making the right noise - The Punxsutawney Spirit

Transcription

making the right noise - The Punxsutawney Spirit
Steelers wide receiver Brown focused on 2015. SPORTS, PAGE 7
50¢
TODAY’S
WEATHER
A chance of showers
and thunderstorms.
Mostly cloudy, with
a high near 78.
Wednesday, May 27, 2015
www.punxsutawneyspirit.com
(USPS 450-600) CHAMBER BIDS FAREWELL TO DIRECTOR
Vol. 140, No. 124
In honor of National
Pet Month, readers
reflect on their pets
By Larry McGuire
Of The Spirit
By Destiny Pifer
YOUNG TOWNSHIP —
The community and members
of the Punxsutawney Area
Chamber of Commerce gathered at Gobbler's Knob on
Tuesday to say farewell to
Michele Neal, Punxsutawney
Area Chamber executive
director.
Neal had recently resigned
from her position so she could
spend more time with her
husband.
"The reason I'm leaving is
that my husband has started
a new job, and he is doing a
lot of traveling. We thought
it would be nice for me to go
along with him," Neal said,
adding that they are fortunate
enough to do that.
"Life is short, so we are
going to take advantage of it
and spend time together and
enjoy my family," she said.
"I'll continue to be active in
the community. I'm just not
(See Farewell on Page 5)
Of The Spirit
PUNXSUTAWNEY
— May is National Pet
Month, a month where
pets are celebrated for the
lives they touch. Though it
is observed in the United
States in May, it is observed
in the month of April in the
United Kingdom.
National Pet Month is
a month that promotes the
benefits of pet ownership.
Awareness is raised of
the role, contribution and
value to society of working
companion animals. Pet
adoption is especially
DESTINY’S LATE DOG, BUSTER
recognized during National
Pet Month.
Pets can provide social contributions, and service animals
are especially important to those in need. Service animals
are specifically trained to provide assistance to individuals
with disabilities.
While we may picture service animals as being mainly
(See Pets on Page 5)
Larry McGuire/The Punxsutawney Spirit
Members of the board of directors of the Punxsutawney Area Chamber of Commerce
and the community gave a farewell to outgoing Executive Director Michele Neal on
Tuesday. Pictured (front, from left) are Katie Laska, chamber member; Michele Neal,
outgoing director; Robert Cardamone, president, presenting her with a farewell gift; (back)
Larry Chenoga, Punxsutawney Borough Council president; Brian Smith, Punxsutawney
Borough Council member; Jeff Curtis, chamber board member; and Jim Cassidy and
Katie Donald, chamber members.
MAKING THE RIGHT NOISE
Cast and crew members of the Jefferson County
Chapter's traveling road show "Fun Is in the Air"
demonstrate some of the many devices used to create
sound effects in a salute to old-time radio. The first
performance of the benefit show will take place at 7
p.m. on Wednesday, May 27, at the Jefferson Street
Social Hall in downtown Punxsutawney. Tickets are
priced at $6 and are available at the door. The program
includes segments of a soap opera, several husbandwife comedy skits, a 5-minute mystery, Baby Snooks
and Daddy and a passion-drenched soap opera. In
addition, there will be an original story about a brave
dog and a little boy, an adventure filled with unique
sound effects. The show also features music from
past decades and original old-time radio commercials.
Proceeds benefit PASR's Educational Support Grants
and activities at the Pine Street Senior Center, which is
providing refreshments for the intermission of "Fun Is in
the Air." Pictured above (from left) are Francis Burkett,
Jeanne Burkett, Patti Spinelli and Angela Gigliotti. (Photo
courtesy of Charlotte S. Fye)
Near-perfect day for the Lady Chucks, Chucks in Dubois
The weather cooperated; the timing was perfect; and the Lady Chucks softball team and Chucks baseball team each took care of their business in DuBois on Tuesday, with the girls’
team earning the District IX Championship with a 4-1 win over St. Marys and the boys’ squad defeating Obama Academy 12-0 in five innings. With the wins, both teams advance to
Monday’s opening round of the PIAA State Championship tournament in their respective brackets. Their opponents and the location of their games have not yet been determined.
Pictured here are the Lady Chucks (left photo) with their District IX plaque hoisted high by Kylee Lingenfelter, who allowed just three hits for Punxsy. (Right photo) John Matthews
also had a solid pitching outing, throwing three perfect innings to help the Chucks advance. (Photos by Zak Lantz/The Punxsutawney Spirit)
Inside
■
■
■
■
Index
IRS says thieves stole tax info from 100,000...............................page 2
Police: US airman shoots Wal-Mart workers, kills self....................page 3
Police: Ex-death row inmate Cooper dead of apparent suicide........page 12
3 burglars share tips of trade in crime prevention video...............page 13
Classified 13
Comics 10
Community 14
Crossword 10
Features 11
Horoscope 11
Lottery 2
Obituaries 2
Public Notices 13
Sports 6
Television 8
Viewpoints 4
Good morning to
Joe & Jan
Liscinsky of
Punxsutawney
and have a great day!
THE PUNXSUTAWNEY SPIRIT • 510 Pine Street, P.O. Box 444 • Punxsutawney, PA 15767 • WWW.PUNXSUTAWNEYSPIRIT.COM
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FOR THE RECORD
The Punxsutawney Spirit
Obituaries
Winning Pennsylvania Lottery numbers for:
Frederick “Nathan” Coulter, 24
Frederick
“Nathan”
Coulter, 24, of Punxsutawney,
passed away unexpectedly
on Saturday, May 23, 2015, at
Geisinger Medical Center in
Danville, Pa.
Nathan was born on Sept.
13, 1990, in Punxsutawney,
a son of Frederick Paul and
Kathryn Louise (Rodgers)
Coulter. Nathan’s parents
survive him.
Nathan was unmarried
and a 2013 graduate of The
Pennsylvania State University
College of Engineering, where
he graduated with a Bachelor
of Science in Mechanical
Engineering.
Nathan excelled in his field
of study and was a promising
engineer employed immediately following graduation
from Penn State by the PMG
Corporation of Phillipsburg,
Pa. Besides a love for
mechanics and engineering,
Nathan enjoyed robotics,
guns and tinkering with
gadgets. He had a unique
ability to problem-solve
and “figure out” how things
worked.
Simply put, Nathan was
a “nice guy” with a “million
dollar” smile who always
accentuated the positive in
everyone he encountered
and in everything he did. His
upbeat personality and optimism was contagious and
infected everyone he came in
contact with. A fun-loving,
congenial young man, he
filled the air with smiles and
laughter.
Nathan loved life and
enjoyed his family, friends
and meeting new people. He
was what most people
endeavor for in life — peace
and happiness.
In addition to his loving
parents, Frederick and
Kathryn, Nathan is survived
by two brothers, William
“Bill” James Coulter and
wife Erin of Long Beach,
California, and Douglas Paul
Coulter of Koyuk, Alaska;
and his maternal grandparents, James Alvin Rodgers
and Lois Etha Rodgers.
Friends will be received
from 5 to 9 p.m., Thursday,
May 28, 2015, at Shumaker
Funeral
Home,
Inc.,
Punxsutawney.
A funeral service will be
held at 11 a.m., Friday, May
29, 2015, at the funeral home,
with Pastor Randy Matheny
officiating.
Interment will follow at
Markton Cemetery.
Alex J. Park
Alex J. Park, Funeral Director, Supervisor, Owner
William C. Deeley, Funeral Director
Douglas A. Deeley, Funeral Director
POLICE REPORTS
• On May 21, someone
stole an ATV from the first
block of Quarry Avenue. The
DuBois City Police are investigating.
• On May 21, a 49year-old DuBois man was
arrested for public drunkenness, after he was found
staggering as he walked along
Juniata Street. He was found
to be on probation through
Clearfield County. He was
transported to the Clearfield
County Jail by the Clearfield
County Sheriff’s Department.
• At 11:43 p.m. May 21,
the DuBois City Police
received a report of an assault
victim outside the DuBois
City Police Station. When
police arrived, they met
with a 20-year-old DuBois
male who advised them
that he was assaulted at the
500 block of Juniata Street.
The male mentioned that
he was sleeping in his bed
when he was awakened by
a male in his bedroom. The
unknown male started to
punch the victim about the
head and body numerous
times. Police are still investigating.
PSP-DUBOIS
• Sharif Coleman, 20,
Williamsport, was stopped
for a summary traffic violation at 11:21 a.m. on May
20 on I-80 in the Brookville
Borough. During the traffic
stop, probable cause was
established for a search of
Coleman’s car. During the
search, approximately 3
pounds of suspected marijuana was located, along with
several items of drug para-
Pick 2 (Midday): 1-0
Pick 3 (Midday): 7-7-3
Pick 2 (Night): 7-8
Pick 3 (Night): 4-5-8
Pick 4 (Midday): 6-9-8-0
Pick 4 (Night): 2-3-4-9
Pick 5 (Midday): 5-9-7-8-3
Pick 5 (Night): 9-2-8-9-8
Treasure Hunt: 04-05-11-23-26
Cash 5!: 04-17-31-34-37
Market Watch
May 26, 2015
Dow Jones Industrial
18,041.54 (-190.48, -1.04%)
Nasdaq Composite
5,032.75 (-56.61, -1.11%)
Standard & Poor’s 500
2,104.20 (-21.86, -1.03%)
IRS says thieves stole tax info from 100,000
Funeral Home, Inc.
DUBOIS CITY POLICE
Tuesday, May 26
www.palottery.com
Note: The Spirit is not responsible for any
incorrect numbers.
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Wednesday, May 27, 2015
phernalia. Coleman was taken
into custody and charged
with multiple drug violations.
He was arraigned in front
of MDJ and remanded to
the Jefferson County Jail
in lieu of $50,000 straight
bail.
• State police investigated
a theft by deception incident
that occurred at 11 a.m. on
May 24 on Rattlesnake Road,
Brockport. A 65-year-old
Brockport woman attempted
to purchase a dog online via
an ad listed on a local advertising website. After sending
money to an unknown actor
who was selling the dog,
the actor asked for additional funds. The victim then
notified PSP-DuBois. This
investigation continues, and
police remind the public to
be aware of Internet scams.
If it sounds too good to be
true, it probably is.
• State police in DuBois
conducted a traffic stop
based upon a vehicle code
violation at 2:17 a.m. on
May 24 in the Reynoldsville
Borough. A 31-year-old
Reynoldsville man was found
to be under the influence
of alcohol or a controlled
substance and placed under
arrest for suspicion of
driving under the influence.
Charges are pending lab analysis.
• PSP-DuBois conducted
a traffic stop based upon
a vehicle code violation
on May 23 in Washington
Township. Police said
a 62-year-old Brockway
woman was found to be
under the influence of alcohol
or a controlled substance
and placed under arrest for
suspicion of driving under
the influence. Charges are
pending lab analysis.
Happy Birthday
May 27
Heather Beer
Emily Cavallo
Bobby Evans
Homer Rugh
Names for publication in The Spirit’s birthday column
must be received no fewer than two working days and
no more than one month in advance. Proper names
must be used.
WASHINGTON (AP) — Sophisticated
criminals used an online service run by the
IRS to access personal tax information from
more than 100,000 taxpayers, part of an
elaborate scheme to steal identities and claim
fraudulent tax refunds, the IRS said Tuesday.
The thieves accessed a system called "Get
Transcript," where taxpayers can get tax
returns and other filings from previous years.
In order to access the information, the thieves
cleared a security screen that required knowledge about the taxpayer, including Social
Security number, date of birth, tax filing status
and street address, the IRS said.
"We're confident that these are not
amateurs," said IRS Commissioner John
Koskinen. "These actually are organized crime
syndicates that not only we but everybody in
the financial industry are dealing with."
Koskinen wouldn't say whether investigators believe the criminals are based overseas
— or where they obtained enough personal
information about the taxpayers to access
their returns. The IRS has launched a criminal
investigation. The agency's inspector general
is also investigating.
Identity thieves, both foreign and domestic,
have stepped up their efforts in recent years
to claim fraudulent tax refunds. The agency
estimates it paid out $5.8 billion in fraudulent
refunds to identity thieves in 2013.
"Eighty percent of the of the identity
theft we're dealing with and refund fraud is
related to organized crime here and around the
world," Koskinen said. "These are extremely
sophisticated criminals with access to a
tremendous amount of data."
Congress is already pressing the IRS for
information about the breach.
"That the IRS — home to highly sensitive
information on every single American and
every single company doing business here
at home — was vulnerable to this attack is
simply unacceptable," said Sen. Orrin
Hatch, R-Utah, chairman of the Senate
Finance Committee. "What's more, this
agency has been repeatedly warned by top
government watchdogs that its data secu-
rity systems are inadequate against the
growing threat of international hackers
and data thieves."
Koskinen said the agency was alerted to
the thieves when technicians noticed an
increase in the number of taxpayers seeking
transcripts.
The IRS said they targeted the system from
February to mid-May. The service has been
temporarily shut down.
Taxpayers sometimes need copies of old
tax returns to apply for mortgages or college
aid. While the system is shut down, taxpayers
can still apply for transcripts by mail.
The IRS said its main computer system,
which handles tax filing submissions, remains
secure.
"In all, about 200,000 attempts were made
from questionable email domains, with more
than 100,000 of those attempts successfully
clearing authentication hurdles," the agency
said. "During this filing season, taxpayers
successfully and safely downloaded a total of
approximately 23 million transcripts."
The agency is still determining how many
fraudulent tax refunds were claimed this year
using information from the stolen transcripts.
Koskinen provided a preliminary estimate,
saying less than $50 million was successfully
claimed.
Thieves can also use the information to
claim fraudulent tax refunds in the future. As
identity theft has exploded, the agency has
added filters to its computer system to identify suspicious returns. These filters look for
anomalies in the information provided by the
taxpayer.
Until recently, tax refund fraud has been
surprisingly simple, once thieves obtain a
taxpayer's Social Security number and date
of birth. Typically, thieves would file fake tax
returns with made-up information early in the
filing season, before the legitimate taxpayers
filed their returns — and before employers
and financial institutions filed wage and tax
documents with the IRS.
The refunds would often be sent electronically to prepaid debit cards or bank accounts.
Pentagon chief’s take on Iraqis
undercuts Obama’s strategy
even more time to train Iraqis.
"That's a training process that can't be
done in a week," White House spokesman
Josh Earnest said Tuesday. "That's not a
seven-day training course. This is going to
require a more sustained commitment."
The U.S. already has spent years and
billions of dollars trying to position the Iraqi
military to take charge of the country's security. As the U.S. military withdrew from Iraq
in 2011 after more than eight years of war,
Obama declared that local forces were indeed
ready to take on that mission.
With a fresh infusion of American trainers
last year and a new Shiite government
pledging to be more inclusive to Sunnis, Iraqi
forces had made apparent progress against
the Islamic State in recent months. But the
rout in Ramadi, the strategically important
capital of Anbar province, highlighted the
military's weakness anew. Fleeing the city,
Iraqi forces abandoned U.S military vehicles,
including tanks, armored personnel carriers
and artillery pieces.
"What apparently happened is the Iraqi
forces just showed no will to fight," Carter
said Sunday on CNN. "They were not
outnumbered. In fact, they vastly outnumbered the opposing force. That says to me,
and I think to most of us, that we have an
issue with the will of the Iraqis to fight ISIL
and defend themselves."
WASHINGTON (AP) — Defense
Secretary Ash Carter's blunt assessment that
Iraqi forces lack the "will to fight" undermines a central premise of President Barack
Obama's strategy for defeating the Islamic
State: that Iraq's military can effectively
handle ground operations so Americans don't
have to.
Carter's comments in a weekend interview
reflect deep concern within some quarters of
the administration about the capabilities of
Iraq's security forces. Despite outnumbering
Islamic State forces, the military suffered
a major defeat this month in the city of
Ramadi. And some officials question whether
it can overcome the same sectarian divisions
between Sunnis and the Shiite-dominated
government that gave the Islamic State space
to thrive.
"The failure, it's not one of courage,"
Marina Ottaway, a Middle East analyst at the
Wilson Center, said of the Iraqi military. "It's
one of politics."
For now, Obama is showing no sign of
significantly shifting his strategy or easing
his opposition to sending American forces
back into combat in Iraq. Instead, the White
House is essentially pleading for patience and
Weather
Today: A chance of
showers and thunderstorms.
Mostly cloudy, with a high
near 78.
Tonight: A slight chance
of showers before 10 p.m.
Mostly cloudy, with a low
around 62.
Thursday: Mostly sunny,
with a high near 79.
Thursday night: Partly
cloudy, with a low around 63.
Friday: Partly sunny, with
a high near 83.
Friday night: A chance of
showers and thunderstorms.
Mostly cloudy, with a low
around 62.
Compassion
is our passion.
Not everyone can say they’re
passionate about their work.
We’re not everyone.
Every day that we’re able to help
another family make it through a painful
loss is one more day we’re proud to be
in our chosen profession.
Our compassion toward families and
enthusiasm for serving the community
are what set us apart
Shumaker
FUNERAL HOME INC.
115 E. Union St.
153 Jefferson St.
(814) 938-5421
www.ShumakerFH.com
(814) 849-8355
www.ShumakerFH.com
Punxsutawney, PA 15767
Brenda Shumaker, Supervisor
Brookville, PA 15825
Antoinette Facchine, Supervisor
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Wednesday, May 27, 2015
The Punxsutawney Spirit
3
Police: US airman shoots Wal-Mart workers, kills self
By James Macpherson &
Blake Nicholson
Associated Press
A
U.S. airman “with
no apparent motive”
walked into a Wal-Mart
Supercenter in North
Dakota early Tuesday and opened fire
with a handgun, killing one worker
and injuring a second before turning
the gun on himself, police said.
Grand Forks police said the
shooting a few minutes after 1 a.m.
may have been random, with no link
yet found between Marcell Willis,
21, and either the store or the
employees. Willis was stationed at
Grand Forks Air Force Base, about a
dozen miles west of the city.
“We’ve not been able to find
any linkage to him and any of the
victims,” police Lt. Derik Zimmel
said at an afternoon news conference. “There’s no apparent motive
that jumps out at this time.”
Authorities didn’t immediately
identify the two workers who were
shot or a third worker they say
Willis shot at but missed. The
injured person was taken to Altru
Hospital in Grand Forks with a
gunshot wound that was not believed
life-threatening, Zimmel said. An
Altru spokeswoman said the person
was in satisfactory condition Tuesday
afternoon.
Willis was given medical treatment at the scene and taken to
Altru, where he was pronounced
dead, Zimmel said.
