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WILKES-BARRE, PA MondAy, JunE 17, 2013 50
THE TIMES LEADER
6 09815 10011
AIMEE DILGER /THE TIMES LEADER
John Vinskofski holds wife Louises hand during the renewal of vows for those celebrating their 25th, or 50th and beyond
wedding anniversaries Sunday at St. Peters Cathedral in Scranton. The Vinskofskis of Clarks Summit were just one of 230
couples in attendance at the special Mass.
Rose rises to win U.S. Open SPORTS, 1B
Former Pittston Sunday Dispatch editor remembered LOCAL, 3A
Smiles galore
to start your
week off right
CLICK, 1C
INSIDE
A NEWS: Local 3A
Nation & World: 5A
Obituaries 6A
Editorials: 9A
Weather: 10A
B SPORTS: 1B
Scoreboard: 2B
Major League Baseball: 3B
C CLICK: 1C
Birthdays: 3C
Television: 4C
Crossword/Horoscope: 5C
Comics: 6C
D CLASSIFIED: 1D
>> SHAKE, SHAKE, SHAKE: If youre walking down the
street this Friday, take a look at the guy next to you. Dont
breathe heavy and stare or hell think youre weird. Just stop,
calmly extend your hand and shake his. (Make sure you wash
rst. We wouldnt want any embarrassing incidents). Why on
Earth would you do this? Because Friday is World Handshake
Day, thats why. The whole thing is designed to make the world
a friendlier place. And thats gotta be a good thing.
>> SUMMERTIME, AND THE LIVIN IS EASY: Through-
out history, mankind has had various ways of guring out when
the seasons began. On the solstice In England, the ancients
would greet the sun as it rose through the monoliths of Stone-
henge. In Fajada Butte, N.M., American Indians would watch the
sun pierce a spiral cave drawing on June 21. In prehistoric times,
summer began when Thags wife, Grook, would start badger-
ing him to clean up the cave and cut the dino-grass. We have
calendars. And our calendar says that summer begins Friday
morning at 1:04 a.m.
>> ZOMBIES! RUN!: In the world of man-
eating, undead creatures, zombies are the it
monster. They star in a top-rated TV series,
theyll be shambling around Scranton in Sep-
tember, and theres one right behind you now.
RUN! Ha ha ha. Just kidding. (Unless
there really was a zombie behind you.
Then, well. It stinks to be you.) And
this week, you can see zombies
devour everyone in the world
not sort-of married to Ange-
lina Jolie. World War Z,
starring Brad Pitt, will infect
a theater near you starting
Friday.
>> THANK GOD ITS THIRD FRIDAY: The rst Friday of
every month is OK. The second Friday? Hmmm. Pedestrian.
But the THIRD Friday. Now thats a party. At least in downtown
Wilkes-Barre. And lookie here. This Friday is the third one. If
youre hanging around downtown you can take part in the Third
Friday Art Walk from 5 to 8 p.m., or head on over to the River
Common for the opening ceremonies of RiverFest from 6 to 9
p.m.
>> THEYRE BACK!: Remember the movie Mon-
sters, Inc.? Well, a prequel, Monsters University,
is opening in theaters Friday. Ever since he was a
kid monster, Mike Wazowski has dreamed of
becoming a Scarer. To make his dream
a reality, he enrolls at Monsters
University. During his rst
semester, he meets Sulley, a
natural-born Scarer. Sulley
and Mike engage in a ri-
valry that gets them both
kicked out of MUs elite
Scare Program. To make
things right, the monsters
will have to work together.
5
THINGS
YOU NEED
TO KNOW
THIS WEEK
WILKES-BARRE The Wil-
kes-Barre YMCA, in partnership
with the city of Wilkes-Barre, the
Wilkes-Barre City Health Depart-
ment and the Commission on
Economic Opportunity, will offer
its free Food-n-Fun @ the Park
Program for the third year so
fewer kids and teens go hungry
this summer.
More than 64 percent of chil-
dren in the Wilkes-Barre area re-
ceive free or reduced-cost meals
during the school year. And
when school ends for the sum-
mer, so do free meals, leaving
many kids at risk of hunger and
malnutrition.
The Food-n-Fun @ the Park
program offers participating kids
and teenagers, fromkindergarten
to 12th grade, a free lunch and
snacks, weekly guest programs
and supervised fun play each
day. By combining food and fun,
kids and teenagers will stay nour-
ished and active while easing the
strain on family food budgets.
The program will be from 10
a.m. to 2 p.m. Monday through
Friday from today to Aug. 16 in
four city parks and the Wilkes-
Barre YMCA. There will be
no program on July 4.
They are staying active and
meeting new people, Carol Hus-
sa of the Wilkes-Barre YMCA
said.
This years program is part
of a national partnership be-
tween YMCA of the USA and
the Walmart Foundation. Last
summer, the program served 846
kids and more than 8,500 meals,
and the YMCA expects the same
turnout this year.
Each snack and lunch com-
plies with the federal Summer
Food Service Program nutrition
guidelines and the YMCAs Na-
tional Healthy Eating and Physi-
cal Activity Standards for Early
Childhood and After-school
programs. The SFSP is a federal
program that was established to
ensure low-income children get
nutritious meals when school is
not in session.
