99¢ 365 lots available in recycling auction

Transcription

99¢ 365 lots available in recycling auction
LOCAL NEWS: ‘On the Press’ with Harlan Beagley, Page 4
Morning showers
D9 ALL-STAR
GAMES
High of
52˚
Rosters have been
announced for
Sportsmanship 1 D9
all-star games.
SEE PAGE 8
Friday
March 25, 2016
IUP DEFEATS
S
PENN STATE
Penguins lose
IUP defeated Penn
State DuBois 17-5 on
Wednesday night.
SEE PAGE 8
The New Jersey Devils
defeated the Pittsburgh
Penguins 3-0 on Thursday.
SEE PAGE 8
St. Marys, Pennsylvania
50¢ Vol. 106
smdailypress.com
No. 38
365 lots available in recycling auction
Load of logs
spill on roadway
in crash
Solid Waste Authority acquired
the building for $920,000 with
the hopes of converting it into the
new Elk County Recycling Center.
Included in the sale of the
building was all of its contents,
which the authority is now trying
to sell in an attempt to clear out
the building.
To clear out the building and
earn some money to offset costs
associated with the purchase of
the building, an online auction
was created through Industrial
Recovery Services (IRS).
By Richie Lecker
Staff Writer
RIDGWAY TWP. – The
Ridgway-based Pennsylvania State Police report
investigating a one-vehicle crash that occurred
on Montmorenci Road
in Ridgway Township on
Thursday at 12:50 p.m.
According to the police
report, Collin L. Larson,
35, of Wilcox, was driving
a 2010 Kenworth log truck
north on the road when he
lost control of the vehicle
for unknown reasons.
The vehicle traveled
off the right side of the
road where it hit a ditch
and
overturned.
This
caused a load of logs to
spill onto the roadway.
The contents of the former
Advanced Recycling Equipment
business have been put up for
sale via an online auction that
features 365 lots of equipment
from the foreclosed business.
In November 2014, the Advanced Recycling Equipment
building was foreclosed with
much of the business’s equipment, tools and materials still left
inside.
The business and the contents inside went undisturbed until February after the Elk County
See Auction, Page 3
Photo by Richie Lecker
Three hundred sixty-five lots of equipment have been made available from the
former Advanced Recycling Equipment business. Available equipment includes
cranes and hoists; forklifts; hardware; maintenance and electrical equipment;
motors; woodworking equipment; metalworking equipment; welders; tooling; work
benches and tables; gang and tool boxes; and portable tools.
Charges filed
against 27
following meth
investigation in
Clearfield County
See Logs, Page 5
HARRISBURG — Pennsylvania Attorney General Kathleen
G. Kane’s office on Thursday announced criminal charges have
been filed against 27 individuals
accused of distributing or possessing illegal drugs in Clearfield
County.
Those charged were being
sought today during a collaborative sweep conducted by the
Office of Attorney General, the
Clearfield County Drug Task
Force and other law enforcement
partners.
The charges resulted from
an investigation that focused on
street- to mid-level trafficking,
importation and distribution of
large quantities of methamphetamine. Investigators identified
those charged as active participants in this operation. A statewide investigating grand jury
also reviewed evidence and heard
testimony relating to this investi-
OPEN
Friday’s
Through
Lent
Fish Fry
Special
10.99
$
Photo submitted
Pictured are committee members Andy Schlimm, Rachel Schreiber and Ken Bish. Missing from the photo are AJ Alexander, Margie Schlimm and Kris Kronenwetter.
Full Menu
Available
3rd Annual Craft & Home Brew Beer Tasting
Event to benefit the SMA United Way
11am-8pm
834-4185
The third annual Craft
& Home Brew Beer Tasting
event to benefit the St. Marys
Area United Way campaign
and the 17 local partner nonprofits the United Way sponsors is coming up fast.
306 Ridgway Rd
Ruffner’s
Outdoor
Maintenance
There will be two sessions
from 2-5 p.m. and 6:30-9:30
p.m. There will be 14 home
brewers with 26 beers. Also,
Victory Brewery, Otto’s, all
new beers from Dr. G’s and
of course Straub Brewery are
some of the Craft beers that
will be at the April 9 event at
The Highlands. The attendees
will be able to vote for their
favorite home brew and the
See Event, Page 3
Council discussed wide range of topics
Lawn Mowing
Landscape Installation
& Maintenance
Hedge Trimming
Spring Clean-ups
Blacktop Sealcoating
Several items have been discussed recently by council covering a range of topics.
Councilman Greg Gebauer
noted that festival season will
soon be upon us and touched on
an issue at last year’s Bavarian
Fall Fest regarding local political signs which were displayed
on the diamond near the booths
of the Democrat and Republican
parties.
This elicited a few comments
from citizens as there are no political signs allowed on the diamond.
Gebauer inquired about adding some simple language in the
city ordinance exempting the
placement of such signs from any
sort of city festival in order to
avoid the issue in the future.
City Manager Tim Pearson
said he will speak to the code enforcement officer for that specific
case.
Free Estimates
Fully Insured
Commercial &
Residential
512-0213 or
834-1029
SMPD’s Largey promoted to sergeant
Pearson reported four new
positions have been filled in the
street department, all of whom
began working in February.
“You will probably be seeing
a change in our ability to plow
the streets,” Pearson said, noting
the city has been very fortunate
that Mother Nature is making it
a little easier than in past years.
During a recent visit to the
city’s street department garage,
Councilman Bob Mohr witnessed
several junk areas, specifically
scrap steal lying around in piles.
Mohr said he would like to see
the city haul the steel out to be
recycled once the price of scrap
steel stabilizes. He added the
area was “rough looking.”
Pearson said this is topic is
on the street department’s to do
list as part of their spring cleanup project.
The department is starting to
remove a lot of the hillside behind
By Amy Cherry
Staff Writer
Photo submitted
The City of St. Marys Police Department’s officer Pete Largey was recently
promoted to the rank of sergeant during a ceremony held at the police department Monday, March 21. Sgt. Largey has been employed with the department
since July 2011. Shown in photo are Chief of Police Tom Nicklas, Sgt. Largey,
his daughter Rylee and his wife Lisa. City Manager Tim Pearson also attended as well as several police officers and civilian staff.
See Council, Page 3
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See Charges, Page 2
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1350
Ea
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$
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99
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Fresh Baked
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Sugardale
Shank Portion
Hams
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Hams
$ 29
1
Lb
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Sugardale
Semi-Boneless
Whole Hams
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Half Hams
1
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$ 59
1
Lb
$ 89
Sugardale
Easy Carve
Whole Hams
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Half Hams
1
Lb
$ 99
1
Lb
$ 99
Sugardale
Spiral Sliced
Half Hams
Superior’s
Half Tavern
Hams
1
Lb
$ 39
2
Lb
Bone-In
Leg of
Lamb
Boneless
Leg of
Lamb
$ 99
4
Lb
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7
Lb
$ 99
Superior’s
Whole Tavern
Hams
Howard’s
Ham Glaze
2
2/$
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$
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Variees
$
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The Daily Press
Friday, March 25, 2016
www.smdailypress.com
LIFT CHAIR SPECIAL
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Elk County Real Estate
3-Day Forecast for St. Marys
SATURDAY
52°
25°
Precipitation
Pleasant with sun and clouds
Regional Weather Today
Erie
40/29
High ................................................ 64°
Low ................................................ 50°
Normal high ................................... 47°
Normal low .................................... 28°
Record high ....................... 79° in 2012
Record low ........................ 11° in 1983
Jamestown
42/26
Wednesday ..................................
Month to date ..............................
Year to date .................................
Normal year to date .....................
0.00"
1.75"
6.20"
7.98"
Warren
48/26
Kane
49/24
Corry
42/26
Precipitation
Meadville
43/26
Cleveland
40/29
Ridgway
52/27
Oil City
48/28
Sun and Moon
Sunrise today .......................
Sunset tonight ......................
Moonrise today ....................
Moonset today .....................
7:09 a.m.
7:32 p.m.
9:44 p.m.
8:19 a.m.
Youngstown
43/28
First
St. Marys
52/25
City
Albuquerque
Asheville
Atlanta
Atlantic CIty
Baltimore
Billings
Birmingham
Boise
Boston
Burlington, VT
Charleston, SC
Charlotte
Chicago
Cincinnati
Dallas
Denver
Des Moines
Helena
Honolulu
Houston
Indianapolis
Jacksonville
Kansas City
Las Vegas
Los Angeles
Hi
67
69
69
64
71
41
69
50
61
56
79
77
45
49
69
43
53
43
81
71
50
79
59
79
77
Lo
36
39
50
42
40
23
45
30
37
29
63
50
32
34
50
21
41
22
69
47
35
64
43
56
55
Sat.
W
s
s
s
sh
sh
sn
s
sn
r
r
t
pc
s
pc
s
pc
pc
sn
sh
s
s
t
pc
s
s
Hi
62
68
75
55
61
51
76
54
49
46
76
70
57
62
76
36
54
51
82
77
61
77
58
70
78
Lo
28
43
58
41
39
29
54
39
36
31
63
51
40
42
54
16
31
24
68
61
42
62
34
49
55
Today
W
pc
s
s
s
s
pc
s
s
s
s
t
pc
c
s
s
sn
r
pc
sh
pc
s
t
c
s
s
City
Memphis
Miami
Milwaukee
Minneapolis
Nashville
New Orleans
New York
Norfolk
North Platte
Oklahoma City
Orlando
Phoenix
Providence
Raleigh
Rapid City
Reno
Sacramento
St. Louis
Salt Lake City
San Francisco
Seattle
Tampa
Topeka
Tucson
Wichita
Apr 7
Apr 13
Apr 22
Indiana
53/30
Pittsburgh
50/31
State College
58/31
Seattle
54/40
Today
Hi
69
58
39
71
51
57
48
41
44
49
40
47
Lo
38
30
27
40
30
26
25
26
28
34
29
32
W
sh
pc
pc
sh
pc
sh
c
pc
pc
pc
pc
pc
Minneapolis
46/37
Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures
are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.
Sat.
Hi
59
57
48
61
59
53
55
51
56
62
50
59
Lo W
35 s
36 s
35 s
39 s
36 s
34 s
33 s
33 s
36 s
42 s
39 s
41 s
Today
City
Coudersport
Detroit
DuBois
Franklin
Fredonia
Grove City
Harrisburg
Ithaca
Jamestown
Johnstown
Lancaster
Lewisburg
Hi
51
47
50
44
42
47
68
56
42
52
68
64
Lo
25
30
28
27
26
26
38
26
26
30
35
31
W
pc
pc
c
c
pc
c
pc
sh
pc
pc
pc
pc
San Francisco
65/51
Sat.
Hi
54
53
55
55
48
54
61
54
52
55
59
58
Lo W
36 s
37 s
35 s
34 s
33 s
34 s
39 s
32 pc
35 s
40 s
36 s
33 s
W
s
c
s
pc
s
s
sh
sh
pc
s
t
s
r
t
sh
pc
s
s
r
s
pc
c
pc
s
pc
Sat.
Hi
72
86
46
46
72
78
55
58
44
72
83
85
54
68
41
62
73
64
49
67
59
82
60
83
63
Lo
50
76
37
27
45
65
42
48
13
41
68
57
36
49
19
37
50
43
35
55
45
72
31
52
30
W
s
pc
pc
r
s
c
s
s
c
pc
t
s
s
pc
pc
s
s
pc
pc
s
pc
c
c
s
pc
Billings
41/23
Today
City
London
Mansfield
Meadville
Morgantown
New Castle
Niagara Falls
Philadelphia
Pittsburgh
Punxsutawney
Rochester
Scranton
Smethport
Hi
37
58
43
55
49
42
70
50
52
48
65
49
Lo
26
28
26
34
26
27
40
31
29
28
33
24
W
pc
pc
c
pc
pc
pc
sh
pc
c
pc
pc
pc
Sat.
Hi
47
56
54
63
57
50
62
58
57
47
58
54
Today
Lo W
32 s
31 s
35 s
43 s
34 s
32 s
41 s
38 s
35 s
33 s
36 s
33 s
City
Hi
State College 58
Syracuse
55
Toronto
42
Washington, DC 72
Wellsboro
56
Wheeling
49
Williamsport 64
Wilkes-Barre 64
Youngstown
43
Lo
31
27
25
44
26
32
32
31
28
W
pc
sh
c
pc
pc
pc
sh
sh
pc
Lo W
36 s
32 s
28 s
44 s
34 s
40 s
36 s
34 s
36 s
Legend: W-weather, s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy,
c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain,
sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.
New York
68/41
Washington
72/44
Kansas City
59/43
Sat.
Hi
58
52
44
62
55
60
60
58
56
Detroit
47/30
Chicago
45/32
Denver
43/21
Regional Forecast
City
Allentown
Altoona
Ashtabula
Baltimore
Beaver Falls
Binghamton
Bradford
Buffalo
Canton
Cincinnati
Cleveland
Columbus
Lo
42
73
30
37
36
55
41
49
21
47
68
57
38
50
17
33
48
40
32
51
40
71
43
49
43
Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are
highs for the day. Forecast high/low temperatures are given for selected cities.
Altoona
58/30
Mar 31
Hi
61
85
38
46
62
72
68
76
52
69
85
85
62
78
46
66
72
55
47
65
54
82
62
82
67
National Outlook
Canton
44/28
Full
Coudersport
51/25
DuBois
50/28
New Castle
49/26
Moon Phases
New
66°
44°
Partly to mostly sunny
Statistics for Wednesday
Temperature
Last
Today
SUNDAY
56°
33°
Partly cloudy and much colder
Owner - Broker
The Nation
TONIGHT
A stray morning shower; cooler
Leah Whiteman
231 W. Main St., Ridgway - Cully’s .......................... $200,000
626 So. Michael St., St. Marys - Merlin’s ................. $385,000
18397 BenneƩs Valley Hwy, Weedville - Big Trout... $575,000
125 Arch St., St. Marys • 781-1715 • www.arthearyandsonsfurniture.com
TODAY
814-781-1393
Los Angeles
77/55
Atlanta
69/50
El Paso
76/49
Fronts
Houston
71/47
Miami
85/73
Cold
Precipitation
Warm
Showers
Stationary
-10s
-0s
0s
10s
20s
T-storms
30s
40s
Rain
50s
Flurries
60s
70s
Snow
80s
90s
Ice
100s 110s
Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2016
Charges
Additionally, Attorney
General Kane thanked
members of the Clearfield
County 911 Center and
Clearfield County EMS
for their assistance and
support.
All defendants will be
preliminarily arraigned
before Clearfield County
Magisterial District Judge
Patrick Ford and will
be prosecuted by Senior
Deputy Attorney General
David Gorman and by the
office of Clearfield County
District Attorney William
Shaw.
The following is a list
of individuals charged today, their last known addresses and the charges
they face:
Brian Duttry, 33, 3
Keystone Rd., Brockway,
is charged with one count
each of possession with intent to deliver or delivery
of a controlled substance,
dealing in proceeds of unlawful activities, criminal
use of a communication
facility and criminal conspiracy (heroin/methamphetamine).
Lacey
Dean,
34,
113 Main St., Apt. C,
Brookville, is charged with
one count each of possession with intent to deliver
or delivery of a controlled
substance, dealing in proceeds of unlawful activities and criminal conspiracy (methamphetamine).
Jessica Vicklund, 35, 9
1/2 N. Jarred St., DuBois,
is charged with one count
each of possession with intent to deliver or delivery
of a controlled substance,
dealing in proceeds of unlawful activities, criminal
use of a communication
facility and criminal conspiracy
(methamphetamine).
Joe Alvin, 32, 135 E.
Weber Ave., DuBois, is
charged with one count
each of possession with in-
tent to deliver or delivery
of a controlled substance,
dealing in proceeds of unlawful activities and criminal conspiracy (methamphetamine).
Hank Petrillo, 28,
409 Burt St., DuBois, is
charged with one count
each of possession with intent to deliver or delivery
of a controlled substance,
dealing in proceeds of unlawful activities and criminal conspiracy (methamphetamine).
Jack Yohe, 35, 372 E.
Main St., Sykesville, is
charged with one count
each of possession with intent to deliver or delivery
of a controlled substance,
dealing in proceeds of unlawful activities and criminal conspiracy (methamphetamine).
Kelly Zameroski, 22,
661 Juniata St., DuBois,
is charged with one count
each of possession with intent to deliver or delivery
of a controlled substance,
dealing in proceeds of unlawful activities and criminal conspiracy (methamphetamine).
Eric McDonald, 31,
320 West Long Ave., DuBois, is charged with one
count each of possession
with intent to deliver or
delivery of a controlled
substance, dealing in proceeds of unlawful activities and criminal conspiracy (methamphetamine).
Cassidy Kaizer, 33,
312 W. Long Ave., DuBois,
is charged with one count
each of possession with intent to deliver or delivery
of a controlled substance
and criminal conspiracy
(methamphetamine).
Nathan Smith, 32, 312
W. Long Ave., DuBois, is
charged with one count
each of possession with intent to deliver or delivery
of a controlled substance
and criminal conspiracy
(methamphetamine).