Willis was the only person with
a gun and no police officers fired
a weapon, according to Zimmel. A
handgun was recovered near Willis’
body, Zimmel said.
Zimmel said police believe the
airman fired only three shots before
shooting himself. Police did not
identify the type of handgun or its
caliber.
Andy Legg, who was in the
store at the time of the shooting,
told WDAZ-TV he heard “popping
sounds” shortly before authorities
herded him and other customers to a
safe section of the store.
“I saw people running. At that
time, we heard people screaming,
one yelling for help,” he said.
When police later escorted them
from the building, they passed a
Wal-Mart employee lying on the
ground, covered in blood.
“It’s just something you don’t see
every day and really don’t want to
see,” Legg said. “I had goose bumps
for probably two hours after that.”
Amy Mehs, Willis’ girlfriend
who lives in Hatton, North Dakota,
about 35 miles southwest of Grand
Forks, was in tears when contacted
by The Associated Press Tuesday
afternoon.
“I really can’t say anything right
now because it’s still under investigation,” she said. “You guys will find
out everything eventually.”
Sean Willis of Nashville,
Tennessee, said only that his son
Amtrak to install long-sought cameras in locomotives
WASHINGTON (AP) —
Amtrak said Tuesday it will
install video cameras inside
locomotive cabs to record the
actions of train engineers, a
move that follows a deadly
derailment earlier this month
in which investigators are
searching for clues to the train
engineer's actions before the
crash.
The Amtrak engineer,
Brendan Bostian, suffered
a head injury in the accident in Philadelphia and has
told investigators he can't
remember what happened.
Northeast Regional train
188 accelerated to a speed
of 106 miles per hour in the
last minute before entering a
curve where it derailed. The
speed limit for the curve is
50 mph. The crash left eight
people dead and about 200
injured.
The train was equipped
with a "black box" data
recorder and an outwardfacing camera focused on the
track ahead, but neither of
those devices reveals what was
happening inside the cab.
The National Transportation
Safety Board has been recommending that the Federal
Railroad Administration
require passenger and freight
train cabs to have audio
recorders since the late 1990s.
They revised that recommendation five years ago to
include inward-facing sound
and video recorders.
Railroad administration
officials say they support use
of the cameras. In the past
year, the agency has told
the NTSB that it intends to
propose regulations requiring
the cameras. However,
no regulations have been
proposed and it typically
takes federal agencies many
months, if not years, to move
from proposals to final regulations.
Joseph Boardman, the
railroad's president and
CEO, said Amtrak has
supported efforts by a
railroad administration safety
advisory committee made up
of industry and labor representatives to come up with
standards for the cameras. The
committee has yet to issue
recommendations.
"We've been supporting
it all the way along," he
told reporters in a telephone
briefing. "It's just a matter of
working out some of those
details. ... There may be
some adjustments we have to
make later down the road, but
I think it's time to do it and I'm
doing it."
Besides accident investigations, Amtrak will review the
recordings to monitor engineers' actions, Boardman said.
Unions representing engineers at Amtrak and other
passenger and freight railroads
have generally opposed use of
the cameras. As recently as
2012, railroad administration
officials had also opposed
requiring the cameras, telling
NTSB they were concerned
the cameras might lower
employee morale and the
images might be used punitively by railroads.
Officials
for
the
Brotherhood of Locomotive
Engineers and Trainmen
didn't immediately respond to
a request for comment.
Robert Mongeluzzi, a
Philadelphia attorney representing 10 passengers who
were on the train, said Amtrak
shouldn't wait until after
a disaster to make safety
changes. The railroad has also
announced since the crash
that it will install technology
before the end of the year to
automatically stop trains that
are in danger of exceeding
speed limits.
"Although we approve of
Amtrak's belated decision to
install a video camera inside
the cab of the locomotive, the
question remains, 'Why wasn't
this done much earlier?" he
said.
Cameras will first be
installed in 70 new Amtrak
locomotives that will power
all Northeast Regional and
long-distance trains between
Washington, New York and
Boston, as well as Keystone
Service between New York,
Philadelphia and Harrisburg,
Pennsylvania. Most of those
locomotives will be equipped
with the cameras before the
Cleveland, US Justice Department
announce police settlement
CLEVELAND (AP) — Cleveland agreed
to sweeping changes in how its police officers
use force, treat the community and deal with
the mentally ill, under a settlement announced
Tuesday with the federal government that will
put the 1,500-member department under an
independent monitor.
The settlement was made public three days
after a white Cleveland patrolman was acquitted
of manslaughter for his role in a 137-shot
barrage of police gunfire that left two unarmed
black suspects dead in a car in 2012.
Mayor Frank Jackson said the ambitious
plan that was worked out over five months of
negotiations with the U.S. Justice Department
will be expensive and will take years to put in
place. But he said he sees it as a chance to set
an example.
"As we move forward, it is my strong belief
that as other cities across this country address
and look at their police issues in their communities, they will be able to say, 'Let's look at
Cleveland because Cleveland has done it right,'"
he said.
In December, after an 18-month investigation prompted in part by the 2012 shooting,
the Justice Department issued a scathing report
accusing Cleveland police of a pattern of excessive force and other abuses.
The settlement comes amid tension around
the U.S. over a string of cases in which blacks
died at the hands of police.
It is an expansive list of items aimed at
easing tensions between the Cleveland department and the city's residents, especially in
the black community. Cleveland is 53 percent
black. About two-thirds of its police officers
are white. The mayor and the police chief are
black.
The reforms were outlined in a 105-page
consent decree filed in federal court. It calls
for new guidelines and training in the use
of force; a switch to community policing,
in which officers work closely with their
neighborhoods; an overhaul of the machinery
for investigating misconduct allegations;
modernization of police computer technology; and new training in avoiding racial
stereotyping and dealing with the mentally ill.
The police department's compliance will be
overseen by an independent monitor approved
by the court.
Several other police departments around
the country, including those in Seattle and
New Orleans, are operating under federal
consent decrees that involve independent oversight.
The worst examples of excessive force in
the Justice Department report involved officers
who endangered lives by shooting at suspects
and cars, hit people over the head with guns
and used stun guns on handcuffed suspects.
Only six officers had been suspended for
improper use of force over a three-year period.
The city is still awaiting a decision on
whether any officers will be prosecuted in two
other deaths: that of Tamir Rice, a 12-year-old
black boy who was killed by a white rookie
patrolman last November while playing with
what turned out to be a pellet gun, and that of
37-year-old Tanisha Anderson, a mentally ill
woman who suffocated last fall after she was
subdued on the ground and handcuffed.
U.S. Attorney Steven M. Dettelbach said
that the overhaul "will help ensure the many
brave men and women of the Cleveland
Division of Police can do their jobs not only
constitutionally, but also more safely and effectively."
The mayor said that when the reforms take
hold, community policing will become "part of
our DNA."
The Justice Department has launched
broad investigations into the practices of more
than 20 police forces in the past five years,
including agencies in Ferguson, Missouri, and,
most recently, in Baltimore. Both cities were
convulsed by violence and protests in recent
months over the deaths of black men at the
hands of police.
Then-Attorney General Eric Holder said
in December that the Justice Department has
intervened in 15 police departments in the
country, including eight that are operating under
court-ordered consent decrees.
Saturday's verdict by a judge in favor of
Patrolman Michael Brelo led to a day of mostly
peaceful protests but also more than 70 arrests.
Dozens of church parishioners also protested
the acquittal in a downtown march Tuesday
afternoon just before officials announced the
settlement.
Cleveland has paid a total of $3 million
to the families of the victims in the 2012
shooting, Timothy Russell and Malissa
Williams.
Pennsylvania's largest private
employer offers buyouts
or older and have at least 10 years of service.
The offer includes medical and dental benefits
and a one-time cash payment.
UPMC, which operates 22 hospitals in
western Pennsylvania, is the state's largest
private employer with about 62,000 workers.
It is facing stepped-up competition from
Highmark, which recently acquired the sevenhospital Allegheny Health Network and owns
the state's biggest health insurer. UPMC also
owns the second-largest health insurance
company in the region.
PITTSBURGH (AP) — The University of
Pittsburgh Medical Center is offering buyouts
to its older workers in a move to cut costs.
The Pittsburgh Tribune-Review reports that
the western Pennsylvania nonprofit is citing
slowing demand for its medical services.
UPMC said Tuesday that it was offering
voluntary severance to employees who are 60
end of the year, and the rest
by sometime this spring,
Boardman told reporters in a
telephone briefing.
Amtrak is developing a
plan for installation of
cameras in the rest of its locomotive fleet, including Acela
Express locomotives, but no
time table has been set for
those installations. The railroad has about 300 locomotives nationwide.
It's not unusual for engineers to be killed in train
crashes, or to be seriously
injured and not remember
details clearly. The NTSB first
recommended requiring audio
recordings of sound in locomotive cabs following a 1996
collision between commuter
train and an Amtrak train in
Silver Spring, Maryland. None
of the commuter train's operating crew members survived,
and the board was unable to
determine their actions leading
up to the crash.
The recommendation
was revised to include video
cameras with sound in 2010 as
the board wrapped up its investigation into one of the worst
train collisions in memory —
a Metrolink commuter train
that failed to obey signals
and collided head-on with a
Union Pacific freight train
near Chatsworth, California.
Twenty-five people were
killed, including the Metrolink
engineer, and over 100 injured
in the 2008 crash.
had been in the military for about
three years and was originally from
Springfield, Tennessee.
Sgt. David Dobrydney, a base
spokesman, said he couldn’t yet
release any information about Willis
due to Air Force regulations.
The Wal-Mart is one of two in
the northeastern North Dakota city
of about 55,000 people. The store is
open 24 hours, though it was closed
Tuesday while authorities investigated the shooting. The company
said it did not know when the store
would reopen.
Wal-Mart spokesman Brian
Nick said in a statement that there
were about 30 employees and 20
customers in the store at the time of
the shooting.
Law enforcement adds backing
to Wolf's pre-kindergarten plan
CAMP HILL, Pa. (AP) — Gov. Tom Wolf is getting
help from law enforcement officials in his push to persuade
lawmakers to spend more money to raise the quality of
Pennsylvania's pre-kindergarten programs.
Wolf appeared Tuesday morning outside the Camp Hill
state prison in suburban Harrisburg with several district
attorneys and the head of the state prisons agency to tout
his proposal that would add $120 million in early-childhood
education funding — an 88 percent increase.
"There is no better way to invest in the lives of our fellow
citizens than in early childhood education. We can see the
reverse when we don't invest," Wolf told reporters.
Wolf and his team pointed to a body of studies from other
states they say bears out their message.
A 2001 study by the Institute for Research on Poverty at
the University of Wisconsin showed that school participation
that starts at ages 3 or 4 was associated with "significantly
higher rates of school completion by age 20, with lower rates
of juvenile arrests."
About half of Pennsylvania's 49,000 state prison inmates
did not complete high school, said Cumberland County
District Attorney Dave Freed.
Supporters say research shows that children who attended
preschool programs are more likely to stay out of prison
and do better in other ways, but critics say that research is
limited in focus and many of the gains made by these kids
fade as they grow older.
Under Wolf's plan, 14,000 more 3- and 4-year-olds would
have access to high-quality pre-kindergarten programs,
which must meet guidelines for curriculum, teacher training,
nutrition and class size, among other things. Currently,
56,000 Pennsylvania children attend high-quality public prekindergarten programs. That is 19 percent of nearly 300,000
3- and 4-year-olds in the state, according to information
from the coalition, Pre-K for PA.
New York, New Jersey, Maryland and West Virginia are
well ahead of Pennsylvania, according to the coalition's
figures.
Leaders of the Republican-controlled Legislature have not
signaled whether they will support Wolf's proposal, particularly if it requires a tax increase, and the law enforcement
officials appearing with Wolf did not necessarily advocate
for a tax increase.
Freed said he isn't trying to get lawmakers to spend more
money "but to figure out how much money they have to
spend, and spend that money on programs that work."
4
Wednesday, May 27, 2015
viewpoints
'The building
of the ship'
The First Amendment
Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the
Government for a redress of grievances.
Y
ou still can find The Harvard Classics in homes
across the country. In 51 handsome matching
volumes, they set forth what in 1909 constituted
the summit of erudition, "a liberal education,"
according to Harvard president Charles William
Eliot, who oversaw the project, "to any one who would read
them with devotion, even if he could spare but 15 minutes a
day for reading."
Two decades later, the publisher P.F. Collier & Son produced
a readers' guide to these volumes that actually set forth a daily
diet of 15-minute readings. It provided a taste of Aesop, a pinch
of St. Augustine, a lot of Robert Burns, dollops of Adam Smith,
spoonfuls of Charles Darwin — and, specially recommended
for Memorial Day, the poem "The Building of the Ship."
This verse by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, quoted by
two presidents at perhaps the two most perilous moments
of American history, is a curious choice for Memorial Day.
Longfellow finished his masterpiece in 1849, a dozen years
before the Civil War, which the poem clearly was written to
help avoid.
There are several conflicting stories about the origin of
Memorial Day, once known as Decoration
Day because it was when war survivors
honored the dead by decorating their
graves. None of those stories places
Memorial Day anywhere near 1849, or
even before the Civil War.
But as we pause for Memorial Day in
this year of the sesquicentennial of the
end of the Civil War, "The Building of the
Ship" seems oddly appropriate for our own
time, and for this occasion. It celebrates
national unity and national purpose. It
speaks of a people who can "laugh at all
David
disaster/and with wave and whirlwind
wrestle." It warns of the "pitiless sea," but
SHRIBMAN
counsels that if we stick to "the toil and
the task we have to do," we may safely
reach the shores and shining beach.
Sometimes a ship is just a ship, as Freud might say, but no
reader of this poem can confuse its subject with a maritime
vessel. Longfellow, famous for writing a decade later of the
"hurrying hoof-beats" and the "midnight message" of Paul
Revere, was steeped in American history and in what he called,
in the poem commemorating the silversmith's sweep through
every Middlesex village and town, "the gloom and the light" of
national affairs. In the building of the ship, as in the midnight
ride of Paul Revere, "the fate of a nation was riding."
It is not until the 104th line that we learn that the ship was
called the Union. But we do know that it was built with "only
what is sound and strong," and it cannot be a coincidence that
it was constructed with Maine cedar and Georgia pine. There is
plentiful pine throughout northern Maine and expanses of cedar
throughout north Georgia, so the ship easily could have been
crafted entirely in Georgia, or in Maine. Instead, Longfellow
assembled his ship, and his message, from both North and
South.
This melding — the essence of national unity and of the
seafaring "Union" — appealed to Abraham Lincoln. Though
he would transform the Civil War into a moral undertaking
designed to free the slaves, he took the country to war to save
the Union.
The poem appealed broadly. Frances Kemble, a noted
British actress, married into a prominent slave-owning
American family but was horrified by her exposure to slave
bondage. She gave several public readings of the poem, one
of them in Boston before an audience that exceeded 3,000,
including Longfellow himself. In his journal, Longfellow wrote
of how Kimble stood, "book in hand, trembling, palpitating and
weeping."
The great Harvard critic Charles Eliot Norton said the poem
"quickened faith and strengthened confidence in the already
threatened union of the States." Robert L. Gale, the University
of Pittsburgh scholar who published "A Henry Wadsworth
Longfellow Companion," said the poem's "local color details
(made) it resemble a Currier and Ives print."
But this poem's role in history renders it more than a literary
confection. Lincoln quoted from its last stanza and, as he did
so, according to his secretary, John Nicolay, "his eyes filled
with tears and his cheeks were wet." A century later, Franklin
Roosevelt sent Winston Churchill the same excerpt in a handwritten letter delivered by his political rival Wendell Willkie. It
so inspired the prime minister that he had it framed and hung in
his Chartwell home:
... (S)ail on, 0 Ship of State!
Sail on, 0 UNION, strong and great!
Humanity with all its fears,
With all the hopes of future years,
Is hanging breathless on thy fate!
It fell to Longfellow's grandson, the scholar Henry
Wadsworth Longfellow Dana, to discover that these lines were
a new ending the poet substituted after concluding that the
original, based on his knowledge of what inevitably happens to
wooden ships, was too dark. He scrapped lines about it being
"(w)recked upon some treacherous rock" or "rotting in some
noisome dock" in exchange for the sentiments that inspired
Lincoln and gave hope to Churchill.
This fateful change came the day before the November 1849
election, when Longfellow voted for a congressional candidate
running on the Free Soil ticket, dedicated to restricting the
expansion of slavery. He dined that evening with Sen. Charles
Sumner, the Massachusetts abolitionist who was among his
closest friends. Revision followed revision, and Longfellow
asked his publisher: "What think you of the enclosed, instead of
the sad ending of 'The Ship'? Is it better?"
It was far better, and far better suited to the tasks to which
two presidents would employ it. "By bringing in again the
name of the ship 'UNION' in capital letters," Longfellow's
grandson wrote in the February 1950 Colby College Library
Quarterly, he made it clear "that in referring to the fate of the
ship, he had at heart the fate of the nation."
Churchill read the poem on the radio and returned the
favor to Roosevelt, sending him "Say Not the Struggle Naught
Availeth," by Arthur Hugh Clough, who, it turns out, died in the
first year of the Civil War. Clough's poem ends in the optimism
that is the other side of the sadness we mark on Memorial Day:
And not by eastern windows only,
When daylight comes, comes in the light,
In front the sun climbs slow, how slowly,
But westward, look, the land is bright.
Sanders is Hillary's leftward advance man
I
s Bernie Sanders pulling Hillary
Clinton to the Left? No, for the
same reason a canoe doesn't pull
an aircraft carrier.
The Vermont socialist running
in the Democratic presidential race
is currently at 7.4 percent in the
RealClearPolitics average of national
polls, versus Clinton's 64.2 percent.
Clinton is in fact moving leftward on
issues like immigration, gay marriage,
inequality and more, but it's
not because she's feeling
the heat from a little-known
competitor.
Still, Sanders is staking out a
role as the forward scout of the
Democratic Left, going public
with wish list plans to make the
federal government even more
massive, even more expensive, and even more intrusive.
In the absence of Elizabeth
Warren, who many of the most
progressive Democrats would
have preferred, Sanders is
broadening the conversation
in what is sometimes called
the Democratic wing of the Democratic
Party.
Just look at something known among
progressives as "debt-free college." The
idea is that all young people deserve a
government guarantee that they can
graduate from college without debt, a
result accomplished either by outright
grants or cheap loans.
Clinton is moving toward the idea.
