more bed-
rooms or office/
playrooms.
Attached 2 car
garage connected
by a 9x20 breeze-
way which could be
a great entertaining
area! Above ground
pool, gas fireplace,
gas heat, newer
roof and All Dri
system installed in
basement. MLS #11-
626. $119,900
Mark R. Mason
570-331-0982
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
HANOVER TWP.
95 Pulaski St.
Large home on
nice sized lot.
Newer windows,
walk up attic. 3
bedrooms, nice
room sizes,
walk out base-
ment. Great
price you could
move right in.
For more info
and photos visit:
www. atlasreal-
tyinc.com
MLS 11-4554
$39,900
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
P
E
N
D
I
N
G
HANOVER TWP.
LIBERTY HILLS
Constitution Avenue
5 year old, 8 room,
2 story, 4 bedroom
3 bath, vinyl sided
home with large lot.
Deck, patio,
security system,
hardwood floors &
sooooo much more!
MLS# 11-2429
$289,900
Call Florence
570-715-7737
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-474-6307
HANOVER TWP.
REDUCED
5 Raymond Drive
Practically new 8
year old Bi-level
with 4 bedrooms, 1
and 3/4 baths,
garage, fenced
yard, private dead
end street. For
more info and pho-
tos visit: www.
atlasrealtyinc.com
MLS 11-3422
$175,000
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
906 Homes for Sale
HANOVER
TOWNSHIP
Very well main-
tained 2-story home
with 6 rooms, 3
bedrooms, large
eat-in kitchen and
1.5 baths. This home
also has a first floor
laundry room, duct-
less air conditioner,
gas steam heat and
a fenced yard. This
is a beauty! Make an
appointment today!
MLS#11-4433
$79,900
Karen Altavilla
570-283-09100
ext 28
HANOVER
Multi-family. large 3
unit building, beauti-
fully updated apart-
ments. Two 3 bed-
room apartments &
one efficiency
apartment. Great
location also offers
street parking. This
is a must see.
$139,900. MLS 11-
4389. Call/text for
Details Donna Cain
570-947-3824
HARDING
2032 ROUTE 92
Great Ranch home
surrounded by
nature with view of
the river and extra
lot on the river.
Large living room
and kitchen remod-
eled and ready to
move in. Full unfin-
ished basement, off
street parking.
For more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 12-79
$78,900
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
HARVEYS LAKE
1626 Halowich Rd.
Country living at its
finest! This 3 bed-
room, 2 3/4 bath
home features a
spacious floor plan.
Great room fea-
tures a fireplace
enclosed in PA Cul-
tured Blue Stone
w/waterfall on side.
Red oak flooring
and beams & a
panoramic view of
the mountainside.
Kitchen has granite
countertops and
hickory cabinets,
Satillio terra cotta
flooring and sky
windows. Much
more.
MLS 12-471
$315,000
Call Jay Crossin
Ext. 23
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
HARVEYS LAKE
Nice country home
with almost a full
acre of land. 1 mile
from Harveys Lake.
Home offers some
new windows, new
copper piping and
updated electric cir-
cuits. Come relax in
the nice screen
porch. MLS 12-476
$148,000
Call Tony
570-855-2424
Job Seekers are
looking here!
Where's your ad?
570-829-7130 and
ask for an employ-
ment specialist
HUGHESTOWN
REDUCED
189 Rock St.
Spacious home with
4 bedrooms and
large rooms. Nice
old woodwork,
staircase, etc. Extra
lot for parking off
Kenley St.
For more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 11-3404
$89,900
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
906 Homes for Sale
JENKINS TWP.
2 W. Sunrise Drive
PRICED TO SELL!
This 4 bedroom has
2 car garage with
extra driveway,
central air, veranda
over garage, recre-
ation room with
fireplace and wet
bar. Sunroom
For more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 12-296
$199,900
Call Tom
570-262-7716
JENKINS TWP.
4 Orchard St.
3 bedroom starter
home with 1 bath on
quiet street.
For more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 12-254
$69,900
Call Tom
570-262-7716
JENKINS TWP.
4 Widener Drive
A must see home!
You absolutely must
see the interior of
this home. Start by
looking at the pho-
tos on line. Fantas-
tic kitchen with
hickory cabinets,
granite counters,
stainless steel
appliances and tile
floor. Fabulous
master bathroom
with champagne
tub and glass
shower, walk in
closet. 4 car
garage, upper
garage is partially
finished. The list
goes on and on. For
more info and pho-
tos visit: www.atlas
realtyinc.com.
MLS 12-210
$389,900
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
JENKINS TWP.
Highland Hills
8 Patrick Road
Magnificent custom
built tudor home
with quality
throughout. Spa-
cious 4 bedrooms,
3.5 baths, 2 story
living room with
fireplace and library
loft. Dining room,
family room and 3
season sunroom
which overlooks
professionally land-
scaped grounds
with gazebo and
tennis/basketball
court. Lower level
includes recreation
room, exercise
room and 3/4 bath.
Enjoy this serene
acre in a beautiful
setting in Highland
Hills Development.
Too many amenities
to mention. For
more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 12-723
$399,900
Call Terry
570-885-3041
Angie
570-885-4896
LINE UP
A GREAT DEAL...
IN CLASSIFIED!
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
KINGSTON
171 Third Ave
So close to so
much, traditionally
appointed 3 bed-
room, 3 bath town-
home with warm
tones & wall to wall
cleanliness. Modern
kitchen with lots of
cabinets & plenty of
closet space thru-
out, enjoy the priva-
cy of deck & patio
with fenced yard.
MLS 11-2841
$123,000
Call Arlene Warunek
570-650-4169
Smith Hourigan
Group
(570) 696-1195
906 Homes for Sale
Kingston
3 bedroom bi-level
with two modern,
full baths & one 3/4
bath. Living room
with fireplace and
skylights, built in
china cabinets in
dining room. Lower
level family room
with fireplace and
wet bar. Large
foyer with fireplace.
MLS#11-3064
$289,500
Call Joe Moore
570-288-1401
KINGSTON
806 Nandy Drive
Unique 3 bedroom
home perfect for
entertaining! Living
room with fireplace
and skylights. Din-
ing room with built-
in china cabinets.
Lower level family
room with fireplace
and wetbar. Private
rear yard within-
ground pool and
multiple decks.
MLS#11-3064
Call Joe Moore
570-288-1401
KINGSTON
MOTIVATED SELLER
76 N. Dawes Ave.
Use your income
tax rebate for a
downpayment on
this great home
with modern
kitchen with granite
counters, 2 large
bedrooms,
attached garage,
full basement could
be finished, sun
porch overlooks
great semi private
yard. A great house
in a great location!
Come see it!
. For more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 12-41
$119,900
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
Shopping for a
new apartment?
Classified lets
you compare costs -
without hassle
or worry!
Get moving
with classified!
KINGSTON
OPEN HOUSE
SUNDAYS
1-4
108 Lathrop St.
Completely
remodeled, spa-
cious 4-5 bed-
room, 2 1/2 bath
home with tons of
original character.
Desirable
Kingston neigh-
borhood. Hard-
woods through-
out, 2 zone cen-
tral air, 2 gas fire-
places, finished
basement, new
vinyl fence. Crown
molding, ample
storage, many
built-ins.
A must see!
$275,000
Call for
appointment
570-417-6059
KINGSTON
REDUCED
794 Woodland Drive
Deceptively spa-
cious. Very well
kept. Quiet location.
Move in condition.
Attractive neighbor-
ing properties.
Modest taxes.
Newish furnace and
roofing. Nicely
fenced yard.
$119,900. 11-4547
Call Dale Williams
FIVE MOUNTAINS
REALTY
570-256-3343
906 Homes for Sale
KINGSTON TWP
573 Carverton Rd
Privacy & serenity!
This 40 acre estate
features living room
with fireplace &
hardwood floor;
family room with
vaulted ceiling &
fireplace; 1st floor
master bedroom &
bath with jetted tub
& stall shower; pan-
elled den; dining
room with stone
floor & skylight; 3
additional bedrooms
& 2 baths. Central
Air, 3 outbuildings.
REDUCED
$695,000
MLS 11-4056
Call Nancy Judd
Joe Moore
570-288-1401
KINGSTON
Beautiful well kept
home in the heart of
Kingston. Walk into
your new beautiful
foyer,leading into
the charming living
room with fireplace.
Beautiful wood
floors throughout,2
bonus finished
rooms on the 3rd
fl.Plenty of closets
and ample storage
throughout. Base-
ment is finished and
the yard fenced.
MLS 12-249
$109,000
Call / text Donna
Cain 570-947-3824
Looking for that
special place
called home?
Classified will address
Your needs.
Open the door
with classified!
LAFLIN
210 Beechwood Dr
Rare brick & vinyl
tri-level featuring 8
rooms, 4 bed-
rooms, 1.5 baths,
family room with
fireplace, rear
patio, sprinkler
system, alarm sys-
tem & central air.
MLS#11-2819
$199,000
CALL DONNA
570-613-9080
LAKE NUANGOLA
Lance Street
Very comfortable
2 bedroom home in
move in condition.
Great sun room,
large yard, 1 car
garage. Deeded
lake access.
Reduced $119,000
Call Kathie
MLS # 11-2899
(570) 288-6654
LARKSVILLE
View this view! You
no longer have to go
into the city to
watch the 4th of
July fireworks! Enjoy
home ownership.
Architecturally built
split level, living
room with beamed
ceiling and wood
burning fireplace,
large dining room
with hardwood
flooring, tiled office
with glass views,
two bedrooms, two
baths, family room,
hobby room, green
house, fish pond,
raised gardens,
grape vines, fruit
trees, 1+/- acres of
property, 2-car
detached garage.
MLS#11-1079
REDUCED TO
$229,000
Maribeth Jones
570-696-6565
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new apartment?
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PAGE 22D SATURDAY, MARCH 17, 2012 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
906 Homes for Sale 906 Homes for Sale 906 Homes for Sale 906 Homes for Sale 906 Homes for Sale 906 Homes for Sale 906 Homes for Sale 906 Homes for Sale 906 Homes for Sale 906 Homes for Sale
