UP TO - The Book of Mozilla, 7:15

Transcription

UP TO - The Book of Mozilla, 7:15
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Nov 13 2012 12:10:41:555AM
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GOOD WIFE,
GREAT FURNITURE
C
Post-Gazette
Y
PREPARING VETS
FOR HIGH-TECH JOBS
MAGAZINE, C-1
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VOL. 86, NO. 105 11/13/12 ! FINAL .
A+ report
gives city
schools
mostly
bad grades
OVERTIME CHILLER
STEELERS STRUGGLE TO DEFEAT CHIEFS, 16-13,
AT COLD, DAMP HEINZ FIELD
Confrontation fuels
new fears of wider
Middle East conflict
By Mary Niederberger
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
By Ariel Schalit
and Josef Federman
Associated Press
TEL HAZEKA, Golan Heights
— Israeli tanks struck a Syrian
artillery launcher Monday after
a stray mortar shell flew into
Israel-held territory, the first
direct clash between the neighbors since the Syrian uprising
began nearly two years ago.
The confrontation fueled new
fears that the Syrian civil war
could drag Israel into the violence, a scenario with grave consequences for the region. The
fighting has already spilled into
Lebanon, Jordan and Turkey.
“We are closely monitoring what is happening and will
respond appropriately. We will
not allow our borders to be violated or our citizens to be fired
upon,” Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu said Monday in a
speech to foreign ambassadors.
While officials believe President Bashar Assad has no interest in picking a fight with Israel,
they fear the embattled Syrian
leader may try to draw Israel
into the fighting in a bout of desperation. Israeli officials believe
it is only a matter of time before
Syrian rebels topple the longtime leader.
Peter Diana/Post-Gazette
Steelers kicker Shaun Suisham celebrates with tackle Mike Adams after making the game-winning field goal against the
Chiefs Monday on the second play of overtime. The Steelers won, 16-13, despite losing quarterback Ben Roethlisberger
with a shoulder injury early in the second half.
! For complete game coverage, turn to Sports, Page D-1
! Visit post-gazette.com for special coverage, including video and the Blog ’n’ Gold feature.
SEE ISRAEL, PAGE A-4
Shooting by officer
under investigation
Petraeus
resignation
clogs security
overhaul
Highland Park traffic stop ended in injuries
By Taryn Luna
and Moriah Balingit
By Greg Miller
The Washington Post
WASHINGTON — President
Barack Obama is considering asking Sen. John Kerry,
D-Mass., to serve as his next
defense secretary, part of an
extensive rearrangement of his
national security team that will
include a permanent replacement for former CIA director
David Petraeus.
Although Mr. Kerry is
thought to covet the job of secretary of state, senior administration officials familiar with transition planning said that nomination will almost certainly go
to Susan Rice, the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations.
John Brennan, Mr. Obama’s
chief counterterrorism adviser,
is a leading contender for the
CIA job if he wants it, officials said. If Mr. Brennan goes
ahead with his plan to leave
government, Michael Morell,
the agency’s acting director, is
the prohibitive favorite to take
over permanently. Officials
cautioned that the White House
discussions are still in the early
SEE SECURITY, PAGE A-6
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Darrell Sapp/Post-Gazette
LOOKING NICE, BY GEORGE
A painter walks
Monday beneath the statue of George Washington atop
the Washington County Courthouse. The courthouse
dome got a new coat of paint ahead of wintry weather.
It was shortly before 10 p.m.
Sunday in Highland Park
when two officers pulled over
a man for a traffic infraction
at Stanton Avenue and Farragut Street in what police
described as a routine stop.
Two officers approached —
one officer on the driver’s side
and Officer David Derbish, a
26-year-old who was hired in
2009, on the passenger side.
Police said the driver, Leon
Ford, 19, of East Liberty,
refused to answer questions
after Officer Derbish and his
partner ran his license and
the car’s registration. They
said Officer Derbish thought
he spotted Mr. Ford move his
right hand, as if reaching for
something, and opened the
passenger door in an effort to
stop him.
Mr. Ford threw the car into
drive and Officer Derbish
jumped inside to avoid being
dragged, police said.
They said Mr. Ford
attempted to push Officer Derbish out of the car and the officer then fired his duty weapon
into Mr. Ford’s chest three
times.
Mr. Ford drove about 100
yards before crashing into
a rocky landscaping feature
Medics took him to UPMC
Presbyterian, where he was
listed in critical but stable
condition Monday night.
“The officer fired a weapon
in self-defense,” Deputy Chief
Paul Donaldson said. “The
actor was struck several times
and subsequently the vehicle
crashed into a residence in
the 6000 block of Stanton Avenue.”
Officer Derbish was thrown
against the dashboard and
windshield, injured his hand
and was treated at UPMC
Mercy. He was placed on leave
because of his injury, Major
Crimes Lt. Daniel Herrmann
said in a news release, and
city homicide detectives, in
conjunction with the Allegheny County district attorney’s
office, are investigating.
Chief Donaldson said it was
too early to judge the officer’s
actions as police continued to
gather information on how
the situation unraveled.
By Don Hopey
Salty bromide concentrations in the Monongahela
River, which had risen in 2009
and 2010 due, at least in part, to
discharges of Marcellus Shale
gas drilling wastewater by sewage treatment plants, returned
to normal levels in 2011 and
this year, according to a Carnegie Mellon University river
monitoring study.
The findings are good news
for municipal water suppliers
concerned that the higher levels of bromide, a nontoxic salt
compound, were reacting with
chlorine in the water disinfec-
Weather
tion process to produce higher
than healthy concentrations of
a carcinogen, trihalomethane,
in the finished water supplied
to their customers.
Eleven public water utilities
use the Monongahela River to
supply water to about 1 million
people.
Jeanne VanBriesen, director
Partly sunny, cooler.
High 44, low 26.
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of the Center for Water Quality in Urban Environmental
Systems (Water QUEST) and a
professor in the Department of
Civil & Environmental Engineering, said the decline in
Mon River bromide levels coincided with a request to drilling
companies by the state Department of Environmental Protec-
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Pittsburgh Public Schools
superintendent Linda Lane
knew she would get bad news
in the annual report of A+
Schools, which Monday outlined declines in achievement,
the graduation rate, number of
students qualifying for Pittsburgh Promise scholarships
and reduction in college readiness in her district.
But she said the district is
already working to stem the
tide.
In addition
to the academic
declines, there
was more bad
news: a widening of the racial
achievement
gap, which had
Linda Lane
narrowed in
“I believe
2010-11, giving
problems
school officials
have
hope that it
solutions.
could reduce
We have
the number of
to find out
years it would
take to close.
what the
A+ Schools is answers
an independent are.”
education advocacy group that
works with and monitors the
Pittsburgh Public Schools.
“I believe problems have
solutions. We have to find out
what the answers are,” Ms.
Lane said at the presentation
of the eighth annual Report
to the Community on Public
School Progress in Pittsburgh.
Much of the information in the
report was already reflected in
the district’s 2012 PSSA scores,
which showed some significant
achievement drops and the district’s failure to meet Adequate
Yearly Progress as defined by
the No Child Left Behind Act.
Ms. Lane said she believed
teachers’ uncertainty about
their jobs, increased security
SEE SCHOOLS, PAGE A-2
Nut allergies
pose problems
in school
cafeterias
By Sally Kalson
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
tion to stop using the sewage
treatment plants, which are not
equipped to treat the drilling
wastes.
“Bromide concentrations
have declined, and there are
reduced loads entering the
river. We don’t know why, but
At Ramsey Elementary in
the Gateway School District, 45
students have food allergies. As
of now, they all sit with peers
at lunch, but some are placed at
the end of the table to minimize
cross-contamination of foods.
At Moss Side Middle School
in the same district, 32 students
have food allergies. They all sit
with other students in the cafeteria unless the parents request
a separate area.
“It all depends on how
severe the allergies are,” said
Cara Zanella, Gateway spokeswoman, who checked with
several principals on how they
handle food allergies at school.
But food allergies can be a
stubborn problem, depending
on the parties involved.
On Sunday, the parents of a
former student in the Fox Chapel Area School District filed a
lawsuit in federal court, charging that Fairview Elementary
School didn’t properly accommodate their son’s allergy to
tree nuts — walnuts, almonds,
hazelnuts, cashews, pistachios
and Brazil nuts — as required
by law. Despite telling the
parents their son would sit at a
SEE RIVERS, PAGE A-10
SEE NUTS, PAGE A-2
SEE SHOOTING, PAGE A-10
Study finds lower bromide levels in Mon, but not in Allegheny
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
A-1
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TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2012
Israel
clashes
with
Syria
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Nov 12 2012 08:19:08:415PM
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during the PSSA exams and
the lack of funding for interim
assessments in the 2011-12
school year contributed to the
decrease in achievement. This
year the interim assessments,
which help identify areas
where students might be struggling, have been reinstituted.
Ms. Lane said that as a result
of the increased security surrounding the test, which was
implemented to reduce the possibility of cheating, teachers felt
less inclined to offer encouragement and the testing envirnonment was less releaxed for
students.
Carey Harris, executive
director of A+ Schools, said she
had never delivered so much
bad news in the eight years
she’s been giving the annual
report.
News of a widening of the
racial achievement gap was
expecially disappointing,
since last year’s scores had
decreased it significantly. At
that time, Ms. Harris said if
the district continued at the
pace it had set for the previous four years, it would have
taken 40 years to close the gap
in math and 34 years in reading. Based in 2011 test scores,
the gap would close in 24 years
if the pace was kept.
But the 2012 results show the
gap widened this year, increasing by 1.3 percentage points
to 31.9 percent in reading and
increased 3.6 percentage points
to 30.9 in math.
Ms. Harris said she didn’t
have a specific number of years
calculated for closing the gap,
but “we know when it widens it
will take longer.”
The district’s graduation
rate decreased from 70 percent
to 68.5 percent and the number
of seniors who earned a 2.5
or higher grade point average — needed to qualify for
Pittsburgh Promise scholarships — dropped 1 percentage
point to 58 percent of students.
For black students, the number
dropped 4 percentage points to
39 percent.
Saleem Ghubril, executive
director of the Pittsburgh
Promise, said he had not seen
the A+ report but he was not
surprised by the news.
“The African-American population is the most vulnerable
population in the Pittsburgh
Public Schools, especially the
males,” Mr. Ghubril said.
To help more AfricanAmericans qualify for Promise
scholarships, the Promise has
recruited volunteers who will
work, starting in January, with
students to reach the grade
level needed for a Promise
scholarship.
For academic achievement,
A+ didn’t look just at Pennsylvania System of School
Assessment exam but looked at
whether students at each grade
level made a year’s growth in
achievement from the previous
assessment.
In reading, a total of 91
percent of Pittsburgh public
schools with seventh- and
eighth-grade students made a
year’s worth or more growth in
reading.
But 42 percent of schools
with fourth-grade students
made less than a year’s growth.
“nut-free table,” the suit says,
the school made him sit alone
at lunch, apart from the other
students, resulting in teasing
and humiliation.
The student still had several
allergic episodes at school,
the suit says, due to lack of a
sufficient plan to protect him.
When the parents withdrew
him, the district filed truancy
citations, the suit says. The boy
now attends a private school;
the parents are seeking tuition
reimbursement.
The district said yesterday
that it has accommodated students with food allergies and
that the case was heard last
summer by a hearing officer
who found in favor of the district.
“We are confident that the
federal court will agree with
that decision,” the superintendant’s office said in a statement.
That hearing officer’s report,
dated Aug. 14, said the district
met its obligations to educate
the student and did not owe any
reimbursement. But the officer
also found that by filing truancy complaints, then repeatedly postponing the hearings
before a district magistrate,
the district retaliated against
the parents for their advocacy
under the Rehabilitation Act.
A federal judge can overturn
the hearing officer’s finding.
Angel Waldron, spokesperson for the Asthma and
Allergy Foundation of America
in Washington, D.C., said that
even in cases of severe allergy,
litigation can be avoided
through cooperation.
“When parents work
together with the school nurse
and administration so they
understand what precautions
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And 39.4 percent of schools with
fifth-graders did while among
schools with sixth-graders, 59.1
percent made less than a year’s
growth. Data for Pittsburgh
schools with 11th-graders show
that 44 percent made less than
one year’s growth in reading.
In math, achievement measurements were best in grades
six and seven: 68 percent of
schools with sixth-grade students made a year or more
growth as did 73.9 percent
with seventh-graders. But in
schools with fifth-graders, 72
percent of students achieved
less than one year’s growth.
Of schools with eighth-graders
65 percent showed less than a
year’s growth as did 67 percent
of schools with first-graders. In
schools with fourth-graders, 46
percent demonstrated less than
a year’s growth in math.
The report also included
comparisons of Pittsburgh
PSSA scores to the state averages in 2009-2012. In reading,
in grades 6-8 and 11, Pittsburgh
students gains far exceeded
the state average. In reading
in grades 3-5, though, reading
scores dropped 1.2 percentage
points, compared with a 1-point
percentage drop statewide.
In math, again grades 6-8
showed gains higher than the
state averages. But in grades
3-5, there was a 3.2 percentage
point drop, compared with a 0.4
drop statewide.
In 11th grade math, Pittsburgh’s performance remained
static while the statewide average showed a 4.4 percentage
point increase.
Enrollment decreased by
1,052 students to 24,918, with the
sharpest declines at the elementary level. But Ms. Lane said
she was encouraged by an 11
percent increase in kindergarten enrollment this fall.
Some bright spots included
the fact that the number of students enrolled in one or more
advanced placement courses
increased 1 percentage point
to 15.2 percent and that there
were some schools with a
racial achievement gap of 10
percent or less.
In reading there were seven
Pittsburgh schools with a 10
percent or smaller gap. They
are: Allegheny K-5; Dilworth
pre-K-5; Fulton pre-K-5; Phillips
K-5; Sterrett 6-8; CAPA 6-12;
and Science & Technology 6-12.
Two charter schools, City High
Carter and the Urban League
of Pittsburgh Charter School,
showed a gap of 10 percent or
less.
In math, schools with a
10 percent or smaller racial
achievement gap are: Dilworth
pre-K-5; Fulton pre-K-5; Phillips
K-5; Whittier K-5; CAPA 6-12;
Science & Technology 6-12; and
City Charter High School.
Ms. Harris said the schools
are becoming more diverse
with higher percentages of
Hispanic and Asian students.
The student body is also poorer,
with the percentage of students
eligible for free or reduced
lunches 3 percentage points
higher than in 2010-11 at 71.3
percent.
To view the full report go to
www.aplussschools.org.
Mary Niederberger: [email protected] or
412-263-1590.
PORTFOLIO
Petraeus affair conspiracy is well-cloaked
W
hen President Barack
Obama failed to show up
mentally for the first presidential debate in Denver,
there was immediate speculation
that he was preoccupied with some
looming domestic or foreign policy
crisis the rest of us weren’t privy to.
Looking back at that debate now, it
is tempting to imagine the reason for
Mr. Obama’s lassitude boils down to a
variation of the following complaint:
“How did I end up with a director of
the Central Intelligence Agency who is not
only ‘shagging’ his official biographer, but
leaves an email bread crumb trail visible
enough for even the FBI to follow?”
Alas, according to every credible source
so far, Mr. Obama wasn’t briefed about CIA
Director David H. Petraeus’ extra-marital
affair until the day after the election, which
is weeks after House Majority Leader Eric
Cantor allegedly found out about it. Mr.
Cantor, a Republican, was tipped off by an
FBI agent freelancing the information outside the bureau’s chain of command.
Last Thursday, Mr. Petraeus told the
president that he’d let down the American
people and offered to resign. Mr. Obama
had been counting on Mr. Petraeus sticking
around for his second term because he has
been an outstanding leader at the CIA. The
president wasn’t eager to take one of America’s most effective assets in the counterterrorism game off the board.
After brooding overnight, Mr. Obama
accepted his CIA director’s resignation
early Friday morning. That’s when the
most titillating Washington sex scandal in
years took over the headlines.
Still licking its wounds after Gov.
Mitt Romney’s Election Day defeat, the
need to be taken, usually we
can find a happy medium,” Ms.
Waldron said.
Food allergies remain an
issue, she noted, with cases
doubling over the past 20 years
although the incidence has
leveled off. Some allergies are
severe enough to cause death —
the Archives of Internal Medicine says that 200 people die
each year from food allergies.
“We had a patient who
couldn’t go into the school cafeteria at all if they were serving
anything with tree nuts,” Ms.
Waldron said. “He had to eat
lunch in the nurse’s office.”
Told of the Fox Chapel case,
she said: “It sounds like what
they did may not have been the
best thing socially for the child,
but if the allergy was severe
enough …”
The AAFA has no specific
best practices for schools to follow regarding what an individual student plan should contain
or where to place allergic children during meals. It publishes
only general policy standards
and recommends that states follow them.
For example, it wants states
to require each school to have
a full-time nurse; districts to
provide case managements for
students with chronic health
conditions; states to fund staff
training in food allergies; and
allergies and asthma to be
included in the health curriculum for all students.
The AAFA has a state
“honor roll” recognizing those
that adopt the policies into law.
Six or seven states are on the
list, Ms. Waldron said.
Pennsylvania is not one of
them.
Sally Kalson: [email protected] or 412-263-1610.
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right-wing media
and blogosphere
quickly pivoted
from grudging mea
culpas to a new
meme — President
Obama “iced” his
own CIA director to
prevent him from
TONY
testifying this week
before Congress.
This narrative
assumes that under
oath, Mr. Petraeus would be forced to
break with the administration and “tell the
truth” about the death of the four Americans killed during a terrorist attack on our
consulate in Benghazi on Sept. 11.
Because the president is nothing if not
a human lint brush for paranoid theories
of every imaginable stripe, this is to be
expected with a story as murky as this one.
The proximity of the Benghazi hearings
and the timing of Mr. Petraeus’ resignation
shortly after the election, when at least one
Republican in the House has known about
“l’affaire Petraeus” since the summer,
makes this story an irresistible jump ball
for the political press already bored with
narratives about how the GOP screwed up.
Still, not even the most imaginative conspiracy theorist has been able to come up
with an explanation for why Mr. Cantor, a
partisan Tea Party ideologue, sat on such
explosive information in the weeks leading
up to the election instead of exploiting it on
behalf of the GOP.
Are we to assume that Mr. Cantor, like
Mr. Petraeus, was concerned with “protecting” Mr. Obama from embarrassment on
the eve of his historic re-election? Hardly. It
is more likely that Mr. Cantor assumed Mr.
Romney already had the election in the bag
even without the Petraeus scandal greasing the rails.
If anything, Mr. Cantor probably wanted
to keep his powder dry until the Benghazi
hearings. That’s when embarrassing info
about Mr. Petraeus would have most likely
“leaked” from any number of self-interested quarters if he stuck with the Obama
administration version of events. Still, the
House majority leader’s discretion so far
has been admirable, whatever his motives
for keeping his mouth shut.
Lots of folks in Congress are upset that
they weren’t briefed about the FBI’s investigation of potential security breaches at the
CIA when any number of them would’ve
broken all land speed records in leaking
the info to the media for short-term political gain.
A more interesting question is how the
FBI got to go on a fishing expedition that
ultimately led to Mr. Petraeus’ resignation, even after it determined early on that
the former CIA director’s lover had not
compromised national security. Is the FBI
engaged in a petty vendetta of some kind?
How does an FBI agent leak info to Eric
Cantor and keep his job? This is actually
the sleaziest part of this affair — not the
adultery.
There’s a reason that the Obama administration gets poor marks from civil libertarians. In many ways, the Justice Department under Eric Holder is as bad as its predecessor. From busting users of medicinal
marijuana to the incompetent handling
of the Petraeus affair, we’re all way past
ready for new DOJ leadership.
NORMAN
Tony Norman: [email protected]
or 412-263-1631. Twitter: @TonyNormanPG.
walkabout / diana nelson jones
Untapped potential
of Larimer’s water
is now on display
water. We need green infrastructure,
and if everybody got on board, the city
would have less flooding and we would
keep a natural resource” instead of letting it flow away.
Like Mr. Pantone, Deborah Jones is
among several residents featured in the
video in the Mattress Factory installation. She said residents are just as
important to Larimer’s revitalization
as are the city and the Urban Redevelopment Authority.
“The community belongs to the people,” she said.
During her time here, Ms. Damon
met with groups to talk about hydraulic
fracturing, visited Alcosan and sought
out activist residents.
Water and environmental issues have
been at the core of her own activism and
art.
She hadn’t done an installation in
years, but the show’s curator, Hilary
Robinson, an art professor at Carnegie Mellon University, invited her to do one here,
said Owen Smith, exhibits manager at the
Mattress Factory.
Ms. Damon founded Keepers of the
Waters in 1991 and has been using her
vision, according to the Mattress Factory’s
website, to “inspire and promote projects
that combine art, science, and community
involvement to restore, preserve and remediate water sources.”
The title of the show, for which Ms. Robinson chose six feminist artists, signifies
that feminists aren’t confined to so-called
feminist issues.
“Feminist and …” runs through May
26, 2013, at the Mattress Factory, which is
located at 500 Sampsonia Way with its public entrance on Jacksonia Street.
L
arimer is one of Pittsburgh’s lesser
known neighborhoods, but New York
artist Betsy Damon discovered it during a lengthy stay in Pittsburgh preparing
for the ongoing show “Feminist and...” at
the Mattress Factory in the Central North
Side.
A shallow pool of water in sand nearly
fills the lower-level room in which Ms.
Damon’s work, “Water Rules — Life, Pittsburgh: Seeking Lost Rivers, Living Waters
of Larimer,” is staged. Stepping stones lead
viewers to the back of the room, where a topographic model shows Larimer sitting on a
plateau surrounded by large strips of roadway while a short video plays. Sandbags
are stacked on each side of the pool. Two
catchment structures are stacked to create
a waterfall that trickles into the pool.
The pool itself does not say “Larimer”
any more than it says any place. As Ms.
Damon states on her website, keepersofthewaters.org, all water is connected in a lifesustaining loop. A stream that runs to the
Monongahela River runs to the Ohio River
that runs to the Mississippi River that flows
down to New Orleans and out into the Gulf
Of Mexico.
Larimer just happens to be a terrific site
for water retention. It sits above Negley
Run Road and Washington Boulevard and
has a significant grass-roots “green” plan
that calls for a water collection project that
would keep rain in the neighborhood from
flowing out.
“Every drop,” said Bob Bingham, an
Nut allergies pose problems
NUTS, FROM PAGE A-1
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PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE ! TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2012 ! WWW.POST-GAZETTE.COM
A+ gives city schools
mostly poor grades
SCHOOLS, FROM PAGE A-1
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Carolyn Peeks, captain of the Larimer
Green Team, and Derric Heck are shown
in a video at the Mattress Factory exhibit
“Water Rules — Life.”
environmental artist who teaches at Carnegie Mellon University. He drove Ms. Damon
around the area of the August 2011 deadly
flooding on Washington Boulevard.
Mr. Bingham is writing a grant application for funds that would cover more than
half of the $1.5 million cost of creating a
conveyance system in Larimer to capture
rain water and divert it to wetland demonstrations, to cisterns for reuse in the community garden, to an irrigation demonstration, an aquaponics greenhouse and a water
park.
Ms. Damon and Mr. Bingham are collaborating on the project with the Larimer
Green Team, the Kingsley Association and
the Larimer Consensus Group.
“We are on a plateau, and also there is
a lot of vacant land and condemned property in Larimer,” said Albert Pantone, a
manager of the Larimer Community Garden. “The time couldn’t be more perfect
to change the infrastructure to retain the
O N L Y
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T H E
Diana Nelson Jones: djones@post-gazette.
com or 412-263-1626. Read her blog City Walkabout at www.post-gazette.com/citywalk.
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PG STORE post-gazette.com/pgstore (Pittsburgh skyline, Steelers,
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(On this day, Nov. 13)
1789 Benjamin Franklin wrote in a letter to a friend, JeanBaptiste Leroy: “In this world nothing can be said to be
certain, except death and taxes.”
1844 The Monongahela River was formally opened for
navigation as far as Brownsville, Fayette County; seven dams
and 11 locks were in operation.
1909 Two hundred fifty-nine men and boys were killed when
fire erupted inside a coal mine in Cherry, Ill.
1923 Twenty thousand persons attended the formal opening
of the new banking room of Union Trust Company at Fifth and
Grant.
1974 Karen Silkwood, a technician and union activist at the
Kerr-McGee Cimarron plutonium plant near Crescent, Okla.,
died in a car crash while on her way to meet a reporter.
1999 The Pitt Panthers played their last football game at Pitt
Stadium, defeating Notre Dame, 37-27.
Some items are from Stefan Lorant’s “Pittsburgh: The Story of an American
City” (digital.library.pitt.edu/chronology).
— Compiled by Rick Nowlin
Penguins, Pirates and local college merchandise)
Joseph Pepe, president
Tracey DeAngelo, director of marketing
Liam Durbin, chief information officer
James M. Frederick, director of production
Henry Gorman, director of finance
Lisa Hurm, director of operations
Stephen B. Spolar, director of human resources
Randy Waugaman, director of audience
Today’s birthdays: : Actor Joe Mantegna, 65. Actress Frances
Conroy, 59. Actress Tracy Scoggins, 59. Actor Chris Noth, 58.
Actress-comedian Whoopi Goldberg, 57. Comedian Jimmy
Kimmel, 45. Actor Steve Zahn, 45. Actor Gerard Butler, 43.
Thought for today: “As you live, believe in life. Always human
beings will live and profess to greater, broader and fuller life.
The only possible death is to lose belief in this truth simply
because the great end comes slowly, because time is long.”
— W.E.B. Du Bois, American author and reformer (1868-1963)
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PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE ! TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2012 ! WWW.POST-GAZETTE.COM
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PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE ! TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2012 ! WWW.POST-GAZETTE.COM
INTERNATIONAL
Leaders depart as credibility of British institution falls under scrutiny
2 more BBC execs withdraw amid crisis
WORLD
BRIEFS
Israel weighs
retaliation
JERUSALEM — Gaza
militants pummeled southern Israel with rockets for a
third day in a row Monday,
increasing internal pressure
on the Israeli government to
retaliate.
A million Israelis are in
range of the rockets. Israeli
leaders have warned they
won’t tolerate continued barrages and have threatened a
more forceful response.
Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu told
foreign ambassadors that
Israel would defend itself. He
spoke during a visit to Ashkelon, a southern city that
has been battered by Gaza
rockets.
Israeli Defense Minister
Ehud Barak met with the
military chief of staff and
other senior officials Monday
evening to determine how to
respond to the rocket fire.
More than 110 rockets
have hit Israeli towns since
the latest round began, the
military said.
By Alan Cowell
and John F. Burns
The New York Times
LONDON — The BBC
struggled Monday to contain a
spreading crisis over its reporting of a decades-old sexual abuse
scandal as two senior executives
withdrew temporarily from
their jobs following the resignation of the corporation’s director
general in the worst setback to
the public broadcaster’s status,
prestige and self-confidence for
years.
The BBC’s website said its
director of news, Helen Boaden,
and her deputy, Stephen Mitchell, had “stepped aside,” the latest
moves since a flagship current
affairs program, “Newsnight,”
wrongly implicated a former
Conservative Party politician in
accusations of sexual abuse at a
children’s home in North Wales
in the 1970s and 1980s.
The BBC management said
that while neither Ms. Boaden
nor Mr. Mitchell “had anything
at all to do with the failed ‘Newsnight’ investigation” of the
politician, Alistair McAlpine, it
“believes there is a lack of clarity in the lines of command and
control in BBC News” because
of an inquiry into a separate
“Newsnight” debacle — the cancellation of a program a year ago
into allegations of sexual abuse
by Jimmy Savile, a longtime
BBC television host who died
last year at age 84.
The BBC said the two executives would step aside until the
end of that investigation, which
is being conducted by Nick Pollard, a former head of the rival
Sky News.
The BBC said its head of news
gathering, Fran Unsworth, and
Ceri Thomas, the editor of the
“Today” current affairs radio
program, are to fill in for the
executives who stepped aside.
Tim Davie, 45, an executive
with a background in marketing who is director of the BBC’s
radio operations, is to serve as
the acting director general. In
a videotaped interview posted
by the BBC, Mr. Davie also said
he would take a short period to
deliberate.
“I’ve just got into the job,” he
said. “I’m going to take a bit of
time to look through the recommendations, and then we’ll take
the disciplinary process through
and be fair to those individuals.”
He added: “The BBC has lost a
director-general in this process.
That in itself is very significant,
and he has taken responsibility.”
Accounts published in Britain’s newspapers, citing current
and former BBC staff members
familiar, said the “Newsnight”
team had worked with an independent group, the Bureau of
Investigative Journalism at
the City University in London,
in preparing the Nov. 2 report
that wrongly implicated Mr.
McAlpine.
The privately funded bureau
was founded in 2009 to investigate controversial issues and,
in its own words, to provide
a “gold standard” for reporting. It has used experienced
journalists and students at the
university’s journalism school,
often in conjunction with mainstream media organizations like
the BBC, which have paid the
bureau for its work.
In a statement, the bureau’s
board of trustees has said it was
“appalled by what appears to be
a breach” of standards and that
“remedial action will be taken
against those responsible.”
The bureau’s work for the
report was led by a former BBC
reporter, Angus Stickler, who
was loaned to “Newsnight” and
worked jointly under a BBC
producer and the bureau’s own
managing editor, Iain Overton,
Israel
clashes
with
Syria
Action on Greece delayed
ISRAEL, FROM PAGE A-1
BRUSSELS — Eurozone
finance ministers have ended
a meeting in Brussels on
Monday without agreeing on
the next batch of bailout aid
for Greece.
Jean-Claude Juncker, the
head of the eurogroup, said
the finance ministers hoped
to reach a final agreement at
an extraordinary meeting to
be held next Tuesday, which
he said would be a continuation of Monday’s meeting.
However, finance ministers did agree that Greece
could have two additional
years — until 2022 — to meet
its debt reduction target.
New term on rights council
UNITED NATIONS —
The United States was reelected Monday to another
three-year term on the U.N.
Human Rights Council in the
only contested election for
the organization’s top human
rights body.
The U.S. was competing
with four countries for three
open seats belonging to the
Western Group on the council. Germany and Ireland
also were elected by the
193-member General Assembly. Greece and Sweden lost
out.
U.S. Ambassador to the
U.N. Susan Rice said her
country was “pleased and
proud to have been re-elected
to a second three-year term.”
Rustlers ambush police
NDJAMENA, Chad
— More than 10 Kenyan
police officers, and possibly
as many as 31, have been
killed by cattle rustlers in an
ambush in a remote part of
northern Kenya known as
death valley, Kenyan officials
said Monday, in of one the
more brazen cases in recent
years in the war against livestock thieves.
According to Kenya’s
internal security ministry,
the officers were attacked
around 4 a.m. Saturday in
Samburu North, an arid,
sparsely populated district
several hours north of Nairobi, the capital.
The ministry said the officers were trying to recover
stolen livestock when they
were waylaid by bandits
from the Turkana ethnic
group, one of the poorest,
most marginalized groups in
Kenya, with a reputation for
being fierce pastoralists.
Cleric won’t be deported
LONDON — A radical Muslim preacher who
praised the 911 bombings and
preached terrorist violence
against Christians and Jews
won his final appeal against
a British government deportation order Monday.
The judgment was a
severe blow to Home Secretary Theresa May, who has
long sought Abu Qatada’s
deportation to face trial in
Jordan, where he is wanted
on terror charges.
The government’s loss was
compounded by the decision
of Judge John Mitting, head
of the Immigration Appeals
Court where Mr. Qatada’s
final appeal was heard, that
the cleric be released on
bail Tuesday — albeit under
severe restrictions on his
contacts with the outside
world and a 16-hour-a-day
curfew.
— Compiled from news services
For news updates, visit
post-gazette.com/nationworld
a former BBC producer who
resigned Monday.
Several of those involved in
the preparation of the “Newsnight” report have been quoted
in British papers as saying that
errors included not calling Mr.
McAlpine for a response and not
showing a former child home resident interviewed for the report,
Steve Messham, a photograph of
Mr. McAlpine to identify him. Mr.
Messham has apologized to Mr.
McAlpine, tracing the confusion
to the police identification of a
photograph of a man he identified
as his abuser in the early 1990s.
The latest debacle has compounded the problems facing the
network since accusations last
month against Savile, who was
suspected of having sexually
abused as many as 300 young
people. Critics have accused the
BBC of covering up the abuse by
canceling a “Newsnight” report
on the accusations against him
in December.
Daniel Ochoa de Olza/Associated Press
SPAIN’S HOUSING CRISIS A demonstrator holds a banner reading ‘Stop Evictions’ during a protest Monday outside the
conservative party PP headquarters in Madrid. Spain’s banks announced they will freeze mortgage-related evictions for two
years in cases of extreme need as a public outcry mounted over two suicides in 15 days by indebted homeowners who were
about to lose their properties.
Witnesses differ with U.S. on timing of Libya attack
By Nancy A. Youssef
McClatchy Newspapers
BENGHAZI, Libya — Witnesses in Benghazi, Libya, provide a chronology for the Sept. 11
attack on the U.S. consulate here
that differs in significant ways
from timelines released by U.S.
officials in Washington, raising
more questions about how the
assault unfolded and the speed
with which Americans at a
nearby CIA annex responded to
calls for help from the consulate.
The versions of the attack
told here indicate that the last
visitor who met with Ambassador Chris Stevens, who died
in the assault on the consulate,
departed at least 45 minutes earlier than U.S. officials in Washington have said. Witnesses
here also suggest that the attack
may have begun as many as 15
minutes earlier than officials in
Washington have said.
Page One. An article Monday
about the “Crossing Fences” oral
history project misidentified the
location of a CD release celebration in Homewood. The event
is at the Homewood-Brushton
YMCA, 7140 Bennett St.
Forum. The Democratic
Republic of the Congo changed
its name to Zaire and then
back to Democratic Republic of
the Congo. The Republic of the
Congo, sometimes called just
Congo or Congo-Brazzaville, is a
different, neighboring country.
If you have a correction and
cannot reach the responsible
reporter or editor, please call
the office of David M. Shribman, executive editor, 412-2631890.
™
Sun-Telegraph/The Pittsburgh Press
Copyright 2012, PG
Publishing Co. Published daily and Sunday by PG Publishing Co. Pittsburgh Post-Gazette is
a federally registered trademark and service mark.
Seven-day home delivery for $3.95 a week — Call
1-800-228-NEWS (6397) or go to
post-gazette.com/pgdelivery
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everyone agrees was his last official act. While State Department
officials said Stevens escorted
the Turkish consul out of the
compound at 8:30 p.m., a guard
at the compound and an official
familiar with the meeting said
Mr. Akin left at 7:45 p.m.
A security guard said he distinctly remembered the time
of the meeting because about a
half-hour before Mr. Akin was
scheduled to meet with Stevens,
the ambassador approached the
guard, introduced himself and
asked what security measures
were needed to allow the Turkish consul to enter. Stevens told
him Mr. Akin would arrive at
6:30 p.m. for an hour-long meeting.
As the guard and Stevens
spoke, the protests in Cairo had
been going on for nearly two
hours. Stevens didn’t mention
the film to the guard, and no one
from the compound warned the
guard about possible protests
throughout the night, the guard
said.
Mr. Akin arrived on time and
the men met for an hour, the
guard said.
The guard made a note of the
time of Mr. Akin’s arrival and
departure in a book in which the
guards tracked all movements,
he said.
State Department officials
have said the attack started at
9:40 p.m., a time that the CIA
timeline also sets as the approximate beginning. A Pentagon
account of its response said the
assault started at 9:42 p.m.
But two guards at the compound told McClatchy that the
attack began earlier; one said at
9:25 p.m. and the other at 9:35.
Behind the compound, at a
nearby restaurant, a Western
diplomat who was having dinner heard a mortar round go off
around 9:30 p.m.
Former Afghan warlord rallies followers
corrections
&clarifications
C
Witnesses also said there was
no indication that anyone in the
U.S. diplomatic compound was
aware before the assault that
protests had broken out in neighboring Egypt over an inflammatory film about the Prophet
Muhammad that was produced
in the United States.
The differences in the timelines could mean that CIA officers stationed in a compound just
1.2 miles away may have waited
as long as 40 minutes before setting out to assist the besieged
consulate and might not have
arrived there until more than an
hour after the attack began.
At a minimum, the witness
accounts suggest that after two
months,theU.S.governmentstill
may not know the basic sequence
of events and when key moments
in the assault occurred.
On the evening of Sept. 11, Stevens met with the Turkish consul here, Ali Sait Akin, in what
By Graham Bowley
The New York Times
HERAT, Afghanistan — One
of the most powerful former
mujahedeen commanders in
Afghanistan, Ismail Khan, is
calling on his followers to reorganize and defend the country
as Western militaries withdraw,
in a public demonstration of faltering confidence in the national
government and the Westernbuilt Afghan National Army.
Mr. Khan is one of the strongest of a group of warlords who
defined the country’s recent
history in battling the Soviets,
the Taliban and one another,
and who then were brought into
President Hamid Karzai’s Cabinet as a symbol of unity. Now, in
announcing that he is remobilizing his forces, Mr. Khan has rankled Afghan officials and stoked
fears that other regional and
factional leaders will follow suit
and re-arm, weakening support
for the government and increasing the likelihood of civil war.
This month, Mr. Khan rallied
thousands of his supporters in
the desert outside Herat, the cultured western provincial capital
and the center of his power base,
urging them to coordinate and
Afghan President
Hamid Karzai
reactivate their networks. And
he has begun enlisting new
recruits and organizing district
command structures.
“We are responsible for maintaining security in our country
and not letting Afghanistan be
destroyed again,” Mr. Khan, the
minister of energy and water,
said at a news conference over
the weekend at his offices in
Kabul. But after facing weeks
of criticism, he took care not to
frame his action as defying the
government: “There are parts
of the country where the government forces cannot operate, and
in such areas the locals should
step forward, take arms and
defend the country.”
Mr. Karzai and his aides,
however, were not greeting it as
an altruistic gesture. The governor of Herat province called Mr.
Khan’s reorganization an illegal
challenge to the national security forces. And Mr. Karzai’s
spokesman, Aimal Faizi, tersely
criticized Mr. Khan.
“The remarks by Ismail
Khan do not reflect the policies
of the Afghan government,” Mr.
Faizi said. “The government of
Afghanistan and the Afghan
people do not want any irresponsible armed grouping outside
the legitimate security forces
structures.”
In Kabul, Mr. Khan’s provocative actions have played out in
news media and brought a fierce
reaction from some members of
Parliament, who said the former
warlords were preparing to take
advantage of the U.S. troop withdrawal set for 2014.
“People like Ismail Khan
smell blood,” Belqis Roshan, a
senator from Farah province,
said in an interview. “They
think that as soon as foreign
forces leave Afghanistan, once
again they will get the chance
to start a civil war, and achieve
their ominous goals of getting
rich and terminating their local
rivals.”
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The conflict has already
spilled over into several of Syria’s other neighbors — whether
in direct violence or in the flood
of refugees fleeing the bloodshed. More than 36,000 Syrians
have been killed in the fighting,
according to estimates by antiAssad activists.
On Monday, a Syrian fighter
jet bombed a rebel-held area
hugging the border with Turkey
three times, killing 15 to 20 people, according to a Turkish official. Separately, eight wounded
Syrians died in Turkey, the official said, speaking on condition
of anonymity because he was not
authorized to brief the media.
Potential Israeli involvement
in Syria could be far more explosive. The bitter enemies both
possess air forces, tanks, and
significant arsenals of missiles
and other weapons.
Although the Israeli military
is more modern and powerful,
Syria has a collection of chemical weapons that could wreak
havoc if deployed. Fighting
between the countries could
also drag in a close Syrian ally,
the Lebanese guerrilla group
Hezbollah, or Islamic militant
groups in the Gaza Strip on Israel’s southern flank.
Israeli political scientist Dore
Gold, an informal adviser to Mr.
Netanyahu, described Israel’s
reaction Monday as a “carefully
calibrated response.”
“On the one hand, it shows
Israel’s determination to protect
its civilians, and at the same
time it indicates it doesn’t want
to get drawn in,” he said.
Israel has warily watched the
fighting in Syria for months,
carefully trying to avoid any
involvement. It has found itself
in a difficult position as the
fighting rages near the frontier
with the Golan Heights, a strategic plateau it captured from
Syria in 1967 and later annexed.
A number of mortar shells
have landed in the Golan in the
past week. Early this month,
Syrian tanks accidentally
crossed into a buffer zone along
the frontier for the first time in
nearly 40 years.
Israel responded for the
first time Sunday, firing what
it called a “warning shot”
into Syria after a mortar shell
landed near an Israeli military
post. Israel also warned of a
tougher response if the attacks
persisted.
In Monday’s incident, the military said it reported “direct hits”
on a mobile artillery launcher
after another shell struck the
Golan. It would not say whether
the launcher belonged to the
Syrian army, saying only it had
targeted the “source of fire.”
The Israeli military believes
the mortar fire is spillover from
internal fighting in Syria and
not aimed at Israel. But officials say they are beginning to
question that assessment after
repeated breaches of the frontier.
The incident began when Syrian military units were shelling
gunmen in the twin Syrian villages of Bariqa and Bir Ajam,
only several hundred yards from
Israeli-held territory. A Syrian shell struck the Golan less
than 100 yards from an Israeli
position. Israeli forces quickly
opened fire.
Israel has little love for Mr.
Assad, who has provided refuge
and support to Israel’s bitterest
enemies through the years. But
he and his father before him
have kept the frontier quiet for
nearly four decades, providing
a rare source of stability in the
volatile region.
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PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE ! TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2012 ! WWW.POST-GAZETTE.COM
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NATIONAL
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3ID3 9J? %@#!
Catholic bishops urged
by new president to repent
#J<;=J':;J@A A@;J%!
By Ann Rodgers
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
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BALTIMORE — Those who
expected Cardinal Timothy
Dolan to lambast election victories for same-sex marriage in
four states, including the one
where the Catholic bishops are
meeting this week, were surprised when he used his presidential address to urge the bishops to practice repentance and
confession.
The task of reviewing the
votes on same-sex marriage
fell to Archbishop Salvatore
Cordileone of San Francisco,
who warned that if the Supreme
Court takes up California’s ban
on same-sex marriage and rules
it unconstitutional, it will do to
marriage and family laws in the
United States what Roe v. Wade
did to bans on abortion 40 years
earlier.
“Marriage redefinition could
… be forced on the whole country, regardless of various state
protections,” he said.
The bishops paid attention,
but it was Cardinal Dolan’s talk
that drew a standing ovation.
“The premier answer to the
question ‘What’s wrong with the
world?’ is not politics, the economy, secularism, sectarianism,
globalization or global warming,” he said, quoting the British
writer G.K. Chesterton. “The
answer to the question ‘What’s
wrong with the world?’ is just
two words: I am.”
He wasn’t suggesting repenting of their convictions, but
aligning their hearts and souls
with Jesus.
The bishops must be “good
examples of humble, repentant
pastors, aware of our personal
and corporate sins, constantly
responding to the call of Jesus to
interior conversion,” he said.
He acknowledged that he
would be criticized for not
addressing burning public
issues but “first things first,” he
said.
Then the bishops reviewed
election-related issues. Archbishop Cordileone repeatedly
called the legal situation with
same-sex marriage “critical.”
The bishops and their allies
were “vastly outspent by those
seeking to redefine marriage.”
“We were narrowing the gap
and lost by just a small margin,” he said. “This is not a time
to give up but rather a time to
redouble our efforts.
He said many Catholics don’t
grasp the church’s understanding of the nature of marriage.
What gay rights groups regard
as marriage equality and legal
protection for partners and their
children, the bishops regard as
social engineering that undermines the most basic building
block of society. They believe
marriage is defined by the fact
that a man and a woman are
both necessary to create a baby.
“Marriage is not a matter of
two consenting adults simply
coming together for the state to
ratify their romantic relationship. Rather, marriage is the
only institution that unites a
man and a woman to each other
and to any children born of their
union. It’s child-centered, and
its meaning is written in our
nature,” Archbishop Cordileone
said.
He said the bishops are continuing a video series for young
Catholics about the nature of
marriage, including one formatted as a Spanish-language soap
opera.
“We try to be sensitive to people who disagree with us,” he
said at a news conference. “All
bishops are open to dialogue
with partners who disagree with
us on a whole range of issues.”
Petraeus
muddles
security
overhaul
Ann Rodgers: [email protected] or 412-263-1416.
General investigated
for emails sent
to Petraeus friend
By The Associated Press
SECURITY, FROM PAGE A-1
phases and that no decisions
have been made.
Mr. Petraeus’ resignation
last week after revelations of an
extramarital affair have complicated what was already an
intricate puzzle to reassemble
the administration’s national
security and diplomatic pieces
for Mr. Obama’s second term.
The process has become further complicated by congressional ire over not being told that
Mr. Petraeus was under FBI
investigation, on top of what are
likely to be contentious closeddoor hearings this week over
administration actions surrounding the Sept. 11 attack on
the U.S. diplomatic mission in
Benghazi, Libya.
Ms. Rice, one of an inner
circle of aides who have been
with Mr. Obama since his first
presidential campaign in 2007,
is under particular fire over the
Benghazi incident, in which the
U.S. ambassador and three other
Americans were killed.
Some Republican lawmakers
have suggested that she was part
of what they suspect was an initial, election-related attempt to
portray the attack as a peaceful
demonstration that turned violent, rather than what the administration now acknowledges was
an organized terrorist assault.
Ms. Rice’s description, days
after the attack, of a protest gone
wrong was either intentionally
misleading or incompetent,
Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C.,
said Sunday. Ms. Rice, he said,
“would have an incredibly difficult time” winning Senate confirmation as secretary of state.
But several White House officials said Mr. Obama is prepared
to dig in his heels over her nomination to replace outgoing Secretary of State Hillary Rodham
Clinton.
Ms. Rice’s post-Benghazi
remarks on several television
news shows were merely a recitation of administration talking
points drawn directly from intelligence available at the time, said
the senior administration officials, who agreed to discuss the
closely held transition planning
only on the condition of anonymity.
Deputy Defense Secretary
Ashton Carter also has been
mentioned as a possible replacement for Defense Secretary Leon
Panetta, as has been Michele
Flournoy, former undersecretary for policy at the Pentagon.
The timing of a nomination for
Panetta’s successor is unclear.
On Monday, he said he had no
imminent plans to step down but
indicated that he was unlikely to
stay in the job for the duration of
Mr. Obama’s second term.
Several bishops reported on
other public policy initiatives.
They celebrated the lopsided
defeat of an assisted suicide initiative in Massachusetts, where
Cardinal Sean O’Malley said the
medical community, disabilities
rights groups and many liberal
political figures joined them in
opposition. The church was a
leader in another broad coalition in California that nearly
succeeded in passing an initiative to abolish the death penalty.
The bishops regarded 47 percent
for abolition as progress.
Archbishop William Lori
of Baltimore said the bishops
of Maryland, working with
other immigrant rights groups,
turned back strong initial opposition to pass a state version
of the Dream Act. It will allow
high school graduates who were
brought to the United States illegally as young children to attend
community colleges at in-state
tuition rates.
Archbishop Lori is the bishops’ point man on religious
freedom, which includes their
high-profile conflict with the
Obama administration over new
health care rules requiring most
employers to pay for contraceptives, sterilizations and morning-after drugs in their employees’ health insurance. They
aren’t satisfied with a proposed
compromise for religiously
affiliated hospitals and social
service agencies, and argue that
such institutions should fall
under the same exemption that
houses of worship do.
“It’s impossible to know how
the rule-making process will
turn out,” Archbishop Lori said.
“The political landscape is the
same, but so is our resolve to
eliminate the HHS mandate.”
Chris O’Meara/Associated Press
Jill Kelley leaves her home
Monday in Tampa, Fla. She is
identified as the woman who
allegedly received harassing
emails from David Petraeus’
paramour, Paula Broadwell.
“Who the hell knows,” Mr.
Panetta said, when asked by
reporters traveling with him
to Australia whether he would
remain in office for four more
years. “It’s no secret that at some
point I’d like to get back to California.”
Mr. Kerry did not respond to
requests for comment on his possible nomination at the Pentagon. A spokesperson, Jodi Seth,
said: “Senator Kerry’s only focus
right now is his job as senior
senator from Massachusetts and
chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee.”
But administration officials,
one of whom described Mr.
Kerry as a “war hero,” said his
qualifications for the defense
job included not only his naval
service in Vietnam but also his
knowledge of the budget and
experience in the diplomacy that
has increasingly become a part
of the defense portfolio. They
said the Democrats’ retention of
the Senate majority, with a net
gain of two seats, in last week’s
election provided a cushion
that allowed them to consider
Mr. Kerry’s departure from the
chamber.
Beyond complicating the
overhaul of the national security
team, Mr. Petraeus’ departure
will send ripples through management layers at the CIA.
Many had expected Mr.
Petraeus to stay in place for Mr.
Obama’s second term, and he
had spent recent months planning transitions at other key
posts at CIA headquarters. Now,
four of the agency’s most critical positions — director, deputy
director, head of the National
Clandestine Service and chief of
the Counterterrorism Center —
have become question marks.
Mr. Petraeus did not intend to
resign from his position until it
became clear that his extramarital affair with his biographer
would become public after a federal investigation of his email
accounts, according to two longtime military aides who admire
the retired general.
Within hours of Mr. Petraeus’
resignation Friday, his biography was excised from the CIA
website and replaced with that of
Mr. Morell.
Michael Vickers, undersecreC
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ABOARD A U.S. MILITARY
AIRCRAFT — In a new twist
to the Gen. David Petraeus
sex scandal, the Pentagon
said early Tuesday that the
top American commander in
Afghanistan, Gen. John Allen,
is under investigation for
alleged “inappropriate communications” with a woman
who is said to have received
threatening emails from Paula
Broadwell, the woman with
whom Mr. Petraeus had an
extramarital affair.
Defense Secretary Leon
Panetta said in a written
statement issued to reporters
aboard his aircraft, en route
from Honolulu to Perth, Australia, that the FBI referred
the matter to the Pentagon on
Sunday.
Mr. Panetta said he ordered
a Pentagon investigation of
Gen. Allen on Monday.
A senior defense official
traveling with Mr. Panetta said
Gen. Allen’s communications
were with Jill Kelley, who has
been described as an unpaid
social liaison at MacDill Air
Force Base, Fla., which is
headquarters to the U.S. Central Command. She is not a
U.S. government employee.
Ms. Kelley is said to have
received threatening emails
from Ms. Broadwell, who is Mr.
Petraeus’ biographer and who
had an extramarital affair with
Mr. Petraeus that reportedly
began after he became CIA
director in September 2011.
Gen. Allen, a four-star
Marine general, succeeded
Petraeus as the top American
commander in Afghanistan in
July 2011.
tary of defense for intelligence,
also has been mentioned as a
candidate for CIA director.
If Mr. Morell ends up permanently in the job, he will need
to designate a new deputy and
would be in charge of other pending personnel decisions that Mr.
Petraeus had been poised to
make.
The head of the clandestine
service, John Bennett, was
talked out of retirement to take
that job and has signaled his
intent to step down in the coming months, current and former
officials said.
The top position in the Counterterrorism Center, which
carries out the CIA’s drone
campaign, is also expected to
come open. The current director, known by his cover name
“Roger,” has been in the job for
more than six years. Former CIA
officials said Roger has wanted
to be named director of the clandestine service but has a reputation for harshness toward subordinates and had been expected to
be passed over by Mr. Petraeus.
The Washington Post’s Kimberly Kindy contributed.
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PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE ! TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2012 ! WWW.POST-GAZETTE.COM
NATIONAL
More women
drivers than
men hit the
road in U.S.
NATIONAL
BRIEFS
By Joan Lowy
Associated Press
Drug facility
inspected
UPS ends Scouts grants
ATLANTA — The philanthropic arm of shipping
giant UPS said it will no
longer give money to the
Boy Scouts of America as
long as the group discriminates against gays, the second major corporation to
recently strip funding from
the scouts.
The UPS Foundation
made the change Thursday after an online petition protesting its annual
grants to the Boy Scouts
attracted more than 80,000
signatures. UPS, based in
Atlanta, follows computer
chip maker Intel in withdrawing corporate support
for the Boy Scouts.
The UPS Foundation gave
more than $85,000 to the Boy
Scouts in 2011, according to
its federal tax return.
Probe looks at natural gas
INDIANAPOLIS — The
search for what caused a
massive, deadly explosion
that rocked an Indianapolis
neighborhood turned to
natural gas Monday, with
the National Transportation
Safety Board checking gas
lines and a homeowner saying a problem furnace could
be to blame.
Local gas supplier Citizens Energy said it also was
checking gas lines and
a meter at the home that
exploded. But officials cautioned that it was too soon to
rule out other causes, saying
only that they do not believe
a meth lab was to blame.
John Shirley, 50, owner
of one of the homes that was
destroyed, said there was a
problem with the furnace
in the last few weeks. The
malfunction had forced
his daughter, her mother
and her mother’s boyfriend
to stay in a hotel, but the
daughter later told him it
had been fixed.
Hostess closing 3 bakeries
DALLAS — Hostess
Brands Inc. is permanently
closing three bakeries following a nationwide strike
by its bakers union.
The maker of Twinkies,
Ding Dongs and Wonder
Bread said Monday that the
strike has prevented it from
producing and delivering
products, and it is closing
bakeries in Seattle, St. Louis
and Cincinnati. The facilities employ 627 workers.
Hostess, based in Irving,
Texas, operates 36 bakeries
nationwide and has about
18,300 employees. It warned
earlier this month that the
strike, by about 30 percent of
its workforce, could lead to
bakery closures.
– Compiled from news services
For news updates, visit
post-gazette.com/nationworld
Rebecca Droke/Post-Gazette
Randy Rocha of Cherry Hill, N.J., surveys a section of boardwalk destroyed by Superstorm Sandy in northern Atlantic City. The
boardwalk in front of the resort city’s casinos remains intact.
! For more of Rebecca Droke’s photography from areas of the East Coast hit by Sandy, visit post-gazette.com
Flood insurance faces new stress
Superstorm Sandy expected to rank as 2nd worst for claims paid
By Eric Lipton,
Felicity Barringer
and Mary Williams Walsh
The New York Times
WASHINGTON — The federal government’s flood insurance program, which fell $18
billion into debt after Hurricane
Katrina, is once again at risk
of running out of money as the
daunting reconstruction from
Superstorm Sandy gets under
way.
Early estimates suggest that
Sandy will rank as the nation’s
second-worst storm for claims
paid out by the National Flood
Insurance Program. With
115,000 new claims submitted
and thousands more being filed
each day, the cost could reach $7
billion at a time when the program is allowed, by law, to add
only an additional $3 billion to
its onerous debt.
Congress, just this summer,
overhauled the flawed program
by allowing large increases in
premiums paid by vacationhomeowners and those repeatedly hit by floods. But critics say
taxpayer money should not be
used to bail it out again — essentially subsidizing the rebuilding
of homes in risky areas — without Congress’ mandating even
more radical changes.
“We are now just throwing
money to support something
that is going to end up creating
more victims and costing more
money in the future,” Rep. Earl
Blumenauer, D-Ore., said of
the program, which insures 5.7
million homes nationwide near
coasts or flood-prone rivers.
Even with the new rules, critics argue, it will be many years,
if ever, before many homeowners are required to pay premiums that accurately reflect the
market cost of the coverage.
Some communities have long
resisted imposing more appropriate building codes to prevent
damage, putting the program
at further risk of devastating
losses when storms like Sandy
hit. And despite some efforts in
recent years, many of the flood
maps the program relies on are
out of date — which can have
expensive, and even deadly, consequences in this era of rising
sea levels if homeowners are not
cognizant of the risks they face.
The program’s giant debt
makes matters worse because
simply covering the interest
owed the Treasury consumes
from $90 million to $750 million a year, depending on interest rates. This means it is much
harder to build reserves for
future catastrophes.
But others on Capitol Hill
argue that the changes adopted
in July are an important first
step, and that Congress must
give the Federal Emergency
Management Agency, which
runs the program, a chance to
apply them before any additional
changes are considered.
Already, 44 members of the
House of Representatives have
called for Congress to appropriate whatever money is needed to
help victims recover from Hurricane Sandy, and aides on Capitol Hill say that — under such
extreme losses — they expect
lawmakers will do what they
have to do to keep the program
solvent — even amid a federal
budget crisis.
The federal government’s
flood insurance program collects about $3.5 billion in annual
premiums. But in four of the
past eight years, claims will
have eclipsed premiums, most
glaringly in 2005 — the year of
Hurricanes Katrina, Rita and
Wilma — when claims totaled
$17.7 billion. Private insurance
companies have long avoided
offering flood insurance to homeowners.
“It’s like rat poison to them,”
said Tony Bullock, an insurance
industry lobbyist, explaining
how the risk outweighs the benefit for private insurers. “You
need the federal backstop.”
The pending costs for Hurricane Sandy would have been
even higher if a greater share of
residents along the East Coast
had signed up for the insurance, which is voluntary outside
the 100-year-flood zones. There
would also have been more
premium dollars, although not
enough to pay the claims.
The fact that many homeowners hit by Sandy have no flood or
homeowners insurance could
prompt Congress to provide
assistance to the uninsured,
too, as happened after Katrina,
further raising the cost to the
federal Treasury.
Officials in New Jersey and
New York say the federal government must move quickly to
put the flood insurance program
back on stable footing, even if
it means increasing the federal
deficit.
Hurricane Katrina put the
program so deeply into debt that
federal officials have acknowledged they will never be able to
fully repay the $18 billion Treasury-financed loan that bailed
the program out.
Democrats consider Romney fiscal proposal
By Jonathan Weisman
The New York Times
WASHINGTON — With both
parties positioning for difficult
negotiations to avert a fiscal crisis as Congress returns for its
lame-duck session, Democrats
are latching on to an idea floated
by Mitt Romney to raise taxes
on the rich through a hard cap
on income tax deductions.
The proposal by Mr. Romney, the Republican presidential nominee, was envisioned to
help pay for an across-the-board
income tax cut, a move ridiculed
by President Barack Obama as
window dressing to a “sketchy
deal.” But many Democrats now
see it as an important element
of a potential deficit-reduction
agreement — and one they can
claim to be bipartisan.
The cap — never fully detailed
by Mr. Romney — is similar
to a long-standing proposal by
Mr. Obama to limit income tax
deductions to 28 percent, even
for affluent households that pay
a 35 percent rate. But a firm cap
of around $35,000 would hit the
affluent even harder than Mr.
Obama’s proposal, which has
previously gotten nowhere in
Congress.
“Let’s just say there’s a
renewed interest,” said Sen.
Kent Conrad, D-N.D., chairman
of the Senate Budget Committee.
“Part of it is people reflecting
on Obama’s proposal, but when
Romney said what he said, it just
added fuel.”
“I was a little surprised Romney proposed a dollar cap when
he did it,” Mr. Conrad added.
The attention on the plan
is evidence that ideas on deficit reduction are beginning to
take firmer form as the January deadline for dealing with
expiring tax cuts and automatic
spending reductions draws
close. The lame-duck session
that begins today could be one
of the most pivotal in years, and
the political atmosphere is considerably different than when
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lawmakers left in October for
the fall campaigns.
Mr. Obama has been reelected convincingly. Democrats,
once in danger of losing control
of the Senate, instead gained at
least one seat. House Republicans held control, but as many
as 16 incumbents lost, including
some of the party’s most uncompromising voices, like Rep. Joe
Walsh of Illinois and Allen B.
West of Florida, who refuses to
concede his seat despite his continuing deficit in the vote count.
The somber mood among Republicans could ease negotiations to
avert more than $500 billion in
automatic spending cuts and tax
increases.
“The worst time to work
together on a bipartisan basis
is right before an election,” said
Rep. Jeb Hensarling of Texas,
chairman of the House Republican Conference. “The best time
to work on a bipartisan basis is
right after an election.”
Rep. Chris Van Hollen of
Maryland, the top Democrat on
the House Budget Committee,
said the Romney proposal to cap
deductions would only work in
concert with allowing the top
two income tax rates to revert
to the level of Bill Clinton’s
presidency, 36 percent and 39.6
percent, up from the current 33
percent and 35 percent.
To come close to the level
of deficit reduction needed to
get the nation’s fiscal house in
order, the presidential deficit
reduction commission known
by the names of its chairmen,
Erskine B. Bowles and Alan K.
Simpson, assumed those top
rates would jump, Mr. Van Hollen said. But beyond those rate
increases, more revenues will
have to be raised.
“This is a promising idea for
tax reform,” Mr. Van Hollen
said, “if you start at the higher
Clinton-era rates for highincome earners.”
The idea gained currency
when Martin Feldstein, a prominent Republican economist and
former chairman of Ronald
Reagan’s Council of Economic
Advisers, embraced it during
the campaign to show that Mr.
Romney’s tax plan was not as
far-fetched as Democrats portrayed it. Maya MacGuineas,
president of the Committee for
a Responsible Federal Budget
and something of a ringleader
in the search for a bipartisan
The Silverado Sell Out
Over 130 in stock, priced to go fast!
deficit deal, has also embraced
the idea.
But with the presidential campaign over, it is taking on new
salience. The Democratic centrist group Third Way has made
it the centerpiece of a package
of tax changes that it says could
raise nearly $1.3 trillion over 10
years without raising rates.
The Third Way proposal
would limit tax deductions
to $35,000 but would exclude
charitable giving. Universities,
foundations and other philanthropies have been the biggest
impediment to passing Mr.
Obama’s more modest 28 percent limit, which did not exclude
the charitable tax deduction.
“Premium Quality...
Wholesale Value”
Factory You
our
WASHINGTON — Federal health inspectors found
numerous potential sources
of contamination, including
leaky ceilings and insects,
at a drug-making facility
that has the same founders
as the specialty pharmacy
linked to a deadly meningitis outbreak.
The Food and Drug
Administration on Monday
released the results of a
monthlong inspection of
Ameridose, a Westborough,
Mass.-based company that
makes injectable drugs.
The agency’s report, posted
online, lists a host of problems at the plant, ranging
from manufacturing to sterility to quality control.
Inspectors said they
found insects within 10 feet
of a supposedly sterile area
where drugs were manufactured. In another case,
inspectors reported a bird
flying into a storage room.
Elsewhere, the report
cites leaks and cracks in
the ceiling and walls of a
clean room used to manufacture sterile drugs. The
same room contained “thick
residues that were orange,
brown, and green” on equipment used for sterilization.
FDA inspectors also said
the company did not investigate at least 53 incidents
of bacterial contamination
that arose during testing of
stock drug solution.
Ameridose agreed to shut
down for inspection in October after tainted steroids
from its sister company, the
New England Compounding
Center, were linked to a fungal meningitis outbreak that
has caused 32 deaths.
WASHINGTON — Women
have passed men on the
nation’s roads. More women
than men now have driver’s
licenses, a reversal of a longtime gender gap behind the
wheel that transportation
researchers say is likely to
have safety and economic
implications.
If current trends continue,
the gap will only widen. The
share of teens and young
adults of both sexes with
driver’s licenses is declining,
but the decline is greater for
young men, according to a
study by the University of
Michigan’s Transportation
Research Institute. The study
looked at gender trends in
driver’s licenses between
1995 and 2010.
“The changing gender
demographics will have
major implications on the
extent and nature of vehicle
demand, energy consumption
and road safety,” predicted
Michael Sivak, co-author of
the study. Women are more
likely than men to purchase
smaller, safer and more fuelefficient cars; to drive less;
and to have a lower fatality
rate per distance driven, he
said.
Over the 15 years the study
covered, the share of men
ages 25 to 29 years old with
driver’s licenses dropped 10.6
percent. The share of women
of the same age with driver’s
licenses declined by about
half that amount, 4.7 percent.
Male drivers outnumbered
women drivers from the
moment the first Ford Model
T rolled off the assembly line
in 1908, the year the automobile became popular, and
through most of the past century. In the 1950s, when only
about half adult women had
driver’s licenses, jokes about
women drivers were a staple
of comedians.
But the gap gradually
closed. By 1995, men with
driver’s licenses slightly
outnumbered women, 89.2
million to 87.4 million. By
2010, 105.7 million women had
licenses, compared with 104.3
million men.
Male drivers under age 44
are still slightly more numerous than women of the same
age, but that’s only because
young men outnumber young
women in the general population, the study said. There
now are 105 boys born each
year for every 100 girls in the
U.S. Women outnumber men
later in life because they live
longer — an average of 80
years for women, compared
with about 75 years for men.
One reason for the growing disinterest among young
men in driving may be the
erosion of the “car-fetish society,” travel behavior analyst
Nancy McGuckin said.
There also may be economic reasons for the shift,
Ms. McGuckin’s research
indicates. Employment of 16to 24-year-olds as a share of all
workers has declined. At the
same time, the rate of young
men ages 18 to 34 years old living at home has been going up
and is greater than the rate of
young women living at home.
It may be that unemployment and underemployment
have made auto insurance
unaffordable for young men,
said Alan Pisarski, author of
the Transportation Research
Board’s comprehensive
“Commuting in America”
reports on U.S. travel trends.
“Insurance for males under
25 is just colossally expensive,” he said.
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Time is running out
for Hire Heroes credit
Businesses have until Dec.
31 if they want to hire an
unemployed veteran and take
advantage of a federal tax
credit of up to $9,600. The
amount of the credit under
the Hire Heroes Act of 2011
depends on several factors,
such as the length of time
the veteran was unemployed,
hours worked and the amount
of first-year wages. At www.
IRS.gov, search for “WOTC.”
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TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2012
Customer satisfaction just treading water
By Teresa F. Lindeman
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Like the national economy,
customer satisfaction seems
stuck in a holding pattern.
And that may mean retailers
shouldn’t expect a pile of extra
gifts under the tree this year.
“In an economy that depends
heavily on consumer demand, it
is hard to envision rapid growth
given a flat trend in customer
satisfaction that is coupled with
only tentative improvement in
wages and employment,” said
Claes Fornell, founder of the
American Customer Satisfaction
Index and a professor of business
administration at the University
of Michigan, in his analysis of
the data. The index held steady
for the third consecutive quarter, scoring 75.9 out of a possible
100 points.
There’s no indication that the
unchanged satisfaction levels
will slow consumer demand, in
his opinion, but they won’t rev
up spending either.
The uncertain financial
environment has made customers particularly sensitive to
prices, he said, a fact that may
have helped food companies
with their individual rankings.
Different industry sectors are
examined during different quarters of the year.
While Pittsburgh-based H.J.
Heinz Co. held onto its position as
the food company with the highest satisfaction score — maintaining the 89 that it received
last year — several other food
manufacturers improved their
marks. Quaker’s score rose 2
percent to hit 86, while both Hershey and Nestle rose 1 percent to
a score of 85. ConAgra was up 1
percent to 84.
“Over the past year, food prices
Under contract extension,
Virginia nixes BNY charges
Virginia’s attorney general
agreed not to pursue fraud
claims against Bank of New
York Mellon involving the
bank’s handling of state
and local employee pension
funds in a deal that extends
that state’s contract with the
bank for up to 10 years at
reduced fees, according to
the AG’s office. BNY Mellon
is facing several lawsuits,
including one by the U.S.
attorney in Manhattan, over
pricing of foreign-currency
trades on behalf of clients.
Local institutions garner
awards for health care
The Jewish Healthcare
Foundation has issued Fine
Awards to three institutions
for improving outcomes for
patients transitioning between
care settings and providers:
UPMC Montefiore and the
Montefiore Rehabilitation
Institute, Transplant Service
Line for preventing readmissions through improved
discharge planning; Excela
Health’s Latrobe and Westmoreland hospitals for reducing
wait times; and Children’s
Hospital of Pittsburgh of
UPMC, Children’s Community
Pediatrics, and Western Psychiatric Institute and Clinic of
UPMC for integrated behavioral health services in the
Pediatric Medical Home.
Also in business…
Universal Stainless & Alloy Products said workers
at its Dunkirk, N.Y., plant
represented by the United
Steelworkers union have
agreed to a five-year contract.
Terms were not disclosed.
… Ontario-based Research
In Motion said Monday that
it will hold an official launch
event for its new BlackBerry
10 smartphones on Jan. 30.
The new phones are seen as
critical to RIM’s survival.
From staff and wire reports
The Associated Press
Pitt program designed to give
urban entrepreneurs the skills to succeed
Drilling fluids company
to open facility in Ohio
The United States will
become the world’s largest
oil producer by around 2020,
temporarily overtaking Saudi
Arabia, as new exploration
technologies help find more
resources, the International
Energy Agency forecast on
Monday. The energy watchdog
also predicted that — thanks
partly to a boom in shale
gas output — the U.S. will
become nearly self-sufficient
around 2035.
By Daniel Wagner
and Christina Rexrode
HELPING HANDS
The average price of
gasoline in Pittsburgh fell this
week to $3.663 for a gallon
of regular unleaded. That’s
down about 3 cents from last
week, according to GasBuddy.
com. The average price for a
comparable gallon nationwide
this week was $3.460. Gas
prices in Pittsburgh are up almost 20 cents from this time
one year ago.
Forecast: By 2020, U.S.
will be largest oil producer
SEE SATISFACTION, PAGE A-9
Stocks
nearly flat
as fiscal
cliff looms
Gasoline in Pittsburgh
falls to $3.66 per gallon
Tulsa-based Anchor Drilling
Fluids USA Inc. announced
Monday it was opening a
drilling fluids production facility in Wellsville, Ohio, which
is about 30 miles west of
Aliquippa. The 10,000-barrel
production facility will build
and store fluids that are used
to drill oil and gas wells in the
Utica and Marcellus shales.
have risen far less than the overall Consumer Price Index, which
is up 2 percent,” said Mr. Fornell.
He said shoppers may start to see
food prices go up more next year
as the effects of the 2012 summer
drought begin to kick in, and that
may hurt satisfaction levels.
In the pet food category, Del
Monte Foods’ score rose 5 percent to earn an 86, the highest
STORIES BY DEBORAH M. TODD ! PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE
T
he enthusiasm and conpercent over the next three
viction that help small
years.
business owners bring
Although Mr. Musillo and
million-dollar ideas to
his sister Marcy Collier grew
life rarely generate a million
up watching their parents run
dollars. More often, entreprethe business, they were never
neurs that start off full of high
introduced to accounting
octane energy sputter to a halt
principles that can have draonce profits, new clients and
matic affects on a company’s
overall growth hit a plateau.
bottom line. Today, rather
Hoping to jump-start busithan checking debt to income
nesses that got off the ground
ratios or profit margins once
but never reached the height
a year during tax time, Mr.
of founders’ aspirations, the
Musillo crunches the compaUniversity of Pittsburgh Katz
ny’s financial figures at least
Business School’s Institute for
once a month.
Entrepreneurial Excellence
Mr. Musillo said the tarcreated the Urban Power to
geted financial advice has
Michael Henninger/Post-Gazette definitely made an impact,
Prosper certificate program.
Modeled after the Streetbut creating the growth plan
Mark Musillo, president of the Musillo Sales Agency, seen
Wise MBA program, created
is what drove him to actually
at the company’s West Homestead offices, participated in
by Boston-based small busiput the new information to
ness support organization the Urban Power to Prosper program.
work.