CEO has a lot of experi-
ence providing lunches that are
Summer
food plan
for kids
returns
Food-n-Fun @ the Park program
offers free lunch and snacks
and supervised play.
By TESS KORNFELD
Times Leader Intern
Ofcials back secret surveillance
WASHINGTON Current
and former top U.S. ofcials on
Sunday defended the govern-
ments collection of phone and
Internet data after new revela-
tions about the secret surveil-
lance programs, saying the
operations were essential in dis-
rupting terrorist plots and did
not infringe on Americans civil
liberties.
In interviews on Sunday talk
shows, guests ranging from
White House chief of staff De-
nis McDonough to former Vice
President Dick Cheney and for-
mer CIA and National Security
Agency head Michael Hayden
said the governments reliance
on data collection from both
Americans and foreign nation-
als was constitutional and care-
fully overseen by executive, leg-
islative and court authorities.
All three branches of govern-
ment, using aggressive inter-
nal checks inside the adminis-
tration, from inspectors general
and routine audits, are oversee-
ing how we do these programs,
McDonough said. He added, I
think that the American people
can feel condent that we have
those three branches looking.
The latest reassurances came
as a new Washington Post re-
port Sunday described the mas-
sive intertwined structure of
four major data collection pro-
grams that have been set up by
the government since the 9/11
attacks. The Post report follows
earlier stories based on docu-
ments provided by NSA con-
tractor Edward Snowden.
Two secret programs, the
Post reported in its new disclo-
Dedicating their lives
HARRISBURG In the year
since eight young men took the
stand to testify they were sexual-
ly abused by former Penn State
assistant football coach Jerry
Sandusky, the scandal has played
out in the courts, in the halls of
the university and in continuing
debate about
how it was
handled and
what it meant.
Two Penn
State trustees
made a case
this month
that the uni-
versity has al-
ready made substantial improve-
ments in child safety and its
internal governance, with more
changes on the way, including a
search for a new president.
Board chairman Keith Masser
said the school can already claim
to be more efcient, more trans-
parent and more accountable,
a national model for university
governance. He sees Penn State
turning a corner.
Theres a lot of inaccurate
information and negative infor-
mation thats out there, and I
want to make sure that we pro-
mote and discuss all the good
things that have been done and
were doing, he said in an inter-
view in New York with The As-
sociated Press.
The fallout from the revela-
tions that Sandusky was a child
molester who used his ties to
the university to groom and
victimize boys has hardly been
Sandusky
PSU fallout
lingers a
year later
Two trustees made case this
month that university has
already made major progress.
By MARK SCOLFORO
Associated Press
Sandusky
Virtues of marriage stressed during special Mass
SCRANTON On Sunday
afternoon, 230 couples and
their families celebrated their
25th and 50th anniversaries
with a wedding anniversary
celebration Mass at St. Peters
Cathedral.
The annual Mass gives the
church community an op-
portunity to come together
to celebrate the sacrament of
marriage, Bill Genello, spokes-
person for the Scranton Dio-
cese, said.
We look to you, our anni-
versary couples, for a powerful
lesson and example of what it
means to truly embrace the
pattern of the life of Jesus in
our lives, said the Bishop of
Scranton Joseph C. Bambera.
Couples from as far away
as Milford came to attend the
heart warming hour-and-a half-
long Mass and to renew their
wedding vows. Genello said
an invitation was sent out to
all the parishes within the 11
counties covered by the Dio-
cese of Scranton.
The cathedral was lled
to capacity with about 800 of
the faithful. Other guests were
directed across the street to
the former Holy Cross High
School of Scranton to view the
ceremony on television. A re-
ception was held in the former
Holy Cross High School after
the Mass.
Bambera told audience of
all ages that happiness is not
always a point of marriage, but
there are tremendous opportu-
nities for happiness. Marriage
is lled with meaning and pur-
pose, he said.
Reecting back at his own
parents 50th anniversary, the
bishop recalled asking them
what goes thorough a persons
mind after 50 years together.
My father, a man of few
words, responded with words
of gratitude to my mother and
gratitude to God for the gift of
her and the family he helped
bring into the world, Bam-
bera said.
He said his mother an-
swered the question by saying
they made commitment to
each other and had to live up
to that.
She said, There were
struggles and joys, disappoint-
ments and good times, tears
and laughter. She said Mar-
riage means more after 50
years because we worked at it,
Bambera said.
The point of a good mar-
riage, the bishop said, is seek-
ing out the good in the each
other and those born from
Those interviewed maintain
operations were essential in
disrupting terrorist plots.
By STEPHEN BRAUN
Associated Press
By EILEEN GODIN
Times Leader Correspondent
See PSU, Page 10A See MARRIAGE, Page 10A
See FOOD, Page 10A
See SECRET, Page 10A
McDonough Cheney
BEVERLY HILLS, Calif.
Days of Our Lives won drama
series honors for just the second
time in 40 years at the Daytime
Emmy Awards on Sunday night.
The NBC soap opera that be-
gan airing in 1965 beat out de-
fending champion General Hos-
pital and three-time winner:
The Bold and the Beautiful.
The category included the
only four remaining soaps still
airing on the broadcast net-
works against One Life to Live,
which has found new life on the
Internet after being canceled.
Days only other drama se-
ries win was in 1978.
Doug Davidson of The Young
and the Restless and Heather
Tom of The Bold and the Beau-
tiful won lead acting honors.