Shannon Lathrop, 38,
9 N. Jarred St., DuBois,
is charged with one count
each of possession with in-
tent to deliver or delivery
of a controlled substance
and criminal conspiracy
(methamphetamine).
Corinne Shannon, 35,
9 N. Jarred St., DuBois,
is charged with one count
each of possession with intent to deliver or delivery
of a controlled substance
and criminal conspiracy
(methamphetamine).
Frederick Oddo, 45,
109 E. Main St., Apt. E,
Falls Creek, is charged
with one count each of
persons not to possess
firearms and illegal sale
or transfer of firearms.
Victor Elliott, 56,
224, of Scottsville, Ky., is
charged with one count of
illegal sale or transfer of
firearms.
See Charges, Page 11
GARAGE SALE
Industrial Steel & Pipe Supply Co.
180 Environmental Dr., St. Marys
Monday, March 21 thru Friday, March 25, 2016
9am-2pm
Saturday, March 26, 2016 • 8am-12pm
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Tape, Plastic Pipe, Ratchet Tie Downs
Special Discounts On Copper & Plastic Fittings.
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Continued from Page 1
gation.
Agents from the Attorney General’s Bureau
of Narcotics Investigation
partnered with investigators from the Clearfield
County Drug Task Force
on the joint investigation.
Law enforcement officials
used various tools, including surveillance techniques and undercover
purchases, as they worked
to file charges.
Over the course of the
investigation, investigators made a series of controlled purchases utilizing
confidential
informants
and undercover officers/
agents. Investigators purchased and seized a total
of one pound of methamphetamine valued at approximately $90,736 and
one and a half ounces of
heroin valued at approximately $8,400. Additionally, investigators seized
$27,867 in cash, seven
weapons and one vehicle.
The investigation is ongoing and more arrests are
expected.
Attorney
General
Kane thanked the following agencies for their
participation in the investigation:
Clearfield
County Drug Task Force,
Clearfield County District
Attorney’s Office, DuBois
City Police Department,
Sandy Township Police
Department,
Lawrence
Township Police Department, Clearfield Borough
Police Department, Curwensville Borough Police Department, MorrisCooper Regional Police
Department,
Decatur
Township Police Department, the Pennsylvania
State Police, Pennsylvania State Probation and
Parole, Clearfield County
Sheriff ’s Department, Jefferson County Probation
and Parole and Jefferson
County Drug Task Force.
OBTP#B13696 ©2015 HRB Tax Group, Inc.
3
www.smdailypress.com
The Daily Press
Friday, March 25, 2016
DCNR Secretary Cindy Adams Dunn urges caution to prevent wildfires
HARRISBURG
–
With the approach of
spring, Department of
Conservation and Natural Resources Secretary
Cindy Adams Dunn noted
drying spring winds and
warming
temperatures
quickly can combine to increase fire dangers across
Pennsylvania’s
forests
and brush lands.
“Despite recent wet
weather and snow predicted this weekend in
much of the state, recent,
highly visible fires around
the
Harrisburg
area
showed us it just takes
a few days of sun and
wind to allow brush and
forest fire danger to develop,” Dunn said. “Most
of the reported fires last
year are linked to people;
people cause 98 percent
of wildfires. A mere spark
by a careless person can
touch off a devastating
forest blaze during dry
periods when conditions
enable wildfires to spread
quickly.”
“Common sense can
limit the threat of wildfires,” said Dunn. “When
state residents and forest
visitors are careless with
burning trash, campfires
and smoking, volunteer
firefighters often pay the
price, answering call after
call in spring woodlands
that are ripe for damaging, life-threatening wild-
fires.”
DCNR statistics show
nearly 85 percent of Pennsylvania’s wildfires occur in March, April and
May, before the greening
of state woodlands and
brushy areas. Named
for rapid spread through
dormant, dry vegetation,
under windy conditions,
wildfires annually scorch
nearly 7,000 acres of state
and private woodlands.
In 2015, Bureau of
Forestry personnel and
volunteer firefighters battled a total of 817 reported
field, brish and forest fires
that scorched 4,165 acres
across the state.
Anglers, campers and
other state forest visitors
are reminded open fires
are prohibited on state
forestland from March
1 to May 25, and when
the fire danger is listed
as high, very high, or extreme, unless authorized
by district foresters.
Communities
in
heavily wooded areas
are urged to follow wildfire prevention and suppression methods of the
Pennsylvania
Firewise
Community Program to
safeguard life and property.
DCNR’s Bureau of
Forestry is responsible for
prevention and suppres-
Salon and at the UW
office. Come join in the
fun.
This event benefits
the 17 local nonprofit
organizations that the
St. Marys Area United
Way supports with their
annual campaign. The
local agencies provide
assistance to children,
families and veterans.
At some point in everyone’s life in the St.
Marys area they have
used one of the services
of these agencies, including CAPSEA, St Marys
Public Library, St Marys
area swimming pool,
Boys and Girl Scouts,
Oak Manor, Dickinson’s
CROSSROADS
program, St. Marys Burial
Detail and the Boys &
Girls Club to name just
a few. Further information about our partner
agencies can be found
at www.smaunitedway.
org or facebook.com/
smaunitedway. For further information please
contact the United Way
at 781-6000.
According to the IRS
auction page, the leftover
equipment from the former Advanced Recycling
Equipment business includes cranes and hoists;
forklifts;
hardware;
maintenance and electrical equipment; motors;
woodworking equipment;
metalworking equipment;
welders; tooling; work
benches and tables; gang
and tool boxes; and portable tools.
The auction is scheduled to last until March 29
at 1:30 p.m.
Titchner said during
an open house Thursday
that after the auction is
over, the authority will
have a better idea about
when the building will be
able to be used as the Elk
County Recycling Center.
The authority is currently still using its existing facilities in the
Stackpole Complex in St.
Marys.
Titchner said the first
challenge to moving into
the new facility is getting
the building cleared out
of the unwanted equipment, but added that she
believes the Washington
Street building could be
used as the recycling center in April if everything
goes to plan.
However, she did add
that the authority’s hazardous waste collection in
May will occur at the new
facility.
While hopeful that
much of the equipment
would sell via the auction,
Titchner said she was unsure what would be done
with the equipment if it
didn’t sell.
The County of Elk
owns the building and
all of its equipment, and
Titchner said she would
have to contact Elk County Solicitor Tom Wagner
to determine what would
happen to any unsold
equipment.
Along with beginning
the equipment auction,
the authority received
some good news Wednesday as the state’s budget
impasse ended.
The authority has submitted several grant proposals to state agencies for
funding for various work
that needs to be completed
on their building, which
includes engineering work
and maintenance work.
Titchner said she
doesn’t have any updates
on the grant proposals,
but the proposals were
previously held up due to
the budget impasse.
With several days left
on the online auction,
many lots have bids, with
the highest bid of $6,800
being placed for a 22,000
pound capacity forklift.
Auction information
can be found at www.irsauctions.com under the
“Assets of the Former Advanced Recycling Equipment, Inc.” header.
no utilities available. The
residual parcel is vacant
and proposed to remain
so. Non-building waivers
have been submitted for
the new lot and residual
lot. The applicant is requesting a modification
from the 50 acre survey
requirement of the subdivision ordinance. The proposal of a storage building
is not a permitted use in
this zoning district, so
a variance would be required.
The Planning Commission recommended approval of the subdivision
with the condition that
the corrected recordation
plats be received. The
plats were received Feb. 3.
Andrew Bobenrieth
and Davin Stauffer on Wilson Road proposed to subdivide a 2.558 acre lot (Lot
1) from a 8.396 acre lot as
a new building lot. There
are also two lot additions
as a part of this subdivision. The parcel will be
divided into two lots (Lots
1A and 2A) and consolidated into Lot 1 and an
existing parcel owned by
David Bobenrieth. A component 1 planning module
is included as part of the
subdivision for Lot 1 and
a non-building waiver for
the residual. The application was approved.
William VanAlstine
on Robin Road proposed
to clean up some minor
past land conveyance issues, and separate one
new lot as a separate
building lot. The parent parcel is around 5.28
acres, and has had many
parcels subdivided from it
throughout the years. (7)
Parcels A-G will be lot additions to existing parcels.
Parcel 2, north of Robin
Road, is to be subdivided
as a separate building lot,
and has access to public water and sewer. The
Planning
Commission
recommended approval of
the subdivision with one
comment about correcting the deed description
on page 18, which was re-
ceived Feb. 3.
In addition, council
approved the appointment of Jodi Foster to the
planning commission.
Pearson said the city
is hoping to distribute
newly-formatted
sewer bills beginning this
month. City staff has
been training on new
software used to process
the bills. The city also
purchased a new cash
register for City Hall to
process payments which
is capable of scanning
barcodes on the bills.
See Wildfires, Page 5
Event
Continued from Page 1
home brewers will select
their favorite home brew.
Tickets are available at
the St. Marys Chamber,
St. Marys Beverage, Anderson & Kime Realtor,
Pam Schlimm’s Beauty
Auction
Continued from Page 1
Elk County Recycling
and Solid Waste Coordinator Bekki Titchner said
365 lots of equipment were
assembled over a matter
of weeks by IRS.
Titchner said there
are lots that could appeal
to almost everyone as
there is lots of tools, but
she added that there is
also specialty equipment
that would only appeal to
specific buyers.
Advanced Recycling
Equipment was a manufacturer of Challenger
Grinders and Biomass
Systems.
Council
Continued from Page 1
1031 Trout Run Road
St. Marys, PA 15857
Phone 814-781-7468
Fax: 814-834-5211
PA002288
THINKING GOLFING? Think Lakeview Lodge Treasure Lake! THINKING DINING? Think Lakeview Lodge Treasure Lake! THINKING GOLFING? Think Lakeview Lodge Treasure Lake! THINKING DINING? Think Lakeview Lodge Treasure Lake!
PLUMBING HEATING &
A IR C ONDITIONING
SALES & SERVICE
THINKING GOLFING? Think Lakeview Lodge Treasure Lake! THINKING DINING? Think Lakeview Lodge Treasure Lake!
su do ku
Here’s How It Works:
Sudoku puzzles are formaƩed as a
9x9 grid, broken down into nine 3x3
boxes. To solve a sudoku, the numbers
1 through 9 must Įll each row, column
and box. Each number can appear only
once in each row, column and box.
You can Įgure out the order in which
the numbers will appear by using the
numeric clues already provided in the
boxes. The more numbers you name,
the easier it gets to solve the puzzle!
THINKING GOLFING? Think Lakeview Lodge Treasure Lake! THINKING DINING? Think Lakeview Lodge Treasure Lake!
THINKING GOLFING? Think Lakeview Lodge Treasure Lake! THINKING DINING? Think Lakeview Lodge Treasure Lake! THINKING GOLFING? Think Lakeview Lodge Treasure Lake! THINKING DINING? Think Lakeview Lodge Treasure Lake!
the building to put up a
new shed they have in the
budget. As part of the new
shed going up they will be
dropping the old building
which is very unsafe right
now. This will be part of
the overall cleanup effort.
Council approved a request from the American
Red Cross whose officials
reported they are willing to provide placards to
blood donors to display on
their vehicle’s dashboards
while they are donating
blood to prevent them
from potentially receiving
a parking ticket which has
been the issue in the past.
Blood collection days
at the Moose fall on
Wednesdays and include
the following dates: March
9, April 13, May 11, June
8, July 13, Aug. 10, Sept.
14, Oct. 12, Nov. 9, and
Dec. 14
A letter from Shawn
M. O’Hargan, CVA, local
market manager of ARCBlood Services based in
Cheektowaga, NY. stated
“as you know, blood donation is a critically important volunteer activity.
One blood donation can
help save up to three lives.
Every two seconds, someone in this country requires a blood transfusion.
We have many residents in
St. Marys that are willing
to help the blood supply by
making a blood donation
at the local Moose Club.
By eliminating the parking confusion, perhaps we
can increase blood donations.”
Several subdivisions
were approved including
the following:
Robert and Jennifer Scolari of State Street
proposed to subdivide a
4.031 acre lot (Lot 1) from
a 33.03 acre parcel as a
new building lot. There is
an existing landscaping
supply yard on Lot 1 with
Fill your Easter Baskets
with the Finest Chocolates!
t
Stop In A
• Solid Easter Molds
(Chocolate & White)
• 1&2 lb. easter Eggs
Peanut Butter, French Vanilla,
French Chocolate, Fruit & Nut,
Coconut & Maple Nut
• Chocolate Flavor Popcorn
• Sugar Free Chocolates
• Lots of Novelty Candies
The Easter Bunny Will Be
At The Ridgway Store
March 25Th And 26Th
From 10-2.
Ridgway Store Easter Hours
Open Friday March 25 th 9 – 8
and Saturday March 26 th 9 -5
219 Main St. Ridgway, PA 15853
814-772-4707
4 - The Daily Press
w w w. s m d a i l y p r e s s . c o m
Friday, March 25, 2016
O PINION
Letters &
“On the Press”
a weekly column by HJ Beagley
Homemade beer event
to come to St. Marys.
Win $1,000 and other
bits & Pieces…
“…making your own
beer?” The Craft and
Home Brew Beer show and
tasting event is coming up
in St. Marys
Something good is brewing — The
Highlands Grill and Event Center will
be the place to be next month on April
9 as they play host to the third annual Craft & Home Brew Beer Tasting
event. Truly, the home-brewing event
of the year, which strives to unite the
“home-brew” community for an afternoon of celebration and beer tasting.
Since the inception of the event, it
has quickly become one of the premier
home-brewing events in this area.
And it’s all for a good cause as well,
the event will benefit the St. Marys Harlan J. Beagley
area United Way campaign and the
Publisher
17 local partner nonprofits the United Way likes to sponsor.
The attendees will be able to vote for their favorite
home-brew and the beer makers will select their favorite home brew as well. There will be two main sessions
the first one at 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. and then the second one
from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. There will be at least 15 home
brewers with about 26 different beers. Ken Bish from St.
Marys Beverage is also organizing the more commercial
craft beers. Ken told me the best “craft beer “makers will
also be on hand offing samples of their craft brews; Victory Brewery, Troegs from Hershey, Otto’s from State College, all new beers from Doc G’s beer in DuBois, Riepstine’s Pub of Williamsport, and of course, Straub Brewery
[The pride of St. Marys]. “We wanted regionally local craft
beers,” added Ken. I got excited when Ken mentioned Dog
Fish Head will be pouring some fine brew, they are from
Milton, Del. — that beer is good my friends.
“The tickets are $35 in advance and $40 at the door.
Tickets must be purchased for each session. Each home
brewer will gladly talk to the attendees. The attendees
will also vote for their favorite styles of beer…there will
be a committee judging each of the home brewer’s beers
and making the awards — raffles and a 50/50,” said organizer Kris Kronenwetter. If you are a home-brewer and
have a batch that will be ready soon, call Andy Schlimm
at the number below.
Tickets are available now at the St. Marys Chamber,
St. Marys Beverage, Anderson & Kime, Pam Schlimm’s
Beauty Salon and at the United Way office. You must be
21 to attend.
For more details or information please contact the
United Way at 781-6000.
Guest Commentary
#NeverKasich
This truly is a year
when the rules don't
apply. If they did, John
Kasich would be back in
Columbus trying to figure
out whether he sells his
soul to Donald Trump or
endorses Ted Cruz.
Instead, the Ohio governor is still out on the
trail running a delusional
vanity project masquerading as a presidential
campaign. There is no
appetite for his pragmatic,
"can't we all get along"
campaign among Republican primary voters, who
have made that abundantly clear.
Kasich must hold the
record for the most finishes of 4 percent or below
of any candidate who has
persisted in saying that he
expects to be his party's
nominee. He is the Harold Stassen of primaryseason futility. Kasich has
limped in at roughly 4
percent or lower in Alaska
(4.07 percent), Alabama
(4.43 percent), Arkansas
(3.71 percent), Iowa (1.86
percent), Nevada (3.6
percent), Oklahoma (3.59
percent) and Texas (4.25
percent).
The contests that he
has done best in, besides
his home state, are Vermont, where he finished a
close second to Trump and
got eight delegates, and
the District of Columbia,
where he finished a close
second behind Marco Rubio and got nine delegates.
This is not exactly an
electoral juggernaut.
Kasich's performance on
Western Tuesday would
have been enough to embarrass any lesser mortal
out of the race. In Arizona, he finished in fourth
place in a three-man race,
which sounds like a setup
for a bad joke. Marco Rubio had won enough of the
early vote that the anemic
Kasich couldn't catch him.
In Utah, Kasich bizarrely sought to keep Ted
Cruz beneath 50 percent,
the threshold for winning
all of the state's delegates.
Instead, he succeeded only
in holding Cruz below 70
percent, while he finished
second -- by 52 points.
Kasich has run as a
manic, slightly more
entertaining version of
Jon Huntsman, limiting
his appeal to a slice of the
party's moderates. Kasich
is a genuine man of faith,
but he is prone to selfrighteousness and psychobabble of the sort that
you'd expect to hear from
an overtalkative yoga
instructor, including his
advocacy of more hugging.