SATURDAY, MARCH 17TH
WILKES-BARRE & SURROUNDS
Wilkes-Barre Route 315 1-4PM Hanover Homes
SUNDAY, MARCH 18TH
WILKES-BARRE & SURROUNDS
Wilkes-Barre 35 Regent St. 1-3PM Century 21 Smith Hourigan Group
Wilkes-Barre 40 Wyndwood Dr. 1-2:30PM Lewith & Freeman
Wilkes-Barre 590-592 N. Main St. 2-4PM Rothstein Realtors
Wilkes-Barre 320 Kidder St. 12-2PM Realty World Rubbico Real Estate
Wilkes-Barre Route 315 1-4PM Hanover Homes
HANOVER/ASHLEY/NANTICOKE & SURROUNDS
Hanover Twp. 120 E. St. Marys Rd. 1-3PM Century 21 Smith Hourigan Group
Hanover Twp. 57 Countrywood Dr. 1-3PM Century 21 Smith Hourigan Group
Hanover Twp. 27 Spring St. 12:30-2PM Century 21 Smith Hourigan Group
Hunlock Creek 1585 Main Rd. 4:15-5:30PM Lewith & Freeman
Hanover Twp. 42 Spring St. 12:30-2PM Eileen R. Melone Real Estate
Hanover Twp. 12 Spring St. 12:30-2PM Eileen R. Melone Real Estate
Nanticoke 142 Espy St. 12-2PM Realty World Rubbico Real Estate
Nanticoke 112 Pine St. 12-2PM Realty World Rubbico Real Estate
PITTSTON/NORTH & SURROUNDS
Pittston Twp. 10 Norman St. 12-1:30PM Atlas Realty
Duryea 619 Foote Ave. 12-1:30PM Atlas Realty
Wyoming 5 Windy Hill Lane 1-3PM Century 21 Smith Hourigan Group
Jenkins Twp. Insignia Point Courtyards 1-3PM Lewith & Freeman
Exeter 522 Clover Court 1-2:30PM Lewith & Freeman
Exeter 110 Aster Court 1-2:30PM Lewith & Freeman
Lain 155 Haverford Dr. 2-4PM Lewith & Freeman
Pittston Twp. 1223 Sunset Dr. 1-2:30PM Classic Properties
Wyoming 534 Dennison Ave. 12-2PM Classic Properties
Exeter Twp. 405 Sutton Creek Rd. 12-1:30PM Century 21 Signature Properties
Lain 36 Lain Rd. 2-4PM Century 21 Signature Properties
KINGSTON/WEST SIDE & SURROUNDS
Edwardsville 263 Lawrence St. 1-2:30PM Lewith & Freeman
Kingston 72 N. Loveland Ave. 1-2:30PM Lewith & Freeman
Swoyersville 198 Dana St. 12-2PM Lewith & Freeman
Edwardsville 114 S. Thomas Ave. 2-3:30PM Lewith & Freeman
Kingston/CANCELLED83 N. Loveland Ave. 12-2PM Prudential Poggi & Jones
Swoyersville 610 Church St. 2:30-4PM Classic Properties
Kingston 133 New Hurbane St. 11:30AM-1PM Century 21 Signature Properties
Larksville 80 E. 4th St. 1-2:30PM Century 21 Signature Properties
Kingston 267 Grove St. 1-3PM Elegant Homes
MOUNTAINTOP & SURROUNDS
Mountaintop 5 Hawk Lane 1-3PM Century 21 Smith Hourigan Group
Mountaintop 428 Ice Harvest Dr. 1-3PM Century 21 Smith Hourigan Group
Mountaintop 55 Aleksander Blvd. 12:30-2PM Century 21 Smith Hourigan Group
Mountaintop Lot 1 Woodberry Dr. 1-3PM Lewith & Freeman
Mountaintop 25 Harley Dr. 1:30-3:30PM Coldwell Banker Rundle Real Estate
Mountaintop 43 Walden Dr. 1:30-3:30PM Coldwell Banker Rundle Real Estate
Mountaintop 25 Coplay Place 1-3PM Classic Properties
Mountaintop 14 Old No. Rd. 1-3PM Prudential Poggi & Jones
BACK MOUNTAIN & SURROUNDS
Shavertown 381 Vista Dr. 1-3PM Century 21 Smith Hourigan Group
Back Mountain 96 Saddle Ridge Dr. 1-3PM Century 21 Smith Hourigan Group
Dallas 10 Dakota Dr. 1-2:30PM Lewith & Freeman
Dallas 829 Homestead Dr. 12-1:30PM Lewith & Freeman
Trucksville 125 Frangorma Dr. 2-3:30PM Lewith & Freeman
Shavertown Lot #12 Windy Dr. 1-3PM Lewith & Freeman
Dallas 2 Oval Dr. 4-5PM Lewith & Freeman
HAZLETON & SURROUNDS
Drums 218 Bear Run Dr. 1-3PM Century 21 Bernstein Real Estate
Drums 920 St. Johns Rd. 1-2:30PM Lewith & Freeman
Conyngham 68 Sugarloaf Ave. 1-2:30PM Lewith & Freeman
OPEN HOUSES - SATURDAY, MARCH 17TH & SUNDAY, MARCH 18TH, 2012
906 Homes for Sale
LUZERNE
459 Bennett St.
Very nice 5 bed-
room, 2 story home
in nice area of
Luzerne. Off street
parking for 4 cars.
1st floor master
bedroom & laundry.
Replacement win-
dows on 2nd floor.
5 year young full
bath. Modern
kitchen w/breakfast
bar, oak cabinets.
Basement always
DRY! All measure-
ments approximate
MLS11-3745
$122,900
Debbie McGuire
570-332-4413
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
MOUNTAIN TOP
21 Forest Road
Fairview Heights
ranch featuring 3
spacious bedrooms,
1 1/2 baths, fire-
place, 1st floor laun-
dry, floored attic
with walk-in cedar
closet, 2 car
attached garage.
Newer roof, fur-
nace, water heater
and more! Sellers
are licensed real
estate agents.
MLS 11-3419
$169,000
Tony Desiderio
570-715-7734
Century 21 Smith
Hourigan Group
570-474-6307
Collect cash, not dust!
Clean out your
basement, garage
or attic and call the
Classified depart-
ment today at 570-
829-7130!
MOUNTAIN TOP
215 Patriot Circle
Townhouse. Very
good condition. 3
bedroom, 1 bath,
living room with gas
fireplace and hard-
wood floors. Kitchen
offers new stainless
steel appliances, tile
floor, laundry area,
dining room with
built in corner cabi-
nets. MLS 12-238
$124,900
James Banos
Realtor Associate
COLDWELL
BANKER RUNDLE
REAL ESTATE
570-991-1883
MOUNTAIN TOP
803 Aspen Drive
Brand new carpet in
lower level family
room! Hardwood on
1st floor dining
room, living room,
bedrooms & hall!
Large rear deck.
Master bedroom
opens to deck! Pri-
vate rear yard!
Basement door
opens to garage.
MLS #11-2282
NEW PRICE
$182,500
Jim Graham at
570-715-9323
906 Homes for Sale
WHITE HAVEN
NEW LISTING!
Woodhaven Estates
You can just settle
right into this impec-
cably maintained
home located in the
Crestwood School
District. This 3-bed-
room home offers
numerous features
you will be sure to
love; covered rear
deck, lower deck
leading to the pool,
ductless air, zoned
heating system,
detached heated 2
stall garage in addi-
tion to the built in
garage. Lake
access to enjoy a
row boat ride or
perhaps some fish-
ing! Major intestates
just minutes away.
Take a look!
MLS#12-872
$224,900
Jill Jones 696-6550
MOUNTAINTOP
29 Valley View Dr.
MOTIVATED SELLER
Raised ranch on
corner lot. Spacious
two car garage.
Modern kitchen &
bath, tile floors.
Energy efficient
Ceramic Heat.
MLS#11-2500
$174,900
Call Julio Caprari:
570-592-3966
MOUNTAINTOP
FAIRVIEW TOWNSHIP
4 bedroom ranch,
hardwood floors,
1.5 bathrooms, for-
mal dining & living
rooms, finished
basement family
room with dry bar,
exercise room, &
workshop. Two car
garage. MLS# 12-5
$161,200
Call Vieve
570-239-6236,
ext. 2772,
P
E
N
D
I
N
G
Looking to buy a
home?
Place an ad here
and let the
sellers know!
570-829-7130
MOUNTAIN TOP
130 CHURCH ROAD
The feel of a true
colonial home with
double entry doors
off the foyer into the
living room and din-
ing room. Spacious
kitchen breakfast
area, family room
leading to a fenced
rear yard. 3-season
room with cathedral
ceiling. Hardwood
floors, fireplace,
recently remodeled
2.5 bath and 2-car
garage. Located on
3.77 acres, all the
privacy of country
living yet conve-
niently located.
MLS#12-165
PRICE REDUCED
$183,900
Jill Jones 696-6550
906 Homes for Sale
NANITCOKE
3 bedroom, 1 bath.
Nice opportunity for
a starter home or
investment proper-
ty. Needs work, but
columns, moldings,
and leaded glass
windows are intact.
$42,000
CALL CHRISTINE
KUTZ
570-332-8832
NANTICOKE
182 Robert Street
Nice single or
duplex. Gas heat.
Detached garage.
This home is high
and dry, and avail-
able for immediate
occupancy. Call
Jim for details.
Affordable @
$104,900
TOWNE &
COUNTRY R.E.
570-735-8932
570-542-5708
NANTICOKE
203 W. SOUTH ST
Well kept 6 room
brick fRont ranch, 3
bedrooms, modern
kitchen, separate
dining room, 1.5
modern baths, large
fenced level lot with
prIvate drive. all
appliances.
MLS 12-331
$115,900
Call Florence
570-715-7737
Smith Hourigan Group
570-474-6307
NANTICOKE
Adorable home with
charm & character.
4 bedrooms, 1.5
baths, eat-in kit-
chen, formal dining
room, family room
with gas fireplace.
3 season room,
fenced in yard with
rear deck & shed.
$119,000
MLS#12-498
Michael Nocera
570-357-4300
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-696-5412
NANTICOKE
Great starter home
in nice area. Close
to schools and
recreation. Large 3
season porch with
cabinetry, great for
entertaining. New
plumbing, lots of
light & huge walk
up attic for storage
or rec room.
$38,500
Call CHRISTINE
KUTZ
570-332-8832
906 Homes for Sale
NANTICOKE
Raised Ranch in
good condition with
3 bedrooms, mod-
ern bath and gas
heat. Large fenced
yard, rear deck, 1
car garage and off
street parking for 3
more cars. New
roof, windows and
bath. Basement is
partially finished.
MLS 12-130
$99,900
Call Patty Lunski
570-814-6671
ANTONIK &
ASSOCIATES
570-735-7494
NEWPORT TWP.
Five bedroom
Contemporary has
a vaulted ceiling in
living room with
fireplace.
Hardwood floors in
dining & living
rooms. 1st floor
master bedroom
with walk in closet.
Lower level family
room. Deck,
garage, separate
laundry.
$257,500
MLS#12-170
Call Joe Moore
570-288-1401
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PITTSTON
175 Oak Street
NEW FURNANCE
3 bedrooms, 1.5
baths, 1st floor
laundry room, 3
season porch,
fenced yard and off
street parking.
MLS#12-721
$89,000
Call Patti
570-328-1752
Liberty Realty
& Appraisal
Services LLC
PITTSTON
238 S. Main St.
Ten room home
with 4 bedrooms, 2
baths, 2 car
garage, great drive-
way, central air,
large yard. A must
see home!
For more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 12-477
$139,900
Call Tom
570-262-7716
906 Homes for Sale
PITTSTON
A lot of house for
the money. Corner
home with lots of
space. 9 rooms, 2
1/2 baths, a bonus
room of 42 x 24.
This home is conve-
niently located near
major highways, air-
port and shopping.
Two car detached
garage and nice
yard.
$75,500
MLS# 10-4350
Call Michael Nocera
SMITH HOURIGAN
GROUP
570-696-5412
PITTSTON
Johnson St.
Great home, move
in ready, with 3
bedrooms, 1.5
baths, large yard
with lots of outdoor
living space. Hard-
wood floors, gas
fireplace, modern
eat in kitchen. New
gas furnace, roof
and windows. For
more info and pho-
tos visit: www.atlas
realtyinc.com.
MLS 12-328
$139,900
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
LivingInQuailHill.com
New Homes
From $275,000-
$595,000
570-474-5574
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
PITTSTON
Price Reduced! Price Reduced!
168 Elizabeth Street
Sturdy ranch in Ore-
gon Section. 3/4
bedrooms, 2 baths.
Price $89,000.
Call Stephen
570-814-4183
PITTSTON
REDUCED
168 Mill St.
Large 3 bedroom
home with 2 full
baths. 7 rooms on
nice lot with above
ground pool. 1 car
garage. For more
info and photos
visit: www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 11-3894
$79,000
Tom Salvaggio
570-262-7716
906 Homes for Sale
PITTSTON REDUCED
31 Tedrick St.
Very nice 3 bed-
room with 1 bath.
This house was
loved and you can
tell. Come see for
yourself, super
clean home with
nice curb appeal.
For more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 11-3544
Reduced to
$76,900
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
PITTSTON
REDUCED!
95 William St.
1/2 double home
with more square
footage than most
single family
homes. 4 bed-
rooms, 1.5 baths,
ultra modern
kitchen and remod-
eled baths. Super
clean. For more
information and
photos visit
www.atlas
realtyinc. com
MLS 11-2120
$54,900
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
Find Something?
Lose Something?
Get it back where it
belongs
with a Lost/Found ad!
570-829-7130
PITTSTON TWP.
REDUCED
10 Norman St.
Brick 2 story home
with 4 bedrooms, 3
baths, large family
room with fireplace.
Lower level rec
room, large drive-
way for plenty of
parking. Just off the
by-pass with easy
access to all major
highways. For more
info and photos
visit: www.
atlasrealtyinc.com.
MLS 11-2887
$159,900
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
PITTSTON TWP.
REDUCED
38 Frothingham St.
Four square home
with loads of poten-
tial and needs
updating but is
priced to reflect its
condition. Nice
neighborhood.
Check it out. For
more info and pho-
tos visit: www.
atlasrealtyinc.com
MLS 11-3403
$59,900
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
906 Homes for Sale
PLAINS
1610 Westminster
Road.
DRASTIC PRICE
REDUCTION
Paradise found!
Your own personal
retreat, small pond
in front of yard, pri-
vate setting only
minutes from every-
thing. Log cabin
chalet with 3 bed-
rooms, loft, stone
fireplace, hardwood
floors. Detached
garage with bonus
room. Lots to see.
Watch the snow fall
in your own cabin
in the woods.
For more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com.
MLS 11-319
$279,900
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
PLAINS
30 E. Charles St.
3 story home has 2
bedrooms with pos-
sibly a third bed-
room in the walk up
attic. Some
replacement win-
dows, gas heat and
hotwater. Hard-
wood floors in the
upstairs. An adja-
cent parcel of land
is included in this
price. For more info
and photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 12-776
$39,900
Call Angie
570-885-4896
or
Terry
570-885-3041
PLAINS
63 Clarks Lane
3 story Townhome
with 2 bedrooms, 3
baths, plenty of
storage with 2 car
built in garage.
Modern kitchen and
baths, large room
sizes and deck.
For more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com.
MLS 11-4567
$144,900
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
906 Homes for Sale
PLAINS
REDUCED REDUCED
74 W. Carey St.
Affordable home
with 1 bedroom,
large living room,
stackable washer
& dryer, eat in
kitchen. Yard
with shed.
Low taxes.
For more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 11-4068
$34,900 $34,900
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
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IN CLASSIFIED!
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on an automobile?
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Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
PLYMOUTH
1 Willow St.
Attractive bi-level
on corner lot with
private fenced in
yard. 3-4 bedrooms
and 1.5 baths. Fin-
ished lower level,
office and
laundry room
MLS 11-2674
$99,900
Jay A. Crossin
Ext. 23
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
PLYMOUTH
Fixer upper on a
deep large lot, close
to everything. Home
offers off street
parking, 4 bed-
rooms, laundry
room and 1 full bath.
Brand new furnace
installed last year.
Great investment
opportunity here
don't pass it by this
house has lots of
potential. Seller
says bring all offers.
MLS 12-367
$30,000
Contact Tony,
570-855-2424 for
more information or
to schedule your
showing.