Davidson earned his rst ca-
reer trophy for a role hes played
since 1978. Tom, who previously
was on Y&R, repeated her win
from last year.
Davidson had been nomi-
nated seven times in various
categories for playing Detective
Paul Williams on the CBS soap
before winning.
It suddenly occurs to me that
the presenters are younger than
my tux, he said.
I would like to thank the
viewers. They have been more
than fans, theyve been like fam-
ily to me. Theyve supported my
character in some very difcult
times.
Tom plays Katie Logan on
B&B. Last year, she became
the rst person to win Daytime
Emmys in the younger, support-
ing and lead categories.
The show had its unexpected
moments, including Corbin Ber-
nsen uttering two expletives
during the in memoriam tribute
that included his late mother
Jeanne Cooper of The Young
and the Restless.
The ladies of The Talk pre-
sented outstanding talk show in-
formative and when Aisha Tyler
opened the envelope she quickly
realized it was the wrong one.
Oh, this is interesting, she
said. This winner is not in this
category.
The audience in the Interna-
tional Ballroom of the Beverly
Hilton gasped at the error.
There better be a cocktail
waiting on my table, Tyler said
before being handed the correct
envelope from the wings. Tyler
then announced The Dr. Oz
Show as the winner.
I was having heart palpita-
tions, real ones, Dr. Mehmet Oz
said onstage.
In another surprise, there
was a tie for supporting actor
in a drama series. Scott Clifton
of The Bold and the Beautiful
and Billy Miller of The Young
and the Restless both won.
Julie Marie Berman of Gen-
eral Hospital won supporting
actress honors.
Ben Bailey of Cash Cab
picked up his third win as out-
standing game show host, beat-
ing out ve-time winner Alex
Trebek of Jeopardy! among
others.
Cash Cab is no longer in
production after eight years of
shows that took place in a cab as
Bailey plied the streets of New
York.
Ive got some great hood or-
naments for the cab I now have
in my garage, he said.
The ceremony pitted the only
four remaining soaps still air-
ing on the broadcast networks
against one that found new life
on the Internet.
Top-rated The Young and the
Restless took on last years win-
ner General Hospital, Days of
Our Lives, The Bold and the
Beautiful and online refugee
One Life to Live for best day-
time drama honors.
The Ellen DeGeneres Show
earned its seventh trophy as
outstanding talk showentertain-
ment.
Good Morning America
weather anchor Sam Champion,
along with HLN networks A.J.
Hammer and Robin Meade,
hosted the show on HLN.
The 40th anniversary of the
Daytime Emmys was recog-
nized with a past, present and
future theme woven throughout
the show.
Reecting the current era of
dwindling daytime audiences,
network budget-cutting and the
cancellation of some soaps, the
awards show was aired by cable
news channel HLN, having lost
its longtime home on the broad-
cast networks last year.
The Daytime Emmys moved
back to Southern California last
year after being in Las Vegas for
two years, and its ratings, like
many of the daytime shows it
celebrates, have bounced up and
down in recent years.
Last year, HLN scored its
highest numbers ever for a
scheduled non-news broadcast
when it aired the awards for the
rst time.
In an effort to liven up the
proceedings, the nights biggest
winners were chatted up on
stage by celebrities right after
their acceptance speeches.
CBS and PBS came into the
night tied with a leading 13 cre-
ative arts Daytime Emmys from
last Fridays ceremony honoring
technical and other behind-the-
scenes achievements.
Kevin Clash, who played the
Elmo character on Sesame
Street before resigning last No-
vember, won three trophies, in-
cluding outstanding performer
in a childrens series.
Clash left the PBS show
amid allegations that he sexu-
ally abused underage boys. His
attorney has said that related
lawsuits led against Clash are
without merit. He played Elmo
for 28 years and has a total of 26
Daytime Emmy awards.
Overall this season, CBS
The Young and the Restless
had a leading 24 nominations,
while ABCs General Hospital
was next with 19.
One Life to Live, along with
the venerable All My Children,
ran for more than 40 years on
ABC until both were canceled.
Each has since been revived
online with much of their casts
intact, leaving just four soaps
still airing on the broadcast net-
works compared to a dozen in
1991.
www.timesleader.com TIMES LEADER MonDAy, JunE 17, 2013
timesleader.com
DETAILS
LOTTERY
MIDDAY DRAWING
DAILY NUMBER - 2-1-0
BIG 4 - 7-0-0-7
QUINTO - 0-4-9-0-5
TREASURE HUNT
06-07-12-25-29
NIGHTLY DRAWING
DAILY NUMBER - 9-3-4
BIG 4 - 2-9-2-4
QUINTO - 4-8-9-9-9
CASH 5
01-11-22-26-31
HARRISBURG - No player
matched all ve numbers in
Sundays Cash 5 jackpot
drawing. Todays jackpot will be
worth $325,000.
Lottery ofcials reported 74
players matched four numbers,
winning $196 each; 2, 573 play-
ers matched three numbers,
winning $9.50 each; and 28,499
players matched two numbers,
winning $1 each.
No player matched all ve
numbers in the Power Ball
jackpot drawing. Wednesdays
jackpot will be worth $105 mil-
lion.