For all his foggy rhetoric of uplift, Kasich is
AWOL on Trump. Last
week, he pronounced
himself "very concerned"
about the Trump's remarks about women,
but didn't want to say
anything further. There's
nothing worse than a
self-professed healer who
won't call out the man
who represents everything
he should abjure in our
politics.
Kasich might as well
be a de facto member of
the Trump team. Sean
Trende of RealClearPolitics crunched the numbers and found that with
Kasich in the race, Trump
gets to 1,237 delegates,
and without Kasich in the
race, Trump falls short.
Since Kasich's only path
is a contested convention,
this makes his campaign,
on top of everything else,
a massive self-contradiction.
Kasich believes that an
open convention would
turn to him, which is certainly possible -- the same
way a meteor strike at the
Quicken Loans Arena in
Cleveland is possible.
The delegate game at
a convention would be, in
part, an organizational
contest, and Kasich's
organization is all but
nonexistent. He'd make an
electability case based on
his good head-to-head poll
numbers against Hillary
Clinton, although they
are elevated because no
one has bothered to attack
him.
This is all academic
unless Trump is slowed.
The next chance to do it
is in Wisconsin, where
Kasich at the very least
will make it more difficult
for Cruz to beat Trump,
and perhaps tip the state
to the mogul.
There is no excuse
for Kasich, a politico for
decades, not realizing
this. It's hard to avoid the
conclusion that he is still
in the race only because
he is less realistic and,
sadly, less honorable than
the candidates who have
dropped out before him.
John, spare us your
sanctimony and your unifying patter. Take a coldeyed look at reality, and
do what's best for your
party and your cause. No
hugs necessary.
–
Rich Lowry can be
reached via e-mail: [email protected] (c) 2016 by King
Features Syndicate
Today in History
Pictured are some of the committee members Andy
Schlimm, Rachel Schreiber and Ken Bish, missing from
the photo are AJ Alexander, Margie Schlimm and Kris
Kronenwetter. - submitted photo.
Harlan Beagley
Publisher, Daily Press
The Daily Press
(144920)
245 Brusselles St., St. Marys, Pa. 15857
Website: www.smdailypress.com
Publisher: Harlan J. Beagley
E-mail: [email protected]
Cell: 509-770-6598
Office: 814-781-1596
Managing Editor: Joseph Bell
E-mail: [email protected]
Phone: 814-781-1596
Fax: 814-834-7473
E-mail: [email protected]
Published every morning except Sunday, New Year’s Day, Memorial Day, July 4, Labor Day, Thanksgiving and Christmas.
Single copy price 50 cents.
By carrier or mail in county: 1 month $12.50, 3 months $36.75, 6
months $70.00, 1 year $134.75.
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months $73.00, 1 year $139.00,
Out of county mail delivery: 1 month $16.00.
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to The Daily Press, 245
Brusselles St., St. Marys, Pa. 15857. Complete information on advertising and advertising rates furnished at The Daily Press business office.
Advertisers must notify the management immediately when errors
appear. The publisher reserves the right to reject, edit or cancel any
advertising at any time without liability. Publisher’s liability for
error is limited to the amount paid for advertising.
Periodicals postage paid at St. Marys, Pa.
Today is Friday, March
25, the 85th day of 2016.
There are 281 days left in
the year.
Today's Highlight in
History:
On March 25, 1776,
Gen. George Washington,
commander of the Continental Army, was awarded
the first Congressional
Gold Medal by the Continental Congress.
On this date:
In 1306, Robert the
Bruce was crowned King
of Scots.
In 1865, during the Civil War, Confederate forces
attacked Fort Stedman in
Virginia but were forced to
withdraw because of counterattacking Union troops.
In 1911, 146 people,
mostly young female immigrants, were killed
when fire broke out at the
Triangle Shirtwaist Co. in
New York.
In 1947, a coal mine explosion in Centralia, Illinois, claimed 111 lives.
In 1954, RCA announced
it had begun producing
color television sets at its
plant in Bloomington, Indiana.
In 1965, the Rev. Martin
Luther King Jr. led 25,000
people to the Alabama
state capitol in Montgomery after a five-day march
from Selma to protest the
denial of voting rights to
blacks. Later that day,
civil rights activist Viola
Liuzzo, a white Detroit
homemaker, was shot and
killed by Ku Klux Klansmen.
In 1975, King Faisal
(FY'-suhl) of Saudi Arabia was shot to death by a
nephew with a history of
mental illness. (The nephew was beheaded in June
1975.)
In 1985, "Amadeus" won
eight Academy Awards, including best picture, best
director for Milos (MEE'lohsh) Forman and best
actor for F. Murray Abraham.
In 1990, 87 people, most
of them Honduran and Dominican immigrants, were
killed when fire raced
through an illegal social
club in New York City.
In 1991, "Dances with
Wolves" won seven Oscars,
including best picture, at
the 63rd annual Academy
Awards; Kathy Bates won
best actress for "Misery"
while Jeremy Irons received best actor for "Reversal of Fortune."
In 1996, an 81-day
standoff by the anti-government Freemen began
at a ranch near Jordan,
Montana.
In 2001, at the 73rd
Academy Awards, "Gladiator" won best picture;
its star, Russell Crowe,
was named best actor;
Julia Roberts received
the best actress Oscar for
"Erin Brockovich"; Steven
Soderbergh won best director for "Traffic."
Ten years ago: In Los Angeles, half a million people
marched to protest federal
legislation to make illegal
immigration a felony and
build more walls along the
border. In Seattle, Aaron
Kyle Huff opened fire in a
house full of ravers, killing
six of them before killing
himself. Kimmie Meissner won the ladies' World
Figure Skating Championships title in Calgary,
Alberta. Country music
star Buck Owens died in
Bakersfield,
California,
at age 76. Movie director
Richard Fleischer died in
Woodland Hills, California, at age 89.
Five years ago: Canadian opposition parties
brought down the Conservative government in
a no-confidence vote, triggering an election that
gave Prime Minister Stephen Harper a clear Conservative majority in Parliament. Olga Ulyanova,
89, a chemist and niece of
Soviet founder Vladimir
Lenin who'd written several books praising her
uncle and family, died in
Moscow.
One year ago: Afghan
President Ashraf Ghani
thanked the U.S. Congress
for billions of American tax
dollars and vowed his warwracked country would be
self-reliant within the decade. British singer Zayn
Malik shocked his fans by
announcing he was quitting the chart-topping
band One Direction.
Today's Birthdays: Movie reviewer Gene Shalit
is 90. Former astronaut
James Lovell is 88. Feminist activist and author
Gloria Steinem is 82.
Singer Anita Bryant is 76.
Singer Aretha Franklin
is 74. Actor Paul Michael
Glaser is 73. Singer Elton
John is 69. Actress Bonnie
Bedelia is 68. Actress-comedian Mary Gross is 63.
Actor James McDaniel is
58. Former Sen. John Ensign, R-Nev., is 58. Movie
producer Amy Pascal is
58. Rock musician Steve
Norman (Spandau Ballet) is 56. Actress Brenda
Strong is 56. Actor Fred
Goss is 55. Actor-writerdirector John Stockwell is
55. Actress Marcia Cross
is 54. Author Kate DiCamillo is 52. Actress Lisa
Gay Hamilton is 52. Actress Sarah Jessica Parker is 51. Baseball Hall of
Famer Tom Glavine is 50.
Olympic bronze medal figure skater Debi Thomas is
49. Actor Laz Alonso is 45.
Singer Melanie Blatt (All
Saints) is 41. Actor Domenick Lombardozzi is 40.
Actor Lee Pace is 37. Actor Sean Faris is 34. Auto
racer Danica Patrick is 34.
Actress-singer Katharine
McPhee is 32. Singer Jason Castro is 29. Rapper
Big Sean is 28. Rap DJ/
producer Ryan Lewis is
28. Actor Matthew Beard
is 27. Actress-singer Aly
(AKA Alyson) Michalka
(mish-AL'-kah) is 27. Actor Kiowa Gordon is 26.
Actress Seychelle Gabriel
is 25.
Thought for Today: "The
truth does not change according to our ability to
stomach it emotionally." —
Flannery O'Connor, American author (1925-1964).
www.smdailypress.com
Records
5
The Daily Press
Friday, March 25, 2016
Daily Press
Second super load transport
rescheduled for Thursday,
March 31 near Port Allegany
PORT ALLEGANY –
The Pennsylvania Department of Transportation
(PennDOT) is alerting
area motorists that Mammoet USA NE Corp. has
rescheduled the transport
of a second transformer
super load for Thursday,
March 31 along Route 155
and Route 6 in the Port
Allegany area.
The transformer will
follow the same route
as the first transport of
March 17, traveling from
a rail siding about two
miles north of the SR
155 and SR 6 intersection near Port Allegany to
the Pierce Brook Substation, located at 983 Pierce
Brook Road in Keating
Township. Weather permitting, the transport is
expected to start around
9 a.m. and last as late as
5 p.m.
The transformer will
travel south on Route 155
to Route 6, turning right
onto Route 6 and then
travel west on Route 6 until it reaches Pierce Brook
Road. It will then travel
north to the Pierce Brook
Substation site. Route 155
will be closed from the
rail siding to the Route
6 intersection. Once the
super load is on Route 6,
Route 155 will be opened
and Route 6 will then be
closed from Port Allegany to Pierce Brook Road.
Notes of Interest
Crafters are now being sought to participate
in the annual Craft Sale
held during Brockway’s
Routes 155 and 6 will “Old Fashioned Fourth of
not be closed at the same July Celebration” on July
time.
4 from 10 a.m. until 3 p.m.
The transformer will This is an outside show.
be transported on a duallane trailer that will take
up both lanes of Route 155
and Route 6, requiring
consecutive, full closures
on Route 155 and Route 6.
Drivers should expect
significant delays during
the transport and are encouraged to find alternate
routes through this area.
Community
Nurses
Roadway
message is pleased to sponsor the
boards will be in place pri- 2016 Hospice Foundation
or to this activity to alert of America (HFA) Livdrivers of the coming clo- ing with Grief program:
sures and traffic delays. “Managing Conflict/ FindPennsylvania State Police ing Meaning Supporting
will accompany the trans- Families at Life’s End.”
port to enhance safety.
The free teleconference
Motorists can check program will be held
conditions on more than on Wednesday, April 27
40,000 roadway miles, at from 9 a.m. to noon, in
www.511PA.com. 511PA, the Education Center at
which is free and avail- Penn Highlands Elk in St.
able 24 hours a day, pro- Marys.
vides traffic delay warnThis educational proings, weather forecasts, gram is presented by a
traffic speed information panel of experts in the
and access to more than field. 2.5 hours of con770 traffic cameras.
tinuing education will be
511PA is also available available through HFA
through a smartphone ap- for nurses, social workplication for iPhone and ers, counselors, clergy,
Android devices, by call- and more. The program is
ing 5-1-1, or by following also open to anyone in the
regional Twitter alerts community interested in
accessible on the 511PA learning more about this
website.
topic.
Follow PennDOT on
This program adTwitter at www.twitter. dresses methods, stratecom/511PAStateCOLL.
Set up begins at 7 a.m.
Only those with handmade, hand decorated, or
homemade baked items
will be accepted. For an
application or more information call Darlene at
814-265-8002.
Logs
Continued from Page 1
Larson was cited for
driving vehicle on roadways laned for traffic,
and he was transported
to Penn Highlands Elk by
the Ridgway Ambulance
for minor injuries.
Troopers were assisted
on the scene by PennDOT,
the Ridgway Fire Department and D and T Towing.
City of St. Marys
Police Department
Charges filed
The City of St. Marys
Police Department reports filing charges of disorderly conduct, harassment, and simple assault
against a local juvenile.
The charges are the re-
sult of an investigation
into an incident which
occurred at the St. Marys
Area Middle School on
March 16. Charges were
filed with Elk County
Juvenile Probation. The
identity of the juvenile
was not released by police.
901 thousand pounds,
up 15 percent from 2014,
according to King Whetstone, Director of the
USDA’s National Agricultural Statistics Service, Northeastern Regional Field Office. There
were 17 thousand colonies producing honey in
2015, unchanged from
2014. Yield per colony
15, 2015, up 11 percent
from a year earlier.
Honey
prices
increased during 2015 to
363 cents per pound,
up 25 percent from 291
cents per pound in 2014.
The Honey Production report and all other
NASS reports are available online at www.nass.
usda.gov.
Nurses to host “Managing
Pa. honey production up
Conflict/Finding
HARRISBURG
– averaged 53 pounds, up
Honey production in 15 percent from the 46
Meaning Supporting
2015 from Pennsylva- pounds in 2014. Producnia producers with five er honey stocks were 225
Families at Life’s End”
or more colonies totaled thousand pounds on Dec.
gies and practices that
can be used to provide
psycho- social and other
supports to terminally-ill
patients, their families
and close networks as
they cope with impending death. Particular emphasis will be placed on
how to manage sources of
conflict that often emerge
near life’s end, as well as
how to help individuals
and families find meaning
at life’s end.
Call the Community
Nurses at 781-4722 to register or to inquire about
CE credits. The program
is free. Low cost CE credits are available for a fee.
Each year HFA presents a
nationally recognized distance learning program to
more than 125,000 people
in 2,000 communities.
Community Nurses Hospice is an area host for
the Hospice Foundation of
America program.
History of falling increases
crash risk for older drivers
Older drivers with a
history of falling are 40
percent more likely to be
involved in crashes than
their peers, according to
a new study released by
the AAA Foundation for
Traffic Safety. Falls limit
an older drivers’ ability
to function behind the
wheel and can make driving risky for themselves
and others on the road.
These findings are important since annually
a record 12 million older
adults will experience a
fall.
“Drivers age 60 and
older are involved in
more than 400,000 crashes each year, and it’s important that we find ways
to keep them and others
safe on the road,” said
Theresa Podguski, Legislative Affairs Director
for AAA East Central.
“This research is critical because it shows that
we can now use an older
driver’s fall history to
identify if they are at
greater risk for a crash,”
she adds.
The report, Associations Between Falls and
Driving Outcomes in Older Adults, is the latest
research released in the
AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety’s Longitudinal
Research on Aging Drivers (LongROAD) project.
Researchers from the
University of Colorado
Anschutz Medical Campus along with the AAA
Foundation for Traffic
Safety say that falls can
increase crash risk in two
ways:
Falls can result in
a loss of functional abil-
Police Reports
ity (i.e. wrist fractures or
a broken leg), which can
make it difficult for older
drivers to steer or brake
to avoid a crash.
Falls can increase
an individual’s fear of
falling, which can lead to
a decrease in physical activity that weakens driving skills.
The research suggests
that seniors and their
families should view falls
as a possible early indicator of declining physical
fitness. Addressing the
health issues that originally led to the fall such
as lower body weakness,
poor balance, slow reaction time, certain medications, dizziness, or vision problems, can help
older drivers strengthen
their functional ability
and lower their risk for
crashing or experiencing
another fall in the future.
Fall prevention is a
great way for older drivers to keep themselves
and others safe while
on the road. Those concerned about a parent
or other older driver
should help them monitor risk factors that address health concerns or
household dangers. AAA
recommends a series of
exercises and stretches to
improve neck, shoulder,
trunk, back and overall
body flexibility, which
can help a driver who has
suffered from a recent
fall.As a leading advocate
for senior driver safety,
AAA also offers a variety
of programs and resources to help older drivers
improve their driving
performance and avoid
crashes.
ST. MARYS
MONUMENTS
LOCALLY OWNED
& OPERATED
SUSIE & DONNY (FLIP)
BOBENRIETH
148 TIMBERLINE ROAD
834-9848
Photo submitted
Pictured above, from left, Vince Horning, President of Mountaineer Search and Rescue, Nick Sette of TomBob Outdoors, Jessy
Hoffman of Wildwoods and Steve Bajor, Vice President of Mountaineer Search and Rescue.
First Annual Bigfoot
Calling Contest and Dance
Wildwoods Bar and
Grill held the First Annual Bigfoot Calling Contest and Dance on Feb. 20
to help raise money for
Mountaineer Search and
Rescue from Emporium.
Thirteen people entered
the contest and entertained the crowd. This
year’s top caller was Matt
Nicklas from St. Marys.
TomBob Outdoors was
also involved in the fundraiser and is hoping to
air some of the contest
and footage from the Big-
Wildfires
Continued from Page 3
sion of wildfires on the 17
million acres of state and
private woodlands and
brush lands. The bureau
maintains a fire-detection
system, and works with
fire wardens and volunteer fire departments to
ensure they are trained in
the latest advances in fire
prevention and suppression.
For more information
on Wildfire Prevention
Week activities, contact local district foresters; call
the Bureau of Forestry at
(717) 787-2925; or visit
www.dcnr.pa.gov
(select
“Forestry” then “Wildland
Fire”).
foot Hunt which will take
place July 2 in Emporium.
Six Pak finished up
the night putting on a
great show to entertain
the crowd. Wildwoods,
TomBob Outdoors and
Mountaineer Search and
Rescue would like to acknowledge everyone for
their participation and
donations to help their
search and rescue operations. All together, $862
was raised.
Do you have a news
tip or story idea?
Contact The Daily
Press newsroom
at 814-781-1596 or
send an e-mail to
smnews@
smdailypress.com.