Interise, the program gives
“It made me put pencil to
entrepreneurs a nine-week crash course
selves and must generate at least $300,000
paper to set specific goals and timelines
on core principles such as leadership,
in annual revenue.
in order to make those goals happen. I
financial management, sales, marketing
The program, which is funded in part
have a lot of ideas in my head, but that’s
and resource management.
by foundation grants, costs participants
all they are: in my head,” he said. “I spent
Toward the end of the course, entre$15,000.
a lot of time selling products and working
preneurs take part in a final session
Urban Power to Prosper kicked off its
on the day-to-day operations of the busiwhere they work with instructors and
second class in October, after graduating
ness. This program taught me to focus on
professional mentors to create strategic
its first class of 10 entrepreneurs a month
running the business instead of letting
growth plans specific to their businesses.
before.
the business run me.”
Mentors also are assigned to work with
Graduate Mark Musillo, who runs
A renewed focus on growth helps more
business owners for one year after graduWest Homestead-based plumbing supthan just business owners, said Christine
ating the program to help put the growth
plies company Musillo Sales Agency, has
Kush, associate director of the Institute
plans into action.
already checked off several goals on his
for Entrepreneurial Excellence, She said
Eligible business owners who are
strategic growth plan, including a move
the Institute chose to work in low-income
screened through a detailed application
to expand the company’s client base to
neighborhoods so that any growth in the
process must work in one of Pittsburgh’s
Ohio. He did not share financial figures
form of hiring or expansions would beninner city neighborhoods or in an urban
for the privately owned family company,
efit an entire community.
area within the region, must have run
which was established by Mr. Musillo’s
The 10 inaugural graduates — who
the business for at least three years, must
parents in 1980, but said the primary
SEE URBAN, PAGE A-9
have full-time employees beyond themgoal of his plan is to increase profits 30
Coraopolis firm moves to match vets to jobs
T
he joyful welcome that military
service members receive from
family, friends and strangers
when they return to American soil
doesn’t always extended to the job market.
According to the 2010 National Survey
of Veterans — which polled 8,710 active
duty, demobilized and retired service
members — 28.5 percent of veterans ages
18 to 30 were looking for work.
The survey also found that 18.8 percent of black veterans and 14 percent of
Hispanic veterans who had served since
September 2001 could not find work at
the time the survey was conducted.
Hoping to fill gaps between skilled
veterans lacking opportunities and companies seeking skilled high-tech work-
ers, Coraopolis-based communications
company Victory Media is expanding
its operations to include an advanced
technical institute designed to use a
combination of skills testing and on-site
job training to match veterans with the
positions and employers that best suit
their talents.
“The goal for Victory Tech is simple:
we want to recruit, test, train and build
special relationships to help military
veterans and their families transition
into new jobs,” said Daniel Nichols, program president and director.
Mr. Nichols said the idea came by
combining his skills in training returning vets for the workforce with Victory
Media’s ongoing mission to educate veterans and connect them to private-sector
opportunities.
While working with the U.S. Department of Labor in 2003, Mr. Nichols
created a jobs training program for
wounded service members in California
and, in 2007, established the Military to
Medicine jobs training program in conjunction with Washington D.C.-based
Inova Health System. The initiative
trained more than 1,000 veterans and
their family members for careers in
health care.
Founded in 2001 by three Navy veterans, Victory Media creates publications and for-profit training programs to
address the needs of military veterans
and families. The new Victory Tech pro-
SEE VETS, PAGE A-9
U.S. stocks closed nearly
unchanged Monday, after a
day of uneven trading plagued
by investors’ fears about the
approaching “fiscal cliff.”
The Dow Jones industrial
average finished down 0.31
point at 12,815.08, according to
data available at 5:30 p.m. EST.
It had spent the day alternating
between small gains and losses,
never rising more than 46 points
or falling more than 32.
The closing level of the Dow
was revised several times after
trading closed. The New York
Stock Exchange had experienced a trading glitch during
the day, forcing it to alter its
normal procedure for determining the closing prices of some
stocks.
The Standard & Poor’s 500
index edged up 0.15 point to
1,380. The Nasdaq composite fell
0.61 to 2,904.26.
Trading was very light. The
federal government and the U.S.
bond market were closed for
Veterans Day, and no economic
reports were released.
The fiscal cliff refers to government spending cuts and tax
increases that are scheduled to
kick in at the beginning of the
new year, unless a divided Congress and the White House can
work out a compromise before
then.
Some traders thought the
tentative trading action was
nearly inevitable because there
has been no positive or negative
news about the economy or the
possibility of a deal to avoid the
fiscal cliff.
“Nothing good is going on,”
said Scott Freeze, president of
Street One Financial in Huntingdon Valley, Pa. “Everything forward-looking remains
dreary.”
Last week, after voters
returned a long-deadlocked and
divided government to Washington, the Dow dropped 434 points
in two days and had one of its
worst weeks of the year.
Even if lawmakers work out
a compromise, as they usually
do, the political fight until then
is sure keep investors on edge,
pitching the stock market back
and forth until it’s resolved.
Economists say the cliff could
cost the economy $800 billion
and 3 million jobs and would
plunge the U.S. back into recession.
President Barack Obama, a
Democrat, and House Speaker
John Boehner, a Republican,
have spoken of compromise but
appear to be taking firm stances
on some issues. Mr. Obama will
meet with labor representatives
as well as other progressive
groups today. He’ll hold separate meetings with the business
community Wednesday.
The effect on the markets
has been widespread. Fiscal
cliff worries were blamed for
keeping a lid on European markets and Asian markets, which
closed mostly lower.
business by the numbers
DOW JONES
GASOLINE PRICES
S&P 500
$3.670 (-$0.005)
12,815.08 (-0.31)
1,380.03 (+0.18)
NASDAQ
2,904.26 (-0.62)
PG/BLOOMBERG
285.73 (+0.73)
Tracks stock prices of local publicly traded companies
CRUDE OIL
$85.57 (-$0.50)
(AVERAGE $/GALLON YESTERDAY IN METRO PGH.)
STOCK
FOREIGN EXCHANGE
CURRENCY IN $
EURO
CANADIAN DOLLAR
KEY RATES
1.2714
0.9992
$ IN CURRENCY
0.7865
1.0008
PRIME RATE: 3.25
DISCOUNT RATE: 0.75
CPI 12 MONTHSTHROUGH SEPTEMBER 2012: +2.0%
TREASURY BILL RATES: 3-MONTH: 0.09 6-MONTH: 0.15
10-YEAR NOTE: 1.61
30-YEAR BOND: 2.75
U.S.I BOND: 1.76
U.S.E.E.BOND: 0.20
STOCK
LOCAL STOCKS
AK STEEL
ALCOA
ALLEGTCH
AEAGLEOUT
AMRSVFIN
AMPCO
ANSYS
BAKERM
BKNYMEL
BELDEN
BLACKBOX
CBS B
CALGON
CONSOLENGY
CONSOLCOM
DICKSSPTG
DOMRESCS
DYNAVOX H
CLOSE CHANGE
5.46
8.43
28.29
19.54
2.95
17.47
67.62
19.46
24.07
36.40
24.31
34.53
12.14
33.11
14.66
48.70
49.19
.41
+.05
...
+1.52
-.35
+.04
+.10
+.06
+.27
-.04
-.14
+.06
-.35
+.10
+.16
-.07
-.65
-.14
-.01
EDAP TMS
EQT CORP
ESB FNCL
EATON
EDUCMGMT
ERIEIND
FNBCP PA
FEDEXCP
FEDINVST
FSTCWLTH
FSTNIAGARA
FIRSTENGY
FOSTER
GNC
GLAXOSKLN
HFF INC
HEINZ
HUNTBNCSH
IGATECORP
II-VI
KENNAMTL
KOPPERS
CLOSE CHANGE
1.77
59.09
12.91
49.55
3.19
65.14
10.70
90.08
19.58
6.14
7.55
41.88
36.91
35.31
43.03
13.41
57.68
6.17
15.51
16.19
35.15
33.62
-.07
+.44
-.06
+.50
+.07
-1.29
+.05
+.35
-.12
-.04
-.01
-.60
+.64
-.94
-.52
+.30
+.21
+.01
-.10
+.08
-.28
+.08
STOCK
MACYS
MATTHINT
MINESAF
MYLAN
NISOURCE
NWSTBCSH
PNC
PPG
RTI INTLM
RANGERS
RUE21
S&T BCP
SHAWGRP
TMS INTL
THERMOFIS
USSTEEL
UNVSTAINLS
VERIZONCM
VIACOMB
WABTEC
WESBANC
WESCO INTL
CLOSE CHANGE
38.70
28.82
37.22
26.04
24.02
11.40
56.31
117.47
24.00
66.61
28.31
16.55
43.88
10.45
60.63
21.53
34.18
42.56
49.10
81.17
20.86
62.37
-.23
-.01
+.46
+.17
-.28
+.02
+.05
+.09
+.89
+.31
-.45
+.04
+.35
+.08
-.06
+.43
+.33
-.08
-.06
+1.11
-.12
-.17
METALS
WIDELY HELD STOCKS
GOLD
AT&T INC
33.87
APPLE INC
542.83
BERKHA A
128160.00
CHEVRON
105.93
COCACOLA S
36.08
EXXONMBL
87.32
GENELEC
20.89
GOOGLE
665.90
IBM
189.25
JPMORGCH
40.58
JOHNJN
69.68
MERCK
44.02
MICROSOFT
28.22
ORACLE
30.30
PFIZER
24.11
PHILIPMOR
84.98
PROCTGAM
67.08
VERIZONCM
42.56
WALMART
72.48
WELLSFARGO
32.37
(troy oz)
$1730.30
SILVER
(troy oz)
$32.513
COPPER
(pound)
$3.4730
ALUMINUM
(pound)
$0.8568
PLATINUM
(troy oz)
$1566.50
FOR UP-TO-THE-MINUTE STOCK MARKET LISTINGS AND OTHER FINANCIAL NEWS, VISIT POST-GAZETTE.COM/BUSINESSNEWS
E-mail: [email protected] ! Phone: 412-263-1567 ! Web: post-gazette.com/businessnews ! Editor: Brian Hyslop
C
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P
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STOCK
CLOSE CHANGE
+.33
-4.23
+575.00
+.09
-.21
+.11
-.11
+2.87
-.39
-.04
-.19
-.03
-.61
-.05
-.06
-.44
+.07
-.08
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+.02
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PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE ! TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2012 ! WWW.POST-GAZETTE.COM
Highmark,
WPAHS
hold talks
By Steve Twedt
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Senior leaders from Highmark Inc. and the West Penn
AlleghenyHealthSystemheld
“a very productive session”
on Monday “that focused on
efforts the parties could take
to address the financial condition of WPAHS to secure
approval of their affiliation
agreement by the Pennsylvania Insurance Department,”
said Highmark spokesman
Michael Weinstein in a press
release.
Participants included
Highmark President and
CEO William Winkenwerder
Jr. and West Penn Allegheny
Board Chairman Jack Isherwood.
The statement said both
parties “realize there are significant issues that must be
addressed and that prompt
action is essential.”
Highmark and West Penn
Allegheny have been negotiating an affiliation for more
than a year, but the partnership was nearly derailed
after WPAHS officials
objected to what they called
pressure from Highmark
to file for bankruptcy to get
out from under the health
system’s near-$1 billion debt
obligations.
West Penn Allegheny
board members wanted to
talk to other possible capital
partners but Highmark successfully blocked that move
last week in a suit filed in the
Allegheny Court of Common
Pleas.
Monday’s statement noted
that Highmark and WPAHS
officials had recently met
with WPAHS bondholders,
presumably to discuss a
restructuring of West Penn
Allegheny’s bond debt, and
that “further meetings are
planned.”
The region’s largest
insurer and its second largest health system also said
they plan to focus on physician recruitment and retention at WPAHS, and on
“improving ongoing communications and coordinated
actions prior to any regulatory approval.”
Steve Twedt: [email protected] or 412-263-1963.
Toyota tests cars that communicate with each other
By Yuri Kageyama
The Associated Press
SUSONO, Japan — Toyota
Motor Corp. is testing car safety
systems that allow vehicles to
communicate with each other
and with the roads they are on
in a just completed facility in
Japan the size of three baseball
stadiums.
The cars at the Intelligent
Transport System site receive
information from sensors and
transmitters installed on the
streets to minimize the risk of
accidents in situations such as
missing a red traffic light, cars
advancing from blind spots and
pedestrians crossing the street.
The system also tests cars that
transmit such information to
each other.
In a test drive for reporters
Monday, the presence of a pedestrian triggered a beeping sound
in the car and a picture of a person popped up on a screen in
front of the driver. A picture of an
arrow popped up to indicate an
approaching car at an intersection. An electronic female voice
said, “It’s a red light,” if the driver
was about to ignore a red light.
The 3.5 hectare test site is in
a corner of the Japanese automaker’s technology center near
Mount Fuji in Shizuoka Prefecture, central Japan.
Toyota officials said the smartcar technology it is developing
will be tested on some Japanese
roads starting in 2014. Similar
tests are planned for the U.S.,
althoughdetailswerenotdecided.
Such technology is expected to be
Koji Sasahara/Associated Press
Toyota’s Lexus LS stops automatically in front of a dummy
during a demonstration of the company’s pre-collision system
at its Higashi-Fuji Technical Center in Susono, Japan.
Coraopolis firm to prep vets for tech jobs
VETS, FROM PAGE A-8
gram will become the company’s
sixth global brand, adding to the
G.I. Jobs and G.I. Education websites, Vetrepreneur and Military Spouse magazines and The
National Veteran Owned Business Association.
Victory Media has 30 full-time
employees and 35 part-time contract employees.
Using a $750,000 initial investment for its newest program,
the company built the Victory
Tech Learning Studio in a
1,000-square-foot former storefront in Coraopolis.
While the bulk of the funds
went toward renovation and
equipment costs, Mr. Nichols
said the company cut some costs
through agreements that let vets
train on a potential employer’s
equipment. If all goes well, the
company anticipates it will train
at least 200 veterans for high-tech
positions over the next year.
Getting vets in contact with
equipment is one thing, but making sure they have what it takes
to work the machines is the top
priority, said Mr. Nichols.
Veterans hoping to be placed
through Victory Tech must take
a free validation screening test
to measure science, technology,
engineering and math skills.
Validation screenings will
help when it comes to job placement, but also will help individuals note skills they may not be
aware that they gained through
deployment. Mr. Nichols said a
Program
offers skills
Satisfaction
mostly flat
URBAN, FROM PAGE A-8
SATISFACTION, FROM A-8
operate out of Homewood, the
Hill District, Wilkinsburg,
Rankin, Munhall and West
Homestead — collectively
employ 134 full-time employees and 25 part-time employees. Employees hired in 2011
by the companies saw average salaries of $33,650.
“We felt that the program
could help build businesses
that are already committed to communities and that
would have a positive effect
on the neighborhood,” said
Ms. Kush.
And while there weren’t
many changes to the program’s format for the current
group of entrepreneurs, it
has definitely shown its own
signs of growth, according to
instructor Rhonda CarsonLeach. The Institute has
partnered with the African
American Chamber of Commerce of Western Pennsylvania and Urban Innovation 21
to recruit businesses for the
program and is seeking additional partners for upcoming
years.
After seeing early strides
made by previous graduates,
Mrs. Carson-Leach said she
is more energized than ever
to pass the winning formula
down to the next class of 16
entrepreneurs.
“We’re not doing anything
different, but we’re doing
things better, with more
energy, more vigilance and
more intensity,” she said.
For more information about
the program, call 412-648-1806.
score. The San Francisco company, which has a regional office
on the North Shore, was credited
by those surveyed with offering
a good value and introducing
new products. Del Monte’s pet
brands include 9Lives and Kibbles ‘n Bits.
Steady prices were also a factor in that category’s overall
strong showing, according to
Mr. Fornell’s analysis.
Meanwhile, evidence that rising prices don’t make consumers
happy came in the apparel category, where the overall industry ranking dropped. “Over the
past 12 months, apparel prices
have risen at a rate that is nearly
four times the amount that food
prices have increased,” said Mr.
Fornell. Raw material costs for
clothing have gone up, he said.
Data for the satisfaction index
are gathered by interviewing
about 70,000 customers annually.
In other efforts to track consumer sentiment, New Yorkbased Experian Marketing Services on Monday said its surveys
found confidence in the first half
of 2012 was stronger than at any
time since the start of the Great
Recession. The survey polls
25,000 adults annually.
Affluent customers are also
feeling better, according to
research by Stevens, Pa.-based
Unity Marketing. Based on a
survey of more than 1,200 consumers with an average income
of $290,000 in mid-October, more
than half felt they were financially better off than 12 months
ago.
Deborah M. Todd: dtodd@
post-gazette.com or 412-2631652.
Teresa F. Lindeman: [email protected] or 412263-2018.
Focus Fever
Over 85 in stock, priced to go fast!
former Marine Corps sniper who
struggled with math all through
high school took the test and
found to his surprise that it had
become his strongest skill.
“The test lets people know it’s
not about what’s on your resume
that you think works, it’s what
you can do now,” said Mr. Nichols.
Once results of the validation
test are approved, veterans will
have to pay up to $90 for professional exams that grant certification in some areas. Vets also can
enter a 15-month program that
matches them with an employer
for around $18,000.
Mr. Nichols said the program
is not yet eligible to receive G.I.
Bill funds, but the organization
is working to attract state funds
and is encouraging employers to
pick up costs for potential hires.
If the best job isn’t found
within the network of more than
80 partner corporations, including PA CareerLink, Schroeder
Industries and Consol Energy,
vets can use Victory’s Military
Friendly Employers search site
to see what’s available from
the top 100 military employers
nationwide.
Powered by technology created by North Shore-based
search company WebKite (formerly Pikimal), the site sorts
military-friendly employers by
location, the number of military members who make up
new hires, insurance coverage,
compensation policies and programs directed toward military
spouses.
Mr. Nichols pointed out that
communities at large can benefit from an influx of high-skilled
laborers, but he said the greatest
benefit will come from reminding veterans their work is as
valuable at home as it is abroad.
“The big thing to take away
from it is we believe you’re better off for having served, not that
you’re broken or damaged,” he
said. “You’ve gained skills and
you can take advantage of these
new skills and abilities.”
Deborah M. Todd: dtodd@
post-gazette.com or 412-263-1652.
effective because half of car accidents happen at intersections,
according to Toyota.
All automakers are working
on pre-crash safety technology to
add value to their cars.
Toyota’s Japanese rival Nissan
Motor Co. recently showed cars
that were smart enough to stop
on their own, park themselves
and swerve away from pedestrians who suddenly jumped into
the vehicle’s path.
Toyota also showed a new feature that helps the driver brake
harder to prevent bumping into
the vehicle in front.
Toyota also has developed
sonar sensors that help drivers
avoid crashing in parking lots.
One system even knows when the
driver pushes on the gas pedal by
mistake instead of the brakes.
Reproductions
and
Restorations
of
OLD PHOTOS
ALL WORK DONE ON OUR PREMISES
Pine Tree Shoppes!Wexford
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2012 REPORTTHETO
COMMUNITY
on Public School Progress in Pittsburgh
How are Pittsburgh’s public schools doing?
Ask
See the executive summary in the November 13 Post-Gazette
Visit our Web site for the full report: www.aplusschools.org
Stay connected with
the Post-Gazette
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1ÿI*!.OS1*ÿ %!*G1LJL 1U O N!1JI UH..O!@6 ÿ*S O M*.%/JSJ LJUM!1%S1*ÿ *I NJÿJ:SU> )*! .*!J
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Post-Gazette
Nov 12 2012 11:22:06:149PM
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PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE ! TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2012 ! WWW.POST-GAZETTE.COM
Shooting by city police officer
in Highland Park investigated
SHOOTING, FROM PAGE A-1
“We do know that our officers
are permitted to fire in selfdefense or in defense of others,
and the officer believed at the
time his life was in danger, so he
took this action,” he said.
But police and a national
training expert said officers are
not trained to reach into cars
because of the risk they could
be dragged and because it leaves
them vulnerable.
Ed Delmore, the chief of the
Gulf Shores, Ala., police department, is a consultant with LifeLine Training, a national company that has advised police
departments across the country.
He said reaching into a vehicle
during a traffic stop, as a general
matter, is “a bad idea,” although
he declined to comment specifically on Sunday’s case.
“Typically, it’s not something
that we would want officers to
do just because its dangerous for
them,” he said. “Officers are not
trained to reach into a vehicle in
an attempt to stop it like that.”
While he was working as a
security guard at a Target, Chief
Delmore said he once reached
into a car of suspected shoplifters who were fleeing in a car,
reaching for the gear shift much
as Officer Derbish did.
He successfully stopped them,
“but I was very lucky that I didn’t
get hurt [or] killed in doing it.”
“I learned never to do it again,”
he said. “I obviously could have
been seriously injured in the
process.”
Still, he emphasized that
while it’s generally not the best
course of action, there are circumstances that might warrant
reaching into a vehicle even
when the driver is threatening
to flee.
Beth Pittinger, executive
director of the Citizen Police
Review Board, said officer training and safety procedures will
likely be reviewed as more facts
are revealed.
“We don’t want to rush to
judgment here,” she said. “We
want to be patient as we determine the protocol and actions
that were taken and why the officer did what he did and why the
driver did what he did.”
Residents in Highland Park
lamented the violence that had
befallen their calm corner of the
neighborhood.
Alex White, 28, a Pittsburgh
Theological Seminary student,
said he thought he heard gunshots outside his apartment at
Anderson Hall on Stanton Avenue, the school’s housing complex that sits across the street
from the house where the car
crashed and bloodied clothing
lay on the sidewalk.
“I hit the ground, and before
I had any wits about me, sirens
were going,” Mr. White said.
Mr. White said he peeked out
his window and saw a man on
the ground next to the car. He
GRIM FIND IN TOLEDO Authorities investigate Monday at a home in West Toledo,
Taryn Luna: [email protected] or 412-263-1985.
Moriah Balingit: mbalingit@
post-gazette.com or 412-263-2533.
Twitter: @MoriahBee.
Ohio, where the bodies of three children and two adults, all apparently victims of carbon
monoxide poisoning, were found. The dead include a 56-year woman, her granddaughters,
ages 10 and 5, a 7-year-old grandson, and a 32-year-old man who is the uncle of one of the
children. Police said they believe the deaths were not accidental.
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Don Hopey: [email protected] or 412-263-1983.
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Bromide level
falls in Mon,
not Allegheny
the decline corresponds to the
DEP’s request that treatment
plants stop accepting drilling
wastewater,” said Ms. VanBriesen, who discussed the study
results at the third annual CMU
“State of the Monongahela River
Research Forum,” last week.
The CMU study sampled river
water for chloride and bromide,
elements that are components
of total dissolved solids, or TDS,
at eight locations near public
drinking water intakes. She said
the study found bromide discharges continue to be an issue
from coal-fired power plants and
mines.
Bromide
concentrations
remain high near several commercial brine and wastewater
treatment plants on the Allegheny River, where the Pittsburgh
Water and Sewer Authority
draws water for its 400,000
customers. According to the
authority’s 2011 water quality
report, trihalomethane levels
were measured at 18 to 106 parts
per billion, but the systemwide
annual average was 66 parts
per billion, below the federally
allowed maximum of 80 parts
per billion.
The Ohio River Valley Water
Sanitation Commission designated bromide as a “compound
of concern” for water treatment
plants last year.
Other research found that
the higher TDS levels may have
reduced the number of smaller
minnow-sized fish in the river.
According to a fish survey by
California University of Pennsylvania researchers David
Argent and William Kimmel,
populations of larger fish in
the river have been stable since
2005, but three species of darters — rainbow darter, channel
darter and johnny darter —
have all declined significantly
in number.
“The small-bodied benthic
fishes have declined markedly,”
Mr. Argent said. “The reason
for the changes is unknown, but
during that time there has been
elevated total dissolved solids,
and that seems to be having
some effect.”
High TDS levels in the river
in 2008, 2009, and 2010 caused
concerns from industries that
couldn’t use the contaminated
water in their industrial processes and from water utility
customers who complained
about bad tasting and smelling
water that damaged their automatic dishwashers and left spots
on their glassware.
watched as police picked him up
and medics loaded him into an
ambulance.
His neighbors soon began
trickling out of their apartments
in hopes of learning more about
the police activity they consider
rare on their mostly quiet street,
but not unusual in their neighborhood.
“It’s bound to happen in the
city,” said Joel Montgomery, 26,
who went outside after hearing
the car crash. “It’s city life.”
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Nov 12 2012 11:19:15:410PM
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,5&'12%' ,85.' +5 "57' # ')!+51!28. # 5/!+(21!'. #
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Jury to be selected in death penalty case
By Paula Reed Ward
Prosecutors say Robinson
had been inside a home there
and shot and killed another
man, Danyal Morton, over
a drug debt. As he fled, he
came upon the police officer
and opened fire, investigators
allege.
The case was slated to go to
trial last month but was delayed
when prosecutors could not
locate a key witness from inside
the home the night of the shooting.
The U.S. marshals picked up
that witness on a material witness warrant a day later, and
Allegheny County Common
Pleas Judge Kevin G. Sasinoski
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Jury selection will begin
today in the death penalty case
against a man accused of killing Penn Hills police Officer
Michael Crawshaw three years
ago.
Ronald Robinson, 35, is
charged with two counts of
criminal homicide, robbery,
burglary and illegal possession
of a firearm.
If the jury finds Robinson
guilty of first-degree murder in
the killing of Officer Crawshaw,
it will then have to decide if he
should be put to death or spend
Michael
Crawshaw
Ronald
Robinson
the rest of his life in prison with
no chance of parole.
Officer Crawshaw was shot
and killed inside his patrol car
Dec. 6, 2009, as he responded to
a 911 call on Johnston Road.
Port
Authority
seeks cause
of LRT
derailment
ordered that he be held in custody until he testifies at trial.
Jury selection is expected to
last about four days. The judge
will gather the pool of potential
jurors each morning and ask
a series of general questions
before moving the process to
his courtroom. Individual
questioning will be done in his
chambers.
Opening statements are
slated to begin Nov. 27.
Deputy District Attorney
Mark V. Tranquilli has about
40 witnesses for the guilt phase
of the trial, which is expected to
last about a week.
Robinson will be represented
by Veronica Brestensky for the
guilt phase and Patrick Thomassey if the case moves into a
penalty phase.
The district attorney’s office
is seeking the death penalty
based on a number of aggravating factors, including that Officer Crawshaw was a member
of law enforcement, that there
are multiple killings, that the
defendant has a significant history of felony convictions and
because, they say, the shootings
were committed in furtherance
of the drug trade.
Paula Reed Ward: pward@
post-gazette.com or 412-263-2620.
THE BOYS OF INDIAN SUMMER
By Jon Schmitz
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
The derailment of a Light Rail
Transit vehicle in the Downtown subway Friday night was
caused by the vehicle passing a
red “stop” signal and crossing a
track switch that was not in the
proper position, Port Authority
said Monday.
Spokesman Jim Ritchie said
it had not been determined
whether the vehicle operator
was at fault. The agency was continuing to review recorded communications between the South
Hills Village Rail Center and the
vehicle, along with the onboard
data recorder.
“The vehicle went through
a signal and entered a switch
that hadn’t fully moved over to a
locked position,” he said. “Does
that mean it’s operator error?
The answer is not necessarily.”
Nine passengers were aboard
when the outbound vehicle
derailed between the Gateway
and Wood Street stations shortly
before 9 p.m. Friday. One person was taken to a hospital with
minor neck and back injuries
and two others with minor injuries declined treatment at the
scene.
The authority was doing maintenance at the time of the derailment and running inbound and
outbound service on a single
track. During such operations,
vehicles are directed by personnel at the rail center as to when
they are cleared to cross from
one track to the other.
Typically, they would wait
until the signal changed from
red. But there are situations
when a vehicle might be directed
to proceed through a red signal,
Mr. Ritchie said.
The incident forced the authority to terminate service at Steel
Plaza and use bus shuttles to take
passengers to Wood Street, Gateway, North Side and Allegheny
for the rest of the weekend. Full
operations were restored in time
for Monday morning’s start of
service, Mr. Ritchie said.
The unidentified operator is
on paid leave pending the outcome of an investigation.
Larry Roberts/Post-Gazette
John Heller/Post-Gazette
ABOVE: Unseasonably warm temperatures on Monday brought Joey
McGivney, 4, of O’Hara and his nanny, Mary Jo Week, to Blue Slide
Playground in Frick Park on Beechwood Boulevard in Squirrel Hill.
TOP: Finding himself waist deep in leaves at North Park, 21-monthold James Baker of Franklin Park tosses some in the air Monday
while his father, Kolby Baker (not shown), watches close by.
Jon Schmitz: [email protected] or 412-263-1868.
Bob Donaldson/Post-Gazette
B-1
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LEFT: Enzo Centofanti, 2, of Bethel Park reaches to pet one of
the Allegheny County Police horses outside their barn in South
Park during a visit with his mother, Dyan, and sister, Liliana, 3, on
Monday.
Grants
to boost
renewal
projects
Small awards go
to neighborhoods
By Joe Smydo
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Mayor Luke Ravenstahl and
the Design Center of Pittsburgh
today will award $275,000 in
grants for 12 “neighborhood
renaissance” projects, including
a proposal to make Colteryahn
Dairy in Carrick the center of a
destination “dairy district.”
Ranging from $10,000 to
$50,000, the inaugural grants
from the new Pittsburgh Neighborhood Renaissance Fund will
go to groups in the city’s northern, southern and western neighborhoods. The $50,000 grant will
be awarded to Economic Development South, an inter-municipal
development group, for a study of
the dairy tourism initiative.
The city Urban Redevelopment
Authority provided $300,000 for
the fund, and the Design Center,
a Downtown nonprofit, raised
another $300,000. Additional
rounds of grants are planned.
“This is all about creating
more growth in more Pittsburgh
neighborhoods,” mayoral spokeswoman Joanna Doven said. An
awards ceremony will be held at
1:30 p.m. at the West End offices
of Pittsburgh Musical Theater,
which will receive a $15,000
grant for facade improvements
and other building work.
The Design Center already
administers a Design Fund,
which provides grants to community organizations in Allegheny
County and technical assistance
to architects and other design
professionals.
The new fund was created to
push what Mr. Ravenstahl calls
the city’s Third Renaissance into
neighborhoods that haven’t yet
experienced the kinds of development that have benefited Downtown and East Liberty in recent
years. The grants target neighborhoods that need not only a
development boost but help with
planning.
Representatives of Colteryahn’s and Economic Development South could not be reached
Monday. Chris Koch, director
of programs for the Design Center, said dairy owners want to
explore the possibility of increasing tourism at the Brownsville
Road site and converting nearby
storefronts they own into an ice
cream shop, market and restaurant.
“They want to make the
investment. They just don’t know
where to get started,” Ms. Koch
said.
The second-biggest grant,
$35,000, will go to the Hilltop
Alliance — which serves neighborhoods overlooking South
Side, for a “multi-year neighborhood housing strategy plan” to
address blight and mortgage foreclosure. Grants of $25,000 will go
to Community Alliance of Spring
Garden-East Deutschtown for a
neighborhood gateway at Route
28 and the 16th Street Bridge; to
Point Breeze North Development
Corp. to study improvements to
Simonton Street; to South Pittsburgh Development Corp. for
a study on how to market and
SEE GRANTS, PAGE B-2
Future uncertain for alternative No contract since 2011; results expected by Friday
State college faculty takes strike vote
high school in east suburbs
By Mary Niederberger
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Inna Ulyanyuk spent ninth
grade at Plum Senior High
School but quickly grew tired of
cliques and the day-to-day drama
of a large public high school.
Then she heard from a friend
about the Boyce Campus Middle
College High School, an alternative school with a smaller enrollment and the opportunity to take
college classes while still in high
school, and she jumped at the
chance to attend.
Now a junior, Inna, 16, has
completed five college courses
while attending the middle col-
INSIDE
85++'1$
lege high school, located on the
Boyce Campus of Community
College of Allegheny County in
Monroeville.
“The main reason I came was
for the college classes and the
dual enrollment. But there are
also less students here and it’s
easier to find friends,” said Inna,
who plans to complete 14 college
classes by the time she graduates in 2014.
Founded in 1996 by a consortium of the Gateway, Penn Hills,
Plum and Woodland Hills school
districts, the alternative school
has taught about 180 students
a year in grades 10, 11 and 12
who for various reasons did not
succeed in the traditional high
schools of those districts, but
showed potential for academic
success. Last year’s graduation
rate was 97 percent.
However, the school’s future
now is uncertain following
Woodland Hills’ withdraw from
the consortium in June for budgetary reasons and the Plum
school board’s decision last week
not to endorse a plan created and
promoted by the superintendents
of the three remaining districts
to turn the school into a charter
school.
“We are not sure what the
SEE BOYCE, PAGE B-5
By Bill Schackner
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
The union representing faculty at Pennsylvania’s 14 stateowned universities hopes by
Friday to announce results of
a strike authorization vote that
began on the campuses Monday
and runs through Wednesday.
A vote in the affirmative
by faculty would not mean an
immediate work stoppage but
instead would give negotiators
for Association of Pennsylvania State College and University Faculties authority to call
a strike on short notice.
The 5,000 faculty members
represented by APSCUF have
been without a contract since
June 30, 2011, the longest such
labor dispute in the State System’s three-decade history.
Both sides last met Friday and
are not scheduled to bargain
again until Dec. 11.
The vote, being conducted by
paper ballot, is the latest intensification of what for more than
a year had been a relatively
muted dispute. Both sides insist
they want a settlement.
“Faculty members do not
want to strike,” APSCUF
spokeswoman Lauren Gutshall
said Monday. “They see strike
as truly a last resort.”
Questions about delivery or service?
Call 1-800-228-NEWS (6397).
E-mail: [email protected] ! Phone: 412-263-1601 ! Web: post-gazette.com/localnews ! Editor: Tom Birdsong
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FOR MORE LOCAL NEWS COVERAGE AND
BREAKING UPDATES, VISIT POST-GAZETTE.COM
| 5/!+(21!'. PAGE B-3 | ')!+51!28. PAGE B-6
PAGE B-2
A similar tone was struck by
the State System following Friday’s bargaining session.
The system “is committed to
achieving a new collective bargaining agreement with APSCUF that is fair to everyone,
especially to our students and
their families who currently
provide nearly two-thirds of
the revenue needed to operate
the universities,” officials said
in a statement.
On Friday, the State System
offered a new comprehensive
proposal, removing what had
been among the most conten-
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PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE ! TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2012 ! WWW.POST-GAZETTE.COM
WEST
Husband charged
in 1993 drowning
A Industry man has been
charged with homicide in the
drowning death of his wife after
a witness came forward nearly
20 years later.
Beaver County Coroner
Teri Tatalovich-Rossi said the
manner of death for 34-year-old
Debbie Lang was undetermined
when she drowned in 1993.
“Most recently, we have a
person who was there who
produced a statement that
prompted us to look into the
case more,” she said.
The witness, Jamie Darlington, emerged this year and told
authorities he saw 54-year-old
Jon Lang hold the woman under
water with a long-handled pool
skimmer.
Mr. Darlington was an overnight guest and 16 years old at
the time.
Ms. Tatalovich-Rossi said her
office used a coroner’s inquest
that will prompt a jury to decide
whether the act was criminal
or should have been ruled as
accidental.
She referred questions about
the case to Beaver County District Attorney Anthony Berosh,
whose office was closed for the
Veterans Day holiday.
Coroner identifies
woman killed by train
The Beaver County coroner
identified the woman killed
after being hit by a train Sunday night in Ambridge as Terri
Lynn Kudrna, 45, of Harmony.
Beaver County Coroner
Teri Tatalovich-Rossi said Ms.
Kudrna died of head trauma
after a train struck her on the
track near Route 65 and 13th
Street in Ambridge.
Ambridge police Officer
Zadock Dismuke said a train
conductor observed the woman
lying between two rails as his
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train headed north on a Norfolk Southern Railway track
about 4:20 p.m. The conductor
told police he blew his horn but
the woman didn’t move and he
couldn’t stop the train in time to
avoid it hitting her.
Officer Dismuke said she
suffered head trauma, but there
were no indications that she
was crushed by the train.
Ms. Tatalovich-Rossi said
authorities are still investigating the manner of death.
WEST VIRGINIA
Two die on Interstate 70
in wrong-way collision
A head-on collision with
a tractor-trailer killed two
women Monday morning and
temporarily closed Interstate 70
in West Virginia.
Ohio County Deputy Sheriff
Andy Weisal said the vehicle
entered I-70 westbound at the
Dallas Pike exit ramp and was
traveling in the wrong direction sometime after 3 a.m. when
it crashed into a tractor-trailer
between the exit ramp and the
Pennsylvania state line.
The highway was closed
until about 7 a.m. following the
accident.
The interstate reopened
but was down to a single lane
westbound for several hours
while a hazardous materials
crew cleaned the more than 100
gallons of diesel fuel that leaked
from one of the truck’s fuel
tanks, Deputy Weisal said.
The cause of the accident is
still unclear, Deputy Weisal
said, but police did not smell
alcohol on the two woman in
the vehicle, one elderly and the
other middle-aged. Authorities
were attempting to notify their
family Monday.
The driver of the truck
was taken to a local hospital
for observation with non-life
threatening injuries, Deputy
Weisal said.
The Ohio County sheriff’s
office is investigating.
Remains discovered
in Somerset County
Pennsylvania State Police
and forensic anthropologists
are investigating what might
be human remains discovered
Sunday in a wooded area in
Somerset County.
In a news release, state police
said someone walking in the
woods discovered the remains
near the Great Allegheny Passage in Larimer Township
about 12:30 p.m. The person
called state police, whose
investigators said the remains
“appear to be human.”
Forensic anthropologist Dennis Dirkmaat and his crew from
Mercyhurst University in Erie
went to the scene Monday to
investigate.
State police said they would
release more information at a
news conference today.
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Drawings for Monday, November 12, 2012
LOTTERY RESULTS
Results over the web? ! post-gazette.com/lottery/ ! PA - OH - WV
PENNSYLVANIA
Matches
Monday’s Cash 5 results
8-22-29-31-36
No. of winners
5 of 5 numbers:
4 of 5 numbers:
3 of 5 numbers:
2 of 5 numbers:
1
100
3,198
39,499
LOTTERY
Monday’s Daily Numbers
2-7-1 (day); 7-4-1 (night)
Number of winners: 2,315; 4,421
Payout: $189,455; $329,690
Last hit straight: 6/7/08; 9/15/10
Last hit boxed: 10/6/12; 9/13/12
Prize
$325,000
$227
$12
$1
Monday’s Big 4
2-8-8-1 (day); 7-9-9-9 (night)
Monday’s Match 6 results
18-20-25-36-39-49
Number of winners: 173; 130
Payout: $53,000; $108,400
Last hit straight: Never; 10/18/10
Last hit boxed: 5/27/12; 4/9/07
6 of 6 numbers: No jackpot winner
Monday’s Treasure Hunt results
1-2-3-20-25
Tonight’s CASH 5 is worth
an estimated $125,000.
Tonight’s TREASURE HUNT is worth
an estimated $140,000.
Tonight’s MEGA MILLIONS is worth
an estimated $19 million.
Thursday’s MATCH 6 is worth
an estimated $2.1 million.
Tomorrow’s POWERBALL is worth
an estimated $185 million.
No jackpot winner
Monday’s Quinto results
64906 (day); 58455 (night)
Winner count: 10 (day); 14 (night)
Powerball analysis
(Times each number has been picked since the drawing changed Jan. 3, 2009. The first value is the number
of times the value was drawn as one of the white balls; the second is the number of times drawn as the PowerBall.)
No.
Times
Drawn
No.
Times
Drawn
No.
Times
Drawn
No.
Times
Drawn
No.
Times
Drawn
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
35/10
22/12
30/5
37/11
39/14
29/15
40/9
31/14
26/9
34/9
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
36/14
34/10
35/9
38/10
29/12
39/7
29/7
35/10
30/10
57/9
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
30/12
40/9
39/18
27/11
22/11
33/8
32/14
32/5
24/16
36/15
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
25/9
45/7
26/15
30/6
27/5
36/9
34/11
34/6
38/8
28/NA
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
53/NA
36/NA
30/NA
32/NA
40/NA
33/NA
36/NA
31/NA
40/NA
38/NA
No.
Times
Drawn
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
40/NA
39/NA
32/NA
29/NA
28/NA
38/NA
30/NA
35/NA
42/NA
Ohio Pick 3: 6-1-5; 6-6-3 ! Pick 4: 1-8-5-4; 8-5-5-2 ! Rolling Cash 5: 8-17-28-35-39
Ohio Classic Lotto: 12-32-33-42-43-44
West Virginia Daily 3: 4-2-4 ! Daily 4: 5-6-3-0 ! Cash 25: 2-4-7-8-18-25
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Two groups to appeal
approval of forest drilling
Two environmental groups
have filed notice they will
appeal a September federal
court ruling that said the U.S.
Forest Service doesn’t have
the authority to delay oil and
gas drilling in the Allegheny
National Forest until an environmental impact study is
done.
The Allegheny Defense
Project and Sierra Club notice
of appeal was filed with the
3rd U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals last week in the 2009
case Minard Run Oil Co. et al
v. U.S. Forest Service et al. It
will claim that U.S. District
Judge Sean McLaughlin’s
ruling that the Forest Service
has only limited power to
regulate drilling operations
didn’t consider the forest
management protections contained in the 1911 Weeks Act,
the legislation that created
the state’s only national forest, said Ryan Talbott, executive director of the ADP.
“By restricting the Forest
Service’s authority to regulate to protect the Allegheny
National Forest from the
impacts of oil and gas development,” Mr. Talbott said,
“the court is ignoring the
very purpose for which the
Allegheny was created in the
first place — to conserve and
protect the watersheds in the
upper Allegheny River watershed.”
The Forest Service owns
the surface rights of the
513,000-acre forest, but the
mineral rights under 93
percent of that acreage are
in private hands and courts
have ruled that the owners
have the right to access those
holdings.
Deer hit by vehicle kills
woman in second vehicle
Pennsylvania State Police
said a deer struck by a vehicle
crashed through the windshield of another vehicle
headed in the opposite direction, killing a Butler woman
riding in the second car.
Troopers from the Butler
barracks identified the dead
woman as Carol Mitch.
State police said the crash
happened about 6:20 p.m.
Sunday when a car traveling
south on Route 8 in Brady
hit the deer. The driver and
passenger in that car weren’t
hurt.
But the deer was knocked
into the path of a northbound
car driven by Raymond Mitch
of Butler, state police said.
His front-seat passenger was
killed, and a female riding in
the back suffered minor injuries, state police said.
Bridge named to honor
Medal of Honor winner
An Ellwood City bridge has
been renamed for a soldier
who was awarded the Medal
of Honor earlier this year
for his actions in defending
against an ambush by North
Vietnamese troops on May
10, 1970.
The former Ewing Park
Bridge was renamed on
Veterans Day at a ceremony
attended by Rose Mary SaboBrown, the widow of the
soldier being honored, Spc.
Leslie H. Sabo Jr.
The 22-year-old Army rifleman was killed charging an
enemy bunker, killing several
enemy soldiers.
Sabo was wounded but
managed to throw an enemy
grenade away from another
wounded comrade, then continued toward the bunker, and
threw a grenade into it. He
was killed in the blast, which
also silenced enemy fire.
CITY
By Diana Nelson Jones
South Side assault
on man investigated
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Pittsburgh police are
investigating after a man was
assaulted on the South Side
early Sunday morning.
Sgt. William Gorman in
the bureau’s Zone 2 station
said Dave Whaley, a local
musician, was crossing at
20th and Sarah streets when
a Ford Mustang went through
a traffic control signal and
almost hit him.
After Mr. Whaley shouted
for the vehicle to slow down,
Sgt. Gorman said, the car
stopped and a male about 6
feet tall, and more than 200
pounds, got out of the vehicle
and hit Mr. Whaley, knocking
him out.
“Sounds like one punch
and he fell face first to the
ground,” Sgt. Gorman said.
Though the incident
occurred at 1:30 a.m., the
report was filed at 6:30 p.m.
from UPMC Mercy, where
Mr. Whaley remains awaiting
surgery today, his friend, Joe
Moore, said.
When Mr. Whaley woke up
on 20th and Sarah streets, his
friend said, he stumbled back
to Carson Street.
Mr. Whaley has a fractured
orbital bone and doctors are
concerned about his vision,
Mr. Moore said.
Sgt. Gorman said another
man was assaulted only a
half-mile away the same
night.
A Duquesne University student reported that “somebody
coldcocked him,” Sgt. Gorman said, and stole his phone
and wallet in the 1300 block of
Carson Street about 12:30 a.m.
Bomb threat found
in Duquesne U. hall
Duquesne University police
searched Fisher Hall Monday
night after someone discovered a bomb threat scrawled
on a bathroom wall.
University spokeswoman
Bridget Fare said the threat
was discovered in a sixthfloor women’s rest room about
8 p.m. School police evacuated
the building as a precaution
and began searching.
They had not found anything as of 9:45 p.m., when the
building remained closed.
Ms. Fare said several
classes were being held
tonight in the building, which
is home to the School of Nursing, some labs and modern
languages courses, among
others.
From local and wire dispatches
Faculty takes strike vote
STRIKE, FROM PAGE B-1
tious proposals — a 35 percent
pay cut for temporary faculty.
Part-time temporary faculty
members would see their salary freeze at current levels.
The State System also
wants to phase out incentive
payments offered since 1999 to
faculty for distance education
course development. Management says the incentives
that were created when there
were almost no such courses
no longer are needed, given
how widespread those courses
are today at the 14 universities, which include California,
Clarion, Edinboro, Indiana
and Slippery Rock universities
in Western Pennsylvania.
The State System also is
seeking savings in health care
costs and has reopened a voluntary retirement incentive
program that other unions
across the State System participated in two years ago but
APSCUF did not.
Last month, nearly 100 faculty members from across the
115,000-student system held a
protest at the State System’s
board of governors meeting in
Harrisburg and urged system
leaders to accept the union’s
offer of binding arbitration.
The State System rejected the
proposal.
Bill Schackner: [email protected] or 412263-1977.
First Vehicle Services
Open House
The First Vehicle Services
Pittsburgh Service Center
will be hosting an Open House for all
WBE / MBE vendors in the Pittsburgh and
surrounding areas
This Open House will be held
Thursday, November 15, 2012
6:30 - 8:00 pm
Facility One
10 29th & A.V.R.R. Streets
(Railroad Street in the Strip District)
Pittsburgh, PA 15201
Please contact Jake Harvey at
(412) 255-2770 or (412) 475-4350
For any additional information or questions you may have.
First
Vehicle Services
A First Services Company
C
Y
Plans
advance
for new
grocery in
Bloomfield
P
G
M
K
A proposed Bottom Dollar on
Penn Avenue in Bloomfield got
the special exceptions and variances it needs to move forward in
providing the corridor between
Bloomfield and Garfield with its
first grocery store in many years.
The project passed the Zoning
Board of Adjustment’s legal tests
for two special exceptions and
seven variances at 5200 Penn
Ave. The board decided that
it would have no detrimental
visual, transportation or operational impacts on the residential
portion of the district, which is
zoned local neighborhood commercial.
“We are heartened by the
decision and believe that in the
long run this development will
prove to be a major asset for the
commercial district,” said Rick
Swartz, executive director of the
Bloomfield-Garfield Corp.
The plan has been embraced
by many in the adjacent neighborhoods, including Friendship,
but some who live near the site
testified at hearings against
what they called ugly design
that did not provide for adequate
screening. They cited the potential noise and emissions from
fans and potential traffic congestion on Coral Street.
Leslie A. Peters, an attorney
representing the developer,
Commercial Properties Inc.,
said work on the site will begin
if there is no appeal by the end
of the appeal period on Dec. 2,
weather permitting.
The attorney for the opponents
could not be reached.
The board determined that the
property’s configuration and size
— less than one acre — make it
too hard to develop without variances to setback requirements,
parking requirements and location of the store’s operational systems, such as walk-in coolers and
bathrooms.
To locate a grocery store in
a neighborhood commercial
district, a developer needs the
board to grant a special exception. Special exceptions are also
needed for parking below what is
required by the scale of the project. In this case, parking will be
allowed in front of the store.
The developer held several
meetings with nearby residents
and agreed to plant a screen of
evergreens, revise the total building footprint, redesign fencing
and remove the store sign from
the Coral Street facade.
The board noted that Brantley
Tillman, the president of Commercial Properties Inc., the developer of the store, has received the
support of the mayor and county
executive’s offices and numerous
institutions.
“If we can work with the
neighbors to ensure the site
plan is adhered to, and perhaps
enhanced, I think everyone will
feel as though some of what they
wanted to see was realized,” Mr.
Swartz said. “Our goal is to help
the developer make this store an
important shopping place that’s
compatible with the surrounding district.”
Diana Nelson Jones: djones@
post-gazette.com or 412-263-1626.
Read her blog City Walkabout at
www.post-gazette.com/citywalk
Grants given
for projects
GRANTS, FROM PAGE B-1
brand Brookline Boulevard; and
to the West End Alliance for a
study on how to reuse four closed
school buildings and boost the
neighborhoods around them.
Ernie Sciulli, alliance vice
president and development chairman, said civic leaders are concerned about what’s to become of
the one parochial and three public school buildings in Crafton
Heights, Elliott and Sheraden.
He said one, closed for four or
five years, already is showing
signs of deterioration.
The Polish Hill Civic Association will receive $20,000 to
study the use of two vacant lots
and four fire-damaged houses,
while grants of $15,000 will go
to Central Northside Neighborhood Council for advancing its
Allegheny City Central branding plan; to Troy Hill Citizens for
implementation of park-related
projects; and to Beltzhoover
Civic Association for converting
a former trolley turnaround into
a garden. Association member
Raymont Conner said the garden
is an effort “to bring life back
into our neighborhood.”
Focus on Renewal and the
Ujamaa Collective will receive
$10,000 to promote Centre Avenue
development in the Hill District.
Joe Smydo: [email protected] or 412-263-1548.
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PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE ! TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2012 ! WWW.POST-GAZETTE.COM
NEWS OBITUARIES
ELLIOTT CARTER | Dec. 11, 1908 - Nov. 5, 2012
BURTON ‘BURT’ A. PERRETT
June 7, 1927 - Nov. 9, 2012
Pulitzer Prize-winning American composer
By Anne Midgette
The Washington Post
Elliott Carter, the Pulitzer
Prize-winning American composer who fused European and
American modernist traditions in seminal but formidable
works, and who lived to hear
ovations for music that was
once thought to be anything but
listener-friendly, died Nov. 5 at
his home in New York City. He
was 103.
His assistant, Virgil Blackwell, confirmed the death but
did not disclose an immediate
cause.
Mr. Carter’s career was like
some of the towering cathedrals of Europe: so long in the
making that it reflected the
dramatic shifts in artistic style
that take place over a century.
A late bloomer — he didn’t find
his mature voice, or the style for
which he was best known, until
age 40 — Mr. Carter eventually
received acclaim by some critics and composers. Igor Stravinsky was credited with calling
Mr. Carter’s “Double Concerto
for Harpsichord, Piano and Two
Chamber Orchestras” (1961) the
first American masterpiece.
Much of Mr. Carter’s music
was difficult to play, difficult
to listen to and, judging by the
slow pace of his output, difficult
to write. Yet it also embodied a
certain simplicity. As he aged,
Mr. Carter emphasized the connections between his music and
the world around it. He said he
sought to represent the pace of
the 20th century: the acceleration and deceleration of an airplane rather than the regular
beats, and horses’ hooves, of
18th- and 19th-century music.
Mr. Carter experimented
most notably with meter, or
rhythm, and challenged audiences to follow multiple instruments that played simultaneously to different beats.
“A piano accelerates to a flickering tremolo as a harpsichord
slows to silence,” wrote composer and musicologist David
Schiff, describing Mr. Carter’s
music. “Second violin and viola,
half of a quartet, sound cold,
mechanical pulses, while first
violin and cello, the remaining
duo, play with intense expressive passion. Two, three or four
orchestras superimpose clashing, unrelated sounds. A bass
lyrically declaims classical
Greek against a mezzo-soprano’s American patter.”
Mr. Carter said his music
presented society as he hoped it
would be: “A lot of individuals
dealing with each other, sensitive to each other, cooperating
and yet not losing their own
individuality.”
Mr. Carter continued composing until shortly before his
death, his works ranging from
ballets to vocal, instrumental,
chamber and orchestral pieces.
At age 90, he premiered his first
opera, appropriately called
“What Next?” The program for
his 100th birthday celebration
at New York’s Carnegie Hall
included a new work, “Inter-
ventions,” conducted by James
Levine with Daniel Barenboim
as soloist. It was an impressive showing for a composer
described earlier in his career
as “a musical loner.”
Elliott Cook Carter Jr. was
born Dec. 11, 1908, to a prosperous family in New York City.
He was able to identify all the
music in his parents’ collection
before he learned to read.
Mr. Carter attended private school in New York but
spent much of his childhood in
Europe; his father, a pacifist lace
importer, first took him there
to show him the destruction
wrought by World War I. The
family’s travels helped expose
Mr. Carter to the music of revolutionary composers such as
Stravinsky, Alexander Scriabin
and Arnold Schoenberg — three
men who helped determine that
Mr. Carter would not grow up to
be a lace importer, as his family had hoped. Mr. Carter often
said that Stravinsky’s “Rite
of Spring,” which he heard as
a teenager at Carnegie Hall,
inspired him to become a composer.
As an undergraduate at Harvard University, Mr. Carter
studied literature. It remained
an important part of Mr. Carter’s life: In the 1970s, he wrote
a cycle of vocal music based on
the writings of poets including
Robert Lowell, Elizabeth Bishop
and Hart Crane.
In the 1930s, after earning
a master’s degree in music at
Harvard, Mr. Carter took a step
that was virtually de rigueur
for a generation of American
composers: He went to Paris to
study with Nadia Boulanger.
“She wasn’t encouraging
if you wrote very dissonant
music,” Mr. Carter told the
Guardian in 2006. “But, meanwhile, the world of music had
changed. It wasn’t hard to think
when we saw pictures of Hitler
that it was expression that had
gone on and produced such a terrible result in Germany, that it
was a working out of that kind of
extravagance that had become
terrifying. So we thought that it
was time to be more orderly and
more consciously beautiful, and
neoclassicism did seem to have
a perfect logic about it.”
Returning to the United
States in the late 1930s, Mr.
Carter initially worked in the
traditional mold of other Boulanger students, creating neoclassical, approachable, “American” works such as the ballet
“Pocahontas,” which had its
premiere in 1939.
In the mid-1940s, after
his “Holiday Overture” was
rejected by the Boston Symphony, Mr. Carter moved away
from so-called approachability,
writing the “Piano Sonata” in
1945-46, the “Cello Sonata” in
1948 and then in 1950-51, the
“String Quartet No. 1,” which
was considered his first real
breakthrough. The sprawling
40-minute work probed the idea
of multiple perspectives in a
single composition and put Mr.
Carter on the map.
SUSAN JEFFERS | March 3, 1938 - Oct. 27, 2012
Psychologist and author of self-help books
By Dennis Hevesi
New York Times
Susan Jeffers, a psychologist who wrote 18 self-help
books, the first of which, “Feel
the Fear and Do It Anyway,”
became an international phenomenon, died Oct. 27 at her
home in Santa Monica, Calif.
She was 74.
The cause was cancer, her
husband, Mark Shelmerdine,
said.
Ms. Jeffers’ thesis in most
of her books was simple: If
we wait to stop feeling scared
before trying to do what frightens us, we could wait forever;
pressing ahead is the only way
to erase fear.
“Whatever happens to me,
given any situation, I can
handle it,” is one of her aphorisms in “Feel the Fear and Do
It Anyway,” published in 1987.
Another is: “There’s no such
thing as a bad decision. Each
path is strewn with opportunities, despite the outcome.”
Translated into more than
three dozen languages, the
book has sold millions of copies worldwide.
In “Embracing Uncertainty” (2003), Ms. Jeffers
wrote, “When we finally are
able to let go of the need for
control, for the first time we
are truly in control.”
Her other titles include “The
Little Book of Peace of Mind”
(2001) and “The Little Book of
Confidence” (1999)
In “I Can Handle It” (2002),
written with Donna Gradstein,
Ms. Jeffers offered stories of
children dealing with difficulties like fear of the dark, the
loss of a favorite toy and their
parents’ divorce.
In “I’m Okay, You’re a
Brat!” (1999), she challenged
the thinking in many books
that she felt promoted overinvolvement in children’s lives.
A reviewer in The Philadelphia Inquirer praised Ms.
Jeffers for assuring parents,
“You’re OK, even though you
go to work [not necessarily because you have to but
because you like to] and send
your children to day care.”
It was an early bout with
breast cancer and a difficult
first marriage that led Ms.
Jeffers to become a writer.
“These were actually enriching experiences,” she wrote in
“Feel the Fear.”
Susan Jane Gildenberg was
born in Manhattan on March
3, 1938, one of two daughters of
Jeanne and Leon Gildenberg.
She was married by the time
she was 18 and soon had two
children.
Believing that she was
meant to do more than raise a
family, she enrolled at Hunter
College, from which she graduated in 1964. She went on to
earn a master’s degree and a
doctorate in psychology from
Columbia.
After her divorce in 1972
she changed her last name to
Jeffers, said Mr. Shelmerdine,
whom she would marry 13
LATEST DEATHS
CLASSIFIED OBITUARIES
The Post-Gazette’s comprehensive report
of recent deaths includes three types of obituaries. News obituaries, prepared by our staff,
are published at the discretion of our editors.
Classified obituaries are paid death notices
prepared by funeral home directors. To place
a classified obituary call 412-263-1371. To
suggest a news obituary, call 412-263-1601.
Funeral home directors may also call 412-2631601 from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. to note a death
for which there is no classified obituary. Those
names will be listed under other deaths.
BELLIS, Betty Jane Easterly Martin, formerly
East McKeesport
BOGDAN, Margaret McCann “Margie”
BRADLEY, Dolores “Doe,” Bloomfield
CARSON, David E., Canonsburg
CHECCA, Antoinette Falce “Toni” “Belle,”
Friendswood, Texas, formerly Peters
CHECCA, Roland M.
COLLINS, Neil A., Lawrenceville
CROWLEY, Grace
DEEDS, Maria A.
DELPHEY, Robert R., West Deer
DUFFY, Edith Ann Smith “Edie,” Georgetown,
S.C., formerly Munhall
Classified Obituaries
BELLIS
BETTY JANE (EASTERLY) MARTIN
83, formerly of East
McKeesport, died Friday,
November 9, 2012. Wife of the
late Edmiston “Scotty” Martin, Jr.
and Frank Edward “Ed” Bellis;
mother of John (Debbie) Martin
and Jane (Benito) Aguirre;
stepmother of Linda (Rich) Hyatt,
and Diane Ausec; grandmother of
Kelli, Janeen, Matt, Stacy,
Roxanne, and Jonathan; also four
great-children. Visitation
Thursday 2-4 and 6-8 p.m. at the
FORGIE-SNYDER FUNERAL
H O M E , 1032 Broadway, East
McKeesport, 412-823-8083,
where a Funeral Service will be
held at 11 a.m. Friday. Those
wishing may contribute to a
charity of choice.
Send condolences at post-gazette.com/gb
BOGDAN
MARGARET “MARGIE”
(McCANN)
On Saturday, November 10,
2012, of Pittsburgh. Wife of
James H. Bogdan; mother of
James C. and Douglas G.
(Johanna) Bogdan; also survived
by aunt, Bernice Mazolik; uncle,
Regis (Josie) Hennessy; sister of
Timothy McCann and Pat
McCann; also numerous nieces
and nephews; grandmother of Eli
Bogdan; also survived by best
friends, Karen Cummings, Jan
Bogdan; also survived by best
friends, Karen Cummings, Jan
Greer, Diane Young, Elsie Zilko,
Joe Savage, and Gail Lourie.
Friends received at the JOHN
J. GMITER FUNERAL HOME,
119 South 15th St., South
Side, Tuesday 6-8 p.m.
and Wednesday 2-4, 6-8 p.m.
Funeral Prayer Thursday, 9 a.m.
Mass of Christian Burial in St.
Adalbert Church Prince of Peace
Parish, 10 a.m. If desired, family
suggests contributions
to Jefferson Regional Medical
Center Oncology Fund, 565 Coal
Valley Rd., Pgh., PA 15025.
Send condolences at post-gazette.com/gb
BRADLEY
DOLORES “DOE”
On Sunday, November 11,
2012, Nana, age 81, of
Bloomfield. Loving wife of the
late Bill Bradley; beloved mother
of Bill (Barb) Bradley, Dolores
Ricci, and Bernice Bradley; sister
of Betty, Loretta, Mary Ann,
Raymond, and the late Robert,
Norma, and John; also survived
by five grandchildren and six
great-grandchildren. Friends
received at the J O H N F .
MURRAY FUNERAL HOME,
INC., Butler at 52nd Sts.,
Lawrenceville. Mass of Christian
Burial at St. Maria Goretti Parish,
Libety Avenue Campus,
Wednesday at 10 a.m. Nana
worked at the Paddy Cake Bakery
in Bloomfield for over 30 years.
Visitation Tuesday only 2-8 p.m.
Send condolences at post-gazette.com/gb
CARSON
DAVID E.
Of Canonsburg, passed away
on November 10, 2012. Retiring
in 1999, Dave taught with the
Burgettstown School District for
36 years. He was preceded in
death by his father, Dale Carson;
his mother, Ida Carson Downey;
C
Y
P
G
M
K
years later. Her husband is a
British filmmaker whom she
met in Los Angeles.
By the early 1980s, Ms. Jeffers was teaching a course
on fear at the New School for
Social Research in Manhattan.
“She had the seeds for ‘Feel
the Fear,’ based on the course,”
her husband said. The book
catapulted her to a career
not just in writing but also in
life-affirmation workshops,
speeches and appearances
on television, including “The
Oprah Winfrey Show.”
Ms. Jeffers remained upbeat
even in dealing with death. In
“Embracing Uncertainty,” she
wrote:
“When I die, I would like
it to be the best party I ever
attended. I plan to be there
in spirit and I expect to have
a great time. I want to hear
laughter, and compliments,
and see color everywhere …
absolutely no black allowed,
and lots of balloons.”
FERRARO, Barbara, Franklin Park
GRAEB, Donald R., Shaler
GUZZI, Andrew Walter, Upper St. Clair and
Dormont
HANK, Robert G. Jr., Mount Pleasant Borough
HORNE ALVERO, Wilma Donaldson, Ross
HUMPHREY, Milo E., Harrison
HUTTER, Russell W., Bethel Park
KIGGINS, James R., Pleasant Hills
LABBETT, Agnes Gasparik, South Side
LANGA, David Charles, Franklin, Butler County
MACHEROSKY, Robert W. “Bob,” McKeesport, formerly Wilkins
MANDAK, Caroline Naglich, Chalfant
MAZZARINI, Louis, Tampa, Fla.
McINTYRE, Thomas M., Brentwood, formerly
death by his father, Dale Carson;
his mother, Ida Carson Downey;
sister-in-law, Judy Cunningham;
and brother-in-law, Walter
Platter. Dave is survived by his
loving wife Linda; two daughters,
Lynn Carson Stone and her
husband, Rob of Manhattan
Beach, CA and Wendy Carson of
Harrisburg; four grandchildren,
Camden, Chandler, Carson, and
Ciara Stone; sister, Doloris Platter
of California, PA; brother, Dale
(Eleanor) Carson of Venice,
FL; his in-laws, Ruth Ann
(Robert) Robertory and
Albert (Marilyn) Raytek; his
brother-in-law, Jim Cunningham;
and numerous nieces, nephews,
and cousins. Funeral arrangements
by BEINHAUERS, 724-941-3211.
Friends welcome at 2828
Washington Road, McMurray,
15317 on Tuesday from 2-4 and
6-8. A Funeral Service will begin at
10:00 a.m. on Wednesday in the
Beinhauer Chapel with Pastor
Thomas Chacko officiating.
Interment will follow at Woodruff
Memorial Park. The family suggests
that memorial donations be made
to a charity of your choice. Please
add or view tributes at:
www.beinhauer.com
Veteran committed
to law enforcement
By Len Barcousky
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Harmar Patrolman Burton
A. “Burt” Perrett recognized the
man who shot him in 1964.
Mr. Perrett, who grew up in
the township along the Allegheny
River, knew pretty much everybody in the community, according to his wife, Evie. “Burt had
arrested him a couple of times,”
she said of the gunman.
Mr. Perrett had been a Marine
in Korea and he knew what to do
when he came under fire, Mrs.
Perrett said. “He hit the ground
and started rolling away,” she
said. One bullet passed through
his hat, another hit his boot,
another hit his belt buckle, while
a thick pocket notebook stopped
another. One shot, however, hit
him in the leg.
Although wounded, Mr. Perrett apprehended his assailant.
“He wouldn’t go to the hospital
until he caught this guy,” his
wife said. “They fixed up his leg
and by the end of the week he
was back at work.”
Mr. Perrett, who went on to
serve as Harmar police chief,
died Friday at his home in the
township. He was 85.
“Being a policeman was his
life,” his son, Reilly, said. “He
loved his job and he loved going
to work.”
“I remember riding around
with him in his police car,”
Reilly Perrett said. “He wanted
me to be a policeman, and I had
no problem with that.” Like his
father, Reilly Perrett started
as a patrolman and eventually
became Harmar police chief.
“My mom would say that she
was married to one police chief
and gave birth to another,” her
son said.
Born in Pittsburgh, Mr. Perrett was the son of the late Burton and Mary Williams Perrett.
Send condolences at post-gazette.com/gb
CHECCA
ROLAND M.
Prayers of transfer will be
said TODAY Tuesday, Nov. 13,
followed by a Christian
Funeral Mass in St. Mary's
Church, at 10:00 a.m. with
Father Stan Gregorek officiating.
Interment will follow in the
National Cemetery of the
Alleghenies, Cecil Township. Visit
at:
coleman-taylorfuneralservices.com
‘Love Boat’ producer
By The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES — Television
producer and executive Henry
Colman — whose credits include
“The Love Boat,” “Hawaii FiveO” and “Green Acres” — has
died at age 89.
An announcement Sunday by
the Archive of American Television says Mr. Colman died
Wednesday.
Mr. Colman’s career dates
to early commercial television,
where he started as production
coordinator on the musical show
ANTOINETTE “TONI” “BELLE”
(FALCE)
CROWLEY
GRACE
On Sunday, November 11,
2012, born poor, died rich of love.
No viewing, burial private.
A r r a n g e m e n t s b y WILLIAM
ECKELS FUNERAL HOME.
Send condolences at post-gazette.com/gb
DEEDS
MARIA A.
On Friday, Nov. 9, 2012.
Mother of John W. Marshall,
David J. Marshall of FL and
Cheyenne S. Guy; grandmother of
Braedon A. Matrone; sister of
Helene Deeds, Jeffrey Deeds,
Margie Long and Antoinette.
Family and friends may call
Tuesday 3-7 p.m. at O’BRIEN’S,
3724 California at Cooper Aves.,
N.S., where there will be a
Blessing Service at 7 p.m. In lieu
of flowers, memorial donations to
Toys For Tots C/O the Marine
Toys for Tots Foundation .
Send condolences at post-gazette.com/gb
Send condolences at post-gazette.com/gb
Age 83, of Friendswood, TX,
formerly of Peters Township, PA,
died Friday, November 9, 2012 at
Emeritus Assisted Living in
Friendswood, TX. She was born
September 14, 1929 in
Pittsburgh, a daughter of
Nicholas and Ann Wessel Falce.
She was married to the late
Daniel M. Checca. Mrs. Checca
was a member of Mary Queen
Catholic Church of Friendswood,
TX. She is survived by a son,
Dennis P. Checca of New York; a
COLLINS
NEIL A.
Age 32, of Lawrenceville, on
Saturday, November 10, 2012.
Beloved son of Paul and
Geraldine (Lozowski) Collins;
loving brother of Courtney A.
Collins; also survived by aunts,
uncles, cousins and friends.
Family and friends received at
the WALTER J. ZALEWSKI
FUNERAL HOME, 216 44th St.,
Lawrenceville on Wednesday
from 4 to 8 p.m. Prayer Service at
the Funeral Home on Wednesday
at 7:30 p.m.
Send condolences at post-gazette.com/gb
DELPHEY
ROBERT R.
Age 84, of West Deer, on
Sunday, November 11, 2012.
Beloved husband of the late
Kathryn J. (Fischer) Delphey;
father of Raymond R. (Sheryl)
Delphey of West Deer and Ruth
A. (Daniel) Lippke of West Deer;
grandfather of Arden Delphey,
Paul and Amanda Lippke.
Services private. Arrangements
by
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“Easy Does It.” In 1951, Mr. Colman became assistant to the
director for “Kraft Television
Theatre” and later worked on
such series as “Robert Montgomery Presents” and “Colgate Comedy Hour.” As a TV executive,
Mr. Colman oversaw the pilot
of “The Many Loves of Dobie
Gillis” and worked on “Green
Acres” and “Hawaii Five-O.”
In the 1970s, he helped develop
“The Love Boat,” where he
worked as line producer. Mr.
Colman also produced the 1980s
series “Hotel.”
Munhall
SCARVACE, John Mark, Baldwin Borough
SCHAEFER, Virginia Rae Chopak, Canonsburg
SIMPSON, Robert A. Sr., Crafton
SINGLETON, Alan H., Marshall
SKANDERSON, Donna Lee, Blawnox
SMITH, Sarah W. “Sally,” Cranberry
THOMAS, David E., McKeesport
THOMAS, Lenora F., Penn Hills, formerly Bethel Park
TONGEL, George T.
WAGNER, Nancy Douglass, formerly Mount
Oliver
WHEELER, Eleverna Anna, Mt. Lebanon
YAMBER, Alice B. Nalesnick, West Mifflin
Send condolences at post-gazette.com/gb
CHECCA
Len Barcousky: lbarcousky@
post-gazette.com or 412-263-1159.
HENRY COLMAN | Died Nov. 7
Lawrenceville
MONTGOMERY, James Andrew, Turtle Creek
MORAN, Joseph M., Baldwin Borough
OBLOCK, Oscar, Cecil
O’HARA, Daniel J., Crafton Heights
PALLUCH, James R. “Tex,” Bridgeville
PANEPINTO, Thomas, Export
PAPST, Betty Lychkoff “Toots,” McKees
Rocks
PRINZO, Marie A., Mount Washington
REGINELLA, Rose M. Abbenante, Oakmont,
formerly Greenfield
ROCK, Terrance Robert
RYGELSKI, Mary Jane Burzyck, Shaler, formerly Morningside
SABOLCIK, Paul J., Bethel Park, formerly
TX. She is survived by a son,
Dennis P. Checca of New York; a
daughter, Julianne C. Murphy of
Texas; four grandchildren, Sean
M. Murphy and Daniel X., James
P. and Caitlin A. Checca; a sister,
Mary Ellen Vitalie of Bethel Park,
PA; and a brother, James Falce of
San Jose, CA; and numerous
nieces and nephews. A memorial
service will be held at a later
date. Funeral arrangements by
BEINHAUERS, 724-941-3211.