PLYMOUTH
Recently remodeled
single family home
with 1st & 2nd floor
baths, modern
kitchen, large family
room with hard-
wood floors.
$70,000
MLS # 10-4618
Call Michael Nocera
SMITH HOURIGAN
GROUP
570-696-5412
906 Homes for Sale
PLYMOUTH
Roomy 2 bedroom
single with eat-in
kitchen, tile bath,
gas heat & 2 car
detached garage.
Priced to sell at
$34,900
MLS 11-2653
Ann Marie Chopick
570-760-6769
570-288-6654
PLYMOUTH
This 4 bedroom 2
story has a full bath
on the 1st floor and
rough in for bath on
2nd floor. An
enclosed side patio
from the kitchen
dinette area & side
drive are a big plus.
MLS 12-553
Only $34,900
Ann Marie Chopick
570-760-6769
570-288-6654
SHAVERTOWN
105 Summit Street
Fire damaged
home. Sold as is.
60 x 235 lot. Pub-
lic sewer,
water & gas.
$34,500
Call 570-675-0446,
evenings.
SHAVERTOWN
1195 Sutton Road
Attractive, well-
maintained saltbox
on 2 private acres
boasts fireplaces in
living room, family
room & master
bedroom. Formal
dining room. Large
Florida room with
skylights & wet bar.
Oak kitchen opens
to family room. 4
bedrooms & 3 1/2
baths. Finished
lower level.
Carriage barn
PRICE REDUCED
$425,000
MLS# 10-3394
Call Joe Moore
570-288-1401
SHAVERTOWN
12 Windy Drive
New construction in
the exclusive
Slocum Estates.
Stucco exterior. All
the finest appoint-
ments: office or 5th
bedroom, hard-
wood floors, crown
moldings, 9' ceil-
ings 1st & 2nd floor.
Buy now select
cabinetry & flooring.
MLS #11-1987
$525,000
Call Geri
570-696-0888
906 Homes for Sale
SHAVERTOWN
Well maintained
raised ranch in
Midway Manor.
Good size level
yard with shed.
Large
sunroom/laundry
addition. Lower
level family room
with wood stove.
$163,700
Call
Christine Kutz
570-332-8832
SHAVERTOWN
2 Oak Drive
Vacant land ready to
build. One of the last
lots left in this Back
Mountain develop-
ment. (1) one acre
lot. Call for details.
MLS 11-1488
$62,400
Christine Pieczynski
570-696-6565
Shopping for a
new apartment?
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or worry!
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*2008 Pulse Research
Call 829-7130
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Say it HERE
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570-829-7130
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com SATURDAY, MARCH 17, 2012 PAGE 23D
To Place Your Professional Services Ad, Please Call 829-7130
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Professional Services Directory
1006 A/C &
Refrigeration
Services
STRISH A/C
Ductless / Central
Air Conditioning
Free Estimates
Licensed & Insured
570-332-0715
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1024 Building &
Remodeling
1st. Quality
Construction Co.
Roofing, siding,
gutters, insulation,
decks, additions,
windows, doors,
masonry &
concrete.
Insured & Bonded.
Senior Citizens Discount!
State Lic. # PA057320
570-606-8438
ALL OLDERHOMES
SPECIALIST
825-4268.
Remodel / repair,
Windows
& Doors
DAVE JOHNSON
Expert Bathroom &
Room Remodeling,
Carpentry & Whole
House Renovations.
Licensed &Insured
570-819-0681
NEED A NEW
KITCHEN OR
BATH????
HUGHES
Construction
Roofing, Home
Renovating.
Garages,
Kitchens, Baths,
Siding and More!
Licensed and
Insured.
FREE
ESTIMATES!!
570-388-0149
PA040387
NICHOLS CONSTRUCTION
All Types Of Work
New or Remodeling
Licensed & Insured
Free Estimates
570-406-6044
Shedlarski Construction
HOME IMPROVEMENT
SPECIALIST
Licensed, insured &
PA registered.
Kitchens, baths,
vinyl siding & rail-
ings, replacement
windows & doors,
additions, garages,
all phases of home
renovations.
Free Estimates
570-287-4067
1024 Building &
Remodeling
SPRING
BUILDING/
REMODELING?
Call the
Building Industry
Association
for a list of
qualified members
call 287-3331
or go to
www.bianepa.com
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
1030 Carpet
Cleaning
Alan & Lindas
Carpet and/or
Chair Cleaning
2 FOR $39
570-826-7035
1039 Chimney
Service
A-1 ABLE
CHIMNEY
Rebuild & Repair
Chimneys. All
types of Masonry.
Liners Installed,
Brick & Block,
Roofs & Gutters.
Licensed &
Insured
570-735-2257
CHIMNEY REPAIRS
Parging. Stucco.
Stainless Liners.
Cleanings. Custom
Sheet Metal Shop.
570-383-0644
1-800-943-1515
Call Now!
COZY HEARTH
CHIMNEY
Chimney Cleaning,
Rebuilding, Repair,
Stainless Steel Lin-
ing, Parging, Stuc-
co, Caps, Etc.
Free Estimates
Licensed & Insured
1-888-680-7990
570-840-0873
1042 Cleaning &
Maintainence
BACK MOUNTAIN
COMMERCIAL
Cleaning Services
For your free
estimate dial
570-675-2317
House
Cleaning
Errands, etc.
$9 - $11/room.
Excellent
References
Call Jennifer at
570-436-8102
1054 Concrete &
Masonry
C&C Masonry
and Concrete.
Absolutely free
estimates. Masonry
& concrete work.
Specializing in foun-
dations, repairs and
rebuilding. Footers
floors, driveways.
570-766-1114
570-346-4103
PA084504
1054 Concrete &
Masonry
D. Pugh
Concrete
All phases of
masonry &
concrete. Small
jobs welcome.
Senior discount.
Free estimates.
Licensed & Insured
288-1701/655-3505
Wi l l i ams & Franks I nc
Masonry Contrac Masonry Contrac- -
tors tors. Chimney,
stucco, concrete,
and stonework.
Clean outs and
hauling service.
570-466-2916
WYOMING VALLEY
MASONRY
Concrete, stucco,
foundations,pavers,
retaining wall sys-
tems, dryvit, flag-
stone, brick work.
Senior Citizen Dis-
count.570-287-4144
or 570-760-0551
1057Construction &
Building
GARAGE DOOR
Sales, service,
installation &
repair.
FULLY INSURED
HIC# 065008
CALL JOE
570-606-7489
570-735-8551
1078 Dry Wall
MIRRA
DRYWALL
Hanging & Finishing
Textured Ceilings
Licensed & Insured
Free Estimates
(570) 675-3378
1084 Electrical
GRULA ELECTRIC LLC
Licensed, Insured,
No job too small.
570-829-4077
SLEBODA ELECTRIC
Master electrician
Licensed & Insured
Service Changes &
Replacements.
Generator Installs.
8 6 8 - 4 4 6 9
1093 Excavating
All Types Of
Excavating,
Demolition &
Concrete Work.
Large & Small Jobs
FREE ESTIMATES
(570) 760-1497
1132 Handyman
Services
All Your Home
Repair Needs No
Job Too Small
Licensed &
Insured
Free Estimates
RUSSELLS
PROPERTY
MAINTENANCE
570-406-3339
Marks
Handyman
Service
Give us a call
We do it all!
Licensed &Insured
570-578-8599
1135 Hauling &
Trucking
AAA CLEANING
A1 GENERAL HAULING
Cleaning attics,
cellars, garages.
Demolitions, Roofing
&Tree Removal.
FreeEst. 779-0918or
542-5821; 814-8299
A.S.A.P Hauling
Estate Cleanouts,
Attics, Cellars,
Garages, were
cheaper than
dumpsters!.
Free Estimates,
Same Day!
570-822-4582
AAA Bob & Rays
Hauling: Friendly &
Courteous. We take
anything & every-
thing. Attic to base-
ment. Garage, yard,
free estimates. Call
570-655-7458 or
570-905-4820
AFFORDABLE
Junk removal
cleanups,
cleanouts, Large or
small jobs. Fast
free estimates.
(570) 814-4631
ALWAYS READY
HAULING
Moving, Deliver-
ies, Property &
Estate Cleanups,
Attics, Cellars,
Yards, Garages,
Construction
Sites, Flood
Damage & More.
CHEAPER THAN A
DUMPSTER!!
Free Metal
Removal
Free Estimates
570-301-3754
CASTAWAY
HAULING JUNK
REMOVAL
823-3788 / 817-0395
HAUL ALL
HAULING &
PAINTING SERVICES.
Free Estimates.
570-332-5946
Shopping for a
new apartment?
Classified lets
you compare costs -
without hassle
or worry!
Get moving
with classified!
Junk-Be-Gone
We Haul It All!
Residential Com-
mercial
No Job Too Big Or
Small! Free Est.
W-B based
570-237-2609/
570-332-8049
Mikes $5-Up
Removal of Wood,
Trash and Debris.
Same Day Service.
826-1883
1135 Hauling &
Trucking
SPRING CLEANUP!
ALL KINDS OF
HAULING & JUNK
REMOVAL
TREE/SHRUB TREE/SHRUB
REMOV REMOVAL AL
DEMOLITION DEMOLITION
Estate Cleanout Estate Cleanout
Free Estimates
24 HOUR
SERVICE
SMALL AND
LARGE JOBS!
570-823-1811
570-239-0484
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
1156 Insurance
NEPA LONG TERM
CARE AGENCY
Long Term Care
Insurance
products/life insur-
ance/estate plan-
ning. Reputable
Companies.
570-580-0797
FREE CONSULT
www
nepalong
termcare.com
1162 Landscaping/
Garden
Brizzys
Arbor Care &
Landscaping
Tree trimming,
pruning & removal.
Stump grinding,
Cabling. Shrub and
hedge sculpting
and trimming.
Spring cleanup,
retaining walls
and repair.
Free Estimates
Fully Insured
570-542-7265
JAYS LAWN SERVICE
Spring clean-ups,
mowing, mulching
and more!
Free Estimates
570-574-3406
NORWAY SPRUCE
8 - 9 for $99.00
Plants dug fresh
Delivery & Planting
available.
Other types & sizes
helenandedstree-
farm.com
570-498-6209 Ed
Tough brush,
mowing, edging,
mulching, trimming
shrubs, hedges,
trees, lawn care,
leaf removal, Spring
clean up. Accepting
new customers &
applications this
season. Weekly &
bi-weekly
lawn care.
Fully Insured.
Free Estimates
570-829-3261
TREE REMOVAL
Stump grinding, Haz-
ard tree removal,
Grading, Drainage,
Lot clearing, Stone/
Soil delivery. Insured.
Reasonable Rates
570-574-1862
1165 Lawn Care
SPIKE & GORILLAS
LAWNCARE
Silly Name, Serious
Results! Residential
& Commercial
Services Available.
570-702-2497
1183 Masonry
H O S CONSTRUCTION
Licensed - Insured
Certified - Masonry
Concrete - Roofing
Quality Craftsman-
ship
Guaranteed
Unbeatable Prices
Free Estimates
1-888-386-9009
JAMES ATHERTON
MASONRY
Free Estimates
All phases of
masonry,
foundations, brick,
concrete,
chimneys & roofs
570-417-7688
KENS MASONRY
All phases of
brick/block, chim-
ney restoration,
replacement
of steps.
FREE ESTIMATES
570-458-6133
1189 Miscellaneous
Service
VITOS
&
GINOS
Wanted:
WANTED
ALL JUNK
CARS,
TRUCKS &
HEAVY
EQUIPMENT
DUMPTRUCKS
BULLDOZERS
BACKHOES
Highest
Prices
Paid!!
FREE PICKUP
288-8995
1195 Movers
BestDarnMovers
Moving Helpers
Call for Free Quote.
We make moving easy.
BestDarnMovers.com
570-852-9243
1204 Painting &
Wallpaper
David Wayne
PAINTING
CALL ABOUT
OUR EXTERIOR
SPECIALS
570-762-6889
M. PARALI S PAI NTI NG
Int/ Ext. painting,
Power washing.
Professional work
at affordable rates.
Free estimates.
570-288-0733
1204 Painting &
Wallpaper
Serra Painting
Book Now For
Spring & Save. All
Work Guaranteed
Satisfaction.
30 Yrs. Experience
Powerwash & Paint
Vinyl, Wood, Stucco
Aluminum.
Free Estimates
You Cant Lose!
570-822-3943
1213 Paving &
Excavating
EDWARDS ALL COUNTY
PAVING & SEAL COATING
Modified stone,
laid & compacted.
Hot tar and chips,
dust and erosion
control. Licensed
and
Insured.
Call Today
For Your
Free Estimate
570-474-6329
Lic.# PA021520
Mountain Top
PAVING & SEAL
COATING
Patching, Sealing,
Residential/Comm
Licensed & Insured
PA013253
570-868-8375
1252 Roofing &
Siding
EVERHART
CONSTRUCTION
Roofing, siding,
gutters, chimney
repairs & more.
Free Estimates,
Lowest Prices
570-855-5738
J.R.V. ROOFING
570-824-6381
Roof Repairs & New
Roofs. Shingle, Slate,
Hot Built Up, Rubber,
Gutters & Chimney
Repairs. Year Round.