KORB
MONUMENTS
Since 1901
1-800-752-1601
Mary Petrucci
814-781-3063
www.korbmonuments.com
Foot and Ankle Specialist
Dr. David G. Sanderson D.P.M.
General • Medical • Orthopedic • Surgical
• Diabetic Shoegear
• Diabetic Safety Shoes Now Avail.
• Diabetic Shoes covered for Medicare patients
• Diabetic Safety Shoes may be reimbursed by your
• employer
Participating with Medicare & Most HMO, PPO, & Private Insurances
814-834-7240
238 Chestnut St. • St. Marys, PA / Cameron Co. Health Center 90 E. 2nd St. • Emporium, PA
Reardon, military historian
and Penn State University
Laureate, to speak at DuBois
DuBOIS – A presentation by the Penn State
Laureate for 2015-16,
Military Historian Carol
Reardon, is scheduled for
7 p.m. on Tuesday, April
5, in Hiller Auditorium at
Penn State DuBois. Reardon will share her program, From Battlefield to
Boardrooms: Gettysburg’s
Leadership Lessons for
the 21st Century. This
event is free and open to
all members of the public.
Reardon is a professor
of American History, who’s
teaching and research focus on military history,
specifically that of the Civil War and Vietnam era.
Established in 2008,
the Penn State Laureateship was founded in order
to provide an enhanced
level of social, cultural, ar-
Carol Reardon
tistic and human perspective and awareness to a
broad array of audiences.
One faculty member receives the honor each year,
and embarks on a statewide tour to share their
work.
Moody’s: Pa. $6.6B budget
ignores fiscal challenges
HARRISBURG
(AP)
— A credit rating agency
on Thursday welcomed the
end of Pennsylvania’s ninemonth budget stalemate but
said the spending package
doesn’t resolve the state’s
structural budget deficit or
address its looming pension
crisis.
Democratic Gov. Tom
Wolf backed off a veto threat
and agreed to permit a Republican-penned $6.6 billion
supplemental spending package to become law, saying he
relented because it was “time
to move on” and start work
on the next budget.
Moody’s said Thursday
that while the budget represents an improvement over
“political gridlock,” it fails to
address the state’s long-term
fiscal challenges.
“The approved budget ...
casts no light on the government’s ability to reach compromise on its long-term fiscal challenges,” Moody’s said
in a statement.
Noting
Pennsylvania
faces sharply higher pension costs, the agency said
the budget fails to fully fund
public employee pensions. It
said Pennsylvania’s willingness to address the pension
crisis “in spite of what could
be slow tax revenue growth
will be a major factor in the
commonwealth’s credit profile.”
The agency also said it
expects Pennsylvania’s economy to “underperform due to
weak demographics and poor
fiscal conditions over the long
See Moody’s, Page 14
DATE ADDED
BARB & JACK OWNERS
SAINT MARYS
SHOWROOM
481 BRUSSELLS ST.
OPEN DAILY
834-4415
6
The Daily Press
Friday, March 25, 2016
www.smdailypress.com
Palms
With Easter coming soon, the students at the St. Marys Catholic Elementary School learned
more about the season. During their studies, they discovered the events of Palm Sunday,
the week before Easter when Jesus entered Jerusalem. After they understood all that occurred on Palm Sunday, the fifth graders made palm branch crosses. The students enjoyed
the project and then distributed to crosses at Pinecrest, Elk Haven, and Silver Creek during
Holy Week. In the above picture are fifth graders Rylie Belsole, Brooke Dilley, Gabby Weisner and Rachel Sloff. What a great way to help celebrate the season!
Changes
Everyone and everything changes continually. Recently, the students in Mrs. Meredith’s seventh grade science class at the St. Marys Catholic Middle School studied the differences
between physical and chemical changes. A physical change simply changes the appearance of the substance while a chemical change creates a completely new substance. The
students are shown doing a chemical reaction with water, glue, and borax. The result is a
sticky substance that will bounce – slime. This is always a fun-filled experiment that the
students enjoy!
Recycling
Recycling is important to help save Mother Earth. Mr. Vogt’s sixth grade students at St.
Marys Catholic Middle School are doing a recycling project. The students are learning
about how they can do their part to keep the world beautiful. They were asked to create
something useful or creative from nothing but garbage. The students scoured their homes
for items that they would normally throw away and create a recycled product. In the above
picture are some of the students with their recycling projects. How creative and educational
at the same time!
Beautiful Music
Music is an expression of love and inspiration. To foster this creativity, the third graders at
the St. Marys Catholic Elementary School are learning how to play the recorder during this
second semester of school. The students are learning how to read notes on a staff, proper
playing posture, and instrument responsibility. To encourage proper practice habits and personal motivation, students learn songs that earn colored belts (which has a similar concept
to karate belts). Songs get progressively more difficult, but their perseverance is essential
to continue earning “belts.” In the above left picture, Cecilia Dornisch is writing note names
on the Smart Board for “Merrily We Roll Along.” In the right picture, Maria Radkowski and
Gina Geci are playing the song. With spring in the air, music is a natural continuation!
K’NEX Challenge
Work time
Not all students finish projects and papers at the same time. During one of Mrs. Steele’s
eighth grade English classes, students worked on different parts of the verbal unit. The
eighth graders had to work on individual worksheets on finding infinitives used as nouns,
adjectives, and adverbs. In the picture, most of the students opted to do the old fashioned
worksheets that day, but on other days they chose other options. A different option was
working with Newspapers in Education. Instead of doing worksheets, they were looking
for their infinitives using The Daily Press and the Bradford Era. In the picture, Elly Neubert,
Lindsey Werner, and Tyler Herzing are using the newspapers. Yet another student was using technology. Maddie Taylor was using the iPad to practice with infinitives on a program
called IXL. All three lessons accomplished the same goal: identify and label infinitives. The
students liked the option of how to do their work.
Everyone likes a good challenge. The fourth and fifth grade enrichment students from the
St. Marys Catholic Elementary School recently attended the K’NEX STEM Challenge in
Port Allegany on Tuesday, March 1. The students had been working for weeks on drawing
a blueprint, building their structure, keeping an inventory, making a presentation board,
and incorporating technology with the use of the iPad for their presentation. The students
worked very hard on their projects and learned a lot about working as a team and being
creative. They learned a lot and created a wonderful project.
Verb Trees
Red Cross
The American Red Cross is essential in this country. They do so much for so many. The
students at the St. Marys Catholic Elementary School realize this truth. They recently held
a dress-down day for students, faculty, and staff. Each person brought in a donation for
the privilege of dressing down. They all love a chance to go to school without the school
uniform. From this dress-down day, they collected money to use to make a donation to the
American Red Cross. In the above picture, third graders, Gerrianne Vogt, Michael Belsole,
Allen Singer, and Gianna Bille presented the check to Mr. Steve Zimmett. It is so nice to see
students giving back to the community!
What do verbs and trees have in common? Mrs. Bon’s sixth grade English class found out.
They have been working on a verb unit in which they studied present tense, past tense,
future tense, present progressive tense, past progressive tense, future progressive tense,
present perfect tense, past perfect tense, and future perfect tense. The students completed
worksheets identifying the verbs and labeling the tenses. They filled out verb conjugation
sheets for many of the irregular verbs. Last week, they worked on a group project in which
they created a verb tree. Each group brainstormed to give their tree a unique name and
then chose two verbs for the tree’s leaves. The tree had to bear a minimum of 18 leaves.
Each leaf bore the verb written in complete sentences using one of the nine different tenses.
Each of the verb tenses had to be found on the tree at least two times. The students labeled
each leaf, identifying the verb and its tense. The projects were graded not only for having the
verbs used correctly, but they were also graded for spelling, punctuation, and neatness. In
the above picture, Holly Buttery, Audrey Dornisch, Joey Geci, and Wes Lion are showing off
their tree. What a unique way to learn the different verb tenses.
7
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PHAZTECH, INC.
Tool & Die
40 S. St. Marys St.
St. Marys, PA 15857
Ph. 814-834-3262
STEVE NEWELL PLUMBING
AND HEATING, INC.
1031 Trout Run Rd.
St. Marys, PA 15857
814-781-7468
SUBURBAN BUILDING
CENTER, INC.
Johnsonburg Rd. St. Marys, PA
M-W-F: 7:30-5:00; T-Th. 7:30-7:00;
Sat. 7:30-12:00
814-781-7576
THE DAILY PRESS
245 Brusselles St.
St. Marys, PA 15857
781-1596
WESTERN HOME
Elk County’s Largest
Appliance Selection
727 S. St. Marys Rd
St. Marys, PA
814-781-1581
STRAUB INSURANCE
AGENCY, INC.
Auto, Life, Home & Health Insurance
201 John St. St. Marys, PA
834-2490
EASTERN TOOL
STEEL SERVICE
P.O. Box 857
1045 Delaum Rd., St. Marys, PA
Ph. (814) 834-7224
STOLTZ FORD
OF ST. MARYS
Million Dollar Highway
Sales: 781-1010
Service: 781-8404
ST. MARYS
STEEL SUPPLY
Specializing In Tool Steel
240 Stackpole St., St. Marys, PA
814-834-7116
The Daily Press
Friday, March 25, 2016
FIRST UNITED METHODIST
140 N. St. Marys Street
St. Marys, PA
834-3016
Rev. Tim Hoover, Pastor
www.stmarysumc.com
Sunday Morning Services 8:30 a.m. - Traditional Worship
9:45 a.m. - Sunday School
11:00 - Contemporary Worship
QUEEN OF THE WORLD
CHURCH
Fr. Richard J. Allen, Pastor
Sunday Obligation Masses
Saturday — 5:00 and 7:30 p.m.
Sunday — 7:30, 10:00 a.m.
Daily Masses
Mon. thru Sat. — 7:00 a.m.
Confessions — Saturday 4 to
4:45 p.m. and 7:00 to 7:20 p.m.
WESLEYAN CHURCH
Weedville, Pa
Sunday
Pastor Bryon Kletpinger
Youth Pastor Daniel Henderlong
9:30 a.m. — Sunday School.
10:30 a.m. — Morning Worship.
6:00 p.m. — Evening Worship.
6:00 p.m. — Big House Youth
Wednesday
5:30 p.m. — AWANA
6:30 p.m. — Adult Bible
Study
ST. JOSEPH CHURCH
Force, Pa
Rev. William Sutherland
Sunday Obligatlon Masses
Saturday — 5:00 p.m
Sunday — 9:00 a.m.
Daily Mass — 8:30 a.m.
Confessions — Saturday 4 and
4:45 p.m.
SHILOH
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
Sunday
Rev. Scott Wiest
Sunday service at 10:30 a.m.
Sunday School - (for all ages)
— 9:15 a.m.
Sunday Evening - 6:00 p.m.
“The Gathering” a praise & worship service.
www.shilohpc.com
E-mail: [email protected]
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST
LATTER DAY SAINTS
Jct. Routes 219 and 948
Sunday
9:00 a.m. — Sacrament meeting.
10:20 a.m. — Auxiliary.
11:20 a.m.— Sunday School.
ST. MARY’S CHURCH
Fr. Alfred Patterson OSB, Pastor
Sunday Obligation Masses
Saturday — 4:30 p.m.
Sunday — 6:30, 8:30, 10:30
a.m.
Holy Day
6:00 p.m. vigil, 8:45 a.m., 5:15
p.m.
Confessions — Saturday 3:30
to 4:15 p.m.
GOOD SHEPHERD
LUTHERAN CHURCH
at St. Agnes Episcopal Church
Rev. Bruce J. Burkness
Sunday
10:45 a.m. — Sunday School.
11:00 a.m. — Service
BENEZETTE UNITED
METHODIST
256 Winslow Hill Road
814-787-5891
Rev. Lola Turnbull, Pastor
Sunday
11:30 a.m. — Sunday Worship
SINNEMAHONING UNITED
METHODIST
48 Lions Road • 814-787-5891
Rev. Lola Turnbull
Sunday
10:30 a.m. - Sunday Worship
Thursday
6:00 p.m. - 2nd Thursday
Community Dinner
Saturday
8:00 a.m. - 1st Saturday, Men’s
Breakfast
SACRED HEART CHURCH
337 Center Street
Saint Marys, PA 15857
Father Eric T. Vogt, O.S.B., Pastor
Sunday Obligation Masses
4:30 p.m. — Saturday Anticipated.
7:00, 9:00 and 11:00 a.m. — Sunday.
Daily Masses
6:15 a.m. Monday through Friday;
Holy Days of Obligation
5:15 p.m. - Vigil., 6:15 a.m. &
12:05 p.m.
Confession
3:30 to 4:15 p.m. — Saturdays
Thursday before First Friday
4:00 p.m. until all are heard.
ST. AGNES EPISCOPAL CHURCH
209 N. St. Marys St.
(814) 781-1909
www.saintagnesepiscopalchurch.org
Sundays
8:30 a.m. Holy Eucharist
CALEDONIA UNITED
METHODIST
3335 River Road
814-787-5891
Rev. Lola Turnbull, Pastor
Sunday
10:15 a.m. - Sunday Worship
Thursday
7:00 p.m. - Thursday Prayer
Service (except 2nd Thursday)
RIDGWAY
CHURCH OF NAZARENE
23 Metoxet St.
Ridgway, PA 15853
Phone 776-6323
Rev. Joe Miller, Jr., Pastor
Sunday
9:30 a.m. — Sunday School.
10:30 a.m. — Morning Worship.
6:00 p.m. — Evening Worship.
Wednesday
7:00 p.m. — Prayer.
AGAPE’ ASSEMBLY OF GOD
1004 Earth Road, St. Marys
781 -7445
Pastor Ed Carocci
www.agapestmarys.org
[email protected]
Sunday
9:00 a.m. — Sunday School.
10:00 a.m . — Morning Worship. Nursery provided. Children’s Worship Service
Other Events
Once a month special event on
selected Sundays, with a fellowship dinner following. Everyone
welcome. Please contact us for
details and times.
Agape’ is the Greek word for
God’s love.
GRACE BAPTIST CHURCH
328 First Ave (on Cobb St.)
Johnsonburg, PA 15845 • 814965-4580
Int. Pr. Art Lockard
Sunday School 10:00am;
Worship Service 11:00am;
Afternoon Service 2:00pm;
Wednesday Kid’s Club 6:00pm
BETHLEHEM LUTHERAN
226 South Street
Ridgway, PA 15853
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Sunday School - 9:00 a.m.
ABUNDANT LIFE
CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP
New Testament/
Non-denominational
18 Gillis Ave. Ridgway, PA.
772-3261
Sunday Services
9:00 a.m. — Sunday School
10:00 a.m — Morning Worship.
GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH
216 Center St., Ridgway
776-6132
Sunday Services 10:00 a.m.
HOLY ROSARY
Roman Catholic Church
Corner Bridge and Penn Streets
Rectory: 606 Penn Street,
Johnsonburg
Rev. David, J. Wilson, Pastor
Lord’s Day Masses
Saturday, 5:30 p.m.;
Sunday, 8:30 and 10:00 a.m.
FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH
288 West Creek Road
St. Marys, PA 15857
Pastor Brad Brunner
834-1830
Sunday
9:30 a.m. — Sunday school for
all ages - Nursery provided.
10:30 a.m. — Worship Service
- Nursery provided.
(Every 3rd Sunday - Hearing
Impaired Service)
Monday
6:30 p.m. — Ladies’ Bible Study
Wednesday
6:00 p.m. — Prayer Service
ST. BONlFACE CHURCH
Kersey, Pa.
Father Ross Miceli
Sunday Obligation Masses
5:00 p.m. — Saturday.
8:00 and 10:30 a.m. — Sunday.
Confession
4:00 p.m. til Ànished Saturday.
SACRED HEART CHURCH
337 Center Street
Saint Marys, PA 15857
Father Eric T. Vogt, O.S.B., Pastor
Sunday Obligation Masses
4:30 p.m. — Saturday Anticipated.
7:00, 9:00 and 11:00 a.m. —
Sunday.
Daily Masses
6:15 a.m. Monday through
Friday;
Holy Days of Obligation
5:15 p.m. - Vigil., 6:15 a.m. & 12:05
p.m.
Confession
3:30 to 4:15 p.m. — Saturdays
Thursday before First Friday
4:00 p.m. until all are heard.
ELKTON PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH
Dagus Mines, Pa.
Jim Dixon, Lay Leader
Sunday Services
Worship — 9:00 a.m.
MARIA LUTHERAN CHURCH
Dagus Mines, PA
Senior Pastor: Rev. Erik R. Hart
Sunday
9:00 a.m. — Morning Worship.
STERLING RUN UNITED
METHODIST
398 Sterling run Road
Rev. Lola Turnbull
814-787-5891
Sunday
9:00 a.m. - Sunday Worship
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
Johnsonburg, Pa.
Rev. Bob Andrews
Sunday
9:15 a.m. —Worship Service.
2nd Sunday of Each Month
7:00 p.m. —Worship Service.
Mon., Wed., Fri.
6:30 p.m. — Prayer Time.
WEEDVILLE UNITED
METHODIST
1907 Redwood Avenue
814-787-5891
Rev. Lola Turnbull, Pastor
Sunday
9:00 a.m. — Sunday Worship.