The numbers drawn were:
28-36-40-48-55
Powerball: 01
OBITUARIES
Dorish, William
Fischer, Dorothy
Gasper, Walter
Kroll, M. Doris
Patton, Dorothy
Popeck, Mark
Slesinski, Mary
Page 6A
WHO TO CONTACT
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BUILDING
TRUST
The Times Leader strives to
correct errors, clarify stories
and update them promptly.
Corrections will appear in
this spot. If you have infor-
mation to help us correct an
inaccuracy or cover an issue
more thoroughly, call the
newsroom at 829-7242.
THE TIMES LEADER A CIvITAS MEDIAcompany
WALT LAFFERTY
Regional Business Development
Director & General Manager
(570) 970-7158
wlafferty@civitasmedia.com
JOE BUTKIEWICZ
VP/Executive Editor
(570) 970-7249
jbutkiewicz@timesleader.com
DENISE SELLERS
VP/Chief Revenue Ofcer
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LISA DARIS
VP/HR and Administration
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ldaris@timesleader.com
PAGE 2A
Man of Steel takes ight with $125M debut
AP PHOTO
This lm publicity image released by Warner Bros. Pictures shows Henry Cavill as Superman in Man of Steel.
LOS ANGELES Man of
Steel leaped over box ofce ex-
pectations in a single weekend.
The Warner Bros. superhero
lm earned $113 million in its
opening weekend at the box
ofce, according to studio esti-
mates Sunday. The retelling of
Supermans backstory earned
an additional $12 million from
Thursday screenings, bring-
ing its domestic total to $125
million. Original box-ofce ex-
pectations for Man of Steel
ranged from $75 million to $130
million.
They nally got the Super-
man formula right, said Paul
Dergarabedian, an analyst for
box-ofce tracker Hollywood.
com. Superhero movies really
are the bread and butter of the
summer box ofce. The fact
that Iron Man 3 has the biggest
opening of the year so far and
Man of Steel has the second
biggest opening of the year just
proves that.
Man of Steel, which stars
Henry Cavill as Superman and
Amy Adams as Lois Lane, also
nabbed the record for Junes big-
gest opening away from Toy
Story 3, the Disney-Pixar lm
which banked $110.3 million
when it opened in 2010. Su-
perman Returns, the previous
Superman lm starring Bran-
don Routh in the titular role,
launched with $52.5 million in
2006.
The new take on Supermans
origin also performed solidly
overseas, earning $71.6 million
from 24 territories, including
the Philippines, India, Malaysia
and the United Kingdom, where
Man of Steel earned $17.1 mil-
lion. The lm, which also stars
Russell Crowe and Michael
Shannon, is set to open next
weekend in 27 more territories,
such as Russia and China.
Sonys This Is the End de-
buted in second place in North
America behind Man of Steel
with $20.5 million in its open-
ing weekend. The comedy star-
ring Seth Rogen, James Franco
and Jonah Hill as versions of
themselves trapped in a man-
sion during the apocalypse
opened Wednesday, earning a
domestic total of $32.8 million.
The lmcost just $32 million to
produce.
We knew we were going to
have competition, but we felt
our movie stood on its own
and had its own voice, said
Rory Bruer, Sonys president of
worldwide distribution. I be-
lieve weve absolutely proven
that. To have this amount of
money in the bank with its cost
of production, good reviews and
word of mouth really puts our
feet on solid ground.
In its third weekend at the
box ofce, the Lionsgate illu-
sionist heist lm Now You See
Me eeced $10.3 million in
third place, bringing its total do-
mestic haul to $80 million.
Universals Fast & Furious 6
arrived in fourth place with $9.4
million, while the studios inva-
sion horror lm The Purge
starring Ethan Hawke scared up
$8.2 million in the fth spot.
The super openings of Man
of Steel and This Is the End
helped to lift the box ofce 50
percent over last year when
Madagascar 3 and Pro-
metheus held on to the top
spots. Man of Steel will face
off against stiff competition next
week when Paramounts zombie
thriller World War Z and the
Disney-Pixars prequel Mon-
sters University both debut.
Estimated ticket sales for Fri-
day through Sunday at U.S. and
Canadian theaters, according to
Hollywood.com. Where avail-
able, latest international num-
bers are also included. Final do-
mestic gures will be released
on Monday.
Superman redo also took record
for Junes biggest opening
away from Toy Story 3.
By DERRIK J. LANG
AP Entertainment Writer
Venerable Days of Lives wins Daytime Emmy drama series
AP PHOTO
Wayne Brady, right, current host of Lets Make a Deal, presents the lifetime achievement award
to Monty Hall, longtime former host of the same game show, at the 40th Annual Daytime Emmy
Awards on Sunday in Beverly Hills, Calif.
Soap that started in 1965 wins
for only 2nd time. Davidson,
Tom take lead actor nods.
The Associated Press
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com MonDAy, JunE 17, 2013
timesleader.com
PAGE 3A
LOCAL
KINGSTON TWP.
Assault leads to hospitalization
A Shavertown man was hospitalized
in critical condition Sunday after an
alleged assault by a neighbor.
John Rogers, 61, was taken to Geis-
inger Wyoming Valley Medical Center,
Plains Township, after the altercation,
police said.
Police later obtained an arrest war-
rant for 58-year-old Brian Emershaw.