Please view or add tributes at
www.beinhauer.com
He grew up in Harmar and graduated from the former Aspinwall
High School. He was wounded
while serving with the Marines
in Korea and received the Purple
Heart. He worked for Duquesne
Light, as a Harmar constable
and as a part-time police officer
before being hired full-time in
the township.
His interests outside of work
included hunting and fishing,
which took him and his son on
trips to Colorado, New Mexico,
Wyoming and Montana.
During a 40-year career in law
enforcement, Mr. Perrett became
a community fixture. He had an
informal outdoor office in a Harmar shopping plaza near Route
910.
“He’d sit there on a bench with
a cigar in his mouth, and everybody would come up and talk
with him,” his son recalled.
His gunshot wound was his
only major injury during his long
career. “He had busted knuckles
and got a few black eyes over the
years,” Mrs. Perrett said.
Mr. Perrett on occasion used
nontraditional policing methods.
Facing a tavern full of rowdy
motorcyclists, he called on the
township fire chief to bring a
pumper truck to the scene. “He
hosed them down,” his wife said.
Working in a small community also meant that everyone
knew his home and family. “He
taught me to shoot and always to
park my car in the garage,” Mrs.
Perrett said.
In addition to his son, who
lives in Harmar, he is survived
by his wife of 55 years, the former
Evie Honkus, and two grandchildren. Services and burial were
private. Arrangements are by the
Charles B. Jarvie Funeral Home,
801 Pittsburgh St., Springdale.
Services private. Arrangements
by SCHELLHAAS FUNERAL
HOME & CREMATION
SERVICES, Bakerstown. A
Korean War Army veteran,
Robert retired from Anvil
Products and enjoyed spending
time with his family. In lieu of
flowers, family suggests
donations to St. John's LAS
Specialty Care Center, 500
Wittenberg Dr., Mars, PA 16046.
www.schellhaasfh.com
Send condolences at post-gazette.com/gb
DUFFY
EDITH ANN “EDIE” SMITH
64, died Friday, November 9,
2012, at Tidelands Community
Hospice House. Ms. Duffy was
born in Clarinda, Iowa on
February 26, 1948, a daughter of
Edith Sheaffer Smith and the late
Eugene F. Smith. She grew up in
Munhall, PA and graduated from
Villa Maria College with a B.S.
degree in nursing. Ms. Duffy
moved to South Carolina in the
70s and earned a Master’s
degree in Public Health from the
University of SC. She worked as a
state public health nurse and
administrator in Columbia, SC
and Greenville, SC for a time prior
to moving to Georgetown. Until
her retirement, Ms. Duffy was
employed as a nurse director in
Georgetown and Pawleys Island,
SC. Surviving are her mother of
Munhall, PA; a brother, Gene
Smith (René) of Pittsburgh, PA;
three sisters, Kathie Smith (John
Burke) of Pittsburgh, PA, Sue
Salak (Ken) of Columbus, Ohio,
and Peggy Rich (Mike) of Erie,
PA; nieces, Abby Salak (Melissa
Prendergast), Sara Salak, and
Becky Salak (Dave Walker); a
nephew, Chris Smith (Kristen
Bush); and a great-niece, Ellie
Walker. Services will be held in
Pittsburgh, PA at a later date.
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PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE ! TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2012 ! WWW.POST-GAZETTE.COM
Three-time rapist matched to another crime
Old evidence leads to new charges
By Liz Navratil
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
A Penn Hills man convicted
of awakening three girls and
raping them is now awaiting
arraignment on charges that
he raped a fourth woman after
police say his DNA matched
evidence taken from a victim
in 1989.
Michael Lipinski, 43, is currently serving a 90- to 180-year
sentence at the State Correctional Institution Smithfield in
Huntingdon for three separate
rapes that occurred in 1998,
2002 and 2005. Lipinski has
filed an appeal in the Superior
Court of Pennsylvania.
Those cases, like the 1989
rape with which Lipinski was
charged last week, hinged on
the results of DNA testing. Lipinski was required to submit
a DNA profile to an FBI database called Combined DNA
Index System, or CODIS, after
he was convicted of sex assault
in connection with a case in
2006 and assault in a 2008 case.
After he did that, investigators
matched him to the rapes of
the three girls.
Cont. from Previous Page
Walker. Services will be held in
Pittsburgh, PA at a later date.
A local service will be
announced. Sign a guest book at
www.mayerfuneralhome.com.
Memorials may be made to
Tidelands Community Hospice,
2591 N. Fraser St., Georgetown,
SC 29440. THE GEORGETOWN
CHAPEL OF MAYER FUNERAL
HOME is assisting the family.
Send condolences at post-gazette.com/gb
FERRARO
BARBARA
Age 67, of Franklin Park,
passed away November 11, 2012.
Born on August 9, 1945 in
Indiana, PA. Daughter of the late
Alex and Vekia Ruddock; beloved
wife of David N. Ferraro, Sr.;
loving mother of David (Veronica)
Ferraro, Jr.; grandmother of
Sophia, Maria, Travis, Sabrina,
David, Amilia, Rosalynne; sister of
Patricia Lundberg; also survived
by many nieces and nephews.
Barbara enjoyed to travel, loved
nature and animals, and most of
all, she loved spending time with
her beloved grandchildren and
family. Friends will be received
on Wednesday, November 14,
2012 from 3-6 p.m. at the H.P.
BRANDT FUNERAL HOME,
INC., 1032 Perry Hwy., Ross Twp.
412-364-4444. In lieu of
flowers, memorial contributions
may be made to Animal Friends,
562 Camp Horne Rd., Pittsburgh,
PA 15237. Online condolences
may be offered at:
www.brandtfuneralhome.com
Pittsburgh sex assault detectives contacted the Allegheny
County medical examiner’s
office in June to ask if they
still had the evidence from a
rape kit collected at MageeWomens Hospital in March of
1989, when the CODIS system
did not yet exist. A worker
offered to process the DNA and
learned in October that the
evidence matched Lipinski,
according to a criminal complaint.
Investigators contacted the
victim, identified only as Jane
Doe, again this month. She told
them that she remembered falling asleep in her apartment on
Roup Street in March of 1989
and awakening to find “a dark
figure standing within five feet
of her in her bedroom.”
The man threatened to
kill her and then taped her
eyes and hands, police said.
He ripped her clothes, held a
lighter between her legs and
then raped her, according to
the complaint.
Police said the man ransacked her drawers, stole some
earrings and told her to wait
an hour before calling because
private collections. He was a
member of the Pennsylvania
Watercolor Society, Pittsburgh
Watercolor Society, Whiskey
Painters of America, and the
North Hills Art Center. His
favorite place to paint was in the
New England area and traveled
there regularly to participate in
painting workshops over the
years. Don enjoyed his sports
cars, travel, cruises, golf,
dancing, ice skating, and Steeler
games. He had a kind spirit and
cherished every minute with his
family and friends. He was a true
gentleman and will be sadly
missed. Don succumbed to Lewy
Body Dementia - a combination
of dementia and Parkinson's
disease. Friends will be received
from 2-8 p.m. Wed. and 9-11
Thurs. at the BOCK FUNERAL
H O M E , L T D . , 1500 Mt. Royal
Blvd., Glenshaw. A Funeral
Service will be held on Thursday
at 11:00 a.m. In lieu of flowers,
please make donations to the
Glenshaw Valley Presbyterian
Church, 1520 Butler Plank Rd.,
Glenshaw, PA 15116 or a charity
of your choice.
Send condolences at post-gazette.com/gb
“he would be watching her and
would come back and kill her
if she did not obey his orders.”
The woman told officers she
waited about five minutes and
then ran to a neighbor’s door
and began pounding.
Michelle Collins, the assistant public defender who represented Lipinski in the previous three rape cases said during the trial that he rejected a
plea deal because “he couldn’t
plead guilty to something he
didn’t do.”
Pittsburgh police have previously said that Lipinski told
them he had a troubled childhood, having been removed
from his home at the age of 5
and then sexually assaulted
by the female companion of
a Homewood preacher whom
he later lived with. He said he
was in and out of psychiatric
hospitals for anger issues and
used cocaine for many years,
sometimes committing burglaries to support his habits,
police said.
Liz Navratil: [email protected], 412-263-1438 or on
Twitter @LizNavratil.
Send condolences at post-gazette.com/gb
HANK
ROBERT G., Jr.
65, of Mt. Pleasant, on Monday,
November 12, 2012. Loving father
of Marla Harris (Gregory) of Pine
Twp. and Bobi Rae Hank of Ft.
Knox, KY; loving grandfather of
Patrick Cachmar. Robert studied
Broadcasting at Boston University
which led to a career in radio as
a disc jockey and also radio
station management in
advertising. He most recently
ended his career with the PALCB.
Robert was also a veteran of the
PA National Guard. There will be
no visitation and services will be
private. Arrangements entrusted
to H.P. BRANDT FUNERAL
H O M E , 1032 Perry Hwy.,
Pittsburgh.
www.brandtfuneralhome.com
GUZZI
Send condolences at post-gazette.com/gb
GRAEB
DONALD R.
81, of Shaler Township, passed
away peacefully at home on
Monday, November 12, 2012.
Born on July 18, 1931 to John and
Lavina Graeb. Beloved husband
to Bernice Milbert Graeb of 52
years; loving father to Susan
(Kevin) Boroch and Michael
(Michelle) Graeb; cherished
grandfather to Alexandra and
Ryan Boroch; loving brother to
Corinne Frayer, Janet Graeb,
Maxine Greggor, and the late
John Graeb; brother-in-law of
Betty (Harvey) Woods and Ronald
(Verna) Milbert; nieces and
nephews. His father died when
he was six, leaving behind five
children ages 6 months to 8
years old. With no financial
assistance, relatives fed and
housed them. As a child he
carried coal, delivered
newspapers and worked the
farms on Mount Troy. He was 13
before having a hand-me-down
bike given to him by a cousin.
Don graduated from Allegheny
High School in 1949. Shortly
thereafter he was drafted into
the Army and served on the front
lines of the Korean War. Having
artistic flair and with the help of
the G.I. Bill, he enrolled in
Carnegie Tech University and
graduated in 1959 with a
Bachelors degree in Industrial
Design. Don's career focus was
designing trade shows for many
top corporations. Many of his
trade show exhibits took him
across the country and
internationally as well. His work
can still be seen today as he
designed the Hillman Hall of
Minerals and Gems at the
Carnegie Museum, the American
Helicopter Museum in
Philadelphia, and the Heart
Museum in Maryland. Also, his
drawings and models were used
to accumulate funding for the
Dinosaur Hall at the Carnegie
Museum. He was highly
respected and was considered in
the top of his field. While Don
enjoyed the design profession,
his passion was painting. He
became one of Pittsburgh's finest
award winning watercolorists,
winning awards both locally and
nationally. His paintings have
been displayed in many
corporations, museums, and
private collections. He was a
member of the Pennsylvania
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By Emily Petsko
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Jennifer Sikora, whose sister
died 11 years ago, is a “survivor
of suicide.” The term refers to
individuals who have lost friends
or family members to suicide,
which is now the 10th-leading
cause of death in the United
States.
As a board member of the
American Foundation for Suicide Prevention’s Pittsburgh
chapter, Ms. Sikora is helping to
organize an event for other survivors to come together and discuss grief, loss and coping.
The International Survivors
of Suicide Conference will be
held Saturday at Fisher Hall in
Duquesne University’s School
of Nursing. Registration begins
at 9:30 a.m., and the event runs
until 2 p.m.
University of Pittsburgh
researchers will discuss ways to
manage complicated grief, which
is a prolonged period of mourning where the impact of loss is
felt “as raw and as real as when it
first happened,” Ms. Sikora said.
“Recovering from the loss of a
suicide is unlike any other type
CLASSIFIED OBITUARIES
Army from 1953-1955 while
6-9 p.m. and Thursday from 1-8
p.m. at BEINHAUER FUNERAL
HOME, 2828 Washington Rd.,
McMurray (724-941-3211).
Services will be held on Friday
at 3 p.m. in Westminster
Presbyterian Church, 2040
Washington Road (Route 19),
Upper St. Clair. EVERYONE
PLEASE MEET AT CHURCH. Burial
will be private. Andrew did many
volunteer hours with Animal
Friends Pet Assisted Therapy.
Memorial contributions in
memory of Andrew may be
made to Animal Friends of
Pittsburgh, 562 Camp Horne
Road, Pittsburgh, PA 15237.
Please add tributes at:
www.beinhauer.com
ANDREW WALTER
A popular member of
Pittsburgh's young professionals'
scene whose favorite saying was
“life is short - live it”, died early
Sunday, November 11, 2012,
from injuries he sustained in an
accidental fall. He was 25.
Andrew, of Upper St. Clair and
Dormont, will be remembered by
family, friends, and colleagues as
a man with a zest for life and an
ebullient personality who worked
hard and who was passionate
about Pittsburgh and all that it
has to offer, from its trendy
restaurants and clubs to its
historic sports teams. Among
Pittsburgh's crowd of
twenty-something movers and
shakers, Andrew was known for
his quirky glasses, trim goatee,
offbeat sense of style and
positive attitude. He drew people
to him with his energy and sense
of fun; he was ideally suited to a
career in sales and marketing
which he pursued with intensity.
"I love my friends and family, and
I try everyday to make someone
else's day", he once said in a
moment of self-reflection.
Andrew was a Sales Executive
and Verification Officer with
Global Vacation Network. He
previously held sales positions
with the Home Depot Corporate
and Davison Design and
Development as Director of New
Products. He began his
professional career following an
internship at Micronic North
America, LLC. After graduating
from Upper St. Clair High School
in 2005, Andrew went on to earn
degrees in psychology and
business from Washington &
Jefferson College where in
addition to his studies, he
worked as a technician on the IT
HELP Desk and earned a
reputation as a campus leader.
He was a member of Phi Delta
Theta fraternity and served as a
member of the recruiting
committee and representative to
the Interfraternity Council. In
addition, he was a member of the
Student Activities Board and a
saxophonist in the Jazz Band. He
also was a founding member of
Hometown Heritage House, a
collegiate philanthropy which
supports Special Olympics, the
Greater Pittsburgh Community
Food Bank and other social
service organizations in
Washington County. In addition
to a wide circle of friends,
Andrew is survived by his
parents, Kimberly (Feltz) and
Anthony Guzzi, of Upper St. Clair;
a sister, Katherine, at home; his
maternal grandparents, Walter
and Carol Feltz, of Mt. Lebanon;
his paternal grandparents, Lois
Guzzi and the late Dominic Guzzi,
of Charleroi; an aunt, Nora Guzzi
Gibson and her husband, Robert,
of Belle Vernon; and a cousin,
Kara Gibson, at home. Visitation
will be held on Wednesday from
6-9 p.m. and Thursday from 1-8
Conference to offer day of healing,
ways to cope for ‘survivors of suicide’
Send condolences at post-gazette.com/gb
HORNE ALVERO
WILMA (DONALDSON)
92, of Ross Twp., passed away
on Monday, November 12, 2012.
She was the beloved wife of the
late Frank C. Horne, Sr. and
Edward Alvero; she was the
loving mother of Ralph J. (Leslie)
Horne of Bethel Park and the late
Frank C. Horne, Jr. and Patrice
Jean Potetz; loving mother-in-law
of Loretta R. Horne of California.
grandmother of Kathy (Bob) Prell,
Jean (Dan) Frampton, Jim (Nancy)
Horne, John Lewis, Rachel (Ralf)
Hernandez, Denise (Tom) Riley,
Dawn (Ian) Lysinger, Amy (Frank)
Houser, and Shawn (Evie) Potetz;
she is also survived by 14
great-grandchildren. Wilma was a
longtime member of the Elfinwild
Presbyterian Church and was a
volunteer with the North Hills
Meals-on-Wheels. Friends will be
received on Wednesday from 2-4,
7-9 p.m. in the H. P. BRANDT
FUNERAL HOME, INC., 1032
Perry Hwy., Ross Twp.,
412-364-4444. A Funeral Service
will be held on Thursday at 11
a.m. in the funeral home. In lieu
of flowers, donations may be
made to the Vincentian Home,
111 Perrymont Rd., Pittsburgh,
PA 15237. Condolences may be
offered at:
www.brandtfuneralhome.com
stationed in Germany. Milo was a
former Allegheny Ludlum
employee for 39 years, a coach in
the Natrona Heights Little League
1968-1972, a volunteer at the
Community Library of Allegheny
Valley, an avid reader and
recreational basketball player.
He was a member of the VFW,
Elks and Eagles. Celebration of
life will be from 2-4, 6-8 p.m.
on Wednesday in the
CICHOLSKI-ZIDEK FUNERAL
HOME, INC., 1522 Carlisle St.,
Natrona Heights. A Mass of
Christian Burial will be at 10 a.m.
Thursday in Most Blessed
Sacrament Church, Natrona
Heights. In lieu of flowers, the
family suggests memorial
contributions be made to the
Highlands Area Meals-on-Wheels,
PO Box 395, Natrona Heights, PA
15065 or to the Community
Library of Allegheny Valley, 1522
Broadview Blvd., Natrona
Heights, PA 15065.
Send condolences at post-gazette.com/gb
HUTTER
RUSSELL W.
Age 73, of Bethel Park, passed
away on Sunday, November 11,
2012. Beloved husband of 48
years to Lorraine C. Hutter; loving
father of Debra (Larry) Hultz and
Lori (Jeffrey) Lawton; grandfather
of Benjamin, Nicholas, Caroline
and Zachary Hultz, and Luke,
Dylan, Nathan and Matthew
Lawton. Friends will be received
on Tuesday and Wednesday from
2-4 and 7-9 p.m. at P A U L L .
HENNEY MEMORIAL CHAPEL,
5570 Library Rd., Bethel Park.
Mass of Christian Burial will be
offered on Thursday, 11 a.m. at Our
Lady of Victory Catholic Church,
1000 Lindsay Road, Carnegie, PA
15106. Interment will follow at
Queen of Heaven Cemetery.
www.henneyfuneralhome.com
Send condolences at post-gazette.com/gb
KIGGINS
JAMES R.
Age 84, of Pleasant Hills,
passed away peacefully on
Friday, November 9, 2012, after a
courageous battle with cancer.
Husband of the late Betty
(Thomas) Kiggins; beloved father of
Kathleen Pietrasanta of Newport
News, VA, Christine Kiggins of
Portland, OR and Colette (Bradley)
Goepfert of Economy Boro, PA;
loving grandfather of Madeline
Goepfert. He proudly served in the
Marine Corps during WWII and the
Korean War. Jim will always be
remembered for his love of travel,
cooking and his spirit of adventure.
A Memorial Mass will be celebrated
at 10 a.m., Wednesday, in St.
Thomas A Becket Church.
Donations may be made to the
Family Hospice and Palliative Care,
50 Moffett Street Pittsburgh, PA
15228.
www.jeffersonmemorial.biz
Send condolences at post-gazette.com/gb
“Sometimes you have
to take some baby
steps, but it is taking
steps in the right
direction.”
— Jennifer Sikora,
board member,
American Foundation for Suicide
Prevention’s Pittsburgh chapter
of grief process, and it tends to be
a very difficult grief process,” she
said. “The program is intended to
reach out to those who have been
affected by a loss from suicide
and invite them to come together
and grieve.”
The event is one of a series to
be held around the world Saturday to mark the 14th annual
International Survivors of Suicide Day.
According to the foundation,
four Americans commit suicide
every hour and nearly 37,000 die
from suicide each year.
Sam Lonich, former chairman of the psychology depart-
Christian Burial in St. Peter
Church, Prince of Peace Parish,
at 10 a.m. In lieu of flowers,
donations may be made to
Family Hospice and Palliative
Care, 50 Moffett St., Pgh., PA
15243 or a charity of your choice.
www.thomasjgmiterfh.com
Send condolences at post-gazette.com/gb
LANGA
DAVID CHARLES
61, of Butler, passed away,
November 12 at the VNA
Inpatient Hospice following a two
year battle with ALS. He was
born in Butler on May 16, 1951, a
son of Mary (Kudamik) Langa and
the late Joseph J. Langa. He was
a lifelong member of St. Paul
Roman Catholic Church in Butler,
where he married Julia Ann Dollar
on April 12, 1975. In addition to
his wife, he is survived by his
daughter, Jennifer (David)
Chottiner of Pittsburgh, and his
son, Reverend Daniel, of Butler.
He loved his grandson, Max and
was looking forward to the birth
of a new grandchild in May. David
is also survived by his mother,
Mary; as well as two brothers,
Ted (Dorothy) of Butler, and Tom
(Donna) of Fresno, CA; one sister,
Irene Delaney of Butler; and
many nieces and nephews.
Friends will be received at the
GEIBEL FUNERAL HOME,
201 East Cunningham Street,
Butler, from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
Wednesday. A Mass of Christian
Burial will be celebrated on
Thursday, at 10:00 a.m., at St.
Paul Roman Catholic Church, 128
North McKean Street, Butler.
Interment will follow in Butler
County Memorial Park. Memorial
donations may be made to the
ALS Association, Western
Pennsylvania Chapter, 416
Lincoln Avenue, Pittsburgh, PA
15209 or to the V.N.A. Inpatient
Hospice, 115 Technology Drive,
Butler, PA 16001.
Send condolences at post-gazette.com/gb
MACHEROSKY
ROBERT W. “BOB”
Age 57, of McKeesport,
formerly of Wilkins Twp.,
suddenly on Saturday, November
10, 2012. Beloved husband of
Melinda (Roberts) Macherosky;
loving son of the late Robert and
Betty (Belin) Macherosky; brother
of David Macherosky, Marian
(Howard) Schwartz, and Bryan
(Randy) Macherosky; uncle of
Christine, Emily, Kimberly,
Mikaela, and Taylor. Bob retired
from Royal Biscuit Co. and was a
union steward for Teamsters
Local #485. He was an avid
golfer/Nascar fan and loved his
dogs. Friends will be received
Wednesday 6 p.m. until an 8:30
p . m . s e r v i c e a t t h e JOBE
F U N E R A L H O M E &
CREMATORY, INC., corner of
(118) Shaw and Triboro Avenues,
Turtle Creek (412-823-1950). In
lieu of flowers, contributions may
be made to the American Society
for the Prevention of Cruelty to
Animals (ASPCA), 424 E. 92nd St.,
New York, NY 10128-6804.
www.jobefuneralhome.com
Send condolences at post-gazette.com/gb
ment at California University of
Pennsylvania, will be discussing
suicide bereavement and coping
behavior. It will be followed by a
survivor’s story from a foundation board member.
The conference does not seek
to answer why people commit
suicide, but offers a day of healing. Ms. Sikora said it is an outlet
for those who wish to share personal stories, but also for those
who prefer to be observers.
“We’re not there to force anybody to talk or share their stories. For many of these folks, it’s
too new and they’re not ready
to do that yet,” Ms. Sikora said.
“Sometimes you have to take
some baby steps, but it is taking
steps in the right direction.”
For those who are unable to
attend the conference, an online
webcast will begin at 1 p.m. The
registration form can be completed at www.afsp.org.
If you are in crisis or need support, please contact: re:solve Crisis
Network, 1-888-7-YOU CAN, where
counselors are available 24 hours
a day every day.
Emily Petsko: [email protected] or 412-263-1468.
MAZZARINI
LOUIS
85, of Tampa, formerly of
Pittsburgh, PA. Survived by his
loving wife of 60
years, Ellen; sons,
Louis J., Lee, Mark
and Paul Mazzarini;
daughters, Melinda,
Christine; ten
grandchildren; and four
great-grandchildren. Louis was a
Merchant Marine and Army
veteran serving in World War II.
After Military Service, Louis and
EIIen purchased and remodeled
an old bar on Grandview Avenue
in Pittsburgh which would
become the first restaurant on
the avenue called Point View
Restaurant. Besides being a
restaurateur, Louis was also a
Licensed Coal Miner and Horse
trainer, which eventually brought
him to Tampa in 1993 where he
was involved with the Tampa
Bay Downs. Visitation is
Wednesday, 6-8 p.m. at
HOLLOWAY FUNERAL HOME,
112 Bayview Blvd., Oldsmar,
813-855-2439. Funeral Mass at
Incarnation Catholic Church,
Tampa, Thursday at 10 a.m.
www.hollowayfuneralhomefl.com
Send condolences at post-gazette.com/gb
McINTYRE
THOMAS M.
Age 82, of Brentwood,
formerly Lawrenceville, on
Saturday, Nov. 10, 2012. Beloved
husband of Shirley; loving father
of Ida McIntyre and Lilly Zalatimo;
loving grandfather of Amber
McIntyre; brother of Marlyn
Wilson, Janet Maggio and the
late Jean Gally, Alex "Buddy,"
George, Esther Curley, Donald,
Walter and Norbert McIntyre.
V i s i t a t i o n a t t h e
D'ALESSANDRO FUNERAL
HOME & CREMATORY, LTD.,
Butler at 46th. Sts.,
Lawrenceville, Tuesday 2-4 and
6-8 p.m. Funeral Mass, Our Lady
of the Angels, St. Augustine
Church, Wednesday, 10 a.m.
www.dalessandroltd.com
Send condolences at post-gazette.com/gb
MONTGOMERY
JAMES ANDREW
Age 82, of Turtle Creek, passed
away on Monday, October 15,
2012. Beloved husband of Hilda
(Rawson) Montgomery for 59
years; loving father of James R.
Montgomery, Patricia A. (William)
Hovan, Ronald A. Montgomery,
Richard A. (Sharon) Montgomery;
proud grandfather of Jeremy
a n d J a s o n a n d t w o
great-granddaughters; dear
brother of Helen Jean Stein, the
late Robert W. and the late David
Montgomery; son of the late
Robert and Helen Montgomery.
James served as a Marine in the
Korean War. He was a Mail Man
of the Turtle Creek Post Office
and a Truck Driver for Frank Lilly.
James was also a member of
Friends of the East Broad Top. A
Memorial Service will be held on
November 15 at 1 p.m. at the
JOBE FUNERAL HOME &
CREMATORY, INC. corner of
Shaw and Triboro Avenues, Turtle
Creek (412-823-1950). Inurnment
to follow at Churchill Cemetery.
www.jobefuneralhome.com
Send condolences at post-gazette.com/gb
Send condolences at post-gazette.com/gb
MORAN
MANDAK
CAROLINE (NAGLICH)
LABBETT
AGNES (GASPARIK)
HUMPHREY
MILO E.
Of Natrona Heights, passed
away peacefully, Sunday,
November 11, 2012 at Allegheny
Valley Hospital. He was the
beloved husband of Josephine
(Perry) Humphrey for 56 years;
loving father of Gary "Milo"
Humphrey, LouAnn (Tim) Bonnett,
Cathy (Brett) Kowalczyk and
Susan (Edward) Herbulock;
grandfather to six grandchildren,
and a great-granddaughter; and
loving uncle to numerous nieces
and nephews. He was preceded
in death by his parents, Milo and
Mabelle (Lobaugh) Humphrey;
and his sisters, Jean White,
Willavene Caldwell and Martha
Howard. Milo served in the US
Army from 1953-1955 while
stationed in Germany. Milo was a
Age 84, of the South Side, on
Saturday, November 10, 2012.
Beloved wife of the late Emmert
“Whitey” Labbett; loving mother
of Eileen (Thomas) Gmiter and
Donna (Joseph) Peake, and the
late Bruce Labbett; dear
grandmother of Tim, Sean, and
Lauren Brutscher, Amanda
(Will) Reichl, Tom Gmiter,
Zachary Harris Labbett;
great-grandmother of Jack and
Sam Reichl; sister of Lois (Ken)
Ebel, Richard (Joann) Gasparik,
and the late Mary Khalil, Ottillia
Stumpf, Emma Johnston, Madge
Olman, Elizabeth Herbster,
Joseph, Stephen, and Florian
Gasparik; also survived by many
loving nieces, nephews and close
friends. Friends received
Monday, 6-8 p.m. and Tuesday,
1-8 p.m. at THOMAS J. GMITER
FUNERAL HOME, INC., 2323 E.
Carson St. Funeral Prayer
Wednesday, 9 a.m. Mass of
Christian Burial in St. Peter
Church, Prince of Peace Parish,
On Sunday, November 11,
2012, age 82, of Chalfant Boro.
She was retired from
Westinghouse Nuclear in
Monroeville and was a member
of the Croatian Fraternal Union
Lodge #141. Wife of the late John
Mandak; beloved mother of Linda
(Russell) Krieger and David
(Bernie) Mandak; also six
grandchildren; and six
great-grandchildren; dear sister
of Walter (Diane) Naglich and
Jane (Bill) Lytle; nieces and
nephews. Family and friends
received A L F I E R I F U N E R A L
HOME, INC., 201 Marguerite
Ave., Wilmerding, PA 15148,
(412) 824-4332, on Wednesday
from 2-8 p.m. Panahida Service on
Wednesday at 8 p.m. Divine Liturgy
on Thursday at 10 a.m. in St. Mary’s
Byzantine Catholic Church, 317
Howard St., E. Pgh., PA 15112
(EVERYONE PLEASE MEET AT
CHURCH). Entombment will follow
in Penn Lincoln Memorial Park.
The Mandak family would like to
extend their sincere appreciation to
Forbes Hospice.
Send condolences at post-gazette.com/gb
C
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JOSEPH M.
Age 61, on Friday, November 9,
2012, of Baldwin. Loving husband
to Patricia S. (Sorocko) Moran;
loving father of Lisa Jo and Katie
Lynn Moran; beloved son of the
late Helen and Thomas Moran;
beloved son-in-law of James and
Frances Sorocko; brother of
Thomas (and the late Catherine),
Daniel (Pamela), Christine (James)
Bane, Robert (Barbara), and Ann
(William) Oehling; beloved
brother-in-law to Charlotte
(Ronald) Loy and the late James
Sorocko; and loving uncle to
numerous nieces and nephews.
Joe served in the US Navy aboard
the USS Hermitage from 1971 to
1974. Upon his honorable
discharge, Joe married his
childhood sweetheart, Trish, with
whom he raised two wonderful
daughters. Joe worked diligently
at Duquesne Light as a Senior
Automatic Controllman for over
33 years. Family and friends will
be received at the J O H N F .
SLATER FUNERAL HOME,
INC., 412-881-4100, 4201
Brownsville Road, Brentwood
15227, from 2-4 p.m. and 6-8
Cont. on Next Page
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PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE ! TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2012 ! WWW.POST-GAZETTE.COM
Future uncertain for alternative high school at CCAC Boyce Campus
BOYCE, FROM PAGE B-1
future holds for this exact type
program,” said Robert Reger, acting superintendent of Gateway.
The superintendents had
hoped to submit a charter application to the Gateway school
board by Thursday, the state’s
deadline to open a school in the
2013-2014 school year. Gateway
would file the charter application because the middle college
high school is located in Monroeville, one of two communities
that make up the school district.
Under state law, local school
boards vote on applications for
charter schools within their
boundaries.
While the charter application
would not need the support of all
three districts, Penn Hills Superintendent Thomas Washington
and Mr. Reger said the plan had
been to have all three behind the
effort before a charter application was made.
“It was designed to be a partnership. One partner pulled out,
so you have to rethink it,” Mr.
Washington said.
Plum Superintendent Timothy Glasspool said he believes
his board rejected the idea
because “it was too new and too
much too fast.” He and the other
Cont. from Previous Page
Brownsville Road, Brentwood
15227, from 2-4 p.m. and 6-8
p.m. on Wednesday. Funeral
Prayer on Thursday morning at
10:00 a.m. Mass of Christian Burial
in St. John Vianney at 11:00 a.m.
Please send condolences to:
www.johnfslater.com
Send condolences at post-gazette.com/gb
superintendents said school
directors generally see charter
schools as competition to their
districts, which must pay tuition
for students who choose to attend
charter schools.
Mr. Washington said the
superintendents saw converting
the school to a charter as a way
to open it up to other districts
and to provide an independent
funding source to secure its
future. He acknowledged that it
is unusual to for public school
superintendents to support a
charter school, but said “challenging times caused for us to
think differently.”
In the past, each of the four
founding districts provided an
annual payment and three teachers to the school. In recent years,
the annual payment was about
$45,000 for each district because
the school had accrued a healthy
fund balance and used large that
money to balance the budget.
But that fund balance is
essentially gone after this school
year, which means the remaining three districts will see their
costs increase, said director
Robert Patterson, a retired Penn
Hills elementary teacher and
administrator.
In addition, when Woodland
Hills dropped out, the school lost
and the late Linda Jane Palluch;
also survived by eight
grandchildren and two
great-grandchildren. A veteran of
the Korean War, serving in the
U.S. Army and a longtime local
truck driver. He was a member of
the Bridgeville Italian Club,
Bridgeville American Legion, Post
#54 and the Owls Club. Friends
received Tuesday, 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
in the W A R C H O L F U N E R A L
HOME, INC., 3060 Washington
Pike, Bridgeville (412-221-3333),
where a Blessing Service will be
held Wednesday at 10 a.m.
Memorials may be made to the
Alzheimer’s Assoc., 1323 Forbes
Ave., Pgh., PA 15219. View and
add condolences at:
www.warcholfuneralhome.com
Send condolences at post-gazette.com/gb
OBLOCK
OSCAR
89 years old of Cecil, died
Friday, November 9, 2012 in
Center for Compassionate Care,
Mt. Lebanon. He was born July
28, 1923 in Bridgeville, son of the
late Matthew and Mary Urbanic
Oblock. He was a 1941 Graduate
of Cecil High School. Sergeant
Oblock served 33 months in the
Marine Corp during WWII and
was on the invasion of Okinawa.
He was a member of McDonald
VFW, Teamsters Local 249, and
South Fayette Sr. Citizens. He
enjoyed traveling, visiting the
casino, and attending Marine
Corp Reunions. He worked for his
father as a farmhand on the
Oblock Farm in Venice and
owned it from 1966-77. He
retired as a Concrete Truck Driver
for Frank Bryan Co., Pittsburgh,
he also worked for Silhol in
Bridgeville and Dravo Co. in
Pittsburgh. Surviving are his
wife, Alice Ayres Oblock of Cecil;
a son, Terry (Tami) Oblock of
McDonald; a daughter-in-law,
Carol Oblock of Canonsburg; two
grandchildren, Matt (Sylvia)
Oblock of Cecil, and Lindsay (Bill)
Jiblits of Waynesburg; and four
great-grandchildren, Matthew,
Anna, and Katie Oblock, and
Zachary Jiblits. He was the last of
his family, preceded by one son,
Gerald in 2000, four brothers,
John, Matthew, Thomas, and
Edward Oblock; and three sisters,
Mary Noark, Frances Strupek, and
Angeline Fuhrer. Friends will be
received 6-8 p.m. (today) Tuesday,
Nov. 13 and 2-4 and 6-8 p.m.
W e d n e s d a y , a t t h e
COLEMAN-TAYLOR FUNERAL
SERVICES, 3378 Millers Run Road,
(Rt.50) Cecil, PA. where service will
be held on Thursday, Nov. 15, at
10:00 a.m. with Pastor Doris Sawhill
officiating. Interment will follow in
the National Cemetery of the
Alleghenies, Cecil Township.
Contributions may be made to the
Marines Greater Washington Toys
for Tots Program, 724-225-2087.
Send condolences at post-gazette.com/gb
O’HARA
DANIEL J.
Age 78, of Crafton Heights, on
Sunday, November 11, 2012. Mr.
O’Hara passed away after a brief
illness while surrounded by his
family. Beloved husband for 55
years of Alberta (Jocuns) O’Hara;
loving father of Colleen (Charlie)
Martin and Daniel F. (Kitty)
O’Hara; proud “Pappy” of Casey
Martin, Daniel J., Shawn D., and
Heather D. O’Hara; brother of Jim
O’Hara and the late Edna Downey
and Helen Christian. Dan served
in the US Army, was a retired City
of Pittsburgh Policeman, and
former Civic Arena employee
where he ushered, did utility
work and policed. He enjoyed his
long retirement, traveling, visiting
with family, and watching his
Steelers and Penguins. Friends
and family received on
WEDNESDAY ONLY from 2-8 p.m.
at ANTHONY G. STAAB
FUNERAL HOME, INC., 900
Chartiers Ave., Pgh., PA 15220.
Mass of Christian Burial in
Guardian Angels Parish on
Thursday at 12 noon. Entombment
in Southside Cemetery. Send online
condolences to:
www.staabfuneral.com
Send condolences at post-gazette.com/gb
PALLUCH
JAMES R. “TEX”
Age 79, of Bridgeville, on
November 11, 2012. Beloved
husband for 58 years of Sylvia
(Kozak) Palluch; loving father of
Randy (Gina) Palluch, Donald
(Janette) Palluch, John Palluch,
Bob (Lori) Palluch, Donna (John)
Casella, David (Amanda) Palluch
and the late Linda Jane Palluch;
also survived by eight
PANEPINTO
THOMAS
63, of Export, died on Nov. 11,
2012. Born in McKeesport on
March 4, 1949, he is the son of
Mary Fern Seeley Panepinto
Veronick of Tucson, Arizona and
the late Dominic Panepinto. He
was employed as an executive
metals trader at Omnisource
Corporation and previously
worked at ELG Metals in Port Vue
for 25 years. He served in the
U.S. Army during the Vietnam
War, was a member of the VFW
Post 803 in Clairton and the
Glassport American Legion Post
0443. He is survived by his wife,
Chris Keeler Panepinto; children,
Thomas “Tommy” Panepinto, Jr.
of Baldwin and Kristy (Brett)
Nicholson of Mossup, CT; stepson,
Jason Cindric of White Oak;
grandchildren, Hannah, Brett and
Jesse Nicholson; and sister, Debra
Lloyd of Tucson, AZ; and loving dog,
Princess. Friends will be received at
STRIFFLERS OF WHITE OAK
CREMATION AND MORTUARY
SERVICES, 1100 Lincoln Way,
White Oak, 15131, (Sue Striffler
Galaski, supervisor, 412-678-6177),
on Tues. 6-8 and Wed. 2-4 and 6-8.
Blessing will be Thurs. at 10:00 a.m.
at the funeral home. Burial will
follow in Mt. Vernon Cemetery.
Send condolences at post-gazette.com/gb
PAPST
BETTY “TOOTS” (LYCHKOFF)
90, of McKees Rocks, passed
away on Sunday, November 11,
2012. Mother of Dennis
(Marlene), Stanley (Paula),
Richard, and Robert Papst;
survived by seven grandchildren
and 15 great-grandchildren; also
survived by nieces, Karen (Jim)
Mazur and Leslie (Alvin) Lutz.
Family and friends will be received
at McDERMOTT FUNERAL
HOME, INC., 1225 Chartiers Ave.,
McKees Rocks on Tuesday 2-4 and
6-8 p.m., where a Blessing Service
will take place on Wednesday
at 11:00 a.m.
www.mcdermottfuneralhome.com
Send condolences at post-gazette.com/gb
PRINZO
MARIE A.
Age 97, of Mt. Washington, on
Saturday, November 10, 2012.
Beloved wife of the late Joseph
A. Prinzo; loving mother of Joseph
A. (Norine) Prinzo and the late
Phyllis Prinzo and Kathleen “Butch”
(Ronald ) Kennedy; dear sister
of Lillian Doerfler and the late
Anthony and Harold Wilk;
grandmother of Amie Prinzo, Dante
(Kristen) Prinzo, Patrick (Colleen)
Kennedy, and Ronna (Todd)
Fullerton; also survived by three
great-grandchildren; and many
nieces and nephews. Marie will
be remembered by her family
and friends for her caring ways
and her handicrafts. Funeral
arrangements by BEINHAUERS.
Friends welcome at 2828
Washington Rd., McMurray,
724-941-3211, Saturday, 11 a.m.-1
p.m. Blessing Service Saturday at 1
p.m. Private interment in Calvary
Cemetery. Family suggests
memorial contributions to the
American Cancer Society
Southwest Region, 320 Bilmar Dr.,
Pgh., PA 15205. Please view or add
tributes at:
www.beinhauer.com
Send condolences at post-gazette.com/gb
C
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Pam Panchak/Post-Gazette
Delvon Randall, a junior at Boyce Campus Middle College High School, takes notes during class.
three of its nine teachers. That
means there are few electives
offered, although the dual enrollment with the college allows students to take elective classes.
Enrollment this year, without Woodland Hills, dropped to
110, including several students
attending on a tuition basis from
Pittsburgh, Wilkinsburg and
Penn-Trafford.
The original plan for converting the school to a charter called
for the three superintendents to
make the charter application
and sit on the governing board
CLASSIFIED OBITUARIES
SCARVACE
JOHN MARK
REGINELLA
ROSE M. (ABBENANTE)
Surrounded by her loving
family, on Sunday, November 11,
2012, age 77, of Oakmont,
formerly of Greenfield. Beloved
wife of 56 years to Fred
Reginella; loving and devoted
mother of Joseph A. (Donna)
Reginella, Thomas J. Reginella,
and Francine R. (Anthony)
Pugliese; cherished "Nonna" of
Anthony, Vincent, Marco, Nina
and Milo; sister of Thresa
Panichelea, Josephine Vickers,
Jack (Joan) and the late Joseph
Abbenante; sister-in-law of Frank
Reginella and Ruthane L.
Reginella Ph.D.; also survived by
nieces and nephews. Friends will
be received Tuesday 6-8,
Wednesday 2-4, 6-8 p.m. in the
EDWARD P. KANAI FUNERAL
H O M E , 500 Greenfield Ave.
Funeral Thursday with Funeral
Mass in St. Irenaeus Church,
Oakmont at 11:30 a.m. (Everyone
please meet at Church). In lieu of
flowers, the family suggests
donations to the Dysautonomia
Youth Network of America,
Inc., 1301 Greengate Court,
Waldorf, MD 20601.
Send condolences at post-gazette.com/gb
ROCK
TERRANCE ROBERT
Beloved husband of Trudi,
father of Jennifer and Mark, died
Saturday, November 10, 2012.
Terry was the New Year's Baby in
Munhall/Homestead in 1947.
Predeceased by son, James;
daughter-in-law Diane;
granddaughter, Kaitlyn Marie;
father, Paul Rock; mother, Anna
Haney Rock Braun; brother, Paul
Roger; and stepfather, Louis
Braun. Survived by sisters,
Patricia Rock Szekely Wiencek of
Buffalo, NY and Bonnie Braun
O'Shell of Fort Mohave, AZ; and a
host of friends and relatives. A
celebration of Terry's life will be
held next summer. Details will be
provided at a later date.
Arrangements entrusted to the
GEORGE IRVIN GREEN
FUNERAL HOME, INC.,
412-461-6394.
Send condolences at post-gazette.com/gb
RYGELSKI
MARY JANE (BURZYCK)
Age 97, of Shaler Twp.,
formerly of Morningside, on
Saturday, Nov. 10, 2012. Wife of
the late Matthew J. Rygelski;
beloved mother of Ronald A.
(Eleanor) Rygelski and Janet
(Kent) Lydic; grandmother of
Ronald A. (Lisa-Jo) Rygelski, Dean
A. (Mary) Rygelski, Rae Allison
(Ray) McCurley, Chad A. (Beth)
Rygelski, Rachel (Thomas) Beglan,
Kent G. (Carlene) Lydic, Garrett
(Leslie) Lydic, Karlene (David)
Lesho, Neil (Kathy) Lydic; also 18
great-grandchildren; sister of the
late Joseph E. and Thomas J.
Burzyck and Nellie K. Martowicz.
Friends received at the WALTER
J. ZALEWSKI FUNERAL HOME,
216 44th St., Lawrenceville on
Tuesday from 1 to 8 p.m. Funeral
Mass in St. Raphael Church on
Wednesday at 10 a.m. Family
requests donations to St. Raphael’s
Angel Fund.
Send condolences at post-gazette.com/gb
SABOLCIK
Age 46, of Baldwin, surrounded
by his loving family on Sunday,
November 11, 2012. Beloved son
of M. Janet (Leive) and the late
Charles D. Scarvace; loving
brother of Lorraine (Scott)
Learish; beloved uncle of Jessica
(fiance Ryan DeGregory) and
Joseph M. Learish; also survived
by his companion, Jason White;
dearly loved by all his aunts,
uncles, and cousins. John went to
Our Lady of Grace Grade School,
Seton-LaSalle High School and 18
months at John Carroll University.
Friends welcome Wednesday
2-4 and 7-9 p.m. at WILLIAM
SLATER II FUNERAL SERVICE,
1650 Greentree Rd., Scott Twp.
Mass of Christian Burial in Our Lady
of Grace Church on Thursday at
10 a.m. If desired, memorial
donations may be made to
American Cancer Society, 320
Bilmar Dr., Pittsburgh, 15205.
www.slaterfuneral.com
Send condolences at post-gazette.com/gb
SCHAEFER
VIRGINIA RAE CHOPAK
75, of Canonsburg, on
Saturday, November 10, 2012.
Beloved widow of Harry; mother
of Andrew Chopak, Roberta
Czarnecki, Sheryl McCutheon;
stepmother of William Schaefer,
Sonia Schaefer Sellers; sister of
Pat Cline, Sr., Norman L. Cline,
Jr.; grandmother of Joshua, Holly,
Heather; aunt of Kimberly, Pat.
Visitation Wednesday, 6-8 p.m.,
and 2-4 and 6-8 p.m. Thursday,
SOLLON FUNERAL HOME,
LTD., 30 E. College St.,
Canonsburg. Funeral 10 a.m.
Friday. Visit www.sollon.com for
more information.
Send condolences at post-gazette.com/gb
SIMPSON
ROBERT A., Sr.
Age 73, of Crafton, on Monday,
November 12, 2012. Husband of
the late Jacqueline (Schroeder)
Simpson; beloved father of
Robert Jr. (Lisa), Richard of
Brookville, PA, Ronald (Tina) of
Ross Twp., and Jason Simpson of
Crafton; dear grandfather of
Ryan, Jorden, Mahriah, Colin,
Lauren, and Kevin Simpson;
brother of the late William, Ralph,
Robert, and Lee Simpson; also
survived by many nieces and
nephews. Visitation 6-9 p.m.
WEDNESDAY ONLY at the
SCHEPNER - McDERMOTT
FUNERAL HOME, INC., 165
Noble Ave., Crafton 15205, where
the Funeral Service will be held
at 9 a.m. Thursday.
Send condolences at post-gazette.com/gb
SINGLETON
Dr. ALAN H.
Of Marshall Twp., on Friday,
November 9, 2012. Beloved
husband of 54 years to Nancy
(Walton) Singleton; father of Alan
H. Singleton, Jr. (Kelly), David S.
Singleton (Shawn), Kimberly A.
Singleton, and Jennifer L.
Singleton; brother of Dr. Robert T.
Singleton and the late Jack
Singleton; also survived by six
grandchildren. Friends received
Wednesday, 2-4 and 6-8 at
DEVLIN FUNERAL HOME OF
CRANBERRY, 2678 Rochester
Rd., 724-772-8800. Service will be
held in St. John’s Lutheran
Church of Highland on Thursday,
11 a.m. EVERYONE PLEASE MEET
AT CHURCH. In lieu of flowers,
contributions to the Cranberry
Public Library or the American
Cancer Society.
Send condolences at post-gazette.com/gb
PAUL J.
Of Bethel Park, formerly of
Munhall, on November 10, 2012,
age 37. Beloved son of Elmer and
the late Elizabeth (O’Rourke)
Sabolcik; brother of William
Sabolcik, Teresa (David) Beyer,
Lisa (Raymond) Pawlak, and the
late John and Stephen Sabolcik;
also survived by his companion,
Sarah Zawojski and her children,
Caleb, Lillian, and Alexander.
Paul will be greatly missed by his
dogs, Kaos and Bahr and was a
graduate of Serra Catholic High
School. Friends received
SAVOLSKIS - WASIK - GLENN
FUNERAL HOME, INC., 3501
Main Street, Munhall, Tuesday
and Wednesday 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
p.m. Funeral Mass Thursday,
10:00 a.m., St. Therese Church.
www.swgfuneralhome.com
Send condolences at post-gazette.com/gb
SKANDERSON
DONNA LEE
Age 71, of Blawnox, on
Saturday, November 10, 2012.
Beloved wife of 44 years to John
"Jack" Skanderson, Jr.; daughter
of Gerald I. and the late Ethel
Walker; sister of Ronald (LuAnn)
Walker and Larry (Diane) Walker;
also survived by nieces, nephews
and great-nieces and nephews.
Donna was a retired statistician
with Mellon Bank. She enjoyed
crocheting, knitting, macrame
and painting, and was involved
with crafts shows. Donna was an
avid bowler and won three state
tournaments and the Iron City
Doubles Tournament, and enjoyed
traveling to National and State
Bowling Tournaments. Friends
received Wednesday 2-4 and 6-8
p.m. at the
of the school. If the charter was
granted and the conversion took
place, the middle college high
school would become a public
school that students from any
district could attend.
The 80-some page draft charter application called for adding
received Wednesday 2-4 and 6-8
p.m. at the W E D D E L L - A J A K
F U N E R A L H O M E , 100 Center
Ave., Aspinwall, where a parting
prayer will be held Thursday at
10 a.m. followed by a Funeral Mass
at 10:30 a.m. at St. Edward
Church, Blawnox.
Send condolences at post-gazette.com/gb
SMITH
SARAH W. “SALLY”
Age 92, of Cranberry Township,
PA, passed away at Sherwood
Oaks Retirement Community, on
Sunday, November 11, 2012.
Sarah is lovingly remembered by
her five children, Pamela (Rick) D.
Sellars of Arnold, MD, James W.
(Elaine) Smith of Pittsburgh, PA,
William A. (Kathy) Smith III
of Graysonville, MD, Christopher
A. (Betsy) Smith of Pittsburgh,
PA, Peter C. (Deb) Smith of
Pittsburgh, PA; and her 17
loving grandchildren; and 23
great-grandchildren. A Memorial
Service will be celebrated at
Sherwood Oaks Retirement
Community on Saturday,
December 8, 2012 with times
to be announced. In lieu of
flowers, memorial donations
may be made in Sarah's honor
to the Easter Seals Society,
Attn: Online Giving Coordinator,
233 South Wacker Drive, Suite
2400, Chicago, IL 60606
(www.easterseals.com), or the
Berkley Hills Lutheran Church,
517 Sangree Rd., Pittsburgh,
PA 15237. Online condolences
and directions at:
www.glennkildoofuneralhome.com
Send condolences at post-gazette.com/gb
THOMAS
DAVID E.
Of McKeesport, passed
unexpectedly, November 7, 2012.
Beloved son of Jacqueline D.
Nash and Thomas Samuel
Thomas; cherished grandson of
Erdine and Aaron Nash, Jr. and
the late Julia and Reverend Willie
Thomas; loving brother of Dianne
Carter (Ted), Monique Thomas,
Jackie Thomas; nieces, nephews,
uncles, aunts, other relatives and
friends. Visitation Wednesday 4-8
p.m. SPRIGGS & WATSON
FUNERAL HOME, INC., 720
North Lang Ave., E.E. Services
Thursday 11 a.m. Fountain of Life
Church, 247 Johnston Ave.,
Hazelwood, PA.
Send condolences at post-gazette.com/gb
THOMAS
LENORA F.
Of Penn Hills, formerly of
Bethel Park, on Sunday,
November 11, 2012. Wife of
the late Chester Thomas;
sister-in-law of William
Hochstein; dear friend of Allen
Faulhaber. Allen would like to
thank the staff of Kane Regional
Ross for all of their help and
support in caring for his dear
friend. Friends received in the
WILLIAM F. GROSS FUNERAL
HOME, LTD., 11735 Frankstown
Road (at Rodi Road), Penn Hills,
on Tuesday from 3 until time of
Blessing Service at 7 p.m.
Send condolences at post-gazette.com/gb
TONGEL
GEORGE T.
Age 66, of Wexford, on Sunday,
November 11, 2012. Beloved son
of the late John and
Suzzanna Tongel;
brother of Clara
Sovyak and the late
Delores Krevosh,
Helen Solarczyk,
Joseph and Albert Smith, and
Dorothy Nagy; also survived by
nieces, nephews, great-nieces,
g r e a t - n e p h e w , t w o
great-great-nieces and one
great-great-nephew. He was
a retired Franklin Park Police
Officer. Friends received 2-4 and
6-8 p.m. Wed. only at the
THOMAS P. KUNSAK
FUNERAL HOME, INC., 3552
California Ave. at Davis Ave.,
where a Blessing Service will be
held Thursday at 11 a.m.
ninth grade to the school, but
limiting enrollment to 180 students. One of the biggest draws
to the school is the opportunity
for students to enroll in college
courses at no cost and earn college credits before graduating
from high school.
For students like Brandon
Diorio, 16, of Gateway, the alternative school is a more peaceful
place than his home high school.
“There aren’t as many bullies
and mean kids here,” Brandon
said. Several other students said
the school got them out of drama
and chaos in their home districts
and allowed them to focus on
their work.
“I was having a lot of problems
with students being disrespectful to teachers. I was also picked
on quite a bit in Penn Hills,” said
Grant Miller, 15, a sophomore
from Penn Hills.
Delvon Randall, 15, a junior
and standout on the Gateway
High School football team, said
he transferred to the school
halfway through his sophomore
year “because there are less people and I won’t get distracted as
much.”
Mary Niederberger: [email protected] or 412263-1590.
Wednesday 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. at
the JAMES J. BARRY, JR.
FUNERAL HOME, INC., 608
Warrington Ave., Funeral Thursday
at 2 p.m. In lieu of flowers, family
requests donations be made
to American Diabetes Association,
100 West Station Square Dr.,
1st floor, Suite 1900, Pittsburgh,
PA 15219.
Send condolences at post-gazette.com/gb
WHEELER
ELVERNA ANNA
Of Mount Lebanon, on
Saturday, November 10, 2012,
died peacefully at home after a
short illness. Born in 1926 to the
late Michael and Anna Janoski.
Beloved wife of the late Charles
Henry Wheeler for 46 years;
loving mother of C. Robert
Wheeler (Linda), Barbara
Edenfield and Elizabeth Shaffer;
sister of Francis Janoski (Joann)
and the late Martin and Michael
Janoski, Dolores Gigliotti and
Regina Pyszczynski; grandmother
of Andrew, Timothy, Michael and
Katherine Wheeler, Caroline
Shaffer and the late Erik Charles
Edenfield; also survived by
numerous nieces and nephews.
Vern was a homemaker who
lived all of her life in Mount
Lebanon. She kept an immaculate
home and pristine garden, as
flowers were her passion. She also
enjoyed her bingo nights. Friends
will be welcomed at
LAUGHLIN MEMORIAL CHAPEL ,
222 Washington Road, Mount
Lebanon, Wednesday 3 p.m. until
time of Blessing Service at 6 p.m.
Interment private. In lieu of
flowers, contributions may be
made to the Alzheimer’s
Foundation, 1100 Liberty Avenue,
Ste. E-201, Pgh., PA 15222, or
Animal Friends, 562 Camp
Horne Road, Pgh., PA 15237.
www.laughlinfuneralhome.com
Send condolences at post-gazette.com/gb
YAMBER
ALICE B. NALESNICK
Age 90, of West Mifflin,
formerly of Imperial, PA, on
Sunday morning, November 11,
2012. Beloved wife of the late
Joseph Yamber and the late
Edward Nalesnick; beloved
mother of Edward Nalesnick and
wife, Lin and Carol Bires and
husband, Jeffery; cherished
grandmother of Carrie Lynn
Theiss and husband, Daniel;
adored great-grandmother of
Madelyn Eve Theiss; sister of Ruth
Daughenbaugh, Edie Ergen and the
late Eileen Stefanski, James Quinn
and Ralph Quinn; also survived by
several nieces and nephews.
Family to receive friends at the
WHARTON-HERRICK FUNERAL
H O M E , Edward M. Herrick
Funeral Director/Owner, 951 Cliff
Mine Rd., N. Fayette Twp.,
Imperial, PA, 724-695-7332, on
Tues. 7-9 p.m. and Wed. 2-4 and
7-9 p.m., where a Funeral Service
will take place Thurs. 11 a.m.
followed by interment Valley
Cemetery. It is respectfully
requested, memorial donations
be sent to either Amity
Presbyterian Church or Light of
Life Rescue Mission or the
Hillman Cancer Center.
Send condolences at post-gazette.com/gb
In Memoriam
Send condolences at post-gazette.com/gb
WAGNER
NANCY (DOUGLASS)
After a long illness on Monday,
November 12, 2012, age 79,
formerly of Mt. Oliver and
Beechview Manor High Rise. Wife
of the late Robert P. Wagner, Sr.;
loving mother of Michael Wagner,
Robert P. Wagner, Jr., Patti Ann
Stone, Raymond Wagner,
Deborah Wagner McGrail;
survived by grandchildren,
great-grandchildren, nieces and
nephews. Friends received
Wednesday 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. at
the
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JULIUS FRANK
Nov. 13, 1923 - Jan. 11, 2006
BIRTHDAY REMEMBRANCE
Unforgettable you.
It’s lonely here without you, Jule.
Miss you very much, love you
more, Betty.
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PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE ! TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2012 ! WWW.POST-GAZETTE.COM
ROB ROGERS
Founded 1786
Paul Block, publisher, 1927-1941
Paul Block Jr., co-publisher, 1942-1987
William Block, co-publisher, 1942-1989
William Block Jr., co-publisher, 1990-2001
John Robinson Block
Publisher and editor-in-chief
David M. Shribman, executive editor and vice-president
Susan L. Smith, managing editor
Tom Waseleski, editorial page editor
Mary C. Leonard, deputy managing editor
Joseph Pepe, president
Petraeus’s exit
His affair hurts family members and U.S. policy
T
learned before in cases that involved
senior officials, including former President Bill Clinton, a messy private life
that becomes public can cripple one’s
effectiveness.
If Mr. Petraeus had been more
adroit— such as not leaving signs of
the affair in his email — he might have
been able to get away with it, even if
he shouldn’t have.
It has to be said that given his distinguished performance in Iraq and
Afghanistan and the major role he
has played over the years in developing U.S. military doctrine, particularly in the realm of counterterrorism,
his exit from U.S. policymaking is a
loss to the country. But it was necessary.
Mr. Petraeus’s resignation is illtimed as the president prepares for
other vacancies in his national security team, at secretary of state, secretary
of the treasury, possibly national security adviser and probably secretary of
defense. Although Mr. Petraeus’s exit
gives Mr. Obama a free hand to move
fresh talent in that area to meet the
nation’s needs, the CIA position is a
key one for the country and should be
filled with care.
he saddest victims of the extramarital affair of retired
U.S. Army Gen. David E. Petraeus, who resigned Friday
as director of the CIA, are the families
concerned.
His partner in the relationship was
his biographer and reserve Army officer Paula Broadwell, who has a husband and two children. Mr. Petraeus
and his wife of 38 years, Holly Knowlton Petraeus, have two adult children.
Others may be damaged by the episode,
including Jill Kelley, who accused Ms.
Broadwell of harassing her by email,
the incident that led to the FBI investigation that unmasked Mr. Petraeus’s
affair. These people were all collateral
damage in the inevitable Washington
personnel drone strike that brought
down the CIA director.
He had to go. His mistake in carrying on the relationship with Ms.
Broadwell could not but call into question his overall judgment, including
the intelligence advice and analysis
he was providing President Barack
Obama. That is not to say that people,
including those in senior government
service, do not have a right to personal lives. But, as the United States has
Tax-exempt land
County council’s look should be broad-gauged
As more land in Pittsburgh and
Allegheny County is gobbled up by
nonprofit corporations, it’s worth reexamining the financial impact of so
much tax-exempt property, as Allegheny County Council plans to do at a
public hearing Dec. 5.
UPMC, the region’s largest health
care network, is the county’s single
largest property owner with
$1.6 billion in holdings and
86 percent of it tax-exempt,
according to a Post-Gazette
investigative series. Other
large “charitable” enterprises, including Highmark
insurance, the West Penn Allegheny Health System and
the University of Pittsburgh,
also have handsome real estate portfolios.
Under a state tax system in which
school districts, counties and municipalities get a major source of their
revenue from property tax collections,
it is necessary that every land owner
and service user bear its share of the
load. Unfortunately, a weak state law
favors the interests of non-profits, including a large one like UPMC with a
$10 billion global operation.
That’s why council is right to scrutinize how to treat — and, ideally, how to
tax — the property of nonprofits.
But the county hearing comes when
the Service Employees International Union is trying
to represent various UPMC
workers. Councilman John
DeFazio, a district director
and executive board member
of the United Steel Workers,
will chair the meeting.
Given the backdrop of labor politics, the event should
not be a club aimed at UPMC,
but a lens through which a
broad system of tax exemption and its
public impact gets close examination.
Council members can do the county
and state a great service, or they can
politicize the issue for narrow gain.
Sealed for a reason
America’s elite fighters must resist the profit motive
Last year when members of Navy
SEAL Team 6 burst into Osama bin
Laden’s compound last year, it was
the culmination of months of secrecy
and years of planning. No one saw it
coming, including the most elusive terrorist mastermind in the world. The
SEALs killed bin Laden and spirited
his body out of Pakistan.
It was a daring military operation
that made instant folk heroes out of
the highly disciplined, but secretive
American warriors. Although SEAL
Team 6 has dozens of members, none
of those who were on the raid stepped
forward to be identified in media reports. The whole team took credit for
killing bin Laden because the mission
was bigger than any one person.
Even President Barack Obama
wasn’t told the identity of the member
who actually pulled the trigger that
took bin Laden’s life because of the
team’s strict adherence to its code of
anonymity and silence, to which all
members become signatories.
Since the raid on bin Laden’s compound, some members of the elite
fighting unit have acted uncharacteristically. Earlier this year, a member of
the team that participated in the raid
wrote a firsthand account of that fateful night, which formed the core of the
book “No Easy Day,” without clearing
it with the Pentagon. The author was
accused of disclosing classified information and violating his nondisclosure agreement.
Last week, military officials said
that seven members of SEAL Team 6,
including one involved in the bin Laden raid, were punished for disclosing
classified information to the maker
of the “Medal of Honor: Warfighter”
video game. Four other SEALs are under investigation for similar violations
of non-disclosure. The Pentagon also
accuses them of sharing information
about weapon modifications unique to
their unit to the toy maker to make the
video game more realistic.
The punishment consists of letters
of reprimand that will prevent the
men from advancing in rank. They
have also been docked half a month’s
pay. This will send a signal to all members of the team, both retired and active, that spilling military secrets for
glory and profit will not be tolerated.
Such behavior puts future missions in
jeopardy when potential foes can see
SEAL Team 6’s methods and tactics on
a computer screen or read about them
in a book.
The nation appreciates stoic warriors who are content to work in the
shadows in order to keep the country
safe. For that reason some of America’s elite fighters must be reminded
that silence is golden.
EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS
Editorials reflect the collective opinion of the Post-Gazette editorial board. In addition to the
publisher and editor-in-chief and the editorial page editor, the board comprises Reg Henry,
deputy editorial page editor; Susan Mannella, associate editor; Tony Norman, associate editor;
and Dan Simpson, associate editor.
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Visit Rob Rogers’ Cartoon Blog at post-gazette.com/robrogers
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
The new parking meters are tough to read
I read with amusement this Nov. 5
article “Learning Curve Proves Too
Tough for Parkers at New Meters.” On
a recent Friday evening my husband
and I went to Phipps Conservatory and
Botanical Gardens. We parked right in
front and saw the new meter. We went
over to see whether payment was due
after 6 p.m. We must have looked quite
comical trying to read the instructions in the dark. There is absolutely
no way of reading the screen once the
sun has set.
Luckily, I have a flashlight app on
my iPhone, so there we were shining
my phone in order to view the screen.
And now that we have changed the
clocks back, money will definitely be
due when it is dark outside.
We think the new meters are a great
idea, but the city better think about
charging only during daylight hours.
JOYCE OFFERMAN
Point Breeze
Difficult for seniors
I am wondering if the new payment
machines for parking were tested with
senior citizens and the handicapped
before being purchased. Remembering one’s license plate number is the
least of problems, having to walk to
the nearest machine is — then it is
often the case that bikes are padlocked
to the station restricting access.
The reflection of light in the screen
has been cited. Another problem is
the amount of finger or hand strength
needed to punch the buttons.
All in all, its not clear who is helped
by the new machines.
ANN de KLERK
Squirrel Hill
Conservative denial
I was driving around Central Pennsylvania one recent weekend and saw
dozens of yard signs blaming “Obama”
and “regulation” for the woes of the
coal industry. It’s odd that these areas
don’t recognize competition when
they see it. With all the fracking going
on, corporations are switching from
coal to the cheaper natural gas. But
it seems typical that when they can’t
compete, these areas suddenly want
government help and relief from
health and safety regulations.
I read a similar article about a
Republican majority on a congressional committee trying to suppress
a report they commissioned because
it doesn’t support their belief that tax
breaks to the rich will support jobs.
The willingness of conservatives to
deny reality when it doesn’t fit their
ideology never ceases to amaze me.
They start by denying evolutionary
history, even though that history supplies the very gas and oil resources
they are exploiting, and finish by
denying economic realities.
JIM MORGAN
Squirrel Hill
Honest review
I read with interest the Oct. 28
Forum piece “Will It All Come Down
to Coal?” and found it very worthy of
consideration. The timing was unfortunate as it appeared during an election fight. Rather, this issue and other
energy policies are quite basic to our
national well-being and deserve nonpartisan consideration.
What about miners on political TV
ads complaining about new regulations? Their point was quite valid. In
2011, there were more than 8,000 people employed in Pennsylvania mining.
Average wages were about $73,000
annually. That equals about one-half
billion dollars in earnings. With a
weak economy, can that be ignored?
Another issue was carbon dioxide and global warming. According
to the BP energy review, our nation
accounted for 13.5 percent of the
world’s coal consumption. China
consumed 49.4 percent and India 7.9
percent of the world’s coal, over four
times our usage.
Natural gas is given as the answer.
With current prices under $4/mmBtu
it is an option for electric generation.
But, for how long? The United States
will become an exporter of natural gas
within five to seven years — as much
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as 10 percent of domestic production.
This will surely impact price.
Both solar and wind are mentioned
in the article. Most experts see wind
power as a more realistic renewable
resource. Yet, how do you store electricity? And given our environmental laws new hydroelectric plants are
not a current option, though widely
embraced elsewhere.
The coal article is a good start.
What is really needed is a full review
of our country’s policies on energy, the
environment and the economy — one
committed to honesty. If we increase
our energy costs while competing
nations don’t, what’s the impact on our
economy? If we do nothing, what future
weather problems are we inviting?
This is the time for statesmen to put
the country above politics.
TOM GRANEY
New Wilmington
In the bubble
In response to Colleen Hroncich
(“This Election Has Me Fearing for
the Future,” Nov. 9 letter), just as you
and your husband are shocked, so are
Mitt Romney and Paul Ryan. It was
reported that the Romney campaign
told the press they didn’t have a concession speech prepared.
The problem is you all live inside
the Fox bubble — you only hear and
believe what comes to you from rightwing TV, radio and print. Nate Silver
predicted this — he had Obama at
a 90.6 percent chance of re-election,
yet the Romney campaign chose to
ignore that, possibly didn’t even know
it existed because of the bubble. Karl
Rove stayed in the bubble even when
Fox told him it was over — of course,
he had a lot to fear — so much money,
so little return.
If their campaign is so incompetent
that they refuse to believe what is staring them in the face, why would you
want them running the country?
He lost because he Etch-a-Sketched,
he lost because he wouldn’t show his
tax returns, he lost because President
Obama’s policies have worked, he lost
because Republicans tried to intimidate voters, he lost because so many
women thought the abortion issue was
settled, he lost because Mr. Obama is
a better manager. Maybe that community organizing gave him a better
understanding of the world than the
view from Mr. Romney’s 1 percent.
You needn’t fear for your children
or grandchildren. Mr. Obama’s reelection is not the end of America —
it’s only so in right-wing land. Please
get yourselves out of the bubble.
ELAINE SMITH
Cecil
Gerrymandered
Pennsylvania will have 18 representatives in the 113th Congress, 13
Republicans and five Democrats. This
may seem surprising because Democrats won the presidency, the Senate
and the statewide offices.
The conventional explanation, reiterated by the Post-Gazette recently, is
that people split their votes because
they are more conservative at the
local level. This explanation is wrong
because the total number of votes cast
for Democratic candidates for Congress in Pennsylvania (2.7 million)
was actually larger by about 75,000
than the total number of votes cast for
Republican congressional candidates.
Nationally, 53.9 million votes have
been counted for Democratic House
candidates and only 53.4 million for
Republican candidates.
The real reason for the disproportionate number of Republican
members of Congress is that the congressional districts have been gerrymandered. This essentially disenfranchised Democrats. The fairest distribution of seats would be 216 Republicans and 219 Democrats nationally
and nine each in Pennsylvania.
There is likely to be continued gridlock in the federal government. The
GOP will undoubtedly say that they
have a mandate to continue this gridlock, but they really do not.
The real reason that the GOP has a
majority and will be able to continue
to play an obstructionist role in Congress is that they have assiduously gerrymandered congressional districts to
thwart the majority of Americans
JOHN F. NAGLE
Point Breeze
Don’t change
the air toxic
guidelines
While Allegheny County Executive Rich Fitzgerald was happy the
air toxics guidelines passed, he
stated, “There was an amendment
put in there that shouldn’t be there,
and will most likely be taken out at
the next meeting. That was a mistake.” I could not disagree more. As
Donald Burke, who chaired the Air
Toxics Review Committee, stated,
“[The original guidelines] are scientifically sound and were achieved
after reaching a consensus [with
industry input].”
Science was invented and
changes were made behind closed
doors to these originally agreed
upon guidelines. The most troubling change replaced the industry
standard of measuring pollution at
the applicant’s property line with
something they named a “public
exposure boundary” defined as
“the point of the nearest regularly
occupied or likely to be regularly
occupied (at least six hours per
day for a minimum of 30 days per
calendar year) structure beyond
the applicant’s property line.
Googling, I could find no other
examples of “public exposure
boundary” in any guidelines or
scientific publications. In addition,
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the Air Toxics Review Committee
examined numerous air quality
policies and could find no other
examples of such an imaginative
and unfriendly standard for public health. All use property line.
The invented standards that Mr.
Fitzgerald seems to prefer are significantly weaker and fail to adequately protect the public health.
Under the adopted guidelines, no
permit from the past three years
would have been denied.
Such loose standards create
uncertain legal ramifications. Consider the impact on neighboring
landowners’ rights. A permit issued
next to undeveloped land creates a
moving target. Where is the nearest
building today? Tomorrow? This
uncertainty significantly impacts
the landowner’s ability to use their
land for future development. The
guidelines should stand as adopted.
MICHAEL BETT
Ben Avon
The writer is a Ben Avon council
member.