Licensed/Insured
FREE Estimates
*24 Hour Emer-
gency Calls*
WINTER
ROOFING
Special $1.29 s/f
Licensed, insured,
fast service
570-735-0846
1276 Snow
Removal
SNOW
PLOWING
Commercial
Industrial
Residential
DRIVEWAYS
SIDEWALKS
SALTING
VITO & GINOS
570-574-1275
1297 Tree Care
ZOMERFELD TREE
SERVICE, INC.
Tree removal,
trimming, stump
grinding. Demolition
Hauling &
excavating.
570-574-5018
906 Homes for Sale
SHICKSHINNY
408 Cragle Hill Rd.
This is a very well
kept Ranch home
on 6 acres, central
air, rear patio and 1
car garage. This is
a 3 parcel listing.
MLS 11-4273
$157,900
Jackie Roman
570-288-0770
Ext. 39
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
SUGARLOAF
REDUCED!!!!
2 houses. Must sell
together. Each has
its own utilities on
2.5 + acres. 3 car
garage with 3 large
attached rooms.
For Sale By Owner.
$239,900
Call (570) 788-5913
SUGARLOAF
Beautiful setting in a
fabulous location.
Well maintained 4
bedroom, 2.5 bath
home sits on a full
beautiful acre of
land. 3 car garage
with a breezeway,
first fl master bed-
room suite and a
great porch to sit
and relax on all
while enjoying your
new serene sur-
roundings.
MLS 12-392
$225,000
Call Tony
570-855-2424
SWEET VALLEY
137 Post Office Rd
Great home on 3
acres with addition-
al 5 acres available.
Mostly level - one
third Wooded. Full
Dry Basement
ready for Finishing.
Central Air & Vac, 2
1/2 Bath with
Whirlpool in the First
Floor Master. Gen-
erator Package for
Emergency Power
Supply. Lg 20 x 12
Shed. MLS 11-3369
$219,500
570-675-4400
Looking for that
special place
called home?
Classified will address
Your needs.
Open the door
with classified!
SWEET VALLEY
5411 Main Road
Commercial zoned
property on busy
corner. Country
Colonial home with
detached 2 car
garage, with addi-
tional office space
and entrance door.
Perfect property for
home based busi-
ness. Eat in kitchen
with brick gas fire-
place, large dining
room and living
room with coal
stove. Finished
basement with 2
rooms & 1/2 bath.
Old fashioned root
cellar off the
kitchen. Large
paved parking area.
MLS 11-2554
$188,000
570-675-4400
SWEET VALLEY
66 Post Office Road
Charming ranch on 1
acre lot. Modern
kitchen, living room
with gas fireplace,
lower level finished,
large deck with
above ground pool,
nicely landscaped.
MLS#11-2627
$164,000
Call Geri
570-696-0888
SWEET VALLEY
Enjoy easy summer
living in this
adorable 2 bedroom
cottage with lake
rights located on
North Lake. Motivat-
ed Seller. $68,900
Shari Philmeck
ERA Brady
Associates
570-836-3848
906 Homes for Sale
SWOYERSVILLE
120 Barber Street
Nice ranch home!
Great neighbor-
hood. MLS#11-3365
$109,000
(570) 885-6731
(570) 288-0770
CROSSIN REAL ESTATE
SWOYERSVILLE
19 Bohac St.
2-3 bedroom. New
bath with laundry 1st
floor. Large living
room. Finished
lower level. Full walk
up attic. Air condi-
tioning. Nice yard, 1
car garage. Low
taxes. Gas heat. A
must see. $95,000
Call 570-760-1281
for appointment
SWOYERSVILLE
53 Noyes Ave.
Single family, 3 bed-
room, 1 bath home
situated on a dou-
ble lot with finished
family room in
basement./
MLS 12-641
$119,900
Jay A. Crossin
Ext. 23
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
SWOYERSVILLE
65 Perrin St.
Nice vinyl sided
starter home with
1 1/2 car garage
and large yard.
MLS 12-588
$74,500
Mark R. Mason
570-331-0982
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
SWOYERSVILLE
New Listing!
3 bedrooms, 1 bath
home on double lot.
One car garage,
two 3 season
porches, security
system & attic just
insulated.
$90,000.
Call
Christine Kutz
570-332-8832
Collect cash, not dust!
Clean out your
basement, garage
or attic and call the
Classified depart-
ment today at 570-
829-7130!
SWOYERSVILLE
OPEN HOUSE
Sunday
12pm-5pm
52 Barber Street
Beautifully remod-
eled 3 bedroom, 1
bath home in the
heart of the town.
With new carpets,
paint, windows,
doors and a mod-
ern kitchen and
bath. Sale includes
all appliances:
refrigerator, stove,
dishwasher, washer
and dryer. Nice yard
and superb neigh-
borhood. Priced to
sell at $89,900 or
$433.00 per month
(bank rate; 30
years, 4.25%, 20%
down). Owner also
willing to finance
100% of transaction
with a qualified
cosigner. Call Bob at
570-654-1490
TAYLOR
Featured on
WNEPs Home &
Backyard. Move
right into this 3
bedroom, 2 bath
immaculate home
with custom maple
eat in kitchen,
stainless steel
appliances, hard-
wood floors,
Jacuzzi tub, 2 fire-
places, abundance
of storage leading
outside to a private
sanctuary with
deck/pergola & Koi
pond. Off street
parking. MUST SEE.
For more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 12-733
$189,900
Call Keri
570-885-5082
906 Homes for Sale
TRUCKSVILLE
Well maintained 3
bedroom, 2 bath
double wide in nice
neighborhood.
Many updates.
Landscaped &
fenced yard with
pool, large deck &
koi pond! $99,700
Call Christine
Kutz
570-332-8832
TUNKHANNOCK
Historic Tunkhan-
nock Borough.
Affordable 3 bed-
room, 1.5 bath fami-
ly home with
detached garage.
All appliances and
many furnishings
included. $166,800.
Shari Philmeck
ERA Brady
Associates
570-836-3848
W. PITTSTON
New Listing. Oppor-
tunity knocking.
Stately 2 story, river
front home located
on Susquehanna
Ave. New heat, new
electrical, 1st floor
studded, 2nd floor
good condition.
Call Donna
Mantione
570-613-9080
Looking to buy a
home?
Place an ad here
and let the
sellers know!
570-829-7130
WAPWALLOPEN
359 Pond Hill
Mountain Road
4 bedroom home
features a great
yard with over 2
acres of property.
Situated across
from a playground.
Needs some TLC
but come take a
look, you wouldnt
want to miss out.
There is a pond at
the far end of the
property that is
used by all sur-
rounding neighbors.
This is an estate
and is being sold as
is. No sellers prop-
erty disclosure. Will
entertain offers in
order to settle
estate. MLS 11-962
$64,900
Call Karen
Coldwell Banker
Rundle Real Estate
570-474-2340
WEST PITTSTON
313 Race St.
This home needs
someone to rebuild
the former finished
basement and 1st
floor. Being sold as
is. 2nd floor is
move in ready.
For more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 12-255
$39,900
Call Tom
570-262-7716
WEST PITTSTON
REDUCED
18 Atlantic Ave.
Large 2 story home
with 2 baths,
attached garage.
Being sold as-is.
For more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 11-4475
$49,900
Call Tom
570-262-7716
906 Homes for Sale
WEST WYOMING
438 Tripp St
OPEN HOUSE
Sunday
12pm-5pm
Completely remod-
eled home with
everything new.
New kitchen, baths,
bedrooms, tile
floors, hardwoods,
granite countertops,
all new stainless
steel appliances,
refrigerator, stove,
microwave, dish-
washer, free stand-
ing shower, tub for
two, huge deck,
large yard, excellent
neighborhood
$154,900 (30 year
loan @ 4.5% with 5%
down; $7,750 down,
$785/month)
100% OWNER
FINANCING
AVAILABLE
Call Bob at
570-654-1490
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
906 Homes for Sale
WEST WYOMING
550 Johnson St.
Nicely landscaped
corner lot sur-
rounds this brick
front Colonial in
desirable neighbor-
hood. This home
features a spacious
eat in kitchen, 4
bedrooms, 4 baths
including Master
bedroom with mas-
ter bath. 1st floor
laundry and finished
lower level. Enjoy
entertaining under
the covered patio
with hot tub, rear
deck for BBQs and
an above ground
pool. Economical
gas heat only $1224
per yr. For more
info and photos
visit: www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 12-157
$254,860
Call Michele
Reap
570-905-2336
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
906 Homes for Sale
WEST WYOMING
Why pay rent when
you can own this 1/2
double? 3 bed-
rooms. Eat in
kitchen. New roof
installed 12/11.
$49,900
MLS# 10-2780
Call Michael Nocera
SMITH HOURIGAN
GROUP
570-696-5412
Job Seekers are
looking here!
Where's your ad?
570-829-7130 and
ask for an employ-
ment specialist
WEST WYOMING
WHY PAY RENT?
Nice half double
with eat in kitchen,
nice yard, shed and
off street parking.
$49,900
MLS # 11-1910
Call Michael Nocera
SMITH HOURIGAN
GROUP
570-696-5412
906 Homes for Sale
WEST PITTSTON
NEW LISTING
Nice double block,
not in the flood area!
3 vehicle detached
garage, off-street
parking for 4 vehi-
cles, front & rear
porches, patio,
fenced yard, nice &
private. Home also
has central air, #410
is updated & in very
good condition,
modern kitchen &
bath. Kitchen has
oak cabinets, stain-
less steel refrigera-
tor, center aisle, half
bath on 1st floor &
4th bedroom on 3rd
floor. Both sides
have hardwood
floors on 2nd floor.
MLS#12-737
$175,000
Louise Laine
283-9100 x20
WHITE HAVEN
28 S. Woodhaven Dr
Beautiful 4 bedroom
home. Peaceful sur-
roundings. Lake
view. 11-1253.
$179,000
Darcy J. Gollhardt,
Realtor
570-262-0226
CLASSIC
PROPERTIES
570-718-4959
Ext. 1352
906 Homes for Sale
WILKES-BARRE
100 Darling St
Nice two bedroom
single, gas heat,
enclosed porch,
fenced yard. Close
to downtown & col-
leges. Affordable at
$39,500. Call
TOWN & COUNTRY
REAL ESTATE CO.
570-735-8932
570-542-5708
LINE UP
A GREAT DEAL...
IN CLASSIFIED!
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
WILKES-BARRE
Come invest your
time for a great
return. Fixer Upper
in a nice location,
nice neighborhood
out of the flood
zone. Offers 4 bed-
rooms and a beauti-
ful large lot. Dont
miss out Call for
your showing today.
MLS 12-432
$29,900
Call / text Donna
Cain 570-947-3824
906 Homes for Sale
WILKES-BARRE
1400 North
Washington St
Nice 2 story in need
of some TLC with
low taxes, near the
casino. Roof is 5
years young. Newer
water heater
(installed '09),
replacement win-
dows throughout,
100 AMP electric,
tiled bath, wall-to-
wall carpeting entire
1st floor. $49,900.
11-4455.
CROSSIN
REAL ESTATE
570-288-0770
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
WILKES-BARRE
2 Story, 3 bed-
rooms, 1 & 1/2 bath
single family. Large
eat-in kitchen, 1st
floor laundry, hard-
wood floors, newer
furnace & water
heater, 1 car
garage. Off street
parking. Quiet one
way street.
$49,900
MLS 11-4171
Call Jim Banos
Coldwell Banker
Rundle
570-991-1883
906 Homes for Sale
WILKES-BARRE
260 Brown Street
Move right into this
3 bedroom, 1 1/2
bath in very good
condition with mod-
ern kitchen and
bathrooms and a 3
season sunroom off
of the kitchen.
MLS 11-4244
$64,900
Call Darren Snyder
Marilyn K Snyder
Real Estate
570-825-2468
Shopping for a
new apartment?
Classified lets
you compare costs -
without hassle
or worry!
Get moving
with classified!
WILKES-BARRE
285 Blackman St
Great property.
Priced to sell quickly
and in move-in con-
dition! Easy access
to Interstate 81 &
shopping! 11-3215
$36,500
570-675-4400
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
Say it HERE
in the Classifieds!
570-829-7130
Say it HERE
in the Classifieds!
570-829-7130
Looking to buy a
home?
Place an ad here
and let the
sellers know!
570-829-7130
PAGE 24D SATURDAY, MARCH 17, 2012 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
941 Apartments/
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941 Apartments/
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*income restrictions apply
For seniors age 62+ or disabled according to social security guidelines
IN THE HEART OF WILKES-BARRE
Immediate Occupancy!!
Efficiencies available
@30% of income
MARTIN D. POPKY APARTMENTS
61 E. Northampton St.
Wilkes-Barre, PA 18701
Affordable Senior Apartments
Income Eligibility Required
Utilities Included! Low cable rates;
New appliances; Laundry on site;
Activities! Curbside Public Transportation
Please call 570-825-8594
D/TTY 800-654-5984
Dallas Township
NOWLEASING!
3 Bedrooms, 2.5 Bath w/Garage
2-3 Bedrooms, 2 Bath Condos Available
Starting at $1,800/mo.
Pool, Clubhouse, Fitness Center &More
(570) 881-3946 or (570) 690-6632
EAST
MOUNTAIN
APARTMENTS
The good life...
close at hand
Regions Best
Address
1 & 2 Bedroom Apts.