Earlier this month, her campaign manager,
Robby Mook, thrilled progressives when
he said in a TV interview that "what
voters are looking for in this election is
someone who's going to be a champion
for everyday people — for young people,
that's debt-free college."
Then, during a campaign stop in Iowa
this week, Clinton herself said, "We have
to deal with the indebtedness — to try to
move toward making college as debt-free
as possible."
Government-guaranteed debt-free
college is a step beyond President Obama's
free community college program. But this
week, Sanders trumped them all with two
new bills — the "College for All Act" and
its companion, "The Inclusive Prosperity
Act of 2015" — that would eliminate
undergraduate tuition at all
public colleges and universities.
Under Sanders' plan, college
would be free for all, everywhere, paid for by the government in a program Sanders
estimates would cost taxpayers
more than $70 billion a year,
or somewhere around $750
billion over the next decade.
Sanders would also dramatically
cheapen college loans
Byron for other
college expenses and
YORK for those who do not attend
tuition-free institutions.
How to pay for a new, nearly
Obamacare-sized federal program? By
imposing a "speculation fee" on Wall
Street. "Right now, you have people who
are becoming phenomenally wealthy
by speculating in derivatives and every
other type of esoteric instrument that
they can," Sanders said recently on CNN.
"People are getting very rich on Wall
Street. We're going to impose what exists
in dozens of countries around the world,
a modest tax on the transference of large
amounts of stock."
Would Clinton go the full Sanders and
advocate free tuition for all? Probably
not, but it would not be a surprise if, now
that Sanders has gotten the more radical
idea out there, Clinton moves a bit further
left than some expected.
There's no penalty. To cite one
completely unscientific example, a new
focus group of 10 Iowa Democrats,
put together by Purple Strategies and
Bloomberg Politics, found Democratic
voters not at all concerned about Clinton's
move to the left — in fact, wanting
more.
"She's getting my support," said a
Democrat named Bill. "She's moved to
the left on a couple of issues I really care
about."
"I think she's looked at as kind of a
centrist," added a group member named
Charlie. "But I think she's going to have
to move to the left a little bit. I mean, it's
either going to be that, or it's going to
be Scott Walker ... destroying America's
unions."
News reports stressed one of the focus
group's awkward moments — when
Democrats said they admired Clinton's
experience but were unable to name even
a single accomplishment as secretary of
state. But perhaps the bigger news from
the session is that Clinton has virtually
unlimited room to run on the left.
Right now, the only constraint on
Clinton is what will pass with voters in
the general election. And she appears to
believe the Obama years have moved
things considerably leftward of where
they were in 2008. This week, the
Washington Post reported that Clinton's
approach "is a bet that social and demographic shifts mean that no left-leaning
position Clinton takes now would be
likely to hurt her in making her case to
moderate and independent voters in the
general election next year."
Given that, Bernie Sanders' role is not
so much to pull Clinton to the left as to
show her how far she can go.
Byron York is chief political correspondent for The Washington Examiner.
David M. Shribman is executive editor of the Post-Gazette
([email protected], 412 263-1890). Follow him on
Twitter at ShribmanPG.
Tracy L. Smith, Publisher • [email protected]; Zak Lantz, Editor • [email protected]
Sending
Letters:
The Punxsutawney Spirit welcomes letters and guest Viewpoints columns from readers. Please include your day and evening phone numbers
for verification purposes. The Punxsutawney Spirit reserves the right to edit or reject any submissions. The contents of Letters to the
Editor represent only the views of the writer, not the opinions of The Punxsutawney Spirit or its staff. Send all submissions to:
Viewpoints/Letters to the Editor, c/o The Punxsutawney Spirit, P.O. Box 444, Punxsutawney, PA 15767
Fax: 814-938-3794 • E-mail: [email protected]
PAGE ONE CONTINUED
Wednesday, May 27, 2015
TWO-VEHICLE ACCIDENT
The Punxsutawney Spirit
5
12 detained after fire kills 38 at seniors' home in China
BEIJING (AP) — At least 12 people
connected to the privately run home for
the elderly in central China where 38
people died in a fire earlier this week
have been taken into custody by the
police, state media reported Wednesday.
The official Xinhua News Agency
reported that the 12 included the legal
representative of the Kangleyuan Rest
Home, and that police were searching for
another three employees.
The fire broke out Monday night in
the facility, which housed 51 residents in
the city of Pingdingshan in Henan province, the province's work safety administration said in a statement. In addition
to the dozens who died, six people were
injured, including two in serious condition, the statement said.
A photo of the fire scene released by
Xinhua showed that many sections of
the facility appeared to have completely
burned. Xinhua said the cause of the fire
was unclear.
"I was in my bed at the time. Suddenly,
I saw a worker run out of a room on fire
and he shouted 'Run! Run!' to me, so I
dashed out," Guo Xin, 78, was quoted by
Xinhua as saying.
Another survivor, 82-year-old Zhao
Yulan, said only two of the 11 people
living in her room made it out alive,
Xinhua reported. Some of the remains
of people killed in the fire were burned
beyond recognition, the news agency
said.
The fire destroyed a part of the home
housing people who were completely
dependent on others for care. Xinhua
quoted 80-year-old resident Chen
Runsheng as saying not enough caregivers were working at the facility.
Premier Li Keqiang called on officials across the country to "draw lessons
from the accident, checking all potential
safety hazards to avoid similar incidents,"
Xinhua said. Fire officials were ordering
inspections of nursing homes, kindergartens, child-care centers, hospitals and
what Xinhua called "welfare houses"
across the country.
With a rapidly aging population and
under-resourced social security net, China
faces increasing pressure to provide safe
and affordable care for the elderly. Xinhua
cited figures showing a severe shortage
of caregivers in the country, with 220,000
working in homes for the elderly, while
10 million are needed.
"The tragedy is a sore reminder" that
facilities for the elderly are still far behind
where they should be, Xinhua said in a
commentary on the blaze. The shortage
means some people "have no other choice
but to live in poorly equipped nursing
facilities," it said.
Floodwaters deepen in Houston after city gets more rain
Larry McGuire/The Punxsutawney Spirit
A white sedan struck the rear of a blue Chevrolet SUV
at 6:50 p.m. Tuesday on South Main Street Extension,
Young Township. Punxsutawney-based Pennsylvania
State Police were assisted at the scene by Jefferson
County EMS and the Punxsutawney Fire Department.
There appeared to be no injuries, and both vehicles were
driven from the scene.
Farewell
(Continued from Page One)
going to be in charge of the
chamber."
Neal said she will continue
being on multiple boards and
the community foundation.
"I want to jump full tilt into
that and see where we can take
that," Neal said.
Robert
Cardamone,
Punxsutawney Area Chamber
of Commerce president, said
that Neal had many accomplishments during her time as
executive director.
"Michele was very instrumental in starting up the
Punxsutawney Foundation,"
Cardamone said, adding
that she has been working on
Pets
(Continued from Page One)
dogs, it is also possible that
other animals, such as horses
and monkeys, can be trained
to be service animals as well.
Miniature horses are trained
to guide people who are visually impaired, and monkeys
are often trained to provide
assistance to people who have
suffered spinal cord injuries.
One thing is for certain —
when it comes to pets, they are
not a possession but a family
member.
Growing up I had many
pets. We had a couple of cats
and two dogs. One of my
favorite pets growing up was
a little dog we called Buster.
He came from my mom's aunt,
who was, sadly, dying from
cancer. My mother would take
care of her, and the moment
she saw Buster she fell in
love with him. He was a cross
between a Pomeranian and a
Yorkshire terrier.
My mother's aunt gave us
Buster, as she wanted him to
have a good home. I can still
remember my mother hiding
him under her coat, and the
moment he popped his head
up, my brother and I went
wild.
He resembled Mickey
Mouse in a way, but as he
got older, the color of his fur
began to change, yet still he
was a beautiful dog and very
smart. He would sleep under
my covers at night, and out of
the entire family, he was the
closest to my mother.
Buster would follow her
everywhere, and when the time
came that we couldn't care for
Buster, he went to live with
my Grandma Rishel, whom he
also fell in love with.
My grandma also had a dog
that was a little Pomeranian
named Babe who became
good friends with Buster.
When my grandma, who had
cerebral palsy, fell and broke
her hip, both dogs somehow
got out of the house and ran
up to my uncle's and barked
until he came out, and then
they both led him to my
grandma. They proved to not
only be wonderful pets, but
wonderful service dogs as
well.
I asked our readers to tell
me about their pets or to talk
about pets, and though we
only had a few who wrote in,
a study on how the
Punxsutawney Phil Souvenir
Shop can generate more
revenue.
He said she is involved in
the studies dealing with the
future of the Pantall Hotel.
"She's on loads of
committees behind the
scenes that have contributed
to Punxsutawney, including
the Jefferson County Hotel
Tax Committee," Cardamone
said. "She has contributed
much to our community in the
few years she has been with
us."
Cardamone said they are
continuing to search for Neal’s
successor.
it still touched me to hear their
stories.
• I was afraid of dogs all
of my life. I would never pet
a dog; that's how afraid I was
of them. Then, I asked my
son, Joey, what he wanted
for his 13th birthday. He said
all he wanted was a puppy!
Well, after much thought and
discussion, I gave in and said
yes! I did give certain circumstances, though, such as the
dog had to stay downstairs in
the garage, and it would never
come upstairs into the house.
Well, that didn't last long.
Our dog, Miley, is three years
old and sleeps with me every
night. I wouldn't know what
to do without her. She is a
special part of my life. —
Jeanine DiPietro
• My husband and I found a
kitten who didn't have a home
and was living in Nomadic
Trading. While searching for
a "forever home," we fell in
love. For weeks, she remained
nameless, but now, she is
known as "Lady Karma of
the Nomadic." There was a
homeless kitten at Hazen Flea
Market, and Rachel Marshall
scooped her up without
hestitation and gave her a
good home. She named the
kitten "Hazel" and gave her
a "forever" home. — Katrina
Pascuzzo Horner
• My son was looking for a
dog at the Humane Center and
found Mia, a black German
Shepherd, who was going to
be put down that day. Needless
to say, we have her, and she is
a great dog. We also have two
boxers and five rescue cats! —
Stacy Stankewich
• My son, Quinton, always
wanted a pet. Since we are not
home enough to take care of a
dog or cat, I told him no. Well,
we went to one of the local
fairs, and he won a fish. He
named him "Croaky." Well, a
week later, Croaky croaked.
The next fair we went to, he
won another fish and named
him Croaky II. He lived about
a month before going belly up.
So, his uncle bought him a fish
from a store, and being the
smart boy that he is, Quinton
decided Croaky maybe wasn't
a good name for a fish, so he
named him "Hush." He died
a couple months ago after
having him for over a year. —
Stacy Clark
HOUSTON (AP) — Floodwaters
deepened across much of Texas on
Tuesday as storms dumped almost a
foot more of rain on the Houston area,
stranding hundreds of motorists and inundating the famously congested highways
that serve the nation's fourth-largest city.
Meanwhile, the search went on for
about a dozen people who were still
missing, including a group that disappeared after a vacation home was swept
down a river and slammed into a bridge.
Several more fatalities were reported
— four in Houston and four more in
Central Texas. That brought to 17 the
number of people killed by the holiday
weekend storms in Texas and Oklahoma.
Similar search efforts unfolded just
south of the Texas-Mexico border, where
crews tried to track down the missing and
assessed damage in the city of Ciudad
Acuna after a tornado killed 13 people
Monday.
In Houston, the water rose sharply
overnight as about 11 more inches of rain
fell, much of it in a six-hour period. By
Tuesday evening, most rivers had receded
back within their banks.
The floodwaters affected virtually
every part of the city and paralyzed
some areas. Firefighters carried out more
than 500 water rescues, most involving
stranded motorists. At least 2,500 vehicles were abandoned by drivers seeking
higher ground, officials said.
"Given the magnitude and how
quickly it happened, in such a short
period of time, I've never seen this
before," said Rick Flanagan, Houston's
emergency management coordinator.
The drenching weather threatened to
linger. Forecasts called for a 20 to 40
percent chance of thunderstorms through
the rest of the week in Houston.
The flooding closed several highways,
and the ones that stayed open became a
gridlocked mess.
Interstate 45 near downtown was
backed up for miles Tuesday morning,
and a handful of motorists traveled the
wrong way on the highway to retreat
from high water.
Small cars weaved between massive
18-wheelers as other drivers stared at
them in disbelief. With no end to the
backup in sight, some drivers got off
the freeway, only to be held up again by
water covering nearby access roads.
In the Heights neighborhood about 5
miles from downtown, groups of people
roamed the streets after escaping their
stalled cars, and police cruisers blocked
some dangerous roads.
Some motorists were stuck on I-45
all night, sleeping in their cars until the
backup was cleared about 8 a.m.
NBA fans at the Toyota Center, where
the Rockets hosted a Western Conference
finals game against Golden State on
Monday, were asked with about two
minutes left in the game not to leave the
arena because of the weather.
The game ended before 11 p.m., but
about 400 people remained in their seats
at 1:30 a.m., choosing to stay in the
building rather than brave the flooded
roads that awaited them outside. Up to
150 people stayed all night, according to
arena officials.
A spokeswoman for the flood district
of Harris County, which includes
Houston, said up to 700 homes sustained
some level of damage.
Yesenia Lopez and her husband,
Armando, waded through knee-deep
water, carrying bags of possessions over
their heads. During the night, a nearby
bayou overflowed and flooded their
apartment complex.
"We tried to do as much as we could,
saved the family portraits and stuff like
that, but everything else is destroyed,"
she said.
The two planned to stay with her
mother-in-law.
Dripping with water, she said:
"Everything is scary. That's the first
time I lived through something like this,
so it gives you a lot to think about."
Some of the worst flooding in Texas
was in Wimberley, a popular tourist town
along the Blanco River in the corridor
between Austin and San Antonio. That's
where the vacation home was swept
away.
The "search component" of the
mission ended Monday night, meaning
no more survivors were expected to be
found, said Trey Hatt, a spokesman for
the Hays County Emergency Operations
Center.
Eight people missing from the
destroyed house were friends and family
who had gathered for the holiday, said
Kristi Wyatt, a spokeswoman for the
City of San Marcos. Three children, two
age 6 and another 4, were among the
missing.
The Blanco crested above 40 feet —
more than triple its flood stage of 13
feet. The river swamped Interstate 35
and closed parts of the busy north-south
highway. Rescuers used pontoon boats
and a helicopter to pull people out.
Hundreds of trees along the Blanco
were uprooted or snapped, and they
collected in piles of debris up to 20 feet
high.
The deaths in Texas included two
men and one woman whose bodies were
pulled from the Blanco; a 14-year-old
who was found with his dog in a storm
drain; a high school senior who died after
her car was caught in high water; and a
man whose mobile home was destroyed
by a reported tornado.
The Oklahoma Department of
Emergency Management also reported
four fatalities between Saturday and
Monday after severe flooding and reports
of tornadoes.
In Ciudad Acuna, Mayor Evaristo Perez
Rivera said 300 people were treated at
local hospitals after the twister, and more
than 200 homes had been completely
destroyed in the city of 125,000 across
from Del Rio, Texas.
Nigeria paying $800 million to oil suppliers to end crisis
LAGOS, Nigeria (AP) —
Nigeria's outgoing government has agreed to pay a
debt of $800 million to
resolve a months-long fuel
crisis crippling the economy
days before the inauguration of a new president in
the country, oil suppliers said
Wednesday.
Chaos reigned Tuesday
at Nigerian airports where
most flights were cancelled.
Foreign airlines flew to other
African countries to refuel.
Cars and other vehicles
formed queues two and three
deep blocking roads for
more than 2 kilometers (a
mile) outside of gas stations.
Attendants turned away
people carrying yellow cans
to buy kerosene for cooking.
There was none.
Banks started closing at
lunchtime on Monday and
cell phone companies warned
they would be forced to shut
down service countrywide for
lack of diesel to fuel generators.
Nigeria — Africa's biggest
oil producer— generates
more than 2 million barrels of
petroleum a day but imports
the refined product because
its refineries are not maintained. A woeful national grid
that offers only a few hours
of electricity on a good day
failed to generate any electricity recently because of
shortages of thermal gas to
fire its generators. That leaves
all businesses and homes
that can afford it dependent
on diesel-powered generators. The country frequently
suffers fuel shortages, but the
disruption caused by the latest
is unprecedented.
President-elect Buhari's
party accused President
Goodluck Jonathan's administration of sabotage to ensure
it inherits "a nation in crisis."
Months of backlog mean
the shortages still will be
biting when dozens of presidents and U.S. Secretary of
State John Kerry are scheduled to arrive for Friday's
inauguration.
The Independent Petroleum
Marketers Association of
Nigeria said the finance
minister agreed Monday to
pay them $800 million. It
said companies started
distributing oil Tuesday and
unpaid tanker drivers stopped
striking.
There was no immediate
statement from the finance
minister, who accused the
suppliers of holding Nigeria
to ransom over the disputed
debt, bemoaning "so much
fraud allegations and scams
in this business of oil
marketing."
Nigeria's government, hit
by halved prices for the petroleum that provides 80 percent
of its revenue and a massive
slump in its naira currency,
has been borrowing to pay
salaries.
Suppliers, hit by tightened
credit lines and naira repayments to pay dollar debts,
worried they would not be
paid by the incoming government of Muhammadu Buhari,
who has pledged to fight
endemic corruption.
spirit sports
6 The Punxsutawney Spirit
Wednesday, May 27, 2015
Lady Chucks take care of business
to earn D-9 title over St. Marys
By Zak Lantz
Of The Spirit
DUBOIS — The Lady
Chucks entered Tuesday
afternoon's District IX
Championship game against
St. Marys as the No. 2 seed —
the underdog — but Punxsy
didn't play like an underdog,
showing confidence and poise
in stealing the D-9 title from
the top-seeded Lady Dutch
with a 4-1 victory in a game
held in DuBois.
The win for Punxsy capped
off a run to the District title
that was up-and-down for
the Lady Chucks — with the
team showing a major upward
trend over the final few
weeks of the season.
"This is big," Punxsy Head
Coach Alan Pifer said after
the win. "I have mentioned it
before that after our 1-0 loss
at Altoona earlier this year, I
told the girls that it was probably one of the most disappointing losses I'd ever had
as the Lady Chucks softball
coach. I can honestly say that
today was one of the most
satisfying wins, though. To
beat a very good pitcher, and
for our girls to have the confidence to keep battling like they
did today, it just showed they
knew they could do it. We can't
say we crushed them, but we
played well enough to win this
game."