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PERSPECTIVES
EZRA KLEIN
DAN K. THOMASSON
America’s unnoticed revolution
So smart, yet so dumb
Step back for a minute, and consider the past few years
Petraeus trusted his fate to the notoriously untrustworthy Internet
S
ix days isn’t a long time
to digest a presidential
election, all that came
before it and all that’s
likely to come after. But it’s long
enough to get a bit of perspective.
Max Weber wrote that “politics is the strong and slow boring
of hard boards.” It is not a vocation that rewards impatience.
Progress is slow. It’s tough. It
requires compromises and is
marked by disappointments. It’s
incremental even when it needs
to be transformational. At least,
that’s how it usually is.
Step back and take an accounting of these last few years:
The United States of America,
a land where slaves were kept
150 years ago and bathrooms
were segregated as recently
as 50 years ago, elected and
reelected our first black president. We passed and ratified a
universal health care system.
We saw the first female speaker
of the House, the first Hispanic
Supreme Court justice and the
first openly gay member of the
Senate. We stopped a Great
Depression, rewrote the nation’s
financial regulations and nearly
defaulted on our debt for the first
time in our history. Connecticut, Iowa, Massachusetts, New
Hampshire, New York, Vermont,
Maine, Maryland, Washington
and the District of Columbia
legalized gay marriage, and the
president and the vice president both proclaimed their support. Colorado and Washington
legalized marijuana. We killed
the most dangerous terrorist
in the world and managed two
wars. We’ve seen inequality and
debt skyrocket to some of the
highest levels in American history. We passed a stimulus and
investment bill that will transform everything from medical
records to education and began a
drone campaign that will likely
be seen as an epochal shift in the
way America conducts war.
Americans of good faith disagree over the worth of these initiatives and the nature of these
milestones. None of us know the
verdict that history will render.
But we can say with certainty
that the pace of change has been
breathlessly fast. We have toppled so many barriers, passed
so many reforms, completed
so many long quests, begun so
many experiments, that even
those of us who’ve been paying
attention have become inured to
how much has happened.
It is common, for instance, to
hear pundits wonder why the
president didn’t invest in longterm infrastructure after the
financial crisis or move Medicare beyond fee-for-service to
cut the debt, either forgetting or
never knowing that the stimulus
was one of the largest infrastructure investments in the nation’s
history and that the Affordable
Care Act is the most ambitious
effort to move American health
care towards a pay-for-quality
paradigm ever mounted.
Another complaint is that
the pace and scale of change has
been, if anything, insufficient.
The stimulus should’ve been
bigger, the health reforms more
ambitious, the largest banks broken apart, the wars either finished more swiftly or expanded
more decisively. All that may be
true, but it doesn’t obviate the
remarkable pace and scale of the
changes that have come.
More troublesome is that
even once change has happened,
it takes time for it to be felt. The
health care law, for instance,
won’t go fully into effect until
2014. And in some cases, the
extraordinary efforts were
meant to keep something from
happening. Our success in stopping another Great Depression
will be studied by economists
for years to come, but in real
people’s lives, this meant less
change, not more, for which we
should be thankful.
Political journalism, meanwhile, is built to obscure change
once it’s happened. The demands
of reporting the news require us
to focus on what’s being done,
rather than what’s been done
(notice how, mere days after a
presidential election, we have
already moved on to talking
about the Petraeus affair). The
focus on conflict elevates voices
that argue that we haven’t done
nearly enough, or that what
we’ve done wasn’t worth doing.
The community of the media
encourages a kind of jaded cynicism — you’re always safer pretending to have seen it all before
than to never have seen anything like it.
There is a theory in evolutionary biology called “punctuated
equilibrium.” It holds that most
species don’t change much for
long periods of time, but then
they change dramatically, in
rapid bursts, over geologically
short periods of time.
Political scientists Frank
Baumgartner and Bryan Jones
have argued that “punctuated
equilibrium” describes the path
of political systems, too. Typically, politics is held in stasis,
with little progress being made
in the slow boring of those hard
boards. But when change does
come, it’s not a steady process
of incremental advances but a
breathless flurry in which the
boards split all at once.
Whether we intended to or
not, whether it was sufficient or
not, whether we liked it or not,
we have been living through a
remarkable period of political
change in these last few years.
We have split so many hard
boards that we’re no longer surprised when they crack in half,
and we mainly wonder why we
haven’t gotten through more of
them, or why we didn’t choose
different ones.
But viewed against most other
eras in American life, the pace
of policy change in these last few
years has been incredibly fast.
Historians, looking back from
more quiescent periods, will
marvel at all that we have lived
through. Activists, frustrated
at their inability to shake their
countrymen out of their tranquility, will wish they’d been
born in a moment when things
were actually getting done, a
moment like this one.
Ezra Klein, an MSNBC news
analyst, is a columnist for The
Washington Post and Bloomberg
View.
CHRISTINA WALSH
Up with food trucks
Pittsburgh should free its eatery entrepreneurs
T
he election is finally
over. Whether you’re
celebrating, enraged or
just relieved not to have
to suffer through yet another
campaign ad, let’s forget about
the divisiveness of politics and
focus on something that we can
all appreciate for its diversity
and differences: food!
For the past several years,
chefs across the country have
been putting their food on
wheels and hitting the streets in
gourmet food trucks. This delicious trend has made it here to
the Steel City, and if you haven’t
had the opportunity to visit one
of these mobile kitchens, find
one immediately.
Unfortunately, that will prove
difficult. Compared to similarly
sized cities, Pittsburgh has
very few food trucks. This isn’t
because of the city’s climate, or
its hilly terrain — but its laws.
In Pittsburgh, trucks may not
park at metered spaces, cannot
stay in one place for more than 30
minutes and are forbidden from
operating within 500 feet of a restaurant that sells similar food.
These and other restrictions
make it nearly impossible to run
a successful food truck, and less
competition means higher prices
and fewer lunchtime choices for
workers throughout the city.
These laws aren’t just keeping food trucks away from you.
They are also unconstitutional.
Laws like Pittsburgh’s are frequently passed at the behest of
a few brick-and-mortar restaurants that want the government
to “protect” them from the competition posed by mobile counterparts. But having the city
pick winners and losers is not
a legitimate use of government
power, and courts that consider
similar laws routinely strike
them down.
Fortunately, Pittsburgh Councilman Bill Peduto has introduced legislation to fix the city’s
food-truck laws. Also fortunate
is the fact that many Pittsburgh
restaurants are rallying around
food trucks, embracing these
new mobile kitchens as welcome
additions to the city’s thriving
culinary scene and a new way to
reach their customers.
Pittsburgh should embrace
food trucks. They put people to
work, enrich communities and
serve as “eyes on the street”
that help make public rights-ofway safer and friendlier. Some
brick-and-mortar restaurants
may argue that trucks threaten
their businesses but cities that
have good food-truck laws also
have vibrant restaurant scenes.
Food trucks aren’t “unfair competition,” because any advantage that a food truck’s mobility
might provide is more than offset by its many disadvantages,
including no seating, no climate
control, no extra storage space
and no booze.
Governments have a role to
play in regulating trucks, but
it should be limited to ensuring
public health and safety. Food
trucks should be allowed to
operate wherever their presence
won’t cause excessive congestion. They should be required to
be sanitary and safe, just as restaurants are. And they should
be responsible for the litter they
generate. These are legitimate
regulations that the government
has the right to impose; everything else should be wiped clean
from the Pittsburgh city code.
So why should you care about
where and when food trucks can
operate in Pittsburgh?
The first and probably most
obvious reason to the hungry
reader: More choices!
The second and more fundamental reason: These seemingly small, local issues are
what define us as a nation of
opportunity, a place where
entrepreneurs of all stripes can
try to climb their way up the
economic ladder. We can’t allow
the government to cut the ladder
out from any entrepreneur, big
or small, stationary or mobile.
Nobody should be subject to
arbitrary, anti-competitive and
unconstitutional abuses of government power.
Small enterprises represent
big dreams. Eat a hot dog at
Franktuary or a pierogi from
the Pierogi Truck. While you’re
enjoying your food (and you
will), talk to the owners about
their struggles to succeed —
especially with so many roadblocks in the way — and their
aspirations to grow.
Now, back to that election.
It’s easy to feel as though your
impact is lost in the race for the
president. But you can have a
very real impact at the local
level — by becoming a champion for your entrepreneurial
neighbors, starting with food
trucks. Make a phone call to City
Council. Sign a petition (you can
find one at www.pghmobilefood.
com). These small actions can
produce demonstrable, satisfying change.
Support Pittsburgh’s food
trucks and help them make
their way up the economic ladder — and hopefully, to a curb
near you.
Christina Walsh is director
of activism and coalitions for
the Institute for Justice, a public
interest law firm based in Arlington, Va., that promotes economic
liberty (www.ij.org).
T
he title of this saga probably should be “Why Do
Smart People Do Obviously Dumb Things?”
Probably the best advice my
father ever gave me was never to
write anything you wouldn’t be
comfortable seeing printed on the
front page of your newspaper. It’s
not a complicated rule and should
be followed by everyone, especially those who dwell in high
places with a long distance to fall.
That is the classic definition
of tragedy and Gen. David Petraeus fits it almost perfectly having ended a glorious career in
an inglorious fashion in the time
it takes to read a few emails he
never should have written in the
first place. How incredible that
the head of the CIA, where everything is so secret the person in
the next office often hasn’t a clue
what is going on two doors down,
would trust his future to a device
that is notoriously unsecure —
the Internet.
Forget about the morality or
lack of it involved here. Adultery is never a justifiable act. It
is not surprising, however, that
a man of his stature under great
pressure during long absences
from home on the front lines of
national defense would look for
creature pleasures with a smart,
vital, engaging, type-A personality 20 years his junior. Dumb?
Certainly. But not rare. Have you
not heard of Gen. Dwight Eisenhower and Kay Summersby?
That Gen. Petraeus’s part-time
companion turned out to be a jealous and indiscreet handful is not
unusual in these situations. Ask
Bill Clinton.
What is shocking is that a
normally cautious man who has
spent a lifetime in sensitive positions would fail to recognize the
danger of his actions or the pain it
would cause others if discovered.
Indeed, it is amazing that Paula
Broadwell, his devoted biographer who also is schooled in
intelligence matters, would recklessly challenge by email another
woman she perceived as a rival
for the good general’s attention.
The second woman read it as a
threat and reported it. Hello, FBI,
so long, general.
But, as we all know, sexual
chemistry tops caution almost
every time, even among those
who know what’s at stake. Some
reach heights that lead them to
believe they are immune from
the self-restraint any prudent person would follow. Others are just
so caught up in the emotion, they
are careless. Gen. Petraeus may
have been a little of both.
If those close to Gen. Petraeus
noticed the electricity between
him and Ms. Broadwell, which
they reportedly did, they apparently failed to warn him — not
unusual for subordinates when
dealing with superiors at that
exalted level. Who would feel
comfortable enough to broach
such a subject with a four-star
eminence? In fact, the head of the
FBI and the attorney general of
the United States blinked several
times before telling the national
intelligence director and the
president. Agents already had
determined it was a matter not
involving any breach or threat to
national security.
Whether or not the president
should have accepted Gen. Petraeus’s resignation is bound to be
debated for some time. There had
been friction between them over
Afghanistan. Gen. Petraeus’s
departure is a sizable loss to the
government.
Once again, the EisenhowerSummersby relationship comes
to mind. Chief of Staff George
C. Marshall reportedly rejected
Eisenhower’s request for permission to divorce his wife and marry
Summersby. The implication was
clear. Summersby would no longer be in the picture nor would
Eisenhower if the liaison continued. The relationship ended and
the willowy Irish beauty who
had been Ike’s driver walked
away. She wrote about the true
nature of their affair only after
Eisenhower’s death and when she
herself was dying. Eisenhower
went on to the leadership role that
helped end the war in Europe.
As a news executive, I spent
more than a year visiting newspaper and television properties
lecturing on libel, slander and
other subjects, including Internet
security. The message delivered
repeatedly was don’t trust emails.
My father’s advice came through
loud and clear. What a hard lesson
Gen. Petraeus has had to learn.
Dan K. Thomasson is former
editor of Scripps Howard News
Service ([email protected]).
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PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE ! TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2012 ! WWW.POST-GAZETTE.COM
WEATHER REPORT
TOMORROW
TODAY
HIGH: 44
LOW: 26
A.M. RUSH: 30
LUNCH: 40
P.M. RUSH: 42
First
Nov 20
Full
Nov 28
Mostly sunny. Winds WSW at 4-8 mph.
0
300
Intervals of clouds and sun. Winds NNE
at 4-8 mph.
Erie
38/28
32
0-50: Good, 51-100: Moderate, 101-150: Unhealthy
for sensitive groups, 151-200: Unhealthy,
201-300: Very Unhealthy, 301-500: Hazardous
Source: Pa. Dept. of Environmental Protection
Cleveland
40/28
(today’s forecast in feet)
ALLEGHENY
Franklin, Pa. ............................................. 5.14 R
Parker, Pa. ................................................ 4.05 R
Sharpsburg, Pa. ..................................... 11.59 R
MONONGAHELA
Gray’s Landing, Pa. ................................ 10.46 R
CHEAT
Parsons, W.Va. ......................................... 5.68 R
WEST FORK
Clarksburg, W.Va. ..................................... 4.34 F
YOUGHIOGHENY
Sutersville, Pa. ......................................... 4.47 R
BEAVER
Beaver Falls, Pa. ....................................... 5.17 R
OHIO
Pittsburgh, Pa. ....................................... 16.52 R
Dashields Dam ...................................... 14.94 R
Montgomery Dam, Pa. .......................... 13.00 R
Pike Is. Lock and Dam, W.Va. ................. 13.90 R
Bradford
36/22
Scranton
46/27
Youngstown
40/25
Canton
40/26
Altoona
42/26
Washington
Johnstown
44/23
41/24
Parkersburg
46/25
Last
Dec 6
Bedford
47/28
Lancaster
York 50/30
48/28
Uniontown
42/26
Cumberland
46/31
Oakland, Md.
40/24
Calgary
32/19
Seattle
51/43
90s
80s
70s
Portland
55/44
60s
50s
Hagerstown
47/31
Frederick
50/28
40s
30s
20s
Salt Lake City
45/33
San Francisco
66/51
10s
0s
-10s
Los Angeles
81/54
Precipitation
Rain
Las Vegas
65/44
Showers
Santa Fe
53/26
Phoenix
76/53
T-storms
Flurries
Ice
Cold
Warm
Dallas
62/38
El Paso
64/36
Chihuahua
68/35
Stationary
Shown are today’s noon positions of
weather systems and precipitation.
Temperature bands are highs for the day.
San Antonio
62/41
Montreal
Portland
42/27
54/30
Toronto
Albany
38/30
46/27
Boston
Buffalo
Detroit
38/30 New York 59/37
41/26
51/36
Philadelphia
Cleveland
51/36
40/28
Pittsburgh
44/26
Washington
51/36
St. Louis
48/33
Oklahoma City
57/32
Snow
Fronts
Minneapolis
40/30
Kansas City
54/33
Houston
64/42
Monterrey
68/51
Athens
Auckland
Baghdad
Beijing
Berlin
Bermuda
Bogota
Buenos Aires
Cairo
Copenhagen
Dublin
Frankfurt
Hong Kong
Jerusalem
Johannesburg
Kinshasa
London
Madrid
Manila
Mexico City
Montreal
Moscow
Nairobi
Nassau
New Delhi
Oslo
Paris
Rio de Janeiro
Rome
Seoul
Singapore
Sydney
Tokyo
Toronto
Vancouver
Vienna
Warsaw
Today
Hi Low W
70 58 pc
62 54 r
72 55 sh
43 25 s
46 37 s
75 69 sh
65 46 t
72 59 s
76 62 pc
47 44 pc
55 45 pc
54 38 s
82 72 s
62 50 s
78 57 t
90 75 t
57 46 pc
57 41 pc
86 77 t
73 49 pc
42 27 pc
39 26 c
83 57 pc
82 72 pc
86 57 pc
43 38 pc
55 36 s
75 69 r
66 54 pc
46 34 sh
86 77 r
76 61 s
64 54 c
38 30 c
51 42 r
53 38 pc
43 28 pc
Charlotte
54/36
Nashville
53/30
Atlanta
58/41 Jacksonville
76/56
Mobile
63/38
Orlando
New Orleans Tampa
83/64
83/63
64/47
Bradenton
Miami
81/63
82/69
Today
Tomorrow
Today
Tomorrow
Hi Low W
Hi Low W
Hi Low W
Hi Low W
Los Angeles
81 54 s
81 56 pc
Albany
46 27 r
43 27 s
Louisville
47 31 s
52 29 pc
Albuquerque
53 31 s
57 33 pc
Memphis
54 34 s
57 36 s
Allentown
50 29 r
49 28 s
Miami
82 69 pc
82 70 t
Anchorage
29 25 c
33 30 sn
Milwaukee
38 30 pc
45 31 pc
Atlanta
58 41 pc
54 42 pc
Minneapolis
40 30 s
47 30 pc
Atlantic City
54 39 sh
49 37 pc
Baltimore
53 34 r
50 34 s
Myrtle Beach
70 44 pc
60 44 pc
Nashville
53 30 s
54 31 s
Birmingham
58 35 s
58 40 pc
New Orleans
64 47 s
65 47 pc
Boise
48 34 pc
50 32 c
Boston
59 37 sh
47 36 pc
New York City
52 36 sh
50 38 s
Norfolk
59 42 sh
52 42 pc
Buffalo
38 30 pc
41 32 pc
Oklahoma City
57 32 s
61 34 s
Charleston, S.C.
71 48 pc
61 48 pc
Omaha
50 27 s
53 29 pc
Charleston, W.Va.
46 27 pc
53 30 pc
Orlando
83 63 pc
80 64 t
Charlotte
54 36 pc
54 36 pc
Philadelphia
52 36 sh
50 35 s
Chicago
41 29 s
47 31 pc
Phoenix
76 53 s
81 53 pc
Cincinnati
46 28 pc
48 28 pc
Portland, Maine
54 30 r
46 30 pc
Cleveland
40 28 pc
42 30 pc
Portland, Ore.
55 44 c
55 42 c
Columbus
44 28 pc
47 28 pc
Providence
58 35 sh
49 34 pc
Dallas
62 38 s
65 38 s
Richmond
53 33 sh
52 32 s
Dayton
44 27 pc
43 27 pc
Sacramento
66 44 c
67 44 c
Denver
52 27 s
55 30 pc
St. Louis
48 33 s
51 33 s
Des Moines
48 32 s
52 32 pc
Salt Lake City
45 33 pc
50 32 pc
Detroit
41 26 pc
41 26 pc
San Diego
76 53 s
73 53 pc
Erie
38 28 sh
43 33 pc
San Francisco
66 51 c
66 50 c
Fairbanks
3 -2 s
11 -6 c
San Juan
87 75 sh
88 75 sh
Grand Rapids
37 26 pc
44 27 pc
Seattle
51 43 r
50 39 c
Greensboro
52 34 pc
51 36 pc
Spokane
40 33 c
42 33 pc
Hartford
54 32 sh
47 31 pc
Syracuse
43 31 r
45 29 pc
Harrisburg
49 31 r
47 31 s
Tampa
83 64 pc
80 63 t
Honolulu
84 72 s
84 72 s
Toledo
42 26 pc
43 27 pc
Houston
64 42 s
68 40 pc
Tucson
75 46 s
79 44 pc
Indianapolis
42 27 s
47 26 pc
Washington, D.C.
51 36 r
50 35 s
Jackson, Miss.
60 33 s
60 34 s
Wheeling
44 27 pc
46 31 pc
Kansas City
54 33 s
54 33 s
Wilmington, Del.
53 34 r
50 34 s
Las Vegas
65 44 s
67 50 pc
U.S. EXTREMES (For the 48 contiguous states yesterday)
High ............................... 84 at Punta Gorda, Fla. Low ................................... -12 at Denton, Mont.
presents
TOWN MEETING
SECOND TERM
OR
SECOND CHANCE?
Monday, December 10 | Heinz History Center | 6:00 pm | Free
Barack Obama’s re-election victory seals his place in history, but the president’s second
term is as much a burden as an achievement. Ahead is the terrifying ``fiscal cliff,’’ but
that is not the only danger facing the president and Congress. Amid party deadlock,
Washington must confront high unemployment and a looming crisis involving Social
Security and Medicare. Precisely seven weeks before the president’s second Inaugural,
our panel of experts examine the Obama legacy – and the Obama challenge.
MODERATOR:
PANELISTS:
David Shribman
Cal Mackenzie
Tracie Mauriello
Susan Page
Paul West
Executive editor of the
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Professor of Government
at Colby College whose
professional work focuses
on governance and public
policy, with a special interest
in the politics of presidential
appointments
Washington bureau
chief for the Pittsburgh
Post-Gazette
Washington bureau chief
for USA Today who has now
covered nine presidential
campaigns and is a regular
analyst on cable news
networks and NPR
National political
correspondent for the
Los Angeles Times, Chicago
Tribune and other Tribune
news organizations
Free admission. To attend, register at www.post-gazette.com/townmeeting or call 412-263-3850.
WWW.POST-GAZETTE.COM/TOWNMEETING
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Tomorrow
Hi Low W
65 58 pc
62 55 sh
70 51 pc
45 23 s
48 36 s
75 69 sh
64 49 r
73 61 s
77 62 s
50 40 s
54 41 pc
50 39 s
79 73 s
64 54 pc
75 56 t
89 73 t
52 40 pc
61 45 pc
87 76 t
69 44 t
39 25 pc
37 35 c
84 58 pc
80 73 pc
86 55 pc
46 36 pc
52 44 s
76 65 r
69 53 pc
45 30 s
86 79 t
77 63 sh
63 50 pc
43 30 pc
47 42 sh
49 40 pc
41 29 pc
Weather (W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy,
sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries,
sn-snow, i-ice.
NATIONAL CITIES
Des Moines
48/32
Chicago
41/29
Omaha
50/27
Denver
52/27
-0s
Baltimore
53/34
As a cold front pushes off to the east a blast of much cooler air will overtake the region today. High pressure will build into the Ohio
Valley from the west leading to partly sunny skies. Temperatures will be 20-25 degrees colder with highs only reaching the lower to
middle 40s. Winds will be from the west at 5-10 mph. The probability of precipitation is near zero percent.
Bismarck
32/15
Rapid City
46/22
Philadelphia
52/36
Washington, DC
51/36
Winnipeg
20/11
Billings
42/29
Boise
48/34
Reading
50/30
Harrisburg
49/31
TODAY’S NATIONAL WEATHER
100s
Stroudsburg
49/28
State College
44/28
Pittsburgh
Weirton
44/26
47/28
Wheeling
Zanesville 44/27
44/24
Morgantown
44/28
Wilkes-Barre
48/28
Lock Haven
46/29
F-Falling; M-Missing; P-Pool; R-Rising; S-Stationary
Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2012
WORLD CITIES
Meadville
38/28
Akron
40/26
RIVER STAGES
110s
Mostly sunny. Winds ENE at 6-12 mph.
Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.
500
Primary pollutant: Ozone
7:05 a.m.
5:05 p.m.
6:40 a.m.
4:55 p.m.
52
34
TODAY’S REGIONAL WEATHER
Yesterday’s Rating:
50 100 150 200
For the most accurate
local weather forecast in
your neighborhood, tune
in to Dennis Bowman, Jeff
Verszyla, and Jon Burnett
SATURDAY
49
32
AIR QUALITY
Today’s Forecast:
SKYWATCH TODAY
MOON PHASES
FRIDAY
46
30
Partly sunny. Winds NE at 4-8 mph.
YESTERDAY’S RECORD
Readings from the Pittsburgh International
Airport through 5 p.m. Nov 12, 2012
TEMPERATURE
High .............................................................. 70
Normal high .................................................. 53
Year ago ........................................................ 60
Record high ........................................ 74 (1949)
Low ............................................................... 55
Normal low ................................................... 36
Year ago ........................................................ 30
Record low ......................................... 17 (1911)
DEPARTURE FROM NORMAL
Yesterday ................................................. +18.1
Month to date ............................................. -3.6
Year to date ............................................... +3.0
HUMIDITY
High ............................................. 87 (at 5 p.m.)
Low .............................................. 38 (at 1 a.m.)
PRECIPITATION (inches)
Yesterday ................................................... trace
Month to date ............................................ 0.15
Normal month to date ............................... 1.22
Departure from normal ............................. -1.07
Year to date ............................................. 35.98
Normal year to date ................................. 33.42
Departure from normal ............................ +2.56
BAROMETER
Yesterday’s high ....................................... 30.20
Yesterday’s low ........................................ 29.96
Sunrise ................................................
Sunset .................................................
Moonrise .............................................
Moonset ..............................................
THURSDAY
44
30
Partly sunny and cooler. Winds W at 4-8 mph.
New
Nov 13
Region forecasts, radar imagery at www.post-gazette.com/weather
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S E E N , S T Y L E & S E R E N D I PI T Y
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TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2012
WHOWHAT
WHEREWHY
The Diane Guest Chair is part
of the new TGW collection by
Mitchell Gold + Bob Williams.
Photos by Kathy Wolfe Photography
Depression
Couture
recycles values
The Kalinda chair is one of the most popular pieces in
the TGW collection. Shown in leather, it is available in
fabric as well.
By Sara Bauknecht
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
What to do with children’s clothes once
they’re stained, snagged or just too small
is not a problem for Kathleen DeMartino.
Others may consider such outfits destined
to be ditched, but this mother of two from
Fox Chapel turns them into a handmadein-Pittsburgh line of girls’ apparel called
Depression Couture.
“It’s taking the incredible ideals of the
Depression housewives, who would look to
remaking things that no longer fit their kids
or themselves,” she says. “That’s where the
name comes from. It’s kind of going back to
the era of feed sack fashion.”
Ms. DeMartino, who has an art degree
from the Center for Creative Studies College
of Art & Design in Detroit, has been sewing
and designing for years. Prior to Depression
Couture, she created and sold PetuniaBaker,
a higher-end collection of children’s clothes.
The idea for her latest fashion endeavor
came when Ms. DeMartino’s daughter, now
10 years old, spilled chocolate milk on her
Julianna Margulies on the set of “The Good Wife.”
GOOD WIFE,
GREAT
FURNITURE
Will’s chair is the most coveted
piece in the collection designed
by “The Good Wife” set
decorator Beth Kushnik.
SEE COUTURE, PAGE C-4
By Patricia Sheridan
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Actress Christine Baranski
is often filmed sitting behind
Diane’s Desk.
HIGHPOINT, N.C. — There are certain movies in
which the rooms are as interesting as the characters.
One that comes to mind is Nancy
Meyers’ 2009 film “It’s Complicated.” The California ranch home
that Meryl Streep lives in was nearly
as enticing as the story line — Alec
Baldwin played the philandering
husband who wants her back.
On the small screen, Beth Kushnick’s set decorating is once again
garnering raves. The apartment,
offices and furnishings she cre- Beth Kushnick
ates for the CBS drama “The Good
Wife” get so much email that the New York designer
has started a blog, “The Good Look of the Good Wife.”
The show’s story line centers around Alicia Florrick (played by Julianna Margulies), who goes back
to work as a defense attorney after her husband, Peter
(Chris Noth), is caught cheating on her. Just as she
SEE FURNITURE, PAGE C-3
Bill Wade/Post-Gazette
PBT dancers Christine Schwaner and Alexandre Silva perform.
Pointe in Time: A Parisian Cabaret
Bill Wade/Post-Gazette photos
Ball chairs Gabriela and David Porges
A stunning setting had close to 400 guests saying “c’est manifique”
Saturday as they entered the Westin Convention Center ballroom for the
Pittsburgh Ballet Theatre ball. The elegant evening featured a spectacular dinner, dancing to Gary Racan and the studio-e Band and, of course,
wonderful performances by PBT’s dancers. Gabriela and David Porges
chaired the benefit, which raised $450,000.
PICT actors Tony Bingham, Bria Walker, Robin Abramson and
Martin Giles
Midnight in Paris
While actors circulated in vintage ’20s attire, guests at the Pittsburgh Irish & Classical Theatre gala Thursday at LeMont Restaurant enjoyed cocktails before adjoining to the dining room with its
spectacular views. Robert Levin and his wife, Kerry Bron chaired
the gala. Honored for their commitment to PICT were BNY Mellon
(represented by Bernadette Smith) and Marina Stockdale, a teacher
in the South Side Area School District, Beaver County.
Questions about delivery or service?
Call 1-800-228-NEWS (6397)
E-mail: [email protected] ! Phone: 412-263-1978 ! Web: post-gazette.com/lifestyle
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PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE ! TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2012 ! WWW.POST-GAZETTE.COM
PBT’s Parisian Cabaret
Terrence Orr and Marianna Tcherkassky
Lynn and Ron Davenport
Becky and Herb Torbin
Janet and Harris Ferris
Marylynn Uricchio’s
Carolyn and Bill Byham
Bill Wade/Post-Gazette photos
Kitty Hillman and PBT principal Julia Erickson
PICT’s Midnight in Paris
Robert Levin and Kerry Bron
Bernadette Smith and Marina Stockdale
Bill Wade/Post-Gazette photos
Eugene and Sandy O’Sullivan and Andrew Paul
Designer Dress Days
Joan Reich, Sheryl Braver and Rita Tauberg
Mindy Hedges and Hilary Spatz
Michael Henninger/Post-Gazette photos
Chair Henry Krakovsky and honorary chair Kiya Tomlin
Red Shoe Ball
Michael and Twilley Delligatti
Joe and Diana Rockey
Kent and Eleanor Reigel with Ronald McDonald
John Colombo photos
Garbage Bag
Gala
Darryl Ford Williams
Walter Hales Jr., Judge Kim Clark, Joy Maxberry and Dwayne Woodruff
Across Town
Dr. Joseph Losee
2
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Richard Keitel
3
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Ruthane Reginella, Judy Woffington and Kay Shirk
Robert Kozel, W&J president Tori Harding-Smith and Kevin McMahon
A rosy glow filled the Westin Convention Center ballroom Saturday,
causing the nearly 400 guests to gush
“c’est manifique” as they arrived
for Pittsburgh Ballet Theatre’s
Pointe in Time Ball. The theme
was “A Parisian Cabaret,” and the
spectacular dinner would have made
Julia Child proud. Seared scallops,
herb-rubbed filet or cornish hen, slowroasted tomato salad, a cheese plate
and French pastries — everything
was perfection and that was before
the spirited crowd took to the dance
floor with encouragement from Gary
Racan and the studio-e Band.
Of course, the ball supports ballet, and the evening began with a
wonderful sampler of performances
by PBT dancers. Other company
members mingled in black tie, giving
guests a chance to meet them both
during cocktails (an absinthe bar
was a novelty) and the silent auction
that preceded the live version. With
offerings like a trip to New York or
Paris, a two-week adventure in South
Africa and more than 70 bottles of
French wine, it was no wonder the
auction fetched more than $100,000
under Jim Roddey’s experienced
gavel. By evening’s end the gala total
was $450,000, but a truer measure of
success was how much fun the guests
had and how late many stayed.
Gabriela and EQT CEO David
Porges chaired the ball, lending
their style to the elegant evening. Of
course, PBT executive director Harris Ferris was there with Janet. And
artistic director Terrence Orr and his
wife Marianna Tcherkassky greeted
guests as they arrived. Among them
were Cindy and Murry Gerber (they
hosted the Patron Party), Dr. Michael
and Norma Sobel and Dr. Vonda
Wright with Peter Taglianetti (both
couples underwrote wine gatherings),
Steve and Peggy McKnight, Dr. Freddie and Hilda Fu, Colleen and Denny
Travis, Melanie and Jim Crockard,
Kathleen Miclot, Susan and PG
publisher John Robinson Block, Shelley and Jim Taylor, Steve Webster,
Chuck Snyder and Carol Shriber,
Ed Byrnes, Bill and Vivian Benter,
Donna and Tom Hotopp, Morgan and
Kathy O’Brien, Richard Burkland
and Maureen Kerr, Debbie Dick and
Art Stroyd, Louis Talotta and Clyde
Jones. Those fab flowers were from
Hens and Chicks and that rosy glow?
Martin Potoczny of Luxe Lighting +
Atmospheres.
!
“Midnight in Paris” was the
theme of the Pittsburgh Irish &
Classical Theatre gala Thursday at
LeMont Restaurant. While actors circulated in vintage ’20s attire, the 260
guests perused the silent auction and
enjoyed cocktails before adjourning
to the dining room with its spectacular views. Producing artistic director
Andrew Paul welcomed the crowd
along with gala chairs Robert Levin
(who doubled as emcee) and his wife,
Kerry Bron. Honored for their commitment to PICT were BNY Mellon
(represented by Bernadette Smith)
and Marina Stockdale, a teacher
in the South Side Area School District, Beaver County, who takes her
students to PICT productions. Also
on hand were board chair Eugene
O’Sullivan with Sandy, Richard
Rauh, Margie and Alan Baum, Bingo
O’Malley, David and Pearl Figgins,
Judy and John Woffington and
members of “The School for Lies”
cast including Nike Doukas and Leo
Marks.
!
Hundreds of fashion-conscious
women turned out Thursday night
at the Monroeville Convention Center for the Patron Event launching
Designer Days, the annual weekend-long shopping extravaganza
sponsored by the National Council
of Jewish Women. Designer goods
on sale at incredible prices were
donated by local retailers, including Roberta Weissburg, Ilene Levy,
e.b. Pepper, Carol Kinkela, furs
by Carl Herrmann and a St. John
Boutique. Designer Days benefits
NCJW projects including the children’s rooms in the courts, a safe,
stress-free place for children to play
while their parents attend to court
business. Sally Wiggin was master
of ceremonies, and those honored by
the NCJW for their work included
Cheryl Braver, Nancy Recht, Joan
Reich, Lenore Schwartz, Marsha
Stern and Rita Tauberg. Kiya Tomlin served as honorary chair, with
Henry Krakovsky as event chair. —
Mackenzie Carpenter
!
More than 300 guests turned
out Saturday for the Fire and Ice
“Red Shoe Ball,” a benefit for Ronald McDonald House Charities
attended by Mr. McDonald himself.
The black tie-optional affair at the
Omni William Penn directly aids
families staying at Ronald McDonald House in Pittsburgh while their
children undergo medical treatment.
Among the guests dining and bidding
at the silent auction were executive
director Eleanor Reigel with Kent,
board chair Joe Rockey with Diana,
Michael and Twilley Delligatti, and
Kim and Joby Cantalamessa.
!
The Salvation Army’s trashiest
event, the 11th Garbage Bag Gala
SEE SEEN, PAGE C-3
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PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE ! TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2012 ! WWW.POST-GAZETTE.COM
Get a hand when putting on bracelet
S T YLEBOOK
SAR A BAUKNECHT
Even the most skilled fashionista struggles
sometimes with putting on jewelry or applying
nail polish by herself.
Unless she has the bracelet assistant and
portable nail station from RadaPro. A professional manicurist and an inventor with a
background in mechanical engineering created the problem-solving products. The bracelet assistant holds a bracelet in place, as if providing the wearer with an extra hand to hold it
steady while she clasps it. It also folds up into a
portable jewelry box that can be slipped into a
handbag while on the go.
The portable nail station is equipped with
an adjustable platform for positioning a foot or
hand for a pedicure or manicure and includes
holders for nail files, polish remover, cotton
balls and other mani-pedi essentials. A highlight is the nail polish compartment, which
secures polish bottles in place to help prevent
spilling.
The nail station is $29.99, and the bracelet
assistant is $24.99. Both are available at www.
radapro.com.
The Bracelet Assistant costs $24.99.
Late-night shopping Downtown: “Stay
late, shop and dine” is the motto of an initiative
by the Pittsburgh Downtown Partnership and
the Pittsburgh Downtown Community Development Corp. This Thursday, select Downtown stores and restaurants will remain open
until 8 p.m. Participating retailers are Brooks
Brothers, Larrimor’s, Joseph Orlando, Heinz
Healey’s, Boutique la Passerelle, JoS. A. Bank,
Boutique 208, Shaw Galleries, Awesome Books
and Macy’s. Purchases of certain amounts
will earn shoppers 20 percent off at Downtown
restaurants Caffe Amante, Sonoma Grille,
Seviche, Las Velas, August Henry’s, Nine on
Nine, Taste of Dahntahn, Six Penn Kitchen,
Bravo Franco’s, Vallozzi’s, Penn Avenue Fish
Company and Habitat.
The next late-night Thursday is slated for
Dec. 20.
Women’s trunk show at Larrimor’s:
Get a sneak peek at the spring St. John collection Thursday and Friday at One PNC Plaza,
Downtown. Information: www.larrimors.com
or 412-471-5727.
Piranesi trunk show: View sophisticated
diamond, ruby and emerald jewelry from noon
to 7 p.m. Thursday and Friday and 11 a.m. to
5 p.m. Saturday at the Omni William Penn
Hotel, Downtown. Information, appointments:
412-999-6501.
Pittsburgh fashion and beauty front …
Boutiques to hold Pinterest party: Want
to try out some of the recipes pinned to your
Pinterest page but just can’t seem to find the
time? Three local boutiques have a solution.
Downtown-based Boutique 208, Koolkat
Designs in Mt. Lebanon and Wildcard in Lawrenceville will hold monthly Pinterest parties,
where recipes and crafts from Pinterest will
be prepared for guests to try and observe. The
first get-together will be 6 to 9 p.m. Wednesday at Boutique 208, across from Heinz Hall,
and will feature fall-themed foods and crafts.
Admission is free, but people are encouraged
to bring a nonperishable canned food item to
donate to the Greater Pittsburgh Community
Food Bank.
Learn more at boutique208.blogspot.com,
www.imakoolkat.com or wildcardpgh.com.
“One Handbag at a Time” fundraiser:
Join the Ladies Hospital Aid Society from 10:30
a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Wednesday for its annual fall
luncheon at LeMont Restaurant, Mount Washington. It will include a silent auction of new
and gently used handbags.
Tickets are $75, or $650 for a table of 10, at
[email protected] or 412-648-6106.
Information: www.lhas.net.
American Girl fashion show: See fashions from today and yesteryear at the Junior
League of Pittsburgh annual event at the
Pittsburgh Field Club. More than 100 local
models will showcase the looks. Shows also
will include refreshments, party favors, door
prizes and raffles. Plus, girls can bring their
American Girl doll and get its hair styled for
$15 at the doll hair salon sponsored by Supercuts.
It’s 11 a.m., 2:30 and 6 p.m. Saturday and 1
and 4 p.m. Sunday. Tickets are $45-$50 at www.
jlpgh.org.
Curvy B Jeans fashion show: Check out
tops, dresses and figure-flattering jeans at
a free style show 5 p.m. Saturday in the food
court of the Monroeville Mall. Information:
www.cbjeans.com.
Hair salon canned food drive: Stephen
Szabo Salon, with locations in McMurray and
South Hills, is collecting canned goods for a
local food pantry this month. Clients who give
two or more canned food items will receive $5
off their services that day.
Art Institute student finalist in FurFree contest: Marquis Clancy, a student in
the Art Institute’s fashion design program, is
a finalist in the eighth annual “Cool vs. Cruel”
fashion design competition organized by The
Art Institutes and The Humane Society.
Students at Art Institutes across North
Americaweretaskedwithreinterpretingwithout animal fur runway looks by Marc Jacobs,
J. Mendel, BCBGMAXAZRIA and Jean Paul
Gaultier. Mr. Clancy is one of 19 finalists who
will go on to compete in the finals. The winner will receive an expenses-paid, weeklong
internship with a designer from the judging
panel.
See Mr. Clancy’s design at www.facebook.
com/HSUSFurFree.
did for another victim of a cheating mate in “It’s Complicated,”
Ms. Kushnick creates a world
of interiors on a sound stage in
Brooklyn.
“People wanted to know
things so I give them sources
on the blog. Every single week
since the show began, I would
get a question about Will’s
leather chair in his office, which
I designed with Mitchell Gold +
Bob Williams,” Ms. Kushnick
says.
Law partner Will Gardner’s
(Josh Charles) leather club chair
is one of the best-selling items in
the line, along with Kalinda’s
chair, which is sleek, sexy and
a little dangerous like the character, Kalinda Sharma (Archie
Panjabi), a private investigator
for the law firm of Lockhart &
Gardner. Many of the pieces
were designed with the character in mind, including the Alicia
sofa and Diane’s desk, which is
used by Diane Lockhart (Christine Baranski).
The furniture collection will
undoubtedly grow as the story
line does. In some scenes, Ms.
Kushnick uses furniture from
existing Mitchell Gold + Bob
Williams collections.
“I read in the script that there
would be a flashback scene to 10
years before in the home Alicia
and Peter owned. I was able to
get a big comfy, round-armed,
slip-covered sofa that you
couldn’t find anymore from (the
company) and they got it to me
in three days.”
With 30 years of decorating
experience in film, commercials, other TV shows including
“Fringe” and “Law and Order:
Trial by Jury” as well as private clients, Ms. Kushnick has
developed a broad and appealing
range. But she had never entered
into a partnership with a furniture manufacturer to make her
designs available to consumers until “The Good Wife” and
the enthusiastic response of
its viewers. Ms. Kushnick and
CBS partnered Mitchell Gold
+ Bob Williams on furniture
and Interlude Home on lighting
and accessories. The Good Wife
(TGW) line was introduced at
the Fall International Furniture
Market in High Point, N.C.
“It reflects my design philosophy and what I do with private
clients as well. I’m not looking to
do spare, noncharacter-infused
homes or rooms for anybody,”
she says. “It’s the reason I think
so many fans say ‘I want to live
in Alicia’s apartment.’”
The look is very attainable.
One of the more notable details
is the fortune cookie collection
in a bowl in the kitchen.
“Some of our sets were
flooded after Sandy and my
daughter said, ‘I really hope my
fortune cookie collection is still
OK,” says Ms. Kushnick, who is
famous in the industry for attention to the tiniest details, even
those the viewers never see.
“We create full back stories
for every character, so on my
sets every drawer is filled and
every cabinet stocked with what
that character would have.”
She does it for the show, the
characters and her own personal pleasure. “For me it is just
something that is a must,” she
explains.
Ms. Kushnick is so dedicated
SEEN, FROM PAGE C-2
Dollar Bank and Pittsburgh Filmmakers present:
at the Fairmont Pittsburgh Hotel
Nov. 1 had nearly 200 guests
dressing in plastic bags. The
amount of creativity and effort
resulted in some outstanding sartorial ensembles created by local
boutiques, which were applauded
during the fashion show portion
of the evening. The event began
with a VIP reception where
guests mingled with philanthropist Margot Perot. Even the men
got into this year’s event, which
was chaired by Pamela Abdalla,
helping to gross nearly $40,000 for
the cause. — Patricia Sheridan.
1
Prime Stage Theatre
held its “All That Jazz!” gala
Thursday at the New Hazlett
Theater. The evening honored
director-in-residence Rich Keitel and City Council president
Darlene Harris. Tony-nominated
director Jeff Calhoun served as
emcee with Etta Cox providing
all that jazz.
2
1
Symphony North
hosted its Fashion Show and
Luncheon Saturday at the
Chadwick in Wexford. The
event attended by 400 was a
benefit for the Pittsburgh Symphony and the music center at
Duquesne University.
3
1
Washington & Jefferson College honored Robert
Kozel, pioneer and entrepreneur in the oil and gas industry,
and Pittsburgh Cultural Trust
president Kevin McMahon as
Entrepreneurs of the Year at its
26th annual Entrepreneurial
Leadership Dinner Wednesday
at the Duquesne Club.
three rivers film festival
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13,2012
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Also in the news …
Thanksgiving Day
Urban Outfitters, Daryl K collaboration coming soon: Animal print sweaters,
sequined selections, military-inspired jackets and more by the Irish-born designer are
expected in stores this month. Pieces will run
between $59 and $139.
To have a style or fashion event considered
for Stylebook, send listing to Sara Bauknecht at
[email protected].
‘The Good Wife’ inspires new furniture collection
FURNITURE, FROM PAGE C-1
LOSE WEIGHT BEFORE &
DURING THE HOLIDAYS!
to the creation of an environment that she gets excited when
she sees really good fake food
mixed with the real in Alicia’s
refrigerator.
“I think social media has
helped me understand what fans
are focusing on and through the
show I have contributed to their
visual training. I get screen
shots sent to me, pictures of
homes, pictures from the show.
“They tweet me through
every episode and talk about
patterns and fabrics, the colors,
the palette. I could interact with
the fans as a full-time job,” she
laughs. “They really keep me
going.”
Mr. Gold, co-founder of Mitchell Gold + Bob Williams, agrees
that consumers have been influenced by television.
“Years ago, Bob and I were
talking about how the American consumer has gotten progressively more sophisticated
in their home furnishings taste
and how we believed a significant part of this was due to television shows. It exposes people
to higher-end design.”
What drew Ms. Kushnick to
the North Carolina-based furniture manufacturer was how
similar its design aesthetic was
to her own as well as how versatile it could be. “The ability
for me to use the furniture in
a contract setting such as the
law offices, a bar, a nightclub, a
lobby and a home or apartment
just made my job more fluid.”
“When we saw what Beth was
doing with ‘The Good Wife,’ we
immediately felt this was a show
that was very much simpatico
with our products,” Mr. Gold
says. “It’s been a big success,
frankly bigger than I expected.”
All TGW furniture can be custom-upholstered. For example,
Kalinda’s chair, which is shown
in leather, can be done in fabric
and the standard foam cushion
can be ordered in down.
For more information, go to
www.mgbwhome.com, www.
horchow.com or www.weisshouse.com.
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THE MAN WITH THE IRON FISTS (R) ....... 12:30 2:55 5:20 7:45 10:10
PARANORMAL ACTIVITY 4 (R) .................... 12:00 2:20 4:35 6:50 9:45
THE PERKS OF BEING A WALLFLOWER (PG-13)...... 12:20 2:50 5:20
...................................................................................................... 7:55 10:35
PITCH PERFECT (PG-13)...................................................... 3:05 5:45 8:30
SILENT HILL: REVELATION (R)
3D .......................................................................................................... 3:00
2D ................................................................................................ 12:40 5:35
SINISTER (R) ..................................................... 11:50 2:25 5:00 7:35 10:20
SKYFALL (PG-13) ................................ 1:00 2:00 4:20 5:30 7:40 9:00 10:55
TAKEN 2 (PG-13).............................................. 12:10 2:35 5:15 7:50 10:15
WRECK-IT-RALPH (PG)
3D ........................................................ 12:55 2:45 3:40 5:25 6:15 8:15 9:10
2D ...................................................................... 11:45 1:50 4:40 7:20 10:05
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11:55 3:40 7:20 10:50
Special Attraction XD Pricing Applies
SKYFALL (PG-13) .......................................... 1:05 2:15 4:20 5:40 8:00 9:10
ARGO (R) .................................................................... 1:20 4:25 7:15 10:25
CLOUD ATLAS (R) ..................................................................... 11:40 3:40
FLIGHT (R)......................................... 12:15 2:00 3:45 5:30 7:30 9:15 10:40
HERE COMES THE BOOM (PG) ............................................... 4:45 9:50
HOTEL TRANSYLVANIA (PG)
3D:............................................................................................... 12:00 7:25
2D: ........................................................................................................ 2:25
THE MAN WITH THE IRON FISTS (R) ............... 12:40 4:30 7:05 10:10
PARANORMAL ACTIVITY 4 (R) .............................................. 3:35 9:20
THE PERKS OF BEING A WALLFLOWER (PG-13).............. 12:55 3:55
...................................................................................................... 7:10 10:00
SILENT HILL: REVELATION (R)
3D: .............................................................................. 2:40 5:10 7:55 10:30
2D: ...................................................................................................... 12:05
SINISTER (R) ................................................................................. 1:00 6:30
TAKEN 2 (PG-13)........................................................ 1:15 4:10 7:50 10:35
WRECK-IT-RALPH (PG)
3D: ............................................................ 12:50 3:50 4:50 7:00 9:45 10:45
2D: .............................................................. 11:50 1:50 2:45 5:50 8:05 9:00
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PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE ! TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2012 ! WWW.POST-GAZETTE.COM
Grandma needs to extend
an olive branch to grandson
steel advice
DEAR MARY ANN: My grandson and
his girlfriend were invited to attend [a holiday dinner] along with the rest of the family.
They have a baby boy whom his girlfriend
does not want my daughter to see for reasons
that are unknown to me. My daughter was in
our downstairs game room holding the baby
while the [baby’s] mother was upstairs. She
later went downstairs and seeing my daughter holding the baby, she took him from my
daughter and told my grandson that they
were leaving immediately. A verbal confrontation developed between my daughter and
my grandson’s girlfriend. At one point, I told
my daughter along with my grandson and
his girlfriend that I wanted them to leave.
My husband then asked me not to interfere.
A short time later, the arguing escalated into
pushing and shoving. At first, my grandson
watched the two of them argue uncontrollably and did not do a thing. I believe that
my grandson’s girlfriend initiated the first
shove. When my daughter shoved her back,
my grandson then gave his mother a very
hard shove that knocked her on the floor.
She was not hurt, but at that point, I backed
my grandson into a wall telling him that I
will not tolerate him laying his hands on his
mother. I then told my grandson and his girlfriend that they were to leave immediately.
My daughter has apologized to me for the
incident, but my grandson never has, nor
MARY ANN WELLENER
has he spoken a word to me since. Because
he has made the choice not to apologize to me
or speak to me, I have decided to disregard
giving him any more birthday or Christmas
gifts. It seems apparent that he feels he does
not owe me an apology for his behavior and
that he wants nothing to do with me.
— GRANDMA WHO WANTS AN
APOLOGY
DEAR GRANDMA: As matriarch of
this four-generation family, it is your role to
act like the responsible adult. As hurt as you
are about this melee, blaming your grandson for not apologizing to you is childish. He
was defending his child’s mother and may
feel he did nothing wrong. The best gift you
can give him is forgiveness. You perpetuate
the rift with this grandson if you don’t talk
with him about what happened. Invite him
to lunch. You can’t solve all of the problems
of an angry family dynamic but you can
attempt to rebuild a relationship with your
grandson.
DEAR MARY ANN: My wife and I
have three young granddaughters who live
roughly 1,700 miles away. The oldest granddaughter is 4. We love seeing the girls but
because of the distance this usually only
happens twice a year. Do you have any suggestions of any grandparent-type traditions
we could start and maintain from a distance
that could be fun and perhaps meaningful
for the girls without being an imposition on
their busy parents?
— FARAWAY GRANDPARENT
DEAR FARAWAY GRANDPARENT:
As the out-of-town grandparent you have
to devote extra effort to build a relationship
with your granddaughters. Memories are
created small steps at a time.
Children love to hear stories, read books
and get mail. Not all children like to talk on
the phone, but they all love to receive packages. You can tuck little extras in the package: holiday socks or novelties, craft supplies, crayons, paints and always a book with
a note in front so they know it is from you.
Every year send an age-appropriate back-toschool box. Clip a picture of an elephant or
a beautiful flower and put it in the mail. Let
your little girls know you think of them and
why. When you travel send post cards; mail
a large map and highlight where you live
and where they live. Skype and recorded stories are great options. Every connection you
make serves to pass on your family values.
The effort you make to communicate
with your granddaughters at each level of
their development will reap rewards as they
mature. Don’t let distance be a deterrent.
Need some Steel Advice? Email questions
to: [email protected] or write to Mary
Ann Wellener, Steel Advice Column, c/o Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, 34 Blvd. of the Allies,
Pittsburgh, PA 15222. Follow Mary Ann on
Twitter at @PGSteelAdvice.
A new kind of couture
COUTURE, FROM PAGE C-1
favorite T-shirts.
“I tried to come up with something to do with them because she
had a fit.”
Ms. DeMartino pieced the tees
together into a new skirt for her
daughter, which moms at the
Picket Fence in Shadyside “oohed”
and “awed” about when she wore it
shopping.
“The shop owner overheard, and
it just kind of took off from there,”
Ms. DeMartino says.
Fast-forward a couple of years
and Depression Couture’s mix of
skirts, tops, denim jackets and
more for sizes 2 through 14 is sold at
the Picket Fence, Lullabye Landing
Boutique near South Hills Village
and So Me in Glenshaw. Clothes
also are available at www.etsy.
com/shop/DepressionCouture.
Price points vary, from $24 for
a knit sweater hat to $146 for a twopiece holiday outfit made from recycled and felted sweaters. Keeping
the cost sensible is in line with the
collection’s eco-friendly nature.
“If you can stay true to your
story, that is who your brand is,”
she says. “I think there is a demand
for something like what I do.”
The process begins with gather-
ing recyclables to make over into
new looks. In addition to her own
children’s closets, she shops for
fabrics at used clothing sales, and
local friends in the design industry give her fabric samples when
they’re out of season or discontinued. Everything is boiled and
disinfected, and some pieces are
dyed.
Her designs are inspired by
European patterns. The prepped
fabrics are then cut and sewn
together — all by Ms. DeMartino,
who can turn out about 50 pieces
per month if needed, depending
upon the order. She often gets
requests from mothers wanting a
sweater like their daughter’s made
in adult sizes. Stores have been
selling out their stocks in a matter
of days, she says.
“There’s value in things that
don’t fit you anymore. You don’t
just throw things in the trash just
because you can’t use it anymore,”
Ms. DeMartino says. “At the end
of the day, it is fun. As long as I’m
having fun, I’ll do this for a very
long time.”
Information: www.depressioncouture.com.
Sara Bauknecht: sbauknecht@
post-gazette.com.
To place your announcement, please call 412-263-1185
James and Carole McMahon
James and Carole McMahon
celebrated
their
50th
wedding
anniversary on July 28, 2012. They have
two children: James and Roy Mark. The
couple lives in Imperial.
Where were you married? Why did you
choose that site?
Carole: St. Columbkille Church in
Imperial because Jim was a practicing
Catholic.
How did you meet?
Carole: We met a Raccoon Park Beach
while strolling along with our friends.
Where was the reception and honeymoon?
Why did you choose those sites?
Carole: The reception was in my mom
and dad’s basement and outside because
money wasn’t plentiful when we started
out and we loved small gatherings.
Where did you each grow up?
Carole: Jim grew up in Imperial and
I grew up near Carnegie in a small town
called Ft. Pitt.
Who proposed? How?
Carole: It was mutual. We went
together for a year and talked to each
other about how well we got along and
loved each other and decided to marry.
James and Carole McMahon
What was your favorite wedding
memory?
Carole: My best memory was our first
trip to Niagara Falls. Neither of us has
been on many vacations and it was just
so special and beautiful.
Are there any current wedding trends that
you wish you could have incorporated?
Carole: I would have liked to have
rented a reception hall because I could
have decorated more as brides do today
– more room, music and dancing.
Do you still own any of your wedding
gifts? If so, what?
Carole: Yes, a few. We still have a pretty
red candy dish from my mother and a
picture of Jim and me in our wedding
clothes that our best man sent to us.
What is the secret to your successful
marriage?
Carole: We always share our views
about everything and let each other have
some freedom to do things that we like
to do separately. No lies either.
What activity do you enjoy doing most
as a couple?
Carole: In our old age, we just love to
go to a nice dinner and a good movie.
How did you celebrate your
anniversary?
Carole: We had a party at Celebrations
& More in Imperial on July 29. July 28
was taken.
Other details:
Carole: I was just thrilled because I
only had one other party in my lifetime
and that was my bridal shower. The cake
was just beautiful with gold flowers and
I placed the bride and groom topper
from our wedding on it.
To place an announcement, call 412-263-1185
or visit post-gazette.com/celebrations
&())!0%, # (0%/%(1(0*, # /00!'(.,/.!(, # -!.*", # -!.*")/$, # %.((*!0%, # /+"!('(1(0*,
ENGAGEMENTS
ENGAGEMENTS
ENGAGEMENTS
ENGAGEMENTS
KATIE WARD
AND
PAUL BEENER
TO WED
AMANDA GREGORY
AND
RYAN DICK
TO WED
Bill and Georgianne Ward of
Wilkins Township announce the
engagement of their daughter,
Katie Ward to Paul Beener of
Jerome, PA; son of Angela
Beener, and the late Bill Beener.
Katie is a 2003 graduate of
Woodland Hills High School, and
a 2005 graduate of Pittsburgh
Technical Institute, where she
received an associate’s degree in
Computer Aided Drafting. She is
currently a Store Planner at Giant
Eagle, Inc. in Fox Chapel. Paul is
a 1999 graduate of Connemaugh
Township High School and a 2002 graduate of ITT Technical
Institute, where he received an associate’s degree in Electronics.
He is currently a Senior Reliability Technician at Phillips Respironics
in Plum. They are planning a summer 2013 wedding.
Mr. and Mrs. William Gregory
of Apollo are pleased to announce
the engagement of their daughter
Amanda Renee to Ryan Carey
Dick, son of Mr. and Mrs. Carey
Dick of Cranberry Township.
Amanda is a 2003 graduate of
Kiski Area High School and a
2006 graduate of Western School
of Health and Business. She is
currently working as a shift
supervisor at Sheetz in Cranberry
Township. Ryan is a 2000
graduate of Seneca Valley High
School and a 2004 graduate of
Penn State University, where he received a Bachelor of Science
degree in Computer Engineering. He is currently a Senior Project
Engineer at Speech Interface Design on the North Side. The couple
currently resides in Cranberry Township with their dog, Blaze. A
September 2013 wedding is planned at Lingrow Farm.
ANNIVERSARIES
ANNIVERSARIES
ENGAGEMENTS
RICHARD AND KATHLEEN WHITE
ENGAGEMENTS
JESSICA KATHERINE COON
AND
DR. ANDREW THOMAS LAMBE
TO WED
Richard White and Kathleen White will celebrate their 50th
wedding anniversary on November 17, 2012. Richard Joseph White
and Kathleen Wright were married at St. Francis Xavier Church,
3250 California Avenue, Pittsburgh, PA on November 17, 1962.
They have resided in Gibsonia, PA for the past 48 years.
Richard and Kathleen have three children Deborah (Susan)
Whitewood, Richard (Kirstin) White, and Cynthia (Eric) Boyd. They
are the proud grandparents of Abigail-15, Kaitlyn-14, Landon-1,
Braden-14, Elexa-12, Parker-12, and Colton-8.
Richard and Kathleen will be celebrating their 50th anniversary
with their children and grandchildren at Stonewall Jackson Resort in
West Virginia. Family and friends will be gathering at St. Richard
Catholic Church in Gibsonia, PA on November 17, 2012 for Richard
and Kathleen's renewal of their wedding vows.
Mr. and Mrs. Timothy Coon, of
Pleasant Hills, are pleased to
announce the engagement of their
daughter, Jessica Katherine Coon,
to Andrew Thomas Lambe. He is
the son of Dr. and Mrs. Robert
Lambe, of Rehoboth,
Massachusetts.
Jessica attended Baldwin High
School and is a graduate of Penn
State University and Duquesne Law
School. She is an attorney for the
Social Security Administration in
Boston, Ma.
Andrew attended Brown
University before earning his doctorate in chemical engineering at
Carnegie Mellon University. Andrew works in the Boston area as a
scientist for Aerodyne and Boston College.
The couple will wed at Heinz Chapel on April 13, 2013, with a
reception to follow at LeMont on Mt. Washington. The couple will
honeymoon at the Four Seasons in Maui, followed by a few days on
the Big Island of Hawaii.
PERSONAL
CELEBRATIONS
"The Face In The Crowd"
I had nearly lost my mind
And I was shaking so bad it was
a pity
For never in my life had I seen
Someone so doggone pretty
Yes she was radiant, and
awesome and beautiful
And her black hair just knocked
me out
And even in the way that she
walked
Like she knew what it was all
about
ANNIVERSARIES!
412-263-1185
And me;I just stood there in awe
Just wondering what the heck I
could say
That could make this angel of the
world
Even so much; as look my way
And so it continued the saga
Of a man so deeply in love
And who was so taken and
enthralled by this woman
Who he’d sworn had been sent
from above
But then by some strange twist
of fate
She had found her way over to
me
And my eyes opened up like a
cannonball
And I proceeded to say to she:
"I cannot believe how pretty you
are"
"And to say anything less I’d be
remiss"
And at that she leaned over very
casually
And gave me a great big kiss
Celebrations now offers a number of packages to make
placing your announcement easy. Call 412-263-1185, e-mail
FOR THE SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENTS OF YOUR LIFE
[email protected] or visit the Post-Gazette
lobby to meet with our Celebrations consultant.
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And Then I Woke Up!!!
Billy Nardozzi
(412 ) 921-3694
((( All Calls Are Welcomed ))))
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BIRTHDAYS!
412-263-1185
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PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE ! TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2012 ! WWW.POST-GAZETTE.COM
Don’t count out The Who
By Scott Mervis
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
The Who hasn’t played
Pittsburgh in 12 years, having
skipped us on the past few tours,
so fans here would have been
thrilled with a full-on greatest
hits show.
Of course, that’s not the
agenda on this tour as the band
is dusting off a 39-year-old Mods
vs. Rockers rock opera that was
a little obscure to American
audiences even back then. That,
and the subpar Super Bowl gig,
help explain why the upper
decks were practically empty at
Consol Energy Center Sunday
night.
Fortunately, “Quadrophenia”
is one of the two or three best
Who albums and some might
even argue it was the band’s last
great work. As the Consol show
is just a few dates into the tour,
we got it at the perfect time.
Still, it got off to a shaky start
when the “I Am the Sea” intro
played twice without Roger Daltrey and Pete Townshend stepping on stage. The third time
was a charm but Daltrey muffed
the first note of “The Real Me”
and had to start again. Even
then, he didn’t sound like The
Real Daltrey, fading at times and
shying away from the higher
notes.
It seemed like we were in for
a long night, but you can’t count
out The Who, as we’ve learned
many times. Pete’s younger
brother Simon and drummer
Zak Starkey powered them
through a spot-on version of the
“Quadrophenia” overture and
Pete came through with a rugged, emotional take on “Cut My
Hair,” with clips of the band in
younger, wilder days flashing
behind them.
While it’s a bit out of whack,
frankly, to see a gray-haired
67-year-old man who looks every
bit his age sing the words of a
troubled young mod, there was
an undeniable poignancy to it
(especially if you happen to be
in the midst of reading his autobiography).
Daltrey — warmed up, shirt
open and twirling his mike —
found his pipes for “The Punk
Meets the Godfather” while
Ringo’s son did his best Keith
Moon. He and bassist Pino Palladino drove the engine hard all
night, except for the amazing
rumbling solo on “5:15,” coming
to us on video from the late John
Entwistle. That sparked lots of
windmilling from Pete and a
heated jam from The Who, who,
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survives on an island. (Part 2 of 2) (CC)
Sydow. Jesuits try to rescue a possessed girl. (CC)
ENC/ “Rent” (6:40) (2005) ★★ “It Could Happen to You” (1994) ★★★ “Country Strong” (10:45) (2010) ★★
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WEST. Sutherland, Dylan McDermott. (CC)
“Stuck on
“Alvin and the Chipmunks: Chipwrecked” Treme Desautel’s opens;
Boardwalk Empire The
HBO You” (6:30) (2011) ★ Voices of Jason Lee. (CC)
Sonny pawns. (CC)
Milkmaid’s Lot. (CC)
HBO/ “Red Riding Hood” (2011) ★ Amanda Sey- 2 Days: Seth Real Time With Bill Maher Boxing
fried, Gary Oldman. (CC)
Mitchell (9:45) (CC)
2
“Yogi
Bear”
“SuperBabies:
Baby
Geniuses
2” (2004) “Three O’Clock High” (1987) ★★ Casey
“Extremely
HBO/
★ Jon Voight, Scott Baio. (CC)
Siemaszko, Anne Ryan. (CC)
Loud”
FAM (7) ★
“Little Fockers” (2010) ★ Robert De Niro, Little Fock- “Arthur” (2011) ★★ Russell
HBO/ Boardwalk Empire The
Ben Stiller, Owen Wilson. (CC)
ers
Brand. (CC)
SIG. Milkmaid’s Lot. (CC)
“Unknown” (2011) ★★ Liam Neeson, Diane Kruger. An ac- “Fast Five” (2011) ★★ Vin Diesel. Dom Toretto and comMAX cident victim finds a man using his identity. (CC)
pany ramp up the action in Brazil. (CC)
“Apollo 18” “Goon” (2011) ★★★ Seann William Scott, Homeland The Clearing.
Dexter Chemistry. Dexter
SHO (7) ★
Jay Baruchel, Alison Pill.
(CC)
and Hannah grow closer.
“Duplex” (7:20) (2003) ★★ “Bad Teacher” (2011) ★★ Cameron Diaz, “Bringing Down the House” (10:35)
STARZ Ben Stiller. (CC)
Justin Timberlake, Jason Segel. (CC)
(2003) ★★ Steve Martin, Eugene Levy. (CC)
Magic City Ike wants casino Boss Ablution. Kane beSpartacus: Vengeance
Camelot Guinevere. Arthur
STARZ-E gambling legalized. (CC)
comes infatuated with Mona. Lucretia reveals a secret. (CC) and Merlin dine with Morgan.
“Conception” (2011) ★★ Jennifer Finnigan, “The Family Tree” (2010) Dermot Mul“Skateland” (2010) ★★
TMC Jonathan Silverman. (CC)
roney, Hope Davis, Chi McBride. (CC)
Ashley Greene.
ENC
Larry Roberts/Post-Gazette
Roger Daltrey , left, and Peter Townshend perform Sunday at
Consol Energy Center.
concert review
by the way, came with a killer
sound system. The late, lovable
Moonie had his moment on the
maniacal “Bell Boy” vocal, not
to mention all the crushing
drum fills that he originated.
Simon was a diamond in
the rough, whether it was taking a guitar lead or stepping
up with a bold vocal on “Dirty
Jobs” that found the sweet spot
between Roger and Pete. The latter did a hard, bluesy vocal on
“Drowned,” adding a gritty reference to the Ohio.
The big climax was all about
Roger. The show steadily built
steam toward to “Dr. Jimmy”
and “Love Reign O’er Me,”
and when they came up, the
muscular singer nailed both,
reaching deep and hitting that
“Looooove!” scream almost like
he did back in the day.
Overall, the playing — with the
help of the two horns and three
keyboards (why?) — was flawless and often thrilling. On “The
Rock,” The Who was the quadrophonic, symphonic powerhouse
Pete envisioned when he dreamed
up this opus back in ’72.
After Pete’s complimentary
remarks about the city, The Who
launched into a crowd-pleasing
encore set starting with “Who
Are You” and offering a taste of
“Tommy” (“Pinball Wizard”),
a gentle acoustic closing of
“Tea & Theatre” and the crashing best of “Who’s Next” with
“Behind Blue Eyes,” the politically charged “Won’t Get Fooled
Again” (perfect scream!) and the
anthemic “Baba O’Riley.”
It seemed to me that when the
seasoned Who fans yelled “teenage wasteland … they’re all
wasted!” it carried a different
meaning than it had back when
THEY were the teenagers.
[email protected]; 412263-2576. Twitter: @scottmervis_pg
‘Driving Daisy’ still resonates;
‘Seven Guitars’ mostly in tune
Say “Driving Miss Daisy,”
and the mind can’t help but conjure Jessica Tandy and Morgan
Freeman from the 1989 Oscarwinning best picture by Albert
Uhry, who also won that year
for adapting his Pulitzer Prizewinning play. The Jewish Theatre of Pittsburgh revisits the
story of an elderly Southern
Jewish woman and her 25-year
bond with her African-American chauffeur in Rodef Shalom
Congregation’s Levy Hall, an
intimate and apt setting.
In a scene midway through
the play, the title character is
told by her driver, Hoke Colburn, that her synagogue has
been bombed. “Who would do
that? It’s a mistake,” she says,
determining that the intended
target must have been a conservative temple. Her congregation
is reform — as is Rodef Shalom.
When Hoke tries to explain the
“who would do that” by relating
that he had witnessed a lynching years earlier, Miss Daisy
shuts down. This woman who
has lived through both World
Wars can’t handle the idea that
Jews and blacks might be hated
equally by any group.
As she spends time with Hoke
and the civil rights movement
gains traction, Miss Daisy’s attitude evolves, even as her body
and mind begin to fail.
Cary Ann Spears, who has
graced many local stages, is too
youthful to be fully embraced
as a widow aging from 72 to her
90s, although we feel the pain
as her step slows and her back
curves during the course of the
play. She draws us into Miss
Daisy’s frustration with the ravages of time, and her delivery as
a crusty former school teacher
and infuriating backseat driver
is spot on.
When we meet Daisy Werthan, she has just had a car
accident yet refuses her son Boolie’s offer of a “colored” driver.
Boolie ignores her protests and
hires chatty charmer Hoke, and
we are treated to a bravura performance by Kevin Brown, a
local actor seen recently in the
August Wilson Center Theater
Ensemble’s “Gem of the Ocean.”
Hoke wears down Miss Daisy’s resolve and deftly parries
her every resistance.
As Boolie, Todd Betker
rounds director Marci Woodruff’s engaging cast. Boolie recognizes that Hoke has become
essential to his mother and pays
him generously while putting up
with Miss Daisy’s complaints.
10:30
NCIS: Los Angeles Rude
Vegas The Real Thing. A
Awakenings. (N) (Part 2 of 2) dentist is murdered. (N)
Happy End- Apartment Private Practice Sam’s reings (N)
23 (N)
ality show begins taping. (N)
Go On (N)
Normal (N) Parenthood (10:01) (N)
8 WWCP Raising (N) Ben-Kate (N) New Girl (N) Mindy (N)
Go On (N)
Normal (N)
9 WTOV The Voice (N) (L) (CC)
B A S I C , E X PA N D E D A N D D I G I TA L C A B L E
A&E
ABC
FAM
AMC
stage reviews
“You’re a doodle, Mama,” Boolie
is fond of saying.
Characters enter and exit
scenes to time specific-songs
and through various points in
a black-curtain backdrop that is
distracting but functional. The
simple set offers a partial office
and living room on either side
of raised benches that represent
the cars that carry Miss Daisy
and Hoke as near as the Piggly
Wiggly and as far as a visit to
Mobile, Ala.
From her backseat perch,
Miss Daisy tries to be Hoke’s
GPS in all things, but it’s Hoke
who emerges as her gentle guide
through later life. As they reach
the poignant end to their quarter century together, we are glad
to have been along for the ride.
“Driving Miss Daisy” is
at Rodef Shalom’s Levy Hall,
4905 Fifth Ave., 8 p.m. Tuesday
through Thursday and Saturday and 2 p.m. Sunday. Tickets
are $30 ($17 for 65 and older) at
1-888-718-4253 or showclix.com.
— Sharon Eberson,
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
‘Seven Guitars’
Among the 10 plays of August
Wilson’s epic Pittsburgh Cycle,
“Seven Guitars” may be the most
personal. Although the date is
1948, the setting is the Hill District backyard at 1727 Bedford,
where Wilson (1945-2005) spent
his first 13 years, and the play is
filled with the texture of the life
he observed there.
Even so, “Seven Guitars” is
fiction. It’s also Wilson’s only
mystery, starting just after a
funeral, leaping back a week,
then proceeding to reveal who
killed Floyd Barton and why.