10:15 a.m. — Sunday School.
4:00 p.m. — Kid’s for Jesus Club
(Grade 1st thru 12th)
INDEPENDENT BAPTIST
CHURCH
First Avenue and Cobb Street
Johnsonburg, PA - Ph. 837-7775
Sunday Services
10:00 a.m. — Sunday School.
11:00 a.m. — Morning Worship.
6:00 p.m. — Evening Worship.
Wednesday
7:00 p.m.—Bible Study.
SAINT ANNE CHURCH
Roman Catholic Church
Buchanan Street, Wilcox, PA
Rev. David J. Wilson, Pastor
Lords Day Mass
7:30 p.m. — Saturday
UNITED METHODIST
CHURCH
5 Clarion Road
Johnsonburg - Ph. 965-2415
Rev. Jay P. Tennies
Sunday Worship
11:00 a.m. - Worship
9:45 a.m. - SUNDAY SCHOOL
BYRNEDALE UNION CHURCH
Rev. Tom Cole, Pastor
136 Madison St., Byrnedale
Sunday
Church School 10:15 a.m.
Morning Worship 11:15 a.m.
Evening (KJB Chapel) 6:30 p.m.
ST. JOHN’S EVANGELICAL
LUTHERAN CHURCH
325 Church Street • Johnsonburg, PA 15845
Rev. J. Stephen Fair, O.C.C., Pastor
OfÀce Ph: 814-965-4575
Off. Hrs: M-F 9AM-NOON;
Pastor Hrs: M &W 9AM-NOON
Sunday
9:00 a.m. — Worship with Holy
Communion
Saturday
5:45 p.m. — Worship with Holy
Communion
ELK BAPTIST CHURCH
(Southern Baptlst Conventlon)
191 Ford Road
St. Marys, PA 15857
834-1741
http://come.to/elkbaptistchurch
Rev. Barry Moyer, Pastor
814-885-6593
Sunday
9:45 a.m. — Bible Study.
10:55 a.m. — Morning Worship.
Youth & Visitation programs
available.
BROCKPORT UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH
Rev. Karen Trask, Pastor
Sunday & Services
8:30 a.m. — Toby.
9:30 a.m. — Kersey.
10:30 a.m. — Brandy Camp.
11:00 a.m. — Brockport.
Prayer-Bible Study 6:30 p.m.
SAINT LEO MAGNUS
ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH
111 Depot Street
Rev. Brian Vossler, Pastor
Weekend Masses:
Saturday - 5:15 p.m.;
Sunday - 8:00 a.m., 10:00 a.m.
Confessions: Sautrday - 4:00 p.m.
More information at:
www.stleos-parish.org
IT’S A GOOD GOOD FRIDAY
By Pastor B.J. Knefley
Good Friday is the day that Christians celebrate the crucifixion of Christ. So why do they
call it “Good”. Perhaps the best explanation came
through a simple cartoon where one of the characters was saying that he didn’t understand why
they called the day that Jesus hung on a cross
good, in fact he actually stated that he hated the
expression. His friend replied, “If you were going
to be hung on that day and he volunteered to take
your place, how would you feel?” “Good” said his
friend. With that, his friend turned to walk away
and said, “Have a nice day.”
The entire point in Christianity is that God
provides what man cannot. In all other religions,
it is up to man to do what is pleasing and right for
their God. Simply put, by doing good, one earns
their position with God. Christianity does not
work that way. Instead it is acknowledging that
we can’t live up to the expectations that we surrender. It is in the understanding that we are sinners and that redemption isn’t something we can
obtain through self-effort. Rather it is a gift, one
that is extended to all, but received by few.
Jesus said, “the gateway to life is very narrow
and the road is difficult, and only a few ever find
it” (Matthew 7:14). Why? Because it’s a life of faith
and as a people, we take pride in what we do. How
many find it difficult to receive? Yet, that is what
Christ is asking, that we receive his free gift, eternal life, (John 3:16).
Prior to the crucifixion, Pilate asked if the
crowd wanted Jesus to be set free or another man
who was scheduled to be crucified name Barabbas. They called for Barabbas to be released. Interestingly the Scriptures are silent as to how
Barabbas responded to the free gift of life that
was extended to him that day. He like many today,
probably scoffed at it with contempt and distain.
After all, he had importance and status. Both the
Jews and the Romans hated him because he was
an insurrectionist and he probably went back to
doing what he always did. Living a self-centered
life. Are we any different? Think about it.
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8
The Daily Press
Friday, March 25, 2016
www.smdailypress.com
Devils’ Wedgewood gets 1st shutout in 3-0 win over Penguins
PITTSBURGH (AP) — Kyle
Palmieri scored twice in the
first period and Scott Wedgewood stopped 39 shots for his
first career shutout as the New
Jersey Devils beat the Pittsburgh Penguins 3-0 on Thursday night.
Palmieri, who set career
highs with 29 goals and 52
points, has a four-game points
streak. He scored twice early
and Wedgewood held off the
high-scoring Penguins until
Adam Henrique sealed the win
for the Devils with his 27th of
the season midway through the
third period.
New Jersey has won five of
seven.
Marc-Andre Fleury finished with 21 saves as Pitts-
burgh snapped a season-high
six-game winning streak. The
Penguins ended a run of nine
straight games against Metropolitan Division opponents at
7-2.
They remained four points
behind the second-place New
York Rangers in the division —
and home-ice advantage in a
first-round playoff series. The
Islanders are one point back in
fourth place and hold the Eastern Conference’s first wild card
spot.
Devils starting goaltender
Cory Schneider hasn’t played
since injuring his knee on
March 4. He returned to practice and could play next week.
Wedgewood spent the season in the ECHL and mainly
the AHL before an emergency
recall earlier this week. He allowed one goal in his NHL debut
against Columbus on Sunday,
stopping 27 shots to become the
first Devils goaltender to win in
his debut since Martin Brodeur
in 1992.
Wedgewood, New Jersey’s
third-round pick in 2010, followed his initial win with his
first career shutout against a
Penguins’ team that ranks third
in the league since Mike Sullivan took over as head coach in
December.
Pittsburgh captain Sidney
Crosby saw a 12-game point
streak come to an end. Crosby
scored six goals and 20 points
during a streak that was the
longest active in the league.
Palmieri opened the scoring
26 seconds into the game on a
breakaway. He took a pass from
Travis Zajac off the boards and
squeezed a wrist shot through
Fleury’s pads to give the Devils
the early lead.
Palmieri scored 8 seconds
into a Devils power play later in
the period as his slap shot from
the left point beat Fleury to the
glove side.
Hurricanes 3,
Blue Jackets 2
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) —
Elias Lindholm, Victor Rask
and Chris Terry each scored
goals within 1:38 of each other
in the third period, Eddie Lack
made 43 saves and the Carolina
Hurricanes beat the Columbus
Blue Jackets 3-2 on Thursday
night.
With Carolina leading 3-1,
Lack halted a wraparound attempt by Boone Jenner with his
left leg pad. Jenner pushed the
puck over the line after a series
of swipes, however, to cut Carolina’s lead to one at 4:03 of the
third.
The Jackets could not net
an equalizer despite pulling
goaltender Sergei Bobrovsky
with 90 seconds remaining.
Matt Calvert tipped a shot
by Dalton Prout over Lack’s
left shoulder and into the net
at 17:25 of the second to give
Columbus its lone lead of the
game. Bobrovsky finished with
21 saves for the Blue Jackets.
IUP tops Penn State DuBois 17-5 Rosters announced for
DuBOIS – Penn State
DuBois head coach Tom
Calliari’s first-year squad
faced off against the IUP
team which includes his
younger brother, Chris,
on Wednesday night at
Showers Field in DuBois.
Despite Penn State taking an early 2-0 lead on a
two RBI home run by Anthony Caruso in the bottom of the opening inning,
IUP scored five runs each
in the third and fourth
to pull ahead 10-2. Both
teams scored a run in the
fifth, and Penn State cut
the deficit to 11-5 in the
sixth with another pair of
runs. However, IUP pulled
away again with six more
runs in the top of the seventh to win 17-5.
PSUD shortstop Caleb Bennett (Kersey/St.
Marys Area) walked twice
and had one stolen base.
He also scored one of DuBois’ runs.
Austin Amacher (Ridgway/Ridgway) worked 2.1
innings in relief for the
PSUD squad. He faced 10
batters and gave up one
run on one hit while walking two and striking out
two.
For IUP, Chris Calliari
(Brockway/Brockway)
went two-for-four with a
double and also recorded
three RBIs while scoring one run. Calliari also
walked twice.
Sportsmanship 1 District 9 all-star games
Games set
for April 2
at Keystone
Photo by Becky Polaski
Caleb Bennett, 7, is shown at bat for Penn State DuBois during their game against IUP on Wednesday night
at Showers Field.
IUP Athlete of the Week
in an announcement made
Monday for the week ending on Sunday, March 20.
Calliari is an Athlete
of the Week thanks to a
big game in game one of
Thursday’s doubleheader
at Gannon. On the week,
Calliari hit .300 (3-for-10),
slugged 1.000 and reached
base on a home run and
double.
In Thursday’s 17-11
loss, Calliari hit a fourthinning RBI double to
CLARION – Rosters for the 16th Annual
Sportsmanship I/Clarion
County YMCA District
9 All-Star game to be
played Saturday, April 2
at Keystone High School
were announced.
A total of 40 senior
boys and girls – 20 each –
will be in action in a twogame schedule that begins
with the girls’ game at 6
p.m. followed by the boys’
game at approximately 8
p.m. The games serve as a
tribute to outgoing senior
basketball players and a
fundraising event for the
YCMA’s Camp Coffman.
The girls’ teams are
broken up into Team
White, coached by North
Clarion’s Terry Dreihaup
and Karns City’s Dave
Kerschbaumer, and Team
Royal Blue, mentored by
Brookville’s Mark Powell
and Punxsutawney’s Mike
Carlson.
On the boys’ side will
be Team Red, coached by
Clarion-Limestone’s Joe
Ferguson and Coudersport’s Brian Furman, and
right field to plate Scott
Hess and get the Crimson Hawks on the scoreboard. In the seventh inning, Calliari hit a grand
slam to center field as IUP
scored seven runs in the
inning.
Calliari finished the
game going 3-for-3 with
the grand slam, double
Calliari named IUP
and eight RBIs. Calliari’s
Athlete of the Week
WILLIAMSPORT –
four home runs lead the
INDIANA – Junior
With a young roster of
team, while his 15 RBIs 12 student-athletes this
baseball player Chris Calliari has been named an
are second.
spring, the Lycoming College women’s tennis team
will look to continue to
build into a contender
once again in the MAC
Commonwealth
under
sixth-year head coach LeLOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) former coach Rollie Mas- and Angel Rodriguez added Roy Baer.
With just one senior
— Ryan Arcidiacono and simino, who led Villanova 13.
on
the
roster, the team,
Kris Jenkins each scored to the 1985 national chamMiami got here by beat21 points, and No. 2 seed pionship, sitting nearby.
ing a pair of double-digit which lost three starters
Villanova never trailed in
Villanova will play ei- seeds, Buffalo and Wichita to graduation last year,
routing third-seeded Miami ther top-seeded Kansas or State. Villanova showed will have a chance to grow
92-69 Thursday night in No. 5 seed Maryland on the team from the Atlantic and develop after posting
the South Region semifinal Saturday in the regional Coast Conference why the a 0-5 mark in the fall.
At the top of the lineof the NCAA Tournament.
final.
Wildcats were ranked No.
up,
the Warriors will likeThe Wildcats (32-5) are
Daniel Ochefu added 1 in the nation for the first
ly
use
returning starters
back in the Elite Eight for 17 points, and Josh Hart time in program history
the first time since 2009, had 14 for Villanova, which earlier this season. It was in junior Sophie Herzing
when they reached the Fi- shot 62.7 percent (32 of 51). the first game between the (St. Marys/Elk County
nal Four. It’s their third
Miami (27-8) now is 0-3 teams in the NCAA Tourna- Catholic) and sophomore
trip to the regional final in this round and 0-2 with ment, and the first overall Kaitlin Hallabuk (Towanwith coach Jay Wright. coach Jim Larranaga.
since March 2004, when da/Towanda Area). HerzThey turned in quite the
Sheldon
McClellan both teams were in the Big ing competed in both the
No. 1 and No. 2 slots in
offensive performance with scored 26 points for Miami, East.
the spring after moving up
from the No. 5 slot, where
she won three matches as
a sophomore. Hallabuk
Schedule subject to change with- varsity only, 4:15 p.m.
posted a 1-5 record in the
Boys tennis
out notice.
fall, including a 1-2 mark
St. Marys at Bradford, 3:30 p.m.
FRIDAY, MARCH 25
at No. 1 singles, but she
ECCHS at Johnsonburg, 3:30 p.m.
No activities scheduled.
FRIDAY, APRIL 1
SATURDAY, MARCH 26
Baseball
No activities scheduled.
ECCHS at Punxsutawney, varsity
MONDAY, MARCH 28
and junior varsity, 4:15 p.m.
No activities scheduled.
Softball
TUESDAY, MARCH 29
ECCHS at DuBois Area, varsity 4:15
No activities scheduled.
ANAHEIM,
Calif.
p.m., junior varsity 5:30 p.m.
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 30
(AP) — Jordan Woodard
SATURDAY, APRIL 2
Baseball
scored 22 points and BudTrack
Johnsonburg at ECCHS, varsity and
St. Marys and ECCHS at Igloo Invi- dy Hield had 17 points
junior varsity, 4:15 p.m.
and 10 rebounds to lead
tational in Altoona, 8 a.m.
Softball
the second-seeded OklaBaseball
ECCHS at Johnsonburg, varsity 4:15
Warren at St. Marys, varsity and ju- homa Sooners to a 77-63
p.m., junior varsity 5:30 p.m.
romp over third-seeded
nior varsity, noon.
THURSDAY, MARCH 31
and cold-shooting Texas
Softball
Baseball
Johnsonburg at St. Marys, junior A&M in the NCAA West
St. Marys at Curwensville, varsity
Regional on Thursday.
varsity only, noon.
only, 4:15 p.m.
The Sooners (28-7) adCurwensville at St. Marys, junior
No. 2 seed Villanova routs
Miami 92-69 in South semifinal
Scholastic Schedule
Team Navy Blue headed
by Elk County Catholic’s
Aaron Straub and Kane’s
Matt Gasbarre.
Girls
Team White: Hali
Olson - Brookville, Emily Ryan - Clearfield, Emily Morey - Coudersport,
Dayna DeSalve - DuBois
Area, Morgan Silvis - Forest Area, LeeAnn Gibson
- Karns City, Amber Hess
- Keystone, Abbie Schmader - North Clarion, Becca
Dougherty - Redbank Valley, Rachel Bauer - St.
Marys. Coaches - Terry
Dreihaup - North Clarion
and Dave Kerschbaumer Karns City.
Team Royal Blue: Morgan Cratty - A-C Valley,
Elaina Powell - Brookville,
Kelly Beveridge - Clarion,
Anna Reed - Clarion, Rachel Glenny - Clearfield,
Courtney Chandler - DuBois Area, Brooke Hinderliter - Redbank Valley,
Jessica Kifer - Ridgway,
Ava Homan - Venango
Catholic. Coaches - Mark
Powell - Brookville and
Mike Carlson - Punxsutawney.
Boys
Team
Red:
Kurt
Schindler - Brookville,
Trae Smith - Cameron
County, Noah Rankin -
Clarion-Limestone, Cody
Spaid - Clearfield, Darren Keglovits - Coudersport, Christian LaParne
- DuBois Central, Zayn
Hargenrader - North
Clarion, Heath Stewart Otto-Eldred, Sam Heeter
- Redbank Valley, Jeremy
Breier - Ridgway. Coaches
- Joe Ferguson - ClarionLimestone and Brian Furman - Coudersport.
Team Navy Blue: Anderson Nicka - Austin,
Jonathan Smith - Clarion,
Taylor Smith - ClarionLimestone, Evan Lutz
- Cranberry, Zach Sloan
- DuBois Area, Jordan
Seefeldt - Port Allegany,
Dylan Huey - Punxsutawney, Parker Housler - St.
Marys, Cole Morris Union, Brady Kingston Venango Catholic. Coaches - Aaron Straub - Elk
Catholic and Matt Gasbarre - Kane.
Four players were
chosen to play in the game
but for various reasons
couldn’t participate. They
are Elk County Catholic’s
Kyle Huff, Oswayo Valley’s Brandon Brabham,
St. Marys Area’s Brady
Bauer and Punxsutawney’s Hope Bridge.
Lycoming women’s tennis team opens season
led the team with six victories as a freshman. The
pair will also team up at
No. 1 doubles, where they
posted a 1-5 mark during
the fall.
A pair of freshmen
also moved into the lineup during the fall and
will continue to compete
for the time in the lineup
in Brittany Lenze (St.
Marys/Elk County Catholic) and Kimberleigh Parroccini (Warren/Warren
Area). Lenze moved into
the No. 3 slot in the fall
and Parroccini saw time
between No. 3 and No. 6
singles, and Parroccinni
will likely move into the
upper half of the lineup
again in the spring. The
pair also teamed up at No.