Punxsy had yet another
stellar outing from freshman
pitcher Kylee Lingenfelter,
who outdueled St. Marys'
senior stud Andria Copelli by
throwing all seven innings
and holding the Lady Dutch
to just one run on three hits.
In her last outing, she relied on
plenty of strikeouts, but this
time, the defense behind her
played well, as well.
"I said at the beginning of
the game that their pitcher is
a very good pitcher, but in my
opinion, I have two pitchers
who are as good as her if not
better, and I sincerely believe
that," Pifer said. "Kylee went
out and showed us today what
she's made of, what kind of
competitor she is and how she
can manage a game. She kept
us in it until we could get a few
runs on the board."
Copelli got off to a fast
start against the Lady Chucks,
setting the side down in order,
and St. Marys got the first
base runner with two outs in
the bottom of the first when
Brittany Geitner reached on
a booted grounder at second.
Lingenfelter got Copelli to fly
out to Shaina Painter in left to
end the first inning and send it
to the second scoreless.
The Lady Chucks made a
bit of noise with two outs in
the second inning, with Lexxi
Cielo notching the game's first
hit with a seeing-eye single to
right field. Designated Player
Alli Ishman was hit with a
high-and-tight offering from
Copelli to put two on base,
but Copelli struck out Jensen
Constantino to end the frame.
Lingenfelter made fast work of
the Lady Dutch in the second,
though, and the game went
to the third with zeroes in all
columns.
The pitchers' duel continued
through the third, with both
dealers setting their opponents'
sides down in order, but in the
top of the fourth, the Lady
Chucks finally cracked open
the goose egg with a two-spot.
Ivy Phillips led off the
inning with a single just over
the shortstop's head, and she
advanced to second on a
productive 4-3 putout off the
bat of Morgan Adamson.
Anna Horner reached on an
Photos by Zak Lantz/The Punxsutawney Spirit
The Chucks baseball team was firing on all cylinders
on Tuesday en route to a 12-0, five-inning victory over
Obama Academy to advance to the 16-team PIAA
State Championship tournament. (Top photo) Braxton
Giavedoni was one of three Chucks who belted an
extra-base hit, and he added a single for a potent
offensive attack. (Bottom photo) Punxsy was aggressive on the base paths, too, as is evidenced by Dakotah
Byers sliding into third for a stolen base. He ended
up scoring after the throw sailed into left field, and he
also pitched two shutout innings for the Chucks.
Darn near perfect:
Chucks dominant
in win over Obama
There was lots to celebrate
for the Lady Chucks on
Tuesday, as they claimed
a 4-1 victory to earn the
District IX title over St.
Marys in DuBois. (Top
photo) The defense was at
a premium for Punxsy, as
evidenced here with Nicole
DiPietro applying the tag
to catch Maddie LeGrys
stealing at second. (Middle
photo) After the game, the
girls met in the center of
the field for a group hug to
celebrate. (Bottom photo)
High fives all around! Lexxi
Cielo (back) high fives
pitcher Kylee Lingenfelter
after they completed backto-back catches of pop
flies. Lingenfelter pitched a
complete game, and Cielo
had two hits — including a
a two-RBI double that broke
things open for the Lady
Chucks. (Photos by Zak Lantz/
By Zak Lantz
Of The Spirit
The Punxsutawney Spirit)
error when her infield blooper
fell in and out of the second
baseman's glove, putting two
runners on, and after Horner
took second without a throw
down, there were two Lady
Chucks in scoring position with
just one out. Cielo stepped into
the box and delivered with a
double that caught chalk down
the right-field line and plated
both Phillips and Horner.
Ironically, Pifer said the
play almost never happened,
as it came on a missed sign.
"I'll take it," he said. "She was
supposed to do something a
little different, but the results
are there, so I was very happy
for her."
Copelli settled back in to
retire the side with no further
damage done, but Lingenfelter
did her part to make sure the
Lady Dutch didn't bounce
back, retiring them in order for
the third-straight inning.
Punxsy's only hit in the top
of the fifth came on a two-out
frozen rope off the bat off
Shaina Painter that ended up in
left field, but she was stranded
there, and in the home half, St.
Marys cut the Punxsy lead in
half with a run.
Allison Vollmer started the
rally with a one-out single
laced to left field, and Jackie
Lenze belted the next pitch to
the fence in left over Painter's
head. Painter hustled to the
ball though, and after a perfect
relay throw, Lenze was struck
down trying to stretch a twobagger into a triple. Vollmer
scored, but the relay throw
and a nice catch by Painter on
another solid hit to left brought
the rally to an end with Punxsy
still ahead 2-1.
(See Title on Page 7)
Pirates run win streak to five, top Marlins 5-1
PITTSBURGH (AP) — Jeff Locke
worked into the sixth inning in his first win
in more than a month, and the Pittsburgh
Pirates dropped the reeling Miami Marlins
5-1 on Tuesday night.
Locke (3-2) struck out six and walked
four in 5 2/3 shutout innings for his first
victory this season against a team other
than last-place Milwaukee. Neil Walker
hit a two-run homer in Pittsburgh's fifth
straight win, and Josh Harrison and Jung
Ho Kang had two hits apiece.
Miami rookie Jose Urena (0-1) failed
to make it out of the fifth inning in his
first big league start, giving up five runs
in 4 2/3 innings. Martin Prado had an RBI
double and Christian Yelich added two
hits for Miami, which fell to 2-7 under
manager Dan Jennings.
The Marlins recalled the 23-year-old
Urena from Triple-A earlier in the day to
make a spot start for a rotation beset by
injuries. Urena was an impressive 4-0 with
a 1.22 ERA in the minors, but the Pirates
made quick work of his mid-90s fastball.
Kang singled home Harrison to give
Pittsburgh the lead in the first. Harrison —
who has multiple hits in six of his last 11
games — doubled home Jordy Mercer in
the third and Walker then sliced his third
homer of the season into the seats in left
field.
That was more than enough to put
away the Marlins, who have lost 13 of
their last 16 games, a stretch that included
Jennings replacing Mike Redmond. Third
base coach Brett Butler was reassigned
Tuesday morning, but Jennings declined
to get into specifics. Lenny Harris took
over for Butler in what Jennings expects
to be a smooth transition.
There were no obvious issues. Then
again, Harris didn't have much to do.
Locke came in winless in his previous six
starts as his ERA ballooned to 5.28, easily
the worst on the starting staff. He seemed
to find something during a no-decision
against Minnesota last week, settling down
after giving up three runs in the first.
The 2013 All-Star kept it going against
Miami, pitching carefully to Giancarlo
Stanton and taking his chances with the
rest of Miami's struggling lineup. Stanton
went 1 for 2 with a double and two walks.
The Marlins left 10 runners on base,
including at least one in every inning but
the fifth and the ninth.
Pittsburgh has outscored opponents
30-7 during its five-game streak, hitting
.306 in the process. The Pirates improved
to 10-1 in their last 11 games against
Miami at PNC Park.
TRAINER'S ROOM: Marlins: 1B
Michael Morse was placed on the 15-day
disabled list with a strained ligament in his
right ring finger to make room for Urena.
... RHP Jose Fernandez will throw a simulated game on Wednesday as he continues
his comeback from Tommy John surgery.
... RHP Henderson Alvarez is focusing on
strengthening his ailing right shoulder and
has not been cleared to throw. ... RHPs
Jarred Cosart and Mat Latos will work off
the mound later this week.
UP NEXT: The Pirates go for their
second straight series sweep and third of
the season on Wednesday when Gerrit
Cole (6-2, 2.05 ERA) looks for his
seventh win of the season. Cole tossed
a career-high 8 1/3 innings and struck
out 10 in a victory over the New York
Mets last Friday. The Marlins, who have
already been swept five times, have yet to
announce a starter.
DUBOIS — Entering Tuesday's PIAA State Championship
play-in game against Obama Academy, Punxsy had no idea
what to expect in an unfamiliar opponent. But one thing
Punxsy knew was that it had to play its game. The Chucks did
just that in all facets, cruising to a 12-0, five-inning victory
and earning a spot in the 16-team PIAA State Championship
bracket, with the first game to be played next Monday at a
time and location to be determined.
"It's tough coming into a game when you don't know
anything about a team, but we did what we had to do," Punxsy
Head Coach Mike Dickey said after the game. "The pitching
was sharp; the defense was outstanding; and the base running
was sharp, as well. I'm not very happy with how many guys
we left on base, but you can't complain too much when you
score 12 runs. We're just glad to advance."
Punxsy's pitching was nearly flawless, with John Matthews
pitching three perfect innings — and fanning five — to start
things off, while Dakotah Byers closed things out with two
shutout innings of work, allowing just one hit — one that
came with two outs in the fifth.
Matthews started things off on the highest note possible,
fanning the first three hitters he faced in the top of the first to
set Obama Academy down in order in the first. And Punxsy
didn't waste any time giving him some breathing room to
work with, as the Chucks put up four runs in the home half.
The game started with a Braxton Giavedoni double off the
fence, and Dakota Thomas put runners on the corners with
a single in the hole between short and third. Thomas took
second without a throw to put two in scoring position, but
Ryan Sloniger walked to load the bases for clean-up hitter
Ruben Taylor. Taylor made the most of his opportunity, belting
a two-RBI double to right field to score both Giavedoni and
Thomas.
A walk to Byers loaded the bases again, and Lance
Pennington earned an RBI without putting the bat on the ball
by taking a bases-loaded walk to plate Sloniger. Joey DiPietro
capped the four-run inning with a sacrifice fly to left bringing
Taylor home to score.
In the second inning, Matthews let his fielders get in on the
action, spreading it around with three ground balls — a 5-3, a
6-3 and a 4-3 — retiring the side in order.
The first five hitters to come to the plate for Punxsy in
the second also came in to score, with Thomas getting things
rolling by legging out a booted ball to second. The next two
hitters walked, which would have loaded the bases were it not
for Thomas scoring on a wild pitch with Taylor in the box.
Sloniger and Taylor both were issued free passes, and both
scored on a double to left-center off Byers' bat, making it a
7-0 game.
Byers moved up one station with a stolen base, and he
ended up trotting home, as well, when the throw to get him
sailed into left field, making it 8-0. Pennington walked and
moved to second on a passed ball. He moved up to third on
a flyout to right by Brandon Blose, and Matthews helped his
own cause by belting a single to left to plate Pennington and
make it 9-0.
Matthews returned to the mound and regained control,
retiring the first hitter on a 1-3 putout and whiffing the next
two to close out his three perfect frames, and Punxsy added
one more in the third to make it a 10-0 game.
Sloniger led off the inning with a single the opposite way,
and when Taylor belted a single down the left-field line, it was
misplayed, allowing Sloniger to score and Taylor to advance
all the way to third. Byers took some high heat for an HBP,
and Pennington was walked to load the bases, but Obama got
out of the jam from there to keep it a 10-run game.
Byers worked the fourth inning efficiently, earning two
groundouts and a strikeout to send his team back to the dugout,
and the Chucks added two more runs without a hit to their
tally in what would prove to be their final trip to the dish.
The first three hitters of the inning — Giavedoni, Thomas
and Sloniger — reached on free passes, and after Taylor
was called out on the infield fly rule, Byers hit one to short
that was too hot to handle, leading to an E-6 and bringing
Giavedoni in to score, making it 11-0. Pennington then
plated the Chucks' final run by belting a sacrifice fly to the
(See Chucks on Page 7)
Spirit Sports
Wednesday, May 27, 2015
Steelers wide receiver Brown focused on 2015
PITTSBURGH (AP) — The Pittsburgh
Steelers trickled off the field in small
groups, sweaty and a little spent from the
first real day of football in nearly five
months, even if it was just practice in
shorts.
Antonio Brown lingered, as happens
whenever the All-Pro wide receiver has
his No. 84 jersey pulled on. He spent
20 minutes helping linebacker Sean
Spence with a series of stretches and
sit-ups.
Brown hardly looked like a guy ready
to hold out for more money.
The three-time Pro Bowler insisted
Tuesday he has no plans to get into a
contract showdown with the Steelers
even after questions surfaced during the
offseason about whether he would skip
training camp in hopes of landing a raise.
"I'll be there at training camp so you
guys get ready to see me," Brown said
with a smile.
Brown led the NFL with 129 receptions and 1,698 yards in 2014, both team
records. He has three seasons remaining
on the six-year, $43 million deal he signed
in 2012, one that looks like an absolute
bargain for one of the league's most
productive players.
All Brown has done over the last two
years is catch 239 passes and 21 touchdowns while developing into one of the
most dynamic open-field threats in the
NFL. He is also the only receiver left on
the Steelers from a group that included
Mike Wallace and Emmanuel Sanders.
Pittsburgh offered Brown an extension
in 2012 before letting Wallace and then
Sanders walk in free agency. It appears
to be one of the wisest investments in the
league considering Brown will make less
in 2015 than Wallace, Dwayne Bowe and
Greg Jennings.
Brown consistently brushed aside the
idea that he's underpaid, stressing the
business-side of his career is up to his
agent Drew Rosenhaus.
"This organization has been nothing but
first class to me, believing in my talent and
my skills since I got here," said Brown,
taken in the sixth round of the 2010 draft.
"And I'm just here to pay them back with
my work ethic."
That has never been a question for
Brown, who wore his game pants during
the first two hours of spring practice, a
habit he's carried with him throughout his
career.
"This is a community that I love,"
Brown said. "My kids go to school here
and I want to keep a good reputation.
Money is not important to me. I've got
enough. The organization has extremely
blessed me. I'm here to play football and
that's what I want to be known as."
Quarterback Ben Roethlisberger
laughed at the idea of Brown — a notorious workaholic — missing a chance to
work on his craft.
"He doesn't want ... his teammates to
think that he doesn't want to be here,"
Roethlisberger said. "Because he wants
to be here for us. That's what makes him
special. We all believe that that is who he
is."
Entering the middle of his prime while
coming off a year in which the Steelers
won the AFC North and finished second
in total offense, the only numbers Brown
is focused on are 2015, not the ones on
his contract.
"Every year I've got something to
prove," he said. "I've got guys here
wanting to take my spots. I've got guys
around the league trying to be better than
me. I've got to stay hungry."
Not that testing Pittsburgh's front
office works anyway. The Steelers never
re-negotiate contracts with multiple years
on them for players other than their quarterbacks, and they even changed that
tactic when they decided to not re-sign
Roethlisberger until this spring when he
had just season to go.
NOTES: RB Le'Veon Bell said he
doesn't know when the NFL will hear
the appeal of his three-game suspension
following his arrest on marijuana and
DUI charges last August. Bell added
he is close to 100 percent after missing
Pittsburgh's playoff loss to Baltimore
with a hyperextended knee in January.
... S Mike Mitchell underwent
offseason surgery to repair a torn groin that
limited him for much of 2014. Mitchell
there is still occasional pain but he
expects it to dissipate going forward.
Mariota adapting to huddle, complex plays with Titans
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP)
— Marcus Mariota never had
to worry about huddling up
to call plays at Oregon — he
and the Ducks simply glanced
to the sideline for what to run
next.
Now with the Tennessee
Titans, it's up to Mariota to
huddle up his teammates and
call a play only he has received
from the sideline. The play can
be as short as three words or as
long as 11.
"For me, learning a whole
new system, I have to go over
it constantly so that I know
what's going in," Mariota said.
Mariota showed his
command Tuesday as the
Titans took the field for their
first organized workout this
offseason. Whisenhunt says
that hasn't been an issue since
Mariota arrived as the No. 2
pick overall.
"He's obviously comfortable doing that," Whisenhunt
said. "He fits naturally in
there."
NFL quarterbacks get plays
called into their helmets from
a coach on the other end of the
radio, and the Titans also have
given Mariota a wristband as a
backup aid for calling plays.
"He works very hard at it
outside of his time here, so I
think the biggest thing is just
time with him," Whisenhunt
said of Mariota. "It'll click.
He's just got to continue to
hear it as we continue to build,
and we're going to continue to
throw things on him."
On his first day with all
his new teammates, Mariota
showed off both the strong
arm and speed as a runner that
helped him win the Heisman
Trophy along with The
Associated Press player of the
year. He took off for a 30-yard
run at one point, though he
also lost a fumble along with
an interception.
Whisenhunt called it a
typical first day with Mariota
just one of many new players
on offense. Yet Whisenhunt
expects the rookie quarterback's speed and ability to run
for big gains to help him earn
his teammates' respect pretty
quickly. The respect Mariota
had from his teammates is
something the Titans noticed
when scouting the quarterback
Chucks
(Continued from Page Six)
warning track in center to bring
Thomas in to score.
A 4-3 putout and a comebacker made two quick outs
for Byers and put Punxsy
one out from perfection, but
a well-placed hit by Ryan
Hogan led to an infield
single despite a great effort
by Thomas in the hole,
trying to make the tough
play.
Byers retired the next hitter,
though, to bring the game
to a close and push Punxsy
into the tournament. Going
forward, Dickey said Punxsy's
mentality will be what it has
been all year: The next game
matters most.
"One game at a time," he
said. "Jimmy V. used to say
'survive and advance.' That's
what we're looking to do
Tuesday
• District IX Softball Finals: Punxsy 4, St. Marys 1
• PIAA Baseball Play-in: Punxsy 12, Obama Academy 0, 5 innings
Next Monday
• PIAA baseball opening round: Punxsy vs. TBD
• PIAA softball openig round: Punxsy vs. TBD
MLB Standings, Scores & Schedule
AMERICAN LEAGUE
W L PCT
East Division
Tew York
24 22 .522
Tampa Bay
24 22 .522
Boston
21 24 .467
Baltimore
20 23 .465
Toronto
22 26 .458
Central Division
Kansas City
28 17 .622
Minnesota
26 18 .591
Detroit
26 20 .565
Cleveland
20 24 .455
Chicago
19 24 .442
West Division
Houston
30 17 .638
Los Angeles 23 22 .511
Texas
22 23 .489
Seattle
21 23 .477
Oakland
17 30 .362
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W L PCT
East Division
Washington
27 19 .587
New York
26 21 .553
Atlanta
22 22 .500
Philadelphia 19 29 .396
Miami
18 29 .383
Central Division
St. Louis
29 16 .644
Chicago
25 20 .556
Pittsburgh
23 22 .511
Cincinnati
19 26 .422
Milwaukee
16 30 .348
West Division
Los Angeles 27 17 .614
San Francisco 26 20 .565
Arizona
21 23 .477
San Diego
21 25 .457
Colorado
18 26 .409
GB
—
—
2½
2½
3
—
1½
2½
7½
8
—
6
7
7½
13
Today’s Games & Probable Starters (American League)
Texas (Lewis 4-2) at Cleveland (Carrasco 5-4), 12:10 p.m.