Along the way in the current
Point Park Conservatory production, we discover the real
subject, the seven intertwined
lives, each with its different
song. Floyd and his dreams of
music stardom may be central,
but not by much. There’s also
cryptic prophet Hedley and his
confused vision of the black man
triumphant; Vera, Louise and
Canewell, looking for love; Red,
the loyal friend; and young Ruby
with her “little fast behind” (as
her aunt says), carrying a secret
and a plan.
Ultimately, “Seven Guitars”
has no one lesson to teach. As
always in Wilson, there’s plenty
of comedy, but for all its pleasure
and comforting music, the pain
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endures.
Indeed, the play is neither
tragedy, comedy nor melodrama. Chicago serves these
Pittsburghers as Moscow does
Chekhov’s three sisters, as a
dream of escape and achievement, never to be realized.
More than anything, “Seven
Guitars” depends on its vernacular poetry, laced with the stuff
of everyday life — brand names,
sports stars, childhood rhymes
and snippets of music, sung by
the seven but also wrapping
scenes in ambient music.
Visiting director Jade King
Carroll has emphasized this
speech, sometimes to the extent
that the student actors stand
awkwardly still. But they clearly
understand the language, which
is the main thing.
There is of course (as in any college show) a disjunction between
young actors and their characters
of middling years, but the sense
of character comes through in
any case. I am especially taken by
Trumaine Verret-Fleming’s insistent charisma as Floyd, MichaelAngelo Turner’s irony and energy
as Canewell and Alexis Cash’s
refusal to play to a stereotype as
sexy Ruby. But I could praise the
other four, as well.
The only drawback is that in
striving for a Haitian dialect
as Hedley, Saladin White II is
often unintelligible — and the
character is a strange, would-be
prophet whom we want to understand better.
Rich Preffer’s set seems lifted
right out of a Hill backyard, and
it is well matched by professional-quality costumes, lights
and sound.
“Seven Guitars” demonstrates the great truth of all Wilson’s plays, that everyone is the
star of his or her own life story,
and all those stories have interest when told with such a mix of
poetry, laughter and tears.
Note: Early in their rehearsals, I spent an afternoon with
the cast, giving them a tour of
August Wilson’s Hill; I’d do the
same for any local production of
his plays.
“Seven Guitars” is at Point
Park Conservatory, Pittsburgh
Playhouse, 222 Craft Ave., Oakland, through Sunday, then Nov.
29–Dec. 2; 8 p.m. Thursday-Saturday, 2 p.m. Saturday-Sunday. It is
in the 75-seat studio theater and is
said to be sold out, but there is a
line at each show for turn-backs.
On the night reviewed there were
10 empty seats.
— Christopher Rawson,
PG senior theater critic
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage Wars Storage Wars
Wars (CC)
Wars (CC)
Wars (CC)
Wars (CC)
Wars (CC)
Wars (CC)
(11:01) (CC) (11:31) (CC)
“Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire” (7:30) (2005) ★★★ Daniel Radcliffe, Rupert
The 700 Club (CC)
Grint, Emma Watson. Voldemort lays a trap for Harry at the Triwizard Tournament.
“Poseidon” (2006) ★★ Josh Lucas, Kurt Russell. A luxury “Poseidon” (2006) ★★ Josh Lucas, Kurt Russell. A luxury
liner capsizes in the North Atlantic. (CC)
liner capsizes in the North Atlantic. (CC)
Frontier Earth (N)
Wild Hawaii (N)
Blue Planet: Seas/Life
Frontier Earth
ANIM
BBC Kitchen Nightmares (CC) Kitchen Nightmares (CC) Chef Race: U.K. vs U.S. (N) Kitchen Nightmares (CC)
BET The Soul Man Family First Family First Family First Family Fi. (N) The Soul Man Sleep! (N) The Soul Man
The Real Housewives of
BRAVO Beverly Hills
Reba (CC)
CMT Reba (CC)
CNBC Mob Money: Murders and
CNN Anderson Cooper 360 (N)
COM Workaholics Tosh.0 (CC)
C-SPAN Capitol Hill Hearings
DEST
DIS
‘Driving Miss Daisy’
8:30
NCIS A Navy lieutenant is
KDKA murdered. (N) (CC)
Dancing With the Stars:
4
All-Stars (N) (L) (CC)
WTAE
6 WJAC The Voice (N) (L) (CC)
7 WTRF NCIS Shell Shock, Part I. (N)
TONIGHT ON TV
9
9:30
10
DSC
Flipping Out Issues drive
Jeff to therapy. (N) (CC)
Redneck Island
Million Dollar Decorators What Hap- Flipping Out
(10:01) (Season Premiere) (N) pens (N)
(11:31) (CC)
Chainsaw
Big Texas
Redneck Island
60 Minutes on CNBC
American Greed
Piers Morgan Tonight (N)
Anderson Cooper 360 (CC) Erin Burnett OutFront
Tosh.0 (CC)
Tosh.0 (N)
Tosh.0 (CC)
Mad Money
Brickle. (N)
The Wild West A re-creation The Wild West Billy the Kid. The Wild West General
of the O.K. Corral.
A look at Billy’s case.
Custer’s career.
“WALL-E” (2008) ★★★★ Voices of Ben
Phineas and Gravity Falls Phineas and
Burtt, Elissa Knight, Jeff Garlin. (CC)
Ferb (9:45) (CC)
Ferb (CC)
Alaska: The Last Frontier Alaska: The Last Frontier Alaska Marshals Searching
Something’s Fishy. (CC)
Legend of Terrible Island. (N) for fugitives in Alaska. (N)
FBI: Criminal Pursuit A
Homicide Hunter: Lt. Joe Motives & Murders People
woman’s baby is kidnapped. Kenda (N) (CC)
receive a puzzling call. (CC)
Fashion Police
Young, Beautiful & Vanished: 15 Unthinkable Crimes
Daily (N)
Colbert (N)
The Wild West A re-creation
of the O.K. Corral.
Austin & Ally Good Luck
(CC)
Charlie (CC)
Alaska: The Last Frontier
Legend of Terrible Island.
FBI: Criminal Pursuit A
woman’s baby is kidnapped.
Chelsea (N) E! News
DSC/
INV
E!
Basketball College Basketball: State Farm Champions Classic
SportsCenter
ESPN College Basketball
College
Basketball
NIT
Season
Tip-Off:
Teams
TBA.
(N)
College
Basketball
NIT
Season
Tip-Off:
Teams
TBA. (N)
ESPN2
ESPN-C
EWTN
FNC
FOOD
FOXSC
FX
GOLF
GSN
HALL
HGTV
Bay City Blues (CC)
Mother Angelica Live
Triumph and Tragedy: The Triumph and Tragedy: The Bay City Blues (CC)
Ray Mancini Story (CC)
Ray Mancini Story (CC)
Reli -gious Rosary
Threshold of Hope
Priest
Women of
The O’Reilly Factor (N)
Hannity (N)
Greta Van Susteren (N)
The O’Reilly Factor (CC)
Chopped Unsung Heroes.
Chopped Oui, Oui, Confit.
Chopped (N)
Chopped Have a Heart.
Soccer U-21: England vs. Northern Ireland.
Fox Soccer News (N) (L)
UEFA Soccer
“Twilight” (7:30) (2008) ★★ Kristen Stewart.
Sons of Anarchy Crucifixed. (N)
Anarchy
Big Break Greenbrier
Big Break Greenbrier (N)
Chasing
Golf Central
Minute to Win It (CC)
Minute to Win It (CC)
Longest Drive Big Break
Minute to Win It (CC)
“Christmas Magic” (2011) Lindy Booth. (CC)
Family Feud Family Feud
“Mistletoe Over Manhattan” (2011) Tricia Helfer. (CC)
Love It or List It (CC)
Property
Property
Hunters
Hunt Intl (N) Million Dollar Rooms (N)
Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Mankind The Story of All of Us Inventors. (Series Pre- Pawn Stars Pawn Stars
HIST (N) (CC)
(N) (CC)
miere) Inventing trade; the discovery of iron. (N) (CC)
Fork It Over. Wise Guys.
Lois & Clark: The New Ad- Lois & Clark: The New Ad- Hercules: The Legendary Sliders Robots have seemHUB ventures of Superman (CC) ventures of Superman (CC) Journeys (CC)
ingly replaced humans.
“Transporter 3” (2008) ★★ Jason Statham. Frank Martin “Transporter 3” (10:15) (2008) ★★ Jason Statham. Frank
IFC becomes involved with a Ukrainian woman.
Martin becomes involved with a Ukrainian woman.
Abby’s Ultimate Dance
Abby’s Ultimate Dance
Prank My
Prank My
Prom Queens Prom Queens
LIFE Competition Sabotage. (CC) Competition (N) (CC)
Mom (N)
Mom (N)
(N) (CC)
(N) (CC)
Rachel Maddow Show (N) The Last Word (N)
The Ed Show
MSNBC The Ed Show (N)
Teen Mom 2 Walk the Line. Underemployed (N) (CC)
Jersey Shore (CC)
MTV Jersey Shore (CC)
College Basketball Georgia Southern at Charlotte. (N) (L) World Series of Fighting 1
NBCS Boxing (7)
Doomsday Preppers
NGEO Doomsday Bugged Out (N) Doomsday Preppers (N) Doomsday Preppers
Full House Full House
All Stood Up. (CC)
Oprah: Where Are They
OWN Now? (CC)
OXYGEN “The Skeleton Key” (7)
PCNC NightTalk
NICK
Full House Full House
(CC)
(CC)
Oprah: Where Are They
Now? Mary Jo Buttafuoco.
Snapped Linda Pedroza.
The Nanny The Nanny
(CC)
Close Shave.
Oprah: Where Are They
Now? (N)
Snapped Ellen Snyder.
PCNC News PCNC News The Doctors (CC)
Friends (CC) Friends
(11:33) (CC)
Oprah: Where Are They
Now? (CC)
Snapped Tracey Richter.
Mike Tomlin Ch. 11 News
ROOT Vintage Penguins Replay of Pittsburgh Penguins hockey.
College Soccer Big East Tournament, Final: Teams TBA.
When Earth Erupts Europe. When Earth Erupts Pacific Global Weirding (CC)
When Earth Erupts Europe.
SC
(CC)
Rim. (CC)
(CC)
Dumbest
Hard Parts Hard Parts My Ride
My Ride
Dumbest
Dumbest
SPEED Dumbest
Ink Master (N) (CC)
Tattoo (N)
Bev. Cop
SPIKE Ink Master Trick or Freak. Ink Master (CC)
Total Black- Total Black- Total Black- Total Black- Total Black- Viral Video Total Black- Viral Video
SYFY out
out
out
out
out (N)
(N)
out
Showdown
The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang Conan Joel McHale; James
TBS Theory (CC) Theory (CC) Theory (CC) Theory (CC) Theory (CC) Theory (CC) “Bobo” Fay. (N) (CC)
“Our Betters” (9:45) (1933) ★★ Constance “Two Against the World”
“What Price Hollywood?” (1932) ★★★
TCM Constance Bennett. (CC)
Bennett, Gilbert Roland.
(11:15) (1932) ★
TLC Little People: Down Under Little People Big World: Extreme Cou Extreme Cou Little People Big World:
Rizzoli & Isles Jane avoids Rizzoli & Isles A serial killer Rizzoli & Isles Jane and
Leverage The team tries to
TNT sensitivity training. (CC)
claims to have clues. (CC)
Frankie try to solve a murder. stop a terrorist. (CC)
TOON Level Up (N) Advent. Time King of Hill King of Hill Amer. Dad Amer. Dad Family Guy Family Guy
TRAV Dangerous Grounds Haiti. Dangerous Grounds (N)
Pawn
Pawn (N)
Pawn
TRUTV Pawn
Cosby
Show
Cosby
Show
Raymond
Raymond
TVL
USA
Bizarre Foods/Zimmern
Bizarre Foods/Zimmern
Pawn
Stings
Pawn
Raymond
Raymond
Law & Order: Special Vic- Law & Order: Special Vic- Covert Affairs Quicksand.
tims Unit Educated Guess. tims Unit Spiraling Down.
(N) (CC)
T.I. and Tiny T.I. and Tiny Basketball Wives LA
Behind the Music Pink. (N)
VH1
WE CSI: Miami Kill Clause. (CC) CSI: Miami Count Me Out.
WGN-A How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met
talk shows
9 a.m. WPXI: Today — Vanilla
Ice; One Direction trivia. (N) (CC)
10 a.m. WPXI: The Ellen DeGeneres Show — Andrew Garfield; Alison Eastwood; Ne-Yo. (N)
11 a.m. WTAE: The View —
Rachael Ray and her husband,
John Cusimano. (N) (CC)
11 a.m. WPXI: Anderson Live
— A woman who was held captive
CSI: Miami (CC)
CSI: Miami Show Stopper.
WGN News at Nine (N)
Funniest Home Videos
by her husband; Nick Cannon;
Jane Velez-Mitchell. (N) (CC)
2 p.m. KDKA: The Talk — Carrie Fisher; Toby Keith. (N) (CC)
3 p.m. KDKA: Dr. Phil — Dr.
Phil’s new book teaches how to
spot users and abusers. (N) (CC)
3 p.m. WTAE: Katie — An innocent man tells of serving 25
years in prison. (N) (CC)
11 p.m. TBS: Conan — Joel
McHale; James “Bobo” Fay. (N)
11:34 p.m. WPXI: The Tonight Show With Jay Leno —
C
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Stings
King
King
Law & Order: Special Victims Unit (11:01) Uncle.
Storytellers Pink. (N)
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Keira Knightley; Whitney Cummings.
11:35 p.m. KDKA: Late Show
With David Letterman — Julianna
Margulies; Mumford & Sons.
Midnight WTAE: Jimmy Kimmel Live — Christina Applegate;
Youngblood Hawke. (N) (CC)
12:36 a.m. WPXI: Late Night
With Jimmy Fallon — Sally Field;
Finesse Mitchell; Elon Musk. (N))
12:37 a.m. KDKA: The Late
Late Show With Craig Ferguson
— J.R. Martinez; Toby Keith. (N)
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For Better or For Worse
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Jump Start
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Get Fuzzy
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Children’sCorner
Lemony Snicket discusses
‘Who Could That Be at This Hour?’
Karen MacPherson
Scripps Howard News Service
Take a zany plot set in a place called
Stain’d-by-the-Sea, where there is no
longer any sea. Add a narrator who isn’t
quite sure himself exactly what is going
on. Paint the whole thing as a parody
of the “noir” style popularized by such
hard-boiled mystery masters as Dashiell
Hammett and Raymond Chandler.
Blend all these ingredients — don’t forget to stir in a huge dollop of dry humor
at the last moment — and you’ve got the
latest children’s novel by an author with
the curious, or suspicious, name of Lemony Snicket.
Titled “Who Could That Be at This
Hour?” (Little Brown, $15.99, ages 8-12),
the newest novel by Snicket is the first
book in a series called “All the Wrong
Questions.” “Lemony Snicket” is the
sometimes pen name of Daniel Handler,
who also writes books under his own
name.
If the first book is any indication, it’s
a series that is pretty much guaranteed
to delight young readers and baffle their
parents.
The series also functions as prequel,
of sorts, to Snicket’s best-selling 13-book
children’s series titled “A Series of
Unfortunate Events.” In those books, he
narrates the grim story of the orphaned
Baudelaire children; in the new series,
he tells how he got his start in a mysterious federation of detectives.
In a recent telephone interview, Mr.
Handler talked about his new book, noting that “it’s heavily influenced by noir,”
or “hard-boiled,” mysteries, in which
the detective has a cynical view of life
and his/her work. The noir feel of “Who
Could That Be at This Hour?” is further
enhanced by the stylized illustrations
done by an artist simply named Seth.
“I doubt that ‘noir’ means anything
to kids,” added Mr. Handler, who’s long
been a fan of noir fiction. “It’s one of the
strange things about genres like noir,
that you’re first introduced to them as a
parody when you’re young.”
But Mr. Handler, 42, says he expects
that “Who Could That Be at This Hour?”
will resonate with kids as a “journey of
childhood.”
“There’s something that people of all
ages respond to about the idea of a lonely
detective discovering moral corruption
and still trying to find a clear path, even
as he is being led around by the nose by
a femme fatale,” he said with his typical
deadpan humor.
In “Who Could That Be at This
Meredith Heuer/SHNS
Lemony Snicket reading the paper.
“Who Could That Be at This Hour?”
is the newest novel by Snicket and
the first book in a series called “All
the Wrong Questions.”
Hour?,” Snicket is being trained by
a shadowy organization to do some
unspecified clandestine activities
under the tutelage of an inept, martinet-style trainer.
Here’s how Mr. Handler opens the
book: “There was a town, and there was
a girl, and there was a theft. I was living
in the town, and I was hired to investigate the theft, and I thought the girl had
nothing to do with it. I was almost thirteen and I was wrong. I was wrong about
all of it.”
Snicket deliberately chooses to apprentice for a clueless trainer, S. Theodora
Classic Peanuts
Let’sTalkAboutArt
Markson, figuring that this will allow
him fuller scope to do the kind of work
he feels he should be doing.
Unfortunately, Snicket’s initial plans
go awry almost immediately when
Markson spirits him off to Stain’d-bythe-Sea and away from his sister and the
undercover work they had planned to do
together in the city.
In Stain’d-by-the-Sea, Snicket learns
that he and Markson are supposed to
steal an iconic statue called the Bombinating Beast and return it to someone who says she is the rightful owner.
Snicket, however, discovers that the
statue is actually with its rightful owner
and that stealing it will put the statue in
the wrong hands.
Meanwhile, Snicket meets two fascinating young women: Moxie Mallahan,
who strives to report the town’s news
despite a shortage of ink; and the quickwitted Ellington Feint, who says she is
searching for her kidnapped father but
shows up in surprising places.
Snicket also strikes up an acquaintance with Dashiell Qwerty, the town’s
“sub-librarian,” who is described as
having “the hairstyle one gets if one
is attacked by a scissors-carrying
maniac and lives to tell the tale.” With
Qwerty’s help, Snicket is able to send
coded postcards to his sister to explain
why he’s not able to carry out their
original plans.
As in the “Series of Unfortunate
Events” books, Mr. Handler’s dry wit,
wordplay and perfect comic timing
greatly expand the humorous confusion
in “Who Could That Be at This Hour?”
Readers may not get all of the literary allusions Mr. Handler packs into
the story, and they certainly won’t get
answers to the many questions Snicket
poses, but they’ll still revel in following
his progress, or lack thereof.
Mr. Handler, who also has written
picture books as well as novels for teens
and adults, says he first got the “germ of
the idea” for the “All the Wrong Questions” series when he was finishing up
“A Series of Unfortunate Events.”
The new series will be a quartet,
although each book will have 13 chapters, as 13 is a favorite number for Mr.
Handler, who says he’s “still stunned” by
the literary success of “A Series of Unfortunate Events.”
“I assumed that the books would be
noble failures … and that I would remain
a mostly ignored slightly cultured
writer,” he said. “Well, the books aren’t
noble, but they’re not failures either.”
Karen MacPherson, the children’s/
teen librarian at the Takoma Park, Md.,
Library, can be reached at [email protected].
By Charles Schulz
Garfield
This is a biweekly series about art
and artists in the region. Pittsburgh
Filmmakers/Pittsburgh Center
for the Arts serves the community
through arts education, exhibitions
and artist resources.
Robots are regularly depicted
in movies and on television as the
friends we wish we had.
R2D2, The Iron Giant, even
Optimus Prime, are just a few of
the robotic characters who exude
loyalty, friendship, leadership and
even charm.
As a youngster, Pittsburgh artist
Don Jones was inspired by science
fiction and enjoyed making spaceships, rockets and robots. “My alltime favorite robot is still B9 from
‘Lost in Space,’” he says about the
1960s television series.
His father introduced him to gas
arc welding, brazing, wood working, construction and shop principles, he says, before he was 10 years
old. “I’ve always enjoyed creating
art and sculptures.”
For more information:
www.pittsburgharts.org or
www.pghfilmmakers.org
As an adult Mr. Jones worked
in advertising and as an art director. But in 1998 he decided to devote
himself to his art and began making commissioned robots.
His whimsical robot sculptures
— featured in The Holiday Shop at
Pittsburgh Center for the Arts — are
made from scrap and reused materials. This includes a robot snowman
on sleds, a jolly automaton with an
empty cookie tin body, a dog made
from binoculars and a camera. It’s
just the kind of scrap the
Wall-E might’ve used
to create gadgets in the
popular Pixar futuristic
movie.
About four years ago
Mr. Jones began making
robots with more personality to sell to individuals. “The reaction has
been great. From kids to
adults, they all smile or
start laughing,” he says.
Many admirers just
want to figure out what
they are made from. “I
really enjoy the interaction,” Mr. Jones says.
To learn more about his
art, visit www.jonesroboworks.com.
Pittsburgh Center for
the Arts is expanding
its Holiday Shop to fill
the gallery’s first floor.
Besides Mr. Jones’ robot
sculptures, the shop
also offers handcrafted
gifts from more than 200
regional artists. A free
opening reception with
refreshments will be
held 5:30 p.m. Friday to
commemorate the start
of the holiday season. For
information, including
expanded holiday hours:
www.pittsburgharts.org
A sculpture by Don Jones made from
— By Jessica Futrell
scrap and reused material.
for PF/PCA
Mother Goose and Grimm
By Mike Peters
By Jim Davis
Tundra
Dennis the Menace By Hank Ketcham
The Family Circus
By Chad Carpenter
By Bil Keane
Hagar the Horrible
“Aren’t you two a little old for that kinda stuff?”
“O YEAH! Daddy called earlier and said he’s bringing
his boss home for dinner.”
Marmaduke® By Brad & Paul Anderson Bizarro
By Chris Browne
Lio
By Mark Tatulli
By Dan Piraro
Drabble
By Kevin Fagan
“That’s Marmaduke — the neighborhood watchdog.”
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PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE ! TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2012 ! WWW.POST-GAZETTE.COM
Elmo puppeteer accused of underage relationship
By Frazier Moore
Associated Press
NEW YORK — The puppeteer
who performs as Elmo on “Sesame Street” is taking a leave of
absence from the popular kids’
show in the wake of allegations
that he had a relationship with a
16-year-old boy.
Sesame Workshop said puppeteer Kevin Clash denies the
charges, which were first made
in June by the alleged partner,
who by then was 23.
“We took the allegation very
seriously and took immediate
action,” Sesame Workshop said
in a statement issued Monday.
“We met with the accuser twice
and had repeated communications with him. We met with
Kevin, who denied the accusation.”
The organization described
the relationship as personal
and “unrelated to the workplace.” Its investigation found
the allegation of underage conduct to be unsubstantiated.
But it said Mr. Clash exercised
“poor judgment” and was disciplined for violating company
policy regarding Internet
usage. It offered no details.
“I had a relationship with
the accuser,” Mr. Clash said in
a statement of his own. “It was
between two consenting adults
and I am deeply saddened that
he is trying to characterize it
as something other than what it
was.”
Sex with a person under 17
is a felony in New York if the
perpetrator is at least 21. It was
unclear where the relationship took place, and there is no
record of any criminal charge
against Mr. Clash in the state.
Mr. Clash, the 52-year-old
divorced father of a grown
daughter, added, “I am a gay
man. I have never been ashamed
of this or tried to hide it, but felt
it was a personal and private
SUDOKU
Victoria Will/Associated Press
This Jan. 24, 2011, photo shows “Sesame Street” muppet
Elmo and puppeteer Kevin Clash in the Fender Music Lodge
promoting the film “Being Elmo” during the 2011 Sundance
Film Festival in Park City, Utah.
matter.
“I am taking a break from
Sesame Workshop to deal with
ACES ON BRIDGE/BOBBY WOLFF
Complete the grid so that every
row, column, and 3x3 box contains
every digit from 1 to 9 inclusively.
DIFFICULTY RATING : Easy
YESTERDAY’S PUZZLE ANSWER
Debbie Rosenberg, who
is married to top expert
Michael, demonstrated here
that the talent in that family is not limited to her husband. Debbie was also part
of the U.S. squad that won
the World Junior Teams in
1991, and she had numerous major successes in the
women’s game. Here, she is
at work in a delicate contract
of three hearts.
West led a club to East’s
jack. It did not seem right
to East to give up on the
club tenace by continuing
the suit (although that does
defeat the contract), so
East quite reasonably shifted to the spade nine. West
took two rounds of spades
and played a third spade.
Rosenberg ruffed in dummy
and appeared to have five
top losers. However, she realized that she had been given
a chance, since the defense
no longer had any communication in the club suit.
However, the winning path
is by no means obvious. But,
given that East appeared
to have all the remaining
clubs, West was marked with
WISHING WELL
this false and defamatory allegation,” he said.
Neither Mr. Clash nor Sesame
HOROSCOPE
JERALDINE SAUNDERS
Tuesday, November 13,
2012
The following astrological forecasts should be read for entertainment value only. These predictions have no reliable basis in
scientific fact.
the balance of high cards to
make up his opening bid.
Therefore, Rosenberg cashed
the top hearts and led a
low diamond to her 10 and
West’s queen. West hopefully
led a spade, but Rosenberg
could win her king since East
was out of trump. She drew
the last trump, finessed the
diamond jack, and parked her
club loser on the diamond
ace to make nine tricks for
an excellent result.
CRYPTOQUIP
ARIES (March 21-April 19):
Do a good deed, as it really is
true that actions speak louder
than words. Feedback from others may vary from positive to
negative, so remain guided by
only the highest principles.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20):
Ignore intuitions and nagging
doubts. Remain observant, as
the new moon can indicate a
favorable fresh start in key relationships. There is a reason
people say that you should walk
it like you talk it.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20):
Good things come to those
who wait. An important, pending decision may be causing
stress. Remain patient. You will
find that if your objectives are
worthy, the wait will be worth it.
CANCER (June 21-July 22):
Your attention shifts with the
new moon. Use your superb
business know-how to handle
finances with finesse. Embrace
Workshop indicated how long
his absence might be.
“Elmo is bigger than any
one person and will continue to
be an integral part of ‘Sesame
Street’ to engage, educate and
inspire children around the
world, as it has for 40 years,”
Sesame Workshop said in its
statement.
“Sesame Street” is currently
in production, but other puppeteers are prepared to fill in for
Mr. Clash during his absence,
according to a person close to
the show who spoke on condition of anonymity because that
person was not authorized to
publicly discuss details about
the show’s production.
“Elmo will still be a part of
the shows being produced,” that
person said.
In addition to his role as
Elmo, Mr. Clash also serves as
the show’s senior Muppet coordinator and Muppet captain.
He has won 23 daytime Emmy
AP reporter Tom Hays contributed to this report.
big dreams, but never forget
about support, loyalty and commitment.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Be a
dream believer. This week, your
subconscious may provide worthy advice regarding a current
situation. Follow your intuition
and develop insights, as today’s
new moon emphasizes family
relationships.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept.
22): Banish backseat drivers.
Meddling could create misunderstandings and add to turmoil.
Present others with complete
honesty in business deals; trying to gain an unfair advantage
will work against you.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22):
This isn’t a great day to impress
people, make persuasive arguments or try to exert influence
over others. The potential for
misunderstandings is still rather
high, so pass up any heart-toheart talks.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21):
It is time to forgive, forget and
move on. Powerful ambitions
can be realized if you hook up
with the right person. You may
meet someone who is both a
mover and shaker. Let bygones
be bygones.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec.
21): Success usually comes
to those who are too busy to
look for it. Family responsibilities might briefly prevent you
from concentrating on career or
a crucial workload. Get back in
step tomorrow.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19): Speed up the assembly
line and increase your productivity. You are at the top of your
game and are able to double
your workload with ease. Make
snap decisions; your instincts
are finely tuned.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
18): Go the extra mile to make
a good impression. Showing a
little gusto toward your work will
draw the notice and admiration
of superiors. Stay focused, as
what you create or build now
may be permanent.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March
20): Mountains and molehills
certainly are not the same.
When someone says the
wrong thing or makes a silly
mistake, it is best to ignore it.
Try being the diplomatic king of
your group.
IF NOVEMBER 13 IS
YOUR BIRTHDAY: You may be
inspired by your friends to reach
more ambitious goals in the job,
career or financial areas during
the next eight to 10 weeks.
If you are single, a romantic
relationship might quicken your
heartbeat in April.
JUMBLE
awards and one prime-time
Emmy.
Mr. Clash has been a puppeteer for “Sesame Street” since
1984. It was then that he was
handed the fuzzy red puppet
and asked to come up with a
voice for him. Mr. Clash transformed the character, which had
been a marginal member of the
Muppets gang for a number of
years, into a major star rivaling
Big Bird as the face of “Sesame
Street.”
Among children and adults
alike, Elmo was quickly
embraced as a frolicsome child
with a high-pitched giggle and a
tendency to speak of himself in
the third person.
“I would love to be totally like
Elmo,” Mr. Clash said in a 1997
interview with The Associated
Press. “He is playful and direct
and positive.”
CELEBRITY CIPHER
Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from quotations
by famous people, past and present. Each letter in the
cipher stands for another. Today’s clue: H equals M.
HERE IS A PLEASANT LITTLE GAME that will give you a message every day. It’s a numerical puzzle designed to spell
out your fortune. Count the letters in your first name. If the
number is 6 or more, subtract 4. If the number is less than
6, add 3. The result is your key number. Start at the upper
left-hand corner and check one of your key numbers, left to
right. Then read the message the letters under the checked
figures give you.
11/13
ACROSS
1 — take forever!
4 Historical period
7 Derisive remark
11 Gift tag word
12 Roulette color
14 Sleep like — —
15 Break
17 Electrical connector
18 Dairy product
19 Full of spunk
21 Mark of Zorro
22 RN helper
23 Leeway
26 Folk singer Pete —
29 Syllogism word
30 Watch part
31 “— a lid on it!”
33
34
35
36
38
39
40
41
44
48
49
51
52
53
54
55
56
Solution for previous Cryptoquip: Novel about a
scarlet-toned ferret’s relative that is brave: “The Red
Badger of Courage.”
Previous Jumble solution below Quick Crossword
QUICK CROSSWORD
DOWN
1 Doubtful
2 Pamplona runner
3 Wind resistance
4 Main course
5 Turnpike
6 Broadcast
7 Wide open
8 Troubles
9 Boxing match
10 Like souffles
13 Mirror
16 Ancient Incan
capital
20 Fencer’s blade
23 Dry, as wine
24 Goody-goody
25 Thickening agent
U.S. spy gp.
Treaty
Tubular pasta
Salad makings
Kind of coffee
Tennis return
Rand of “Atlas
Shrugged”
Illinois city
Coat with flour
Was very thrifty
Contacts
Helm position
Tiberius’ garb
Fanatic
Shortening
Rorem or Beatty
NASA counterpart
26
27
28
30
32
34
35
37
38
40
41
42
43
45
46
47
50
Marsupial pockets
Film spectacular
“Ask Dr. —”
Engine part
— Maria
Laborer
Territories
Skipped a
syllable
Vast number
Traditional saying
Banquet
Kan. neighbor
Lascivious glance
Fully cooked
Veld grazers
This, to Pedro
Charged particle
Answer to Previous Puzzle
Monday’s Jumble: Spell, Ratio,
Pounce, Groovy. An important way to
compensate our veterans is to — Pay
respect.
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Solution for previous Celebrity Cipher: “We’ve lost
a very special man ... we’ve lost a great American
treasure.” — Tony Orlando, on Andy Williams
THE NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD
37 Immediately,
on a memo
41 Converge
42 Common
blockage locale
43 On both sides
47 Symbol on a
“This way” sign
49 “I kiss’d thee
___ I kill’d thee”:
Othello
50 Kind of scan
51 20-, 27- and
43-Across locale,
in slang
56 Boneheaded
57 Gang woman
58 Macaroni, e.g.
61 And others: Abbr.
62 The thought that
counts?
63 Compassion
64 Turn down
65 Metalworker’s tool
By John Guzzetta
66 Horse-pulled cart
2 Santa ___
3 People in
Down
1-Acrosses, e.g.
1 Air balls miss it
4 Alpine lake
5 Rhythmic
Answer to Previous Puzzle
6 Something of
interest to Miss
Marple
7 “And” or “or”:
Abbr.
8 Antifur org.
9 Drinks with straws
10 CBS series for
17 seasons
11 The Hunter
12 Jack’s purchase in
a children’s story
14 C, D and EEE
21 Le ___ Soleil
Across
1 Shooter through
whitewater rapids
5 Cold war inits.
9 Neatnik’s
opposite
13 Visitor for the
holidays, maybe
15 Soothing plant
16 ___ Krishna
17 New Zealand
native
18 Minor collision
reminder
19 Wall Street
Journal ___
20 On the front
23 Habitual drunk
25 Ship unit or
shipping unit
26 Plow driver’s
handful
27 On the back
32 Buenos ___
33 Greedy person’s
demand
34 ___ of Sharon
35 Overexcited
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22 Mötley ___
23 White dwarf, e.g.
24 The Allegheny and
Monongahela join
to form it
28 Like Willie Winkie
29 Evacuate
30 Furrow maker
31 Hockey defender
Bobby
35 Egg layer
36 For the present
37 Feel unwell
38 Establishment
that might sell 9Down and
53-Downs
39 Glow
40 [Hey, buddy!]
No. 1009
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
52
53
54
55
59
60
Whimper
Miss Marple, e.g.
Winner of 1948
Not stable
Iguana feature
Sphere
Supplementary
A FedEx driver
may have one
Arab ruler
Drink with a
straw
Naughty Goose
and Moose Drool
Readied to play
Cy Young’s was
2.63, in brief
Pig’s home
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THE GAMES, THE PLAYERS, THE NUMBERS AND MORE
!
! TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2012
NEARLY PICKED OFF: TIMMONS’ OT
INTERCEPTION HELPS AVOID UPSET
Shaky victory
comes with a
price as Big Ben
taken off with a
shoulder injury
that puts him in
doubt next week
By Ed Bouchette
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Peter Diana/Post-Gazette
Steelers Mike Wallace makes a catch for a touchdown while falling to the ground against the Chiefs in the second quarter Monday at Heinz Field.
I
No Big Ben? Big problems
t’s hard to imagine a
more frightening sight
at Heinz Field than
Steelers quarterback
Ben Roethlisberger being
led to the locker room by
the team’s medical personnel, holding his right arm
close to his body, clearly in
distress.
It happened Monday
night early in the third
quarter of the game against
the Kansas City Chiefs.
Suddenly, the outcome
didn’t seem important. It’s
nice to report the Steelers
went on to win, 16-13, in
overtime behind backup
quarterback Byron Leftwich on a night when their
miserable play matched
the miserable weather.
But it doesn’t change the
RON
COOK
fact their season is in jeopardy because of what the
team described as a right
shoulder injury for Roethlisberger, the severity of
which wasn’t disclosed by
coach Mike Tomlin after
the game.
But it did not look good.
The timing couldn’t be
worse.
The Baltimore Ravens
come to town Sunday night.
And, to think, a lot of people feared Roethlisberger
would miss the Ravens
game because of the birth
of his first child, who is due
this month.
“I hope Ben is healthy,”
Leftwich said. “If not, I’ve
got to be ready to go. I’ll be
in watching film tomorrow.
It’s a great opportunity if I
get to play, but it’s not about
that. I must do my job. We
got big things on our mind
here. We’re here preparing
to win a Super Bowl.”
Asked if he thought
the Steelers could win the
SEE COOK, PAGE D-3
Matt Freed/Post-Gazette
Chiefs tight end Tony Moeaki runs away from Keenan Lewis in the first
quarter Monday night at Heinz Field.
MORE AT POST-GAZETTE.COM
! Postgame interviews from the Steelers locker room.
! Steelers Report with Ed Bouchette and Gerry Dulac.
! Fan reaction on Blog ’n’ Gold.
The Steelers did not
know the seriousness of
the injury to quarterback
Ben Roethlisberger’s right
shoulder as they were
leaving Heinz Field Monday night, but they knew
one thing — they had just
avoided what would have
been an embarrassing
upset to another bad AFC
team.
Linebacker Lawrence
Timmons capped one of his
best games of the season by
intercepting Chiefs quarterback Matt Cassel on the
second play of overtime to
set up a Shaun Suisham
23-yard field goal to win it,
16-13.
“We’ll take it and we
won’t apologize for it
either,” Steelers coach
Mike Tomlin said after
the defense allowed yet
another fourth-quarter
lead to evaporate and then
saved the day in overtime.
“Words can’t describe
that,” Timmons said after
he intercepted Cassel’s
pass on the second play of
overtime and returned it
23 yards to the 5. “I got butterflies.”
Suisham came on immediately to end the game and
save the Steelers, 12½-point
favorites, from a monumental upset to the Chiefs, who
managed their first lead in
regulation this season but
still sunk to 1-8.
The Steelers’ fourth
consecutive victory raised
their record to 6-3 as they
prepare for a showdown
Sunday night against
their archrival Baltimore
Ravens, who are in first
place at 7-2 in the AFC
North Division.
“As soon as that field
goal goes through there,
it’s Baltimore time,” linebacker Larry Foote said.
But
Roethlisberger
might not be able to play.
He left early in the third
quarter with a right shoulder injury. He went to the
hospital for a MRI. The
Steelers sounded ready to
play without him.
“It’s why they have me
here,” said backup Byron
Leftwich, who guided the
Steelers to a fourth-quarter
Suisham field goal that put
them ahead for the first
time in the game, 13-10.
Roethlisberger
was
hurt with 13:40 to go in the
third quarter when he was
sacked by Justin Houston,
whose helmet jammed
into Roethlisberger’s right
SEE STEELERS, PAGE D-4
INSIDE Pitt takes on Fordham at Petersen Events Center, Page D-6 l WR McCartney leaves West Virginia football team, Page D-7 l Previewing the WPIAL Class A football semifinals, Page D-9
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PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE ! TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2012 ! WWW.POST-GAZETTE.COM
MONDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL / STEELERS VS. CHIEFS
2012 STEELERS SCHEDULE:
Week 1
at Broncos
Week 2
vs. Jets
Week 3
at Raiders
31-19
27-10
34-31
L
W
L
Week 4
OVERALL: 6-3 " !46'7 $30 " /%/#7 +3( " -21 /&* 54.)!7 ,30 " -21 /&*7 (3(
Week 5
vs. Eagles
Week 6
at Titans
Week 7
at Bengals
Week 8
vs. Redskins
Week 9
at Giants
Week 10
vs. Chiefs
16-14
26-23
24-17
27-12
24-20
16-13
W
OPEN
DATE
L
W
W
W
W
Week 11
vs. Ravens
Nov. 18
8:20 p.m.
WPXI
Week 12
at Browns
Nov. 25
1 p.m.
KDKA
Week 13
at Ravens
Dec. 2
4:25 p.m.
KDKA
Week 15
at Cowboys
Dec. 16
4:25 p.m.
KDKA
Week 14
vs. Chargers
Dec. 9
1 p.m.
KDKA
Week 16
vs. Bengals
Dec. 23
1 p.m.
KDKA
Week 17
vs. Browns
Dec. 30
1 p.m.
KDKA
GAME 9
STEELERS 16
CHIEFS 13
SCORING BY QUARTERS
FIRST QUARTER
1st 2nd 3rd 4th OT Total
Kansas
City:
Charles 12 run (Suc- Chiefs
7 3 0 3 0 13
cop kick), 8:37. Drive:
Steelers
0 10 0 3 3 16
4 plays, 70 yards,
1:46. Key Plays: Cassel 38 pass to Moeaki; Cassel 13 pass to McCluster. Kansas City 7, Steelers 0.
SECOND QUARTER
Kansas City: FG Succop 22, 14:20. Drive: 4 plays, 6
yards, 1:47. Key Play: Bailey 1 fumble return (Redman) Kansas City 10, Steelers 0.
Pit: FG Suisham 35, 9:02. Drive: 11 plays, 43 yards, 5:18.
Key Plays: Roethlisberger 6 pass to Miller on 3rd-and-2; Roethlisberger 16 pass to Miller. Kansas City 10, Steelers 3.
Pit: Wallace 7 pass from Roethlisberger (Suisham kick),
3:16. Drive: 7 plays, 50 yards, 3:46. Key Plays: Dwyer 17
run on 3rd-and-4; Roethlisberger 14 run on 3rd-and-4. Kansas City 10, Steelers 10.
FOURTH QUARTER
Pit: FG Suisham 31, 12:37. Drive: 11 plays, 73 yards,
6:06. Key Plays: Leftwich 31 pass to Sanders on 3rd-and-9;
Arenas 22-yard defensive pass interference penalty on
3rd-and-3; Hali 14-yard roughing the passer penalty on 3rdand-12. Steelers 13, Kansas City 10.
Kansas City: FG Succop 46, :00. Drive: 9 plays, 52 yards,
1:51. Key Plays: Cassel 18 pass to Moeaki; Cassel 12 pass
to Moeaki; Cassel 27 pass to Bowe on 4th-and-15. Kansas
City 13, Steelers 13.
OVERTIME
Pit: FG Suisham 23, 14:05. Drive: 1 play, 0 yards, 0:04.
Key Play: Timmons 23 interception return to Kansas City 5.
Steelers 16, Kansas City 13.
Attendance: 57,644.
A CLOSER LOOK
Peter Diana/Post-Gazette
Steelers linebacker Lawrence Timmons intercepts a pass against the Chiefs in overtime Monday at Heinz Field.
TWOMINUTE DRILL
GERRY DULAC’S
GAME BALL
X’s AND O’s
goes to: ILB Lawrence Timmons
The Steelers came into the game with the league’s No.
1 pass defense after holding Andy Dalton, Robert Griffin
III and Eli Manning to a combined 402 yards in the previous three games. And they were doing much the same
to Chiefs quarterback Matt Cassel, who had only seven
completions for 92 yards late in the fourth quarter. But
Cassel came to life on the final possession, completing
four passes for 62 yards to set up a 46-yard field goal
with no time remaining to force overtime. “We didn’t do
enough to play good football,” coach Mike Tomlin said.
“We did do enough to win.”
It might have been the best game of the season for Timmons, even before his interception
and 23-yard return in overtime that set up the
winning field goal. Timmons had seven tackles,
one quarterback hurry and two passes defended. But he saved
the Steelers from another embarrassing defeat when he picked
off a Matt Cassel pass on the second play of overtime and returned it 23 yards to the Chiefs 5. “We knew it was huge because
our quarterback went out and we knew it would be on the defense,” Timmons said.
KANSAS CITY
STEELERS
14
FIRST DOWNS
14
7
Rushing
3
7
Passing
8
0
Penalty
3
2-13
THIRD DOWN EFFICIENCY
6-16
1-1
FOURTH DOWN EFFICIENCY
0-1
290
TOTAL NET YARDS
249
63
Total Plays
62
4.6
Average Gain
4.0
142
NET YARDS RUSHING
95
35
Rushes
29
4.1
Average per rush
3.3
148
NET YARDS PASSING
154
2-6
Sacked-Yards lost
1-3
154
Gross-Yards passing
157
11-26
Completed-Attempts
16-32
1
Had Intercepted
0
5.3
Yards Per Pass Play
4.7
3-2-1
KICKOFFS-END ZONE-TB
5-3-0
8-42.1
PUNTS-AVERAGE
6-42.7
0
Punts blocked
0
0-0
FGs-PATs BLOCKED
0-0
119
TOTAL RETURN YARDAGE
50
3-17
TOTAL Punts Returns
3-4
5-102
TOTAL Kickoffs Returns
1-23
0-0
TOTAL Interceptions Return Yards
1-23
6-76
PENALTIES-YARDS
2-19
1-0
FUMBLES-LOST
3-1
29:18
TIME OF POSSESSION
31:37
RUSHING STATISTICS
KANSAS CITY
Charles ................ 23-100
Hillis ...................... 10-30
Cassel ..................... 2-12
STEELERS
Dwyer..................... 19-56
Redman ................... 8-21
Roethlisberger.......... 1-14
Sanders ......................1-4
PASSING STATISTICS
THE COUNTDOWN
1
A quick look at the top performances from Monday’s game:
DEJA VU: It looked as if the Steelers might be on the wrong end of another debatable call when quarterback Byron Leftwich tried to
stop his throwing motion and had a fumble returned 21 yards for a touchdown by outside linebacker Justin Houston — a play similar to the one last week by Ben Roethlisberger against the New York Giants. The touchdown would have given the Chiefs a 17-10
lead. But the officials reversed the call after a replay review, saying Leftwich’s arm came forward, making it an incomplete pass.
2
3
BOWE THROW: Facing
fourth-and-15 with 22
seconds remaining,
Matt Cassel hit wide receiver
Dwayne Bowe over the middle
for a 27-yard gain to the Steelers 28. After a quick spike,
Ryan Succop kicked a 46-yard
FG with no time remaining to
force overtime.
GOOD BREAK II: The
Chiefs had two touchdowns taken away, the
first when Bowe scored on a
22-yard catch and run on the
first possession of the third to
make it 17-10. But the play was
negated by a penalty, a call
that proved large when Succop
missed a 33-yard field goal.
WHAT WAS HE
THINKING?
Receiver Mike Wallace made one of
the great catches of the year on his
7-yard touchdown that tied the score,
10-10. Wallace used his right hand to
pull in Roethlisberger’s soft pass in
the right corner of the end zone, then
used both knees to squeeze the ball
when it slipped from his hand. Wallace rolled over possessing the ball
and a review upheld the call. “I just
tried to make a play on it,” said Wallace. “I got lucky.”
4
BEARDED WONDER:
Defensive end Brett Keisel did something the
Steelers rarely get from their
defensive linemen — disruptive plays. He had both sacks
on Matt Cassel, four quarterback hurries and was second
on the team with eight tackles.
5
MOMENTUS OCCASION: When RB Jamaal
Charles scored on a
12-yard run in the first quarter
to give Kansas City a 7-0 lead,
it marked the first time in nine
games the Chiefs held a lead
at any point in regulation.
KANSAS CITY
Cassel ..........11-26-1-154
RECEIVING STATISTICS
KANSAS CITY
Bowe ....................... 4-55
Moeaki..................... 3-68
McCluster................. 2-18
Baldwin .................... 1-11
Hillis ...........................1-2
“We won’t apologize for it.
Such is life in the NFL. The
guys made the necessary
plays to get out of the stadium with a win. Big-time kudos
to all the players who made
the necessary plays, particularly Lawrence Timmons.”
— Mike Tomlin, Steelers coach, on the win
NEXT
OPPONENT
@ BALTIMORE RAVENS,
8:20 P.M. SUNDAY: The Steelers (6-3) play
the Baltimore
Ravens (7-2)
at 8:20 p.m.
Sunday at
Heinz Field,
the first of two games in three
weeks against Baltimore. The
Steelers have won seven of the
12 meetings under Tomlin.
INSIDE THE
NUMBERS
1,002
STEELERS
Miller ....................... 4-47
Wallace .................... 3-14
Sanders ................... 2-30
Redman ................... 2-18
Paulson.................... 2-15
Cotchery .................. 1-22
W.Johnson...................1-7
Dwyer..........................1-4
PUNT RETURNS — YARDS
KANSAS CITY
Arenas ..................... 3-17
OVERHEARD
STEELERS
Roethlisberger...9-18-0-84
Leftwich ............7-14-0-73
That’s the number of career rushing yards by quarterback Ben Roethlisberger, who reached that total
with a 14-yard scramble in the second quarter that set up his tying
7-yard touchdown pass to Mike Wallace. Kordell Stewart holds
the team record for rushing yards by a quarterback with 2,561.
STEELERS
Gilreath.......................2-8
Rainey............ 1-(minus 4)
KICKOFF RETURNS — YARDS
KANSAS CITY
Wylie........................ 3-68
Draughn ................... 2-34
STEELERS
Rainey...................... 1-23
TACKLES — ASSISTS — SACKS
KANSAS CITY
Johnson .................12-1-0
Houston ...................5-2-1
Berry........................5-0-0
Elam ........................3-2-0
Belcher ....................3-1-0
Brown ......................3-0-0
Arenas .....................2-1-0
Draughn ...................2-0-0
Flowers ....................2-0-0
Lewis .......................2-0-0
Pitoitua ....................1-4-0
Jackson....................1-2-0
Hali..........................1-1-0
Albert.......................1-0-0
Bailey.......................1-0-0
Gafford ....................1-0-0
Greenwood...............1-0-0
Poe..........................0-1-0
STEELERS
Clark ........................8-2-0
Keisel ......................6-2-2
Lewis .......................5-1-0
Woodley ...................4-4-0
Timmons..................4-3-0
Foote .......................3-4-0
W.Allen.....................3-0-0
Hampton..................2-1-0
C.Allen .....................2-0-0
Hood........................2-0-0
Harrison...................1-6-0
B.Batch....................1-0-0
C.Brown ...................1-0-0
Mundy......................1-0-0
Paulson....................1-0-0
Suisham ..................1-0-0
Taylor .......................1-0-0
Wallace ....................1-0-0
Carter ......................0-1-0
Gilreath....................0-1-0
Golden .....................0-1-0
B.Johnson ................0-1-0
INTERCEPTIONS — YARDS
KANSAS CITY
None
STEELERS
Timmons.................. 1-23
MISSED FIELD GOALS
KANSAS CITY
Succop................ 33 (WR)
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PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE ! TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2012 ! WWW.POST-GAZETTE.COM
MONDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL / STEELERS VS. CHIEFS
Win comes at a steep price
COOK, FROM PAGE D-1
Jim Bradley. Suddenly, everything seemed wrong. Roethlisberger isn’t just the Steelers’
Most Valuable Player. He had
played so well this season that
his name had been mentioned in
NFL MVP discussions. Late in
the second quarter, he threw a
perfect lob pass to wide receiver
Mike Wallace for a 7-yard touchdown that pulled the Steelers
into a 10-10 tie. It was Roethlisberger’s 17th touchdown pass of
the season. He has been intercepted just four times.
Bradley came back out to the
field.
Roethlisberger never did,
going to a local hospital for an
MRI.
It’s a real stretch to think the
Steelers can beat the Ravens
without Roethlisberger. It’s just
as much of a stretch to think
they can outlast the Ravens and
win the AFC North Division if
he is out for a significant period
of time.
Predictably, Leftwich had
problems when he entered the
game. He missed all of last
season after breaking his left
arm in the exhibition season.
He played in just one game late
in the 2010 season after injuring his knee in the exhibition
season.
Leftwich’s inactivity showed.
The Chiefs helped the Steelers immensely on the field goal
drive that gave the Steelers a
13-10 lead. A pass interference
penalty on cornerback Javier
Arenas and a roughing the
passer call on Hali — both on
third down — kept the drive
going. Earlier, Leftwich did
complete a 31-yard pass to wide
receiver Emmanuel Sanders on
a third-and-9 play. Somehow,
the Steelers got in position to
get a 31-yard field goal by Shaun
Suisham with 12:37 left in the
game.
The kick looked as if it would
hold up for a couple of reasons.
One, the Chiefs, now 1-8, are a
lousy team. And two, Leftwich
completed a 22-yard pass to wide
receiver Jerricho Cotchery on
third-and-7 from the Steelers 11
with little more than 3 minutes
left.
But the Steelers defense
couldn’t protect the lead. Chiefs
kicker Ryan Succop tied the
score, 13-13, at the end of regulation after an eight-play, 52-yard
drive.
Fortunately for the Steelers, the defense made up for it.
An interception by linebacker
Lawrence Timmons set up
Suisham’s winning 23-yard field
goal.
Leftwich, who wasn’t needed
REPORT
CARD
in the overtime period, finished
7 of 14 for 73 yards.
The Steelers traded for Leftwich on draft weekend in 2010
for just this sort of emergency.
He was supposed to start for
Roethlisberger when Roethlisberger was suspended for
the first four games of the ’10
season. Leftwich’s knee injury
ended those plans. The broken
arm kept him from being Roethlisberger’s backup last season.
Leftwich finally got his
chance Monday night. He was
just good enough. But it’s clear,
isn’t it? He has to be so much
better for the Steelers to succeed
in the games ahead if Roethlisberger’s injury is serious.
Ron Cook: rcook@post-gazette.
com. Ron Cook can be heard on
the “Vinnie and Cook” show
weekdays from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
on 93.7 The Fan.
CITY OF
CHAMPIONS
GERRY DULAC
grades the
Steelers’ effort
Monday in their
win against the
Chiefs:
TODAY’S TEAM
GRADE: Average
mark of the 9 categories
Ben Roethlisberger left in
the third quarter with a right
shoulder injury and did not
return. After a slow start, he
managed to bring the SteelQUARTERBACK
ers back from a 10-0 deficit
with a 7-yard touchdown
pass — a drive that included a 14-yard scramble on third down.
Byron Leftwich made his first appearance of the season and
was a sporadic 7 of 17 for 73 yards. He needed a replay review
to overturn what would have been a touchdown return of a
fumble
QB
After producing three consecutive 100-yard rushers
for the first time in five years,
the Steelers had trouble
RUNNING BACKS
finding one back to gain
consistent yards. Jonathan
Dwyer returned after a onegame absence and had 56 yards on 19 carries, including 38 in
the second quarter when he replaced Isaac Redman. Dwyer’s
17-yard run helped set up the first touchdown. Redman did not
return in the first half after his fumble at his 10 led to a Chiefs
field goal and a 10-0 deficit.
RB
WR
The absence of injured
Antonio Brown seemed to be
significant. Mike Wallace had
WIDE RECEIVERS
only two catches for 14 yards
in the first half, but one was
a magnificent one-handed
catch for a 7-yard touchdown. Emmanuel Sanders had a big
31-yard catch-and-run on third-and-9 to keep alive a drive that
led to the go-ahead field goal. Tight end Heath Miller had four
catches for 47 yards early, but was largely quiet after that..
The running game that
averaged 155 yards the
past three games was nonexistent against the Chiefs.
OFFENSIVE LINE
The Steelers finished with
95 yards on 29 attempts,
averaging just 3.3 yards per
carry. Nobody could block LB Derrick Johnson, especially on a
failed fourth-and-1 run at midfield in the third quarter. Guard Willie Colon had the double-whammy of being penalized for holding and unsportsmanlike conduct, one play before Redman’s
fumble.
OL
A big game by end Brett
Keisel, who had both sacks
on quarterback Matt Cassel
and also forced a third-down
incompletion. The Chiefs had
DEFENSIVE LINE
little trouble creasing the defensive front and consistently
gaining yards. Jamal Charles had 65 of his 89 rushing yards in
the first half, when he averaged 4.6 yards per carry. The biggest
ignominy of allowing a 12-yard scoring run to Charles was that it
marked the first time all season the Chiefs had a lead in regulation.
DL
The Chiefs lead the
league in turnovers (29),
including an NFL-high 18
by Cassel, but the defense
didn’t force a takeaway until
LINEBACKERS
Lawrence Timmons’ interception in overtime, setting
up the winning field goal. It was the culmination of a big game
by Timmons, who was very active, both against the rush and
applying pressure. But he was lucky that a 22-yard touchdown
by Dwayne Bowe was negated by penalty because Timmons
missed the tackle.
LB
S
After allowing just 402
yards passing in the previous
three games, the league’s
SECONDARY
No. 1-ranked pass defense
held Cassel to seven completions for 92 yards until the
last drive. And that included a 38-yard catch-and-run on the
second possession in which safety Ryan Clark missed a tackle.
Then they allowed him to complete four passes for 62 yards on
the final possession to tie the score at the end of regulation.
The loss of Brown was
especially apparent on punt
returns because the Steelers got little production from
Chris Rainey and David
SPECIAL TEAMS
Gilreath. But the offense
was bailed out by Shaun
Suisham, who had field goals of 35 and 31 yards in regulation
and the winning 23-yarder in OT. Suisham is 20 of 21 on the
season. The other good news: The Steelers did not allow any
significant returns by the Chiefs. And, when he needed a good
punt, Drew Butler delivered a 58-yarder with 1:51 remaining.
SP
Posters, photos, DVDs and more
The Steelers were fortunate not to lose another
game to a team with just one
victory. It was not the kind
of offense expected against
COACHING
Todd Haley’s former team,
who had allowed an average
of 30 points per game. The running game was sporadic and
the passing game lacks confidence without Roethlisberger. And
when the defense needed a stop on the Chiefs’ final possession, it didn’t deliver. That’s what happened in the other three
losses. But Timmons’ big play in overtime got everyone off the
hook.
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MONDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL / STEELERS VS. CHIEFS
STEELERS NOTEBOOK
Roethlisberger’s
status unknown
for Ravens game
By Paul Zeise
and Jerry Micco
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
The Steelers’ 16-13 victory
against the Kansas City Chiefs
Monday night at Heinz Field
might have been a costly as
quarterback Ben Roethlisberger was injured in the third
quarter and taken to a hospital
to be evaluated for a right shoulder injury.
Roethlisberger was sacked
by Justin Houston and it
appeared he took the crown of a
helmet into his shoulder.
“We don’t know the status of
that as we sit here right now,”
Steelers coach Mike Tomlin
said. “When I get information,
you’ll get it.”
Roethlisberger was replaced
by Byron Leftwich, who finished the game and might have
to play Sunday night against
the Baltimore Ravens. If that’s
the case, his teammates say the
offense is still in good hands.
“Anytime our quarterback
goes down you worry about it,”
receiver Mike Wallace said.
“But we have some guys who
are capable of stepping in. Ben
is one of the best in the game
and anytime you lose a guy who
is one of the best at any position it hurts you, but we have
[Leftwich]and he is capable of
running this team.”
The Steelers also might have
lost Ryan Clark, who was
knocked out of the game and
had to be evaluated for a possible concussion.
Rookie released
The Steelers released rookie
defensive lineman Alameda
Ta’amu Monday to make room
to sign wide receiver David Gilreath from the practice squad.
Ta’amu, a fourth-round draft
pick from the University of
Washington, was charged with
aggravated assault, aggravated
assault by vehicle while driving
under the influence and fleeing an officer after an off-duty
officer first spotted him driving the wrong way on Fort Pitt
Boulevard and then heading
over the Smithfield Bridge to
the South Side Oct. 14.
Three officers on foot
attempted to stop him as he continued to drive erratically down
East Carson Street, nearly striking them as they drew their
guns and yelled for him to stop.
His SUV struck four parked
vehicles, injuring a woman who
was sitting in one of them, and
finally crashed into a Honda
Civic.
It took four officers and two
sets of handcuffs to restrain
the 6-foot-3, 348-pound defensive lineman, who had a blood
alcohol level of 0.196, more than
double the legal limit, according
to a police complaint.
He also is charged with leaving the scene of an accident, DUI
and escape, all misdemeanors,
in addition to several summary
driving offenses.
The Steelers signed Gilreath,
a rookie from Wisconsin, to the
53-man roster to add an extra
receiver with Antonio Brown
out with an ankle injury.
If Ta’amu clears waivers, he
could be re-signed to the practice squad.
First lead
The Chiefs scored a touchdown on their second drive of
the game — a 12-yard run by
Jamaal Charles that gave
them a 7-0 lead with 8:37 remaining in the first quarter.
It marked the first time this
season the Chiefs have led in
regulation this season.
That was a span of 33 quarters of regulation football that
the Chiefs played without a
lead.
The previous time they held
a lead in regulation was in the
season finale last year, a 7-3 win
against Denver.
Big mistake
Chiefs quarterback Matt
Cassel had the key turnover
in overtime when his pass was
intercepted by Steelers linebacker Lawrence Timmons
deep in his territory. The play
led to the winning 23-yard field
goal by Shaun Suisham one
play later.
“One of their defensive linemen deflected it,” Cassel said.
“He hit it and it went a direction
we didn’t want it to go.”
That was to Timmons, who
rumbled 16 yards to the Chiefs
5. The Steelers then tried the
winning kick on first down.
“I think [Cassel] thought
the linebacker [Timmons] was
rushing, but he dropped back,”
Chiefs coach Romeo Crennel
said. “He made a good play and
jumped up to get the ball.”
Colon’s daily double
Willie Colon had a tough
sequence in the first quarter
and it led to the Chiefs’ second
score of the game, a 22-yard field
goal by Ryan Succop.
TheSteelershadafirst-and-10
at their 28 when Isaac Redman
ran off left tackle for what would
have been an 8-yard gain.
Colon, however, was penalized for holding, which would
have been a 10-yard penalty, but
he apparently objected to the
call and said something inflammatory to the officials and was
penalized for unsportsmanlike
conduct.
The second penalty was
enforced as half the distance
to the goal line and that left the
Steelers with a first-and-29 at
the 9. One play later Redman
fumbled and the Chiefs recovered at the 10.
Colon redeemed himself
a little bit, however, on the
next drive when he recovered
a fumble by tight end Heath
Miller, prolonging what turned
out to be a field goal drive and
the Steelers’ first points of the
game.
Inactive players
The Steelers had the following players inactive: Charlie
Batch, DeMarcus Van Dyke,
Rashard Mendenhall, Troy
Polamalu, Sylvester Stevenson, Marcus Gilbert and
Antonio Brown.
As a result Mike Adams
started at right tackle (in place
of Gilbert), Redman started
at running back, Emmanuel Sanders started at wide
receiver and Will Allen started
at safety.
The Chiefs inactive players were Brady Quinn, Steve
Breaston, Tysyn Hartman,
Cyrus Gray, Bryan Kehl,
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134 passing yards to become
just the 25th quarterback in
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yards passing and 1,000 yards
rushing.
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C
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STEELERS, FROM PAGE D-1
shoulder.
Roethlisberger was 9 of 18 for
84 yards and one touchdown to
that point.
With Leftwich at the controls, the Steelers picked up two
big third downs — two thanks
to Kansas City penalties — on
the way to a 73-yard drive that
ended with Suisham’s 31-yard
field goal.
It gave the Steelers their first
lead of the game with 12:37 to
go.
The Steelers and Kansas City
ended regulation tied, 13-13,
when Chiefs kicker Ryan Succop, who missed one earlier
from 33 yards, kicked a 46-yard
field goal with no time left to
send the game into overtime.
Kansas City, with no time
outs, drove 52 yards in the final
1:51 to tie it. Cassel completed a
27-yard pass to Dwayne Bowe on
fourth down to the Steelers 28.
The Chiefs hustled up to the
line of scrimmage and Cassel
spiked the ball with two seconds left to stop the clock. Succop then kicked his second field
goal of the game.
The Steelers defense gave up
fourth-quarter leads in three
previous losses this season,
including to two losing teams,
the Oakland Raiders and Tennessee Titans on the road.
They did manage to win their
15th consecutive Monday night
home game, but it might have
been their most difficult in that
21-year stretch.
The Chiefs, who entered the
game at near NFL-record pace
with 29 turnovers, had none
Monday night until Timmons’
interception. The Steelers had
one turnover.
Kansas City running back
Jamaal Charles rushed for 100
yards and a touchdown in a
game in which Cassel was typically bad — he was 11 of 26 for
154 yards, two Brett Keisel sacks
and the one huge interception
by Timmons.
The Steelers were not as productive on the ground after a
good three-game run. Isaac Redman started but lost a fumble in
the first quarter and finished
with just eight carries. Jonathan Dwyer carried 19 times for
56 yards and the Steelers
Leftwich went 7 of 14 for 73
yards passing in the game.
The Steelers got two breaks
in the third quarter as Kansas
City had two touchdowns nullified, one by a penalty and one
by video review, and missed a
33-yard field goal.
Leftwich entered for the first
time this season and, on his
third play, dropped the ball as
his arm moved forward. As they
did with Roethlisberger a week
ago, the officials on the field let
it stand as a fumble and Houston
returned it 21 yards for a touchdown, which was overturned
by video review and called an
incomplete pass.
The Steelers erased a 10-0
Chiefs lead to tie it by halftime,
10-10.
Mike Wallace, who dropped
what would have been a 44-yard
touchdown reception five plays
earlier, made a spectacular
catch of a 7-yard pass in the
Matt Freed/Post-Gazette
Punter Drew Butler congratulates Shaun Suisham for his winning field goal in overtime Monday
night at Heinz Field.
right corner of the end zone for
a touchdown that gave the Steelers a tie and brought them back
from 10 points back.
On first down, Wallace
hauled in Roethlisberger’s pass
with his right hand behind
cornerback Brandon Flowers.
As he fell to the turf, the ball
wedged between his knees as he
rolled out of bounds. The play
was reviewed and the call stood
as a touchdown.
“You don’t script that,” Wallace said. “You just have to roll
with it.”
Kansas City, which took its
first lead of the season in regu-
lation at 7-0 in the first quarter,
stretched it to 10-0 early in the
second quarter after Redman
fumbled at his 10 and Succop
kicked a 22-yard field goal.
Suisham ended the next
drive with his first field goal of
the game, from 35 yards, after a
43-yard drive fizzled at the Kansas City 17.
It was 10-3 Kansas City with
9:02 left in the first half.
Earlier, Kansas City’s second drive of the game produced
the Chiefs’ first lead in regulation this season (their only win
came against the New Orleans
Saints in overtime).
NOTEBOOK
Vick’s concussion is
‘pretty significant’
From wire dispatches
Philadelphia Eagles coach
Andy Reid said quarterback
Michael Vick suffered a
“pretty significant” concussion and told Vick to stay home
Monday and rest.
Reid said he could not immediately rule out Vick for a game
Sunday at Washington. Reid,
though, made it sound likely
that rookie Nick Foles will get
the start.
Browns
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412.322.8031
2520 Route 19 South
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PA 15317
Roethlisberger injured;
Steelers avoid big upset
Outgoing president Mike
Holmgren still hasn’t decided
if he wants to coach again.
Hoping to squelch a weekend
report that he would be interested in a coaching job with
the Dallas Cowboys if Jason
Garrett gets fired, Holmgren
said he would never float a
story about any interest in
replacing another coach and “I
haven’t talked to a single soul”
in Dallas.
49ers
Quarterback Alex Smith
threw a 14-yard touchdown
pass in the second quarter Sunday of a tie against the Rams
while playing with blurred
vision before coming out with
a concussion. Coach Jim Harbaugh said Monday that Smith
connected with Michael Crabtree six plays after he began
experiencing blurred vision
on a 1-yard keeper early in the
second quarter. Earlier, he had
taken a vicious hit from linebacker Jo-Lonn Dunbar.
Buccaneers
Coach Greg Schiano said
linebacker Quincy Black is
expected to recover from a
neck injury but is experiencing complications with his left
arm. Black was carted off the
field Sunday after making a
tackle on Chargers running
back Ryan Mathews.
Packers
Green Bay have lost another
player despite having the weekend off, placing offensive tackle
Bryan Bulaga on the injured
reserve with an injured hip.
Panthers
Coach Ron Rivera said he
has fired special teams coordinator Brian Murphy after
the team gave up a 76-yard
punt return for a touchdown
to Trindon Holliday in a loss
Sunday to the Denver Broncos. Rivera promoted assistant
special teams coach Richard
Rodgers to coordinator.
Elsewhere
Yahoo Sports apologized for
a site outage Sunday that left
thousands of fantasy football
players complaining of lastminute lineup problems and
possible lost money.
It took them only four plays to
cover 70 yards with Charles running the final 12 up the middle
past Ziggy Hood and Will Allen
for the score and a 7-0 lead.
“We didn’t perform very
well,” Tomlin said.
“We accept responsibility for
that. We’re not going to make
excuses. … We did do enough to
win, though.”
For more on the Steelers, read
the blog, Ed Bouchette on the
Steelers at www.post-gazette.
com/plus. Ed Bouchette: [email protected] and
Twitter: @EdBouchette.
NFL
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
W
Baltimore..........7
Steelers ...........6
Cincinnati .........4
Cleveland .........2
W
New England.....6
Miami...............4
N.Y. Jets...........3
Buffalo .............3
W
Houston ...........8
Indianapolis ......6
Tennessee........4
Jacksonville ......1
W
Denver .............6
San Diego.........4
Oakland............3
Kansas City ......1
NORTH
L T
2 0
3 0
5 0
7 0
EAST
L T
3 0
5 0
6 0
6 0
SOUTH
L T
1 0
3 0
6 0
8 0
WEST
L T
3 0
5 0
6 0
8 0
Pct
.778
.667
.444
.222
PF
254
207
220
169
PA
196
177
231
211
Pct
.667
.444
.333
.333
PF
299
173
175
211
PA
201
186
228
285
Pct
.889
.667
.400
.111
PF
250
186
219
127
PA
143
201
311
246
Pct
.667
.444
.333
.111
PF
271
209
191
146
PA
189
191
284
256
NATIONAL CONFERENCE
W
N.Y. Giants .......6
Dallas ..............4
Philadelphia......3
Washington.......3
W
Atlanta .............8
Tampa Bay........5
New Orleans .....4
Carolina............2
W
Chicago ............7
Green Bay.........6
Minnesota ........6
Detroit..............4
W
San Francisco ...6
Seattle .............6
Arizona .............4
St. Louis...........3
EAST
L T
4 0
5 0
6 0
6 0
SOUTH
L T
1 0
4 0
5 0
7 0
NORTH
L T
2 0
3 0
4 0
5 0
WEST
L T
2 1
4 0
5 0
5 1
Pct
.600
.444
.333
.333
PF
267
188
156
226
PA
216
204
221
248
Pct
.889
.556
.444
.222
PF
247
260
249
163
PA
174
209
256
216
Pct
.778
.667
.600
.444
PF
242
239
238
216
PA
133
187
221
222
Pct
.722
.600
.444
.389
PF
213
198
144
161
PA
127
161
173
210
MONDAY’S GAME
Steelers 16 .................... Kansas City 13, OT
SUNDAY’S GAMES
New Orleans 31 ........................... Atlanta 27
Minnesota 34 .............................. Detroit 24
Denver 36 ................................. Carolina 14
Tampa Bay 34......................... San Diego 24
Tennessee 37................................. Miami 3
New England 37...........................Buffalo 31
Baltimore 55.............................. Oakland 20
Cincinnati 31 ......................... N.Y. Giants 13
Seattle 28 .................................. N.Y. Jets 7
St. Louis 24.................San Francisco 24, OT
Dallas 38 .............................Philadelphia 23
Houston 13 ..................................Chicago 6
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Open: Arizona, Cleveland, Green Bay, Washington
THURSDAY, NOV. 15
Miami at Buffalo, 8:20 p.m.
SUNDAY, NOV. 18
Baltimore at Steelers, 8:20 p.m.
Cleveland at Dallas, 1 p.m.
N.Y. Jets at St. Louis, 1 p.m.
Jacksonville at Houston, 1 p.m.
Cincinnati at Kansas City, 1 p.m.
Philadelphia at Washington, 1 p.m.
Green Bay at Detroit, 1 p.m.
Arizona at Atlanta, 1 p.m.
Tampa Bay at Carolina, 1 p.m.
New Orleans at Oakland, 4:05 p.m.
San Diego at Denver, 4:25 p.m.
Indianapolis at New England, 4:25 p.m.
Open: Minnesota, N.Y. Giants, Seattle, Tennessee
MONDAY, NOV. 19
Chicago at San Francisco, 8:30 p.m.
SUNDAY’S LATE GAME
Houston 13, Chicago 6
Houston ..........................3 7
Chicago ..........................0 3
First Quarter
Hou—FG S.Graham 20, 8:13.
0
3
3—13
0— 6
Second Quarter
Chi—FG Gould 51, 12:52.