822-4444
www.EastMountainApt.com
1, 2 & 3 Bedroom Apts.
288-6300
www.GatewayManorApt.com
KINGSTON
SDK GREEN
ACRES HOMES
11 Holiday Drive
Kingston
A Place To
Call Home
Spacious 1, 2 & 3
Bedroom Apts
3 Bedroom
Townhomes
Gas heat included
FREE
24hr on-site Gym
Community Room
Swimming Pool
Maintenance FREE
Controlled Access
Patio/Balcony
and much more...
Call Today
for Move In
Specials.
570-288-9019
1 & 2 BR
Apts
2 & 3 BR
Townhomes
Wilkeswood
Apartments
www.liveatwilkeswood.com
570-822-2711
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
906 Homes for Sale
WILKES-BARRE
298 Lehigh Street
Lovely 2 story with
new roof, furnace,
water heater, new
cabinets and appli-
ances. Whole house
newly insulated.
Nice deck and
fenced-in yard. Call
Chris at 570-885-
0900 for additional
info or to tour.
MLS 11-4505
$82,000
CROSSIN
REAL ESTATE
570-288-0770
WILKES-BARRE
39 W. Chestnut St.
Lots of room in this
single with 3 floors
of living space. 3
bedrooms, 1 bath
with hardwood
floors throughout,
natural woodwork,
all windows have
been replaced,
laundry/pantry off of
kitchen. 4x10 entry
foyer, space for 2
additional bed-
rooms on the 3rd
floor. Roof is new.
MLS 11-325
$69,900
Jay A. Crossin
570-288-0770
Ext. 23
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
WILKES-BARRE
44 Hillard St.
Lovely 3 bedroom
in move in condi-
tion. Beautiful hard-
wood floors
throughout, crown
molding and lots of
character and
charm. Large clos-
ets and lots of stor-
age space. New
vinyl fence around
back yard. New
front porch. One
stall garage has a
new roof and is
accessed via alley
behind property.
Water heater
is new.
MLS 12-510
$79,900
Shelby Watchilla
570-762-6969
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
Looking for that
special place
called home?
Classified will address
Your needs.
Open the door
with classified!
WILKES-BARRE
46 Bradford Street
SALE BY OWNER
OUT OF FLOOD
ZONE
Single, 3 Bedroom,
1 Bath. Newer roof,
windows & vinyl
siding. Gas heat, off
street parking with
extra lot. One way
street.
A Must See!
$69,900
Call 570-417-4884
WILKES-BARRE
527 S. Franklin St.
If youre looking for
a large home with
Victorian charm,
come and see this
4 bedroom with
many great fea-
tures. Cedar closet
in Master bedroom,
enclosed 2nd floor
sun porch, full bath
and bedroom on
3rd floor. Beautiful
woodwork, newer
appliances and
water heater. Addi-
tional fenced side
yard offers may
possibilities.
MLS 11-2495
$125,000
Call Connie
for a look
EILEEN R.
MELONE REAL
ESTATE
570-821-7022
WILKES-BARRE
74 Frederick St
This very nice 2
story, 3 bedroom, 1
bath home has a
large eat in kitchen
for family gather-
ings. A great walk
up attic for storage
and the home is in
move-in condition.
MLS 11-1612
$63,900
Call Karen
Coldwell Banker
Rundle Real Estate
570-474-2340
906 Homes for Sale
WILKES-BARRE
77 Schuler St.
Goose Island
gem. Large home
with 3 bedrooms,
2.5 baths, screened
in porch overlook-
ing fenced in yard,
driveway, laminate
floors throughout.
Fresh paint, move
in condition. For
more info and pho-
tos visit: www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 12-845
$99,900
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
WILKES-BARRE
Beautifully main-
tained double block
on large landscaped
lot. Newer roof and
windows, hard-
wood under carpet,
ceiling fans, plaster
walls and ample off
street parking. Live
in one side and let
rent from other side
help pay your mort-
gage. Must see!
$108,000
Call
CHRISTINE KUTZ
for details
570-332-8832
WILKES-BARRE
Clean, nice double
block at very attrac-
tive price. 750
square feet each
side. 2 bedrooms
per side. Separate
utilities. Quick show.
One side vacant.
Only $39,900, but
owner anxious to
sell and is listening
for reasonable
offers. May be best
2 unit for the price
around. Call today.
570-674-3120
day or night
Marilyn K. Snyder
Real Estate
WILKES-BARRE
Duplex, can convert
to single. Steel sid-
ing, new roof, new
furnace, garage
large lot. Reduced
$59,900
Castrignano Realty
570-824-9991
WILKES-BARRE
Former Blessed
Sacrament Church,
Rectory and paved
parking lot. 4,372
square foot Church
1,332 square foot
Rectory. Parking for
40 vehicles.
Three adjacent lots
for one price.
$160,000
MLS#11-4037
Call Jeff Cook
Realty World
Bank Capital
570-235-1183
WILKES-BARRE
Large well main-
tained gas heated
multi-unit property.
2 apartments, air
conditioned office
suite, 3 car garage
with office area.
Close to General
Hospital. 11-1268
Price reduced to
$165,000
ROTHSTEIN
REALTORS
Call Bernie
888-244-2714
WILKES-BARRE
Large, stately brick
home in Historic Dis-
trict. Large eat-in
kitchen, dining room
2 fireplaces, 5 full
baths & 2 half baths.
Huge master with
office. Large 3rd
floor bedroom. 2
story attic. Custom
woodwork & hard-
wood floors. Leaded
glass, large closets
with built-ins. Needs
some updates. With
large income apt.
with separate
entrance.
Call for
appointment.
ASKING $300,000
Call 570-706-5917
WILKES-BARRE
Lot 39 Mayock St.
9' ceilings through-
out 1st floor, granite
countertops in
kitchen. Very bright.
1st floor master
bedroom & bath.
Not yet assessed.
End unit. Modular
construction.
MLS #10-3180
$179,500
Jim Graham at
570-715-9323
906 Homes for Sale
WILKES-BARRE
Nice 3 bedroom, 1
bath home, with 3
season porch and
detached 1 car
garage. Good
starter home in
well established
neighborhood.
Family owned for
many years.
$65,000
CALL
CHRISTINE KUTZ
570-332-8832
WILKES-BARRE
Nicely remodeled
fully rented Duplex,
near schools, hospi-
tal, parks & bus
route. Separate utili-
ties and off street
parking. MLS 12-
599 $96,500.
CLASSIC
PROPERTIES
570-793-9449
Call Steve Shemo
570-718-4959
Collect cash, not dust!
Clean out your
basement, garage
or attic and call the
Classified depart-
ment today at 570-
829-7130!
WILKES-BARRE
Parsons Section
32 Wilson St
No need for flood or
mine subsidence
insurance. 2 story, 3
bedroom, 1 bath
home in a safe,
quiet neighborhood.
Aluminum siding.
Corner, 105x50 lot.
Fenced in yard.
Appraised at
$57,000. Serious
inquiries only. Call
570-826-1458
for appointment
WILKES-BARRE
Nice home located
on a quiet street. 2
bedrooms, 1 bath
well kept & ready
for new owner. MLS
12-73. $55,000.
Call/text for Details.
Donna Cain
570-947-3824
WILKES-BARRE
Come take a look at
this value. 2 bed-
rooms, 1 bath. Sit
back & relax on the
rear deck of your
new home. MLS 12-
75. $42,500. Call/
text for Details.
Donna Cain
570-947-3824
WYOMING
768 Lewis Road
Dallas school dis-
trict - Lovely cedar
sided ranch home
on 2.7 acres with
gorgeous setting
overlooking pond.
Heated in ground
pool, 2 car garage,
plus one car garage
with workshop, cen-
tral A/C, finished
basement. Loft area
overlooking 2 story
living room, hot tub.
$5,000.00 carpet
allowance. 10-3570
$275,000
Call Nancy Answini
570-237-5999
JOSEPH P. GILROY
REAL ESTATE
570-288-1444
YATESVILLE
PRICE REDUCED
12 Reid st.
Spacious Bi-level
home in semi-pri-
vate location with
private back yard. 3
season room. Gas
fireplace in lower
level family room. 4
bedrooms, garage.
For more informtion
and photos visit
wwww.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 10-4740
$149,900
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
VM 101
WE BUY
HOMES!
Any Situation
570-956-2385
909 Income &
Commercial
Properties
AVOCA
25 St. Marys St.
3,443 sq. ft.
masonry commer-
cial building with
warehouse/office
and 2 apartments
with separate elec-
tric and heat. Per-
fect for contractors
or anyone with stor-
age needs. For
more information
and photos log onto
www.atlas
realtyinc.com.
Reduced to
$89,000
MLS #10-3872
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
VM 101
BEAR CREEK
1255 Laurel Run Rd.
Bear Creek Twp.,
large commercial
garage/warehouse
on 1.214 acres with
additional 2 acre
parcel. 2 water
wells. 2 newer
underground fuel
tanks. May require
zoning approval.
For more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 12-208
$179,900
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
BACK MOUNTAIN/
HARVEYS LAKE
Restaurant/Bar for
sale. 8,525sf. Turn-
key with seating for
125, bar area seats
24, includes all
equipment, fixtures,
two walk-in coolers,
furnishings, kitchen
equipment, & liquor
license. Two apart-
ments with long
term tenants, gas
heat, handicap
accessible, high
traffic area.
MLS#11-4332
$499,000
Maribeth Jones
570-696-6565
EDWARDSVILLE
89-91 Hillside St.
Out of the flood
plain, this double
has potential.
Newer roof and
some windows
have been
replaced. Property
includes a large
extra lot.
MLS 11-3463
$87,000
Call Roger Nenni
Ext. 32
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
5770-288-0770
EDWARDSVILLE
Lawrence St.
Nice 3 unit property.
Lots of off street
parking and bonus 2
car garage. All units
are rented. Great
income with low
maintenance.
$139,900
MLS# 10-2675
Call Karen
Coldwell Banker
Rundle Real Estate
570-474-2340
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
FORTY FORT
1012 Wyoming Ave.
SUPER LOCATION
Needs work. Priced
to sell. Great for
your small business
or offices. Very high
traffic count. Prop-
erty is being sold IN
AS IS CONDITION.
Inspections for buy-
ers information only.
Property needs
rehab.
MLS 11-4267
$84,900
Roger Nenni
570-288-0770
Ext. 32
Crossin Real
Estate
570-288-0770
909 Income &
Commercial
Properties
HUGHESTOWN
115 New St.
Office building
with over 2600
sq. ft. can be
divided for up to
3 tenants with
own central air
and utilities and
entrances. New
roof. 20-25
parking spots in
excellent condi-
tion.
For more info
and photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 12-607
$249,900
Call Tom
P
E
N
D
I
N
G
KINGSTON
155 Sharpe St.
Nice duplex with
separate electric
and water. Off
street parking in
rear. Also listed as
residential. See list
#12-609 for addi-
tional photos.
MLS 12-605
$79,900
Jay A. Crossin
Ext. 23
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
KINGSTON
341 Wyoming Ave.
3 story Victorian
located in a high
exposure area. Has
all the lovely signa-
ture woodwork of a
grand Victorian of
yesteryear! Can be
restored for use as
a residential home
or a landlord invest-
ment. Currently
subdivided into mul-
tiple office spaces
and 2 apartments.
MLS 12-617
$190,000
Jay A. Crossin
Ext. 23
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
LAFLIN
33 Market St.
Commercial/resi-
dential property
featuring Ranch
home with 3 bed-
rooms, newly
remodeled bath-
room, in good con-
dition. Commercial
opportunity for
office in attached
building. For more
info and photos
visit: www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 11-3450
Reduced
$159,000
Call Tom
570-262-7716
LEASE SPACE
Kingston Wellness
Center / profession-
al offices.
-Modern Decor and
Loft Style Offices
-Four Lane Street
Frontage
-100+ Parking
-Established
Professional &
Wellness Businesses
On-Site
-Custom Leases
Available
-Triple Net
Spaces Available:
600SF, 1400SF,
2610SF, and
4300SF.
4300SF Warehouse
Space available
Built to Suit.
Call Cindy
570-690-2689
www.cindykingre.com
570-675-4400
To place your
ad Call Toll Free
1-800-427-8649
LUZERNE
Over 10,000SF of
storage space in
two buildings. Room
to build another
building, profession-
al, car wash,
restaurant, salon.
Minutes from Cross
Valley Expressway
Exit 6. Survey, storm
water/drainage
control plan and soil
and erosion sedi-
mentation control
plan completed if
you choose to build
a building on the
property. Also a por-
tion is available for
rent. MLS#10-320
REDUCED TO
$199,000
Maribeth Jones
570-696-6565
909 Income &
Commercial
Properties
NANTICOKE
4, 5, 6, 7, and 8
unit apartment
buildings. Fully
occupied. City
license and occu-
pancy permits
issued. Very well
maintained. Some
have new win-
dows, roofs, coin-
op washer/dryer.
570-736-3125
NANTICOKE
REDUCED
414 Front St.
Move right into this
modern office build-
ing featuring 4
offices, receptionist
office, large confer-
ence room, modern
kitchen, storage
room, full base-
ment, central air,
handicap access. 2
car garage and 5
additional off street
parking spaces.