Chicago White Sox (Samardzija 4-2) at Toronto (Estrada 1-3), 12:37
Kansas City (C.Young 4-0) at N.Y. Yankees (Pineda 5-2), 1:05 p.m.
Boston (Porcello 4-3) at Minnesota (P.Hughes 3-4), 1:10 p.m.
Seattle (F.Hernandez 7-1) at Tampa Bay (Archer 5-4), 1:10 p.m.
Detroit (Simon 5-2) at Oakland (Kazmir 2-3), 3:35 p.m.
Houston (McHugh 5-2) at Baltimore (U.Jimenez 3-3), 4:35 p.m.
San Diego (Cashner 1-7) at L.A. Angels (Richards 4-2), 10:05 p.m.
Today’s Games & Probable Starters (National League)
Colorado (K.Kendrick 1-6) at Cincinnati (Leake 2-3), 12:35 p.m.
Miami (Undecided) at Pittsburgh (G.Cole 6-2), 12:35 p.m.
Philadelphia (O’Sullivan 1-3) at N.Y. Mets (Syndergaard 1-2), 1:10
San Francisco (Vogelsong 3-2) at Milwaukee (Fiers 1-4), 1:40 p.m.
Washington (Scherzer 5-3) at Chicago Cubs (Lester 4-2), 8:05 p.m.
Arizona (Collmenter 3-5) at St. Louis (Lynn 3-4), 8:15 p.m.
San Diego (Cashner 1-7) at L.A. Angels (Richards 4-2), 10:05 p.m.
Atlanta (A.Wood 2-2) at L.A. Dodgers (Greinke 5-1), 10:10 p.m.
Thursday’s Games
White Sox at Baltimore, 1:05
White Sox at Baltimore, 4:35
Boston at Texas, 8:05 p.m.
Detroit at L.A. Angels, 10:05
Yankees at Oakland, 10:05 p.m.
Cleveland at Seattle, 10:10 p.m.
Thursday’s Games
Pittsburgh at San Diego, 10:10
Atlanta at San Francisco, 10:15
NHL PLAYOFFS AT A GLANCE
Sunday
Tampa Bay 2, N.Y. Rangers 0, Tampa Bay leads series 3-2
Monday
Anaheim 5, Chicago 4, OT, Anaheim leads series 3-2
every game this time of year.
It doesn't have to be pretty, but
if you survive, that's what you
aimed to do. We have a few
things to shore up, but we're
still playing."
Today
Western Conference Game 6: Anaheim at Chicago, 8 p.m.
Friday
x-Tampa Bay at N.Y. Rangers, 8 p.m.
Saturday
x-Chicago at Anaheim 8 p.m.
NBA PLAYOFFS AT A GLANCE
Sunday
Cleveland 114, Atlanta 111, OT, Cleveland leads series 3-0
Monday
Houston 128, Golden State 115, Golden State leads series 3-1
Today
Western Conference Game 5: Houston at Golden State, 9 p.m.
Thursday
x-Eastern Conference Game 6: Cleveland at Atlanta, 8:30 p.m.
Montoya earns $2.4 million for Indy 500 win
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Juan Pablo Montoya was all
smiles at the victory banquet Monday night where he celebrated his second Indy 500 win in three tries.
Also, tribute was paid to team owner Roger Penske for
winning a 16th race at Indy.
"You don't understand," the Colombian driver said. "When
you run for Team Penske, you're part of something bigger.
When we win, we all win together."
Montoya earned $2,449,055 for his win. His earnings
were part of a $13,397,315 overall purse. The check amounts
were announced at the annual victory dinner Monday at the
Indianapolis Motor Speedway.
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—
2
6
7
9
Tuesday’s Games
Pittsburgh 5, Miami 1
Chicago Cubs 3, Washington 2
Cincinnati 2, Colorado 1
Mets 5, Philadelphia 4, 10 inn
San Francisco at Milwaukee (n)
Arizona at St. Louis (n)
San Diego at L.A. Angels (n)
Atlanta at L.A. Dodgers (n)
Tuesday
Eastern Conference Game 5: Atlanta at Cleveland (late finish)
DuBois
—
4
6
10
13½
Tuesday’s Games
Houston 4, Baltimore 1
N.Y. Yankees 5, Kansas City 1
Toronto 10, White Sox 9
Seattle at Tampa Bay (n)
Texas at Cleveland (n)
Boston at Minnesota (n)
Detroit at Oakland (n)
San Diego at L.A. Angels (n)
and when the ball skipped
past the left fielder, Phillips
scampered all the way to third.
Then, with two outs, Horner
snuck a single past a diving
second baseman to bring
Phillips in to score and make
it a 4-1 game. Copelli finally
got Cielo on strikes in her
fourth plate appearance, but
the damage had been done,
and Punxsy held a three-run
lead heading to the final half
frame.
"Those extra runs were
big," Pifer said. "They're a
good team with good pitching
and good hitters. They were
having good at-bats, and
they're always dangerous.
Any bit of insurance is great.
Kylee's a good pitcher, but
softball is a game of breaks.
Those can happen either way,
so it's always good to have the
insurance."
John T. Smelko, D.M.D.
—
1½
4
9
9½
Monday’s Games
Colorado 5, Cincinnati 4
N.Y. Mets 6, Philadelphia 3
San Francisco 8, Milwaukee 4
Washington 2, Chicago Cubs 1
St. Louis 3, Arizona 2, 10 inn
Pittsburgh 4, Miami 2
L.A. Dodgers 6, Atlanta 3
L.A. Angels 4, San Diego 3
Ishman ended up in scoring
position.
Shania DeFoor put down
another bunt, but the Lady
Dutch opted to trade the base
runner for a run and allowed
her to reach safely to load the
bases. From there, though,
Copelli regained her composure and retired the next two
hitters she faced to keep the
game in reach at 3-1.
Morgan Krug reached
safely for the Lady Dutch,
earning the first walk off
Lingenfelter with two outs in
the sixth, but she was retired
on the next play when a ball
off Geitner's bat struck her
while she was running to
second, retiring the side.
Punxsy added one last
insurance run in the top of
the seventh to make it a 4-1
game. Phillips got it started
with a one-out single to left,
Two quick outs put
Lingenfelter one out away
from the victory, but a single
that fell into right field and
then skipped past Adamson
put Vollmer on third with
two outs and gave the Lady
Dutch one last gasp of life.
Lingenfelter took care of that
last chance, though, by striking
out Lenze swinging to end
the game and give the Lady
Chucks the title.
The victory guarantees
the Lady Chucks their spot
in the 16-team PIAA State
Championship tournament,
which will start on Monday
at a time and location to be
determined against the top
seed out of District VII.
GB
Monday’s Games
N.Y. Yankees 14, Kansas City 1
Baltimore 4, Houston 3
Minnesota 7, Boston 2
Oakland 4, Detroit 0
Texas 10, Cleveland 8
Toronto 6, Chicago White Sox 0
Seattle 4, Tampa Bay 1
L.A. Angels 4, San Diego 3
Tuesday
Eastern Conference Game 6: Rangers at Tampa Bay (late finish)
NEW YORK (AP) — Embattled general manager Ruben
Amaro Jr. apologized Tuesday to Philadelphia Phillies fans
for saying they "don't understand the game" and the "process"
that goes into constructing a team. Speaking before the Phillies
played the New York Mets at Citi Field, Amaro acknowledged
his comments "caused a bit of a firestorm" in Philadelphia.
"I'd like to apologize to the fan because I'm a fan myself and
I understand. I understand the passion and the knowledge that
our fans have for our game and the other major sports — all the
sports in Philly," he said. "So, I don't think the comments were
meant to disparage our fans by any stretch of the imagination.
The Lady Chucks left the
bases loaded in the sixth, but
they did manage to add one
insurance run to make it a 3-1
game. Adamson reached on a
leadoff walk after working the
count full, and after Horner
squared to bunt her to second,
she ended up doing the job by
taking one in the leg to put two
on. Cielo kept up her productive day at the plate with a
sacrifice bunt to put two in
scoring position.
That play proved to be
vital to Punxsy adding one, as
on the next play, Ishman put
one down in front of the
plate, and when the Lady
Dutch tried to catch Adamson
leaning too far off third, the
throw back down hit her in
the helmet and skipped into
left field. Adamson came
in to score, and Horner and
right shoulder is healthy after
costing him the final three
games last season, and he also
worked hard this offseason
to be stronger. But the
quarterbacks' lockers are
right next to each other, and
Mettenberger said Mariota is
really sharp.
"Really he doesn't need a
lot of my help," Mettenberger
said. "He's been picking up
things pretty quickly. If he
asks, I'll definitely help."
But it's Mariota that has
created more excitement
for this franchise than the
Titans have seen since drafting
Vince Young at No. 3 overall
in 2006. His jersey is selling
left and right, and he is the
quarterback who threw for
4,454 yards last season alone
for Oregon.
Tight end Delanie Walker
cautioned Tuesday was only
the first day of organized team
activities for a franchise trying
to improve after going 2-14 in
2014.
"He got more to show, and
we all going to be watching
to see what he brings to the
table," Walker said.
7
PAHS Scores & Schedule
I probably used my words incorrectly or poorly. So I want to
apologize for that."
Already criticized by fans eager to see the club rebuild
following consecutive 73-89 finishes, Amaro told CSNPhilly.
com for a story published Tuesday that he thinks the Phillies
will be conservative in promoting top prospects Aaron Nola and
Zach Eflin through the minors.
As for fans who want to see the team be more aggressive?
"They don't understand the game," Amaro said, according
to CSNPhilly.com. "They don't understand the process. There's
a process. And then they (expletive) and complain because we
don't have a plan. There's a plan in place, and we're sticking
with the plan. We can't do what's best for the fan. We have
to do what's best for the organization so the fan can reap the
benefit of it later on. That's the truth."
Phillies general manager apologizes
to fans for disparaging comments
Title
(Continued from Page Six)
during his pro day at Oregon.
"They like having guys
that can help them win, and I
think they see that in Marcus,"
Whisenhunt said.
The rookie quarterback isn't
much of a talker, at least not in
the locker room. Wide receiver
Kendall Wright called Mariota
someone who talks only when
spoken to first, something that
changes when they head onto
the field.
"He kind of lets his playing
do the talking," Wright said.
"Once he puts his helmet
and jersey on, he's a different
player. It's straight football."
The Titans have made it
clear Mariota is expected to
be their starter Sept. 13 at
Tampa Bay ahead of Zach
Mettenberger, their sixthround draft pick a year ago
out of LSU. For a franchise
that started three quarterbacks
last season, the Titans also
are expected to keep veteran
Charlie Whitehurst around
too giving them three on the
roster.
Mettenberger doesn't plan
on ceding the starting job
to Mariota. Mettenberger's
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• Submit your drawing of your dad on a
plain white 8 1/2 x11 piece of paper
• Markers, crayons and dark pencil
drawings will be accepted
• Be sure your drawing is not too small
• All ages are eligible to enter
• We must receive your drawing by
Monday, June 8 at 5 p.m.
• Please put your name, address and
phone number on the back of your
drawing.
• Drop off your drawing at
The Spirit office at 510 Pine St. or
mail to The Spirit, P.O. Box 444,
Punxsutawney, PA 15767
All entries will be featured in
an upcoming special issue.
One winner will be selected
by a random drawing from
all participants.
Annabelle Wallis, Ward Horton.
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Construction
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10
The Punxsutawney Spirit
COMICS AND FEATURES
Sense & Sensitivity ...
Teen reader can't make
sense of adults' text speak
D
EAR HARRIETTE: I am
18, and I baby-sit frequently.
Whenever certain parents text
me, they use stereotypical "text
speak," like "LMK" or "2NITE"
or "GRT" — I cannot even understand it! It is
incredibly informal, and I have never communicated with them using any slang or lingo.
Are they trying to relate to me by texting me
this way? Should I continue to decipher, or is
there a polite way to tell them I will understand if they message me
normally? — Bridging the
Gap, Pittsburgh
DEAR BRIDGING
THE GAP: I can feel
you cringing as you are
receiving these messages
as I can also see these
parents working overtime
to attempt to seem hip
and cool. Yes, you are the
one who needs to address
this. Use great sensitivity
Harriette
because they are making an
COLE
effort to talk to you the way
they believe you communicate using text messaging. Tell them that
you have noticed that they often use abbreviations when they are texting you, and you
don't always know what these acronyms mean.
Ask them to please write to you straight. That
way, you will not run the risk of mistakenly
following a direction they did not give you, or
otherwise misinterpreting their communication. When you do not understand a text from
them, always ask for clarification.
DEAR HARRIETTE: Recently, a new
clothing store opened up in the town I live
in. Previously, every teenage girl had ordered
clothing from the store's website or gone to the
store in the next state over because there was
never one close by. The opening seems ideal,
except no one wants to go in because of the
employees. The store has, seemingly unknowingly, hired the "mean girls" from the town
high school. They are very public about loving
their jobs, and they turn away business from
the store because no one wants to interact with
them. Do I have the responsibility of telling
the store owner why he isn't getting business,
or should I not meddle? I have been a part of
this town my whole life. I go to school with
these girls, so I know what I'm talking about.
I mean, at least 200 girls have said they won't
go in because of them. But I don't want to be
a gossip. — Should I Tell, Westchester, New
York
DEAR SHOULD I TELL: As a member
of your town, you definitely should speak up.
Find out who the owner or manager is and
ask for a meeting at a time when the girls in
question are not at work. Tell this person that
you are happy the store came to your town and
that you are concerned about their future sales
because of the reputation these girls have at
the local high school.
Make it clear that your intention is not to
spread gossip but that you know that a sizeable number of girls have said they will not
step foot in the door because these girls work
there and they are rude. It will be in the store
owners' hands after that.
Lifestylist and author Harriette Cole is
president and creative director of Harriette
Cole Media. You can send questions to [email protected].
Peanuts
Hagar
Arlo & Janis
Blondie
Bridge
When overtricks count, get lucky
D
By Phillip Alder
orothy Dix, the
pseudonym of journalist Elizabeth
Meriwether Gilmer,
who died in 1951, said,
"There isn't a single human
being who hasn't plenty to
cry over, and the trick is to
make the laughs outweigh the
tears."
At the bridge table, if one
side is laughing, the other
is usually crying. Today's
deal occurred during a pairs
event, where overtricks were
important because each
score was compared with the
other pairs holding the same
cards.
How should South try for
the maximum in this deal? He
is in four spades, and West
leads the heart queen.
North used a transfer bid
to show five-plus spades and
at least zero points. South,
with a maximum, four-card
spade support and a doubleton,
jumped to three spades -- this
is known as a superaccept.
North, who had been unde-
cided between inviting and
insisting on game, now had
no qualms in bidding four
spades.
South saw four losers: one
spade and three clubs. If he
had immediately led a trump,
the defenders surely would
have taken those tricks.
Instead, declarer had to try
to jettison those club losers.
He won the first trick, cashed
dummy's diamond queen (the
honor from the shorter hand
first), played a diamond to his
ace, discarded a club on the
diamond king, and, because
it could not cost, pitched
another club on the diamond
jack.
If it had been ruffed with a
low spade, South would have
broken even. Here, though,
East had to ruff with his spade
ace, so the contract made
with an overtrick for a tied
top.
Frank & Ernest
Beetle Bailey
NEA Crossword Puzzle
thatababy
Grizzwells
Born Loser
Alley Oop
Wednesday, May 27, 2015
The Punxsutawney Spirit
COMICS AND FEATURES
Wednesday, May 27, 2015
Wedding, a new buggy horse “Mighty,”
and birthday highlight week
Word Sleuth
(Elizabeth’s friend) deep-fried
blue gill fish for our supper.
Elizabeth made French fries
to go with the fish. I appreciated getting out of the cooking
several nights.
Friday, Rhoda (a friend of
our daughters), brought lunch
for the men working here
on our pole building. Her
boyfriend Nate works with
the crew and she wanted to
surprise him. She served ranch
potatoes, sloppy Joe sandwiches, pork and beans, ice
cream, and cake. I’ll share her
recipe for ranch potatoes.
By Lovina Eicher
T
he sun is shining,
bringing a little
warmth with the
chilly weather. Our
mercury on the
thermometer dipped down
all the way to 35 degrees this
morning. Brrr! Without heat
in the house, it felt good to
wear a sweater. Even Izzy
(Elizabeth’s Yorkie) is trying to
find a spot to lie where the sun
is shining into the house. This
is the second day of this cool
weather. I’m hoping the rest
of the week will be warmer, as
we would like to put the rest of
my garden out.
Today is Elizabeth’s last
day of work at the factory until
June 1. They get Friday and
next week off, and tomorrow
she is taking the day off to go
to her friend Linda’s wedding.
Timothy and Elizabeth will
be evening servers at the
wedding. Elizabeth has to
wear mint green and Timothy
a white shirt with black pants
and vest.
Next week is nephew John’s
wedding, and Elizabeth and
Verena’s teal-colored dresses
have to be cut out and sewn
yet. Timothy also needs to
wear a teal-colored shirt for
this wedding. Elizabeth will
sew all three outfits, so I’m so
glad she gets some time off.
The wedding of nephew
Levi and Barbara is now
history. We arrived home
around 11 p.m. A little over
four hours later, my husband
Joe had to get up to go work at
the factory. Needless to say, he
was ready for an early bedtime
Friday evening.
It was a nice, cool and sunny
day for the wedding. Fried
chicken was on the menu, so
the cool weather made it easier
on the cooks who had to fry the
chicken. My job was to
help with the mashed potatoes. They had over 50
cooks so it didn’t seem
like I had too much to do
that day. Daughter Verena
was a table waiter and had to
wear light blue. The cooks all
wore royal blue.
All eight of us siblings were
at the wedding. Brother Amos
had a three-year-old horse at
the wedding that he trained
and was going to sell. Joe and
I decided to buy him, as we
are in need of another horse.
His name is “Mighty,” and he
is a very gentle horse. Nieces
Elizabeth and Emma’s special
friends, Menno and Manuel,
brought “Mighty” along up
with them to our house on
Friday evening. It was greatly
appreciated.
Joe and I took Mighty
to town on Saturday to get
groceries. He’s so calm around
the traffic and the farm equipment. That means a lot to have
a horse who handles traffic
well, keeping us safe and
sound.
Daughter Lovina had her
11th birthday on Monday
May 18. She wanted to make
her own cake. She used a
heart-shaped pan. I helped
her decorate it. We had grilled
hamburgers and macaroni and
cheese, along with the cake
and ice cream in honor of
her birthday. Joseph, 12, and
Lovina made cheddar and sour
cream popcorn for Lovina to
take to school to treat her classmates. Some of her classmates
asked her to bring the popcorn
that she makes for a birthday
treat.