Hou—Foster 2 pass from Schaub (S.Graham
kick), 4:14.
Third Quarter
Chi—FG Gould 24, 1:55.
Fourth Quarter
Hou—FG S.Graham 42, 4:49.
A—62,410.
TEAM STATISTICS
Houston
Chicago
13.....................First downs ...................... 8
215................ Total Net Yards ............... 249
35-127............ Rushes-yards ........... 23-115
88....................... Passing..................... 134
0-0.................. Punt Returns................ 3-31
3-66...............Kickoff Returns .............. 3-53
2-5...............Interceptions Ret. ............ 2-10
14-26-2 ............ Comp-Att-Int ............18-33-2
1-7...............Sacked-Yards Lost.............. 0-0
8-44.6...................Punts .................. 5-38.8
0-0.................. Fumbles-Lost.................. 2-2
3-35...............Penalties-Yards .............. 5-49
31:08..........Time of Possession ......... 28:52
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
RUSHING—Houston, Foster 29-102, Forsett
4-27, Schaub 2-(minus 2). Chicago, Forte 1639, Cutler 3-37, Bush 3-34, Campbell 1-5.
PASSING—Houston, Schaub 14-26-2-95.
Chicago, Campbell 11-19-0-94, Cutler 7-142-40.
RECEIVING—Houston, Foster 5-15, Johnson
4-35, G.Graham 3-15, Walter 2-30. Chicago,
Marshall 8-107, Spaeth 3-4, Hester 2-4, Forte
2-(minus 3), Bennett 1-9, Adams 1-7, Davis
1-6.
MISSED FIELD GOALS—Chicago, Gould 48
(WL).
C
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Nov 13 2012 12:26:08:291AM
Post-Gazette
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D-5
D-5
PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE ! TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2012 ! WWW.POST-GAZETTE.COM
MONDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL / STEELERS VS. CHIEFS
Peter Diana/Post-Gazette
No, it’s not snowing. A Heinz Field ground crew member uses leaf blowers to clear water off the tarp prior to removal before the Steelers took on the Chiefs Monday night.
RAINY DAY: STEELERS NEARLY LET ONE
SLIP AWAY AGAINST DISMAL CHIEFS
Matt Freed/Post-Gazette
Punter Drew Butler congratulates Shaun Suisham after kicking a field goal to
win the game, 16-13, in overtime Monday night at Heinz Field.
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Peter Diana/Post-Gazette
Steelers rookie tight end David Paulson loses control and fumbles the football against the Chiefs on a
night that featured several fumbles, drops and miscues in the pouring rain.
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SportsTwo
NHL LOCKOUT
Crosby’s
patience
waning
slowly
Back to
drawing
board for
Panthers
Playing overseas
still an option
Pitt still learning
after poor start
against Huskies
By Shelly Anderson
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Sidney Crosby sees a pattern in collective bargaining
between the NHL and the
NHL Players’ Association,
and it’s not one he likes.
“It’s pretty one-sided,” the
Penguins center and captain
said Monday after practicing with eight teammates at
Southpointe. “I don’t really
know what [the league owners] have given up, up to this
point.”
With the lockout stretching into a ninth week and
no end in sight — as of
Monday evening, no formal talks were scheduled
after the sides met Tuesday
through Friday and Sunday
— Crosby is getting worn
down emotionally by the
situation.
“It’s just frustrating,”
he said. “You kind of hear
the same things coming
out of the meetings all the
time. Just waiting to hear
something new from their
side. It’s almost to the point
where you don’t want to ask
because you know you’re
going to get the same answer
you got a week before.
“There’s no reason we
can’t figure something out.
I really want to be optimistic. It’s not easy right now.
It’s just a roller coaster … I
don’t know what’s going to
happen.”
Crosby reiterated that the
longer the lockout lasts, the
more likely he is to pursue
signing with a European
club.
He said his agent, Pat
Brisson, has a handle on feasible offers, although the two
have not conferred on those.
In addition, costly insurance
against at least some of Crosby’s 12-year, $104 million
contract set to kick in next
season could be a stumbling
block.
Top executives from the
league and the union were in
Toronto for the annual Hall
of Fame induction ceremony
Monday, and it’s possible
a new bargaining session
could stem from informal
contact there.
Steve Fehr, special counsel
to the NHLPA, said during a
conference in Toronto that
the three big issues remain
the split of revenue between
the league and the players,
player contract rules and
how to handle a shortened
season. The league has canceled the schedule through
the end of this month.
He said what is lacking is
a breakthrough moment.
“One thing [NHL deputy
commissioner] Bill Daly
and I agree on: When the
moment is right, a deal will
be done very quickly,” Fehr
said, adding that while the
union is open to bringing
in a moderator, “My impression is the league isn’t terribly interested in it.”
When the sides could not
make much headway on core
economic issues last week,
they turned to player contract rights Sunday, but that
meeting lasted only about an
hour. The NHL apparently
is insisting on many of the
changes in contract rules it
included in an opening proposal during the summer.
Those include a longer
wait for unrestricted free
agency, shorter entry-level
contracts and caps on contract length and variation
in salary over the course of
a contract.
Those are more ownerfriendly than rules that were
adopted when the previous
collective bargaining agree-
SEE NHL, PAGE D-7
FF!
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GA CKOUT 2012
NHL LO
DAY 59
By Sam Werner
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
It can be an overused
sports cliche, but for the
past two weeks “learning
how to win” has been the
reality for Pitt.
The 24-17 loss Friday to
Connecticut was Pitt’s second consecutive one-score
defeat, and third of the season.
“I think a
play here or
there does
make a difference,
but you’ve
got to learn
how
to
make those
plays,” Pitt ! Game: Pitt
vs. Rutcoach Paul
gers.
C h r y s t
said on the ! When:
Big
East
Noon Nov.
coaches
24.
conference ! Where:
call MonHeinz Field.
day morn- ! TV: ESPN/
ing.
ESPN2.
“Sometimes those
plays are in the first half,
sometimes they’re in the
third quarter, sometimes
they’re at the end, sometimes they’re in overtime.
What makes it tough is,
I feel like at times, we’re
learning from these things,
and sometimes we need
to go through it again to
learn.”
While Pitt’s triple overtime loss to Notre Dame
10 days ago came down to
a few plays at the end, the
Panthers lost Friday’s game
against the Huskies when
they fell behind, 24-0, in the
first half.
After the game, running
back Ray Graham and quarterback Tino Sunseri said
the team came out sluggish
and flat in the first half. On
Monday, Chryst took his
share of the responsibility,
but also noted that players
need to find some self-motivation.
“We’ve got to create a
culture of guys [who] are
appreciative and enjoy the
opportunity to play each
game and that starts with
me helping them get there,”
Chryst said. “You’ve got to
be ready. To take the game
for granted, or to not be
excited to play, we’ve got to
change that thinking.”
Next
Julia Rendleman/Post-Gazette photos
Pitt center Steven Adams tries a hook shot in the first half Monday night against Fordham at Petersen Events Center.
Adams scored 13 points and grabbed 5 rebounds in the win.
PITT 86, FORDHAM 51
MOORE POWER,
MORE SUCCESS
Junior forward takes on new role, scores 20 to spark win
Today
By Ray Fittipaldo
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Over the summer when J.J. Moore
was recuperating from foot surgery
that forced him to stay off the court,
coach Jamie Dixon had some heart-toheart conversations with his talented
junior about adding another position
to his resume. In convincing Moore to
embrace a move to power forward he
drew a comparison between Moore and
former Pitt star and current NBA player
Sam Young.
On Monday night, Moore did a fair
impersonation of Young in Pitt’s 86-51
victory against Fordham in the first
round of the Preseason NIT at Petersen
Events Center. The Panthers will play
Lehigh tonight for the right to advance
to the semifinal round of the tournament next week at Madison Square Garden in New York.
Moore, a 6-foot-6 junior, came off the
bench to lead the team with 20 points.
He showed off his inside and outside
! Game: Pitt vs. Lehigh.
! When: 9 p.m.
! Where: Petersen Events
Center.
! TV: ESPNU.
game, crashing the boards to get some
early points and then stepping out to
the 3-point line to take advantage of his
taller and slower counterparts.
Moore was 3 for 5 from 3-point range
and displayed a confidence that he had
not shown in his first two years in the
program.
“I told him in the offseason this is
where Sam had his breakout year,”
Dixon said. “And it’s this exact same
change where [Young] played the four
[position] and the three. It creates
matchup problems obviously. We didn’t
Freshman Durand Johnson scored 8
points in 10 minutes Monday.
Johnson leaves Pitt
SEE PANTHERS, PAGE D-8
! After not playing Friday
in a game against Mount St.
Mary’s, guard John Johnson
left Pitt and will transfer to
another school.
— Story, Page D-8
LEHIGH 89, ROBERT MORRIS 60
Colonials too cold from field
McCollum, dry spell in first half are too much to overcome
By Craig Meyer
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Entering the second half
of its game against Lehigh
trailing by 15 points, the
Robert Morris basketball
team needed the fresh start
that a new half provides, a
chance to not only regroup
and correct mistakes, but
also the opportunity to enter
the next 20 minutes with a
new, optimistic mindset.
Within
10
seconds,
though, the player whom all
eyes were upon entering the
game — Lehigh’s C.J. McCollum — wrapped around a
backdoor screen and, with
ease, leapt and caught a lob
from teammate Mackey
McKnight, laying the ball
in gently off the glass and
setting an early tone — that
there would be little differ-
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Julia Rendleman/Post-Gazette
Robert Morris forward Lucky Jones passes in the first
half Monday against Lehigh at Petersen Events Center.
ence between the game’s
first and second half.
Days removed from a
25-point loss to Rider in
which it shot a little more
than 25 percent from the
field, Robert Morris suffered its second loss in as
many games, falling, 89-60,
Monday night to Lehigh in
the first round of the Preseason NIT at the Petersen
Events Center.
“What happened tonight
was we played a really good
team, we had some defensive
breakdowns where we really
needed to get stops and
because we’re not as sharp
as we need to be offensively
or defensively,” Robert Morris coach Andy Toole said.
For the second consecutive game, the Colonials
(0-2) struggled with their
shooting, hitting just 33.9
percent. Lehigh, by comparison, made 51.7 percent of its
shots From 3-point range,
Robert Morris made only
four of its 22 attempts.
McCollum led all scorers with 19 points, along
with four rebounds and four
SEE RMU, PAGE D-8
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Time to heal
The Panthers will have
an extra week to think
about the loss to the Huskies before they take the
field again.
Pitt has an open date this
weekend before a Nov. 24
date against Rutgers, now
alone in first place in the
Big East.
Chryst said the team
will practice today through
Thursday this week and add
in some off-field workouts
Friday before the weekend.
For some players, the off
week will also be a chance
SEE PITT, PAGE D-7
Pitt running back Ray
Graham said the team
came out sluggish Friday
against Connecticut.
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Nov 13 2012 01:18:02:426AM
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PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE ! TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2012 ! WWW.POST-GAZETTE.COM
COLLEGE FOOTBALL / HOCKEY
Hope wearing thin
as lockout drags on
NOTEBOOK
Change
made to
new bowl
system
NHL, FROM PAGE D-6
From local and wire dispatches
The new college football postseason system will have six
games as originally planned,
but now a spot in the marquee
bowls will be reserved for the
best team from a group of five
conferences that includes the
Big East.
The tweak to the postseason
format that will start in 2014 was
made Monday during a meeting
of conference commissioners
and university presidents.
In September, a proposal was
put forth to add a seventh game
to the format that would match
the best team from the Big East,
Mountain West, Conference
USA, Sun Belt and Mid-American Conference against a team
from the Pac-12 or Big 12.
But ultimately that plan was
dumped, and instead a guaranteed spot was created to give
those conferences access to the
top games.
The national semifinals will
rotate through six bowl games,
setting up two playoff games and
four major bowl games every
season. The title game will be
bid out each year through a
separate process similar to the
Super Bowl.
Louisville
Cardinals running back
Senorise Perry will miss the
remainder of the season with a
torn right anterior cruciate ligament. The No. 20 Cardinals’ top
rusher and Big East Conference
touchdowns leader was injured
in Saturday’s 45-26 loss at Syracuse.
Florida
Gators quarterback Jeff
Driskel is doubtful for Saturday’s game against Jacksonville State. Coach Will Muschamp said Jacoby Brissett
likely will start against the
Gamecocks. Driskel sprained
his right ankle in the third
quarter of Saturday’s game and
probably won’t practice this
week. He is wearing a protective walking boot.
Texas Tech
Tommy Tuberville took
full responsibility for losing his
cool with a Red Raiders graduate assistant along the sideline
Saturday. The third-year coach
said he had watched a replay
of his outburst after the 41-34
victory and saw what had fans
upset. He called his actions
“unfortunate” and said he had
apologized to Kevin Oliver,
who works with special teams.
Video of the confrontation went
viral on the Internet, showing
Tuberville angrily facing Oliver and appearing to strike him
after Texas Tech had difficulty
getting the right personnel on
the field. Tuberville said he did
not strike Oliver. He said he
reached and pulled on Oliver’s
headset.
Washington State
Cougars coach Mike Leach
denies his players are subjected
to any type of abuse, as alleged
by star receiver Marquess Wilson. Wilson made the allegations in a letter he released Saturday in which he quit the team
and also complained that the
coaching staff would “belittle,
intimidate and humiliate us.”
Leach said: “There is no truth
about it at all.” He described Wilson as a disgruntled player.
Houston
Defensive back D.J. Hayden
has checked out of the hospital,
six days after taking a hit in
practice that tore a major vein
that feeds the heart. A statement
from the university said Hayden
was discharged from Memorial Hermann-Texas Trauma
Institute in Houston Monday
afternoon. The team physician
has said the senior was taken
by ambulance to Memorial Hermann Hospital after the collision last Tuesday. Hayden was
rushed into immediate surgery
for a tear of the inferior vena
cava, the large vein that carries
blood from the lower half of the
body to the heart.
Tennessee
Volunteers linebacker Curt
Maggitt will miss the remainder of the season after tearing
his anterior cruciate ligament
Saturday in a 51-48 overtime loss
to Missouri. Tennessee coach
Derek Dooley announced Maggitt’s condition at his news conference.
Elsewhere
Carnegie Mellon (6-4) was
selected for the 2012 Eastern
College Athletic Conference
Southwest Bowl and will play
at Waynesburg (9-1) at 1 p.m.
Saturday in John F. Wiley Stadium. … Penn State’s regular
season finale against Wisconsin will kick off at 3:30 p.m. Nov.
24 at Beaver Stadium.
Patrick Semansky/Associated Press
Wide receiver Ivan McCartney left West Virginia for personal reasons, the school said Monday.
WEST VIRGINIA
Another wide receiver
decides to leave team
By Jenn Menendez
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Wide receiver Ivan McCartney left the West Virginia football team for personal reasons,
the university said Monday. He
is the second player to leave the
team in less than a week.
McCartney, a junior and
a high school teammate of
quarterback Geno Smith and
receiver Stedman Bailey at
Miramar High School in Miami,
Fla., did not make the trip with
the team for a game Saturday at
Oklahoma State.
His departure was made
official Monday when a short
statement was issued by the university. The statement also said
coach Dana Holgorsen would
have no further comment.
Freshman Travares Copeland, another wide receiver, left
the team last week for personal
reasons. Copeland was to be redshirted until coaches used him
in the second half of the Oct. 13
game against Texas Tech when
Bailey suffered an ankle injury.
Copeland started the next two
games but his departure was
announced Thursday.
The absence of both against
Oklahoma State meant littleused receivers Conor Arilia
and Ryan Nehlen were thrust
into the lineup.
Both had some key catches
Next
! Game: West Virginia vs. Oklahoma.
! When: 7 p.m.
Saturday.
! Where: Milan Puskar Stadium.
! TV: WPXI.
against the Cowboys, including
Nehlen’s touchdown interception from backup quarterback
Paul Millard.
Millard entered the game for
one snap when Smith’s helmet
came off and he had to leave the
field.
McCartney had nine catches
for 112 yards this season.
The ‘big’ game
About an hour before McCartney’s departure was announced,
Holgorsen said on a Big 12 Conference coaches call that the
upcoming game against Oklahoma still is anticipated around
Morgantown.
Just a couple of months ago
it was billed as “the game” of
the season by many pundits
who expected the game to have
potential Big 12 championship
implications. A title and Bowl
Championships Series berth is
still within reach for the Sooners, but the Mountaineers’ fourgame losing streak has forced
the team to simply try to become
bowl-eligible.
“I think people are pretty
excited about it, they’ve had it
circled for a while, just because
Oklahoma is such a storied
program over the last hundred
years,” Holgorsen said.
He said his team is “fine” and
“still motivated.”
“Thought our effort last week
was good,” Holgorsen said. “It
better be. We’ve got a top-10 team
coming to Morgantown. It’ll be
on national TV and we’ve got to
play good.”
New defense
Oklahoma’s defense will pose
a new challenge for the Mountaineers, Holgorsen said.
“It’s a different approach than
what we’ve faced over the last
six or seven games. We’ve seen a
lot of zone coverage. A lot of drop
seven, drop six. These guys are
a man-coverage team,” he said.
“They’ve got tremendous athletes. They got big, thick guys up
front who do a great job against
the run. It’s going to be one-onone matchups all over the place.
We’ve got to do a good job of winning those.
“I’m kind of excited about it
actually. We haven’t faced really
anything different for quite
some time. This is a different
style. [Oklahoma defensive coordinator] Mike Stoops is a great
defensive football coach.”
Turnovers not an issue for Pitt
PITT, FROM PAGE D-6
to get healthy. Chryst was optimistic that tight end Hubie
Graham and safety Jason
Hendricks, both of whom left
the game against Connecticut,
will be ready to go when the
team returns to action.
Ball control
Despite the uneven results
on the scoreboard, Pitt has
been remarkably consistent
with its ball security this season.
The game against Connecticut was its fifth consecutive
contest without a turnover.
Their last giveaway came
Oct. 5, when tight end Drew
Carswell lost a fumble against
Syracuse.
It was also Sunseri’s seventh
game in a row without throwing an interception.
He hasn’t thrown an interception since Pitt’s win Sept. 15
against Virginia Tech, and has
just two this season.
Pitt ranks No. 18 in Division
I-A with a plus-8 turnover margin.
Pitt-Rutgers TV
ESPN announced Monday
that Pitt’s game against Rutgers Nov. 24 will kick off at
noon and be televised on either
ESPN or ESPN2.
The network will decide late
Saturday which outlet will air
the game.
It will be Pitt’s third noon
home kickoff of the season.
The Panthers’ Oct. 13 game
against Louisville started at 11
a.m.
Sam Werner: swerner@
post-gazette.com and Twitter @
SWernerPG.
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Sto-Rox grad transfers to RMU
Paul Jones’ football journey has been a roundabout one recently, but, for the time being, it looks as if it will feature a return to
Pittsburgh.
Jones, a former Sto-Rox High School standout who left the Penn State football team in late
September, tweeted Monday that he will transfer
to and continue his career at Robert Morris.
“I’ll be going to school at Robert Morris University and will be playing football there,” Jones
tweeted from his personal account.
Because of NCAA rules, the school could not
confirm that Jones would be joining the team,
but athletic department officials said that the
Paul Jones
team is “actively recruiting him.”
Ranked among the top-10 quarterback prospects nationally by Scout and Rivals coming out of Sto-Rox, Jones
was a backup quarterback for the Nittany Lions before being
moved to tight end by first-year coach Bill O’Brien. Jones left the
team after its fourth game of the season.
Since Robert Morris is a Division I-AA school, Jones will be eligible for the Colonials in the 2013 season.
—By Craig Meyer
ment was crafted after a lockout that wiped out the 2004-05
season, and many players
have said they deserved those
rules as a concession for taking a 24 percent salary cut and
agreeing to a salary cap.
Now the NHLPA is loath to
give up contract rights on top
of agreeing to drop its share of
league revenues from 57 percent under the previous CBA
to 50 percent.
“They’re trying to take
away all the contracting
rights,” Crosby said. “The
question I’d ask is why would
we change that? I think we all
think it’s the most competitive
league in the world, so why
would you go and change that
— the way contracts go and
the way teams can operate? If
it’s not broke, don’t fix it.
“I understand their point.
At the end of the day, it’s dollars, but at the end of the day,
you want to get a deal done. I
don’t think they’re going to get
a deal done if they’re trying to
take away guys’ contracting
rights.”
Crosby has consistently
faulted the owners for not
being willing to budge while
the players are.
“When it comes down to it,
both sides have to be willing to
sacrifice a bit,” he said in September while in New York for
a large union meeting. “I feel
like our side is doing a little
bit of that, and it doesn’t seem
like they’re really willing to
do that.”
In mid-October, Crosby
attended a Toronto negotiating session in which the NHL
quickly rejected three NHLPA
counter offers, leading to a
break of almost three weeks
between formal talks. Crosby’s frustration was unmistakable.
“That doesn’t seem like a
group willing to negotiate,” he
said then.
His feelings on that haven’t
changed.
Crosby’s dismay only grew
over the weekend when there
were reports — but no direct
comments from the NHL —
that the league believed union
executive director Donald
Fehr was keeping players only
partly informed.
“That’s just tactics, I think,
on their part,” Crosby said.
“We’re pretty informed. If he
decided he didn’t want to [do
what we want], there are 15 or
20 other guys [who have been
at the talks] who would have
told us. I think if the league or
anyone negotiating really has
something to say, they should
say it in a meeting and not to a
reporter or a journalist.”
In fact, Crosby wonders if
the NHLPA has better information flow and representative ideas than the owners.
“On [union] conference
calls, it’s great,” he said.
“You’ve got guys who were in
the [latest] meeting. You’ve
got guys who are interested in
what’s going on. And whether
they’re on the conference call
or they’re talking to someone
who’s in the meeting, we have
our update every meeting. …
We all have the opportunity to
say what we want to say.
“That’s the unfortunate
thing as far as owners are
concerned — you have two or
three owners [at meetings].
Whether [they represent] the
feeling of 30, we don’t know.
At least with a large number
of players, you get a bigger
range of possibilities on what
they think. [On the other side]
you’re getting two opinions
from owners, and that’s about
it.”
For more on the Penguins,
read the Pens Plus blog with
Dave Molinari and Shelly
Anderson at www.post-gazette.
com/plus. Shelly Anderson:
[email protected]
and Twitter @pgshelly.
NHL NOTEBOOK
Lockout takes away
from Hall inductions
By The Associated Press
TORONTO — There is
something missing from Joe
Sakic’s new plaque at the
Hockey Hall of Fame — and it’s
not because the printer made a
mistake.
Among the list of his many
achievements is no mention of
his 21st NHL season, the one
that was never played because
of the 2004-05 lockout. With
the sport back in another dark
period brought on by another
labor dispute, Sakic reflected
on the year that never was
on the day he took his place
among hockey’s greats.
“I lost a year of hockey,”
Sakic said Monday before the
induction ceremony. “It would
have been 21 years instead of
20. That’s what you lose.”
Fellow inductees Mats Sundin and Adam Oates were
also in the NHL when the last
lockout hit, while Pavel Bure,
the fourth member of the class,
was already retired.
Sundin never managed to
win a Stanley Cup in his career
and can’t help but wonder what
could have been had the ’04-05
season been played. His Maple
Leafs were on a run of six consecutive playoff appearances
before that work stoppage.
“It was awful,” said Sundin.
“I think it’s devastating.”
While all four of the inductees seem to have thoroughly
enjoyed their induction weekend, the current lockout made
it a more subdued affair than
usual. They were to have
been honored at Air Canada
Centre before a scheduled
Maple Leafs-Devils game Friday — a missed opportunity
in particular for Sundin, the
longtime Maple Leafs captain,
and Oates, who grew up in
Toronto.
Sundin is back living in his
native Sweden now, but the
impact of another work stop-
Hockey Hall of Fame
inductee Joe Sakic walks on
stage Monday in Toronto.
page hasn’t gone unnoticed
even from a distance.
“I think it’s huge,” he said.
“The National Hockey League
is kind of representing the
game of hockey. It’s the biggest
representative of the game of
hockey in the world. When the
NHL is not going, people lose
focus on hockey.
“For everybody that is
involved in the sport, it’s huge
to get the guys back playing as
soon as possible.”
Added Sakic: “It hurts the
players, it hurts the owners, it
hurts the fans and it hurts the
game.”
The two men at the center
of collective bargaining negotiations, commissioner Gary
Bettman and NHLPA executive director Donald Fehr,
both attended Monday night’s
ceremony.
Bettman referred to “difficult times” after paying tribute
to the inductees in a speech.
“All of us — fans, teams,
players — look forward to the
time the game returns,” said
Bettman.
All four members of this
year’s class were affected by
a labor disruption in their
careers — Bure was playing
for Vancouver during the lockout-shortened 1994-95 season.
The Camry Clear Out
Over 50 in stock, priced to go fast!
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PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE ! TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2012 ! WWW.POST-GAZETTE.COM
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
ROUNDUP
COLLEGE
BASKETBALL
No. 1
Indiana
struggles
in win
MEN’S POLLS
AP TOP 25
Records through Sunday
(First place votes in Parenthesis)
Record
Pts
Prv
1. Indiana (46) ...................1-0 1,598
1
2. Louisville (18) ................1-0 1,572
2
3. Kentucky (1) ..................1-0 1,438
3
4. Ohio St..........................1-0 1,339
4
5. Michigan........................1-0 1,327
5
6. NC State .......................1-0 1,278
6
7. Kansas..........................1-0 1,222
7
8. Syracuse .......................1-0 1,163
9
9. Duke .............................1-0 1,109
8
10. Florida ...........................1-0 1,007 10
11. North Carolina ...............2-0
944 11
12. Arizona ..........................1-0
882 12
13. UCLA.............................1-0
746 13
14. Missouri ........................1-0
716 15
15. Creighton.......................1-0
678 16
16. Baylor............................2-0
578 19
17. Memphis .......................0-0
570 17
18. UNLV .............................0-0
538 18
19. Gonzaga ........................1-0
437 21
20. Notre Dame ...................1-0
343 22
21. Michigan St. ..................0-1
325 14
22. Wisconsin......................1-0
324 23
23. UConn ...........................1-0
262 —
24. Cincinnati ......................1-0
152 24
25. San Diego St. ................0-1
128 20
Others receiving votes: VCU 75, Murray St. 64,
Minnesota 58, Pitt 36, Saint Louis 32, Saint Joseph’s 30, Butler 22, Texas 20, Marquette 18, Tennessee 18, Kansas St. 12, Miami 9, Saint Mary’s
(Cal) 8, Florida St. 7, New Mexico 7, West Virginia
7, Ohio 6, Alabama 5, Davidson 4, N. Iowa 4, Stanford 4, Bucknell 1, Georgetown 1, Maryland 1.
Zeller, Abell spark
second-half surge
From local and wire dispatches
USA Today/ESPN
Records through Sunday
(First place votes in Parenthesis)
Record
Pts Prvs
1. Indiana (25)...................1-0
768
1
2. Louisville (4) ..................1-0
740
2
3. Kentucky (2) ..................1-0
701
3
4. Ohio State .....................1-0
648
4
5. Michigan........................1-0
638
5
6. N.C. State .....................1-0
601
6
7. Kansas..........................1-0
583
7
8. Syracuse .......................1-0
522
9
9. Duke .............................1-0
515
8
10. Florida...........................1-0
465 10
11. North Carolina ...............2-0
447 12
12. Arizona ..........................1-0
426 11
13. Creighton.......................1-0
360 15
14. UCLA.............................1-0
351 13
15. Missouri ........................1-0
319 17
16. Memphis .......................0-0
310 16
17. Baylor............................2-0
270 18
18. UNLV .............................0-0
241 19
19. Gonzaga ........................1-0
221 22
20. Wisconsin......................1-0
212 21
21. Notre Dame ...................1-0
143 23
22. Michigan State...............0-1
135 14
23. San Diego State.............0-1
66 20
24. Cincinnati ......................1-0
63 —
25. Texas ............................1-0
60 24
Others receiving votes: Connecticut 58, VCU 54, Murray State 34, Kansas State 19, Pitt 15, Saint Mary’s
13, Marquette 11, New Mexico 11, Saint Louis 8, Tennessee 8, Minnesota 7, Santa Clara 6, Colorado State
4, Florida State 3, Iowa State 3, Stanford 3, Bucknell 2,
Colorado 2, Georgia 2, Maryland 2, Saint Joseph’s 2,
Middle Tennessee 1, Ohio 1, South Alabama 1.
MONDAY’S RESULTS
MEN’S DISTRICT
RESULTS
PITT 86, FORDHAM 51
PITT (2-0)
FG
FT REB
Min M-A M-A O-T A PF PTS
Robinson ........ 26 3-4 0-0 0-2 3 2 6
Woodall .......... 26 5-12 0-1 0-2 5 0 12
Patterson........ 26 2-5 0-0 0-4 6 2 5
Adams............ 19 5-5 3-4 5-5 0 2 13
Zanna............. 21 3-7 2-3 3-5 3 1 8
D Johnson ...... 10 3-5 1-2 0-0 1 2 8
Wright ............ 14 1-5 1-2 0-3 2 2 3
Zeigler............ 18 3-6 1-2 0-0 1 2 7
Taylor ............. 21 2-4 0-0 4-9 2 1 4
Moore ............ 19 7-11 3-3 2-3 1 1 20
Totals ........... 200 34-64 11-17 16-36 24 15 86
Percentages: FG .531, FT .647.
3-Point Goals: 7-17, .412 (Moore 3-5, Woodall
2-6, D. Johnson 1-1, Patterson 1-3, Robinson 0-1,
Zeigler 0-1).
Team Rebounds: 3.
Blocked Shots: 2 (Adams, Zanna).
Turnovers: 6 (Taylor 3, Zanna, D. Johnson, Patterson).
Steals: 11 (Wright 3, Woodall 2, Patterson 2, Adams 2, D. Johnson, Zanna).
Technical Fouls: None.
FORDHAM (0-2)
FG
FT REB
Min M-A M-A O-T A PF PTS
Frazier ............ 23 1-5 2-2 0-2 3 0 4
Leonard.......... 14 2-3 2-2 0-0 0 5 6
Gaston ........... 25 1-4 2-2 0-6 1 2 4
Smith ............. 27 4-9 0-0 3-3 2 3 11
Myers............. 30 1-5 0-0 0-2 2 1 3
Thomas .......... 18 0-3 7-8 0-2 1 2 7
Zivkovic .......... 12 1-2 0-0 0-1 0 1 3
Rhoomes........ 17 1-2 0-0 0-2 0 0 2
Short ............. 12 4-7 2-2 0-0 1 1 11
Fay................... 3 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0
Robinson .......... 2 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0
Canty ............. 17 0-1 0-0 1-2 1 4 0
Totals ........... 200 15-41 15-16 6-24 11 19 51
Percentages: FG .366, FT .938.
3-Point Goals: 6-15, .400 (Smith 3-6, Short 1-2,
Zivkovic 1-2, Myers 1-2, Thomas 0-1, Frazier 0-2).
Team Rebounds: 4.
Blocked Shots: 5 (Gaston 2, Zivkovic, Rhoomes,
Short).
Turnovers: 19 (Myers 4, Smith 3, Short 2,
Thomas 2, Leonard 2, Gaston 2, Canty, Zivkovic,
Frazier).
Steals: 3 (Smith, Thomas, Myers).
Technical Fouls: None.
Fordham.................................. 18 33— 51
Pitt ......................................... 37 49— 86
A—NA.
Officials—John Cahill, Joe Lindsay, Bill McCarthy.
LEHIGH 89, ROBERT MORRIS 60
ROBERT MORRIS (0-2)—McFadden 5-10 3-4
13, L. Jones 2-8 0-0 6, Morgan 5-7 2-3 12, V.
Jones 3-10 5-7 12, Williams 1-4 0-0 2, MyersPate 3-9 0-0 6, Lewis 0-2 0-0 0, Anderson 2-9
0-0 5, Hawkins 0-2 4-4 4, Sweigart 0-1 0-0 0.
Totals 21-62 14-18 60.
LEHIGH (1-1)—Greiner 5-9 0-0 12, Knutson
3-7 5-8 12, D’Orazio 3-6 1-2 9, McCollum 8-15
2-2 19, McKnight 4-5 6-7 15, Carter 0-1 0-0
0, Goodman 1-1 1-2 4, Schaefer 2-5 0-0 4,
Cvrkalj 4-9 0-0 11, Goldsborough 0-1 1-2 1,
Baltimore 1-1 0-0 2. Totals 31-60 16-23 89.
Halftime—Lehigh 38-23. 3-Point Goals—
Robert Morris 4-22 (L. Jones 2-6, Anderson
1-4, V. Jones 1-5, Williams 0-3, Myers-Pate
0-4), Lehigh 11-24 (Cvrkalj 3-6, Greiner 2-4,
D’Orazio 2-4, Knutson 1-1, McKnight 1-1, Goodman 1-1, McCollum 1-5, Schaefer 0-2). Fouled
Out—Baltimore, Morgan. Rebounds—Robert
Morris 43 (McFadden 13), Lehigh 37 (Greiner
7). Assists—Robert Morris 12 (V. Jones 7),
Lehigh 19 (McKnight 7). Total Fouls—Robert
Morris 19, Lehigh 20. A—6,425.
WOMEN’S POLLS
AP TOP 25
Records through Sunday
(First place votes in Parenthesis)
Record
Pts
Prv
1. Baylor (39).....................1-0
975
1
2. UConn ...........................1-0
931
2
3. Duke .............................0-0
883
3
4. Stanford ........................2-0
838
4
5. Maryland .......................2-0
812
5
6. Kentucky .......................1-0
766
6
7. Notre Dame ...................1-0
743
7
8. Louisville .......................2-0
677
9
9. Penn St. ........................1-0
665
8
10. Georgia .........................1-0
615 10
11. Oklahoma ......................1-0
548 12
12. California.......................1-0
518 13
13. Vanderbilt ......................1-0
426 16
14. West Virginia..................1-0
407 17
15. Nebraska.......................2-0
375 18
16. Texas A&M ....................0-1
331 15
17. Delaware .......................1-1
285 11
18. Purdue ..........................1-0
271 21
19. Texas ............................2-0
224 —
20. Ohio St..........................0-1
198 19
20. St. John’s ......................1-1
198 14
22. Oklahoma St..................1-0
164 23
23. Miami............................1-0
139 24
24. Tennessee.....................1-1
125 20
25. Georgetown ...................2-0
112 —
Others receiving votes: Kansas 103, Middle Tennessee 82, Iowa St. 52, Georgia Tech
42, UCLA 26, Green Bay 22, DePaul 17, Virginia 16, North Carolina 14, San Diego St. 13,
Florida St. 12, Chattanooga 10, Rutgers 10,
Dayton 9, LSU 8, Michigan St. 4, Princeton 4,
Gonzaga 3, South Carolina 2.
WOMEN’S DISTRICT
RESULTS
West Virgina 60, Boston U. 57
WEST VIRGINIA (2-0)—Fields 3-5 5-7 11,
Dunning 4-9 7-9 16, Caldwell 1-9 0-0 2, Palmer 1-8 0-0 2, Stepney 2-4 1-1 5, Bethel 2-4 0-0
4, Hampton 0-0 0-0 0, Faulk 0-0 0-0 0, Harlee
0-3 0-0 0, Simms 1-2 0-0 3, Holmes 2-7 1-4 6,
Leary 4-5 3-3 11. Totals 20-56 17-24 60.
BOSTON U. (1-1)—Agboola 3-6 0-4 6, Turner
0-4 0-0 0, Sims 1-5 2-3 5, Alford 9-17 6-8 30,
Moran 4-10 3-4 12, Callahan 1-4 2-2 4, McKendrick 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 18-47 13-21 57.
Halftime—Boston U. 33-28. 3-Point Goals—
West Virginia 3-13 (Simms 1-1, Dunning 1-2,
Holmes 1-3, Caldwell 0-1, Stepney 0-1, Palmer 0-5), Boston U. 8-21 (Alford 6-11, Moran
1-3, Sims 1-5, Callahan 0-2). Fouled Out—Agboola. Rebounds—West Virginia 32 (Dunning
11), Boston U. 40 (Alford 9). Assists—West
Virginia 7 (Harlee, Palmer 2), Boston U. 12
(Moran 5). Total Fouls—West Virginia 20, Boston U. 16. A—303.
Julia Rendleman/Post-Gazette photos
Tray Woodall looks for an open teammate during the first half of the Preseason NIT tournament Monday night against
Fordham at Petersen Events Center.
Moore sparks Panthers
to victory vs. Fordham
PANTHERS, FROM PAGE D-6
really have that last year. We
really have something there
that we can cause some problems with. His confidence is
soaring because of it. It’s the
same thing we saw with Sam
in a lot of ways.
“He’s played really good
defense, too. That’s standing
out, too. He’s taking pride in
what he’s doing.”
Moore was one point shy
of getting his career high,
and Dixon took him out early
because the game was in control. He did all of his damage in
19 minutes.
Moore replaced starting
power forward Talib Zanna
midway through the first half
and was the spark the Panthers
needed. Holding a 12-11 lead,
the Panthers began to pull
away as soon as Moore entered
the game. He scored all 12 of
his first-half points in the final
13:18 of the half.
Moore’s second 3-pointer
stretched the lead to 33-18.
Then with 27 seconds remaining before halftime, Moore
made two free throws made it
37-18. With Moore leading the
way, Pitt outscored Fordham,
19-3, over the final 9:50 of the
half.
“I like my role coming off the
bench,” Moore said. “I feel like
I give my team a lot of energy
coming off the bench, giving
it on defense and making good
plays on defense. I think it’s
helping us on the court.”
The Panthers shot 53 percent
Pitt guard Johnson to transfer
Pitt sophomore reserve guard John Johnson left Pitt and is
going to transfer to another school.
Johnson, who started two games last season and averaged
4.2 points per game, did not show up for practice Monday
morning before a game against Fordham at Petersen Events
Center. Johnson apparently was upset by not playing in the
opener Friday against Mount St. Mary’s.
Pitt coach Jamie Dixon said after the game that Johnson was
sick and that was the reason he did not play. Johnson tweeted
shortly thereafter: “I’m not sick, I’m not hurt.”
Johnson watched as a freshman James Robinson earned
a starting position in front of him, alongside Tray Woodall in
the backcourt. Robinson played 26 minutes against Mount St.
Mary’s.
But Dixon was not down on Johnson. Dixon praised Johnson after the final exhibition game and was excited about his
future: “John has made tremendous strides over the last 10
days,” Dixon said after the Hawaii-Hilo exhibition contest. “It’s
tremendous strides. I don’t think anyone thought he’d be where
he is point-guard wise. But he’s doing a great job, working hard
and playing hard.”
Dixon did not seem concerned about having three point
guards and appeared dedicated to finding a role for Johnson.
“I’m real excited about them,” he said about the situation. “I really feel like we have three really good point guards at this point.”
— By Ray Fittipaldo
from the field and had 24 assists
and only six turnovers. Dixon
also received strong efforts
from several others. Freshman center Steven Adams had
13 points and five rebounds.
Senior guard Tray Woodall
had 12 points and five assists.
Adams set the tone inside
with eight points in the
first half. The Panthers outrebounded Fordham, 36-24.
They had 16 offensive rebounds,
42 points in the lane and 21 second-chance points.
“That was a whooping in the
paint,” Fordham coach Tom
Pecora said.
The Panthers also forced
Fordham into 19 turnovers and
held the Rams to 36 percent
shooting. In the first half, Fordham shot 26 percent. Senior forward Chris Gaston, who had 19
points and 14 rebounds in Fordham’s opener, was held to four
Other men’s top 25
Trey Zeigler had 7 points
and 1 assist in 18 minutes
Monday against Fordham.
points and six rebounds.
“I told my team it was like
being an eighth- or ninthgrader in the schoolyard and
having the older guys beat you
up pretty good,” Pecora said.
“They are a very good basketball team.”
!
NOTES — Pitt’s bench contributed 42 points. Pitt’s reserves
are averaging 37 points per game
in the first two games. … The
Panthers were 7 for 17 from
3-point range. … Bryan Smith
and Jeff Short led the Rams
with 11 points.
Ray Fittipaldo: rfittipaldo@
post-gazette.com and Twitter:
@rayfitt1.
Cold shooting holds back Colonials
RMU, FROM PAGE D-6
assists, and was one of five
Lehigh players in double figures. Forward Mike McFadden led the Colonials with 13
points and 13 rebounds. His
frontcourt mate, forward
Vaughn Morgan, added 12
points, 5 rebounds and 5
blocks.
The Colonials were competitive for the early part of
the first half, leading 8-7 five
minutes into the game. From
there, the Mountain Hawks
(1-1) closed the half on a 31-15
run. In the final 11 minutes
of the first half, Robert Morris made just four field goals,
a span in which Lehigh took
control of the game.
“It just deflates you a
little bit,” Toole said of the
final stretch of the first half.
“We’ve got to be smarter in
those situations to make sure
we’re getting the shot that we
want and not allowing them
to get an easy shot on the
other end.”
Robert Morris also was
undone by turnovers, giving
the ball away 21 times. The
Mountain Hawks scored 25
points off those turnovers.
With their first 0-2 start
in three years, the Colonials
will play Fordham in the first
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Today
! Game: Robert
Morris vs. Fordham.
! When: 6 p.m.
! Where: Petersen Events
Center.
! TV: None.
game tonight. Fordham lost
to Pitt in the opener.
But even though his team
ended Monday night with the
same result it achieved Friday, Toole believes the Colonials might have returned to
form.
“This is going to be one of
the most bizarre statements
ever — we lost by 29 points,
but I think I got my team back
tonight,” Toole said.
“I’ve talked about fighting
success. As much as you beat
the drum that it’s not last
year and it’s not going to be
easy and it’s not going to be
roll it out and here comes big,
bad Robert Morris and people
are just going to cower — you
have to go out and earn it this
year, and I think the message
is starting to set in.”
Craig Meyer: [email protected] and Twitter: @
craig_a_meyer.
Cody Zeller and his teammates were not themselves Monday night.
The 7-foot center had an
excuse — he was sick. His teammates looked like they caught
the same bug.
Fortunately, the Hoosiers
found a remedy at halftime.
Zeller, Remy Abell and Jeremy Hollowell turned the game
with a second-half run that
finally allowed No. 1 Indiana
to pull away to an 87-61 victory
against visiting North Dakota
State in the first round of the
Progressive Legends Classic.
“Your fundamentals, your
technique, all your experiences,
all those things are really, really
important, but there’s nothing
bigger than energy and toughness. It’s got to be there constantly,” Indiana coach Tom
Crean said.
This was the kind of game
that had given Indiana problems in previous seasons. Fans,
and perhaps Indiana’s players,
figured those struggles were
over since the Hoosiers (2-0)
reclaimed their spot on top of
the college basketball world.
But North Dakota State
proved how dangerous assumptions can be. The Bison (1-1) were
content to challenge every shot
Indiana shot took — regardless
of the cost. It took a toll, too.
Zeller scored 22 points and
grabbed nine rebounds, while
Abell, a sophomore, made
all five of his shots including
three 3-pointers to finish with a
career-high 14 points. Hollowell,
a freshman, scored 14 points in
19 minutes.
“We had some fight in us,
but we expect to have fight in
us,” Bison coach Saul Phillips
said. “It’s amazing to me, they
just kept coming at us in waves.
Eventually, they leaned at us
and a leg went out.”
! Michigan 91, IUPUI 54:
Trey Burke scored 22 points and
Glenn Robinson III added 21,
leading No. 5 Michigan (2-0) past
visiting IUPUI (1-1) in the NIT Season Tip-Off.
! Memphis 81, North Florida
66: Tarik Black had 18 points and
seven rebounds to lead No. 17
Memphis (1-0) past visiting North
Florida (1-1) on Monday night.
! UNLV 92, Northern Arizona
54: Anthony Bennett scored 22
points to lead five players in double figures and No. 18 UNLV won
its season opener against visiting
Northern Arizona.
Big East
! Notre Dame 84, Monmouth
57: Garrick Sherman had 22
points and seven rebounds to
lead No. 20 Notre Dame to a victory against visiting Monmouth (11). Jack Cooley added 16 points
for the Irish (2-0) and Pat Connaughton had 13.
! Seton Hall 78, Norfolk State
65: Fuquan Edwin scored 23
points and grabbed 10 rebounds
as host Seton Hall (2-0) defeated
Norfolk State (1-1) in the Naismith
Memorial Tip-Off Classic.
! Providence 81, Bryant 49:
Kadeem Batts’ career-high 27
points propelled host Providence
(2-0) to a commanding victory
against Bryant (0-2).
! Rutgers 88, Sacred Heart
62: Eli Carter come off the bench
to score 18 points and lead host
Rutgers (1-1) past Sacred Heart
(1-1).
Women’s top 25
! West Virginia 60, Boston
University 57: The No. 14 Mountaineers (2-0) overcame a 33-28
halftime deficit to defeat host
Boston University (1-1). Crystal
Leary scored 11 points to lead
the second-half rally. Ayana Dunning had her second double-double of the season with 16 points
and 11 rebounds.
! Miami 69, Richmond 63:
Michelle Woods scored a careerhigh 20 points and No. 23 Miami
(2-0) picked up a victory against
host Richmond (1-1).
Notes
Julia Rendleman/Post-Gazette
Robert Morris forward Mike McFadden drives to the basket
against Lehigh’s Holden Greiner Monday at Petersen Events
Center.
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! The NCAA men’s basketball tournament will return to
Consol Energy Center in 2015,
with Duquesne University as the
host school. Second- and thirdround games will be play March
19 and 21. This is the fifth time
Duquesne has been selected as
a host school. Ticket information
will be available at a later date.
… The Carrier Classic will return
to the USS Yorktown to open
the college basketball season in
2013 despite the canceled contest Friday between Ohio State
and Marquette because of condensation on the court.
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PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE ! TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2012 ! WWW.POST-GAZETTE.COM
SPORTS
MLB NOTEBOOK
Trout, Harper earn top rookie honors
By The Associated Press
Mike Trout and Bryce
Harper were teammates on the
Scottsdale Scorpions last fall. The
outfielders arrived in the major
leagues on the same April day
this year, both played in the AllStar Game and they won rookie
of the year awards a half-hour
apart Monday, the vanguard of
baseball’s next generation.
Trout, 21, was a unanimous
pick as the youngest American League rookie winner, and
Harper, 20, edged Arizona pitcher
Wade Miley, 112-105, to become
the second-youngest winner of
the National League honor.
“It’s pretty neat,” said Trout,
the son of former Minnesota
minor leaguer Jeff Trout.
For the first time, players
learned the voting results when
they were announced on television.
“My heart was beating a little
Mike
Trout
Unanimous
pick in
American
League
bit,” Harper said.
Trout, who turned 21 Aug. 7,
received all 28 first-place votes
from the AL panel of the Baseball
Writers’ Association of America.
The Los Angeles Angels center
fielder was the eighth unanimous
AL pick and the first since Tampa
Bay’s Evan Longoria in 2008.
Trout hit .326, second-best in
the league to Triple Crown winner Miguel Cabrera’s .330, with
30 homers and 83 RBIs, and he led
the majors with 129 runs and 49
steals. He joined Ted Williams,
Mel Ott and Alex Rodriguez
as the only players to hit .320 or
higher with 30 or more homers in
Bryce
Harper
Edges
Arizona’s
Wade Miley
for award
seasons they started as a 20-yearold.
Trout received the maximum
140 points. Oakland outfielder
Yoenis Cespedes was second
with 63, followed by Texas pitcher
Yu Darvish (46), who joined
Trout as the only players listed
on every ballot.
Detroit second baseman Lou
Whitaker had been the youngest AL winner in 1978, but he
was 3 months, 5 days older than
Trout on the day he took home
the award.
In addition to Trout and Longoria, the only other unanimous
AL winners were Nomar Gar-
ciaparra, Derek Jeter, Tim
Salmon, Sandy Alomar Jr.,
Mark McGwire and Carlton
Fisk.
Harper turned 20 on Oct. 16
and has been hyped for years.
When he was just 16, he appeared
on the cover of Sports Illustrated
with the headline “CHOSEN
ONE.”
“He’s been put on the spotlight
since he was 15 years old,” Trout
said.
The Washington Nationals outfielder got 16 of 32 first-place votes
from the NL panel. Miley was
second with 12 first-place votes,
followed by Cincinnati slugger
Todd Frazier with three firsts
and 45 points. Harper appeared
on every ballot.
Harper was the top pick in the
2010 amateur draft and batted .270
with 22 home runs and 59 RBIs as
Washington brought postseason
play to the nation’s capital for the
first time since 1933. Only Tony
HOCKEY
PIHL CLASS AAA
Central Catholic 5 .........................Penn-Trafford 1
Norwin 7 ................................................ Shaler 3
PIHL CLASS AA
Bishop Canevin 6.......................Chartiers Valley 5
Hampton 6 .......................................North Hills 4
Latrobe 14 ............................. Franklin Regional 1
Moon 7 ............................................... Montour 0
Pine-Richland 7 ..................................Kiski Area 4
West Allegheny vs. Erie Cathedral Prep
PIHL OPEN CLASS
Baldwin 7 ...............................................Frazier 0
Beaver 3..................................................Trinity 1
Ford City 11............................... Keystone Oaks 3
Greensburg Salem 11 ............................ Carrick 3
Indiana 13..................................... Connellsville 0
John Marshall, W.Va. 5 ..................Central Valley 2
Wheeling Park, W.Va. 11..... Wheeling C.C., W.Va. 0
Harbor Creek vs. Canon-McMillian
SCORING LEADERS
3 goals: Dan Merz, Norwin.
PLAYOFF SCHEDULE
FOOTBALL
John Heller/Post-Gazette
Robert Boatright (9) and Clairton carry a 58-game winning streak into their WPIAL Class A
semifinal game against Neshannock Friday at Chartiers-Houston.
WPIAL FOOTBALL PLAYOFFS
GIRLS VOLLEYBALL
PIAA CLASS AAA PLAYOFFS
Semifinals
Tuesday — Parkland vs. Upper Merion at
Council Rock South, 7 p.m.; Landisville Hempfield vs. North Allegheny at Chambersburg, 7
p.m.
PIAA CLASS AA PLAYOFFS
Semifinals
Tuesday — Delone Catholic vs. Pope John
Paul II at Garden Spot, 7 p.m.; Mars vs. Fort
LeBoeuf at Slippery Rock University, 7 p.m.
PIAA CLASS A PLAYOFFS
Semifinals
Tuesday — Marian Catholic vs. Williamson
at Shamokin, 7 p.m.; Greensburg Central
Catholic vs. Clarion at Butler, 7 p.m.
CLASS A
Neshannock embraces
challenge vs. Clairton
By Mike White
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
BOYS SOCCER
GIRLS SOCCER
Until two weeks ago, Neshannock had never won a WPIAL
playoff game.
Now the Lancers hope to
stop the longest winning streak
in WPIAL history.
Neshannock (10-1) plays
mighty Clairton (11-0) in a
Class A semifinal Friday night
at Chartiers-Houston. Talk
about opposite ends of the tradition spectrum. Clairton has
won 58 consecutive games and
a victory would tie the state
record for the longest winning
streak that Central Bucks West
set from 1997-2000.
Clairton has won four
WPIAL titles in a row. Meanwhile, the first playoff win
in Neshannock history came
Nov. 2 in the first round of the
WPIAL playoffs.
Considering those traditions,
few might give Neshannock a
chance to win. But coach Fred
Mozzocio insists his players
aren’t in awe of Clairton.
“Clairton is a dynamic team
and they are as athletic as any
team I’ve seen in my 25 years of
coaching,” Mozzocio said. “We
know the task ahead of us. But
when I played at New Castle
High School the first thing
[coach] Lindy Lauro used to
say to us was, ‘If you’re not in
this thing to win championships, you’re in the wrong business.’
“To get to the top of the
mountain and be a champion,
you have to play teams like
Clairton. It’s an honor to go on
the field and compete against
them. But by no means do we
feel like we don’t belong.”
Mozzocio believes his team
is brimming with confidence.
One of the reasons is because
Neshannock owns victories
this season against Sto-Rox and
North Catholic, who will meet
in the other semifinal.
“We feel we’re as battledtested as anyone,” Mozzocio
said.
But since a season-opening
22-20 victory against ChartiersHouston, Clairton has defeated
every team by at least 35
points.
Neshannock features quarterback Ernie Burkes, who has
2,282 yards of offense. He has
completed 112 of 184 for 1,495
yards and also rushed for 787
yards on 86 carries. Eli Owens
has 1,280 yards rushing.
One of Neshannock’s biggest
concerns has to be Clairton’s
Tyler Boyd, a heavily-recruited
running back/receiver who
has rushed for more than 1,800
yards this season.
“When I was a kid, I used to
like watching old NFL films
of Gale Sayers that were set to
music,” Mozzocio said. “When
I watch Boyd and see those cutbacks he makes, I said to myself,
‘Man, he’s like the modern-day
Kansas Comet.’
“But the thing about Clairton
is that even if you take Boyd off
the field, they’re probably still
11-0. They are a talented group
and also well-coached.”
Sto-Rox vs. North Catholic
In the other semifinal Fri-
day, Sto-Rox (11-2) meets North
Catholic (9-2) at Dormont Stadium. A win would put North
Catholic into a title game for
the first time since the school
joined the WPIAL in the mid
1970s. Sto-Rox lost a year ago
in the championship game to
Clairton.
North Catholic relies heavily on its running game, led by
sophomore halfback P.J. Fulmore, who has more than 1,600
yards rushing. But the Trojans
will face a Sto-Rox defense that
has improved dramatically
in the final half of the season.
In the first six games, Sto-Rox
gave up 164 points. In the past
five games, Sto-Rox has allowed
15 points.
“I think probably at the
halfway point of the season we
started to play together more,”
Sto-Rox coach Dan Bradley said.
“We started playing assignment football on defense, being
a lot more consistent with effort
and gap control. … I would say
our defense has improved a lot,
along with our offensive line.”
Sto-Rox features one of
the most potent dual-threat
quarterbacks in the WPIAL
in junior Lenny Williams,
who has almost 3,000 yards
of offense. Williams has completed 108 of 187 for 1,947 yards
and also rushed 117 times for
996 yards.
For more on high school
sports, go to Varsity Blog at
www.post-gazette.com/varsityblog. Mike White: [email protected], 412-263-1975 and
Twitter @mwhiteburgh.
WEB SITE
FOOTBALL, SOCCER
Want to see how your football or soccer
team is doing? Check team-by-team or dayby-day schedules, results, rosters and conference standings for all teams in the WPIAL and
City League by visiting www.post-gazette.com.
NOTICE
REPORTING SCORES
Coaches of all sports are encouraged to report scores to the Post-Gazette immediately
after all games. Call 412-263-1621 or toll-free
1-877-672-6224.
Stay connected with
the Post-Gazette
Follow us on Twitter
twitter.com/pittsburghpg
Boston agreed with backup
catcher David Ross on a twoyear, $6.2 million contract. Ross
spent the past four seasons with
the Atlanta Braves, batting .269
with 24 homers and 94 RBIs in
227 games.
Giants
Left-hander Jeremy Affeldt
and San Francisco agreed to
terms on a three-year contract,
but the deal has not been completed. Affeldt is expected to
undergo a physical today in San
Francisco.
By The Associated Press
PIHL CLASS A
Deer Lakes 7 ............................... South Fayette 4
Serra Catholic 13.... Greensburg Central Catholic 0
Westmont Hilltop vs. Quaker Valley
PIAA CLASS AAA PLAYOFFS
Semifinals
Tuesday — West Lawn Wilson (22-2-1) vs.
Peters Township (22-1) at Chambersburg, 5
p.m.; Cumberland Valley (21-2-1) vs. Neshaminy (22-2) at Hamburg, 7 p.m.
PIAA CLASS AA PLAYOFFS
Semifinals
Tuesday — Moon (22-2) vs. Mercyhurst Prep
(18-4) at Franklin, 6 p.m.; Archbishop Wood
(17-2-2) vs. Northern York (20-5) at Hamburg,
5 p.m.
PIAA CLASS A PLAYOFFS
Semifinals
Tuesday — Greensburg Central Catholic
(21-1) vs. Shady Side Academy (17-5-1) at
Hampton, 7 p.m.; Christopher Dock (10-2-1)
vs. Conwell Egan (10-6-1) at Council Rock, 6
p.m.
Red Sox
After passing on
Jackson, Lakers
choose D’Antoni
MONDAY
PIAA CLASS AAA PLAYOFFS
Semifinals
Tuesday — Delaware Valley (17-1) vs. Upper
St. Clair (20-2-1) at Central Mountain, 6 p.m.;
West Lawn Wilson (24-2-1) vs. La Salle College (20-2-2) at Salisbury, 7 p.m.
PIAA CLASS AA PLAYOFFS
Semifinals
Tuesday — Lancaster Mennonite (19-8)
vs. Bedford (21-1) at Chambersburg, 7 p.m.;
Pequea Valley (23-3) vs. Tulpehocken (21-6) at
Governor Mifflin, 6 p.m.
PIAA CLASS A PLAYOFFS
Semifinals
Tuesday — Biglerville (17-7-1) vs. Sewickley
Academy (20-1-1) at Hollidaysburg, 6 p.m.;
New Hope-Solebury (11-6-5) vs. Mountain
View (16-0) at Salisbury, 5 p.m.
impressive every day he plays.”
For now, each has a rookie
award. In the future, they may
earn MVPs on the same day.
“We play the game the right
way,” Trout said. “We’re always
running out balls. He’s always
hustling, trying to make that big
play.”
NBA ROUNDUP
HIGH SCHOOL
RESULTS,
SCHEDULE
WPIAL CLASS AAAA PLAYOFFS
Semifinals
Friday — North Allegheny (11-0) vs. Seneca
Valley (10-1) at North Hills, 7:30 p.m.; Woodland Hills (9-2) vs. Upper St. Clair (10-1) at
Baldwin, 7:30 p.m.
WPIAL CLASS AAA PLAYOFFS
Semifinals
Friday — Thomas Jefferson (11-0) vs. West
Allegheny (10-1) at Bethel Park, 7:30 p.m.;
West Mifflin (10-1) vs. Central Valley (9-2) at
North Allegheny, 7:30 p.m.
WPIAL CLASS AA PLAYOFFS
Semifinals
Friday — Aliquippa (11-0) vs. Jeannette (101) at Peters Township, 7:30 p.m.; South Fayette (11-0) vs. Washington (11-0) at Chartiers
Valley, 7:30 p.m.
WPIAL CLASS A PLAYOFFS
Semifinals
Friday — Clairton (11-0) vs. Neshannock
(10-1) at Chartiers-Houston, 7:30 p.m.; StoRox (10-1) vs. North Catholic (9-2) at Keystone
Oaks (Dormont Stadium), 7:30 p.m.
PIAA CLASS AAAA PLAYOFFS
Districts 6-8-9-10 Sub Regional
Friday — Perry (8-2) vs. McDowell (5-5) at
Fairview, 7 p.m.
PIAA CLASS AAA PLAYOFFS
Districts 5-6-8-9 Sub Regional
Saturday — University Prep (6-3) vs. Clearfield (10-0) at Clarion University, 1 p.m.
Conigliaro (24) hit more home
runs as a teenager.
“Every little kid’s dream is to
be a big league ballplayer or a doctor or a firefighter or whatever
everybody wants to be,” Harper
said. “That was my dream and I
wanted to make that dream come
true as quickly as possible.”
At 20 years, 27 days, he was 24
days older than New York Mets
pitcher Dwight Gooden when
he won the NL award in 1984.
“This game is unbelievable.
I love it with everything I’ve got
and I’m going to play every single day like it’s my last,” Harper
said.
And the admiration of Harper
and Trout is mutual, especially
after their time together last year
with Scottsdale in the Arizona
Fall League, for the game’s premier prospects.
“He’s one of the best players
in baseball, if not the best right
now,” Harper said. “He’s pretty
Girls basketball player at Seton-LaSalle ruled ineligible
The WPIAL ruled Yacine Diop ineligible to play basketball this season at Seton-LaSalle, saying
she transferred to the school for athletic reasons.
The WPIAL made the ruling after a hearing last week with Diop and Seton-LaSalle. Diop is a
talented 5-foot-10 junior guard who transferred from Oak Hill Academy in Mouth of Wilson, Va., to
Seton-LaSalle. Oak Hill folded its girls basketball program.
Duquesne and other Division I colleges are interested in Diop and she already has a scholarship
offer from Dayton. Diop is originally from Senegal and played AAU basketball this summer for a
Pittsburgh-area team (Western PA Bruins) that included a number of top players in the WPIAL. The
team was coached by Ron Mumbray, a former Seton-LaSalle assistant coach. Mumbray became
Diop’s legal guardian.
Seton-LaSalle won WPIAL and PIAA Class AA titles last season with an undefeated record (30-0)
and is expected to be strong again this season. Diop can appeal the WPIAL decision to the PIAA.
— By Mike White
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Pau Gasol got home from
the game and read about it on
Twitter, while Dwight Howard
got a midnight message on his
BlackBerry. They shared most
Los Angeles Lakers fans’ mix
of surprise, trepidation and
anticipation.
Just when everybody
thought the Lakers were getting back together with Phil
Jackson, they switched course
in the middle of the night and
went with Mike D’Antoni.
What a weekend in Hollywood — and the real drama
isn’t over yet.
The Lakers reacted with
ample excitement and a little
bewilderment Monday to
their front office’s surprising
decision to hire D’Antoni as
coach Mike Brown’s replacement over Jackson, the 11-time
champion who discussed the
job at his home Saturday and
apparently wanted to return.
D’Antoni didn’t even interview
for the job in person, speaking
to the Lakers over the phone.
“It has been crazy, but all
this stuff will just make this
team stronger,” said Howard,
who has been in a Lakers
uniform for about six weeks.
“Everything that we’ve been
through so far, it’s going to
make us stronger, and we have
to look at this as a positive situation.”
The Lakers’ third coach in
four days won’t take over the
team until later in the week.
D’Antoni still hadn’t been
cleared to travel Monday after
having knee replacement surgery earlier in the month,
although the Lakers are optimistic the former Knicks and
Suns coach will arrive in Los
Angeles on Wednesday.
So interim coach Bernie
Bickerstaff was still in charge
Monday when the Lakers gathered for an informal workout
ahead of today’s game against
San Antonio. Just two weeks
into the regular season, the
Lakers (3-4) are about to start
over with a new offense and
another coaching staff — and
a renewed certainty they’re
expected to compete for a title
this season.
“It’s been a zoo,” said forward Antawn Jamison, a
15-year NBA veteran who
played for D’Antoni on a U.S.
national team. “But as I was
telling somebody, it’s just a
typical day here in L.A. It’s
interesting. … It should be
a lot easier to adjust to than
the system we were trying to
get adjusted to early on in the
season. We’ve got Steve [Nash]
that can help us out.”
Two Lakers who supported
both Brown and his two potential replacements weren’t available in El Segundo to weigh
in on the hire. Nash missed
the workout while getting
treatment on his injured leg,
while Kobe Bryant left before
it ended to share a helicopter ride back home to Orange
County with point guard Steve
Blake, who needed an exam on
his abdominal injury.
And the tall, professorial
coach with all the rings wasn’t
at the Lakers’ training complex at all.
Just 24 hours after Jackson
seemed headed back to his
oversized chair on the Staples
Center bench, D’Antoni had
the job.
It’s too soon to tell how the
Buss family’s latest counterintuitive move will sit with
Lakers fans, who chanted “We
want Phil!” during the club’s
C
Y
P
G
M
K
The Lakers hired Mike
D’Antoni Monday to replace
Mike Brown as coach.
weekend games, both victories
after a 1-4 start.
“I think everybody had
expectations about it, and they
were all pretty high,” Gasol
said of Jackson’s potential
return. “We all understood
what Phil brings to the table
… and what he means to the
city and the franchise. It just
couldn’t work out for whatever
reason.”
“The decision is of course
theirs to make,” Jackson said
in his statement. “I am gratified by the groundswell of support from the Laker[s] fans
who endorsed my return, and
it is the principal reason why I
considered the possibility.”
Monday’s games
! Bucks 105, 76ers 96:
Brandon Jennings scored 33
points and Monta Ellis had 18
to lead visiting Milwaukee (4-2)
to a win against Philadelphia
(4-3).
! Thunder 82, Pistons 80:
Russell Westbrook scored a
season-high 33 points and
keyed a fourth-quarter comeback as Oklahoma City (6-2)
rallied to beat winless Detroit.
The loss left the Pistons with
an 0-8 record, the worst start
in franchise history.
! Jazz 140, Raptors 133:
Paul Millsap scored seven of
his 34 points in the third overtime, Al Jefferson had 24 points
and 17 rebounds and Utah (44) picked up its first road win
of the season, beating Toronto
(1-6) in triple overtime.
! Celtics 101, Bulls 95:
Rajon Rondo had 20 points,
nine rebounds and 10 assists
to lead Boston (4-3) to a win
against host Chicago (4-3).
! Heat 113, Rockets 110:
LeBron James scored a season-high 38 points, Chris Bosh
had 24 points and 10 rebounds
and Miami (6-2) rallied to beat
Houston (3-4) on the road.
! Timberwolves 90, Mavericks 82: Nikola Pekovic scored
20 points before leaving with
an injury and short-handed Minnesota (4-2) beat Dallas (4-3)
on the road.
! Suns 110, Nuggets 100:
Goran Dragic scored 21 points,
including 4 of 5 shooting on
3-pointers and the Suns (4-4)
snapped Denver’s four-game
winning streak with a home victory against the Nuggets (4-4).
! Hawks 95, Trail Blazers
87: Josh Smith had 19 points
and 11 rebounds, Kyle Korver
added 16 points and Atlanta
(3-3) snapped a two-game skid
with a win against Portland (25) at the Rose Garden. Al Horford added 15 points and 10
rebounds for Atlanta,
C
P
Y
G
M
Nov 13 2012 12:44:05:587AM
K
D-10
C
Post-Gazette
P
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G
M
D-10
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PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE ! TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2012 ! WWW.POST-GAZETTE.COM
SCOR EBOA R D
morning
briefing
Gordon fined
for wreck
From local and wire dispatches
Four-time NASCAR champion Jeff Gordon avoided
suspension Monday when
NASCAR instead fined him
$100,000 and docked him 25
points for intentionally wrecking Clint Bowyer at Phoenix
International Raceway.
Gordon was also placed on
probation through Dec. 31. But
he’ll be allowed to close out the
season Sunday at HomesteadMiami Speedway despite his
actions in the race at Phoenix,
which triggered a fight in the
garage area between the two
crews.
“I take responsibility for
my actions on the racetrack,”
Gordon said in a statement.
“I accept NASCAR’s decision
and look forward to ending the
season on a high note at Homestead.”
Meanwhile, Brad Keselowski was fined $25,000 and
placed on probation for having
an electronic device inside the
car — the phone he used to
tweet during a red flag period
caused by Gordon wrecking
Bowyer. Keselowski first
did it during a red flag at the
season-opening Daytona 500,
and NASCAR later banned the
practice.
Tennis
Novak Djokovic recovered
from early breaks in both sets
and beat Roger Federer, 7-6
(6), 7-5, in the championship
match at the ATP finals in
London.
Cycling
Lance Armstrong cut
formal ties with his cancerfighting charity to avoid further damage brought by doping
charges and being stripped of
his seven Tour de France titles.
Golf
Rory McIlroy, Tiger
Woods, Brandt Snedeker,
Bubba Watson and Jason
Dufner were nominated for
the PGA Tour player of the
year. Players have until the
end of the month to vote on the
award.
Elsewhere
The Pittsburgh Angels won
the USA Rugby Women’s Club
national title by defeating
Severn River, 8-0, in the championship game in Fort Meyers,
Fla. … Four-time World Cup
skiing champion Lindsey
Vonn was admitted to a hospital in Vail with an undisclosed
illness. … J.D. Jones, 25,
of Goodman, Mo., died after
being critically injured in the
saddle bronc riding competition at the Indian National
Finals Rodeo in Las Vegas.
The horse, which fell on Goodman, had to be euthanized for
internal bleeding and a broken
pelvis. … Forrest “Dew Drop”
Morgan, a national bobsled
champion and former manager
of the U.S. Olympic team, died
at age 90 in Lake Placid, N.Y. …
Texas placed veteran women’s
track and field coach Beverly
Kearney on paid leave pending a review of unspecified
“issues” in the program. …
Olympic gold medalists Allyson Felix and Ashton Eaton
won the 2012 Jesse Owens
Award. It’s the record fourth
time Felix has been honored
as the top track and field athlete in the United States, and
Eaton’s first.
HARNESS RACING
MEADOWS
Tuesday’s Entries
POST TIME 12:55 P.M.