This property is also
available for lease.
Lease price is
$675/mo + $675
security deposit.
Tenant pays all
utilities. Sells for
$85,900
Call John Polifka
570-704-6846
5 Mountains
Realty
42 N. Main St.
Shickshinny, PA
570-542-2141
PITTSTON
166 Vine St.
Nice PPthree
family home in
good location,
fully occupied.
For more info
and photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 12-220
$49,900
Call Tom
570-262-7716
P
E
N
D
I
N
G
PITTSTON
Rear 49 James
St.
Two 2 bedroom
apartments,
fully rented with
separate utili-
ties on a quiet
street. For more
info and photos
visit: www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 12-219
$39,900
Call Tom
570-262-7716
P
E
N
D
I
N
G
PITTSTON
SALE OR LEASE
PRICE REDUCED
Modern office build-
ing, parking for 12
cars. Will remodel
to suit tenant.
$1800/mo or pur-
chase for
$449,000
MLS 11-751
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
WEST PITTSTON
134 Ann St.
Nice duplex in a
great neighbor-
hood. Low mainte-
nance. Investors:
Money maker right
from the start. Unit
2 is owner occu-
pied, rent is pro-
jected.
MLS 12-575
$119,000
David
Krolikowski
570-288-0770
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
WEST WYOMING
379-381 Sixth St.
Perfect first home
for you with one
side paying most of
your mortgage.
Would also make a
nice investment
with all separate
utilities and nice
rents. Large fenced
yard, priced to sell.
Dont wait too long.
Call today to
schedule a tour.
MLS 11-1453
REDUCED!!
$84,900
Mark R. Mason
570-331-0982
CROSS REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
909 Income &
Commercial
Properties
WILKES-BARRE
269 S. Washington
Zoned C-1. 3 floors
with 10 units; 8
apartments and 2
office spaces. Huge
potential for student
housing, offices or
social group.
MLS 12-615
$175,000
John Shelley
570-702-4162
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
WYOMING
14 West Sixth St.
Former upholestry
shop. 1st floor in
need of a lot of
TLC. 2nd floor
apartment in good
condition & rented
with no lease. Stor-
age area. Off street
parking available.
PRICE REDUCED!
$65,000
Contact Judy Rice
714-9230
MLS# 11-572
WYOMING
PRICE REDUCED!
285 Wyoming Ave.
First floor currently
used as a shop,
could be offices,
etc. Prime location,
corner lot, full base-
ment. 2nd floor is 3
bedroom apartment
plus 3 car garage
and parking for
6 cars. For more
information and
photos go to
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS #10-4339
$169,900
Call Charlie
VM 101
912 Lots & Acreage
BACK MOUNTAIN
Dallas Area
Building lots avail-
able. Lot/home
packages.
Call for details.
570-675-4805
BEAR CREEK
38 Wedgewood Dr.
Laurelbrook Estates
Lot featuring 3.22
acres with great
privacy on cul-de-
sac. Has been perc
tested and has
underground utili-
ties. 4 miles to PA
Turnpike entrance.
For more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 12-114
$64,900
Call Tom
570-262-7716
DALLAS
$129,900
SPECTACULAR
WATER VIEW!
2 acres overlooking
Huntsville
Reservoir. Building
site cleared but
much of woodlands
preserved. Perc &
site prep done.
Call
Christine Kutz
570-332-8832
DALLAS
63 acres. Wooded
parcel. 5,000 road-
front on 2 paved
roads. Level &
rolling. In Dallas Twp.
$425,000
Besecker Realty
570-675-3611
DALLAS AREA
3 lots. 70 x 125.
City water and
sewer, gas avail-
able. $36,500
per lot.
570-675-5873
Earth
Conservancy
Land For Sale
61 +/- Acres
Nuangola - $99,000
46 +/- Acres
Hanover Twp.
$79,000
Highway
Commercial KOZ
Hanover Twp.
3+/- Acres
11 +/- Acres
Wilkes-Barre Twp.
32 +/- Acres
Zoned R-3
See additional land
for sale at:
www.earth
conservancy.org
570-823-3445
912 Lots & Acreage
EXETER
Clear land lot, zoned
R2, on corner of
Barber St. & Park
Lane, containing 15,
898 square feet and
well above flood
level. Build your
dream home on a
large corner lot!
$85,000.
Call 570-594-5564
for the lowdown.
Serious Inquiries
Only.
HARDING
Mt. Zion Road
One acre lot just
before Oberdorfer
Road. Great place
to build your
dream home
MLS 11-3521
$29,900
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
HARVEYS LAKE
2 ACRES
$35,000
WOODED LAND.
Call Cindy
570-690-2689
www.cindykingre.com
570-675-4400
HARVEYS LAKE
SELLER SAYS SELL!
Land with LakeView
90' x 125' Lot with
View of the Lake.
Sewer Permit
Required. $17,500
MLS# 10-2523
Call Cindy
570-690-2689
www.cindykingre.com
570-675-4400
912 Lots & Acreage
HUGHESTOWN
Cleared lot in Stauf-
fer Heights. Ready
for your dream
home just in time
for Spring!
MLS 12-549
$32,500
Call Kevin Sobilo
570-817-0706
LAFLIN
Lot#9
Pinewood Dr
156 X 110 X 150 X 45
FORGET THE
GROUNDHOG,
SPRING IS ON ITS
WAY! BUILD NOW!
DIRECTIONS Rt 315
to laflin Rd; make
left off Laflin Rd onto
Pinewood Dr. Lot is
on corner of
Pinewood Dr. and
Hickorywood Dr.
MLS 11-3411
$32,000
atlas realtyinc.com
Call Keri Best
570-885-5082
MOUNTAIN TOP
Beautiful 2.66 Acre
building lot/lake
view. Public sewer
& natural gas. Use
any builder!
Call Jim
for private showing.
$126,500.00
570-715-9323.
MOUNTAIN TOP
Crestwood Schools!
126 Acres for Sale!
Mostly wooded with
approx. 970 ft on
Rt. 437 in
Dennison Twp.
$459,000
Call Jim Graham at
570-715-9323
912 Lots & Acreage
MOUNTAIN TOP
Several building lots
ready to build on!
ALL public utilities!
Priced from
$32,000 to
$48,000! Use your
own Builder! Call
Jim Graham at
570-715-9323
LivingInQuailHill.com
New Homes
From $275,000-
$595,000
570-474-5574
SHAVERTOWN LAND
Harford Ave.
4 buildable residen-
tial lots for sale indi-
vidually or take all
4! Buyer to confirm
water and sewer
with zoning officer.
Directions: R. on
E. Franklin, R. on
Lawn to L. on
Harford.
$22,500 per lot
Mark Mason
570-331-0982
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
SHAVERTOWN
1 Oak Dr.
Vacant land ready to
build. One of the last
lots left in this Back
Mountain develop-
ment. Just over (4)
four acres. Call for
details. MLS 11-1486
$82,400
Christine Pieczynski
570-696-6565
LINE UP
A GREAT DEAL...
IN CLASSIFIED!
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
SHICKSHINNY
Level *7.5 acres*
building lot with a
mountain view.
Great for horses or
organic farming.
MLS 12-306
$59,000
570-675-4400
WILKES-BARRE
PARTLY CLEARED
VACANT LOTS:
LOT #13
E. Thomas St.
Approximately 0.57
acre MLS #11-2616
$32,000.
LOT #18
E Thomas St.,
Approximately
0.73 acre. MLS
#11-2615. $35,000
Call Jeff Cook
Realty World
Bank Capital
570-235-1183
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com SATURDAY, MARCH 17, 2012 PAGE 25D
912 Lots & Acreage
WYOMING
FIRST ST.
4 building lots each
measuring 68x102
with public utilities.
For more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 12-439
$39,900 EACH
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
915 Manufactured
Homes
DALLAS
Valley View Park
403 South Drive
1984 single wide 3
bedroom, 1 bath
home. End lot.
Large deck. New
roof, windows &
doors. All appli-
ances included.
$12,500 or best
offer. Call
570-675-2012
EAST MOUNTAIN RIDGE
(Formerly Pocono
Park) and San Souci
Park. Like new, sev-
eral to choose from,
Financing&Warranty,
MobileOneSales.net
Call (570)250-2890
HUNLOCK CREEK
Very nice 3 bed-
room, 2 bath double
wide in quiet coun-
try setting. $20,000.
Financing available
Call 717-439-7716
MOUNTAINTOP
3 BEDROOMS, 2
BATHS, sunroom,
a lot of new. Asking
$30,000. Call leave
message
570-406-7318
PITTSTON TWP.
95 Redman
2 bedroom. Vinyl
siding, shingled
roof. Clean. NEEDS
NO WORK. Minutes
from I81 & Turnpike.
Excellent Condition.
$19,900.
570-851-6128 or
610-767-9456
WHITE HAVEN
1977 2 bedroom
Schult. No pets.
$6000
570-851-2245
930 Wanted to Buy
Real Estate
WEST PITTSTON
House Wanted
Need Owner
finance. Flood
house OK. Will
repair. Contact
570-212-8370
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
ASHLEY
74 W. Hartford St
1 bedroom + com-
puter room. 2nd
floor. Fridge, stove,
washer/dryer in-
cluded. Wall to wall
carpet. No pets.
Security, application
fee. $550/month
plus utilities.
570-472-9494
ASHLEY
Available Now
1st floor, 2 bedroom.
Off street parking.
Washer dryer
hookup. Appliances.
Bus stop at the
door. Water Includ-
ed.$575 + utilities &
security. No pets.
TRADEMARK
REALTY GROUP
570-954-1992
ASHLEY
Available Now
2nd floor, 2 bed-
room. Off street
parking. Washer
dryer hookup. Appli-
ances. Bus stop at
the door. Water
Included.$575 + util-
ities & security. No
pets.
TRADEMARK
REALTY GROUP
570-954-1992
ASHLEY
Brand new 2 bed-
room, washer/dryer
hookup, $550
month + utilities.
No pets.
OTHER APTS
AVAILABLE IN
NANTICOKE
570-868-6020
BEAR CREEK
Available April 1
New 3 room apart-
ment. All utilities
included except
electric. No smoking
& no pets. $650 +
security and refer-
ences. Furnished or
unfurnished. Call
570-954-1200
DALLAS
HI-MEADOWS
APARTMENTS
1075 Memorial Hwy.
Low & Moderate
Income Elderly
Rentals Include:
*Electric Range &
Refrigerator
*Off Street Parking
*Community Room
*Coin Operated
Laundry *Elevator.
*Video Surveilence
Applications
Accepted by
Appointment
570-675-5944
8a.m. - 4 p.m.
TDD Only,
1-800-654-5984
Voice Only,
1-800-654-5988
Handicap Accessi-
ble
Equal Housing
Opportunity
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
Dallas, Pa.
MEADOWS
APARTMENTS
220 Lake St.
Housing for the
elderly & mobility
impaired; all utilities
included. Federally
subsidized program.
Extremely low
income persons
encouraged to
apply. Income less
than $12,400.
570-675-6936,
8 am-4 pm, Mon-Fri.
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
HANDICAP ACCESSIBLE
FORTY FORT
1 & 2 BEDROOM APTS
Very nice, clean,
great neighbor-
hood, hardwood
floors, a/c, washer
/dryer with newer
appliances, stor-
age, 1st/last/securi-
ty with one year
lease. References
required. $650-
$695 + utilities.
Water/sewer by
owner, no pets,
non-smoking.
Call 202-997-9185
for appointment
FORTY FORT
2nd floor, 2 bed-
room, 1 1/2 baths,
large living & dining
room. Eat-in kitchen
with washer/dryer
hookup. Kitchen
appliances included
+ AC units. Enclosed
porch. Cable + inter-
net also included.
Off street parking.
No smoking, no
pets. $850 + securi-
ty & utilities. Avail-
able March 1. Call
570-762-3031
Shopping for a
new apartment?
Classified lets
you compare costs -
without hassle
or worry!
Get moving
with classified!
FORTY FORT
Available Now!
2nd floor, spacious,
well maintained, 2
bedroom, 2 bath, in
convenient nice
neighborhood.
Large living/dining
area, large eat in
kitchen with w/d
hookup. Front
porch, screened
back porch. Great
closet/storage
space,w/w carpet-
ing, central air, off
street parking.
$900/month plus
utilities. Call 570-
510-4778 from
9am-5pm for an
appointment.
30+
DAY
BEING
REMODELED
FORTY FORT
FIRST FLOOR
EFFICIENCY /
1 BEDROOM,
BRAND NEW
FLOORING,
CARPETING,
MODERN/APPLI-
ANCES, ELEC-
TRIC/GAS FIRE-
PLACE. APPLI-
CATION/EMPLO
YMENT VERIFI-
CATION being
considered NO
PETS/SMOKING
2 YEARS @
$500+ UTILITIES.
MANAGED!
America Realty
Rentals
288-1422
GLEN LYON
KEN POLLOCK
APARTMENTS
41 Depot Street
Low and Moderate
Income Elderly
Rentals Include:
* Electric Range &
Refrigerator
* Off Street Parking
* Community Room
* Coin Operated
Laundry *Elevator
Applications
Accepted by
Appointment
570-736-6965
8:00 a.m. - 4 p.m.