He was arraigned before District Judge
John Hasay in Shickshinny on charges
of aggravated assault, simple assault,
recklessly endangering another per-
son, disorderly conduct and summary
offenses and committed to the Luzerne
County Correctional Facility for lack of
$5,000 bail.
State police and the Luzerne County
District Attorneys Ofce assisted in
the investigation.
HANOVER TWP.
Golf course vandalized
Police are investigating vandalism at
the Wyoming Valley Golf Club course
on South Main Street.
Overnight Saturday into Sunday the
wooden railings on a ranch-style fence
at the fth hole were removed and
carried to the other side of the nearby
pond and set on re, police said. The
re was still smoking when police took
the report around 7:45 a.m. Sunday.
Also tee boxes and three divot boxes
were taken. Empty beer cans were
found on the course.
WILKES-BARRE
Glodzik hearing rescheduled
The preliminary hearing for Leo
A. Glodzik III, the former city tow-
ing contractor charged with theft,
has been rescheduled to noon July 16
before District Judge Paul Roberts in
Kingston.
The hearing for Glodzik, 42, of
Foote Avenue, Duryea had originally
been set for noon Tuesday before Dis-
trict Judge Rick Cronauer in Wilkes-
Barre.
The Luzerne County District Attor-
neys Ofce charged Glodzik on May
31 with stealing $2,100 in cash left in a
Cadillac as part of a sting operation.
According to arrest papers:
Glodzik and an undercover state
trooper working with the FBI and pos-
ing as the head of a regional drug task
force discussed towing vehicles. Dur-
ing one conversation Glodzik asked
what was done with money found in
the vehicles seized by the task force.
He indicated to the trooper through
a combination of verbal and hand
gestures that the trooper could leave
money found inside the vehicle and
they could later share it.
Glodzik was called to tow a vehicle
to his garage on Carey Avenue on Jan.
29 and was told it was seized in a drug
arrest. The trooper told Glodzik that
there was a couple thousand dollars in
the ashtray. The trooper said he saw
Glodzik take the money from the vehi-
cle in the garage and put it in his pants
pocket. In the ofce Glodzik counted
out $1,100 and gave it to the trooper.
The trooper advised Glodzik he
would be arrested. Conversations the
trooper had with Glodzik on that date
and Jan. 25 were secretly recorded by
investigators.
The day Glodzik was charged,
Wilkes-Barre Mayor Tom Leighton
suspended his towing contract and
said an independent arbitrator would
be appointed within 60 days to afrm
the suspension.
The city temporarily appointed Fal-
zone Towing Service of Wilkes-Barre
to handle the towing while a new
contract is awarded.
Glodzik remains free on $5,000 bail.
WILKES-BARRE
Farmers Market on the way
The Farmers Market opens Thurs-
day and will continue every week dur-
ing the summer, offering family fun,
music, food, crafts and fresh produce
from local growers.
The market hours are Thursday, 10
a.m. to 4 p.m., with opening ceremo-
nies at 11:45 a.m. According to the city
website, farms expected to be repre-
sented at the Farmers Market include
Golombs, Plains Township; Kesslers,
Berwick; Braces Orchard, Dallas;
Marty OMalia, Plains Township; Broy-
ans, Nescopeck; Rymans, Nescopeck;
Norman Darling & Sons, Dallas; Creek
Side Farm, Wapwallopen; Dymonds,
Dallas; Dream Green Farm LIU 18,
Dallas; Dunns, New Ringold; Zimmer-
mans, Pitman.
On Thursday, music will be pro-
vided by Windfall Duo and each week
a different musical act will be on the
bandshell stage.
I N B R I E F
PITTSTON The 8th Annual
Tour of Historic Churches of Greater
Pittston, which will visit St. Michaels
Byzantine Catholic Church and the Ital-
ian Christian Church, is set for Sunday
beginning at 1 p.m.
Event organizer Jan Lokuta said this
year the tour will focus on the way the
church inspires the creation of art.
It is meant to give people the oppor-
tunity to see really great works of art
in the setting for which they were de-
signed, Lokuta, a Pittston native, said.
Lokuta has organized the tour since
2006. This year, he said tour-goers will
be exposed to two very different church-
es. He picked St. Michaels Byzantine
Catholic Church and the Italian Chris-
tian Church because they were unique
and represent the wide spectrum of
churches in Pittston, from visual driven
St. Michaels to a much simpler Italian
Christian Church.
Pittston has a complete spectrum
of religious art and it is something that
people should appreciate, Lokuta said.
The tour will start at St. Michaels
Byzantine Catholic Church on 205 N.
Main St., Pittston. St. Michaels is deco-
rated with magnicent icons, abstract
two-dimensional images of the divine
meant to depict the spiritual being of a
person.
The Rev. Joseph Bertha, an expert on
icons, will lead the tour at St. Michaels
and will explain the spiritual signi-
cance of them. He will also explain how
they are created and how they are dif-
ferent from Western European art.
The next hour of the tour, at the Ital-
ian Christian Church, 40 E. Oak St., will
focus on music rather than visual art. At
this stop, the members of the congrega-
tion will sing traditional hymns in Ital-
ian for tour participants.
Gina Malsky, owner of the former St.
Casimirs Church in Pittston, will be a
special guest to present a new venue of
performing arts. Malsky recently trans-
formed the old Baroque-style church
into an arts center by replacing the al-
tar with a stage. At the end of the tour,
she will give participants a sneak peek
of the renovated interior of the center.