1STi7CcF__c $W&ZV ^^c___ =0H-
^ UH0-OJghHPHKhIPN0Kc V 9NKhg0 .... ^]b^ ]bEb^
2 Capriccio Hanover, E Ledford........ Eb^ GbGb\
3 Valley Of Vice, D Palone ............... ]b^ ^b^b^
4 Fox Avenue Mom, A Merriman ...... Gb^ \b]bhIQ
5 Polar Rail, T Hall ....................... ]_b^ EbFbE
6 Fox Valley Ruffian, Br Miller ........ ^]b^ CbGb]
7 Chip Chip Mac, Br Zendt ............ ]_b^ GbGbF
8 Gamblers Vacation, G Grismore .... \b^
]b)b)
9 City Ridge, D McNeight III........... ^_b^ ]b^b^
2NDi7Cc]__c $# \ 6"&? TW# U9 ^ Sljg
^ #lIjg &KK UNPO- Xc ? =Ol03. ......... Cb^
2 Best Find, T Hall.......................... 9-2
3 Caribe, G Grismore...................... Eb^
4 Sanjoramy, Br Miller .................. ^_b^
5 Edington, D Palone...................... \b^
6 Nf Jessica, A Johnston............... ^_b^
7 Aleksey Hanover, M Wilder ........... Fb^
8 Medoland Jate, D Rawlings .......... 7-2
DbEbE
7-x-x
GbFbE
GbEbE
^b)b)
\bFb\
)b)b)
3-5-4
^ UH--NI =H V,jOc # >I(hg0............. Eb^
2 S Js Reel Girl, T Hall.................... \b^
3 Rio Sweet, E Ledford ................... ]b^
4 Unicornlane, D Rawlings ............ ]_b^
5 Play Broadway, G Grismore .......... Gb^
6 Investor, Br Zendt...................... ]_b^
7 Photomania, A Merriman............ ^]b^
8 Must Be Psychic, D Palone ........ ^_b^
9 Belsnickle, M Wilder .................. ^]b^
Fb]bE
Db^bF
^b^bE
FbBbF
Cb]bF
Db\b^
]bFbG
\bDb\
EbBbE
^ &IlN. XNjLg0c = [lKK ..................... \b^
2 El Cucuy, D Rawlings ................. ^Fb^
3 Executive Fella, G Grismore........ ^]b^
4 Wardog Hall, M Wilder ............... ^Fb^
5 Stillwater Cove, D Palone............. Eb^
6 Real Navigator, Br Miller ............ ^]b^
7 Northern Attack, A Merriman........ 5-2
8 Sunny New Day, R Tharps ............ Eb^
9 Shams Big Guy, D Charlino........... Fb^
\b]bE
Db^bD
GbGbG
Cb\b]
EbEbF
EbGb)
2-2-8
BbFbB
Eb^b]
3RD–$5,000, CLAIM 6000 Trot
4THi7Cc^__c $W&ZV ^_c___ Sljg
5THi7^\cF__c $# U9 B___ =0H-
^ 6b#l-c # SlKHIg........................... 5-2 dnf-6-6
2 Primo Spur, R Stillings ................. Fb^ \b]bG
3 Trou Normand, M Wilder .............. Eb^ ]bFbG
4 BS Surgin Don, B Presto.............. \b^ ^b]b]
5 Ram Jam, R Tharps ................... ^]b^ ]bFbE
6 Foggy Lane K, Br Miller .............. ^]b^ Cb^bD
7 Quillz, Br Zendt ........................... Eb^ ^bFb)
8 Gaslight, T Hall ......................... ^Fb^ DbDbD
9 Caviar Crown, D Charlino ........... ^Fb^ CbDbC
6THi7Cc^__c $W&ZV ^_c___ Sljg
^ [g. #HIg Z- &KKc m m0N.JH0g ....... ^]b^
2 Western Kissed, D Charlino ......... Gb^
3 Whoyoucallingafool, A Merriman ... \b^
4 Just A Suggestion, E Ledford........ Eb^
5 Allamerican Junior, Br Zendt....... ]_b^
6 Final Flash, M Wilder ................... Fb^
7 Touch of Steel, D Palone.............. Eb^
8 Grin-n-scoot, D Rawlings .............. Fb^
9 Mystery Island, Br Miller ............ ^]b^
EbGbD
^b^b^
]b^bE
FbEbF
DbCbF
Gb]b^
^bCbF
\b]b^
GbDbC
^ %:. >N.-g0c & Vg00NJlI.............. ^Fb^
2 Kandor Hanover, D Palone ........... \b^
3 Trotslikethewind, T Hall................ Fb]
4 Tiffany, G Grismore.................... ^]b^
5 Paulette Revere, E Ledford........... Eb^
6 Filly Bay, R Tharps ..................... ^Fb^
7 Liz, D Charlino............................. Fb^
8 Rt Sun Poco, Br Miller................ ^]b^
9 Photo Fantasy, M Wilder .............. Eb^
]bDb]
^b^bG
^b]bD
Gb]b^
Fb\b^
Cb^bE
]b^b\
GbEbF
Fb]b]
^ >3gjNlK %KgIhc # SlKHIg............... Gb^
2 Cyrus Seelster, E Mc Neight Jr ... ^_b^
3 Mattacardle, W Yoder .................. Cb^
4 Dalton Hanover, G Grismore......... Cb^
5 Devil Rei, E Ledford ................... ^_b^
6 Twin B Hollister, T Hall................. Bb]
7 Man He Can Skoot, Br Miller ........ ]b^
8 Coast to Coast, R Tharps............. Eb^
\b]b^
FbFbG
^bFb]
CbBb]
EbGbG
^bDb]
]b^b^
Gb\b\
^ =lkKg 9NIgc %0 VNKKg0.................. ^_b^
2 Hogues Rockie, T Hall.................. Gb^
3 Flowing James, D Palone ........... ]_b^
4 Classical Man, A Merriman .......... ]b^
5 Gone Pecan, Br Zendt.................. \b^
6 Chipariffic, G Grismore............... ^]b^
7 Global Winner K, W Yoder........... ^]b^
8 Superfast Stuart, G Wright Jr ..... ]_b^
9 Nj Express, B S Provost ............... Eb^
Eb]bF
Bb\bG
CbDb\
\b\bD
Eb^bD
GbCbE
CbDbB
Eb\bB
]bEbD
^ SHKH YHOII(c $ SlPg .................. ^]b^
2 Rock N Roll Star, M Wilder ........... \b^
3 Pictonian Pride, G Grismore ......... Eb^
4 Unrecognized Saint, E Ledford.... ^]b^
5 Bagel Man, Br Zendt.................... 5-2
6 Dontgetinskyway, Br Miller ........... Fb^
7 Black Ace Hanover, T Hall .......... ^Fb^
8 Wildridge Sam, D Palone.............. Eb^
9 Beckys Dreamboat, A Merriman . ^Fb^
GbFbC
]b\bC
CbDb^
BbCb^
x-x-x
)b)b)
Db^b]
Gb)b)
^bBb]
7THi7^GcC__c $# !5V U9 ^Fc^__ =0H-
8THi7^]cC__c $# U9 E Sljg
9THi7^_c___c $# U9 E___ =0H-
10THi7^_cG__c $W&ZV ^Fc___ Sljg
11THi7^\cF__c $# U9 B___ =0H-
^ >Y. >,3g0 >-l0c = [lKK.................. Eb^
2 Tygerlynx, E Ledford..................... Gb^
3 Mike The Trader, Br Zendt ............ Fb^
4 Valdez, T Cummings .................. ^]b^
5 Challenge All, A Merriman .......... ]_b^
6 Christina Victory, Ji Smith ............ Eb^
7 Bloomington, K Bolon ................ ^]b^
8 Bossy Volo, Br Miller.................... Fb^
9 NF Quotable, D Palone................. \b^
BbGb]
^bCbC
EbDb^
CbCb)
CbDbF
Bb^b\
GbCb\
Fb^b]
Gb^bG
^ =NjLKN.O =g00H0c " WghQH0h.............. Eb^
2 Zippity Doodah Deo, D Palone ...... Eb^
3 Dvc Havalittlehart, D Rawlings.... ]_b^
4 Rosebud Sharkalert, B Brown .... ^]b^
5 Big Pulse, K Bolon....................... Fb^
6 Its Your Time, T Hall .................... Fb^
7 Keystone Radience, A Merriman. ^]b^
8 Chilis Dragon, Br Miller ................ Gb^
9 Cervante Bluestone, D Charlino.... \b^
BbCbD
BbGbC
FbGbC
DbCbC
Eb]bC
\b]b^
Db\bD
]bCb\
]b\bD
^ $0lhlk0lc " WghQH0h .................... \b^
2 Whotooksam, Wi Irvine .............. ^]b^
3 Lucky Yim, D Irvine Jr ................ ]_b^
4 B Cor Thomas, T Hall................... Eb^
5 Green Peace, M Wilder .............. ^]b^
6 Overandovervictory, R Stillings ..... Gb^
7 Campo Basso, Br Zendt............... Eb^
8 Stone Valley, D Palone ................. Fb^
9 Kahoku, D Charlino ..................... Fb^
^b^b)
DbEbE
Db^bG
CbBb^
GbCb\
GbDb]
^b]b^
^b^b)
^bFb^
^ $OKHg [lKKc %0 VNKKg0..................... 5-2
2 Redtogreen Hanover, M Wilder ..... Eb^
3 Wing and a Share, E Ledford ........ 9-2
4 Snickerdoodle, D Rawlings........... Db]
5 Chrome Over, G Grismore ............ Cb^
6 Third Times Acharm, Br Zendt .... ^_b^
7 Home Wrecker, A Merriman........ ^_b^
8 Theshipscruisinin, T Hall.............. Cb^
3-2-4
BbGb^
9-4-x
^b^b]
FbFbG
GbCbD
EbEb]
CbDbC
^ m0l-gQ,K YHOIc m m0N.JH0g............ Eb^
2 American Lassie, C Norris............ \b^
3 Reverand Speed, Wi Irvine ........... Fb^
4 Bon Bon, T O Brien...................... Fb]
5 Star Of The Moment, Br Miller .... ^]b^
6 Charles Ray, M Wilder................ ^Fb^
7 Singlenrdytomingle, T Hall............ Eb^
8 Bam Ba Lam, D Irvine Jr ............ ^]b^
9 Crowdswild Hanover, R Romanetti^Fb^
Eb^b]
)b)b)
\b\bB
]b^b]
FbEb^
FbDb^
^b\b)
\bCbF
FbGb]
12TH–$6,000, CD CLM NW 2 Pace
13THi7^]cC__c $# U9 F =0H-
14THi7^^cE__c $# \6T 5 G6T !5V U9 \ Sljg
15THi7^]cC__c $# U9 F =0H-
Monday’s Results
1STi7^Gc]__c $W&ZV 7\_c___ 9`& Sljg
McSocks, E Ledford ......... ^Ga]_ EaC_ Fa__
Intermezzo Hanover, R Stillings G\a]_ ^]a__
Newbegining, A Merriman ..................... 6.40
=NJgbb^AF^a^a TQQ ^]AFCa
$2 Exacta (6-7) Paid $308.80.
7^ ")lj-l 2EbD/ SlNh 7^FGaG_a
7] =0NQgj-l 2EbDb]/ SlNh 7^cE^GaC_a
7^ =0NQgj-l 2EbDb]/ SlNh 7C_DaG_a
555 6$%2!6ÿ"! 0 )#&& %2(ÿ1'$62 %2ÿ '. ÿ12 42"!
( ÿ!%#$
)ÿ*"' &
ÿ9$0 ÿ9/10"
-83+ 7-."
ÿ2
7'$%*2,6 ()/ 6
ÿ),)!!
%+3 8.9 7.1((. & 2%*'*4%'55#+
,85":85" 6&::+-70*( ' )))!4%.3;/9#1ÿ2!2#$
7] >,3g0Qgj-l 2EbDb&b&2$TA]^FEaDB// SlNh
7^c_D_aG_a
.50 Superfecta (6-7-A-A) Paid $269.60.
2NDi7^Gc___c $# \bF6T 9ZUU"?> T! \
BUT NOT MORE, THAN 7 EXT PM RACES OR
$35,000 LIFE Trot
Keystone Wyatt, Br Zendt.... 7.60 4.80 2.60
Boytown, R Stillings..................... 3.60 2.20
Air-Stewart, T Hall ................................ 2.20
=NJgbb^AFEa TQQ ^A^Fa
Scratched--Rock N Jessie.
7] ")lj-l 2FbE/ SlNh 7^BaG_a
7^ ")lj-l 2FbE/ SlNh 7BaD_a
7] =0NQgj-l 2FbEb^/ SlNh 7G\a]_a
7^ =0NQgj-l 2FbEb^/ SlNh 7]^aE_a
$2 Daily Double (6-5) Paid $58.40.
3RDi7^^cF__c $# \6T 5 G6T U9 ] "8=
SV ?&$">c T? 7^Fc___ WZ!"a &"A ]6T U9 \
EXT, PM RACES LIFE (PA SIRED OR OWNED)
Pace
Northern Art, E Ledford ...... 3.80 2.60 3.00
DVC Is Magical, D Palone............. 4.20 4.00
Last Chance Harvey, W Yoder.............. ^DaG_
=NJgbb^AF\a\a TQQ ^A\\a
Scratched--Excitable Boy, Sharkys Bandit.
7] ")lj-l 2^bF/ SlNh 7]^a__a
7^ ")lj-l 2^bF/ SlNh 7^_aF_a
7] =0NQgj-l 2^bFbE/ SlNh 7\]DaC_a
7^ =0NQgj-l 2^bFbE/ SlNh 7^E\aB_a
7] >,3g0Qgj-l 2^bFbEbC/ SlNh 7]cGGDaC_a
aF_ >,3g0Qgj-l 2]bFbEbC/ SlNh 7E^^aBFa
4THi7^\cF__c $# &WW &m"> U9 7B___
LAST 5 STARTS, AE: NW 7 EXT PM RACES LIFE
Pace
Star Party, T Hall ................ \a]_ ]a]_ ]a^_
Beach Boy Tiger, Br Miller ............ 4.20 3.00
J Matt, D Palone .................................. 2.20
=NJgbb^AF^a\a TQQ ^AGCa
Scratched--Hangon Cowboy.
7] ")lj-l 2GbB/ SlNh 7^^aC_a
7^ ")lj-l 2GbB/ SlNh 7FaB_a
$2 Trifecta (4-9-7) Paid $28.40.
7^ =0NQgj-l 2GbBbD/ SlNh 7^Ga]_a
5THi7^_c___c $# &WW &m"> U9 7E___
LAST 5 STARTS, HORSES RACING FOR A
S;?>" m?"&="? =[&Uc 7^\cF_^ W&>= >=&?=
NE - STAKES & CLOSERS EXCLUDED, (PA
SIRED OR OWNED) Pace
J J Gladiator, T Hall............. 3.80 3.00 2.20
Laurent Hanover, R Tharps......... ^Ca]_ BaC_
Keystone Royce, M Wilder..................... 4.00
=NJgbb^AF^a]a TQQ ]A_Ga
Scratched--Escapable Beaux, Smartiscape.
$2 Exacta (8-4) Paid $59.00.
7^ ")lj-l 2CbG/ SlNh 7]BaF_a
7] =0NQgj-l 2CbGbF/ SlNh 7^B_aC_a
7^ =0NQgj-l 2CbGbF/ SlNh 7BFaG_a
$2 Superfecta (8-4-5-3) Paid $728.00.
aF_ >,3g0Qgj-l 2CbGbFb\/ SlNh 7^C]a__a
7] SNj \ 2^bGcFbC/ SlNh 7^BaG_a
aF_ SNj \ 2^bGcFbC/ SlNh 7GaCFa
6THi7^\cF__c $# &WW &m"> U9 7B___
LAST 5 STARTS, AE: NW 7 EXT PM RACES LIFE
Pace
Pair A Dice, E Ledford ......... 4.80 2.80 3.00
Fashion Heart, D Palone .............. 3.60 2.80
Beach Fighter A, D Rawlings.................. 4.00
=NJgbb^AF]a TQQ ]A]^a
7] ")lj-l 2]bF/ SlNh 7^BaC_a
7^ ")lj-l 2]bF/ SlNh 7BaB_a
7] =0NQgj-l 2]bFb^/ SlNh 7GBa__a
7^ =0NQgj-l 2]bFb^/ SlNh 7]GaF_a
7] >,3g0Qgj-l 2]bFb^bD/ SlNh 7]\_a__a
aF_ >,3g0Qgj-l 2]bFb^bD/ SlNh 7FDaF_a
7THi7^^cF__c $W&ZV 7]_c___ 9`& Sljg
Warners Speedy Art, T Hall ^]a__ Ga__ ]aC_
Four Starz Elder, A Merriman........ ]aG_ ]a^_
Regil Tiger, B Presto ............................. 4.00
=NJgbb^AF]a]a TQQ ]A\Ea
Scratched--Andreoli Hanover, Dontgetinskyway, King Otra.
$2 Exacta (9-3) Paid $27.20.
7^ ")lj-l 2Bb\/ SlNh 7^\aE_a
7] =0NQgj-l 2Bb\bG/ SlNh 7^__a__a
7^ =0NQgj-l 2Bb\bG/ SlNh 7F_a__a
$2 Superfecta (9-3-4-5) Paid $387.60.
.50 Superfecta (9-3-4-5) Paid $96.90.
$2 Pic 4 (4,5-8-2-9) Paid $324.60.
.50 Pic 4 (4,5-8-2-9) Paid $53.55.
8THi7]]cF__c ee9`_ 7^_c___ WZ!"`S?"!"??"# [&U#Z$&Seec SaSa^bF #?&9U@ EbB
DRAWN Pace
Itrustyou, D Palone............. 5.60 3.80 2.80
Fred And Ginger, Br Miller ............ 3.20 2.60
Village Beat, M Wilder........................... 3.60
=NJgbb^AF_aGa TQQ ]AFGa
7] ")lj-l 2BbE/ SlNh 7^]aC_a
7^ ")lj-l 2BbE/ SlNh 7EaG_a
$2 Trifecta (9-6-4) Paid $89.60.
7^ =0NQgj-l 2BbEbG/ SlNh 7GGaC_a
$2 Superfecta (9-6-4-3) Paid $256.80.
.50 Superfecta (9-6-4-3) Paid $64.20.
7] SNj \ 2]bBbB/ SlNh 7^_^a]_a
.50 Pic 3 (2-9-9) Paid $25.30.
9TH–$6,900, CD CLAIM 3-5YO S&G WINU"?> T! ^ %;= UT=c VT?" =[&U \ "8=
SV ?&$"> T? 7^]cF__ WZ!"c $W&ZV S?Z$"
7^Gc___ 9`& 2S& >Z?"# T? T9U"#/ Sljg
Gotta Go Hanover, T Hall..... 5.40 3.40 3.60
Wild For Real, Br Zendt ................ 4.00 4.00
Knockout Art, J Kehm ........................... 7.00
=NJgbb^AF\aGa TQQ \A^]a
Scratched--A and GS Fire, Sharkys Way.
7] ")lj-l 2Gb\/ SlNh 7^CaG_a
7^ ")lj-l 2Gb\/ SlNh 7Ba]_a
$2 Trifecta (4-3-5) Paid $200.80.
7^ =0NQgj-l 2Gb\bF/ SlNh 7^__aG_a
$2 Superfecta (4-3-5-7) Paid $2,072.20.
aF_ >,3g0Qgj-l 2Gb\bFbD/ SlNh 7F^Ca_Fa
10THi7^^cF__c $# \ 6"&? TW# U9 ] "8=
SV ?&$">c T? 7^Fc___ WZ!"a &"A ]6T U9 \
EXT PM, RACES LIFE (PA SIRED AND OWNED)
Trot
Sweet Ben, D Palone.......... ]aE_ ]a]_ ]a^_
Delmary, J Kehm ....................... ^_aG_ FaG_
Morning After, Br Zendt......................... 5.20
=NJgbb^AFCa\a TQQ \A]Ca
7] ")lj-l 2^bB/ SlNh 7\CaC_a
7^ ")lj-l 2^bB/ SlNh 7^BaG_a
7] =0NQgj-l 2^bBbC/ SlNh 7]B^a__a
7^ =0NQgj-l 2^bBbC/ SlNh 7^GFaF_a
11THi7^Gc___c $# F6T 5 ;U#"? 9ZUNERS OF 3 BUT NOT MORE, THAN 7 EXT PM
RACES OR $35,000 LIFE Pace
Martial Bliss, E Ledford ...... 6.20 4.00 2.60
Top Of The Mark, W Yoder ............ 3.20 2.60
Open Water, T Hall................................ 3.40
=NJgbb^AF]a TQQ \AGDa
$2 Exacta (7-3) Paid $23.60.
7^ ")lj-l 2Db\/ SlNh 7^^aC_a
$2 Trifecta (7-3-5) Paid $53.20.
7^ =0NQgj-l 2Db\bF/ SlNh 7]EaE_a
7] >,3g0Qgj-l 2Db\bFb^/ SlNh 7CBCaE_a
aF_ >,3g0Qgj-l 2Db\bFb^/ SlNh 7]]GaEFa
7] SNj \ 2Gb^bD/ SlNh 7F\a__a
aF_ SNj \ 2Gb^bD/ SlNh 7^\a]Fa
12THi7^]cE__c $# \6T 5 G6T U9 \ "8=
PM RACES, OR $20,000 LIFE. (PA SIRED OR
OWNED), AE: 2-4 YO F&M NW 4 EXT PM LIFE
Trot
Sequin Hanover, D Palone... 2.40 2.40 2.20
Screamin Dreamin, T Hall ............ 3.80 2.80
Fantasys Chipchip, Br Zendt.................. 3.60
=NJgbb^AFDa TQQ GA_Ea
Scratched--Knockout Doll, Northern Rhythm.
$2 Exacta (8-6) Paid $7.40.
7^ ")lj-l 2CbE/ SlNh 7\aD_a
$2 Trifecta (8-6-5) Paid $32.60.
7^ =0NQgj-l 2CbEbF/ SlNh 7^Ea\_a
7] >,3g0Qgj-l 2CbEbFb^/ SlNh 7]^FaG_a
aF_ >,3g0Qgj-l 2CbEbFb^/ SlNh 7F\aCFa
13THi7Bc]__c $W&ZV 7^]c___ 9`& Sljg
Winbak Jake, M Wilder...... ^DaG_ Fa]_ \a__
Pj Count On Luck, D Palone.......... 2.80 2.20
Bettor Watch Him, Br Miller ................... 2.20
=NJgbb^AF\a TQQ GA]Fa
Scratched--Jamboree, Premier Flash.
$2 Exacta (3-5) Paid $44.80.
7^ ")lj-l 2\bF/ SlNh 7]]aG_a
7] =0NQgj-l 2\bFbD/ SlNh 7^^Da]_a
7^ =0NQgj-l 2\bFbD/ SlNh 7FCaE_a
7] >,3g0Qgj-l 2\bFbDbC/ SlNh 7F_^aE_a
aF_ >,3g0Qgj-l 2\bFbDbC/ SlNh 7^]FaG_a
7] SNj G 2^bDbCb\/ SlNh 7^D^aG_a
aF_ SNj G 2^bDbCb\/ SlNh 7G]aCFa
14THi7Cc]__c $# \ 6"&? TW# !ZWW6 U9 ^
EXT PM RACE, OR $6000 LIFE. AE: 2YO FILLY
NW 2 EXT, PM RACES LIFE (PA SIRED) Pace
Excelerated Speed, W Yoder 5.40 2.80 3.00
Roxy Spur, R Stillings................... 6.80 4.60
Cin Cardle, G Grismore ......................... 6.40
=NJgbb^AFDaGa TQQ GAGGa
$2 Exacta (2-5) Paid $39.20.
7^ ")lj-l 2]bF/ SlNh 7^BaE_a
7] =0NQgj-l 2]bFbC/ SlNh 7\^_a]_a
7^ =0NQgj-l 2]bFbC/ SlNh 7^FFa^_a
7] >,3g0Qgj-l 2]bFbCbD/ SlNh 7^c_\Ga__a
.50 Superfecta (2-5-8-7) Paid $258.50.
$2 Pic 3 (8-3-2) Paid $68.00.
aF_ SNj \ 2Cb\b]/ SlNh 7^Da__a
15THi7Bc]__c $W&ZV 7^]c___ 9`& Sljg
Rainmaker, T Hall ............... 6.80 4.40 2.40
Spirits Gone Wild, D Rawlings ...... 6.60 3.20
Red Star Paylater, Br Miller ................... 2.20
=NJgbb^AF\aGa TQQ FA_]a
Scratched--Premi
PRO BASKETBALL
NBA
MONDAY’S GAMES
VNK*l,Lgg ^_F .....................Philadelphia 96
Oklahoma City 92......................... Detroit 90
;-lO ^G_...........................=H0HI-H ^\\c \T=
%H.-HI ^_^ ................................Chicago 95
VNlJN ^^\............................... [H,.-HI ^^_
Minnesota 90 ............................... Dallas 82
SOHgIN) ^^_ .............................. #gI+g0 ^__
Atlanta at Portland
TUESDAY’S GAMES
Washington at Charlotte, 7 p.m.
Toronto at Indiana, 7 p.m.
New York at Orlando, 7 p.m.
Cleveland at Brooklyn, 7:30 p.m.
SH0-KlIh l- >lj0lJgI-Hc ^_ 3aJa
>lI &I-HINH l- Wa&a WlLg0.c ^_A\_ 3aJa
SUNDAY’S GAMES
Brooklyn 82 ................................ Orlando 74
L.A. Clippers 89 ........................... Atlanta 76
VgJ3ON. ^_G ............................... Miami 86
TLKlOHJl $N-( ^_E................... $Kg+gKlIh B^
Wa&a WlLg0. ^_\ ....................Sacramento 90
C
Y
P
G
M
K
THE LATEST LINE
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
Tomorrow
Favorite
Pts
Underdog
at Ball St. ............. 4 (59)......................Ohio
at N. Illinois ........ ^_< 2EB/ ................Toledo
Thursday
Local Calendar Home games in bold
13
TUE.
14
15
WED.
NOVEMBER
16
THUR.
FRI.
17
18
SAT.
MON.
! Steelers ! 412-323-1200/steelers.com
Favorite
Pts
Underdog
North Carolina ........ \<................at Virginia
Ravens
8:20 p.m.
Friday
Favorite
Pts
Underdog
at Air Force ............ ]\<....................Hawaii
FIU ...........................^ ......................at FAU
19
SUN.
! #&(( % 412-648-7488/pittsburghpanthers.com
Saturday
Favorite
Pts
Underdog
at Penn State .......... ^D ....................Indiana
at Georgia Tech........ ^\ .......................Duke
at Army.....................3 .....................Temple
at Bowling Green....... 3 ................... Kent St.
Virginia Tech ........... B<.... at Boston College
at Nebraska........... ^C<..............Minnesota
at Mississippi St. .... E<.................Arkansas
at Miami...................7 ............ South Florida
Purdue .....................7 .................. at Illinois
Iowa St................... E<............... at Kansas
at Marshall ............. \<.................. Houston
Florida St................. \^ .............at Maryland
Buffalo .................... ^^ ................ at UMass
at Michigan St......... E<.......... Northwestern
at Clemson ............ ^D<................ NC State
at Cincinnati ........... E<................... Rutgers
at Vanderbilt ........... G<...............Tennessee
at Cent. Michigan ......3 .............Miami (Ohio)
at UAB..................... ^_ .................Memphis
at W. Michigan ......... ^\ ............. E. Michigan
Oklahoma ................ ^_ ....... at West Virginia
Southern Cal............. 4 ....................at UCLA
at Boise St. ............. 28 ............ Colorado St.
at Navy....................^\ .................Texas St.
Kansas St. ............ ^^<................ at Baylor
Nevada.................... ^_ ......... at New Mexico
at Notre Dame .........24 ............ Wake Forest
at Oregon ................ ]^ ..................Stanford
at Oregon St. .......... OFF................ California
SMU....................... \<.................... at Rice
East Carolina ........... ^_ .................at Tulane
at Tulsa .................. \<........................ UCF
at Michigan............. OFF........................Iowa
Washington..............20 ............. at Colorado
BYU ....................... \<........at San Jose St.
at UNLV .................. OFF................. Wyoming
UTSA........................6 ................... at Idaho
at Utah................... OFF....................Arizona
at Missouri ...............4 .................. Syracuse
at Oklahoma St. ..... ^_<............. Texas Tech
Utah St.....................3 ......at Louisiana Tech
at Wisconsin.............3 ................... Ohio St.
at LSU..................... ^B ..............Mississippi
UTEP ........................4 ..... at Southern Miss.
at Arizona St. ........... ]^ ........ Washington St.
Arkansas St. .............3 ......................at Troy
at Louisiana-Monroe .^_ .............North Texas
Middle Tenn. ............ ^_ .... at South Alabama
at La.-Lafayette ....... \<.............W. Kentucky
PRO FOOTBALL (NFL)
Thursday
Favorite
Pts
Underdog
at Buffalo ............. ^ 2GF/................... Miami
! #'!! $("(' % 800-863-3336/gopsusports.com
Indiana
noon
! West Virginia % 800-988-4263/wvugame.com
Oklahoma
7 p.m.
! Robert Morris hockey d G^]b\BDbGBGB`0J,jHKHINlK.ajHJ
Niagara
7 p.m.
! Pitt basketball d G^]bEGCbDGCC`3N--.k,0PO3lI-Og0.ajHJ
Lehigh
9 p.m.
Oakland
6 p.m.
! Duquesne basketball d G^]b]\]b\CF\`PHh,1,g.IgajHJ
James
Madison
7 p.m.
! Robert Morris basketball d G^]b\BDbGBGB`0J,jHKHINlK.ajHJ
Fordham
6 p.m.
Xavier
2 p.m.
! Other games
Men
S>; +.a Ua$a >-l-gc >lI Y,lIc F 3aJa UH+a ^F
SgII >-l-g +.a =%#c >lI Y,lIc =%&c UH+a ^E
SgII >-l-g +.a =%#c >lI Y,lIc =%&c UH+a ^C
Women
SN-- +.a >NgIlc ^ 3aJa UH+a ^\
#,1,g.gI +.a =%#c =%&c UH+a ^G
SgII >-l-g l- =g)l. &5Vc C 3aJa UH+a ^G
?Hkg0- VH00N. l- VNlJN 2T/c D 3aJa UH+a ^F
9g.- :N0PNINl +.a >$ ;3.-l-gc =%&c UH+a ^D
SgII >-l-g +.a WlQl(g--gc ] 3aJa UH+a ^C
Sunday
Favorite
Pts
Underdog
at Steelers ........ \< 2GF</........... Baltimore
at Washington......... OFF.............Philadelphia
Green Bay............ \ 2F^</ .............at Detroit
at Atlanta ............ ^_ 2GF/.................Arizona
Tampa Bay........... ^< 2GC/ .......... at Carolina
at Dallas............ D< 2G\</........... Cleveland
at St. Louis........... 3 (38)............... N.Y. Jets
at New England .. B< 2F\</........Indianapolis
at Houston .......... ^E 2G]/..........Jacksonville
Cincinnati ............ \< 2GG/ ..... at Kansas City
New Orleans ...... G< 2FG</......... at Oakland
at Denver........... D< 2GB</.......... San Diego
Monday
Favorite
Pts
Underdog
at San Francisco ..... OFF...................Chicago
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Today
Favorite
Pts
Underdog
at Valparaiso............^B .................N. Illinois
at UMass................ D<...................Harvard
Temple .....................4 ............... at Kent St.
at St. John’s .............2 ..................... Detroit
at Xavier ................. Pick .....................Butler
Kansas-x ................ ^<............ Michigan St.
at Princeton ........... ^_<..........Northeastern
at Richmond ............ ^G .......;U$@9NKJNIP-HI
at VCU.................... F<.............. Wichita St.
at Mississippi St. ......5 ..........................FAU
at BYU..................... ^G ..............Georgia St.
at Southern Cal......... ^ ......... Long Beach St.
Duke-x.................... ^<................. Kentucky
at California............. ]^ ..............Pepperdine
Houston ................. ^<........at San Jose St.
at UCLA ...................22 ................. ;$@Z0+NIg
at Hawaii ............... ^]<......Houston Baptist
at Rider .................. \<.............Stony Brook
at Charlotte ............. ^_ .....Georgia Southern
Wright St. .................8 .............. at E. Illinois
at S. Dakota St. ...... B<......... Tennessee St.
at W. Kentucky ..........6 .............. Austin Peay
at Boise St. ..............7 ................... Oakland
at Northwestern .......23 ........Texas Southern
x-at Atlanta
PRO BASKETBALL (NBA)
Today
NIT
TBA
Today on TV & Radio
MEN’S BASKETBALL
TIME
TV
Stony Brook at Rider
Northern Illinois at Valparaiso
Harvard at Massachusetts
Temple at Kent State
Detroit Mercy at St. John’s
Butler at Xavier
Kansas vs. Michigan State
Fordham vs. Robert Morris
NIT Tip-Off
Pitt vs. Lehigh
Georgia Southern at Charlotte
Duke vs. Kentucky
NIT Tip-Off
6 a.m.
8 a.m.
10 a.m.
Noon
2 p.m.
4 p.m.
7 p.m.
6 p.m.
8 p.m.
9 p.m.
9 p.m.
9:30 p.m.
10 p.m.
ESPN
ESPN
ESPN
ESPN
ESPN
ESPN
ESPN
ESPN2
ESPNU
NBCSN
ESPN
ESPN2
WOMEN’S BASKETBALL
TIME
TV
Kentucky at Baylor
RADIO
730-AM
93.7-FM
RADIO
6 p.m.
ESPN2
Complete listings, Page C-5
Trivia question
Mike D’Antoni won the Coach of the Year Award in 2004-2005 when
he coached the Phoenix Suns. Five of his players recieved 70 or more
starts that year for the Suns. Who were they?
— Answer in Wednesday’s Post-Gazette
Monday’s question: Which current NFL head coach holds the Chicago Bears’ quarterback record for career completions? 49ers coach
Jim Harbaugh (1,023).
Favorite
Pts
Underdog
at Charlotte ..............2 .............. Washington
New York ..................5 ................ at Orlando
at Indiana ............... D<................... Toronto
at Brooklyn ............. F<................ Cleveland
at Sacramento ..........2 ................... Portland
at L.A. Lakers ......... \<.............San Antonio
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
AUTO RACING
POLLS
SUNDAY’S LATE RESULTS
TRANS ACTIONS
FCS COACHES POLL
(First-place votes in parentheses)
Record
Pts Pvs
^a UH0-O #lLH-l >-a 2]G/ ....Bb^
EGE
^
2. Montana State ............ Bb^
E^B
]
3. Sam Houston State (2) 8-2
597
3
4. Old Dominion .............. Bb^
FDC
G
5. Eastern Washington .... 8-2
537
6
6. Georgia Southern ........ Cb]
F]^
D
7. New Hampshire........... Cb]
GEE ^_
8. Appalachian State ....... Cb\
GG\ ^]
9. Wofford ...................... Cb]
G_C ^G
^_a $gI-0lK &0LlI.l.......... Cb]
\BD ^\
^^a ZKKNIHN. >-l-g ............... Cb]
\G\ ^F
^]a WgONPO ........................ Bb^
\]D
F
^\a >-HI( %0HHL ................ 9-2
300
8
^Ga YlJg. VlhN.HI........... 7-3
293
9
^Fa UH0-Og0I &0NfHIl ......... Cb]
]DB ^^
^Ea =H*.HI....................... EbG
]FD ^D
^Da "l.-g0I XgI-,jL( ........ Cb\
]GE ^C
^Ca $lK SHK( ...................... Cb]
]G_ ^B
^Ba ZIhNlIl >-l-g .............. Db\
^DE ]^
20. Richmond ................... Db\
^F] ]\
]^a :NKKlIH+l..................... Db\
^]C ]F
22. Bethune-Cookman ....... Cb]
^^D ]]
23. South Dakota State..... 7-3
98 20
24. Harvard ...................... Db]
EF ^E
25. Eastern illinois ............ 7-3
39 —
THE SPORTS NETWORK POLL
(First-place votes in parentheses)
Record
Pts Pvs
^a UH0-O #lLH-l >-a 2^]^/ Bb^ \B\_
^
2. Montana State (20) ..... Bb^ \DGC
]
\a >lJ [H,.-HI >-a 2^G/.. 8-2 3585
3
4. Old Dominion (3) ......... Bb^ \GBE
G
5. Eastern Washington .... 8-2 3362
5
6. Georgia Southern ........ Cb] \^^\
D
Da Ug* [lJ3.ON0g 2^/...... Cb] ]CBD ^_
8. Appalachian State ....... Cb\ ]EFB ^]
9. Wofford ...................... Cb] ]F_] ^\
^_a $gI-0lK &0LlI.l.......... Cb] ]\G^ ^G
^^a ZKKNIHN. >-l-g ............... Cb] ]_BG ^F
^]a >-HI( %0HHL ................ Bb] ^B^D
E
^\a YlJg. VlhN.HI........... Db\ ^CCF
B
^Ga WgONPO ........................ Bb^ ^CG\
C
^Fa UH0-Og0I &0NfHIl ......... Cb] ^FBG ^^
^Ea :NKKlIH+l..................... Db\ ^GDD ]^
^Da $lK SHK( ...................... Cb] ^\FG ^B
^Ca ZIhNlIl >-l-g .............. Db\ ^]BG ^C
^Ba =H*.HI....................... EbG ^]F^ ^D
20. Richmond ................... Db\ ^^F\ ]_
]^a >H,-O #lLH-l >-l-g..... Db\ ^_GE ^E
22. Eastern Kentucky ........ 8-3
750 22
23. Tennessee State ......... 8-2
450 24
24. Bethune-Cookman ....... 8-2
423 —
24. Eastern Illinois ............ 7-3
423 —
Others receiving votes: $HKPl-g ]^\c >lJQH0h ]__c &KklI( ^\Ec >lj0lJgI-H >-l-g B_c
UT Martin 75, Arkansas-Pine Bluff 52, Harvard 43, Youngstown State 40, Wagner 29,
McNeese State 28, Northern Iowa 22, Lilberty
]^c =Og $N-lhgK ]_c #gKl*l0g ^Dc >H,-Og0I
;-lO ^Ec SgII ^Fc >H,-Og0I ZKKNIHN. ^\c $Ol-tanooga 7, Coastal Carolina 3, Alabama A&M
3, Alabama State 2, Drake 2, North Carolina
&5= ]c >lI #NgPH ^c YljL.HI+NKKg ^a
Monday’s Moves in Sports
BASEBALL
COMMISSIONER’S OFFICE — Suspended
free agent RHP Rafael Martinez 50 games for
a violation of the Minor League Drug Prevention and Treatment Program.
ATLANTA BRAVES — Named Randy Ready
manager of Gwinnett (IL).
CHICAGO CUBS — Named P.J. Mainville
trainer.
LOS ANGELES DODGERS — Named Pedro
Avila, Gene Grimaldi, Patrick Guerrero, Pat
Kelly, Jamey Storvick and Mike Tosar interIl-NHIlK .jH,-.@ YH.O %l0h 3Kl(g0 3g0.HIIgK
.3gjNlK l..N.-lI-@ lIh 9NKKNg !0l.g0 lIh >jH-Groot professional scouts. Reassigned player
personnel special asssitant Bill Mueller fulltime professional scout.
NEW YORK METS — Named Jim Malone
strength and conditioning coordinator.
TEXAS RANGERS — Agreed to terms with C
Juan Apodaca, OF Jim Adduci, LHP Neal Cotts,
OF Aaron Cunningham, and RHP Yonata Ortega on minor league contracts.
BASKETBALL
LOS ANGELES LAKERS — Named Mike
D’Antoni coach.
FOOTBALL
BUFFALO BILLS — Signed CB Delano Howell to the practice squad.
CAROLINA PANTHERS — Fired special
teams coordinator Brian Murphy. Promoted assistant special teams coach Richard Rodgers
to special teams coordinator.
CINCINNATI BENGALS — Signed LB Ben Jacobs to the practice squad. Released OT Jeff
Adams from the practice squad.
GREEN BAY PACKERS — Signed LB Vic
So’oto. Placed T Bryan Bulaga on injured reserve.
INDIANAPOLIS COLTS — Activated NT Josh
Chapman from the non-football-injury list.
Signed TE Kyle Miller from the practice squad.
Placed DT Drake Nevis and CB Jerraud Powers
on injured reserve.
JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS — Signed LB Greg
Jones. Released WR Anthony Armstrong.
KANSAS CITY CHIEFS — Placed DE Glenn
Dorsey on injured reserve. Signed CB Neiko
Thorpe from the practice squad.
NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS — Released LB
Jeff Tarpinian.
MOTORSPORTS
NASCAR ' !NIgh YgQQ mH0hHI 7^__c___
and docked him 25 points for intentionally
wrecking Clint Bowyer during Sunday’s race.
Docked team owner Rick Hendrick 25 car
owner points and fined crew chief Brian Pattie $25,000 for the same incident. Fined Brad
Keselowski $25,000 for having an electronic
device inside the car.
COLLEGE
TEXAS — Placed women’s track and field
coach Beverly Kearney on paid leave.
PRO SOCCER
MLS PLAYOFFS
Eastern Conference
CHAMPIONSHIP
Sunday, Nov. 11: [H,.-HI \c #a$a ;IN-gh ^
Sunday, Nov. 18: D.C. United vs. Houston,
4 p.m.
Western Conference
CHAMPIONSHIP
Sunday, Nov, 11: Los Angeles 3, Seattle 0
Sunday, Nov. 18: Seattle vs. Los Angeles,
9 p.m.
MLS Cup
>l-,0hl(c #gja ^A "l.-g0I jOlJ3NHI +.a
Western champion, 4:30 p.m.
NCAA Division I-AA
NCAA Division II
AFCA COACHES POLL
Record
^a $HKHa >-l-gbS,gkKH 2]G/ ^^b_
2. Winston-Salem St. (6) ^^b_
3. New Haven (Conn.).... ^_b_
4. Ashland (Ohio) .......... ^^b_
5. Minn. State-Mankato . ^^b_
6. Henderson State (Ark.) ^_b_
7. Minnesota-Duluth ...... ^_b^
8. Midwestern St. (Texas) Bb^
9. Missouri Western St... ^_b^
^_a Bloomsburg.............. ^_b^
^^a IUP .......................... ^_b^
^]a [l0hNIP 2&0La/.............. Bb^
^\a UH0-O*g.- VN..H,0N >-l-g 9-2
^Ga =,.LgPgg 2&Kla/ ........... Bb^
^Fa Shippensburg ........... ^_b^
^Ea 9g.- =g)l. &5V ......... Bb]
^Da :lKhH.-l >-l-g 2mla/ .... Cb]
^Ca ZIhNlIl3HKN. ................ Bb]
^Ba VN..H,0N >5= ............ ^_b^
20. Chadron State (Neb.)... Bb]
]^a >NH,) !lKK. 2>a#a/......... Bb]
22. Carson-Newman (Tenn.).. Cb]
23. Miles (Ala.) ................. Cb]
24. Emporia State (Kan.) ... 9-2
25. Charleston (W.Va.) ....... 9-2
25. Shepherd (W.Va.)......... 8-2
C
Y
P
G
FINAL FINISH ORDER
Top Fuel
^c %0lIhHI %g0I.-gNIa ]c =HI( >jO,JljOg0a
3, Bob Vandergriff. 4, Clay Millican. 5, Spencer Massey. 6, Khalid alBalooshi. 7, Cory Mc$KgIl-OlIa Cc VNLg >lKNIl.a Bc Ya?a =Hhha ^_c
>Ol*I WlIPhHIa ^^c VH0PlI W,jl.a ^]c >-g+g
=H00gIjga ^\c #H,P XlKN--la ^Gc #l+Nh m0,kINja
^Fc &I-0HI %0H*Ia ^Ec =g00( VjVNKKgIa
Funny Car
^c $0,f Sgh0gPHIa ]c $H,0-Ig( !H0jga \c
Jack Beckman. 4, Ron Capps. 5, Mike Neff.
6, Jeff Arend. 7, Robert Hight. 8, Tim Wilker.HIa Bc Vl-- [lPlIa ^_c =HI( Sgh0gPHIa ^^c
YHOII( m0l(a ^]c Sl,K Wgga ^\c &Kg)N. #gYH0Nla
^Gc YHOI !H0jga ^Fc m0lI- #H*INIPa ^Ec YNJ
Head.
Pro Stock
^c &KKgI YHOI.HIa ]c :NIjgI- UHkNKga \c "0Njl
Enders. 4, Mike Edwards. 5, Jason Line. 6,
Ron Krisher. 7, Greg Anderson. 8, V. Gaines.
Bc $O0N. VjmlOla ^_c ?HhPg0 %0HPhHIa ^^c
m0gP >-lIQNgKha ^]c Wl00( VH0PlIa ^\c Yg00(
"jLJlIa ^Gc YgP $H,POKNIa ^Fc 9l00gI YHOI.HIa ^Ec >OlIg m0l(a
Pro Stock Motorcycle
^c &Ih0g* [NIg.a ]c "hhNg X0l*Ngja \c Vl-Smith. 4, LE Tonglet. 5, Hector Arana Jr. 6,
Steve Johnson. 7, Karen Stoffer. 8, Scotty PolKljOgjLa Bc YNJ ;Ihg0hlOKa ^_c VNjOlgK ?l(a
^^c VNLg %g00(a ^]c >Ol*I mlIIa ^\c YlJg.
>,0kg0a ^Gc YHOI [lKKa ^Fc [gj-H0 &0lIla ^Ec
Chip Ellis.
PRO SQUASH
MONDAY’S RESULTS
PITTSBURGH OPEN
Final
mlJg ^A #l+Nh SlKJg0 ^\b=ONg00( WNIjH, ^^
mlJg ]A =ONg00( WNIjH, ^Gb#l+Nh SlKJg0 ^]
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retires with back injury.)
(Thierry Lincou wins 3-2)
COLLEGE
MONDAY’S RESULTS
Women’s Volleyball
Charleston 3.......................... West Liberty 0
Davis & Elkins 3.................. Pitt-Johnstown 2
Shepherd 3............West Virginia Wesleylan 0
West Virginia State 3.................... $HIjH0h ^
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for Buckland’s British junior lightweight title.
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Post-Gazette
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ClassifiedNOW
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PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE ! TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2012 ! WWW.POST-GAZETTE.COM
412-263-1NOW
www.post-gazette.com/classifiednow
To place a job ad: 412-263-JOBS
To call toll free: 1-800-242-1692
To subscribe: 1-800-228-NEWS
REACHING OVER ONE MILLION READERS IN PRINT AND ONLINE EACH WEEK
AUTOS, JOBS, R E A L ESTATE , LEGA LS, MERCH A NDISE , PETS, NOTICES & SERV ICES
EMPLOYMENT
General Help Wanted
BOOKKEEPER
Immediate full
time opening in the
Sharpsburg area.
Ideal candidate must
have 1-2 years
accounting/
bookkeeping experience. Familiar with
Excel, Word and be
able to multi-task
independently in a
busy office environment. Scheduling and
data entry a plus.
Required to interact
with customers and
employees.
Resumes are being
accepted at
[email protected]
Pay rate $10.00 hr.
Info
1-800-554-0412 x 236
LEASING AGENT wanted
for large Prop Mgt Co, rent
apts and general office
duties, PA real estate
license preferred, full time,
salary, health, dental, 401K
PTO, email to mail@
brandywineagency.com or
fax to 412-349-3965
PEAK-TIME TELLERS Canonsburg and McMurray
area. 15 to 18 hours per
week. No previous experience required. Starting
hourly rate is $9.85. Must
be able to operate standard
office equipment/computer
and be able to lift fifty (50)
lbs.
Health Care
Trades
CNA/NA Private
Duty, 12AM-9AM, also daylight hrs avail. Fox Chapel
Area. Avail. Immed.
412-767-4107
WINDOW
CLEANER
Experienced, full time,
available immediately.
412-782-2524
MEDICAL
TECHNICIAN JOBS! REAL ESTATE
FOR RENT
Local companies are
seeking people with all
levels of experience for
medical technician jobs.
HOMEWOOD Area
These employers will
n e v e r k n o w w h o y o u 3BR, newly remodeled,
$520+ utils. Room for
are, what skills you have,
and your desire to work rent-$320. 412-260-1942
for one of these compaMT. WASHINGTON
nies, until you let them
Gorgeous, brand new
know who you are.
everything, 1BR, granite,
hardwood, near incline,
MONSTER MATCH
$650+ 412-760-6724
CAN HELP!
BY PHONE
OR WEB FREE!
9E!G .;>>
EAST LIBERTY Large
1 1/2 BR, LR, DR. $500+.
Security. No Pets. Near
Bus. 412-441-7937
Call Today Sunday, or
any day!!
Use Job Code 56!
1-800-291-7664
or
Post-Gazette.com/Jobs
No Resume Needed!
C<0C.D=0=/(
?- ?@*
(-!**-&&!-0%$'
Apartments for Rent-East
CREATE YOUR
PROFILE NOW
Our automated system
creates one for youFREE! With an 8-minute
phone call or our convenient online form, Monster Match can match
you with employers that
Please forward resume to: are hiring - NOW!
Washington Financial Bank,
1 9 0 N o r t h M a i n S t r e e t , Choose from one of the
ATTN: Human Resources, following positions to enW a s h i n g t o n , P A 1 5 3 0 1 . ter your information:
E.O.E.
* Cardiology Technician
* Emergency Technician
SECURITY
* Laboratory Technician
OFFICERS
* Operating Room
Technician
DOWNTOWN
* Radiology Technician
PT weekends for
*
Respiratory
Technician
downtown garage
* Paramedic
patrol. Extensive foot
patrols. Must have
This FREE service is
security or related
available 24 hours a
experience, clear
day-7-days a week and is
criminal background,
presented by The Pittsexcellent customer
burgh Post-Gazette.
service skills, reliable
transportation
pre employment drug
test. Pay rate
$10.40 hr. Info
1-800-554-0412 x 236
/1,+-#.")++)
F! 2;!:
Apartments for Rent-City
Don't Wait, Do It Today!
MONROEVILLE/
TURTLE CREEK
2BR. Min to Mall. Private
Rd.; sec
intercom, fully equipped.
Very reasonable.
Mgr 412-969-9292
or 412-349-3900
Brandywine
NORTH VERSAILLES
1 or 2BR from $550.00
Pool, A/C, W/W
Includes GAS HEAT,
Equipped Kit,
Laundry
Other Locations
Available
www.pghapts.com
OAKMONT 1br, equip kit,
laundry, pkg.,
$595/mo utils incl.
412-480-9029
SHADY PARK PLACE
N. Braddock. 1BR Senior
apts, rent based on income,
A/C, W/W, security, laundry,
accessible, EHO.
Call Latoya
412-271-7132
Brandywine Agency
SQUIRREL HILL Spacious 2
story with 3 bedrooms, 2
baths, newer fully equipped
eat in kitchen, basement,
laundry, large rear yard,
easy distance to all
shopping and transp. No
pets. $1550 + G & E.
412-521-5920
$#" %! B! 2@29 2=!B2# C6
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$!!%(#& '!" ; G;>28G23 0D=#"2 <6A# !A:!7#B$CB69 C6 <6A#
$2"!5882>7 D26"EFG AH2"2 GH2: ;>?4 6# 3=!C2#0=#5+
>55B) ?H2 ,( .>;!!F#F23!) .;>>
4'&+&1%+9-0C
(-/))-''/-1,8?
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Apartments for Rent-North Apartments for Rent-South Apartments for Rent-South Apartments for Rent-South
AVALON 2nd flr., 1BR,
CARRICK 2br, equip kit,
w/w, eq. kitch.,
laundry hkps, a/c, inter. gar.,
laundry facilities., covered
credit check $30, $650/mo+
deck. $540+ 412-487-8790
utils 412-496-3749
BELLEVUE 2 bedrooms, go
CASTLE SHANNON 1BR.
to
www.GBCHomes.com Near T. D/W, microwv, AC,
large and nice AC 724-799- lndry, prkg, no pets, cr. chk,
8440
$560+. 412-471-2185
BELLEVUE Luxury 3rd fl,
Prime Location, Has
Everything. Credit check.
412-761-2670
CLAIRTON 1 & 2 bdrms
$500-$575. 412-480-6835
or
[email protected]
NORTH SIDE
1 BR, W/W. Walk to
town. Equip. kitchen. No
pets. 412-231-1934
DORMONT 1 BR, eq kit,
lndry. No pets. immediate occup. $525+ util.
412-908-3907
RIVERVIEW PARK/OBSERDORMONT 1 BR, LR, DR,
VATORYHILL/ Lrg 1BR, eq. eq. kit., new windows, w/d
kit., W/D, off st. park, $675, coin ops. Sunrm, sec build,
utils included. 412-251-0402 $535 +elec. 412-496-5615
SHALER/ETNA, 2 Bdrm,
equipped kit. $425. + gas
& elect. No pets.
412-781-0869
WEST VIEW
1BR, W/W, C/A, equip.
kitchen some w/
balcony. Heat incl.
Sorry no pets!
From $690 +elec.
412-366-5700
WEST VIEW Bellaire Apts
1 BR $625 STU $525 Includes Heat Water Sewer &
Trash; No Pet 412-381-8210
Apartments for Rent-South
BRIGHTON HEIGHTS
AREA OF PITTSBURGH NORTH: Immediate openings and establishing a waiting list
for efficiency and 1 BR,
apts. Applicants must be
62 years of age or older
and must meet income
qualifications. Amenities
include: appl, carpeting,
and A/C. units with individual climate controls
sheers, private parking,
sec. intercom access
and ALL UTILITIES
P A I D . On site laundry
and community rooms,
computer lab, picnic area, and garden. Convenient loc. to local stores
and bus route. Section 8
rental assistance is aval.
to those who qualify.
Service coordinator onsite.
Call Sheptytsky Arms
412-768-8802 or TTY#
800-654-5984 to apply.
Equal Opportunity Housing
CARNEGIE 1 Bed Rm, 3
Rms + Bath, 2nd Fl, F.P.,
$587 + Utl. Off. St. Park. Private Nice 412-279-1627
CARRICK- 1st flr 1Br. eq kit,
AC. coin lndry, $525+ elec,
sec. 8 ok, no pets/credit
chk. 412-496-5601
CARRICK 2 BR, 2.5 ba,
full size basement &
porch, close to trans, no
pets. $575 + utils & sec.
412-370-8913
DORMONT Spacious
1BR, fully eq. kitch. &
laundry, large deck, off
st. parking, $650 plus.
412-881-1634
CALL 412-263-1NOW
TO PLACE YOUR AD IN THE PG
DORMONT Furnished,
large, 1BR, newly
remodeled, 2nd floor,
all utilities included,
$695+ security
deposit. 412-973-4014
HOUSTON Great loc. Sm
apt 1BR, utils incl w/app l . $ 5 7 5 / m o . Cindy
Dorcha. Caldwell
Banker 412-296-0752
MT.WASHINGTON,
fully
furn. 2BR. Conv.to transp &
town. No pets.412
-343-4342, 412-563-0395
PLEASANT HILLS 1BR,
eq. kitch., new carpet,
free cable, parking, laundry, no pets, plus electric. $525. 412-881-1634
PG CLASSIFIEDS
GET RESULTS!
CALL 412-263-1NOW
TELEMARKETING
PROS WANTED
FT AND PT POSITIONS
AVAILABLE BETWEEN THE HOURS
(8AM - 5:00PM)
Telstart Corporation is seeking
experienced telemarketers for its
newspaper subscription and renewal
department.
* MINIMUM 24 HOURS PER WEEK
* APPLICANTS MUST BE WELL SPOKEN
AND ENTHUSIASTIC
* PRIOR TELEMARKETING EXPERIENCE
IS REQUIRED
We Offer:
* GUARANTEED HOURLY WAGE,
COMMISSIONS AND BONUSES
* 401 K
* REALISTIC EARNINGS $10-$15 PER
HOUR
* LOCATED IN EAST SUBURBS
(NOT ON THE BUS LINE)
CALL 412 793-3800 EXT 103
ASK FOR SCOTT OR TONY
SOUTH SIDE FLATS
Excellent location, 3 BR
+ small deck, new flooring & painting, C/A,
immed, $1100+.
412-366-6126
Apartments for Rent-West
Apartments for Rent-West
CRAFTON Exc. cond., lrg
deck, 1BR, LR, eq. kitch.,
on busline. $640 incl. all
utils. 412-922-1723
McKEES ROCKS, 1 BR,
eq kitchen, W/W, coin op
laundry, sec. bldg. $495, incl
util. No pets. 412-734-2071
MCKEES ROCKS- Large
3 BR, 2nd and 3rd fl.,
porches, W/D hook-up,
equipped kit. $720 plus
gas & electric. Quiet
neighborhood 412-922-4652
CRAFTON 2BR, LR, DR, eq.
kit, a/c, gar, no pets,
laundry hookup. Near
busway $675+.
412-833-7525
FIND TENANTS fast! Rent
space in the PG Classifieds.
Just call 412-263-1NOW
Business Opportunities
Business Opportunities
INDEPENDENT
CONTRACTOR
MOON TWP 1 & 2 BR,
$450 & $610,
Includes Utilities.
Call 724-495-3238
GET GREAT RESULTS
GREAT SUPPLEMENTAL $$$$
With over a million readers
every week, the Post-Gazette
Classifieds are a great place
to advertise.
Just Call
412-263-1NOW
$#" %! B! 2@29 2=!B2# C6
!A:!7#B:2 C6 CD2 .6!C-*=%2CC2&
0D=#"2 <6A# !A:!7#B$CB69 C6 <6A#
;>?4 6# 3=!C2#0=#5+
Business Opportunities
Business Opportunities
INDEPENDENT
CONTRACTOR
Early AM Hours
7 Morning / Week
Must have an insured vehicle
GREAT SUPPLEMENTAL INCOME
412 784 2250
between 5am until 8am
For Consideration, please call
412-429-3558
Business Opportunities
Business Opportunities
DISTRIBUTORS
NEEDED
To deliver the Pittsburgh
Post-Gazette and other products in
the Leechburg and Freeport
Areas. 7 mornings per week.
Must have an insured reliable
vehicle.
Great Supplemental Income
For additional information,
please contact
Business Opportunities
INDEPENDENT
CONTRACTOR
Needed to deliver the Pittsburgh and
other products in the Fawn
township, Natrona Heights and
Tarentum Area.
Early AM Hours
7 Morning / Week
Must have an insured vehicle
GREAT SUPPLEMENTAL INCOME
For additional information
Please contract
412 784 2250
or 412 852 1770
Bob at (412) 592-2731
Y
(-/))-''/-1,8?
For more information
Please contract
Must have insured reliable vehicle
Early AM Hours
C
MT.LEBANON
Kings Grant. Clean 2BR apt;
1.5BA, LR, DR, kit, D/W,
W/D, patio. sw./pl, new carp
Incls gas $830. No pets/No
smoking. 412-606-1170
Needed to deliver the Pittsburgh
Post - Gazette and other products in
the Oakland Areas.
Needed to deliver the Pittsburgh
Post-Gazette and other products in
Greentree and the surrounding
areas.
Business Opportunities
Apartments for Rent-West Condos/Townhomes for Rent
between 5am until 8am
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PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE ! TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2012 ! WWW.POST-GAZETTE.COM
Services
BusinessDIRECTORY
and
Cleaning Services
CLEANING WOMAN
Scheduling days, 23 yrs.
Exp., dependable, conscientious. Jean: 412-318-6368
PG ads get results 412-263-1NOW
Junk Removal
Junk Removal
Lost
$300 reward for info of
whereabouts of my min pin.
Female, black and tan,
11lbs, tail cropped, ears not,
blue collar. Lost in the Monroe/Trafford/Pitcairn area on
9/18. Please call Jim at
412-608-6315
DEMOLITION Smuts Brothers
Residential &
Commercial
Debris Removal. Fair
pricing.
412-512-7739
CALL 412-415-3983
+&"" )+$!# ,# ("*++$%$&'+
TO PLACE A SERVICES AND BUSINESS AD:
412-263-1201 or email: [email protected]
Houses for Rent-City
Houses for Rent-South
Homes for Sale-South
CITY PGH/PENN HILLS
3BR, equip. kit., fenced
in yard, $725+ Gas &
Elect. 412-253-2903
Ext. 102.
MT. LEBANON 38 Wasson Pl
1/2 dble. 3BR, no pets,
equip. kit, near schools,
$800 + utils, 412-531-3198
DUQUESNE 137 Aurilles
Street. 3BD, 1BA, single
family, 1478 sqft, attached
gar, owner financing, or
cash disc. $250 down $230/
per month. 803-978-1540 or
803-978-1545
Crawford Square Area,
4Br, 1.5 Ba home,
Public Transport,
Lavelle Realty Inc.
412-621-2992
MT OLIVER, Rent to own
• 5 BR, 1.5 BA $975+ • 2-3
BR, finished attic, 1.5BA, No
pets $695+ 412-854-3681
Houses for Rent-East
MUNHALL
GARDENS
2bed, 2full bath, 2covered
porches, Lndry rm, Off-St
Parking. $900 412-780-7569
HAZELWOOD
2BR brick, fridge, stove,
wall to wall. $525+
412-519-0084
PLEASANT HILLS 3BR eq.
kit, a/c, NO PETS/NO SMOKE
credit chk $790+utils & sec
Avail. Jan. 1st 412-384-6030
PENN HILLS Excellent
condition, all brick, 2BD,
1.5BA, central AC, no pets,
garage. $895/ month.
954-242-4300
PENN HILLS/VERONA
Newly remod. 3-5 BR
$745 mo. & up.
RENT/RENT TO OWN!
Financing avail. 412-727-8722
SOUTH HILLS - Jefferson Borough. 3 br, 2 ba,
equipped kitchen, new
wall to wall, new paint,
AC, fireplace, deck, garage. No pets, no smoke.
Credit check. $750 +
utilities & security.
Everything is new.
412-384-3269,
412-384-5622
PITCAIRN Large Duplex
3BD, W/D hookups, equip
kitchen, fenced in yard.
$700 + util. 724-733-4546
SOUTH SIDE FLAT - 2br,
equipped kitchen,
$790+. Available now!
412-443-2115
Houses for Rent-West
PORT VIEW
2br, 1ba, a/c, $650+ utils .
412-727-8722
REGENT SQUARE
DUPLEX for rent, newly remod. 2 & 4br avail. move
right in. 412-727-8722
Homes for Sale-West
McKEES ROCKS
Row house, end unit, w/
yard and off street
parking, 6 Ann Street.
$17,000. 412-331-1869
MOON TWP patio home,hardwood entry and dining room ,ceramic kitchen,
maple cabinets with granite
countertops,ceramic
shower,newly painted interior,new carpet,2 car
garage.Self clean range,
washer, gas dryer and refrigerator included. 412287-4125
MOON TWP FOX HOLLOW
2b/r, w/w, new air, heat inc
pay only elec., club house,
pool. $55,900. 412-760-2824
Hunting Places
CRAWFORD COUNTY
CAMP Canadohta Area
17 Acr., well & septic, wood
burning stove & furnace.
$159,000. 814-336-9027
CRAFTON 4-5BD ranch,
remod, w/ opt, 2.5BA, gar & WARREN COUNTY, PA
pool. 1850/mo 1st/last/sec 2 Br., 2 ba, on 1 acre with
+ cred chk, 724-826-2238
water, well and spetic, free
gas, deer, bear, turkey, and
HOPEWELL - 1BR newly 2 stocked streams, $40,000
remodeled, prvt setting,
814-827-3081
new appl incl, $650 +
elec & gas. Bkgrd &
credit 724-513-6770
Lots for Sale
REAL ESTATE
FOR SALE
FREEPORT WOODED 8.79
ac for building or camp.
Buffalo Creek frontage.
$108K. 724-295-3078
JEFFERSON HILLS SQ. HILL 3BR Modern
140x130, READY TO
contemp. townhouse,
BUILD if you want a flat
Condos-Co-Ops
&
Townhouses
2.5 bath, integral gar,
lot move to Fl. $6,900
all applncs. $1650
Call 1-888-325-2459
+ u t i l s . N o p e t s . CANONSBURG 4 YEAR OLD
TOWNHOME.
1ST FLOOR PENN TOWNSHIP/BUT412-486-6852
MASTER
BEDROOOM. LER COUNTY lot for sale.
SQUIRREL HILL Spacious 2 $188K. 724-678-3976
2.877 acres, Ready to
story with 3 bedrooms, 2
build. Call 724-282-3714
baths, newer fully equipped
eat in kitchen, basement,
PINE TWP SUMMERFIELD
laundry, large rear yard,
AT NORTH PARK
easy distance to all
MT.LEBANON - WashOnly 5 Home sites ALL
shopping and transp. No
ington Square. 3 bedABUTTING NORTH PARK, 2pets. $1550 + G & E.
rooms, 2 bath. Corner
6 AC MIN SQ.FT 3800
412-521-5920
unit with new kitchen.
Packages from $950,000.
$174,500. 412-833-7932 All
utilitiesApproved
TURTLE CREEK Builders Level AND woodCharming Victorian 2BR,
ed
newly reno, off street
%#'$"&*!')#()
MOST DESIRABLE LOCApkg, gated bkyd w/deck.
TION!!!!
Marketed
by
No pets. $750/mo, incl
CLEARFIELD
CO
50
acres
Achieve Realty
water. 724-733-7114
mostly wooded, great site Dori Thaner 412-585-2234
W H I T A K E R , 2 BR, re- home/camp, good hunting Amy Littler 724-799-5331
modeled, no pets, $450 n r C u r w e n s v i l l e L a k e
+ , E . P i t t s b u r g h 2 B R $99,000 OBO 814-577-2801
apt., $400+ 412-754-0311
C L E A R F I E L D C O 8 0 Resort/Vacation Homes-Sale
Acres. Nr DuBois PA
Houses for Rent-North W o o d s / f i e l d s . G o o d s i t e
KANE PA/MCKEEN
home or camp, good hunt.
COUNTY AUTHENTIC
EVANS CITY, Large 3+BR, $134k OBO. 814-577-2801
LOG CABIN 850 sq. ft.
2.5Ba, Gar. Convenient
.50 acre 2br, sleeps 7.
Indiana County Cabin
to I79. No Pets. $850+
Fully furnished,
For Sale: 724-422-2602
724-822-7936.
central heat, full bath
facebook.com/iccabin
$64,900 obo Call Now!
Call today!
FOX CHAPEL 4br, 3.5 ba,
Tom 386-673-8833
avail. short term., bright,
3500 sq ft, 3 car garage.
Homes
for
Sale-All
Other
Locations
Call 412-519-6667
L A R G O Winter in sunny
Florida, 1BR. Furn mobile
home for rent 3 bdr 2 bath Lake Erie Year round liv- h m , 5 5 + , p o o l / s p a .
ranch house close to Cran- ing/sunsets North East, PA $800/mo+; 412-215-1099
berry. senic 6acre setting 50 ft private beach 2 bed
$1,100 724 991 3352
LAUREL HIGHLANDS
1.5 bath, A/C, decks, fpl.
Gorgeous vacation home
INDIANA TWP 3 BR House $249,000. 716-326-2249
minutes from 7 springs,
in Fox Chapel School Dist.
Private setting. 4BD, 3BA,
Avail. immed. $1200/mo+u- OTHER NEW ERECTED
open floor plan. $320,000
tilities. 304-657-4438
SHELL HUNTING CAMP
412-996-0079
Warren County, next to AlSHALER North Hills:3bd/ leghany National Forest
1.5bth,HW,W/D,yard,MUST
Cabin is 24'x32' Great buy
SEE INSIDE,$1200/mo+util
at 38,900.00 814-730-6477
412-760-2408
Treesdale, Adams Twp.
Twnhome $1,395 firm. 2
BR 2 1/2 BA w garage. End
unit w patio. Pool/tennis/
walking trails. Avail 11/1.
Small dog. W D avl Priced
to move 724-504-7492
Homes for Sale-East
MONROEVILLE 3737 Evergreen 3BR, 1BTH Open
House: Nov 18 from 12pm2pm $129,500 412-906-0389
POINT BREEZE 7901 Ingle
Nook Place. Brick 2BD 1BA
WEST VIEW Twnhse,
2BR, eq kit, CA, W/W ln- single Family 2 story. Owner Financing or cash disc.
dry, gar, dead end street
$750+. 412-759-7391 or $350 down $253 per month.
803-978-1542
412-491-6364
Homes for Sale-North
WEXFORD
3BR 2-story
brick home. Nice yard. Good
location. Avail 11-1-12. Call
for details, 724-935-5527.
BRIGHTON HEIGHTS 3444
McClure Ave. 3BR, new
bath, hdwd flrs, porch,
fenced yard, off st. prkg.
$54,500 412-378-3751.
Houses for Rent-South
NORTH PITTSBURGH
Breker Street. 5BD, 1BA,
1,500 sq ft, fixer upper,
owner finance or cash disc.
$750 down $419 per month
803-978-1540 or
803-978-1545
ARLINGTON Nice 3BD
house, laundry hookups, no
pets. $570 plus all utilities,
Section 8 ok. 412-207-0848
BETHEL PARK
3BR, AC,lge. deck,
new appl. $850+ utils.
No pets. 412-831-3862
BRENTWOOD 2 bedroom,
remodeled, yard, hardwood
and carpet. $625+.
No pets. 724-941-6196
DORMONT 3BR, LR, DR,
equip kit, new paint/ carpet.
2 car garage, $850/ mo
412-496-5615
HOMESTEAD
1BR & a 3BR house for
rent (and other areas)
412-583-4288
Pets & Supplies
American bred lab pups
ready Xmas Day! Parents
AKC & onsite. Dewclaws removed, 1st shots, vet
checked. 412-445-4552
Australian Shepherd, AKC
Miniature Female, Tri, Super
Small, Almost 7 month &
Housebroken! 724-825-0124
ATTENTION......
ADS FOR
FREE PETS
Your beloved pet deserves a loving, caring home. The ad for
your free pet may
draw response from
individuals who may
sell your pet for research or breeding
purposes.Please
screen respondents
very carefully when
giving away your pet.
Your pet will thank
you! This message
compliments of the
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.
(2) TOY POODLE
MALES, AKC, 1st
shots, home raised,
$500. 412-650-7836
O’HARA Fox Chapel SD.
6BR/4BA w/350k
upgrades.Lower level office/
suite/apt. Landscaped,dbl
lot. $649,850 BROKER'S
TOUR: 11/14 1:30-6:30pm,
OPEN HOUSE: 11/18 14:00pm.Market Real Estate
Inc. 6 Market Sq, Pgh, PA
15222. (412)325-1105 MLS#936949
SUMMER HILL 3751
Baytree Street. Nice 2BD
2BA Single Family, fenced
yard. Owner financing or
cash disc. $500 down $542
per month. 803-978-1542
COMMERCIAL
REAL ESTATE
4#, 8..<@0" $.# 403.#, @0 AB,
58213'4%-11+"422&)&-02
BENGAL KITTENS
Adorable, parents
on site, taking deposits, 724-244-1114
BICHON/BICHON MIX
PUPS non-shed, guaranAIREDALE PUPS AKC Reg- teed. Shots/Worm, $300 &
istered, tails docked, shots up. 724-265-2795 info/pics
given. $500 724-730-3619,
724-714-2436 724-924-9378 Bichon & Maltese pure
bred & nonshed CKC mixes
AKC BOXER PUPS Flashy
www.furyourlove.com
Fawn & white, males & fe412-204-8444 TEDDY bears
males, and brindle.
$375-$450. ROTTWEILERS Border collie We have 8
$450. 814-754-4154
registered puppies for sale
@300.00 each. Working parAKC ENGLISH BULL DOG ents on site. These animal
DOB 10-8-12 2-fm & 1-m have an amazing brightness
www.jfk33.com 814-743- and loyalty. $300 814-6735572
1541
Port Authority of
Allegheny County
Purchasing and
Materials
Management
Department
Heinz 57 Center
345 Sixth Avenue,
Third Floor
Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania
15222-2527
Bid documents are
available for purchase as
follows: Bid Documents
are available in an electronic form on compact
disk upon payment of
$15.00 per set. Payment
shall be by Check or
Money Order (NO CASH),
payable to "Port
Authority of Allegheny
County". No refunds of
payment will be made.
Upon request, Bid
Documents can be
mailed upon receipt of
payment in full. Should
the purchaser wish to
have the Bid Documents
delivered via special
delivery, such as UPS or
FedEx, the purchaser
shall provide its appropriate account numbers
to Port Authority for
such special delivery
methods.
This Work is subject to
financial assistance
contracts between
Authority and County of
Allegheny, Commonwealth of Pennsylvania
and the Federal Transit
Administration (FTA) of
the U. S. Department of
Transportation (DOT).
A u t h o r i t y , i n
compliance with 49
C.F.R., Part 26, as
amended, implements
positive affirmative
action procedures to
Tickets
e n s u r e t h a t a l l
Disadvantaged Business
BUYING
Enterprises have the
STEELER TICKETS
maximum opportunity to
CALL JIM 412-292-1198 p a r t i c i p a t e i n t h e
performance of
c o n t r a c t s a n d
subcontracts financed, in
whole or in part, with
federal funds provided
for this Project. In this
regard, all Bidders shall
take all necessary and
reasonable steps in
accordance with 49
WANTED: STEELER TIX C.F.R., Part 26, to ensure
that DBEs have the
maximum opportunity to
compete for and perform
contracts. Bidders shall
not discriminate on the
basis of race, color,
national origin or sex in
412-551-5154
t h e a w a r d a n d
performance of
ask for Fred
DOT-assisted contracts.