2 doubles.
The Warriors opened
their
spring
season
against Penn College on
Thursday with a 6-3 victory.
At first singles, Melissa Stabley defeated
Herzing 4-6, 6-2, 10-7, but
Herzing and Hallabuk
teamed up to defeat Sta-
bley and Carolyn Krasley
8-3 at first doubles. At
second doubles Lenze and
Parroccini defeated Morgan Blackwell and Megan
Barlett 8-4.
The match opened
one of the most ambitious
schedules in Lycoming’s
program history, with 12
matches taking place in a
span of 32 days. The Warriors will head to Alfred
on March 29 before starting a four-match homestand the next day against
Lancaster Bible (March
30). The Warriors will
also welcome MAC Commonwealth foe Stevenson
(April 2), Keuka (April 6)
and MAC Commonwealth
foe Arcadia (April 9) during the home swing.
After the homestand,
the Warriors will finish
the year with five more
MAC
Commonwealth
matches, heading to Messiah (April 13), Hood
(April 16) and Albright
(April 30) and hosting
Lebanon Valley (April 19)
and Alvernia (April 23).
Woodard, Hield lead Oklahoma’s
Sweet 16 romp over Aggies
vanced to the Elite Eight
for the first time since
2009. They’ll play Saturday against the Duke-Oregon winner.
The Sooners blew
open a close game by going on a 19-4 run during
the last 7:42 of the first
half to take a 45-26 lead.
The Sooners forced the
Aggies into bad shots and
turnovers, and Woodard
was the catalyst on the offensive end.
Tyler Davis scored
17 for A&M (28-9), which
reached the Sweet 16
with a thrilling doubleovertime victory against
Northern Iowa after rallying from 12 points down
in the final 44 seconds of
regulation.
9
www.smdailypress.com
Daily Scoreboard
Men’s NCAA Tournament
By The Associated Press
All Times EDT
EAST REGIONAL
At Wells Fargo Center
Philadelphia
Regional Semifinals
Friday, March 25
Wisconsin (22-12) vs. Notre Dame (2311), 7:27 p.m.
North Carolina (30-6) vs. Indiana (27-7),
9:40 p.m.
Regional Championship
Sunday, March 27
Semifinal winners
Regional Semifinals
Friday, March 25
Virginia (28-7) vs. Iowa State (23-11), 7:10
p.m.
Syracuse (21-13) vs. Gonzaga (28-7),
9:40 p.m.
Regional Championship
Sunday, March 27
Semifinal winners
WEST REGIONAL
At The Honda Center
Anaheim, Calif.
Regional Semifinals
Thursday, March 24
Oklahoma 85, VCU 81
Oregon (30-6) vs. Duke (25-10), 9:40 p.m.
Regional Championship
Saturday, March 26
Semifinal winners
SOUTH REGIONAL
At KFC YUM! Center
Louisville, Ky.
Regional Semifinals
Thursday, March 24
Villanova 92, Miami 69
Kansas (32-4) vs. Maryland (27-8), 9:40
FINAL FOUR
At NRG Stadium
Houston
National Semifinals
Saturday, April 2
South champion vs. West champion
East champion vs. Midwest champion
National Championship
Monday, April 4
p.m.
Regional Championship
Saturday, March 26
Semifinal winners
MIDWEST REGIONAL
At The United Center
Chicago
By The Associated Press
All Times EDT
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Florida
74 41 24 9 91211182
Tampa Bay 73 42 26 5 89202173
Boston
75 39 28 8 86219206
Detroit
74 37 26 11 85190199
Ottawa
75 34 33 8 76214230
Montreal
75 34 35 6 74199216
Buffalo
74 30 34 10 70176200
Toronto
73 27 35 11 65180214
Metropolitan Division
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
z-Washington 72 52 15 5 109231170
N.Y. Rangers 74 42 24 8 92212194
Pittsburgh
72 40 24 8 88204179
N.Y. Islanders 72 39 24 9 87200182
Philadelphia 72 35 24 13 83188193
New Jersey 73 35 31 7 77166189
Carolina
73 31 28 14 76177198
Columbus
73 30 35 8 68191225
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Central Division
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
x-Dallas
74 44 21 9 97242213
St. Louis
74 43 22 9 95195185
Chicago
74 42 25 7 91205185
Nashville
73 37 23 13 87202187
Minnesota
74 35 28 11 81196187
Colorado
73 38 31 4 80198204
Winnipeg
73 30 37 6 66186216
Pacific Division
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
x-Los Angeles 73 44 24 5 93199167
Anaheim
72 40 23 9 89185168
San Jose
73 41 26 6 88214186
Arizona
73 32 34 7 71192219
Calgary
73 31 36 6 68202228
Vancouver
72 27 33 12 66167207
By The Associated Press
All Times EDT
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
x-Toronto
Boston
New York
Brooklyn
Philadelphia
Southeast Division
Atlanta
Charlotte
Miami
Washington
Orlando
Central Division
y-Cleveland
Indiana
Detroit
Chicago
Milwaukee
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Southwest Division
y-San Antonio
Memphis
Dallas
Houston
New Orleans
Northwest Division
y-Oklahoma City
Portland
Utah
Denver
Minnesota
Pacific Division
y-Golden State
L.A. Clippers
Sacramento
Phoenix
NHL
Edmonton
76 29 40
7
65183223
NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for
overtime loss.
x-clinched playoff spot
z-clinched conference
NBA
Wednesday’s Games
N.Y. Islanders 3, Ottawa 1
N.Y. Rangers 5, Boston 2
Thursday’s Games
Florida 4, Boston 1
New Jersey 3, Pittsburgh 0
Carolina 3, Columbus 2
Toronto 6, Anaheim 5, OT
Detroit 4, Montreal 3
Winnipeg 4, Los Angeles 1
Vancouver at Nashville, 8 p.m.
Calgary at Minnesota, 8 p.m.
Philadelphia at Colorado, 9 p.m.
Dallas at Arizona, 10 p.m.
Edmonton at San Jose, 10:30 p.m.
Friday’s Games
Washington at New Jersey, 7 p.m.
N.Y. Islanders at Tampa Bay, 7:30 p.m.
Vancouver at St. Louis, 8 p.m.
Saturday’s Games
Winnipeg at Buffalo, 1 p.m.
Pittsburgh at Detroit, 2 p.m.
Minnesota at Colorado, 3 p.m.
Dallas at San Jose, 4 p.m.
Boston at Toronto, 7 p.m.
N.Y. Rangers at Montreal, 7 p.m.
Anaheim at Ottawa, 7 p.m.
Florida at Tampa Bay, 7 p.m.=
St. Louis at Washington, 7 p.m.
N.Y. Islanders at Carolina, 7 p.m.
Columbus at Nashville, 8 p.m.
Chicago at Calgary, 10 p.m.
Philadelphia at Arizona, 10 p.m.
Edmonton at Los Angeles, 10 p.m.
L.A. Lakers
W L
48 22
42 30
29 43
19 51
9 63
Pct
.686
.583
.403
.271
.125
GB
—
7
20
29
40
W L
42 30
41 30
41 30
35 36
29 42
Pct GB
.583 —
.577 1/2
.577 1/2
.49361/2
.408121/2
W L
51 20
37 33
38 34
36 34
30 42
Pct GB
.718 —
.529131/2
.528131/2
.514141/2
.417211/2
W L
60 11
41 31
35 36
35 37
26 44
Pct GB
.845 —
.569191/2
.493 25
.486251/2
.371331/2
W L
49 22
37 35
35 36
30 42
23 48
Pct GB
.690 —
.514121/2
.493 14
.417191/2
.324 26
W L
64 7
43 27
27 44
20 51
Pct GB
.901 —
.614201/2
.380 37
.282 44
15 56 .211 49
x-clinched playoff spot
y-clinched division
___
Wednesday’s Games
Cleveland 113, Milwaukee 104
Atlanta 122, Washington 101
Boston 91, Toronto 79
Detroit 118, Orlando 102
New York 115, Chicago 107
Minnesota 113, Sacramento 104
Utah 89, Houston 87
San Antonio 112, Miami 88
Denver 104, Philadelphia 103
Phoenix 119, L.A. Lakers 107
Portland 109, Dallas 103
Golden State 114, L.A. Clippers 98
Thursday’s Games
Indiana 92, New Orleans 84
Brooklyn 104, Cleveland 95
New York 106, Chicago 94
Oklahoma City 113, Utah 91
Portland at L.A. Clippers, 10:30 p.m.
Friday’s Games
Minnesota at Washington, 7 p.m.
Charlotte at Detroit, 7:30 p.m.
Toronto at Houston, 8 p.m.
Orlando at Miami, 8 p.m.
Milwaukee at Atlanta, 8 p.m.
Memphis at San Antonio, 8:30 p.m.
Phoenix at Sacramento, 10 p.m.
Dallas at Golden State, 10:30 p.m.
Denver at L.A. Lakers, 10:30 p.m.
Saturday’s Games
Indiana at Brooklyn, 6 p.m.
Toronto at New Orleans, 7 p.m.
Chicago at Orlando, 7 p.m.
Atlanta at Detroit, 7:30 p.m.
Cleveland at New York, 7:30 p.m.
Utah at Minnesota, 8 p.m.
San Antonio at Oklahoma City, 8 p.m.
Charlotte at Milwaukee, 8:30 p.m.
Boston at Phoenix, 10 p.m.
Philadelphia at Portland, 10 p.m.
Women’s NCAA Tournament
By The Associated Press
All Times EDT
BRIDGEPORT REGIONAL
Regional Semifinals
At Bridgeport, Conn.
Saturday, March 26
UConn (34-0) vs. Mississippi State (28-7),
11:30 a.m.
UCLA (26-8) vs. Texas (30-4), 1:30 p.m.
Regional Championship
Monday, March 28
Semifinal winners, TBA
7 p.m.
Ohio State (26-7) vs. Tennessee (21-13),
9:30 p.m.
Regional Championship
Sunday, March 27
Semifinal winners, TBA
LEXINGTON REGIONAL
Regional Semifinals
Friday, March 25
At Lexington, Ky.
Kentucky (25-7) vs. Washington (24-10),
7 p.m.
DALLAS REGIONAL
Regional Semifinals
Saturday, March 26
At Dallas
Baylor (35-1) vs. Florida State (25-7), 4
Notre Dame (33-1) vs. Stanford (26-7),
9:30 p.m.
Regional Championship
Sunday, March 27, TBA
Semifinal winners, TBA
DePaul (27-8) vs. Oregon State (30-4), 6
FINAL FOUR
At Indianapolis
National Semifinals
Sunday, April 3
Bridgeport champion vs. Dallas champion,
6 or 8:30 p.m.
Sioux Falls champion vs. Lexington champion, 6 or 8:30 p.m.
National Championship
Tuesday, April 5
Semifinals winners, 8:30 p.m.
The Daily Press
Friday, March 25, 2016
Spring Training
By The Associated Press
All Times EDT
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Toronto
Houston
Detroit
Los Angeles
Chicago
Texas
Minnesota
Oakland
Cleveland
Tampa Bay
Seattle
New York
Boston
Kansas City
Baltimore
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Arizona
Washington
Philadelphia
Colorado
Milwaukee
Los Angeles
St. Louis
Miami
Cincinnati
San Francisco
New York
Chicago
Pittsburgh
San Diego
Atlanta
W L
15 4
14 8
14 9
12 8
12 9
13 10
12 10
10 9
11 10
9 9
11 12
9 10
10 13
11 15
6 14
Pct
.789
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.609
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.478
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19 4
15 4
14 7
10 9
11 10
10 10
8 11
8 12
9 14
9 14
7 13
7 14
7 14
7 14
6 16
Pct
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NOTE: Split-squad games count in the
standings; games against non-major league
teams do not.
___
Wednesday’s Games
Pittsburgh 6, Baltimore 5
St. Louis 4, Miami 1
Tampa Bay 5, Minnesota 2
Toronto 3, N.Y. Mets 1
Chicago White Sox 6, San Diego 1
Texas 5, Chicago Cubs 0
Cleveland 7, Kansas City 6
Arizona 10, San Francisco 6
Washington 13, N.Y. Yankees 0
Houston 2, Philadelphia 1
Oakland 13, Seattle 12
Thursday’s Games
Boston 4, N.Y. Mets (ss) 1
Washington 8, St. Louis 2
Baltimore 6, Pittsburgh 5
Minnesota 8, Miami 4
Toronto 6, Detroit 4
Houston 8, N.Y. Mets (ss) 5
Texas (ss) 12, Cincinnati 5
Milwaukee 9, Kansas City 2
L.A. Angels 6, Chicago White Sox 5
Seattle 10, Colorado 8
Arizona 9, San Diego 8
Atlanta 0, Philadelphia 0, tie, 3 innings
Tampa Bay 6, N.Y. Yankees 2, 8 innings
Chicago Cubs vs. San Francisco at Scottsdale, Ariz., 7:05 p.m.
Texas (ss) vs. Oakland at Mesa, Ariz.,
10:05 p.m.
L.A. Dodgers vs. Cleveland at Goodyear,
Ariz., 10:05 p.m.
Friday’s Games
Houston vs. Atlanta (ss) at Kissimmee,
Fla., 1:05 p.m.
Atlanta (ss) vs. Detroit at Lakeland, Fla.,
1:05 p.m.
N.Y. Yankees vs. Baltimore at Sarasota,
Fla., 1:05 p.m.
Minnesota vs. Tampa Bay at Port Charlotte, Fla., 1:05 p.m.
St. Louis vs. N.Y. Mets at Port St. Lucie,
Fla., 1:10 p.m.
Milwaukee vs. Chicago Cubs at Mesa,
Ariz., 4:05 p.m.
L.A. Angels vs. Oakland at Mesa, Ariz.,
4:05 p.m.
Colorado vs. Cincinnati at Goodyear, Ariz.,
4:05 p.m.
Kansas City vs. San Francisco (ss) at
Scottsdale, Ariz., 4:05 p.m.
Chicago White Sox vs. Seattle at Peoria,
Ariz., 4:10 p.m.
Cleveland vs. Arizona at Scottsdale, Ariz.,
4:10 p.m.
Pittsburgh vs. Boston at Fort Myers, Fla.,
6:05 p.m.
Toronto vs. Philadelphia at Clearwater,
Fla., 6:35 p.m.
Washington vs. Miami at Jupiter, Fla., 7:05
p.m.
San Diego vs. Texas at Surprise, Ariz.,
9:05 p.m.
San Francisco (ss) vs. L.A. Dodgers at
Glendale, Ariz., 10:05 p.m.
Saturday’s Games
Boston vs. Baltimore at Sarasota, Fla.,
1:05 p.m.
N.Y. Mets vs. Atlanta at Kissimmee, Fla.,
1:05 p.m.
Washington vs. St. Louis at Jupiter, Fla.,
1:05 p.m.
Detroit vs. Philadelphia at Clearwater, Fla.,
1:05 p.m.
Pittsburgh (ss) vs. Minnesota at Fort Myers, Fla., 1:05 p.m.
N.Y. Yankees vs. Toronto at Dunedin, Fla.,
1:07 p.m.
Cincinnati (ss) vs. Chicago White Sox (ss)
at Glendale, Ariz., 3:05 p.m.
San Francisco vs. Chicago Cubs at Mesa,
Ariz., 4:05 p.m.
Arizona vs. Milwaukee at Phoenix, 4:05
p.m.
Cleveland vs. Cincinnati (ss) at Goodyear,
Ariz., 4:05 p.m.
Oakland vs. Kansas City at Surprise, Ariz.,
4:05 p.m.
Texas vs. Colorado at Scottsdale, Ariz.,
4:10 p.m.
San Diego (ss) vs. L.A. Angels at Tempe,
Ariz., 4:10 p.m.
L.A. Dodgers (ss) vs. Seattle at Peoria,
Ariz., 4:10 p.m.
Tampa Bay vs. Pittsburgh (ss) at Bradenton, Fla., 6:05 p.m.
Act II for RG3: Griffin’s shot
to reboot career with Browns
CLEVELAND (AP) —
Back before he rocketed
into the NFL as a freakish touchdown-maker, before the knee injury and
his downfall in Washington, Robert Griffin III was
convinced he’d play for the
Browns.
During pre-draft workouts in Arizona, Griffin
and his agent were set for
Cleveland to be his home.
“We were ready then,”
Griffin said, “and we are
more than ready now.”
Four long, trying years
later, Griffin has a chance
to revive a career that once
seemed unstoppable.
No longer viewed as one
of football’s brightest and
flashiest players but rather
a reclamation project, Griffin signed a two-year, $15
million contract Thursday
with the Browns, a team on
a perpetual mission to find
a franchise quarterback.
RG3 is beginning his
second act.
Griffin hasn’t been the
same since his dazzling
rookie season in Washington in 2012, when the
former Heisman Trophy
winner — possessed with
a rocket arm, a tailback’s
speed and endless swagger
— took the league by storm.
However, his next three
seasons were curtailed by
injury and clouded by controversy and the 26-yearold found himself without
a team when the Redskins
released him March 7.
The Browns, who tried
unsuccessfully to trade
so they could draft him in
2012, are giving him another shot.