TDD Only,
1-800-654-5984
Voice Only,
1-800-654-5988
Handicap Accessi-
ble
Equal Housing
Opportunity
HANOVER TWP.
30 Garrahan St.
QUIET NEIGHBORHOOD NEAR
UNIVERSITIES
2nd floor, 2 bed-
room, off street
parking & quiet back
yard. $650/month
heat & water includ-
ed. security & refer-
ences required.
Call Rich @
570-542-7620
HARDING
Renovated 1st floor,
2 bedroom apart-
ment. New carpet-
ing and paint. Fridge
& stove. Water
Included. $600 +
security & utilities.
Call 570-240-6620
or 570-388-6503
HARVEYS LAKE
1 BEDROOM
APARTMENT
Located off the
lake. Stackable
washer & dryer, all
utilities included.
$695/ month.
Call 570-675-4600
or 570-639-2331
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
GRACE LUXURY
APARTMENTS
Hughestown
Be the first to live
in this colossal lux-
ury apartment.
Hardwood floors,
massive tiled
kitchen, granite
counters, stainless
steel appliances,
large laundry
room, and elevat-
ed ceilings. 3 bed-
rooms, 2.5 baths.
Central air gas
heat. Storage
room provided. Off
street parking.
Maintenance free
living with clean
grounds. No
smoking No pets.
Utilities not includ-
ed. $1,500 / month
570-760-7326
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
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Youre in bussiness
with classified!
KINGSTON &
Surrounding Areas
WYOMING
1 bedroom, 1st floor,
newly remodeled,
quiet neighborhood.
Off street parking,
$500/month.
KINGSTON:
1 & 2 bedroom
apartments. Near
Market St. &
shopping.
$450-$465.
WILKES-BARRE
2 bedroom apt.
Off street parking.
$460. 4 bedroom
1/2 double, newly
remodeled $675.
Apartments include
appliances. Credit
check/references/
lease required.
Tina Randazzo
Property Manager
570-899-3407
KINGSTON
72 E. 72 E. W Walnut alnut St. St.
3rd floor, located in
quiet neighborhood.
Kitchen, living room,
dining room, sun
room, bathroom. 2
large and 1 small
bedroom, lots of
closets, built in linen,
built in hutch, hard-
wood floors, fire-
place, storage room,
yard. New washer/
dryer, stove & fridge.
Heat and hot water
included. 1 year lease
+ security. $950
570-406-1411
KINGSTON
Available April 1st
2nd Floor, 1 bed-
room, 1 bath,
kitchen, living room
washer & dryer
next to post office,
off street parking
$500 + utilities
water & sewer
included, 1 year.
lease security & ref-
erences no pets, no
smoking.
Call 570-822-9821
KINGSTON
Available Now
Beautiful 1 bedroom
apartment in nice
neighborhood. Wall
to wall carpeting.
Plenty of closet
space. All kitchen
appliances, includ-
ing dishwasher &
garbage disposal.
Nice pantry area off
kitchen. Washer /
dryer hookup. No
pets. No smoking.
$450 + utilities &
security. Call
570-406-9243
Leave Message
All Calls Returned
Same Day
KINGSTON
E. WALNUT ST.
Light, bright, 1st
floor, 2 bedrooms,
elevator, carpeted,
security system.
Garage. Extra stor-
age & cable TV
included. Laundry
facilities. Air Con-
ditioned. Fine
neighborhood.
Convenient to bus
& stores. No
pets. References.
Security. Lease.
No smokers
please. $765 +
utilities. Call.
570-287-0900
KINGSTON
Nice, roomy 2 bed-
room, new kitchen,
clean. On 2nd floor.
$495 plus utilities.
Call for appoint-
ments. Day or night
570-674-3120
Marilyn K. Snyder
Real Estate
KINGSTON
SPACIOUS 1/2 DOUBLES
3 bedrooms, back
yard. Separate utili-
ties. No pets. Back-
ground & security.
$750/month.
570-242-8380
LAFLIN
Spacious,
Modern & Stylish
2 story 2 bedroom
apt. Oak kitchen
with snack bar plus
all appliances, 1-1/2
baths, in-home
office, of street
parking, large
maintenance free
yard. $950 month
includes heat/hot
water budget &
sewer. Rest of utili-
ties by tenant. Sorry
no smoking or pets.
Lease, security &
references.
570-824-9507.
LARKSVILLE
3 bedroom, 1 bath.
$725. Double secu-
rity. Brand New
Hardwood & Tile
Floors, Dishwasher,
Washer/Dryer
Hook-Up. Must see
to appreciate.
BOVO Rentals
Quality Affordable
Housing
570-328-9984
VISIT US
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
LARKSVILLE
AVAILABLE
IMMEDIATELY
Cute and clean 2
bedroom, off street
parking, w/d
hookup, eat in
kitchen. Immacu-
late. $435 + utilities.
1 mo. security. NO
DOGS 845-386-1011
LUZERNE
1 bedroom, wall to
wall, off-street
parking, coin
laundry, water,
sewer & garbage
included. $495/
month + security
& lease. HUD
accepted. Call
570-687-6216 or
570-954-0727
LUZERNE
Spacious 1 bed-
room. Off street
parking. Laundry
hookups. No pets,
no smoking.
Garbage included.
$450 + utilities. Call
570-696-3368
Midtowne
Apartments
100 E. 6th
Street,
Wyoming PA
18644
Housing for
Extremely Low &
Very Low Income
Elderly,
Handicapped &
Disabled.
570-693-4256
ALL UTILITIES
INCLUDED
Rents based on
income.
Managed by EEI
MOUNTAIN TOP
1 Bedroom apart-
ments for elderly,
disabled. Rents
based on 30% of
ADJ gross income.
Handicap Accessi-
ble. Equal Housing
Opportunity. TTY711
or 570-474-5010
This institution is an
equal opportunity
provider &
employer.
MOUNTAIN TOP
1 bedroom with full
kitchen. Remodeled
recently, first floor,
ample parking. Hot
water, sewer &
garbage included.
On Rt 309 - close
to all amenities! No
pets. Non smoking.
$560/month + secu-
rity & references.
570-239-3827
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
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A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
NANTICOKE
1st floor. 1 bed-
room, electric
water and heat
included. Off street
parking. Freshly
painted, w/d
hookup. $575/mo.,
lease and
security required.
NO PETS
570-477-6018
leave message
NANTICOKE
2 bedroom, wall to
wall carpet, off-
street parking, $495
per month+ utilities,
security, lease.
HUD accepted. Call
570-687-6216
or 570-954-0727
NANTICOKE
3 1/2 Bedrooms
, $600 PER MONTH.
1ST MONTHS RENT
& DEPOSI T REQUI RED
570-497-9966
516-216-3539
Section 8 welcome
NANTICOKE
603 HANOVER ST.
2nd floor, 1
bedroom. No pets.
$400 + security,
utilities & lease.
Photos available.
570-542-5330
NANTICOKE
Cozy 1 bedroom,
modern eat-in
kitchen, all appli-
ances including
dishwasher, sky-
light, pantry, walk-in
closets, modern
bathroom. $470
includes garbage.
Call (570) 239-2741
NANTICOKE
FIRST FLOOR
2 bedrooms, hard-
wood floors, refrig-
erator, washer &
dryer in kitchen .
Heat & hot water
included. $625/per
month. Call
(570) 735-4074
NANTICOKE
Spacious 1 bed-
room 1st floor. New
carpeting, gas
range and fridge
included. Garage
parking, no dogs.
References and
security required.
$450/mo. Water,
sewer, garbage fee
incl. Tenant pays
gas and electric
570-696-3596
NORTH WILKES-BARRE
North Washington
Large 1 bedroom
apartment, hard-
wood floors, appli-
ances in kitchen.
Big living room, eat
in kitchen. All
renovated. Parking
space available.
$630/month,
utilities included.
Call Steve at
570-793-9449
or Agnes at
347-495-4566
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
PARSONS SECTION
2nd floor 2 Bed-
room, Washer/Dryer
hookup, Off street
parking water
included, freshly
painted $525/mo
plus utilities. lease &
security required.
No pets.
570-328-1875
PITTSTON
Completely remod-
eled, modern 1 bed-
room apt. Lots of
closet space, with
new tile floor & car-
pets. Includes
stove, refrigerator,
washer/dryer hook
up. Oil heat, nice
yard & neighbor-
hood. No pets.
$575/month inclu-
des water & sewer.
570-479-6722
PITTSTON
Modern 1st floor.
3 bedrooms, 1.5
baths, new carpet-
ing, gas hot water
heat, off street
parking. $650/
month + utilities. No
pets, no smokers,
background/credit
check required.
Call 570-881-4078
PLAINS
MODERN 1ST FLOOR
2 bedroom. Kitchen
with appliances. All
new carpet. Conve-
nient location.
Washer/dryer hook-
up. No smoking. No
pets. $550 + utili-
ties.
570-714-9234
PLYMOUTH
2 bedroom apart-
ment. Heat, water,
stove & fridge
included. Near
bus stop.
$600/month
No smoking or
pets. Credit and
background check,
security &
references
required. Call
(570) 592-2902
SWOYERSVILLE
Must see! Brand
new 1st floor, 3
bedroom. Compa-
rable to a Ranch
home. Large living
room, stove, fridge
dishwasher, w/d,
laundry room, A/c
and heat. Your
dream home. W/w
carpeting, hard-
wood floors, off
street parking,
large back yard.
All utilities paid
except electric.
$1075/mo + security
& references
570-287-3646
Looking for that
special place
called home?
Classified will address
Your needs.
Open the door
with classified!
TRUCKSVILLE
Trucksville Manor
Apartments
170 Oak Street
Low and Moderate
Income Elderly
Rentals Include:
*Electric Range &
Refrigerator
*Off Street Parking
*Coin Operated
Laundry
Applications
Accepted by
appointment
570-696-1201
8a.m. - 4p.m.
TDD only,
1-800-654-5984
Voice Only,
1-800-654-5988
Handicap Accessi-
ble
Equal Housing
Opportunity
WEST PITTSTON
203 Delaware Ave.
Out of flood zone. 4
rooms, no pets, no
smoking, off street
parking. Includes
heat, water, sewer,
fridge, stove, w/d.
High security bldg.
1st floor or 2nd floor
570-655-9711
WEST PITTSTON
2nd floor, 5 rooms,
wall-to-wall carpet-
ing, window dress-
ings, stove, refrig-
erator, & garbage
disposal. Washer/
dryer hookup, off-
street parking. No
pets, no smoking.
$650/month + secu-
rity. Heat, water &
sewer included.
Call 570-574-1143
West Pittston, Pa.
GARDEN VILLAGE
APARTMENTS
221 Fremont St.
Housing for the
elderly & mobility
impaired; all utilities
included. Federally
subsidized
program. Extremely
low income persons
encouraged to
apply. Income less
than $12,400.
570-655-6555,
8 am-4 pm,
Monday-Friday.
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
HANDICAP ACCESSIBLE
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
WILKES-BARRE
Mayflower
Crossing
Apartments
570.822.3968
2, 3 & 4
Bedrooms
- Light & bright
open floor plans
- All major
appliances included
- Pets welcome*
- Close to everything
- 24 hour emergency
maintenance
- Short term
leases available
Call TODAY For
AVAILABILITY!!
www.mayflower
crossing.com
Certain Restrictions
Apply*
WILKES-BARRE
72 W. River St.
Spacious 1st floor,
1 bedroom in an
Historic Colonial
house. Next to
Barre Hall on
Wi l kes Campus.
Hardwood floors.
Washer & dryer
inside unit. Off
street parking.
$750 + security.
570-991-1619
WILKES-BARRE
1 bedroom. Heat &
hot water included.
$550 month +
security required
973-879-4730
WILKES-BARRE
111 Carey Avenue
1 bedroom, 1st floor.
Living room, kitchen
& bath. Fridge &
stove included.
Washer dryer hook-
up. Off street park-
ing for 1 car. Tenant
pays utilities. Ready
May 1. $375 + secu-
rity. 570-270-3139
WILKES-BARRE
LAFAYETTE GARDENS
SAVE MONEY THIS YEAR!
113 Edison St.
Quiet neighborhood.
2 bedroom apart-
ments available for
immediate occu-
pancy. Heat & hot
water included. $625
Call Aileen at
570-822-7944
WILKES-BARRE
Mayflower Section
1 bedroom apart-
ment available. Nice
Area. Stove, fridge,
heat & hot water
included. Storage.
No pets. Call
570-823-7587
WILKES-BARRE
Modern, 1st floor
apartment. 2 bed-
room, 1.5 baths, off-
street parking. No
pets, no smokers.
Security & credit/
background check
required. $550/
month + utilities.
570-881-4078
WILKES-BARRE
1 bedroom
water included
2 bedroom
water included
2 bedroom
single family
HANOVER
2 bedroom
4 bedroom,
large
NANTICOKE
2 bedroom
large, water
included
PITTSTON
Large 1
bedroom water
included
KINGSTON
3 Bedroom Half
Double
McDermott &
McDermott
Real Estate
Inc. Property
Management
570-821-1650
(direct line)
Mon-Fri. 8-7pm
Sat. 8-noon
WYOMING
2nd floor 2 bed-
room, recently
remodeled, washer
& dryer hookup, off
street parking. No
pets. $525 month,
water & sewer
included.