Local Pick Up
It is a condition of this
Contract that all Bidders
shall follow the DBE
required procedures as
set forth in the Bid
Documents. If aid is
required to involve DBEs
in the Work, Bidders are
to contact Authority's
Bids and Proposals
DBE Representative,
Cameil Williams at (412)
566-5257.
PORT AUTHORITY OF
ALLEGHENY COUNTY
The Bidder's attention
is directed to the
ADVERTISEMENT
following contacts for
Separate sealed Bids Bidder's questions:
for the Work as listed
Procedural Questions
hereinafter will be received at the Purchasing Regarding Bidding:
and Materials ManageMargarita Rodriguez ment Department of Port
Authority of Allegheny Port Authority
(412) 566-5150
County, (Authority) Heinz
57 Center, 345 Sixth AvAll other questions
enue, Third Floor, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, r e l a t i n g t o t h e B i d
15222-2527 until 1:30 D o c u m e n t s m u s t b e
p.m. on December 7, submitted by mail or
2012 and will be publicly facsimile to:
Port Authority of
opened and read immediately thereafter at the Allegheny County, Heinz
57 Center, 345 Sixth
same address.
Avenue, Third Floor,
GENERAL ANCILLARY P i t t s b u r g h , P A
15222-2527 Attn:
SERVICES
Margarita Rodriguez
CONTRACT NOS.
Fax: (412) 566-5359
SYS-12-07 G,H,P&E
RAVENS
TICKETS NEEDED
Local Immediate
Pickup
412-512-6557
1-800-585-4488
STEELERS TICKETS
WANTED
LEGALS
GENERAL CONSTRUCTION - CONTRACT NO.
SYS-12-07 G
HVAC CONSTRUCTION - CONTRACT NO.
SYS-12-07 H
PLUMBING CONSTRUCTION - CONTRACT
NO. SYS-12-07 P
ELECTRICAL CONSTRUCTION - CONTRACT
NO. SYS-12-07 E
7/9( $6*. ,(/.+#
(/,$!
BERLIN PETS
AKC PUG PUPPIES Fawn/
Black. 3 litters to pick from.
Family raised in our home.
Vet
checked,wormed,first
shot.Ready starting Nov.24
$100 nonrefundable deposit
to hold for holiday. $500
[email protected]
Class of 1977 35th Reunion
6:30 – 10:00 PM,
Sat., Nov. 24, 2012
Brewstone Beer Company
3466 Wm Penn Hwy
Wilkins Township, PA
Register online
www.cahs77.com/rsvp_
response : $30 per person
or $35 at the door
NOTICES
& SERVICES
Pets & Supplies
AKC,OFA Golden Retriever Puppies Pups are ready
to adopt. Vet checked, UTD
on shots. Father has OFA
Certs. www.goldadditions.y
olasite.com $650 330-3038066
Reunions
Churchill Area High
School, Wilkins Twp
The Work of these
Contracts are providing,
but is not limited to, all
labor, materials, and
equipment necessary to
ROSS TWP
perform assignments as
Retail/ office space
McKnight Rd. near 279 Ent. identified by Authority
pursuant to written Work
400 sq ft. $525/ mo +util
Orders issued by Audisc avail 412-965-9677
thority. The nature of
the Work to be assigned
SCOTT TWP
may include, but is not
Office/Retail space.
limited to: General Con1100 Washington Ave.
struction - providing as(412) 366-5700
phalt and concrete paving, drainage system
Natural Resources
installation and repair,
landslide removals and
repairs, roofing and im143 acres oil & gas incl
deep. Belltown, Elk co. No provements to facilities;
HVAC Construction - exwells virgin prop.
haust system replaceLo # gasline. 8/8ths.
ment, fluid reel [email protected]
tion, facility HVAC
improvements and boiler repair; Plumbing Construction - sewer line repair, oil/water separator
replacement, water line
replacement, and facility plumbing; Electrical
Construction - transLoans
former replacement,
conduit / raceway installation, wiring, lightLOANS ON DIAMONDS
Gold Jewelry. Quick & Easy ing installation, substat i o n b u s d u c t
BROFF'S,
replacement; or per413 Smithfield.
forming other construc(412) 566-1728
tion activities at other
Authority facilities
and/or Work as requested.
&@0- ,74/A82 ;B4A 2.?
Border Collie ABCA parents on premises, raised
with children ,shots, dewormed,B/W 4M, 2F, 1M
Merle $300 330-402-0253
FINANCING Avail.
LOST DOG West Deer
Twp. McIntyre Rd. $500
CASH REWARD. Lg dark
brown male pitbull.
412-600-1883
Commercial Property-Rent
Pets & Supplies
Actual pictures online
We have small breed
Puppies & Bulldogs
avail. For more
info.& pic.
www.berlinpets.com
1 mile East of Berlin
BERLIN Pets 4359
State Rt. 39,
Millersburg, OH
44610 Call Daytime
330-893-7038, ext. 2
Mon-Sat 9-5
$500 CASH REWARD Lost
Cat "Paws Jr." Big orange
male cat, Maine Coon, four
white feet, white under
neck, big fluffy tail, long fur,
last seen 10/26 in Verona,
PA wearing collar/tags. Not
chipped. If you see cat with
his markings call/text 305304-0578, call (412) 5178715, email marycasanova@
earthlink.net
Bids and Proposals
tained on or after November 8, 2012 at
Authority's offices at the
following address:
Bid Documents will be
available for public inspection and may be obtained on or after November 8, 2012 at
Pets & Supplies
In addition, the
Bidder's attention is
directed to the following
schedule of activities for
preparation of its Bid:
9:00 AM Pre-Bid
Conference
November 16, 2012
Port Authority of
Allegheny County
Heinz 57 Center
5th Floor Board Room
345 Sixth Avenue,
Third Floor
Pittsburgh, PA
15222-2527
(Attendance is not
mandatory, but strongly
recommended)
November 27, 2012
Bidders shall submit
Potential Areas of
Subcontracting (Form
GV) to Port Authority.
1:30 p.m. Bids Due
December 7, 2012
Purchasing and
Materials Management
Department
Authority reserves the
right to reject any or all
Bids
THE Allegheny County
Parks Foundation is accepting proposals for a
one-time contract to
perform certain professional consulting services to create a trail that
connects Settlers Cabin
Park to the Panhandle
Trail including approximately .67 miles of trail
on the old abandoned
Greer Road alignment
from the Park Office to
Pinkerton Run Road, site
amenities, landscape
improvements, project
sign and other related
site improvements. Proposals are due December 11, 2012. Download
the RFP at www.acparksfoundation.org/proj
Y
P
G
M
K
Estate Notices
JOBST, Patricia C., deESTATE NOTICES
ceased, of Pittsburgh,
Letters have been
PA. No. 3359 of 2012.
granted on the estate of
Kimberly A. Stephens,
each of the following deExtrx., c/o Jack Wojcedents to the personal
dowski, Adm. and Atrepresentative named
ty., 1300 Fifth Ave.,
who requests all perPittsburgh, PA 15219
sons having claims
against the estate of the K O R B E , L i l l i a n E . , d e decedent to make
ceased, of Pittsburgh,
known the same in writPA. No. 6520 of 2012.
ting to him orhis attorJohn A. Korbe,Jr.,
ney, and all persons inExtr., 106 Woody
debted to the decedent
Crest Dr., Pittsburgh,
to make payment to him
PA 15234 or to Alan I.
without delay:
Farber, Esq., Ste.
M-106, Caste Village,
BALAY, Alice M., dePittsburgh, PA 15236
ceased, of Richland
Twp., PA. No. 3152 of K U Z M A , J o s e p h , d e 2012. Karen S. Cush,
ceased, of Pittsburgh,
Extr., 4124 Ewalt Rd.,
PA. No. 5274 of 2012.
Gibsonia, PA 15044 or
Theresa Rudcki, Exto Jennifer Rea Abel,
trx., c/o Samuel F.
Esq., Richards & RichZets, Esq., 301 Grant
ards, LLP, Attys.,
St., Ste. 830, One Ox16020 Perry Highway,
ford Centre, PittsWarrendale, PA 15086
burgh, PA 15219
BEAN, Michael, deceased, of M A N N , O l g a H . , d e Pittsburgh, PA. No. 6629
ceased, of Bridgeville,
of 2012. Alma DeLuca,
PA. No. 6440 of 2012.
Adm., 636 Liberty Ave.,
Anthony P. Mann Jr.,
Carnegie, PA 15106 c/o
Extr., c/o Arnold H.
Wayne V. DeLuca,
Caplan, Esq., Caplan &
Esq., Eddy, DeLuca,
Chester, 429 Fourth
Gravina & Townsend,
Ave., Ste. 1301, PittsAttys., 564 Forbes
burgh, PA 15219
Ave., Penthouse,
Pittsburgh, PA 15219
MARIANI, Rose M., deceased, of Pittsburgh,
BECK, Helen J., dePA. No. 6042 of 2012.
ceased, of E. McAngela Suppa, Extrx.,
Keesport, PA. No.
c/o John A. D’Onofrio,
6633 of 2012. Victoria
Esq., 500 Commerce
L. Beck, Extr., 434
Dr., Ste. 110, Moon
Seminole St., E. McTownship, PA 15108
Keesport, PA 15035 or
to Linda Sekely, Esq., M A R I N O , J o h n D . , d e 159 Perry Hwy., Ste.
ceased, of Harrison
105, Pittsburgh, PA
Twp., PA. No. 6190 of
15229
2012. Curtis P. Marino and Brad A. MariDEMSEY, Margaret M.,
no, Co-Extrs., c/o
deceased, of Baldwin
Stanley J. Lehman,
Boro, PA. No. 6433 of
Esq., Sherrard, Ger2012. Brian Edward
man & Kelly, P.C.,
Demsey and Alan John
28th Fl., Two PNC PlaDemsey, Co-Extrs.,
za, 620 Liberty Ave.,
c/o Holsworth, SandPittsburgh, PA 15222
er and Assoc., P.C.,
5801 Brownsville Rd., MARTIN, WILLIAM H., dePittsburgh, PA 15236
ceased, of Munhall,
PA. No. 6327 of 2012.
DONATELLI, Mary, deKim Martin, Extr.,
ceased, of Pittsburgh,
6786 E. Bluejay Dr.,
PA. No. 6555 of 2012.
Parker, CO 80138 or
Rita Donatelli, 230
to Carly R. Wilson,
Greenwood Dr., CanEsq., Leech Tishman,
onsburg, PA 15317
Attys. 525 William
and James P. DonatelPenn Pl. 30th Floor,
li, 6536 Ventura Dr.,
Pittsburgh, PA 15219
Pittsburgh, PA 15236,
Co-Extrs., or to Daniel MICHAELS, Franklin a/k/a
L. Goodyear, Esq., SciFrank Michaels, deullo & Goodyear, Atceased, of Ohio Twp.,
tys., 3809 Willow Ave.,
PA. No. 6056 of 2012.
Pittsburgh, PA 15234
Carol Ann Crawford,
Extrx., 208 Gary Dr.,
ENGEL, John Richard Jr.
Sewickley, PA 15143
a/k/a Rick Engel, deor to Richard J. Amceased, of Finleyville,
rhein, Esq., Peacock
PA. No. 63-12-1240.
Keller & Ecker, LLP, 70
Emily L. Engel,
E. Beau St., WashingAdmrx., c/o Matt Carl,
ton, PA 15301
Steve Engel and
Amanda Daquelente, P E T R E L L I , J o h n J . , d e Attys.,Blumling &
ceased, of Pittsburgh,
Gusky, LLP, 436 7th
PA. No. 6167 of 2012.
Ave., 1200 Koppers
Donna J. Petrelli, ExBldg., Pittsburgh, PA
trx., c/o John A.
15219
D’Onofrio, Esq., 500
Commerce Dr., Ste.
FRESHWATER, Jeanne L.
110, Moon Township,
a/k/a Jeanne L. SalyPA 15108
ers, deceased, of
T a r e n t u m , P A . N o . ROTA, Mary Kathryn, de6637 of 2012. Melissa
ceased, of Brentwood,
A. Yingling, Extrx., c/o
PA. No. 6321 of 2012.
Patrick W. Murray,
Melanie Renee Vlah,
Esq., 437 Grant St.,
Adm., c/o Severin D.
Ste. 600, Pittsburgh,
Russo, Esq., DiPaolo &
PA 15219
Russo, 1106 Fifth
Ave., Pittsburgh, PA
GEMPE, CHARLES L., de15219
ceased, of Pittsburgh,
PA. No. 6421 of 2012. STEWART, Lois M., deCharles W. Gempe,
ceased, of Moon Twp.,
Extr., 110 Grove St.,
PA. No. 6021 of 2012.
Pittsburgh, PA 15215
Dallas B. Stewart Jr.,
or to Harold A. EnExtr., c/o Richard J.
glish, Esq., 311 BabKlixbull, Esq., 939 Fifth
cock Blvd., Pittsburgh,
Ave., Coraopolis, PA
PA 15237
15108
PetsNOW
Pets & Supplies
Pets & Supplies
Pets & Supplies
FRENCH Bulldog AKC pups,
8 weeks, M/F, white/brindle
spots, $1200-$1400.
724-428-3461
GERMAN SHORT HAIR
POINTER PUPPIES
5 Males, born Sept.
24th, AKC, $300 each.
740-228-1343
JACK RUSSELL PUPS
CKC, tris, reds,
smooth or rough,
$250. 724-926-8103
CAVACHONS AND
CAVAPOO PUPS
8-9 weeks, home raised, French mastiff First set
Border Collie 6 wks, shots shots. $400-$450. www.
of shots wormed an ckc reg.
and wormed, ABCA regis- cavachons-cavapoos.com.
Pups
for
sale
all
tered, males and female,
males.contact more info
$400 for black and white
$1,250 412-607-4093
and $650 for brown. 724- Chihuahua AKC, Teacup
Males, 5 1/2 months & German Shepherd 9 week
954-0785
Housebroken. Parents on old UKC registered German
Premises 724-825-0124
Shepherd females-3 left.
Boston Terrier Pups 4
First shots, vet checked and
males family raised, AKC
2 ready to go. $500 724-516registered, shots, wormed, CHIHUAHUA CKC
males, 1 female, $300-350 3430
$500 each 724-562-4131
first shots & papers, 11
German Shepherd pups 2
weeks old 412-441-6920
BOSTON TERRIER PUPS
males available. AKC. EuroAKC OR SHORKIE
pean Lines. Rdy 11/19. $550
DESIGNER PUPS CKC
Chihuahua puppies Pure- [email protected].
Health gar, $500-$550.
bred Chihuahua & Mini
304-477-3210
Dachshunds starting$295. GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPS
www.LancasterPuppies.com
AKC registered, 10
weeks. 2 black/tan
males, vet/health
records, shots, perfect
BOSTON TERRIER
pedigree, temperament,
CHOCOLATE LAB PUPS
and demeanor, available
Pups, shots, wormed, reg.,
AKC Shots and
now, $500 each,
Call 724-663-4557
wormed, ready now.
parents on site,
$450. 814-634-9244
BOXER PUP AKC, Fawn
304-842-6224
black mask, available
Bridgeport, WV
November 17th. $500.
DOBERMAN PUPPIES
724-212-9773
Taking deposits, 3 males, 3
females, tails and dew
Cairn Terrier pups 8 claws done. 724-966-7741
weeks old, 3 females, 2
GERMAN SHEPHERD
males, wormed, 1st shots, english bulldog 16 month
dewclaws removed, cute & male not neutered white PUPS Reg. Real beauties,
bred
for size, temperaactive! $300 814-573-2187
housetrained friendly $900 ment and quality, shots,
724-719-0020
health guarantee, $500.
Cane Corsos Cane Corso
Call 724-998-7231
pups many colors view via ENGLISH
CHOCOLATE
e-mail Beautiful Guaran- LAB PUPPIES AKC LIMITED GERMAN S H E P H E R D
teed $1,000 716-982-7816
REGISTRATION,
WORMED White female, 5 months,
AND WILL HAVE 1ST SET OF $275. 814-853-4581 or
CATS 3 females, 1 male, SHOTS 3 MALES READY TO 724-685-9981
inside cats, de-clawed, GO HOME. LUNDOSLABRAD
Shorthaired
neutered, spade, free to ORRETRIEVERS.COM
$450 German
Pointer Pups 5 males/5 fea g o o d h o m e . C a l l 724-246-9881
males; Ready 12/10/12;
412-276-2368
$550 724-998-0289
CAVALIER KING
ENGLISH MASTIFF
CHARLES PUPS,
GERMAN SHORT HAIR
PUPS, AKC, hip cert.
Ready now. Also Young
POINTER
vet checked, wormed
adults. AKC health guarAKC, vet checked,
first shots, 8 wks
antied, very reasonable.
champion bloodlines,
$800. 724-735-9993
330-469-4597
4 males, 724-736-0131
C
Bids and Proposals
the RFP at www.acparksfoundation.org/proj GRIMINGER, Rita E., deects/ or contact Ron
ceased, of Bethel
S c h i p a n i
a t
Park, PA. No. 6481 of
412-281-5595.
2012. Sandra L. Klink,
Extr., c/o Daniel M.
THE City of Pittsburgh
Flynn, Esq., Michael D.
announces that it is
Flynn & Assoc., PC,
pleased to invite inter2770 South Park Rd.,
ested parties to respond
Bethel Park, PA 15102
to a Request for Proposal ("RFP"). As explained GRUBER, Aaronel deRoy,
in detail in the RFP, the
deceased, of PittsCity seeks to hire a proburgh, PA. No. 4465
fessional consultant to
of 2011. Irving B. Gruassist with the developber & David R. Berk,
ment and implementaCo-Extrs., One PPG
tion of a Loss Control
Place, Ste. 3010,
Program ("LCP") for adPittsburgh, PA 15222
dressing general liability
or to David R. Berk,
claims against the City.
Atty., Saul Ewing, LLP,
The LCP will include, but
One PPG Place, Ste.
will not be limited to, fa3010,Pittsburgh, PA
cility and program area
15222
loss control processes,
s a f e t y p r a c t i c e s a n d HARDING, Nettie B. a/k/a
Anastacia B. Harding,
training, notification prodeceased, of Baldwin
cedures, and record
Boro, PA. No. 6502 of
keeping. It will also in2012. Gilbert Harding,
clude a review of the
Extr., c/o David A.
current insurance poliLaRue, Esq., 2021 Suncies that the City mainset Blvd., Steubenville,
tains.
OH 43952
Three (3) hard copies HARRISON, Barbara Ann
and one (1) electronic
Beatty, deceased, of
copy of the proposal
Wexford, PA. No. 6534
must be received no latof 2012. Jason B. Harer than 3pm, Eastern
rison, Adm., 177
Daylight Time, on DeGrove Ave., Pittscember 3, 2012. All hard
burgh, PA 15229 or to
copy submissions should
Harold A. English,
be made to City of PittsEsq., 311 Babcock
burgh, Law Department,
Blvd., Pittsburgh, PA
C/o Assistant Solicitor
15237
Brendan Delaney, 313
City-County Building, 414 H A Y N O R , J e a n B . , d e ceased, of Whitehall,
Grant Street, Pittsburgh,
PA. No. 6411 of 2012.
PA 15219. Hard copies
Robin H. Weidman,
may be mailed or delivExtr., 570 Greenlee
ered by hand. Electronic
Rd., Pittsburgh, PA
copies should be sent to
15227 or to Gary J.
brendan.delaney@pittsGushard, Esq., Tucker
burghpa.gov.
Arensberg, PC, 1500
One PPG Place, PittsInformation on this
burgh, PA 15222
RFP may be viewed at
t h e C i t y ' s w e b s i t e : HOLLAND, Margaret, depittsburghpa.gov
ceased, of McKeesport, PA. No.
The City encourages
5781 of 2012. William
responses from small
James Holland, Extr.,
firms, minority-owned
c/o Orlando R. Sodini,
business enterprises,
Esq., Thompson,
women-owned business
Calkins & Sutter, LLC,
enterprises, veteran850 Ridge Ave., Ste.
owned small businesses,
300, Pittsburgh, PA
and firms who have not
15212
previously done busiJANCE, Joan E., deness with the City.
ceased, of Whitehall,
PA. No. 6768 of 2012.
Brendan Delaney
Joan Schiebel, Extrx.,
Assistant City
c/o C. James RuffenSolicitor
nach, Esq., 275 Curry
Hollow Rd., Ste. 280,
Estate Notices
Pittsburgh, PA 15236
KING CHARLES CAVALIER PUPS, AKC, Tri/ BlenGERM SHEP PUPS AKC
heim, Males, Females Ready
6mos, 1-M blk/tan, full
shots, wrmd, nurtured,hlthy, for Christmas, 724-330-5570
vet ck, $450 724-352-8947
GOLDEN/ CHOW MIX/
ROXY 7 year old spayed
female. Well behaved,
excellent on leash and
house trained. Move-in dog.
Call 724-573-4665 www.
animalcareandwelfare.com
KITTENS/CATS
$50 special everything done.
Great temperaments. Call
724-573-4665 www.
animalcareandwelfare.com
GOLDENDOODLE PUPS
KITTENS/CATS
Taking deposits, ready in
8 weeks, Cats; shots,
3 wks, $850.
spayed/neut. 412-537-5556
330-770-9098
412-367-3391. $45.00
330-799-4030
LAB AKC English pups
Golden Retriever Pup- Ready 4 Xmas Takin deposit
pies for sale, born 9- www.mttopkennel.com 412
11,AKC, vet, contact Sheila -558-9726
$500 724-992-1629
Labradoodles vet checked
dewormed and up-to date
GOLDEN RETRIEVERS
on
shots
house/family
AKC, Male 2 years, neuraised $450 301-616-7927
tered, $875 724-336-3765,
webersgoldens.com
LABRADOR RETRIEVER
PUPS 100% pure no paGOLDEN RETRIEVERS
pers, yellow males $300,
AKC, OFA. Parents
ready 11/14 shots,
health tested & guaran. wormed, dew claws, vet
Pups $975, Ready
certified, approx 11
November 724-336-3765 miles East of Grove City
Outlets. Call cell
HIMALAYAN PERSIAN
724-822-9330 or home
KITTENS CAF REG. Very
814-786-7050
loving, seal point, vet
checked 1st shots and
LHASA APSO PUPS,
de-wormed. $650
3 males, 3 females,
Call 814-343-4934
papers, home raised, 9 wks
$400. 412-853-1314
IRISH SETTER PUPS
AKC, champion bldlns, Maltepoo & Morkies hy
1st shot, parents here.
poallergenic all colors no
614-267-1489.
shedding; also trained 6mth
Lexie $525 412-368-1626
Jack Russell Fun, lovable
puppies! Both parents in Maltese AKC pups, Pgh.
our home. First shots and Top Chmpn. Line, trained,
wormed. Family raised and Monroeville area 1F. ready
loved. $150 740-632-1811
4124395330 or 4124681521
Estate Notices
Legal Notices
SUTHERLAND, REN M.,
deceased, of Mt. Lebanon, PA. No. 6376 of
2012. Melinda Sutherland Berdyck, Extr.,
c/o R. Michael Daniel,
Esq. Cohen & Grigsby,
P.C., Attys., 625 Liberty Ave., Pittsburgh, PA
15222
WEAVER, Guy Edward
a/k/a G. Edward
Weaver, deceased, of
Ross Twp., PA. No.
6798 of 2012. Douglas Weaver, Extr., c/o
F. Brian Dodson, Esq.,
Dodson & Chase,
9800A McKnight Rd.,
Ste. 100, Pittsburgh,
PA 15237
Legal Notices
CHRISTOPHER M.
Swart, Esquire Attorney,
1151 Old Freeport Road,
P i t t s b u r g h , P A
15238-3108. Notice is
hereby given that Articles of Incorporation
were filed with the Department of State of the
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, with respect to
a corporation which has
been incorporated under the provisions of the
Business Corporation
Law of 1988. The name
of the corporation is Local & Proud, Inc.
Legal Notices
NOTICE OF HEARING ON
PETITION TO
INVOLUNTARILY
TERMINATE PARENTAL
RIGHTS
In Re: Jazlyn Destiny
Mercurio, a minor, No.
TPR ___ of 2012, in the
Orphans' Court Division
of the Court of Common
Pleas of Allegheny County, Pennsylvania. To:
Talia Marie MercurioButler a/k/a Talia M.
Butler, Jeffrey Allen
Staruch, Jr. and The Unknown Father, parents of
Jazlyn Destiny Mercurio,
a minor born on July 26,
2008 in Allegheny County, Pennsylvania. A Petition has been filed asking the court to put an
end to all rights you have
to your child Jazlyn Destiny Mercurio. The court
has set a hearing to consider ending your rights
to your child. That
hearing will be held at
The Family Court Building, 550 Fifth Avenue,
Pittsburgh, PA 15219 on
Friday, November 30,
2012 at 11:00 a.m., prevailing time, before the
Honorable Kathleen R.
Mulligan. You are
warned that even if you
fail to appear at the
scheduled hearing, the
hearing will go on without you and your rights
to your child may be
ended by the court without your being present.
You have a right to be
represented at the
hearing by a lawyer. You
should take this paper to
your lawyer at once. If
you do not have a lawyer or cannot afford one,
go to or telephone the
office set forth below to
find out where you can
get legal help.
Lawyer Referral Service, The Allegheny
County Bar Association,
Koppers Building, 11th
Floor, 436 Seventh Avenue, Pittsburgh, PA
15219, Telephone: (412)
261-5555
Andrew F. Szefi,
County Solicitor; Alexandra Gruskos, Attorney at
Law, Children, Youth and
Families, 445 Ft. Pitt
Boulevard, Pittsburgh,
PA
15219, (412)
350-7398, Attorneys for
Petitioner
NOTICE OF HEARING ON
PETITION TO
INVOLUNTARILY
TERMINATE PARENTAL
RIGHTS
In Re: Garrett Lee Cogley, a minor, No. TPR
___ of 2012, in the Orphans' Court Division of
the Court of Common
Pleas of Allegheny County, Pennsylvania. To:
Sherrie Lynn Sopcak
a/k/a Sherrie Lynn Cogley, Jeffrey David Cogley
and The Unknown Father, parents of Garrett
Lee Cogley, a minor born
on April 1, 2003 in Butler County, Pennsylvania.
A Petition has been filed
asking the court to put
an end to all rights you
have to your child Garrett Lee Cogley. The
court has set a hearing
to consider ending your
rights to your child. That
hearing will be held at
The Family Court Building, 550 Fifth Avenue,
Pittsburgh, PA 15219 on
Friday, December 7,
2012 at 11:00 a.m., prevailing time, before the
Honorable Kathleen R.
Mulligan. You are
warned that even if you
fail to appear at the
scheduled hearing, the
hearing will go on without you and your rights
to your child may be
ended by the court without your being present.
You have a right to be
represented at the
hearing by a lawyer. You
should take this paper to
your lawyer at once. If
you do not have a lawyer or cannot afford one,
go to or telephone the
office set forth below to
find out where you can
get legal help.
Lawyer Referral Service, The Allegheny
County Bar Association,
Koppers Building, 11th
Floor, 436 Seventh Avenue, Pittsburgh, PA
15219, Telephone: (412)
261-5555
Andrew F. Szefi,
County Solicitor; Paula J.
Benucci, Attorney at
Pets & Supplies
County Solicitor; Paula J.
Benucci, Attorney at
Law, Children, Youth and
Families, 445 Ft. Pitt
Boulevard, Pittsburgh,
PA
15219, (412)
350-4947, Attorneys for
Petitioner
Legal Notices
DIAMOND RING
3 quarter karat,
beautiful round cut
diamond, must see to
appreciate, asking
$4,100 make offer.
724-766-0174
NOVEMBER 2012
Housing Authority of the
City of Pittsburgh
Board of Commissioners
Meeting
The meeting will be held
THURSDAY,
NOVEMBER 15, 2012
TIME 10:30 A.M.
200 Ross Street
13th Floor Wherrett
Room
Pittsburgh PA 15219
Elliott’s Christmas Tree
Farm 300 Acres and Nursery, 7 Tree Varieties, Excellent Quality 717-349-7319
Legal Services
Machinery & Tools
A Divorce $209 TOTAL
Uncontested, No-Fault
Attys Reisman & Davis. PGH
Free Info 24 Hours
No travel 800-486-4070
Marriage Licenses
CORLISS, JONATHAN
D; CARLSON, REBECCA L,
PITTSBURGH
DRIS, HASSAN BENCHARGUI, WEST MIFFLIN
;MCDONOUGH, THERESA P, LIBERTY TWP, OH
JONES SR., JAMES R;
KNIGHT, DESHA A, MCKEESPORT
KASENIC, BRYAN J;
DEVRES, SEZE, BROOKLYN, NY
KHATTAB, AMMER;
ALGHABRA, GHALIA MHD
BACHIR, MONROEVILLE
MANANDHAR, SENET,
LAKEWOOD, WA;
SHRESTHA, DEEPA,
PITTSBURGH
TUCKER, RICHARD
FRANK; PETROCELLI, TINA MARIE, NORTH VERSAILLES
MERCHANDISE
Lawn & Garden
WHEEL BALANCER
Hunter Model
DSP9000
AAMCO LATHE
Disc/Drum
412-881-2864
Miscellaneous
Christmas
ornaments/
gifts Beautiful ornaments &
gifts; Lenox storybook figurines,Christopher Radko ornaments,4 dolls,Lladro Nativity
set(3 figurines $150set). Perfect condition. All others
$20 ea. 724-869-2777
JOHN BARSDA POETRY
AS FOUND ON
FACEBOOK OR CALL
1-800-834-1803
RESTAURANT
QUALITY STACKING
BANQUET CHAIRS New &
Used. Great prices. Call
Evan 724-612-6573
Monuments & Cemetery Lots
CEMETERY LOT OR
GRAVE SITEMt. Vernon Cemetery, Elizabeth
Twp. 412-673-0789
189 Collectible Dolls 100
Madame A dolls MIB + 89 JEFFERSON MEMORIAL/
Misc dolls mint cond/most
MT LEBANON
MIB. For lists: kathiesdream
CHURCH RD.
@zoominternet.net $5,000
2 plots and 2 bronze
plaques $1250 obo.
ANTIQUE WAGON
Call 412-862-9747
SLEIGH over 150 years
old, Call 724-872-0718 JEFFERSON MEMORIAL
PARK GARDEN OF DEVOTION 4 Sites and 2 vaults.
Barber Chair Circa 1930s Low bargain. 440-954-2565
Model: Hercules
MONROEVILLE Side by
Maker: The E. Berninghaus
side cemetery plots at
Co. Cincinnati, OH
Riverview Memorial
Chair in good shape/lean
Park, Garden of the Last
back function needs work
Supper. 304-727-8248
Headrest and foot rest
LOCAL PICK UP ONLY!
$600 412-816-0651
Musical Instruments
Antiques & Collectibles
$ BUYING $
WW II GERMAN
Japanese, U.S., military
helmets, lugers, daggers,
swords, rifles & old guns.
Robert: 724-413-3292
CAMPAIGN BUTTONS
Wanted by Collector
Top prices paid!
Call Steve 724-444-5685
Piano - Yamaha Studio
Yamaha studio upright piano Model P-2, teak, w/
bench, orig owner, board
like new. Beautiful! Serious inquiries only $5,200
412-344-3966
Radio-TV-Stereo & Accessories
HAM RADIO EQUIP. For
sale, classic to current:
DIECAST MODEL CARS
Viking, Hallicrafters,
124 Scale, 49-72,. 41 cars, Drakes, Hammaralund,
s e l l c h e a p . C a l l Eimac Tubes, Amplifiers,
724-601-4528
etc. Nov. 17, 2-7pm 2049
Silverdale Dr. 51 South
Toward Elizabeth, Ridge
Road toward Finleyville,
turn on to Siler to
Instant Cash Paid For:
Silverdale.
Baseball cards.
Sports cards. Game
used sports items.
Sporting Goods
Bats. Gloves. Jerseys.
Goudey sports cards.
Guns
Savage Fox 20 Gauge
Antiques. Gold. Silver.
C o i n s . D i a m o n d s . Shotgun $375; TC 50 Cal
Flintlock
$300; Mossberg
Watches. Paper money. Old toys. Trains. 500A slug, black synthetic
stock,
marine
coat w/ scope
Comic books. Huge
collections. Entire es- $325 412-860-0625
tates. We will pick up shotguns and rifles new
and pay CASH ! Call Browning A-BOLT 12ga slug
Scott at: 513-295-5634 gun,several savage 110 assorted cal.,several RemingWANTED:
700
assorted
Vintage Baseball Card Col- ton
lections (1900-1969 ONLY). cal.,several Remington 870
12ga,several
mossberg
500
Private Collector paying top
prices in ALL CASH! No col- 12ga and 20 ga,mossberg
500
20ga
rifled
slug
gun,T/C
lection too large. Call Paul!
renegade percussion 56
216-219-6827
smooth or 54 cal,T/C omega
50 cal 265,Cva optima 50
Home Health Care Products cal 195,Remington 7600 270
or 3006,ruger american
243win. can get almost anySTAIRLIFTS,
thing
new
that
you
Acorn, new and used,
desire.call for rock bottom
from $1,200
pricing
724-637-2327
412-245-8927
$0,000 724-637-2327
Household Goods
Trophy buck hunts in
Warren County lowest
prices cell 206 954 1954
DINING ROOM SET
[email protected]
Cherry. Buffet and
$1,500 814-757-9202
china cupboard,
table, good condition.
$300. 412-364-6948
WILDLIFE PRINTS Ned
Ethan
Allen
"Prarie" Smith, Regal Hermit, $150
Queen Bed Cherry Bed, Royal Domain $500, David
$700. Lamp $350. Chairs Maass Woodlot Flush $250,
(Low Numbers). Call
$150. each 404-312-7801
412-343-6142
LENNOX CHINA Brookdale Pattern, 6 piece
Motor Homes-Sale
place setting, service for
12 + extra pieces $2500,
04
Beaver
Monterey 40’
crystal stemware 3 sizes $300, punch bowl on w/ 3 slides TAKEOVER ,
NO
CREDIT
NEEDED
stand, ladle and 30
matching cups eagle and 1299.00 mo, 115,000.00
bal
@
3.9%
loan,
the
fee is
liberty bell printed on
t h e m $ 4 0 0 . C a l l 10,000 or b/o down 562242-4503
724-968-3974
MAHOGANY TABLE
5’ w/ 2 leafs, 6 chairs,
padded, beige $900 obo.
Bar Server, walnut, exc
cond $300 obo. Moving,
must sell 412-205-3834
SELL IT
Motorcycles
‘06-1800 HONDA GOLD
WING Driving lights, CB,
wired helmets, boards.
Adult driven. $10,900.
412-889-4573
=5+=)>6+6*%
9( 9:'
with ease by placing a
Classified Ad in the
Pittsburgh
Post-Gazette
/1,+-#.")++)
for more
details.
(-!**-&&!-0%$'
Call 412-263-1NOW
Pets & Supplies
MASTIFF PUPPIES, 8
Female, 3 Male, Champion Bloodlines, Health
Guarantee, All Brindles.
Nice, Large Puppies
Ready 12/1. Parents on
site. $1000.
724-624-4269
Jewelry
DIAMOND RING 18 Kt
yellow gold, appraised
at $8,100 asking $5,000,
bangle bracelet with 2
rows of diamonds $400,
mans gold chain with
eagle and diamond $700.
Call 724-968-3974
@! ,4!2
1?!A )488
Pets & Supplies
Shih Tzu and Shorkies
Shij tzu/Shorkie pups. M/F
shots and wormed. $300 &
up 724-498-1694
POODLES TOY
(2) White males $450.
For more information
karenspups.com
814-786-7685
SHIH TZU PUPPIES AKC
One
Male,one
female.Ready Nov 19th.
Parents on site. $500 724794-1121
Siberian Husky A.K.C.
male pups. 8 wks. G/W.
Champion parents. OFA,
CERF. Temperament guarPUGGLE adorable tiny anteed. $800. Serious inMINI PINS: Black & tan $300/up & YORKIE LOLA quires please. 814-739-9422
puppies. Weight within reduced $475 aca 6/1 LOstandards. Ready to go. LA; shots wormed loves kids Siberian Husky Puppies
potty training 412-204-8444 Smart friendly great w kids
Born Sept 2nd
Jim 412-608-6315. $225
Parents on site wormed No
PURE BRED BENGAL Shots $325 412-251-3955
PEEK-A-POO PUPS
6Yrs. old, free to good
CKC, non-shedding,
home, special dietary Sweet Little Puppies
fun loving, $300.
needs. 412-249-8389
Cute Puppies are $199.00
724-926-8103
and Up
Pure Standard Poodles 3620
Belmont
Ave
POMERANIAN puppies, Cream,Black and Silver Fa- Youngstown Ohio 330-2593 mos old, 1 male,
ther
chocolate
Mother 1286
1 female, $275 each
Phantom color Ready Now 8
412-475-7686
wks. shots and wormed up
to date parents on site great Various Breeds Breeder
POMERANIAN PUPS
disposition, Ready for your closing down due to ill
AKC. Ready in 2 Weeks,
Beautiful adult
Loving home. Also available health.
Males/ Females, Blue,
now
Yorky-Poos
Yorky- cats free to good homes;
Blue Merles, Sable, Black, Westys $350 and Labradoo- Bengals, Siamese, Oriental
Cream. $450-750
dles $450 all raised in a lov- Shorthair, Sokoke and
412-848-5804 or
ing home,ready now or Khao Manee. Some have
724-561-4513
would be great for Christ- been neutered. $0
mas. $600 740-922-9635
POODLE AKC, standard blk
female pups. 6 mo all shots ROTTWEILER PUPS GER- Weimaraner Pups, blues
incl rabies home raised
MAN LARGE BONED,SHOTS, & grays, ready 11/9, CKC
registered, 3f & 4M. $350
$400 724-483-6234
MICROCHIP,DEWCLAWS
TAIL DOCKED,PARENTS EX- 814-683-4239
POODLE AKC STANDARD CELLENT
TEMPERMENT
Pups Mom is AKC Service $700 330-550-8435
Yorkie purebred normal
Dog Dad is a AKC therapy
TCUP/ micro Morkies cute
dog, these are exceptional
designer mixes MUST see
ROTTWEILERS, AKC,
puppies, whites, cremes
no shed ACA 412-368-1626
German.
5
female
and
3
and blacks. Call
male puppies. Vet checked
724-998-1007
& shots. $700. 412-508-3167
YORKIES, AKC.
P O O D L E P U P S , Stan2 Females $550, 10 wks,
dard AKC, Black/Choco- Shih-Tzu and Shih-Tzu/ Vet checked. Tails, dew
late, Males and Females, Maltese Mix vet checked,
claws, 1st shots,
$500-$700 440-313-5250 dew claws, and dewormed. wormed. Parents on site
www.windhorsefarm.net 724-758-4079
Cash only 412-855-8025
Miniature
Schnauzer
puppies AKC Ligonier excellent temperament $700 724
-238-9151
C
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Nov 12 2012 05:59:34:542PM
K
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Post-Gazette
P
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PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE ! TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2012 ! WWW.POST-GAZETTE.COM
AUTOMOTIVE
Chevrolet
BMW
CAMARO ‘12
Auto Financing
* APPROVED *
BAD CREDIT
NO CREDIT
Turned Down?
Not Here!
Re-establish your credit
*Call Day &
Drive Away*
CAPPY
DAY CHEVROLET
724-327-8774
Antique & Classic Cars
1970 LOTUS EUROPA
Project car, rare,
22,000 miles, $2500 or
trade. 412-608-7548
Lincoln Town Car ’89 Signature 50K mi. Exc cond.
Auto Perfection,LLC cons.
$8875 negot. 724-344-6286
PONTIAC '69 LeMANS
Spt Cp. 77K orig CA mi.
No rust. #'s matching. All
orig. Exc. cond. Loaded
w/ opts. $17,000/ make
offer. 321-216-6015.
2LT/RS Convertible
Silver ice in color with
ebony power heated
leather seats, auto,
A/C, too many options to list, GM certified with only 4k mi.
800-525-8833
WHY BUY NEW AT
ONLY.......... $29,800
COLUSSY CHEVROLET
412-221-1600
2008 128 CIC
Black * 39K
CRUZE LT ‘11
$23,988.00
black, must see
#B6032A
$15,500
2009 335Xi CP
pandwbmw.com
412-682-0788
Red * 46K
$28,988.00
#BP3164
Dodge
IMPALA LT '08
Luxury Sedan
#BP 3216
$13,988
Mocha bronze in color,
loaded d/d with power
luxury features, GM cert
with only 47k mi.,
2008 X5 3.0
Black/Black
Sport * Pan roof. * Heated
seats * 56K
$29,988.00
THIS WEEK SALE
PRICE......... $12,900
10 535I X Drive
COLUSSY CHEVROLET
412-221-1600
#BP3267
Gray/Black
Prem * Value * Nav * 56k
IMPALA LT '10
$32,988.00
#BP3209
NO HASSLE PRICE
Whit/Graph * 51K
ROHRICH CADILLAC
412-344-6000
2009 X5 35D
$11,190
$36,488.00
2011 X3 2.8i
VOLKSWAGEN '78
Conv. Very solid Calif
Car. Excellent Pan.
Needs FI Work. $4800
724-728-2084
Parts/Accessories
$36,988.00
IMPALA LTZ '07
2011 X5 35D
Silver stone metallic in
color, too many luxury
items to list, GM certified
Black/Black
Tech * Prem * Cold * 30K
$45,988.00
THIS WEEK SALE
PRICE......... $13,900
2011 550i
COLUSSY CHEVROLET
412-221-1600
#BP3204
DISM 3000 VEHICLES
Eng. & Trans. Installed.
Cars wanted. DON’s
724-495-3395,495-7790
Silver/Black
Dynamic * Sport
& Climate * 9k
Light truck tires
P275/65R18
Goodyear
Wrangler
Silent Armor
#BP3188
Dodge Trucks
$50,988.00
MONTE CARLO ‘00
SS Coupe
Deep red metallic in color, loaded with power
features, fully reconditioned and ready with
only 60k mi,
THIS WEEK SALE
PRICE................. $9,300
COLUSSY CHEVROLET
412-221-1600
.0% APR and 2 payments
on select models.
www.bobbyrahalbmw.com
RAM1500 ‘02
4X4, 77,800 miles,
w/ cap, $6,800.
412-523-2242
MONTE CARLO LTZ ‘06
Sport Coupe
Polar White in color with
ebony leather, polished
wheels, loaded d/d w
power features, including power sunroof, only
36k miles.
Ford Trucks
F150 ‘ 98 V8, 4x4 ext cab, 8
ft bd, inspected 6/13, good
condition, 104k miles,
$2,850. Call 724-929-5968
F-350 LARIAT 4WD ‘03
6.0L Diesel Engine , 1
owner, leather interior, 55k
HC3333A $19,988
BAIERL CHEVROLET
724-940-2194
AUTOMOTIVE
BY MANUFACTURER
Acura
HOLIDAY SALE
2012 X3’S
Factory Demo’s and
Pre Owned 12 To
Choose From!
X3 2012 Auto
Premium Moon Roof,
Leather Seating,
Heated Seats,
Starting As
Low As $35,900
#PP6277
TSX Tech Pkg ‘10
1 Owner. Certified. 41K.
#A52138A
$22,988
BAIERL ACURA
724-940-2197
Audi
A6 4.2 QUATTRO ‘04
AWD, AUTO, P/ WINDOWS,
P/ SUNRF, LTHR INT, NEW
INSPEC, #SC8020A $10,988
BAIERL SUBARU
724-741-1215
A6 QUATTRO ‘98, AWD,
well maint, p/sunroof,
new tires. $3,700. Lv msg
412-716-8562
BMW
COLUSSY CHEVROLET
412-221-1600
SILVERADO ‘11
CTS '07
WT 4x2 Reg Cab Pick-Up
NO HASSLE PRICE
Silver birch in color, auto,
V-6, alloys, A/C, only 6k
mi, GM certified,
$16,864
ROHRICH CADILLAC
412-344-6000
WHY BUY NEW AT
ONLY.......... $17,800
CTS ‘12 awd, luxury sedan, fully loaded, 3.0 liter V6, auto, 5k, asking
$35,000 412-466-8785
COLUSSY CHEVROLET
412-221-1600
SUBURBAN LT '10
ESCALADE ‘10 ESV Plat.
Rare Find, Cadillac Certified,
#C63037A
NO HASSLE PRICE
$32,550
$57,988
BAIERL CADILLAC
724-741-1215
ROHRICH CADILLAC
412-344-6000
Tahoe ’08 LTZ Chevrolet
34,600 miles, black, leather,
4X4, DVD, navigation, warranty, excellent condition,
$11400,
[email protected]
ESCALADE ‘11 Premium
Black on Black, Super Clean
#CP6649
$57,688
BAIERL CADILLAC
724-741-1215
Chrysler
545i ‘05
black on black, auto,
nav., just serviced,
must see!
$17,900
pandwbmw.com
412-682-0788
BMW X3 ’04 3.0i 82K
miles AutoTrans AWD sunroof Premium pkg Sports
pkg $13000 412-708-0037
TO SEE
YOUR AD
HERE
call the
Post-Gazette
Classified
Advertising
department at
412-263-1NOW
PACIFICA LIMITED ’06
Fully loaded, leather, sunroof, DVD, AWD, 79K
$9,700. 412-567-6590
NO HASSLE PRICE
$14,355
ROHRICH CADILLAC
412-344-6000
SAVE THOUSANDS
ONLY $18,400
FREESTYLE SEL 4WD ‘05
Auto, lthr, new inspection,
warranted. HC2773A
MUSTANG GT ‘10
Leather, Auto, ALL NEW
TIRES #A52657B
$21,988
BAIERL CADILLAC
724-741-1215
RANGER S/C 4X4
‘05
4.0 V6, 5 Spd, alloys, A/C,
only 49,000 miles.
BEST BUY
TAURUS ‘11 SHO
BAIERL CADILLAC
724-741-1215
$29,688
Taurus ’96 LX Wagon Inspected to 9/13,AC, New
tires, brakes, runs strong,
$1,200 412-680-9063
TAURUS ‘99 24 VALVE
70k, new inspection,
new tires, runs great
$2,995 412-854-4558
GMC
THIS WEEK SALE
PRICE......... $33,500
COLUSSY CHEVROLET
412-221-1600
ENVOY SLE ‘06 4X4
Deep red metallic with
ebony power heats,
loaded d/d with luxury
equipment.
THIS WEEK SALE
PRICE......... $13,900
COLUSSY CHEVROLET
412-221-1600
$11,988
BAIERL HONDA
724-940-2195
Chevrolet
GRAND CARAVAN ‘05
V6, AUTO, CD, PW, PDL
KP10468A
AVEO LT ‘06
$7,988
AUTO, AC, P/ WINDOWS,
36K MI, NEW INSPEC
#SC8141A $7,988
BAIERL KIA
724-741-1299
BAIERL SUBARU
724-741-1215
RAM VAN ‘02 Newly inspected, 57k orig mi,
Fully loaded, V6, ready
for work. $4500 obo.
412-583-4549
66666666666
,)-,+/"-"5&
*4 *$'
COBALT LS ‘05
4DR, AUTO, AC, CD PLAYER,
CRUISE, P/ WINDOWS
SC7996B $8,488
BAIERL SUBARU
724-741-1299
/1,+-#.")++)
%2 .32(
AN AUTOMOTIVE ad in the PG
Classifieds sees a lot of traffic.
Call 412-263-1NOW for details
or visit www.post-gazette.com
!021 +3##
(-!**-&&!-0%$'
CIVIC 4DR ‘07
MOONROOF, AUTOMATIC.
#SC8126A
$8,988
BAIERL SUBARU
724-741-1295
BAIERL SUBARU
724-741-1295
FIT SPORT ‘09
5-Sp., Honda cert., 7yr/100k
mi. warranty. HC3461A
$13,988
SIERRA ‘08 SLE
4x4 Crew Cab
Silver birch in color,
loaded d/d with power luxury features, GM
certified
F-150’s
2010-2012
4X4
10 To choose.
XLT, Lariats, Platinums,
super cabs/crew cabs.
Ford certified.
Factory Warranty.
STOP & COMPARE
THIS WEEK SALE
PRICE......... $23,900
COLUSSY CHEVROLET
412-221-1600
YUKON XL ‘10
SLT Luxury 4x4
FOCUS SE ‘07
AUTO, A/C, P/WINDOWS,
NEW INSPECTION
SC8119A $8,988
BAIERL SUBARU
724-741-1295
M35 ‘08 Sport Sedan
1 Owner, Clean Carfax
83K, #A52401A
$19,988
BAIERL ACURA
724-940-2197
Isuzu
AXIOM ‘04
AWD, 3 ROW SEATING,
LEATHER, 65K MILES,
#A53100B
$8,988
NPR Dump Truck ‘06
Auto, 6 liter V-8, fully
serviced and work
ready, only 75k mi.
THIS WEEK SALE
PRICE......... $21,700
COLUSSY CHEVROLET
412-221-1600
Jaguar
ODYSSEY EXL ‘09
Leather, all power,
garage kept, 18K mi.
$23,700. 724-625-6279
RIDGELINE 4WD ‘07
Clean Carfax, Silver, 64K
#A52108A
$15,988
BAIERL ACURA
724-940-2197
LIBERTY SPORT ‘06
AUTO, AC, P/ WINDOWS, P/
SUNRF, ALLOY WHEELS
SC8061A $11,688
BAIERL KIA
724-741-1299
Sapphire blue with ebony interior and matching
hard and soft top, auto,
A/C, loaded d/d with
power luxury features,
only 18k mi.
THIS WEEKS SALE
PRICE......... $29,700
COLUSSY CHEVROLET
412-221-1600
OPTIMA ‘07
AUTO, AC, CD, PW
KP10470A
$9,988
ACCENT SE ‘07
H/BACK, 5SPD, A/C, P/
WINDOWS, 1 OWN, 38K
MC5024A $8,888
BAIERL SUBARU
724-940-2194
ELANTRA ‘10
AUTO, A/C, CD, PW, CC
KP10519
$13,988
ELANTRA ‘11
Luxury Sedan
Auto, A/C, loaded d/d w
power luxury features,
only 9k, fully serviced
THIS WEEK’S SALE
PRICE ........... $15,200
COLUSSY CHEVROLET
412-221-1600
ELANTRA GLS SDN ‘11
Auto, rear wing, fact. warr.,
new inspection. HC3737A
$13,988
BAIERL HONDA
724-940-2195
VELOSTER ‘12
6SPD, LEATHER, AC, CD, 12K
KP10528
$21,988
BAIERL KIA
724-741-1299
SEDONA ‘06
AUTO, A/C, PW, CD
TA1539B
BAIERL KIA
724-741-1299
Sorento ’11 LX EXCELLENT
CONDITION 38,300 miles,
Burgundy exterior, Asking
$17,900
EXTENDED
WARRANTY.included. 724640-9426
Lexus
ES300 '98, low miles,
must sell,
grey, $5000
412-969-4451
GS 300 '05
NO HASSLE PRICE
$16,148
ROHRICH CADILLAC
412-344-6000
GS350 ‘08 AWD
Sport Sedan
Obsidian black with
neutral power heated
leather seats, power
sunroof, too many
luxury features to list,
only 25k mi.
THIS WEEK SALE
PRICE......... $27,800
COLUSSY CHEVROLET
412-221-1600
GX470 ’09
LEATHER, SUNROOF,
CD, ALLOYS,
MUST SEE! $32,990
EX35 AWD ‘08
1 OWN, CLEAN, 59K
#A53145A
$21,988
BAIERL ACURA
724-940-2197
G35 CP ‘06
AUTO, LEATHER, CD,
ALLOYS, SUNROOF,
REDUCED! $13,990
G37 ‘10 Anniversary
Edition, AWD, Loaded,
Excellent Condition,
$23,500. 724-462-5282
COLUSSY CHEVROLET
412-221-1600
INFINITI G37x ‘09 AWD,
F/Warr. (5) From $21,950!
724-934-5050. Photos on
DonBindasMotors.com
Mercedes-Benz
$19,588
BAIERL TOYOTA
724-940-2196
THIS WEEK SALE
PRICE......... $15,900
C300 ‘09
4 matic, monaco blue,
sand leather, moonroof,
Just Serviced
$20,500
COLUSSY CHEVROLET
412-221-1600
RAV-4 4X4 ‘08
Saturn
Auto, alloys, full power,
CD, only 50K.
COMPARE
pandwbmw.com
412-682-0788
ASTRA XR HATCHBACK ’08
POWER EQUIP, 55K
VE5716A
CLK 320‘04
metallic silver, auto,
sunroof, near mint, 27k
mi., Must See This
Special Car!
$14,900
$10,988
$17,500
BAIERL CHEVROLET
724-940-2194
pandwbmw.com
412-682-0788
VUE AWD XE '09
NO HASSLE PRICE
$17,749
ML350 AWD ‘09
Clean Carfax, 44K
#A52676A
ROHRICH CADILLAC
412-344-6000
BAIERL ACURA
724-940-2197
VUE SUV ‘04
Auto, fully equipped, new
inspection. HC3410A
$29,988
Mini
$4,988
BAIERL HONDA
724-940-2195
Subaru
’09 Subaru Forester Manual transmission, 47k miles.
Burgundy, moon roof, inspected July 2012. Asking
$15,000, call 412-290-4570
Forester ’00 Very Good
Condition-AWD-Low milesJust inspected-4 dr. hatchback 412-716-4714
COOPER S ‘10
Raven black with
white stripes, 6 speed
manual, tons of power features, only 21k
FORESTER ‘10
THIS WEEK SALE
PRICE......... $19,900
graphite metallic, auto
$17,900
COLUSSY CHEVROLET
412-221-1600
pandwbmw.com
412-682-0788
MINI COOPER ‘06
BRITISH EDITION,
5SPEED, POWER
WINDOWS, LOCK, CD,
$12,490
FORRESTER LIMITED '09
SIENNA XLE ‘08
T12495TA, Pwr heat/leather
7 pass seats, alloys.
$20,588
BAIERL TOYOTA
724-940-2196
TUNDRA SR5 ‘05
TRD Ext. Cab 4x4
Sapphire blue in color,
auto, V-8, loaded d/d
with power features.
THIS WEEK SALE
PRICE......... $19,400
COLUSSY CHEVROLET
412-221-1600
Volkswagen
GOLF ‘12
R-EDITION
Only 8,000 miles, all
wheel drive, 6-spd, heated leather, moonroof,
touch screen nav., every
option.
LIKE NEW
$33,500
NO HASSLE PRICE
$19,862
Impreza ’09 WRX Sti
23.5K miles, Gray ext., excellent condition, no mods,
snow tires, cargo liner &
3000GT ’95 SL Clean, runs Weathertech floor mats,
excellent,
automatic, $30K 307-262-3463
145,000, $2800 412-5809794
Mitsubishi
Nissan
WRX ‘11
Altima ’08 2.5 S
Great Condition, Very Clean
130K
$9,500 OBO 412-417-7682
STI/Limited
All Wheel Drive
6-Spd, Leather, video
system, spoiler, moonroof, much more.
HARD TO FIND
ALTIMA ‘09
SEDAN, AUTO, CD,
POWER WINDOWS,
LOCKS, CD, LIKE NEW!
$14,480
$32,900
JETTA ‘09
metallic gray on gray, super sharp! just serviced
PM0344A
$12,900
pandwbmw.com
412-682-0788
JETTA SDN ‘10
TDI Edition, auto, moonroof, leather, full power,
only 27,000 miles.
HARD TO FIND
$19,900
BAIERL KIA
724-741-1299
$7,988
Silver birch in color,
20” chromes, many
extras, GM certified
with only 47k mi.
THIS WEEK SALE
PRICE......... $33,700
WRANGLER ‘09
Unltd. Rubicon 4x4
Kia
$8,900
VIBE ‘09 AWD
Sport Hatch
Auto, A/C, loaded d/d
with power features,
GM certified.
Toyota
RAV4 4cyl. ‘08
R12169B A, pwr wind/locks,
tilt, cruise, CD, only 42K
ROHRICH CADILLAC
412-344-6000
Hyundai
5-Spd, A/C, CD, Spoiler,
only 37K
Pontiac
XJ8
’00 Silver/Black.All
maintenance from Jaguar,
garaged. Well cared for in
Mercury
and out, no mechanical issues. 73,700 miles. Asking
Grand Marquis ’00 LS
$9,200. 412-276-4076
2000, Inspected 45,700 mi,
clean, $6300.00 obo, call
Tom 412-427-2907
Jeep
BAIERL CADILLAC
724-741-1215
Infiniti
DAKOTA SLT 4WD ‘05
Crew cab, bedliner, auto,
new inspection. HC3554A
$21,988
BAIERL CADILLAC
724-741-1215
$16,400
DENALI ‘08
Crew Cab 4x4 Pick-Up
Summit white in color
with cashmere power
heated memory
leather seats, power
sunroof, 20” chrome
wheels, nav, plus
much much more, GM
certified with only 25k
Dodge
STS4 ‘08 AWD
49K, SUPER CLEAN
#C62305A
EX-L Edition
V-6, Navigation, Moonroof, Heated leather,
Multi-CD, Much more.
FINAL REDUCTION
BAIERL KIA
724-741-1299
F-150 CREW CAB
4X4 ‘08
ONLY $23,900
ACCORD SDN ‘08
ACCENT
HATCHBACK ‘09
BAIERL CADILLAC
724-741-1215
FX-4 Edition
V-8, Moonroof, alloys, full
power, Ford certified.
GREAT BUY
Mazda
PROTEGE ES ‘02
150k, inspect until 08/13,
needs axle, $1,000 obo
412-680-8750
BAIERL CADILLAC
724-741-1215
$11,900
LEATHER, MOON ROOF, 14K
#VD5399B
EXPLORER ‘99 Eddie
Bauer Mnrf, +all opt. No
better Explorer any year.
$4,900. 412-922-7867
ROHRICH CADILLAC
412-344-6000
Infiniti
LIBERTY SPORT ’07
Mustang ’03 Mach I
BAIERL HONDA
4WD, LEATHER, ALLOYS
4.6,305hp,5spd,newTires,no
724-940-2195
F19110A
mark/dings12400mi,$17900
Honda Civic ’02 LX 115hp
304-737-2609
$9,988
1.7 Liter, Automatic, A/C,
BAIERL CHEVROLET
MUSTANG GT ‘07
Cruise, Power windows &
CALIFORNIA EDN., 5
mirror. 412-795-4637
724-940-2194
SPEED, LEATHER, CD,
ODYSSEY EX-L ‘07
Wrangler ’07 X Engine
ALLOYS, REDUCED!
Leather, All Power, 44K,
well maintained.
Newer
$15,390
#C62295B
soft top. Automatic. S package
412-716-4547
$17,988
5SPEED, WAGON, 79K
MILES, #SC8011A
Expedition ’08 Limited
Excellent condition, Loaded with options, Original
MSRP
$50,795,Asking
$19,999-best offer, Complete
maintenance
records, 93,000 miles,
Black ext/int,leather seats,
5.4L 4X4,Audiophile am/
fm/6cd/sirius/, Htd/cooled
dvr/pass seats,rear seat
entertainment DVD, navigation radio, rear view
camera, power lift gate,
pwr fold/heat/sig/ mem
mirrors, keyless entry keypad, remote starter,4 new
tires 10K miles, reverse
sensing system, heavy duty trailer tow, power fold
3rd row seat, 2nd row 40/
20/40 split bench, 28 gallon fuel tank 412-370-6989
$18,601
CRV EXL ‘04
$14,588
BAIERL TOYOTA
724-940-2196
ESCORT WGN ‘99
NO HASSLE PRICE
AWD, AUTO, P/ WINDOWS,
P/ SUNROOF, 1 OWN, LTHR
INT, SC8060A $8,888
ESCAPE XLS ‘09 4cyl.
TB1253A A, pwr wind/locks,
tilt, cruise, CD, 34K
SILVERADO ‘10
LACROSSE CXL '07
325 ’06 xi Metallic gold, 6cylinder AWD automatic,
low mileage in excellent
condition. Exclusively dealer
serviced. Price includes 3yrs
extended powertrain comprehensive warranty.
From $18,900
3500HD LT Z71 Reg Cab 4x4
Black granite in color, 6
liter V-8, loaded d/d w
power features. Only 6k
CTS ‘03 Garage kept,
excellent condition,
98K miles. 3.2L V-6.
$8,500. 412-498-2821
ONLY 5600 MILES
AUTO, SYNC,
POWERSEAT,
MOONROOF, ALLOYS,
MULTI CD, LOTS MORE
FORD CERTIFIED
4X4, XLT,
Limited Editions.
15 To choose.
Ford Certified.
2.9% X 60 APR
Stop & Compare
$2,988
WHY BUY NEW AT
ONLY.......... $26,600
FORD FUSION SE
‘12
ESCAPES
2011-2012
COLUSSY CHEVROLET
412-221-1600
Cadillac
Acura MDX ’07 CARFAX
available.
67,000
miles,
$23,000. In almost perfect
condition! Silver exterior/
Black interior. New tires and
exhaust. Excellently maintained! 724-422-1173
2004 Ford F150
FX4
mileage 158k, drives great,
clear title and very well
maintained, $4.000. Call:
678-701-3508
THIS WEEK SALE
PRICE......... $13,900
pandwbmw.com
412-682-0788
$11,400
$7,488
BAIERL HONDA
724-940-2195
SPORTS SEDAN
#BP3266A
SE Edition, only 35,000
miles, auto, alloys, full
power, Ford certified.
GREAT BUY
Ford
#B5963A
Blue/Tan
Prem * Cold * 24K
FOCUS SDN ‘08
pandwbmw.com
412-682-0788
2000 Ford Expidition
XLT $2800.00 105,000
highway miles. moonroof,alloy
wheels,5.4
liter,4x4 needs minor work
As Is runs and drives great.
412-482-2221 or 412-7284354. 412-482-2221
Private owner
ACCORD EXL ‘10
Leather, moonroof, 31K
new tires, 12/13, $17,980
or best offer
Factory Warranty
724-513-8145
ACCORD EX '10
1980 Ferrari 308 GTS
Rare with original parts - a
must see! New black
leather
seats,
Asking
$30,800 412-406-7422
500 POP ‘12
$29,948.00
F-150 XLT Super Crew
Cab 2010. Excellent
condition, 2,100 miles,
$27,000 or best offer.
412-260-1079
Ferrari
metallic brown, tan int.,
auto, 5k miles,
Sale Price
Honda
MUST SELL!
Ram 1500 ’04 Slate gray,full size (8 ft.bed). Single
cab with Leer cap and
Linex bed liner. Trailer
hitch, posi-traction. New
tires ,fuel pump, water
pump, and power-steering
cooler. Has 80% highway
miles. Runs great, no mechanical
problems.
Mileage 13 city, 18 highway.
35 gallon tank.
177,000 miles, $3,800 OBO
Call ANYTIME 724-4942685
2009 535 I XDrive
Bronze/Beige
Nav * Prem * 54K
Ford
LEXUS CERTIFIED PRE-OWNED
Suzuki
AVALON XLS ‘01
4DR, AUTO, P/ WINDOWS, P/
SUNROOF, LTHR INT, 58K,
SC8112AA $8,988
$22,988
BAIERL SUBARU
724-940-2196
Nissan Armada ’04 LE
Orig. Owner, Garage Kept,
Cln, 86K mi, Silver exterior,
V8, Auto Liftgate, Tow Pkg,
Sunroof, Htd Pwr Leather
Seats, Bose Audio DVD,
3rd Row Seat, Asking
$14,995 724-816-2611
Camry ’09 LE One owner
Camry with low miles.
Save thousands compared
to the dealerships. 724413-2726
VERSA ‘09 4 door, auto,
1.8L. Inspt 9/13, very good
cond. 36 MPG. 59.5K mi
$8,450. 412-896-4658
CAMRY LE 4cyl ‘07
TP4166A, Auto, pwr
wind/locks, tilt, cruise, CD.
$10,988
BAIERL TOYOTA
724-940-2196
Oldsmobile
CAMRY SE ‘05
4DR, AUTO, P/WINDOWS,
LTHR INT, P/ SUNRF, NEW
INS, SC7264A $9,688
Bravada ’03 Clean SUV,
loaded, leather, remote
start, heated seats, towing
pkg, etc. Must see. Call
412-974-9001
CUTLASS SUPREME ‘85
Mechanic’s, white, 2
door special. Make
offer. 412-833-1969
Pontiac
BAIERL SUBARU
724-741-1295
Camry Solara ’08 SLE Certified Vehicle Service Agreement Ivory leather seats/
sunroof.65,000 miles. Blue
ext.Great gas mileage Asking $12,900 724-355-4744
COROLLA ‘10
G5 ’08 Sport 27k 9/13
insp.garagedLOADEDremote
start 2much 2list! brand
new in & out! 412-770-6457
1 OWNER, SUN ROOF, 19K
VP12112
G6 GT ‘07
BAIERL CHEVROLET
724-940-2194
$11,588
COROLLA SDN ‘05
Auto, new inspection, warranted. HC3287A
$14,988
$8,988
BAIERL HONDA
724-940-2195
GRAND PRIX ‘05
ROHRICH CADILLAC
412-344-6000
POWER EQUIP. CD, 71K
VE5711A
Lincoln
BAIERL CHEVROLET
724-940-2194
$23,988
BAIERL ACURA
724-940-2197
BAIERL SUBARU
724-741-1295
BAIERL CHEVROLET
724-940-2194
BAIERL KIA
724-741-1299
MKX ‘09 AWD
Toyota
4RUNNER FR5 ‘11
New condition,
11,000 miles, $31,900.
412-606-1961
ML63 AMG '09
PANORAMIC ROOF, 40K
#A53186B
AUTO, P/WINDOWS, P/
SUNROOF, P/ SEATS LTHR,
NEW INS SC7977A $10,888
V6, CREW CAB, 16K
VE5788A
FRONTIER SV 4WD ’11
$7,988
SELL IT
PRIUS PKG 5 ‘07
T12781A1 Lthr seats,
navigation, alloy wheels.
$11,588
BAIERL TOYOTA
724-940-2196
With a Classified Ad in the
Pittsburgh
Post-Gazette
PG CLASSIFIEDS
GET RESULTS!
for more details.
412-263-1NOW
Call 412-263-1NOW
PASSAT 3.6L ‘06
BAIERL CADILLAC
724-741-1215
COLUSSY CHEVROLET
412-221-1600
leather, panoramic roof, cd,
pw, alloys KC0763A
$41,550
$8,988
THIS WEEK SALE
PRICE......... $14,600
Pgh’s Best Choice
Rohrich Lexus Pgh
866-729-8888
NO HASSLE PRICE
FORENZA ‘08
AT, FWD, SEDAN
#KC0640C
ARMADA ‘05 LE 4X4
Nav, power sunroof,
dual headrest DVD’s,
fully reconditioned
and ready.
New Beetle ’07 5-sp. man.
55,000 mis. Cream. Good
cond. Insp. thru 5/13. Power
steering needs repair. Est.
avail. $7,350. 412-231-0695
CALL FOR DETAILS
GET
GREAT
RESULTS
With
over
a million
readers
every
week, the
PostGazette
Classifieds
is a great
place
to
advertise.
Just
call
412-263-1NOW
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Check out the Post-Gazette’s staff and community blogs.
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Nov 12 2012 05:37:17:169PM
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PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE ! TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2012 ! WWW.POST-GAZETTE.COM
READY TO GO GRILLE TO GRILLE
AGAINST OUR RIVALS
BAIERL CHEVROLET
1 Always use safety belts and child restraints. Children are safer when properly secured in a rear seat in the appropriate child restraint. See the Owner’s Manual for more information. 2 Whichever comes first. See dealer for limited warranty details. 3 MyLink functionality varies by model. Full functionality requires compatible Bluetooth and smartphone, and USB connectivity for some devices.
2013 CHEVROLET
2013 CHEVROLET
CRUZE LS
AUTOMATIC
2013 CHEVROLET
MALIBU LS
EQUINOX LS
AUTOMATIC
0A%
PR
FRONT WHEEL DRIVE
1.9%
APR
UP TO
60 MOS
60 MOS
2012’s
AND
BUY FOR
$23,5
99
149
$
LEASE
169
$
PER
MONTH
LEASE
195
$
PER
MONTH
LEASE
36 Month 12,000 Mile Per Year Lease
36 Month 12,000 Mile Per Year Lease
PER
MONTH
39 Month 12,000 Mile Per Year Lease
$2,499 due
d att signing
si in plus
pl tax
t and plates. Requires approval by GM Financial. Not all buyers
will qualify. MSRP is $19,020. Requires customer have a competitve lease. Stock #VE5756
$2,599
99 ddue att si
signing
in pl
plus ttax and plates. Requires approval by US Bank. Not all buyers
will qualify. MSRP is $23,150. Requires customer have a competitve lease. Stock #Inbound
$2,199 ddue att si
signing
in pl
plus ttax and plates. Requires approval by GM Financial. Not all buyers
will qualify. MSRP is $24,580. Requires customer have a competitve lease. Stock #VE5722
2012 CHEVROLET
2012 CHEVROLET
2012 CHEVROLET
TAHOE & SUBURBAN
SILVERADO 1500
TRAVERSE LT
EXTENDED CAB
ALL WHEEL DRIVE
31,998
$
OR
0%
12,000
$
APR
UP TO
SAVINGS
72 MOS.
UP TO
OR
AUTOMATIC, NAVIGATION, CHROME WHEELS
UP
%
0APR TO 72 MOS
0%
APR
UP TO
60 MOS.
Ch le Rebate
Chevrolet
Reb $3500, Trade In Assistance $1000 (Must Qualify), All-Star Incremental
Cash $2000. Baierl Chevy Discount $2000. All-Star Edition Package. Discount $1500.
Competitive Lease $2000 (Must Qualify).
Pric Incl
Price
Includes
clud All Available
A
Rebates And Discounts. Tax And Plate Fees Extra.
0% APR 72 Months With Approved Credit. Stock #VD5615
Must Qualify With Ally Financial.
BAIERL CHEVROLET
baierlchevrolet.com 10430 Perry Highway, Wexford, PA 15090 724.940.2194
2013 CADILLAC
ATS 2.5
299
$
LEASE
PER
MONTH
39 Month Lease 10,000 miles a year, with $1995.00 cash or trade equity
down, $0 security deposit. Tax and plate fees extra. Stock #C63078
2012 CADILLAC
2013 CADILLAC
SRX ALL WHEEL DRIVE
XTS
449
$
LEASE
37,985
BUY $
FOR
PER
MONTH
39 Month Lease 10,000 miles a year, with $1995.00 cash or trade equity
down, $0 security deposit. Tax and plate fees extra. Stock #C63098
Price includes $4000 Alternative Purchase Allowance and Baierl Discount.
Tax and plate fees extra
BAIERL CADILLAC
baierlcadillac.com 11410 Perry Highway, Wexford, PA 15090
C
Y
P
G
M
K
724.741.1215
C
Y
P
G
M
K