The former church, located at 65
Church St. in Pittston, is not part of the
ofcial tour, Lokuta said, but a visit
there will give people a chance to see
how the former church is being reborn.
He said it is another example of how
the church, in this case the beautiful
architecture of a century-old former
house of worship, can once again be-
come a space that inspires.
Tour participants are reminded to
dress appropriately for visiting active
houses of worship.
submitted photo
This image by Brian Keeler shows the Susquehanna River with St. Michaels Byzantine Catholic Church of Pittston in
the background. The work is part of an art tour involving area churches.
Greater Pittston church tour focuses on works of art
By TESS KORNFELD
Times Leader Intern
Event organizer Jan Lokuta said this
year the tour will focus on the way the
church inspires the creation of art.
Financial
software
on mind
of Grifth
REPORTERS
NOTEBOOK
JENN LEARN-ANDES
L u z e r n e
County Con-
troller Walter
Grifth said he
has scheduled
a meeting with
county ofcials
today to discuss
his concerns about the upcoming
implementation of a newnancial
software system.
The controller believes the July
1 implementation should be de-
layed, saying the county is not
ready to go live without addi-
tional testing.
This nancial system, for
which county council has ap-
proved funding, is a train wreck
waiting to happen and must be
stopped or at the very least tested
prior to implementation, Grifth
said in an email.
Council approved a $1.28 mil-
lion contract with the new soft-
ware supplier Michigan-based
New World Systems Corp. in
October. The newsystemis prom-
ised to be more user-friendly to
enter and analyze data, and gener-
ate spending and revenue reports.
County Manager Robert Law-
ton told council he is condent
the essential components of the
new system will be operational
July 1.
Griffth is seeking a new
deputy controller, according to a
job posting on the county website,
www.luzernecounty.org.
Daniel Chipego, who was hired
deputy at $50,000 in March, has
submitted his resignation to ac-
cept a position outside county
government, Grifth said.
Chipego could not be reached
for comment. Grifth said Chi-
pego had no issues with him but
could not deal with the way our
government is run.
The controllers ofce also has
an internal audit clerk vacancy
because the employee in that po-
sition did not pass a probationary
period, he said. The $25,000 po-
sition was readvertised because
nobody applied during the rst
posting.
A proposal to publicly post
emails exchanged by the 11 coun-
ty council members would require
an estimated $10,000 for software
and $3,000 to update the com-
puter program annually, county
Chief Solicitor C. David Pedri told
county council Tuesday.
Council will hold its frst
monthly budget work session at 7
p.m. Tuesday in the council meet-
ing roomat the county courthouse
in Wilkes-Barre. This session will
focus on the county prison system
and day reporting center.
The county Flood Protection
Authority also will meet Tuesday
at 11 a.m. in the countys Emer-
gency Management Agency build-
ing, Water Street, Wilkes-Barre.
Council appointed Francis
Curry, Forty Fort, to the Lu-
zerne County Community Col-
lege Board of Trustees to ll an
expired term previously held by
Michael Tigue. He is no relation
to Councilwoman Elaine Maddon
Curry.
Three citizens were appoint-
ed Tuesday to the Children and
Youth Advisory Board: Richard
Holodick, Paul Koval and Susan
Roskos.
An ad in local newspapers
that appeared last week hinted
at the formation of a new county-
wide citizen group but did not
elaborate. The ad in red, white
and blue said, Luzerne County
United. Its coming
John Watson, the former
editor and publisher of
Pittstons Sunday Dispatch,
has died, his brother, Bill
Watson, said.
Watson, 57, who was liv-
ing in Seattle for the past
several years, retired in
1999 from the weekly pa-
per founded by his grand-
father. He orchestrated the
sale of the paper to the par-
ent company of the Times
Leader in 1990 and re-
mained with the company
for nine years after that.
Ed Ackerman, current
editor of the Sunday Dis-
patch, said he cant look
through old clips of the
Dispatch without admiring
Watsons skilled writing.
He was one of the most
talented individuals Ive
ever met, Ackerman said.
He really knew how to
turn a phrase.
Known locally as an
avid and successful golfer,
Watson was a graduate of
Pittston Area High School
and studied computer sci-
ence at Penn State Uni-
versity. He
joined the
Dispatchs
l i t hogra-
phy and
processing
d e p a r t -
ment in
1975. He
took the
reins of the newspaper af-
ter his grandfather died
and his father, William
Pidge Watson Jr., became
ill.
What many people didnt
know, Ackerman said, was
that Watson was an amaz-
ing athlete.
I remember seeing him
play at an All-Star Little
League game in the sum-
mer of 1966, Ackerman
said. He hit a home run in
extra innings. He was ath-
letic at a very early age.
John Joyce, president of
the Joyce Insurance Group,
was friends with Watson
since childhood.
He said he and Watson
played basketball together
at the Avoca Legion courts,
citing Watson as a superb
player. Later in life, Watson
excelled in golf.
He wasnt a pro golf-
er, but he was just about
there, Joyce said.
He was a fun, bright guy
that probably just retired
a little too young. Now
he died too young, Joyce
said. Its so sad.