“I’m just excited to
come in and compete,” Griffin said. “Nothing’s ever
been given to me in my life,
so I just want to go out and
compete with the guys and
grow with this team. I feel
like that’s all I’m really focused on. I cherish the opportunity to get another
chance to play this beautiful game.”
He’s been given no
promises by the Browns,
who have the No. 2 overall pick in this year’s draft
and are expected to take a
quarterback — presumably
California’s Jared Goff or
North Dakota State’s Carson Wentz. As the team
was completing its deal
with Griffin, new coach
Hue Jackson attended
Wentz’s pro day workout in
North Dakota along with
offensive assistant Pep
Hamilton.
Griffin, who didn’t play
Nets blow byCavs
NEW YORK (AP) —
Brook Lopez scored 22 points
and the Brooklyn Nets blew
by LeBron James and the
Cleveland Cavaliers in the
fourth quarter for a 104-95
victory Thursday night.
James was scoreless
and missed both shots in
the fourth quarter after he
scored 30 points on 13-for-14
shooting through three. Lopez had the final five points
in a 14-0 run down the
stretch as the Nets surged
past the Eastern Conference
leaders.
Shane Larkin added 16
points and seven assists for
the Nets in his return to the
starting lineup.
Quit
a single snap and was demoted to third-string last
season, isn’t opposed to the
Browns drafting another
quarterback.
“I’ll take the guy under my wing,” he said during a conference call. “I’m
real excited about that. I’m
considered a vet now after
four years in the league,
and I’ve been through a lot
more than a lot of guys go
through their entire career.
... I can help a young guy.
But that’s not my focus. I
don’t pick players.”
Jackson has spent
much of his coaching career
grooming
quarterbacks.
He met with Griffin last
week and was impressed
by his candor and humility.
“He brings starting experience to our team and
organization,”
Jackson
said. “He’s a young, athletic, talented passer and he’s
really just starting out in
this league. Just like every
player on our team, Robert
will have to earn every opportunity he gets.”
If he can win the starting job, Griffin could be reunited with former college
teammate Josh Gordon,
who has applied for reinstatement with the league
following a one-year drug
suspension. The thought
of playing with Gordon excites Griffin.
“Josh is family,” Griffin said. “I love the guy. I
don’t know what’s going to
happen with him and the
league or with the team,
but he always knows he
has a brother in me, so if
the opportunity comes that
he can get reinstated and
play for the Browns then
I won’t be upset with that.
He is family and at Baylor
we believe that no matter
what happens we’ve always got your back.”
Cleveland has started 24 quarterbacks since
1999, but few of them have
the resume — or talent —
to match Griffin.
The Browns recently
released troubled quarterback Johnny Manziel, once
considered the team’s savior. They also have quarterbacks Josh McCown
and Austin Davis under
contract. But, as is always
the case with that position in Cleveland, nothing
stands still.
After leading the Redskins to the NFC East title
as a rookie, Griffin, who
had become one of America’s most celebrated athletes, began a striking fall
from grace. He seriously
injured to his right knee
in the playoffs and needed
reconstructive
surgery.
His next two seasons were
filled with squabbles with
coaches and little else.
Griffin spent last season watching from the
sideline, where he learned
more about life than anything he could find in a
playbook. He set out to restore his name — and image — with the hope there
would be a next chance.
It’s now in his hands.
“What I learned most
was just the love that’s inside of me for this game of
football,” he said. “What
happened down there (in
Washington) would break
a lot of people. This is my
calling. I’m real excited to
have another opportunity
to grow with a coach who
believes in me. That’s big.
Now I’ve just got to go out
and prove it.”
NOTICE - Bowling
league results appear in
The Daily Press on Tuesdays and Fridays. The
deadline is 11 a.m. the
day before, 11 a.m.
Monday and 11 a.m.
Thursday. Holidays may
alter the day the standings appear.
Pineapple Express
56 40
GrandPa’s
56 40
Denny’s Angels
48 48
Lonesome Losers
44 52
Mona’s
42 54
3’s Company
42 54
High Average - Pineapple Hoohuli
155; Whitney Mertz 134.
Top 12 scores - John Young Sr. 191534, Ben Gearhart 180-494, Pineapple
Hoohuli 171-457, Fran Gagliardi 162449, Jerry Distler 172. George
McCurdy 167, Gerald Cassels 165,
Paul Hale 143, Whitney Mertz 142419, Darlene Cassels 128-344, Leann
Gardner 128, Jane Gardner 114.
Bowling Leagues
Mixed Nutty League
Division I
W
L
Grape Nuts
64 40
WalNuts
62 42
Ahh Nuts
52 52
Just Nuts
30 74
Division II
Fire Nuts
76 28
Lug Nuts
66 38
Not Nuts
52 52
Blind Nuts
14 90
High Average - Eloise Naglik 168; Bill
Groll and Dave Molella 214.
Top 12 scores - Gloria Molella 234178-536,
Lisa
Pontious
197-180-522,Donna Lenze 203, Mary
Kay Kronenwetter 194, Teresa
Kerchinski 191, Judy Rettger 181, Joe
Pistner 268-222-667, George Pontious
263-226-667, Mike Lenze 256-217-662,
Bill Naglik 234-232-629, Wally
Stauffer 227-612, Dave Molella 214213-611.
Gutsy Ladies League
W
L
Chat-N-Curl
70 18
The Rooters
52 36
P. & J. & P.
50 38
Bingo Babes
48 40
Groll’s Disposal
34 54
Friendly Ghosts
10 78
High Average - Peg Wrzesniewski
159.
Top scores - Peg Wrzesniewski 184522, Amy Decker 211-493, Wendie
Straub 170-465, Millie Huff 162-459,
Jody Reed 187-454, Barb Auman 171436, Gloria Nelson 156-434, Helen
Lovenduski 167, Rita Gerber 155,
Joyce Bauer 146, Kate Angeletti 139.
L.W. Ridgway Mixed League
W
L
Regional Championship
Monday, March 28
Semifinal winners, TBA
SIOUX FALLS REGIONAL
Regional Semifinals
Friday, March 25
At Sioux Falls, S.D.
South Carolina (33-1) vs. Syracuse (27-7),
By The Associated Press
All Times EDT
Tuesday, March 22
Quarterfinals
Valparaiso 60, Saint Mary’s (Cal) 44
BYU 88, Creighton 82
Wednesday, March 23
George Washington 82, Florida 77
San Diego State 72, Georgia Tech 56
Semifinals
NIT
At Madison Square Garden
New York
Tuesday, March 29
Valparaiso (29-6) vs. BYU (26-10), 7 p.m.
George Washington (26-10) vs. San Diego State (28-9), 9:30 p.m.
Championship
Thursday, March 31
Semifinal winners, 7 p.m.
W
L
Burke’s Home Center
48 34
The Detail Shop
48 36
Dave’s Pro Shop
40 44
Million $ Machining
40 46
High Average - Sharon Streich and
Donna Wendel152.
Top 12 scores - Donna Wendel 214500, Tammy Bertolasio 178-484, Cindy
FinGado 208-474, Lisa Dezanet 168463, Lorrie Levenduski 157-448, Angie
Wegemer 171-446, Sharon Streich
182, Pam Lanzel 162, Connie Vollmer
159, Barb Auman 156, Linda Johnson
151, Claire McGonigal-Potter 150.
County League
W
L
Joe Fenders Body Shop
42 14
Piedmont Club
36 20
Olympic Pro Shop
32 24
Earl’s Sandbaggers
32 24
Joseph Muccio’s Trans.
32 24
Post 511
28 28
Snelick’s Refrigeration
26 30
Fleming & Haines
24 32
Accurate Sort Inc.
22 34
Benezette Hotel
22 34
Goetz’s Flowers
20 36
Pizza’s Beverage
20 36
High Average - Dave Molella 217.
Top 12 scores - Lenny Snelick 216212-257-685, Joe Pistner 216-229-235680, Dave Feldbauer 233-256-667, Joe
DeCarli 233-236-662, John DeCarli
227-228-654, John Feldbauer 235-206637, Kenny Salter 216-235-624, Tom
Daniels 207-245-600, Dave Molella
248, Dwayne Schaberl 237, Jim Byrd
233, Matt Heindl 227.
LION Around
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Friday, March 25, 2016
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ad call 781-1596.
HIGHLAND VIEW HEALTH CARE
IS NOW HIRING!
Certified Nurse Aids- Full-time
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Full-time Health Benefits- Shift Differential WageWeekend Initiative Program.
For more information please contact:
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ACT NOW before these openings are gone!
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FULL AND PART TIME
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WORKERS
Oak Manor, Inc. is currently accepting
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4. EMPLOYMENT
Must have high school diploma or equivalent
& PA Driver’s License. Includes great benefits.
Applications available at:
Oak Manor, Inc.
4 Erie Ave., Ste. 102, St. Marys, PA
or call 834-3963
Also at PA Career Link
Depot St., St. Marys, PA
Need to earn
money for
school, new car
or vacation?
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hiring for all
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Apply
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mcstate.com/3393
mylocalmcds.com/stmarys
MACHINE OPERATORS
GKN Sinter Metals is the world leader in the manufacturing of powder
metal parts. We have built a reputation as a “World Class” supplier of
high quality precision parts for the automotive industry. We are currently recruiting for Full Time Machine Operators for our Emporium,
PA location.
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Disabled Individuals, Minority, and Female candidates are encouraged
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with resume or application by 04/01/2016.
GKN SINTER METALS
Renee McKimm, Sr Human Resource Manager
PO Box 493
Emporium, PA 15834
Or email at [email protected]
GKN Sinter Metals is an equal employment employer and is committed
to providing employment opportunities to veterans, disabled individuals,
minorities, and females.
ISO/TS 16949
ISO 14001/OSHAS 18001
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SECONDARY MACHINE ATTENDANTS
GKN Sinter Metals is the world leader in the manufacturing of powder metal parts. We have built a reputation as a “World Class” supplier
of high quality precision parts for the automotive industry. We are currently recruiting for Secondary Machine Attendants for our Emporium,
PA location.
Essential Functions:
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operation, removes part from machine. Maintains production rates;
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checks with proper quality control devices as required by Control
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necessary charts.
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up proper program and completes tool off sets.
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accordingly. Utilizes the scanning system and understands the
reports it can generate.
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Disabled Individuals, Minority, and Female candidates are encouraged
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with resume or application by 04/01/2016.
GKN SINTER METALS
Renee McKimm, Sr Human Resource Manager
PO Box 493
Emporium, PA 15834
Or email at [email protected]
GKN Sinter Metals is an equal employment employer and is committed
to providing employment opportunities to veterans, disabled individuals,
minorities, and females.
ISO/TS 16949
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4. EMPLOYMENT
4. EMPLOYMENT
Keystone Powdered Metal Company, a leading producer of
powdered metal parts, has an immediate openings on the night
shift for an experienced or entry level.
Full and Part Time Residential
Program Workers
4am-2am
4. EMPLOYMENT
4. EMPLOYMENT
MACHINIST
Some of the essential functions of this position:
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industry.
Equal Opportunity Employer
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following equipment/operations.
PHEAA SUMMER
COLLEGE WORKERS
Manual Lathes, Manual Mills, CNC Mills, CNC Lathes, Surface
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The Ridgway Area School District
( Elk County )
The Ridgway Area School District is currently
taking applications for PHEAA summer college workers.
Applications may be picked up at the
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between 7 AM and 4 PM
Monday through Friday
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151) clearances prior to starting employment.
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4, 2016 to:
Keystone Powdered Metal Company
Human Resources Department
251 State Street
St. Marys, Pa. 15857
Or email to [email protected]
Come join our Team!! Metaldyne is a world leader in producing powdered metal components for automotive industry leaders, including Ford,
GM and Honda. We are growing and need talent. Our customers rate us
as one of the best powdered metal companies in North America. Come see
what we are about.
Metaldyne Sintered Components, Ridgway is seeking motivated, responsible individuals for the following position:
LIGHT INDUSTRIAL
OPPORTUNITIES
Spherion, one of the nation’s largest and leading
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Chemistry Vacancy
The Ridgway Area School District
( Elk County )
The Ridgway Area School District is currently
accepting applications for a Chemistry Teacher to start the 2016/2017 School Year.
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employable Act 34 (Criminal History Check),
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Clearances.
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Melissa Patterson
Ridgway Area School District
PO Box 447
Ridgway, PA 15853
by Friday, April 8, 2016.
EOE
SHIFT SUPERVISOR- 3RD SHIFT
Interacts and coordinates with Operations Manager, Production Supervisor, Team Leaders and manufacturing employees to assess requirements,
develop plans and provide needed materials and direction. Ensures employees safely operate equipment in the making of product that meets customer expectation. Accountable for quality and productivity that meets or
exceeds established plans.
3-5 years’ experience in manufacturing operations is required. Working knowledge of sintering, CNC, molding and tumbling operations is required. Candidates with prior supervisory or team lead experience highly
preferred.
All interested candidates should apply by logging on to:
www.metaldyne.com
and clicking on the Career Link.
Metaldyne Sintered Components is an equal opportunity employer, minority/female/disabled/veteran.
QUALITY ENGINEER
GKN Sinter Metals Emporium is currently recruiting for a Quality Engineer. This position is responsible to lead and facilitate the implemenWDWLRQRIJOREDODQGVLWHVSHFLÀFTXDOLW\LQLWLDWLYHVDQGWKHLUFRQWLQXDO
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GKN SINTER METALS
Renee McKimm, Sr Human Resource Manager
PO Box 493
Emporium, PA 15834
Or email at [email protected]
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minorities, and females.
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The Daily Press
Friday, March 25, 2016
Ethics court fines Pennsylvania justice $50K for lewd emails
By Mark Scolforo
Associated Press
HARRISBURG (AP)
— Pennsylvania’s judicial
ethics court fined a former
state Supreme Court justice $50,000 on Thursday,
one week after he resigned
because of his role in a
sweeping scandal over lewd
and objectionable emails exchanged within the state’s
law enforcement circles.
The court expressed
“disgust,” saying former
Justice Michael Eakin “dramatically lessened public
confidence in the integrity
and impartiality of the entire judiciary.”
They said his punishment would have been more
severe if he had not stepped
down and taken responsi-
bility. His lawyer said the
decision means Eakin will
keep his state pension, with
an estimated annual value
of $140,000.
They ruled he failed to
conduct himself in a manner that promotes confidence in judges’ integrity
and impartiality, saying he
sent emails that “mocked
minorities and placed women in submissive sexual stereotypes.”
“The common thread of
the emails, with their imagery of sexism, racism and
bigotry, is arrogance and
the belief that an individual is better than his or her
peers. Such beliefs are antithetical to the privilege of
holding public office, where
the charge is to serve, not
demean, our citizens,” ac-
cording to the unanimous
six-judge opinion .
Eakin lawyer Bill Costopoulos said the decision
closes the matter and the
former justice will pay the
fine within the six months
allotted. The court said the
amount was meant to be
akin to a six-month unpaid
suspension.
“It has been a very difficult ordeal and process for
him personally and for his
family and we’re all glad
that it’s over,” Costopoulos
said.
Large numbers of
emails with obscene and
denigrating content were
first uncovered during
an internal investigation
launched by Democratic
Attorney General Kathleen
Kane into how her office
had handled the Jerry Sandusky child molestation investigation before she took
office. That probe found no
evidence of political calculation in decision making
over the prosecution of the
former Penn State assistant football coach, but it
did reveal that dozens of
people in the agency had
been trading inappropriate
emails.
Eakin’s name surfaced
in connection to those
emails in late 2014, about
the time the high court suspended Democratic Justice
Seamus McCaffery, who
soon abruptly retired. Eakin reported to ethics officials at that time that McCaffery had threatened to
expose his own emails, but
a review by the Judicial
Conduct Board, which investigates and prosecutes
judges in ethics cases,
cleared Eakin.
The case was reignited
last fall, as Eakin and the
other justices voted to suspend Kane’s law license after she was charged criminally with leaking secret
grand jury material and
lying about it under oath.
(That case is scheduled for
trial in August, and Kane is
not seeking re-election this
year.)
Kane contacted the
conduct board with new
emails, leading to charges
against Eakin, his tearful
testimony in December at
a preliminary hearing, his
decision to retire last week
and now the fine.
“The pattern evidenced
by the body of all the emails
demonstrated a misjudgment by (Eakin), both in
his understanding of how
electronic communications
work, as well as the substantive content,” the court
wrote.
The judges noted Eakin’s behavior was not
criminal and said his judicial service had otherwise
been exemplary.
“It has always been important to former Justice
Michael Eakin to impress
upon the Court of Judicial
Discipline and the court of
public opinion that, while
he was on the bench for 20
years, every case he participated in was in accordance
with the facts and the law,”
said Costopoulos, his lawyer.
1/2 E. Washington Ave.,
Falls Creek, is charged
with one count each of
possession with intent
to deliver or delivery of
a controlled substance,
criminal use of a communication facility and criminal conspiracy (methamphetamine).
Joseph Frantz, 27,
1045 S. Brady St., DuBois, is charged with one
count each of possession
with intent to deliver or
delivery of a controlled
substance and criminal
conspiracy (methamphetamine).