On Friday evening, Mose
(Susan’s friend) brought brats
and grilled them for our supper.
Then, on Saturday, Timothy
Ranch Potatoes
6 - 8 potatoes, peeled and
chunked
1/2 cup sour cream
1 cup ranch dressing
1/4 cup cooked, crumbled
bacon
2 tablespoons parsley
1 cup shredded cheese (plus
extra for top)
Cook potatoes in salt water
just until tender. Drain and set
aside. Combine other ingredients; toss gently with potatoes. Place in greased 9-by-13
baking dish. Sprinkle with
additional cheese. Bake at
350° for 40 to 45 minutes.
Lovina Eicher is an Old
Order Amish writer, cook, wife
and mother of eight. Formerly
writing as The Amish Cook,
Eicher inherited that column
from her mother, Elizabeth
Coblentz, who wrote from 1991
to 2002. Readers can contact
Eicher at PO Box 1689, South
Holland, IL 60473 (please
include a self-addressed
stamped envelope for a reply)
or at LovinasAmishKitchen@
MennoMedia.org.
Celebrity Cipher
Whole-wheat muffin a perfect complement to crisp salad
N
By Alicia Ross
othing tastes better to me in
the warmer months than a
salad with a hearty muffin
as a side. The problem with
this is that I kill any calorie-saving points by eating a salad when
adding in the oftentimes fat-filled muffin.
Sure, it tastes amazing, but it's more of a
dessert than the side of bread I crave. I
want hearty, not heavy.
So I headed into the kitchen to create a
whole-wheat muffin packed with yummy
oats and applesauce (no half white flour
and half wheat flour in this one). I did not
add oil or butter -- only one egg. If you
like, you can substitute two egg whites
instead. But best of all, these muffins do
not leave a heavy bricklike feeling in your
tummy an hour later.
Of course, these muffins are a delicious
start to your day, or a perfect afternoon
snack with tea. But I still like them best
with a green salad loaded with summer
fruits and vegetables. Just pour a glass of
sun tea, and summer patio dining is here!
Enjoy!
Menu: Crisp green salad with
fruits and veggies; Whole-Wheat Oat
Muffin; Sun tea
Whole-Wheat Oat Muffins
Start to finish: 20 minutes preparation;
30 minutes baking time
Yield: Makes 12 muffins
1 cup old-fashioned oats
1 cup 1 percent milk
1 cup unsweetened applesauce
1 egg, beaten
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 cup whole-wheat flour
2 teaspoons baking soda
1/2 cup light brown sugar, firmly
packed
1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Place
paper muffin cups in a 12-cup muffin tin
and set aside.
In a medium bowl, combine the oats,
milk, applesauce, egg and vanilla extract;
stir well. Let sit for 10 minutes.
In another large bowl, combine the
whole-wheat flour, baking soda, brown
sugar and cinnamon. Stir well to break up
any lumps in the sugar. When oat mixture
has rested for 10 minutes, stir it into the
flour mixture. Spoon the mixture into the
prepared muffin cups and bake for 25 to
30 minutes. Serve warm, or cover and
serve at room temperature.
Approximate values per muffin: 132
calories, 1.5 g fat (trace saturated), 15
mg cholesterol, 4 g protein, 25 g carbohydrates, 2 g dietary fiber, 227 mg sodium.
Big Nate
Y
our past actions, along with the
lessons and experience you've
gained, will play a role in the decisions you make and the path you
follow. Don't get discouraged by
negativity. A positive attitude will influence
what unfolds.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) — Don't allow
a minor disagreement to escalate. A re-examination of the events will
reveal that you may have
overreacted as well. Be
willing to compromise. A
career change is looking
positive.
CANCER (June
21-July 22) — Put some
distance between you and
uncooperative or moody
people. A good way to
avoid controversy and
complaints is to keep busy
taking care of your responEugenia
sibilities and unfinished
LAST
business.
LEO (July 23-Aug.
22) — An unforeseen event
will have a strong influence on your direction.
Someone with something to offer will tempt
you. Play it safe, take your time and don't
appear too eager.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) — Major
changes are forthcoming. With the right preparation, you will outshine the competition and win
Monty
Soup to Nutz
Kit ‘n Carlyle
11
Herman
the respect of your colleagues and superiors.
Make plans to celebrate your accomplishments.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) — Recent
emotional matters will bring you down.
Disregard critical comments or judgmental
people. Spend time with the people who love
you, and don't worry about material things.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) — It's time
you put your talents to good use. Connect with
creative individuals and develop a one-of-akind idea. Social events will turn out to be quite
informative.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) — You
will be tempted by an unusual offer. Be sure that
you have all the facts straight before you make a
commitment. Things are looking up financially,
but that is no reason to overspend.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) — Join a
group that shares your moral and ethical beliefs.
A humanitarian or environmental cause is a
great way to expand your friendships and test
your leadership skills.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) — Don't
allow a dose of nostalgia to ruin your day. There
are many avenues to explore and lots of interesting people to meet. A younger individual will
provide inspiration.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) — Joint
ventures look promising. Consult your financial
adviser about ways to reduce debt and increase
your savings. The knowledge you gain through
a business meeting or trip will be most helpful.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) — Don't go
public regarding your personal secrets. You
need to do some soul-searching to discover how
you really feel before you share anything with
others. Don't fold under pressure.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) — Romance
is on the rise. Revitalize your self-esteem with
a personal update or makeover. You will turn
heads and receive interesting offers if you get
out, socialize and share your ideas.
Date Book
Today is the 147th day of 2015 and the 69th
day of spring.
• TODAY'S HISTORY: In 1937, San
Francisco's Golden Gate Bridge opened to
pedestrian traffic.
In 1999, a United Nations tribunal indicted
Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic for
crimes against humanity.
In 2006, a 6.3-magnitude earthquake on the
island of Java, Indonesia, killed nearly 6,000
people and injured more than 38,000.
• TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS: "Wild Bill"
Hickok (1837-1876), lawman/gambler;
Dashiell Hammett (1894-1961), author; Rachel
Carson (1907-1964), biologist/environmentalist; Hubert Humphrey (1911-1978), politician; Vincent Price (1911-1993), actor; Sam
Snead (1912-2002), golfer; Henry Kissinger
(1923- ), politician; Adam Carolla (1964- ),
TV personality/radio host; Paul Bettany (1971), actor; Jack McBrayer (1973- ), actor; Andre
3000 (1975- ), rapper/actor; Jamie Oliver
(1975- ), chef/activist; Chris Colfer (1990- ),
actor.
• TODAY'S FACT: President Franklin D.
Roosevelt and British Prime Minister Winston
Churchill were not only Allied leaders in
World War II; they were seventh cousins once
removed, through Roosevelt's mother.
• TODAY'S SPORTS: In 1968, Major
League Baseball awarded Montreal, Canada,
the first MLB franchise outside the United
States (Montreal Expos).
• TODAY'S QUOTE: "Intellectuals are
cynical, and cynics have never built a cathedral." — Henry Kissinger
• TODAY'S MOON: Between first quarter
moon (May 25) and full moon (June 2).
12
NATION / WORLD
The Punxsutawney Spirit
Police: Ex-death row inmate Cooper dead of apparent suicide
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — An Indiana
woman who was once the nation's
youngest person on death row but whose
sentence was eventually commuted
to a prison term was found dead in
Indianapolis on Tuesday.
Indianapolis police said 45-year-old
Paula Cooper was found dead of an
apparently self-inflicted gunshot wound
outside a residence on the city's northwest side. Cooper had been released
from prison about two years ago, after
the Indiana Supreme Court set aside her
death sentence and gave her a 60-year
prison term.
Cooper was 16 when she was
sentenced to death in 1986 after
confessing to her role in the murder of
a 78-year-old Gary Bible studies teacher
the year before. Cooper admitted stabbing 78-year-old Ruth Pelke 33 times
with a 12-inch butcher knife in a robbery
that netted four youths $10 and an old
car. Cooper was 15 at the time the crime
was committed.
Her death sentence enraged human
rights activists in the U.S. and Europe
and drew a plea for clemency from Pope
John Paul II. In 1988, a priest delivered
a petition to Indianapolis with more than
2 million signatures protesting Cooper's
sentence.
Pelke's grandson, Bill Pelke, who
organized opposition to the death penalty
after his grandmother's killing, said
he was devastated to learn of Cooper's
death. He said he worked to help Cooper
after realizing that's what his grandmother would have wanted.
"My grandmother would have been
appalled she was on death row and that
there was so much hate and anger and
desire for her to die. I was convinced my
grandmother would have had love and
compassion for Paula and her family,"
he said in a telephone interview from
Anchorage, Alaska, where he runs
Journey of Hope ... From Violence to
Healing, which supports alternatives to
the death penalty.
Pelke said he visited with Cooper
while she was in prison and had last
spoke to her last August. He was expecting
to hear from Cooper next month, when
she was scheduled to be released from
parole. He said she had expressed an
interest in speaking for his organization.
"I have no idea what was going on
in her life. I thought she was doing well
from everything I had heard," he said.
"I had hoped she would travel with us.
She had always told me she wanted to
help young people to avoid the pitfalls
that she had fallen into. She said she
knew she had done something terrible
to society and she wanted to give back."
Two years after Cooper was sentenced
to death, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled
in an unrelated case that those under 16
at the time of an offense couldn't receive
the death penalty. The court said such
sentences were cruel and unusual punishment and thus unconstitutional.
Indiana lawmakers later passed a law
raising the minimum age limit for execution from 10 years to 16, and in 1988,
the state's high court set aside Cooper's
death sentence and ordered her to serve
60 years in prison.
Cooper's sentence was reduced due to
her behavior in prison, where she earned
a bachelor's degree. She was released
from prison on June 17, 2013, after
spending 28 years behind bars.
Wednesday, May 27, 2015
Britain faces tension over push for less EU control
PARIS (AP) — British Prime Minister David Cameron
heads to continental Europe this week on a campaign to curtail
EU involvement in national affairs. France and Germany, meanwhile, want to move in the opposite direction.
Which formula is more likely to ensure the EU's survival?
That's the issue Cameron will face on his trip — and the existential question the EU is facing in the months to come.
Cameron is visiting Denmark, the Netherlands, France,
Germany and Poland as he launches his mission to scale back
the EU's political powers over member states on sensitive issues
such as migration and welfare. Without such changes, he says,
his compatriots may vote to pull Britain out of the EU altogether in a referendum he has promised before 2017.
But France and Germany, whose post-war alliance formed
the backbone of today's European Union, have their own
mission.
They sent an outline for closer economic cooperation in a
letter to European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker
reported by Le Monde. Juncker's spokesman Margaritis Schinas
welcomed the idea Tuesday as "key" to solidifying the shared
euro currency and European unity.
Cameron's official spokesman, Jean-Christophe Gray, said
Tuesday that discussions about the eurozone shouldn't affect
Cameron's trip this week. Britain does not use the euro.
But he conceded that Cameron's trip might not be easy.
"Of course you'll have reports of ups and downs," Gray told
reporters in London. "But he is very clear about the mandate
that he has and his determination to secure the best deal for the
British people."
2015 LOCAL RACING
KEEPING YOU ON TRACK WITH ALL THE ACTION
MARION CENTER SPEEDWAY
555 POTTS ROAD, MARION CENTER, 15759
May 23, 2015
Marion Center Speedway celebrated Memorial Day with a special
King of the Hill race for the Lias Tire Super Late Models. The
two-lap drag race between two competitors at a time whittled down
the competition until only two were remaining to make a 5-lap race
for King of the Hill. The Memorial Day King of the Hill was Mike
Blose from New Bethlehem. Blose is a regular contender at the
track and was there Saturday night to compete for Billy Eash who
was unable to attend the triple point night. Blose eliminated Dave
Blazavich and Rod Phillips to become the first contender for the
“Kingship‚“ and Wally Fox went up against Shawn Claar and Ken
Schaltenbrand to compete against Blose for the “throne.” Blose
took Fox in the run for the money and kingly bragging rights.
Here’s are the highlights of Saturday night’s races.
Wally Fox from Cooperstown may not be the Lias Tire Late
Model King of the Hill, but he was the winner of the Lias Super Late
Model feature in a bizaare 25-lap race for the Super Late Models.
At the beginning of the feature there was a very hard hitting crash
between Joe Petyak and Doug Glessner. Petyak got spun around on
the track and Glessner had no warning to make it around Joe Petyak,
slamming hard into Petyak’s car. No injuries were reported in the
incident that eliminated the two competitors from the race. A couple
more cautions kept interrupting the flow of the race especially one
around lap fourteen. Ken Schaltenbrand was the leader of the race
from his pole position start, and as he was passing a slower car of
Bob Sheesley to put it a lap down, he just misjudged the pass and
clipped the slower car sending it into a slide. Then Andrew Gordon
of DuBois came around the track and slammed into the Sheesley car
hard. Again no injuries were reported, but the cars were severely
damaged. Schaltenbrand was charged with the caution sending the
leader to the end of the line for the restart and putting Mike Blose,
driving for Billy Eash, in the lead position. Blose led the next nine
laps of the feature until he fell victim to a flat tire. Once again
the leader was taken out of the competition. Blose was given a
two-lap courtesy caution to change his tire and take the end of the
field. This put Wally Fox in the top spot on the track for the final
two laps of the race, and he picked up the checkered flag and make
it to the Integra Racing Shocks Winner’s Circle. Dave Blazavich
of Marion Center hung in the race as well and finished second with
Schaltenbrand of Sarver recovering from the earlier incident to
take third. Rod Phillips from Punxsutawney was fourth, and Jerry
Redden of Mahaffey was fifth. Blose from New Bethlehem finished
sixth, and the rest of the field finished in the order of Andrew
Gordon, Bob Sheeshley, Levi Sikora, John Britsky, Shawn Claar and
then Joe Petyak and Doug Glessner with DNFs (did not finish race).
In the Lias Super Late Model heat races the winners were Mike
Blose and Joe Petyak.
The R. D. Shaffer Well Services Steel Block Limited Late Model
feature looked like a runaway for Mike Williams of Rossiter.
Williams started on the pole and was holding off the competition
until the end of the 20-lap feature. Then an incident on the track
with two laps to go took out the top three of Williams, Frank
Brocious from Dayton and Cheyenne Reed of Punxsutawney.
Williams was charged with the caution. At the final checkered flags,
Scott Stein from Cherry Tree was the winner, Paul Ivory from Irvona
was second and Williams was third followed by Brocious and Reed.
Sixth place went to Bernie Whiteford, and then came Zach Snyder,
Adam Nixon, Greg Beach and Steve Scaife, Jr. for the top ten. The
R. D. Shaffer Well Services Steel Block Limited Late Model heat
races were won by Cheyenne Reed and Scott Stein.
Dave Blazavich from Marion Center led every lap from pole
to checkers to the Integra Racing Shocks Winner’s Circle in the
Huey Brothers, Inc. Crate Late Model feature to dethrone Andrew
Satterlee as the undefeated reigning champ of the division.
Blazavich had to hold off outside pole starter Joe Martin for the
win, and Martin from Ringgold finished second. Third place went to
Corey Neal of Trade City, and Wendell Pinckney from Albion was
fourth. Andrew Satterlee from Rochester Mills had started eighth and
finished fifth. Rounding out the rest of the field were Mike Laughard,
Ron Smithley, Patrick Waugh, Bobby Whitling, Bryan Benton and
Stephanie Ivory. Corey Neal and Andrew Satterlee were the winners
of the Huey Bros. Crate Late Model heat races.
Ray Hickok, Jr. swept the competition in the W. G. Satterlee &
Sons Street Stock feature. Hickok from Commodore started on the
pole and led every lap to go to the Integra Racing Shocks Winner’s
Circle and be awarded the checkered flag from Kid’s Club member
Alex Komlosky. Tim Bish from Ringgold started and ended the
20-lap feature right behind Hickok, and newcomer Rob Shook
from Creighton took third. Fourth place went to Jim Fasnaught of
Bairdford, and Gary Furman, Jr. of New Alexander was fifth. Sixth
place was taken by Joey Zambotti of Kittanning, and Jeff Sweeney
finished seventh. Rounding out the top ten were Matt Hugill, Rich
Waltman and Bill Phillips, Jr. all with DNFs. The W. G. Satterlee &
Sons Street Stock heat race winner was Tim Bish.
The Willow Farm Campground Strictly Stock feature was won by
Dalton Gustusson from Weedville. Gustusson started on the outside
pole and led the first couple of laps, then Jon Lee from Mahaffey
took the lead. Gustusson was able to resume leading the 15-lap
feature after the twelfth lap. A caution backed things up a bit and set
up a green/white/checker flag situation. Gustusson held on to lead
for the winning trip to the Integra Racing Shocks Winner’s Circle.
Jim Hamilton from Coalport finished second, and Nick Erskine of
Mahaffey was third. Fourth place went to Jon Lee, and Gary Stitt
from Deckers Point was fifth. Sixth through tenth places went to
Nick Fulmer, Ryan Caldwell and Duke Davidson with Jim Hixon and
Dillon Smith getting DNFs along with a host of others. The Willow
Farm Campground Strictly Stock heat races were won by Kenny
Haight from Purchase Line and Nick Fulmer of Marion Center.
The Butler Auto Supplies Front Wheel Drive 6 Cylinder division
feature was won by Jack Mumau from East Run. Mumau led the
10-lap feature from start to finish for the victory. Mike Potter from
South Fork finished second, and Robert Lydic from Rochester Mills
was third. Fourth place went to Josh Gray of Weedville, and Wild
Bill Hassenplug from Gallitzin was fifth. Jamie Noel of Ebensburg
took sixth, and Zach Wissinger from Mineral Point was seventh. Jack
Mumau also won the Butler Auto Supplies 6 Cylinder heat race.