Watson had written a
weekly local political col-
umn and golf notebook for
the Times Leader in the
the mid 1990s, and a na-
tional political column for
much of 2012.
He took on local political
heavyweights and always
focused on local politics.
Political operative Ed
Mitchell described Watson
as a Pittston Democrat.
He was a real down-
to-earth Democrat, in
the mold of a Pittston
Democrat, Mitchell said.
Pittston Democrats are
more liberal than most in
the area. He was really on
the side of the underprivi-
leged and people that were
down on their luck.
Despite being a scally
conservative businessman,
friend and co-worker Mi-
chael Cotter said, Watsons
political leanings were lib-
eral. In fact, Watson, in his
rst 2012 column in the
Times Leader, described
himself as such.
It has been about a de-
cade, so let me re-introduce
myself, Watson wrote. I
am a Pittston native and a
third-generation member
of a newspaper family.
Trained in the old school,
I am uncomfortable with
labels, but if I must assume
one, liberal would t.
Watson and his father,
Pidge, died nearly 20
years apart, both right
around Fathers Day. On
June 17, 1993, after Pidge
died, John Watson was at
the Dispatch writing about
him. Ive seen my dad ev-
ery day of my life since I
was 18, he told a reporter.
This morning was tough.
The Dispatch was found-
ed in 1947 by John Kehoe,
a millionaire who wanted a
mouthpiece for his politi-
cal views, and WilliamWat-
son Sr., then a reporter for
The Times Leader Evening
News. Kehoe wrote a polit-
ical column and Watson Sr.
had control of the editorial
and nancial operations.
Cotter, of Wyoming, said
he grew up with Watston,
but they became good
friends at the newspaper.
I did my rst piece at
his bidding in 1976 in the
Dispatch, Cotter said. I
eventually got a job at the
Scranton Times, but John
Watson lured me back.
The Sunday Dispatch
has been owned by same
owners of The Times Lead-
er since March 1990, cur-
rently Civitas Media.
A local memorial service
is being planned, but a date
has not been set.
By JOE HEALEY
jhealey@psdispatch.com
Former Dispatch editor/publisher dies
Watson
John Watson remembered
as skilled writer, avid golfer,
political force in paper.
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TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com MonDAy, JunE 17, 2013 N E W S PAGE 4A
Bite mark evidence derided as unreliable in court
At least 24 men convicted or
charged with murder or rape
based on bite marks on the esh
of victims have been exonerated
since 2000, many after spending
more than a decade in prison.
Now a judges ruling later this
month in New York could help
end the practice for good.
A small, mostly ungoverned
group of dentists carry out bite
mark analysis and their ndings
are often key evidence in pros-
ecutions, even though there is
no scientic proof that teeth can
be matched denitively to a bite
into human skin.
DNA has outstripped the use-
fulness of bite mark analysis in
many cases: The FBI doesnt use
it and the American Dental Asso-
ciation does not recognize it.
Bite mark evidence is the
poster child of unreliable forensic
science, said Chris Fabricant,
director of strategic litigation at
the New York-based Innocence
Project, which helps wrongfully
convicted inmates win freedom
through DNA testing.
Supporters of the method,
which involves comparing the
teeth of possible suspects to bite
mark patterns on victims, argue
it has helped convict child mur-
derers and other notorious crimi-
nals, including serial killer Ted
Bundy.
They say problems that have
arisen are not about the method,
but about the qualications of
those testifying, who can earn as
much as $5,000 a case.
The problem lies in the ana-
lyst or the bias, said Dr. Frank
Wright, a forensic dentist in Cin-
cinnati. So if the analyst is not
properly trained or introduces
bias into their exam, sure, its go-
ing to be polluted, just like any
other scientic investigation. It
doesnt mean bite mark evidence
is bad.
The Associated Press re-
viewed decades of court records,
archives, news reports and l-
ings by the Innocence Project in
order to compile the most com-
prehensive count to date of those
exonerated after being convicted
or charged based on bite mark
evidence. Two dozen forensic
scientists and other experts were
interviewed, including some
who had never before spoken to
a reporter about their work.
The AP analysis found that at
least two dozen men had been
exonerated since 2000, mostly
as a result of DNA testing. Many
had spent years in prison, includ-
ing on death row, and one man
was behind bars for more than
23 years. The count included at
least six men arrested on bite
mark evidence who were freed as
they awaited trial.
Two court cases this month are
helping to bring the debate over
the issue to a head. One involves
a 63-year-old California man who
is serving a life term for killing
his wife, even though the foren-
sic dentist who testied against
him has reversed his opinion.
In the second, a New York City
judge overseeing a murder case
is expected to decide whether
bite mark analysis can be admit-
ted as evidence, a ruling critics
say could kick it out of court-
rooms for good.
Some notable cases of faulty
bite mark analysis include:
Two men convicted of raping
and killing two 3-year-old girls in
separate Mississippi crimes in
1992 and 1995. Marks on their
bodies were later determined to
have come from crawsh and in-
sects.
A New Mexico man impris-
oned in the 1989 rape and mur-
der of his stepdaughter, who was
found with a possible bite mark
on her neck and sperm on her
body. It was later determined
that the stepfather had a medi-
cal condition that prevented him
from producing sperm.