570-714-7272
WYOMING
Updated 1 bedroom.
New Wall to wall
carpet. Appliances
furnished. Coin op
laundry. $550. Heat,
water & sewer
included. Call
570-687-6216 or
570-954-0727
WYOMING
Wyoming Ave
2nd floor, large
newly remodeled, 2
bedroom 1 bath. All
appliances, w/d
hardwood floors.
$615/mo + utilities.
No pets, security
and references .
570-954-2972
944 Commercial
Properties
Center City WB
FREE HIGH SPEED FREE HIGH SPEED
INTERNET! INTERNET!
Why pay extra for
internet? Our new
leases include a
FREE FREE high speed
connection!
Affordable mod-
ern office space
at the Luzerne
Bank Building on
Public Square.
Rents include
internet, heat,
central air, utili-
ties, trash
removal, and
nightly cleaning -
all without a
sneaky CAM
charge. Parking
available at the
intermodal garage
via our covered
bridge. 300SF to
5000SF available.
We can remodel
to suit. Brokers
protected. Call
Jeff Pyros at
570-822-8577
Commercial Lease
Courtdale location
Ideal for:
Veterinarian Office
Manufacturing /
Industrial Space
Storage Space
1000 SF - 5000 SF
Space Available.
5000 SF Warehouse
Space with loading
docks, office, heat,
and plumbing. $3.60
- $12 sf/yr + NNN,
lease negotiable.
Call Cindy King
570-690-2689
www.cindykingre.com
570-675-4400
DOLPHIN PLAZA
Rte. 315
1,000 &
3,800 Sq. Ft.
WILL DIVIDE
OFFICE / RETAIL
Call 570-829-1206
PITTSTON
5,000 sq. ft. No
loading dock. Off
street parking.
$550 mo. + utilities
570-540-0746
PITTSTON
COOPERS CO-OP
Lease Space
Available, Light
manufacturing,
warehouse,
office, includes
all utilities with
free parking.
I will save
you money!
PITTSTON
OFFICE SPACE
Attractive modern
office space. 2
suites available.
Suite A-4 offices,
plus restroom and
storage includes
utilities, 700 sq. ft.
$650/month
Suite B-2, large
offices, 2 average
size offices, plus
restroom and stor-
age plus utilities,
1,160 sq. ft.
$1000/month
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
RETAIL BUILDING
WILKES-BARRE TWP
12,000 sf. Route
309. Exit 165 off I81.
570-823-1719
315 PLAZA
1,750 SQ. FT. &
3,400 SQ.FT
OFFICE/RETAIL
570-829-1206
WAREHOUSE/LIGHT
MANUFACTURING
OFFICE SPACE
PITTSTON
Main St.
12,000 sq. ft. build-
ing in downtown
location. Ware-
house with light
manufacturing.
Building with some
office space. Entire
building for lease or
will sub-divide.
MLS #10-1074
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
VM 101
WILKES-BARRE
518 N. Main St.
Approximately 1000
sq. ft. Large glass
storefront, formerly
used as floral shop.
Priced right at
$350/mo., water
incl. Tenant pays
gas & electric
570-814-1356
WILKES-BARRE
GARAGE FOR RENT
Large 43x63
garage with high
overhead door.
Contractors, deliv-
ery truck routes,
etc. who need good
size garage. Also
for storage / vehi-
cles. Located near
W.B. General on
Chestnut St. Electri-
cal. $750 per
month. Call night or
day. 570-674-3120
944 Commercial
Properties
WILKES-BARRE
GREAT LOCATION!
Close to all
Major Highways
Commercial space
for lease 21,600
sq. ft. Distribution/
Warehouse/Retail
/Offices, etc +
large 80,000 sq.
ft. parking lot
fenced in with
automatic dusk to
dawn lighting sys-
tem. Will divide.
Call
570-822-2021.
Ask for Betty or
Dave
947 Garages
WEST PITTSTON
1 locking garage/
storage unit for rent.
9x11. $55/ month.
No electric.
Call 570-357-1138
950 Half Doubles
ASHLEY
57 W. Hartford St.
3 bedroom, large
modern, no pets.
Security/lease.
$575+ utilities
570-332-1216
570-592-1328
DUPONT
Very well main-
tained 3 bedroom
double in solid
neighborhood.
Enclosed rear porch
& fenced yard. Heat
included. Tenant
pays electric &
water. 1 month
security, no lease
required. no pets.
$1,000/month call
Arlene Waruenk @
570-696-1195 or
570-714-6112
SMITH HOURIGAN
GROUP
FORTY FORT
44 Wesley St
3 bedrooms. Finished
attic. Living room /
dining room. All
appliances including
1st floor washer /
dryer. Off street
parking. $850 + utili-
ties & security. Call
570-650-0010
GLEN LYON
3 bedrooms, wall to
wall carpeting,
laundry room, yard,
nice deck.
$500 + utilities,
security & refer-
ences. No Pets.
Call 570-592-3100
HANOVER TOWNSHIP
Nice 3 bedroom. Off
street parking. Nice
area. $575/month
Call (570)825-4198
HANOVER TWP.
$650/month, 2
bedroom, 1 bath,
living dining room
& eat in kitchen.
Appliances, wash-
er/dryer hook up.
Off street parking.
Water, sewer &
recyclables
included. Securi-
ty, references &
credit check.
No pets.
570-824-3223
JENKINS TWP.
3 bedrooms, 1.5
baths, refrigerator
& stove provided,
washer/dryer
hookup, off-street
parking, no pets,
$550/month, plus
utilities, & 1 month
security.
SECTION 8 WELCOME
Call 570-814-6072
KINGSTON
3 bedroom, 1.5 bath
on quiet street;
kitchen with range,
refrigerator; 1st floor
laundry; storage
space; off street
parking; credit
check, lease, and
security; $660
month; call
570-575-9936
KINGSTON DUPLEX
Beautiful 1st floor. 2
bedroom, 1.5 bath,
5 rooms. Conve-
nient residential
location. Hardwood
floors, natural wood
-work, French
doors, laundry with
washer & dryer
included. Refrigera-
tor, gas range, dish-
washer, oak cabi-
nets, off street
parking, fenced in
back yard, storage.
Available May 1.
$695 + utilities &
security.
570-690-0633
KINGSTON
ONE MONTH FREE
3 bedrooms, 1 bath,
refrigerator, stove &
dishwasher, washer
/dryer, front & rear
porches, full base-
ment & attic. Off-
street parking, no
pets, totally remod-
eled. Close to
schools & shopping.
$900/month, + utili-
ties, security &
lease.
Call 570-824-7598
NANTICOKE
1207 Prospect St
3 bedrooms. Hard-
wood floors. Eat-in
kitchen with appli-
ances, including
dishwasher. 1.5
bath. Washer/dryer
hook up. Basement
& front porch.
Sewer & garbage
included. No pets.
No smoking. $625 +
utilities & security.
570-814-1356
950 Half Doubles
PITTSTON
1 bedroom, 4
rooms. $575/month
heat, water, sewer
incl. Security and
lease required
570-906-7614
PLAINS
2 bedroom, modern
quiet, w/w, w/d
hookup, gas heat.
$500. No pets.
Security & lease.
570-332-1216
570-592-1328
PLAINS
31 Center St.
2 bedroom, 1 bath.
New flooring thru-
out. Walk up attic,
covered front
porch, side yard, off
street parking,
washer /dryer hook-
ups. No pets. $550
/month plus utilities
& 1 month security.
Available April 1.
570-262-9181
WILKES-BARRE
133 Garden Ave.
1/2 double, 6
rooms. $600/plus
utilities. No pets.
570-855-8405
WILKES-BARRE
3 bedrooms, tenant
pays utilities. $600/
month + security.
6 month lease.
No Pets
Call 570-824-4207
WILKES-BARRE
EAST END
Clean and freshly
painted. 3 bed-
rooms, spacious
kitchen, hardwood
floors, near ameni-
ties. Full basement,
stove & refrigerator,
washer/dryer
hookup, no pets.
$625/month, + utili-
ties & security.
Call 570-328-3516
570-825-0046
WILKES-BARRE
HALF DOUBLE
Background and
credit checks
required. Security
required. $650. plus
utilities. Call
570-262-9645.
WYOMING
Newly remodeled 3
bedrooms, refriger-
ator & stove provid-
ed, no pets, wall to
wall carpeting,
$800/month, +
utilities, & $1,000
security deposit.
Call 570-693-2804
953Houses for Rent
DALLAS
GREENBRIAR
Well maintained
ranch style condo
features living room
with cathedral ceil-
ing, oak kitchen,
dining room with
vaulted ceiling, 2
bedrooms and 2 3/4
baths, master bed-
room with walk in
closet. HOA fees
included. $1,000 per
month + utilities.
MLS#11-4063.
Call Kevin Smith
570-696-5422
SMITH HOURIGAN
570-696-1195
HANOVER TWP
Modern 3 bedroom.
1 1/2 bath. Driveway.
Gas heat. Lease. No
pets. No smoking.
$725 + utilities. Call
Ann Marie Chopick
570-760-6769
(570) 288-6654
HARVEYS LAKE
2 small bedrooms,
all appliances,
security & 1st.
Available 4/1.
NO PETS.
570-762-6792
HARVEYS LAKE
2.5 bedrooms,
2 baths, all appli-
ances, hardwood
floors, gas fire-
place, washer/dryer
on premises, single
car attached
garage. No pets.
$1,100/month +
security. Water,
sewer & garbage
paid.
Call 570-855-2687
HUNLOCK CREEK
SYLVAN LAKE
1 bedroom, tenant
pays utilities,
$515/per month,
Call (570) 256-7535
NANTICOKE
Desirable
Lexington Village
Nanticoke, PA
Many ranch style
homes. 2 bedrooms
$936 + electric only
SQUARE FOOT RE
MANAGEMENT
866-873-0478
PLAINS
3 bedroom single,
close to Cross Val-
ley exit. Concrete
basement with 2nd
bath. Appliances
and w/d hookup.
Gas heat. Non
smokers preferred.
Section 8 not
accepted. $750
plus utilities. 1st,
last, security and
references.
570-822-7341
953Houses for Rent
SHAVERTOWN
PRIVATE SETTING
Large master suite
& office/bedroom,
private setting with
pond. 1.5 baths.
Ultra-modern
kitchen with appli-
ances, dishwasher
& microwave
included. Plenty of
closet & storage.
Washer/dryer hook
up. Private drive.
$975/month.
Lawn and snow
maintenance,
water, sewer &
garbage included.
Security deposit
required.
Call 570-760-2362
SWOYERSVILLE
Completely remod-
eled Large 2 story, 3
bedrooms, 2 baths,
single family home
including refrigera-
tor, stove, dish-
washer & disposal.
Gas heat, nice yard,
good neighbor-
hood,. Off street
parking. Shed. No
pets. $995 / month.
570-479-6722
WILKES-BARRE
Duplex RENTAL first
& second floor for
rent. Kitchen, bed-
room, living room &
bath in each apart-
ment. Included is
refrigerator & stove
in each apartment.
First floor tenant
has use of washer &
dryer. Off-street
parking. Heat, water
& sewer included in
the rent. Tenant
responsible for
electric only. Appli-
cant to provide
proof of income and
responsible for cost
of credit check. 1st
floor rent is $600
per month, 2nd floor
is $575 per month.
Louise Laine
283-9100 x20
WILKES-BARRE
2 bedroom, stove,
w/d hookups, park-
ing, gas heat. No
pets. $520 + utili-
ties. 570-868-4444
WILKES-BARRE
One 4 bedroom
$750
One 3 Bedroom
$625
One 2 bedroom
$585
Plus all utilities Ref-
erences & security.
No pets.
570-766-1881
962 Rooms
KINGSTON HOUSE
Nice, clean
furnished room,
starting at $340.
Efficiency at $450
month furnished
with all utilities
included. Off
street parking.
570-718-0331
WEST PITTSTON
Rooms for rent in
large, furnished Vic-
torian Home. Hard-
wood floors. Mod-
ern kitchen, bath &
laundry. Off street
parking. $500 +
security. All utilities,
cable & internet
included. Month to
month lease.
Call 570-430-3100
971 Vacation &
Resort Properties
FLORIDA
Boca Raton
Available March/April
Beautiful 5 room
home with Pool.
Fully furnished. On
canal lot. $600
weekly. If interest-
ed, write to:
120 Wagner St.
Moosic, PA 18507
HARVEYS LAKE
LAKEFRONT fully
furnished. Wifi,
cable. Weekly,
monthly. Season
2012 starting June
570-639-5041
QUAIL HOLLOW
VILLAGE
TIME SHARE
Beech Mountain
Lakes, Drums PA.
Great Price!
Call 570-954-8795
LINE UP
A GREAT DEAL...
IN CLASSIFIED!
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
974 Wanted to Rent
Real Estate
Kingston, Forty Fort
or Bear Creek Area
Responsible couple.
Non-smokers.
Seeking to rent a
single home or half
double.
Call 570-822-8361
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
Looking to buy a
home?
Place an ad here
and let the
sellers know!
570-829-7130
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
F U N N I E S SATURDAY, MARCH 17, 2012 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
SALLY FORTH
CLASSIC PEANUTS
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FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
GET FUZZY
CLOSE TO HOME
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TUNDRA

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