Congratulations to Kid’s Club member Alex Komlosky who won
by drawing the honor of presenting the checkered flag to the first
feature winner and also drew the name of the winner for a Crate
Late Model tire that was given away to Wendell Pinckney. Also
congratulations go out to Willow Wright who presented the checkers
to the second feature’s winner who happened to be Wally Fox of
the Lias Super Late Models. There are lots of activities planned
for a fun time for the Kid’s Club members this season. Kids can
also plan ahead to participate in the Kids Bike Races which were
postponed from May 16 to May 30. There’s a whole lot more
information and news relating to the upcoming season on the website,
marioncenterspeedway.net, or you can follow us on facebook,
catch up on twitter or the blog with what’s happening including
the upcoming Independence Day Celebration with a Demolition
Derby and Fireworks plus a flea market! There will also be a pet
parade, Kid’s Demo Derby, a special starting time of 8 p.m. and
a 49-lap Super Late Model Invitational feature race. The Willow
Farm Campground Strictly Stocks are also scheduled to race that
night and possibly another class as well. Stay tuned for more news
on the Fourth of July activities that start on Thursday, July 2 with a
multiple class truck pull event. You can also make sure you don’t
make that unnecessary drive up to the top of the hill if we’re rained
out by downloading an app for your phone from “Rainedout.com”
and receive up to the minute messages if the track should cancel for
the night. Plus there’s the new Race Day Hotline phone number,
724-397-2108, to call on race days only for a recorded message of the
status of the races for the day.
Thanks to our sponsors for the season which include those picking
up division sponsorships like Lias Tire, Willow Farm Campground,
W. G. Satterlee & Sons, and our newest additions R. D. Shaffer Well
Services, Huey Bros, Inc., and Butler Auto Supplies. Also thanks to
HUMMINGBIRD SPEEDWAY
840 GOSPEL CENTER ROAD, REYNOLDSVILLE, PA 15851
May 23, 2015
By Randy Albert
Hummingbird Speedway in Falls Creek was back in action this week
with a full card of racing entertainment. Chris Farrell from Clearfield
held off some stiff competition to take the win in the BWP Bats Steel
Block Late Model feature race. Frenchville’s Bryce Craft made it look
easy in the Sunny 106.5 Micro Spring division. Bob Connor from
DuBois kept it smooth and straight for the win in the Street Stock
class. Shawn Munoz from Punxsutawney earned a well-deserved win
in the Pure Stock cars. Aaron’s of DuBois-sponsored Front Wheel
Drive Four Cylinders found a familiar face in the winner’s circle in
John Campisano from Punxsutawney. The Micro Sprints also featured
a “Wingless Challenge” to close out the night with Sean McAndrew
from Apollo taking the honors.
The Sunny 106.5 FM Micro Sprints were the first division to enter
the track for their feature race. These smaller cars are running first
each week to allow them a smoother racing surface. Bryce Craft from
Frenchville was flanked by Scott Hawkins from Sarver for the wave
of the green flag. Craft took advantage of the starting position and
quickly moved out into a comfortable lead. Hawkins was in pursuit
but exited the track early in the race. Lee Lehnerd from Cabot took up
the charge along with Sean McAndrew from Apollo. Craft continued
to dominate with some interesting racing three and often four wide
back in the pack. With no one able to come within striking distance
of Craft and no yellow flags to reel him back in, the competitors were
left to battle for the remaining positions. Craft went on to take the
checkered flag by nearly half a lap.
Heat race winners included Bryce Craft and Sean McAndrew.
The headliner division of BWP Bats Steel Block Late Models rolled
onto the racing surface led by Dan Smeal from Houtzdale and Tim
Fannin out of Ridgway. A number of cautions set and reset the field
and finally ended up in a single file start. Chris Farrell from Clearfield
moved to the outside of Fannin to move up on Smeal and challenge
for the lead in the first two laps. Ed Connor from DuBois, Dwayne
Brooks from Falls Creek and Paul Kot out of DuBois all slid under
Fannin early to remain within sight of the leaders. The field finally
settled down with Connor, Kot and Brooks working under Smeal
to advance and chase Farrell. Tim Krape from Bellefonte was on a
tear charging forward from his thirteenth starting position working
both the high and low side of the track. Farrell was in control but
not by much and there was no shortage of lap cars just in front of the
leaders. He had to check up a couple of time on the back bumpers of
his competitors but those following him had to do the same. Most of
the front runners made it through the pack of slower cars including
Krape who was still advancing. Kot ended up “stuck in traffic” in turn
two with another car parked on his hood, but both drivers were able to
continue. Connor, Brooks and Krape were all within striking distance
on a late race restart. Connor looked low for an opening but Brooks
was right there giving Connor something else to think about other than
the leader. Krape and Smeal were near the front but not close enough
to mount a charge. With two to go, Farrell faded a shade high coming
out of turn four opening the door for Connor allowing him to pull up
alongside in a dead heat at the flag stand as Bob Sullinger waved the
white flag.
Bob Connor from DuBois and Rich Howell from Clearfield headed
up the Street Stock class for the start of their feature race. Connor
jumped out to the early lead with Howell falling in line in second.
Bruce Hartzfeld from Stump Creek looked inside Howell trying to take
the position which he did within a few laps. Hartzfeld continued the
battle moving on to challenge for the lead on the outside. Behind the
leaders Howell had his hands full with Brian Rhed, Paul Kot and Fuzzy
Fields, all drivers from Brockway. Three wide and side by side was the
norm for these drivers as the race progressed. Connor’s car appeared
to be handling very well running the low line with Hartzfeld and the
others unable to make a bid for the lead. A late race caution reeled the
leader back in, and Hartzfeld made the best of pulling up on his back
bumper then to the outside. It looked like he may have had a chance
on the last turn of the last lap, but he got into the loose clay coming out
of turn four thwarting any outside chance at the win. It may have been
a moot point anyhow; Connor continued to be smooth and consistent
right to the checkered flag.
Street Stock heat race winners included Rich Howell and Bob
Connor.
A short field of Pure Stock cars were led to the green flag by Scott
Zimmerman out of Brookville and Jim Challingsworth from St. Marys.
Zimmerman held the lead early with Mike Miller from Rockton in
second. Shawn Munoz from Punxsutawney and Dustin Challingsworth
out of St. Marys were moving up from the rear to challenge the leaders.
Munoz first moved under Miller then to the outside of Zimmerman to
take the lead. Challingsworth did the same a few laps later. Munoz
was also running smoothly and consistently, and Challingsworth had a
lot of ground to make up. Challingsworth managed to close to within a
car length as the two came out of turn four, but it was too little; too late
as Munoz held on to take the win.
Dustin Challingsworth won the heat race for the Pure Stocks.
Aaron’s of DuBois Front Wheel Drive Four Cylinders were the
DMS MOTORSPORTS PRESENTS
FRIDAY NIGHT THUNDER AT
DOG HOLLOW SPEEDWAY
76 Hamill Rd., N. Cambria • 814-502-8898 • doghollowspeedway.net
GENERAL ADMISSION: Adults $12, Senior Citizens (60+) $10, Students (13-17) $8,
Youth (7-12) $6, Kids 6 & Under Free
FAMILY PASSES: 2 Adults/3 Youth $35 (includes 3 hot dogs and 3 drinks)
2 Adults/2 Youth $30 (includes 2 hot dogs and 2 drinks)
PITS OPEN 5:00 P.M. • GRANDSTANDS OPEN 6 P.M. • RACING 7:30 P.M.
—————————— SPECIAL EVENTS ———————————
May 29th: Race Day/Classes-LM, CL, PS, 4C. Regular Racing Night/Double Points Night
June 5th: Race Day/Classes-LM, CL, SS, PS, 4C. Thunder Dog 25 Crate Late Model
Special Race, increased purse. Kids Bike Racing, helmets are required!
Reynoldsville
Racing At 7:00 p.m.
Every Saturday Night
Admission $10 - Pit $25
5 Division Program
• Steel Block Late Model
• FWD 4 Cyl. • Pure Stock
• Street Stock • Sprint 270
Special Races on Holidays
sWWWHUMMINGBIRDSPEEDWAYCOM
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Rich’s Garage at 724-388-6462 for all their help to get things going
for the season and Integra Racing Shocks, Colonial Motor Mart and
others.
MCS is looking forward to the rest of the season, the 49th under
the continued direction the the Potts Family. Hope to see you at “The
Thrill On The Hill,” Marion Center Speedway, “The Little Track With
The BIG Attitude.”
last regular feature race for the evening with Dylan Frantz from
Luthersburg and John Campisano out of Punxsutawney taking the
green flag for the start of the race. Campisano quickly went for
and took the lead stretching it out to five plus car lengths with his
competitors in rush hour traffic for second place. Frantz held second
as Jim Fye from Reynoldsville and two drivers from Clearfield,
Dustin Kemp and Tom Peters, mixed it up for third through fifth.
Campisano continued to dominate as Frantz’s car began to break up,
opening the door for Austin Dempsey from Brookville and Corin
Monoskey of Clearfield to move up. Campisano never relented and
went on to take the win.
Heat race winners included John Campisano and Jim Fye.
A special wingless Micro Sprint challenge race was held at the
end of the evening. These cars handle and perform differently
without the aid of the downforce from the wing and are fun to watch
make the circuit. Sean McAndrew controlled the race and took the
win with only a late race challenge by Robert Garvey, Jr. his main
competition.
June 13 will be the annual Pittsburgh Circle Track Club night.
Join us each week for some of the best dirt track racing in Central
Pennsylvania. Hummingbird Speedway offers a family-friendly
racing experience with good food and reasonable admission. Look
us up on the web at www.hummingbirdspeedway.com and join us on
Twitter for updates on rain delays as well as preliminary race results.
Wednesday, May 27, 2015
The Punxsutawney Spirit
YARD SALE
IN MEMORY
Moving Sale
In Memory of
Thurs, May 28
thru Sat June 6
9-5
Carole G. Mankovich
who passed away one year ago
May 27, 2014
Today we think of Carole with love.
We remember her unique sense
of humor that turned strangers into friends.
We count ourselves so very fortunate for
having known her.
“In the midst of the sense of tragedy or loss,
sometimes laughter is not only healing, it’s
also a way of experiencing again the
person that you lost.”
~Alan Alda, actor
HELP WANTED
Biggie’s Quality
Meats
is looking for help in
our meat cutting area
& everything else
area of production.
A do all attitude
Apply within
Mary’s Place
Hiring All
Positions!
Penn Mechanical
Group
is seeking
EXPERIENCED Class
A Heavy Haul truck
drivers and Bed
Truck Operators to
fill open positions.
New equipment,
established work,
rig moving & heavy
hauling experience
required. Good Pay,
Benefits and 401k.
Please apply
online at
www.penn
mechanicalgroup.
com
or mail resume to
975 Potts Road,
Home, PA
15747
WORK WANTED
Bugsy’s Roofing
Complete Interior &
Exterior Remodeling
Including Rubber
& Metal Roofing
FULLY INSURED
FREE ESTIMATES
REFERENCES AVAILABLE
20 Race Street,
Brookville
GARAGE SALE
Inside Moving Sale
Joyce’s
Greenhouse
Beautiful
hanging baskets,
bedding plants,
vegetable plants,
onion sets,
seed potatoes
Gift Certificates
Available
4 miles South of
Punxsy on 119
Open Mon-Fri 9-8,
Sat 9-6
724-286-9722
SWIMMING POOLS
19’ X 31’ above
ground pools.
$699 inc. FREE install
deck & complete
pkg. Site prep extra.
BBB accredited.
Established 1969.
800-548-1923
FOR SALE
Hon office desk,
exc. condition
3-250 gallon
fuel tanks
427-2432
FARM PRODUCTS
Bennett’s Farms
Open for
the Season!
Tomatoes & Rhubarb
814-427-5276
SHAFFER’S
GREENHOUSE
Open Mon.-Sat., 8-8
Geraniums-Flowers
Vegetables-Perennials
Hanging Baskets
Open Sundays in
May, 1 p.m. to 5 p.m.
7 mi N. of Punxsy
on Rt 36 turn left at
Stanton Dynamics,
go 2 miles on
Pansy-Ringgold Road
814-856-2232
LOST & FOUND
NOTICES
THE BANKS Township Road District
regular scheduled
meeting for Monday
June 1, 2015 7:00pm
has been changed to
June 2, 2015 7:00pm
Tracy Pearce
Secretary
It’s
Garage
Sale
Season
Place
Your
Ad
Today!
938-8740
Lost:
Engagement Ring
Pxy Softball Field
REWARD
952-1084
938-8422
www.bugsysroofing.com
PA # 001879
Bugsy’s Roofing
& Construction
We Build Pole
Buildings
Free Estimates
938-8422
PA # 001879
L&R Construction
•Interior & Exterior
Remodeling
•Roofing Rubber & Metal
•Soffit Facia
•Siding
•Concrete Work
Lost Cat (Bear)
Missing from West
End Area,
Charcoal Gray,
Epileptic &
needs meds
$100 REWARD
938-8624
BUY IT !
PA # 039791
814-952-4094
SELL IT !
Worried about what
to do with your pets
while on vacation?
Call 814-938-9099
for a pet sitter
near you.
FIND IT
FOR RENT
2 BEDROOM, 1st
Floor Duplex
952-4708
HOUSE-$640+
SUNNY, 3 Bedroom,
New Carpet/Wood
814-236-7664
Nice 2nd Floor apt
w/garage.
A/C, carpeted,
in town.
Ref & Sec Dep,
$500/mo + util.
938-9315
SMALL ONE bedroom, all utilities inc.
$515.00 + security
938-4649
House-Punxsy
2-3 Bedrooms,
New Flooring & Bath
$450 + util,
sewage inc.
Ref + deposit
required
724-397-8480
Buy
Sell
Trade
In the
Classifieds!
To place your ad
Call
814-938-8740
ALLEMANG REALTY
938-9667
www.AllemangRealty.com
Canning jars,
collectibles, tools
5 miles from Punxsy
on 119
South, Marchand
May 30,
9am-3pm
GREENHOUSES
IN
THE
CLASSIFIEDS
814-938-8740
powellrealestateonline.com
Howard Hanna Real Estate Services
10250. DUPLEX in East End,
upstairs/downstairs 1 bedroom apts. $75,900
10254. Starter home or
good investment, located
2 blocks from IUP Campus, 3
BR, 1 bath, nice sized rooms,
10277. Beautiful, nicely
remodeled 3 BR, 1.5 bath
country cozy 2 sty near rails
to trails, maintenance easy
yard, 2 car garage, privacy
fence, above ground pool,
lovely fireplace, tiled kit.
backsplash, $115,000
carport, 2 covered porches
$32,900
9373. Beautiful brick commercial bldg. over 16,000 SF,
parking
9585. Reduced to $39,000!
(3) Acres in the borough of
Punxsy with a fabulous view!
9743. Reduced to $18,000! 3
BR 2 story, finished lower level,
could be converted into duplex
9844. Reduced to $24,900! 3
BR 2 sty, nice price, dbl lot, low
taxes, new metal roof, original
woodwork that has not been
painted, add your touch of TLC
and have a charming home!
04-11099. Sykesville - 3
BR 2 story with large rooms,
first floor laundry and bath,
$42,900
9876. Hillcrest Estates - Lovely brick/vinyl 4 BR 2 story with
10193. Bring back the
sparkle! Great investment
property or large family
home, 4 BRs, 1 1/2 baths,
1900 ornate woodwork
including wood columns,
pocket doors, leaded and
stained glass, 2 fireplaces,
usable 3rd floor, $75,000
2 1/2 baths, over 3600 SF of
living space, 3 car attached
garage, finished basement
with private entrance - ideal
for an office.
9929. Stately brick 2 story,
neat from the street and
inside too, 5 bedrooms, 4
baths, beautifully maintained, bright neutral color
decor, finished lower level,
neatly landscaped, side
porch, rear deck, garage
3 burglars share tips of trade
in crime prevention video
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Police
looking to educate the public about ways
to prevent break-ins turned to the experts
— a trio of convicted burglars.
The Columbus Police Department
recruited the inmates with the help of
the state prisons agency and produced a
YouTube video in which the offenders
share their how-to tips. Most of the
suggestions are common-sense warnings
about locking up, keeping blinds drawn
and not storing valuables in cars.
A few recommendations stand out
for originality: "Sometimes set it off so
people know it's there. Don't just buy
it and never set it off." That's William
Coffman, of Franklin County, serving
time for burglary and aggravated robbery,
on advertising that your home alarm
system works.
Or Hardin County burglar Joel Hamlin
on the importance of putting valuables in
a wall safe, not a small portable safe:
"Little safes? You can easily just grab
that and take it on out," he said.
Or Adam Taylor, of Hamilton County,
on why the elderly are often targeted: It's
easier "to burglarize them and get away
with it."
Columbus police and the Department
of Rehabilitation and Correction filmed
the inmates last year, put the pieces
together over the past few months and
recently posted the two-part, 24-minute
video, called "From the Big House to Your
House."
Police Cmdr. Bob Meader likens the
impact to a child tuning out advice from
a parent but heeding the same tips from a
teacher or coach.
"For the police to say, 'Lock your
doors, keep your garage door shut, leave
the lights on on your porch,' is one
thing," Meader said. "When you're hearing
HELP WANTED
Brookville fast food restaurant
is seeking shift managers immediately.
We are looking for self-directed leaders with
strong management skills and a great work
ethic. Restaurant experience a must and
ServSafe certification a plus.
Wages based on amount of experience.
Benefit package and flexible
hours also available.
Send work history to:
Blind Box #1724
c/o The Punxsutawney Spirit
PO Box 444
Punxsutawney, PA 15767
it from somebody that actually did it for a
living? I think it adds some validity to it."
Criminals-turned-anti-crime consultants aren't new. In 1985, reformed burglar
Ray Johnson published "Ray Johnson's
Total Security: How You can Protect
Yourself Against Crime."
In 2002, the Leonardo DiCaprio movie
"Catch Me If You Can" told the real-life
story of check forger Frank Abagnale
Jr., who impersonated an airline pilot,
a doctor and a lawyer before going to
prison and then becoming an FBI consultant.
In the case of the three Ohio burglars,
they agreed to cooperate in exchange
for a letter to the parole board from
Columbus police about their participation.
The exercise seemed to help the men
process the impact they had on their
communities, said Officer Norm Russell,
who came up with the idea.
Hardin County prosecutor Bradford
Bailey recalled Hamlin as a brazen
addict who broke into wealthy people's
homes in broad daylight. Charging documents from the day Hamlin was arrested
describe him going house to house
in February 2006 before fleeing from
officers, tossing a bag into a river and
throwing away other items as he ran.
Bailey isn't bothered by Hamlin's role
in the video.
"We'll take any tips from the good
guys, or we'll take them from the bad
guys," Bailey said.
HELP WANTED
Residential Service Workers/
Residential Program Supervisors
Lifestyle Support Services, Inc. a
Human Service Agency is currently seeking
applicants for the positions of Residential
Service Workers and Residential Program
Supervisor to assist people with intellectual
disabilities with everyday living skills within
our agency. Openings are available in the
Reynoldsville/Punxsy area. Out starting wage
is $10.00 per hour. Applicants must be at
least 18 years of age with a high school
diploma or GED. Candidates should also be
able to obtain ACT 33 and 34 clearances.