John Pentz, 33, 205 W.
Washington Ave., DuBois,
is charged with one count
of possession with intent
to deliver or delivery of a
non-controlled substance
(methamphetamine).
Cristy Henderson, 30,
23 S. 3rd St., DuBois, is
charged with one count
of criminal conspiracy
(methamphetamine).
Chapel Peace, 33, 176
Alaska Rd., Brookville, is
charged with one count
each of possession with intent to deliver or delivery
of a controlled substance,
possession of drug paraphernalia and possession
of a controlled substance
(methamphetamine).
Jason Yusnukis, 25,
300 Quarry Ave., Dubois, is charged with one
count each of possession
with intent to deliver or
delivery of a controlled
substance, possession of
drug paraphernalia, possession of a controlled
substance, operating a
methamphetamine lab,
possession of liquid ammonia, causing or risking a catastrophe and
reckless endangerment
(methamphetamine).
Robert Milhomme, 29,
currently incarcerated, is
charged with one count
each of theft by unlawful taking and tampering
with evidence.
Justin Zeruth, 28,
5727 Wayne Rd., DuBois, is charged with one
count each of possession
with intent to deliver or
delivery of a controlled
substance, possession of
drug paraphernalia and
possession of a controlled
substance (methamphetamine).
Brittany Keech, 23,
12 Tokarcik Ln., Brockway, is charged with one
count each of possession
with intent to deliver or
delivery of a controlled
substance, possession of
drug paraphernalia and
possession of a controlled
substance (methamphetamine).
Cindy Teats, 49, 100
4th Ave., Apt. 511, Curwensville, is charged with
one count each of possession with intent to deliver
or delivery of a controlled
substance, possession of
drug paraphernalia, possession of a controlled
substance and criminal
use of a communications
facility
(methamphetamine).
Shannon Audette, 29,
711 W. Long Ave., DuBois,
is charged with one count
of possession of drug paraphernalia.
Individuals who have
witnessed a drug deal in
their neighborhood or
suspect illegal drug activity where they live or
work can send an anonymous tip to the Office of
Attorney General by texting PADRUGS + YOUR
TIP to 847411. Tips may
also be submitted electronically.
Charges
Continued from Page 2
Robert Selfridge, 35,
currently incarcerated at
Clearfield County Prison,
is charged with one count
each of persons not to
possess firearms and illegal sale or transfer of
firearms.
Joseph Mazza, 23,
currently incarcerated at
Jefferson County Prison,
is charged with one count
each of possessing a firearm without a license,
persons not to possess a
firearm, burglary, criminal conspiracy to commit
burglary, robbery, criminal conspiracy to commit
robbery and aggravated
assault
(methamphetamine/firearms).
Jodi Taylor, 33, 209
8. FOR RENT
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The Daily Press
Friday, March 25, 2016
www.smdailypress.com
ANNIE’S MAILBOX®
COPYRIGHT 2001 CREATORS SINDICATE, INC.
Dear Annie: I belong to a large
group of friends across several states
who get together often to camp and ride
motorcycles. Recently, one couple in
our group had a terrible accident. The
husband was killed and the wife suffered brain damage. “Jane” does not
remember the accident and only recalls
her husband because she has been told
about him. She is not capable of making
any major decisions.
Here’s the real tragedy: Jane has
two children. Her 21-year-old son is
now responsible for all of the decisions,
and he is overwhelmed. Fortunately, he
seems to be adjusting. We can’t say the
same for his 17-year-old sister, “Astrid.”
Her world has fallen apart.
Right now, the entire show is being run by Jane’s mother-in-law, who
never got along with Jane. She plans
to sell Jane’s house and move Astrid in
with her. She recently took away Astrid’s
phone and car as a punishment for not
doing her chores, leaving her unable
to visit her mother or stay in touch with
us. No one in the family seems able to
stand up to this woman. We have no legal standing and are frustrated watching
this runaway freight train.
Jane’s family has asked for our
advice, but all we can tell them is to get
a lawyer and they don’t have the funds
for that. I know both sides of the family are grieving, but this is just a mess.
Please help. -- Harley Momma from
Texas
Dear Texas: This is such a tough
time for everyone. Try to keep in mind
that, although Jane and her mother-inlaw are not close, it doesn’t mean Mom
is mistreating her granddaughter. You
are getting only one side of the story.
Also, while your advice to find an at-
torney is good, the family should clarify
what for. Does someone want custody
of Astrid? Is the grandmother keeping
Astrid from seeing her other relatives?
If so, perhaps the entire family can pool
their resources or look into Legal Aid.
In the meantime, please do your
best to stay close to Astrid, not only
through social media and phone calls,
but also by befriending her grandmother. She lost her son and now has
responsibility for her granddaughter. It
would be a kindness for you to offer assistance, and it also will be supportive of
Astrid.
Dear Annie: This is about “Not a
Creepy Guy,” whose soon-to-be daughter-in-law thinks he’s creepy, for no particular reason.
My 30-year-old daughter, with
whom I have a wonderful relationship,
has told me that young women think
men in their 50s are creepy just because of their age and gender -- no matter how gentlemanly or polite they may
be. She says now that I am entering my
60s, I am leaving behind the “creepy
middle-aged” guy demographic and will
enter the “kindly grandfather” stage. I
am looking forward to it.
Hopefully, this daughter-in-law
is looking at a stereotype and has no
particular concern. But he is right to talk
about it with her. -- Too Old to Be Creepy
Dear Too Old: We have never noticed this particular stereotype and think
it is odd and potentially damaging. But
thanks for mentioning it. We hope the
new daughter-in-law will grow up before
Dad is too old to care.
Annie’s Mailbox is written by
Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers column.
Please email your questions to [email protected], or write to: Annie’s Mailbox, c/o Creators Syndicate,
737 3rd Street, Hermosa Beach, CA
90254. You can also find Annie
on Facebook at Facebook.com/AskAnnies. To find out more about Annie’s
Mailbox and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists,
visit the Creators Syndicate Web page
at www.creators.com.
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YOUR INDIVIDUAL HOROSCOPE
For Saturday March 26, 2016 - by Francis Drake
ARIES
(March 21 to April 19)
This is a powerful day! You are
energized and motivated. Accomplish as much as you can,
because the stars are with you!
TAURUS
(April 20 to May 20)
You might attract someone powerful to you today. Or possibly,
a friend could become a lover.
Whatever happens will be memorable.
GEMINI
(May 21 to June 20)
Your ability to deal with groups is
excellent today. People will listen
to you. Use this influence to rally
the troops and set them marching!
CANCER
(June 21 to July 22)
You have an excellent influence
on bosses, parents, teachers and
VIPs today. They see you as energetic, positive and productive.
Meanwhile, travel plans look exciting!
LEO
(July 23 to Aug. 22)
This is a strong day to travel or explore opportunities in publishing,
the media, medicine and the law.
Ask for what you want, because
the universe will help you!
VIRGO
(Aug. 23 to Sept. 22)
This is a wonderful day to negotiate any kind of deal on your own
behalf. Things will tend to go in
your way; furthermore, you even
have a legal advantage.
LIBRA
(Sept. 23 to Oct. 22)
Look for ways to make improvements to your health and your job,
because you are blessed today.
Relations with partners and close
friends are energetic and upbeat.
SCORPIO
(Oct. 23 to Nov. 21)
You will accomplish a lot at work
today because you have tons of
energy! Ironically, you also want
to play! “Work hard -- party hard!”
That’s your motto today.
SAGITTARIUS
(Nov. 22 to Dec. 21)
This is a playful, energetic day.
It’s a strong day for those who
are involved in sports or physical
performances related to the arts.
Playful activities with children will
be a plus.
CAPRICORN
(Dec. 22 to Jan. 19)
You can get a lot done at home
today if you want to make home
improvements. Family discussions will be positive and dynamic
because you are persuasive and
strong.
AQUARIUS
(Jan. 20 to Feb. 18)
This is an excellent day for business and commerce. It’s also a
strong day to write, sell, market,
teach and act, because your communication skills are tops.
PISCES
(Feb. 19 to March 20)
Take a realistic look in the mirror
and ask yourself what you can do
to improve your appearance, because you can do this today. You
might want to buy yourself something that makes all the difference.
Shoes?
YOU BORN TODAY You are observant and have an eye for detail.
Socially, you are charming, warm
and friendly. (You might want to
guard against being too impulsive.) Think before you act. This
year others will benefit and help
you, which is why your success
lies with interacting with others
people. Make friends. Join clubs
and organizations. If you help others, you also will help yourself.
Birthdate of: Leonard Nimoy, actor; Leslie Mann, actress; Martin
Short, actor.
(c) 2016 King Features Syndicate, Inc.
13
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The Daily Press
Friday, March 25, 2016
CHRIST
is
RISEN
14
The Daily Press
Friday, March 25, 2016
www.smdailypress.com
Dino's Haddock Fish
Fries, Fish Sandwiches,
Shrimp Dinners 834-6770
PA Power Washing
Houses, Roofs, Concrete
& More - call 594-5756
Sacred Heart Social
Fish Fries, Fri. Mar.25
starts @4:00
Footlighters
"A Bad Year For
Tomatoes"
Apr.14,15,16
tickets - Village Peddler
Johnson's Groc.
Fish Fry Dinner or Shrimp
$9+tax 834-3260
Photo by Richie Lecker
A fire damaged a residential dwelling at 507 Daniels St., Horton Township, at 11:36 p.m. on March 23.
Horton Twp. blaze causes
$150,000 in damages
HORTON TWP. – The
Ridgway-based State Police report that Pa. State
Police Fire Marshal Corporal Greg Agosti and
members of the Horton
Township Fire Department conducted an investigation into the origin
and cause of a fire that
damaged a residential
dwelling at 507 Daniels
St., Horton Township, at
11:36 p.m. on March 23.
According to police,
Christine A. Lenz, 63, of
Brockport, was asleep at
the time of the fire but
was able to escape uninjured.
The cause of the fire
remains under investigation. Damage is estimated
at $150,000.
Anyone with any information about the fire
or anyone who may have
observed suspicious activity in the area is asked to
contact the Pa. State Police at 814-776-6136.
The Horton Township
Fire Department was assisted at the scene by the
Fox Township and Brockway fire departments.
BCAT to host free metal arts weekend
workshop by leading metalsmith
BROCKWAY – On
Friday, April 1 and Saturday, April 2, the Brockway Center for Arts &
Technology (BCAT) will
host a weekend workshop
led by Ken Bova, the past
president of the Society
of North American Goldsmiths (SNAG) and currently a professor at East
Carolina University in
Greenville, N.C.
Bova’s workshop, entitled “Dip, Dry, Draw, &
Fire: Color from White
Liquid Enamel,” will take
place in the art center’s
metal arts studio, where
participants will have an
opportunity to experience
the possibilities that exist with liquid enamel to
create colorful and graphic imagery for copper
brooch, earring, and small
vessel forms.
A leader in the field
of metal arts, Bova has
exhibited work in the permanent collections of the
Smithsonian,
Tacoma,
Philadelphia, and Georgia
Art Museums, among others. He has also presented
workshops
nationwide
in renowned art centers
such as Penland and Peter’s Valley. “I’m honored
to bring Ken Bova to our
center and our community,” says BCAT metals teaching artist Liz
Steiner. “He’s pioneered
this torch-fired enamel
technique with the liquids
and is known as one of the
top metals artists in our
field.”
BCAT executive di-
Lottery
Numbers
The following winning
numbers were drawn on
Thursday in the Pennsylvania Lottery:
DAY
Pick 2
3-6
Pick 3
2-4-4
Pick 4
0-0-7-3
Pick 5
4-5-3-5-7
Treasure Hunt
01-05-09-22-27
EVENING
Pick 2
3-7
Pick 3
8-8-9
Pick 4
2-9-0-0
Pick 5
1-8-1-0-9
Cash 5
01-06-12-22-23
Match 6
08-14-23-31-43-44
Cash 4 Life
17-24-30-45-48
CB: 03
H&R Block Half-Off
Promotion, call for details
781-7130
St.Marys Moose
serving Fish Fries 3-6:30
Fridays thru Lent
Pro-Dig Enterprises
Snow Plowing,
Excavating, Underground
Utilities & more
594-3797
Affordable Contractors
Everything Under Roof
Remodelers
788-0044
We Call Back!
A-One Painting
Residential, Commercial
Industrial-call for free
estimate 594-0776
Stiff at Dagus Legion
Sat. 3/26, 9-1
Thompson's 834-9781
10# or more Lean Ground
Chuck $2.99#
St. Marys Auto Sales
All Prices Slashed!
Stop or Call 781-1339
Royal Inn Easter Buffet
March 27, 11am-3pm
call for reservations
773-3153
Comedy Night/Burg
Johnsonburg Fire Hall
Apr.2, doors 7pm
965-5682
Ruffner's Outdoor
Maintenance
Spring Clean-ups
512-0213
Easter Sunday Buffet
Royal Inn $25.99
4-12 $12.99, under 4 free
Myrtle Beach S.C.
June 5-11 $695ea all
inclusive Georgeanne
965-3056
DeLullo's Deli
Jumbo Eggs 2 dozen for
$2.98
John & Stackpole
St.Marys Elks
Fish Fries 4-8pm
take out avail. 834-3015
Haddock Fish Fry
in canola oil
Fridays-DeLullo's Deli
834-7005
RFD Gun Bash
Apr.2, 4-8pm, for tickets
call John 335-3572
Attn Beer Customers
Good Friday we will be
closed 12 to 3 & re-open
at 3 for pick ups only
Closed Easter Sunday
St.Marys Moose
Kids Easter Egg Hunt
Sat. 3/26 @2pm
Small drillers sue to block new state rules
PITTSBURGH
(AP)
— A trade group that represents small, independent gas
and oil producers in Pennsylvania has filed a lawsuit
challenging new state regulations for conventional drilling.
The Pennsylvania Inde-
pendent Petroleum Producers Association of Bradford
says the rules would be financially ruinous.
The Pittsburgh PostGazette reported Thursday
that the suit argues the Department of Environmental
Protection unfairly grouped
conventional drillers, which
target shallow formations,
with unconventional drillers
that concentrate on the deeper Marcellus Shale.
The trade group is trying
to block the rules before April
21, when a review board is
scheduled to vote on them.
and wipe out a long-term
deficit that has damaged
Pennsylvania’s credit rating.
Democrats said the budget
would add hundreds of millions of dollars to a $2 billion
structural deficit for 201617.
The lengthy budget
fight threatened to shutter
schools and forced layoffs at
social services agencies.
Moody’s predicted a new
budget stalemate for the
next fiscal year, which begins July 1.
Moody’s
Continued from Page 5
term.”
The budget includes a
3 percent increase in overall spending, but it does so
without a multibillion-dollar
tax increase that Wolf had
sought to deliver a record
boost in aid to public schools
Welcome Home Centers
New Home Builder Seminar
Saturday, April 2nd
10:00am - Noon
CALL TODAY TO REGISTER
1-800-763-6383
Photo submitted
BCAT will host a free metal arts weekend workshop with Ken
Bova, the past president of the Society of North American Goldsmiths (SNAG) and currently a professor at East Carolina University in Greenville, N.C.
rector
Debbie
Heigel
agrees. “With our metal
arts studio approaching
its one-year anniversary
in June, our high school
students and this community have really begun to
embrace what’s possible
to create inside a metal
arts studio,” Heigel says.
“Ken Bova’s workshop is
a rare opportunity for our
enthusiasts or beginner
metals artists to come and
learn from one of the best
instructors in the world.”
Friday’s
workshop
will take place from 2:30
to 5:30 p.m., and Saturday’s is scheduled for 9
a.m. to 5 p.m. The workshop is open to the public and offered at no cost,
but space is limited to 15
participants. Please email
BCAT metals teaching
artist Liz Steiner at liz.
steiner@brockwaycat.
org to register. Community members are welcome,
and the center helps educators to complete paperwork for Act 48 continuing education credit.
1013 Trout Run Rd.,
St. Marys, PA 15857
[email protected]
814-781-3444
Heating and Cooling
Fully Insured
ATTENTION
If you value your right to bear arms and you defend
the rights of the unborn...IT IS NOT TOO LATE!!
Welcome Home Centers
6083 Route 219
Brockway, PA 15824
welcomehomecenters.com
Learn How to Make Your Building
Vision into a Creative Reality
For only an investment of two hours of
your time, learn the ABC’s of building a
new home from industry professionals from
every phase of a complete project!
• Home Design, Features & Options
• Excavation, Site Work
& Foundation Options
• Heating & Cooling Systems
• Home Amenities
• Loan Package Options
• Building Codes, Warranties, & Service
You have until March 28th to decide who the next
Republican nominee for President will be!
Special discounts & rebates that will
save you thousands on your new home
project just for attending!
Remember... “not to act is to act” - Dietrich Bonhoeffer
We are a licensed mortgage broker MLO#145126
Join the 62,828 Pennsylvania Democrats who have
changed to the Republican Party this year.
Get registered online in less than 2 minutes at
http://register.votespa.com.
Forms are also available through Committee
members and the County Office of Elections.
Paid for by the Elk County Republican Party.