Sign on bonus for new employees after 30
days. If interested or for more information
Visit our website at
www.lifestylesupport.net
or call 814-948-6708
Mon-Fri., 8:00 am to 4:00 pm
Send resume to:
PO Box 303,
Elmora, PA 15737,
EOE
Thinking of selling? We offer a free
property/market evaluation. Just
call to schedule an appointment.
• Fully furnished camp
on 12 acres,
includes all appliances/furniture and A/C
unit, sleeps 6,
$68,000
• (02-10289) Country living close to
town, well maintained 3 bedroom, 1
bath home situated on an oversized lot,
reasonable taxes, 1 car attached garage, cement driveway, $98,000
WANTED
• Gun enthusiast need home in country w/acreage suitable for 200 yard
shooting range, Smicksburg/Trade City,
home with or without electricity, must
have 5+ acres
• Farm in Troutville-Big Run area +/40 acres, nice well maintained ranch in
Punxsy or within 10 minutes of town
• (04-11619) Many possibilities await
you with this property. A basement
house has been started and needs finished to your liking. A large pond can
be stocked with your favorite fish or ride
your ATV around the 61 acres between
Punxsy and Reynoldsville $279,000
• 8,000 sq. ft.
storefront or warehouse on Main
Street in Sykesville along the 119.
$49,000
• (02-10273) Commercial bldg., close
to downtown, 2000 sq. ft. bldg. $99,000
• Large 3-4 bedroom home with
1 3/4 baths, features a HUGE
kitchen, first floor
laundry and level
lot with picnic pavilion $59,000 (Big Run)
• (02-10270) 2 story brick home on a
DOUBLE LOT, East End of town, 3 bedrooms, 1 1/2 baths, hardwood floors,
large front porch, rear deck $119,000
%-AHONING3T0UNXSYs
Oh, brother: Twins
charged with hurling
bricks at each other
ORANGE CITY, Fla. (AP) —
What are a few bricks between
brothers?
Well, they're worth battery charges
for twin 52-year-olds after officials say
an argument ended with them hurling
the projectiles at each other.
The Daytona Beach News-Journal
reports that Michael and James
Remelius were arguing in the front
yard of a home last week when
Michael first threatened to throw a
brick at his brother.
According to a police report,
Michael Remelius followed through,
striking his brother in the leg and
causing a small cut. James Remelius
retaliated with a brick that bloodied
and bruised his brother's eye.
Both were arrested and charged
with aggravated battery with a
deadly weapon. Both remained jailed
Tuesday. James' bail is $25,000 while
Michael's is $20,000. Court records
show they do not yet have attorneys to
comment on the case.
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
AUCTION
Residential MR Group
Home Field Manager
/Behavioral Specialist
The Punxsutawney Spirit is searching for
a part-time newspaper web press operator
on a Goss community.
FARM AUCTION
Lifestyle Support Services, Inc. a human
service organization is seeking a full time
evening & weekend Field Manager/
Behavioral Specialist. The position is
responsible for the development,
implementation and monitoring of consumer
Behavioral Support Plans in the evening for
individuals that are diagnosed with
Intellectual & Mental Health Disabilities
(ID/MH), overseeing the management of
community group homes located in various
counties as well as the managing of the day
to day supervision of the Residential Service
Workers & House Supervisors. The successful
candidate will possess a bachelors degree
(masters preferred) with a minimum of two
years of behavioral management
& supervision experience with persons with
ID/MH diagnosis. Applicants must be at least
18 years of age and have a high school
diploma or GED. Candidates should also be
able to obtain ACT 33 and 34 clearances
and have a valid PA drivers license.
Sign on bonus for new employees after 30
days. If interested you may apply online at
www.lifestylesupport.net or call
814-948-6708 Mon. thru Fri., 8:00 am
to 4:00 pm.
or send resume to
PO Box 303,
Elmora, PA 15737
Attn: Mike Cappella
EOE
13
WE WILL TRAIN the right person.
Requirements:
• Basic mechanical skills needed with
ability to maintain and repair machinery
• Able to lift 75 lbs.
• Standing for long periods of time.
• Not afraid to get dirty.
• Must be 18 with a high school
diploma or GED
• Night shift hours -5 days per
week. Schedule may vary somewhat.
• Rate of pay based on experience
Send resume or come in to complete
an application:
The Punxsutawney Spirit
510 Pine Street
Punxsutawney, PA 15767
[email protected]
Saturday, May 30, 2015 at 10:00 AM
(THE BAZELLA FARM) ADDRESS/DIRECTIONS:
1042 Dombs Hill Road,
Rossiter, PA 15772.
From Rossiter, take Union Hill Road 1-Mile. Turn Right. First Farm on
the Left. Watch for Signs.
TRACTORS-EQUIPMENT-TOOLS-FURNITUREMISC TRACTORS/EQUIPMENT: International 1066 Turbo Tractor &
Vermeer 5041 Round Bailer (Both to be sold with Confirmations of the
Seller), John Deere 3300 Combine, Same Delfino 35 Tractor, Farmall
Cub Tractor, International 720 5-Bottom Plow, John Deere 7000 Planter, HMI Skid Steer, Gravely 8179 Riding Mower, 3-Point Hitch Sprayer,
New Holland 315 Bailer, 3-Hay Wagons, Brush Hog, Round Bail Spear,
New Holland 488 Mower, White Farm 256 Disc, H&S 180 Manure
Spreader, 3-Point Hitch Post Hole Digger, Chevy C/40 Dump Truck, New
Idea Hay Rake, Kuhn Hay Tedder, New Holland 717 Harvester, New
Idea Cut/Ditioner, County Line Rototiller, 3-Gravity Wagons, New Idea
2-Row Corn Picker, Gehl Grinder Mixer, Grain Elevator, Potato Planter &
Hiller, Potato Digfer & Cleaner, Hydr. Post Pounder, Hay Elevator, Grain
Auger and More. (Equipment was Garage Stored & Well Maintained)
Equipment to Sell at approximately 11:00 AM
TOOLS & MISC: AC/DC Welder, Emglo Air Compressors, 6500 Watt
Generator, Torch & Tank Set, Older Drill Press, Pipe Wrenches, Socket
Sets, Wreches, Grinders, Welding Rods, Hilti Drill, Dewalt Power Tools,
Extension Ladder, Flue Liner Tile, Anvil, Tool Box, Weed Eaters, Work
Benches, Transit, Floor Jack, Extension Cords, Fuel Cans, Concrete
Float, C-Clamps, AIr Tank, Vise, Bench Grinders, Long Handled Tools,
Pressure Washer, Scrap Pile, Hardware, Pig Feeders, Wooden Barrel,
Platform Scale, Quaker State Thermometer, Head Gate, Bell, Sausage
Stuffer, Milk Cans, Meat Cleavers, Pressure Cooker, Green House, Swimming Pool, Hydraulic Jacks, Produce Scale, FURNITURE & about 100
BOX LOTS. (Box Lots Will Be Sold First)
AUCTIONEER: FREEMAN YODER, Lic #AU005487
FOOD & RESTROOMS AVAILABLE
TERMS: Cash, Credit Card or Approved PA Check with Proper ID. Announcements made day of Auction take precedence over any made in
the advertising. For more information, Call Freeman at 814-952-1453.
For Pics go to www.auctionzip.com ID# 13144
14
COMMUNITY NEWS
The Punxsutawney Spirit
Wednesday, May 27, 2015
VanLeer’s Auto Sales
10 Chevy
Cobalt
17K, 4 DR, Great
MPG, SALE $8,995
Rt. 36 and Walston Rd., Punxsy
VanLeers.com or 814-938-2131
One Owners & Local Trades
12 Subaru
Legacy AWD
Premium Edition,
40K
AWD, V6, Nice,
Local Trade
$10,995
Like New, 15K
15 Mazda
CX-5 AWD
10 Ford F-150
Ext. Cab
4x4, V8, 77K,
Nice
14 Toyota
Rav 4
AWD, Like New, 26K
13 Ford
Focus SE
14 Ford
F-150 XLT
08 Toyota
Rav 4
10 Dodge
Caliber
Touring Edition,
21K
Crew Cab,
4x4, 23K
AWD, 4 cyl., Local
Trade, SALE $10,995
35TH WEDDING ANNIVERSARY
Ralph and Linda Depp
(Denton) of Punxsutawney
celebrated their 35th wedding
anniversary on May 25, 2015.
The couple was married on
this date 35 years ago in
Sandy Valley, Pa.
An anniversary card party
during the month of May
is being held, and cards
can be mailed to the couple
at 1046 Barnett Hill Rd.,
Punxsutawney, PA 15767.
The couple has three children — JoAnn Depp of State
College, Christine and Larry
Reinhart of Punxsutawney
and Jennifer Forrest of
Punxsutawney — and two
grandchildren — Joshua
Reinhart of Punxsutawney
and Jordan Landry of State
College.
Ralph has been a beekeeper
for more than 70 years, and
Linda enjoys houseplants and
gardening.
SPRINGTIME ALERT – DO NOT DISTURB YOUNG WILDLIFE;
YOUNG ANIMALS' MOTHERS TYPICALLY FOUND NEARBY
T
he leaves are green, the flowers
are in bloom and, once again,
a new generation of wildlife is
making its arrival.
This time of year, it’s
almost a certainty that Pennsylvanians will
encounter young wildlife, whether in their
backyards or high on a mountain. And
some of those animals — whether they be
young deer, birds, raccoons or other wildlife — might appear to be abandoned.
Usually, they are not abandoned. In
fact, their mothers might be watching over
them from somewhere nearby. And the
best thing people can do is to leave those
animals alone.
Adult animals often leave their young
while they forage for food, but they don’t
go far, and they do return. Wildlife also
often relies on a natural defensive tactic
called the “hider strategy,” where young
animals will remain motionless and “hide”
in surrounding cover while adults draw the
attention of potential predators or other
intruders away from their young.
Deer employ this strategy, and deer
fawns sometimes are assumed to be abandoned when, in fact, their mothers are
nearby.
The Game Commission urges
Pennsylvanians to resist the urge to interfere with young wildlife or remove any
wild animal from its natural setting.
Such contact can be harmful to both
people and wildlife. Wild animals can
lose their natural fear of humans, making
it difficult, even impossible, for them to
ever again live normally in the wild. And
anytime wildlife is handled, there’s always
a risk people could contract diseases or
parasites such as fleas, ticks and lice.
Wildlife that becomes habituated to
humans also can pose a public-safety risk.
A few years ago, a yearling, six-point
buck attacked and severely injured two
people. The investigation into the incident
revealed that a neighboring family had
illegally taken the deer into their home
and fed it as a fawn, and they continued
to feed the deer right up until the time of
the attack.
It is illegal to take or possess wildlife from the wild. Under state law, the
penalty for such a violation is a fine of up
to $1,500 per animal.
Under no circumstances will anyone
who illegally takes wildlife into captivity
be allowed to keep that animal, and under
a working agreement with state health
officials, any “high risk” rabies vector
species confiscated after human contact
must be euthanized and tested; it cannot
be returned to the wild because the risk of
spreading disease is too high.
Animals infected with rabies might not
show obvious symptoms, but still might
be able to transmit the disease. Though
any mammal might carry rabies, the rabies
vector species identified in the agreement
are: skunks, raccoons, foxes, bats, coyotes
and groundhogs.
People can get rabies from the saliva
of a rabid animal if they are bitten or
scratched, or if the saliva gets into the
person’s eyes, mouth or a fresh wound. The
last human rabies fatality in Pennsylvania
was a 12‑year‑old Lycoming County boy
who died in 1984.
Only wildlife rehabilitators, who
are licensed by the Game Commission,
are permitted to care for injured or
orphaned wildlife for the purposes of
eventual release back into the wild. For
those who find wildlife that truly is in
need of assistance, a listing of licensed
wildlife rehabilitators can be found
on the Pennsylvania Association of
Wildlife Rehabilitators website (www.
pawr.com).
If you are unable to identify a wildlife rehabilitator in your area, contact
the Game Commission region office that
serves the county in which the animal is
found so that you can be referred to the
appropriate licensed wildlife rehabilitator.
Region office contact information can be
found on the agency’s website (www.pgc.
state.pa.us) by putting your cursor over
“ABOUT US” in the menu bar in the
banner at the top of the homepage, and
then clicking on “Region Information” in
the drop-down menu listing.
STATE POLICE ISSUE PHISHING EMAIL ALERT
HARRISBURG — The
P e n n s y l va n i a
Criminal
Intelligence Center (PaCIC)
recently received information
regarding a fraudulent email
claiming to originate from the
Pennsylvania Department of
Motor Vehicles (PennDOT).
The subject line of the email
indicates “Action Required Fine for Traffic Violations.”
The body of the email further
states that “a vehicle registered
to you was captured running a
red light” along with a violation date, ticket number and a
specified fine amount. There
were also various links to click
on to view photos, pay the
fine or for more information
regarding the email security
service. These links redirect
the user to other websites not
affiliated with PennDOT.
There are signs that indicate this is a phishing scam,
including: poor spelling or
grammar within the message.
This message often has “violation” spelled incorrectly and
also lists two different violation dates. Additionally,
citations or traffic tickets
issued in Pennsylvania
are not paid directly to
PennDOT.
Fraudulent
emails
purporting to be from legiti-
7 Passenger, Loaded
56K,
10 Jeep
Wrangler Sport
4x4, 46K, Softtop
09 Chevy
Equinox
11 Kia
Sorento AWD
mate government agencies is
not new, but such scams often
change form.
Phishing is the process
of deceiving recipients into
sharing sensitive information with an unknown thirdparty, or cyber attacker,
typically through email;
however, websites and internet
pop-up ads are also used.
Recommendations:
• Follow best practices
— Please make sure users
follow best security practices
regarding email security. Do
not reply to these types of
emails and delete the message
if and when received. If you
receive an email asking for
privileged information, you
should delete it immediately.
• Never give out privileged
information — Oftentimes,
"Phishing" emails will use
legitimate 'From:' email
addresses, well-known logos,
or links to reputable businesses
in the message. Some may ask
for personal information such
as your name, address, date of
birth, Social Security number
(SSN) passwords etc. You
should never reply to inquiries
asking for privileged information. If you do receive these
types of requests through email
or via verbal request, please do
not reply to the request.
• Don’t open anything
from an unknown source —
If the sender’s name is not
recognized, it should not be
opened. If the name is recognized, but the contents appear
questionable, contact that
person to verify they sent the
email.
4 Cyl., Sharp, 67K
15 Chevy
Malibu LT
Great MPG, 21K
15 Dodge
Caravan SXT
7 Passenger, Like
New, Dual A/C, 26k
MEETING MINUTES
Garden Club Meeting Minutes — May 5, 2015
The Punxsutawney Garden Club met on May 5, 2015,
at Barb Certo's residence on Smithhill Road. Attending
were 19 members and three guests. Guests were Grace
Neigh, Mary Lou Stockdale and Tiffany Spatara. The
May hostesses were Tanga Hopkins, Kim Neigh and Rose
Osikowicz.
Program: Erin Cameron, president of the
Punxsutawney Rotary Club, and Michele Neal, Director
of the Chamber of Commerce, presented information on
Rotary’s Community Garden project located in the lot
behind the Pantall Hotel next to the Presbyterian Church.
Erin explained that Rotary obtained a matching grant
from Rotary International that enabled them to create a
garden with a total of 20 raised beds. Erin said her goal
in promoting the garden is to give families, town dwellers
and the elderly living in apartments a place to have a
garden of their own. She mentioned specifically residents
in Mahoning Towers and children in the Summer Reading
Program. To promote a sense of responsibility for their
beds, gardeners, each season, pay $10 for a half bed or
$20 for a full-size bed. Gardeners may plant whatever
flowers, herbs or vegetables they choose, but no bushes or
shrubs. Gardeners must take care of their garden beds over
the growing season, and they will be contacted if they do
not. Security cameras are in place to monitor the gardens.
Rotary has placed a rain barrel next to the Presbyterian
Church spouting to provide water, along with a bench, two
garbage cans and some basic garden supplies. However,
gardeners must provide their own plants, fertilizer and
tools. A Rotarian donated the garden soil. Anyone interested in planting a bed can pick up an application at the
Chamber of Commerce.
Old Business:
1. Canceling future March meetings of GC: The motion
made and seconded in April to cancel future March meetings of Garden Club was re-read, as required by GC
by-laws. Members voted unanimously to cancel future
March meetings due to inclement weather at that time in
recent years.
2. Watering tank: Dotty Jekielek reported that she’s
found an acceptable replacement for the club's broken,
portable 100-gallon water tank. She has permission to
move ahead with the purchase.
3. Dotty also brought up the topic of attire for
Beautification Project workers to identify them as ‘Garden
Club at work.’ Since no one wants to wear T-shirts or hats,
Dotty said perhaps we can get a sign to post at sites where
members are at work. Gloria will check into possibilities.
New Business:
1. Rose Osikowicz reported that her committee
prepared 14 hayracks for planting by adding diapers and
dirt to them. Planting will be done during the last week of
May.
2. Rose O. also reported that her North Findley
Cemetery Committee was prepared to get that site in
shape for Memorial Day.
3. Jonna Irvin reported that she hoped to get Barclay
Square ready for Memorial Day, but her plans depended
on the weather forecast which hints at frost around that
date.
4. Gloria Kerr reported that three Fairman Bed
committee members will prune, feed and mulch those rose
beds in the next two weeks.
5. The President reported that three GC members
attended an informational meeting sponsored by PRIDE
about starting a Punxsy Community Foundation.
Attendees were GC’s president, vice president and treasurer: Gloria Kerr, Pat Prushnok and Debby Elder, respectively. Gloria said it is to be an investment group. Having
asked a presenter about Garden Club’s limited treasury,
she and Debby Elder, treasurer, don’t think it is a right
move for Garden Club’s funds.
5. Judy Hampton then did a presentation on self-watering plant beds called ‘wicking beds.’
The meeting adjourned at 8:30 p.m. The next meeting
will be held Tuesday, June 2, at 7 p.m. at Boo and Jan
Lorenzo's residence at 709 E. Mahoning St. Cheryl
Shenkle will present a program on the Jefferson County
Master Gardeners organization. New members are
welcome. Contact any member or President Gloria Kerr at
427-2951.
One & Two
Bedroom Luxury
Apartments
“55 & Older”
Call now for your tour
and to experience the
luxury you deserve!
407 East Mahoning St.
Punxsutawney
(814) 938-5474
www.graystonecourt.com