Ray Krone, the so-called
Snaggletooth Killer, who was
convicted in 1992 and again in
1996 after winning a new trial
in the murder of a Phoenix bar-
tender found naked and stabbed
in the mens restroom of the bar
where she worked. Krone spent
10 years in prison, three on death
row.
Raymond Rawson, a Las Ve-
gas forensic dentist, testied at
both trials that bite marks on
the bartender could only have
come from Krone, evidence that
proved critical in convicting him.
At his second trial, three top
forensic dentists testied for the
defense that Krone couldnt have
made the bite mark, but the jury
didnt give their ndings much
weight and again found him
guilty.
In 2002, DNA testing matched
a different man, and Krone was
released.
DnA better than bite mark
analysis in many cases, and
the FBI doesnt use it.
By AMANDA LEE MYERS
Associated Press
AP PHOTO
An overlay of a bite mark is placed on top of a photograph of a
bite mark victim to see if the bite could have been made by the
person who made the overlay in Cincinnati.
ENNISKILLEN, Northern
Ireland Europe is mired in
debt and recession. Financial
markets have hit violent ups
and downs on fears that U.S.
stimulus efforts may soon be
scaled back. Japan is nally
looking up after years of stag-
nation but it remains an
open question if the recovery
will stick.
Thats the global econo-
my that will confront the
heads of the Group of Eight
leading economies as they
gather Monday and Tuesday
for their annual summit in
Northern Ireland.
British Prime Minister Da-
vid Cameron will serve as
summit host for U.S. Presi-
dent Barack Obama and the
leaders of Germany, Italy,
Canada, France, Japan and
Russia. At the top of the
agenda: New cooperation to
ght tax evasion and increase
transparency among govern-
ments. Also on the table will
be how much help to give to
rebels in Syria, and a push for
lower trade barriers between
the United States and the Eu-
ropean Union.
On the sidelines and over
dinner, its expected that the
discussions will broaden to
include the election results
in Iran and data protection,
following revelations about
a U.S. counterterror surveil-
lance program.
As always, the summit
takes place under heavy secu-
rity, guarded by 8,000 police
backed by water cannon. The
venue itself is surrounded
by extensive security fences,
and on three sides by water.
Theres only one access road
to the closest town, Enniskil-
len, some 5 miles away.
While its peace process
has been hailed worldwide
as a success story, Northern
Ireland remains a society
troubled by deep-seated divi-
sions between Catholics and
Protestants. Ofcials have
said trouble away from the
summit site cant be ruled
out. Additionally, thousands
of anti-capitalist and labor
union protesters are expected
to march from the town to
the summit fence on Monday.
Since last years G-8 meet-
ing at Camp David in the
U.S., there has been a modest
economic upswing through-
out the developed world and
prospects are brighter after
ve years of turbulence and
recession. Yet despite prog-
ress, the economic outlook
remains fraught with uncer-
tainties.
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com MonDAy, JunE 17, 2013 N A T I O N & W O R L D PAGE 5A
BEIRUT
Blast in embassy area
Syrian state TV and residents said
Sunday an explosion shook a Damas-
cus neighborhood that houses several
embassies and a military airport.
The Britain-based Syrian Obser-
vatory for Human Rights saida car
bomb detonated at a checkpoint near
the military airport in the western
neighborhood of Mazzeh on Sunday
evening.
The Observatory, which has a wide
network of activists on the ground in
Syria, said there are reports of casual-
ties. The media ofce of the Free
Syrian Armys military council in the
Damascus area also said the explosion
targeted the military airport in the
neighborhood.
INDIANAPOLIS
Womanondeathrowreleased
An Indiana woman put on death
row at age 16 for killing an elderly
Bible school teacher is scheduled to be
released today after serving a prison
term that was shortened after the
state Supreme Court intervened.
Paula Coopers death sentence at
such a young age sparked interna-
tional protests and a plea for clemency
from Pope John Paul II. Now 43 years
old, Cooper is being given a second
chance at her life.
Cooper was 15 when she and three
other teenage girls showed up at Ruth
Pelkes house on May 14, 1985, with
plans of robbing the 78-year-old Bible
school teacher.
Coopers three accomplices were
sentenced to prison terms ranging
from 25 to 60 years. But Cooper, who
confessed to Pelkes slaying, was con-
victed of murder and sentenced to die
in the electric chair. At the time in
1986 she was the youngest death
row inmate in the U.S.
COLORADO SPRINGS, COLO.
Residents anxious to return
Residents are anxious to return to
the scene of Colorados most destruc-
tive wildre but authorities said
Sunday its still not safe.
Fire crews were putting out hot
spots Sunday to prevent are ups in
heavily wooded Black Forest, where
nearly 500 houses have been de-
stroyed.
However, El Paso County Sheriff
Terry Maketa said roads and power
lines still need to be repaired. The
death of two people trying to ee is
still being investigated and hes in no
hurry to let people back near what is
considered a crime scene for now.
The 22-square-mile re is 65 percent
contained.
ISTANBUL
Leader stresses duty for order
Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
Erdogan said Sunday it was his duty
to order riot police to evict activists oc-
cupying an Istanbul park that became a
center of deance against his rule, even
as the government crackdown contin-
ued across town with tear gas red at
protesters trying to regroup.
Erdogan also railed against foreign
media coverage of the unrest amid criti-
cism over his governments handling of
the protests that left his international
image battered, and exposed deep rifts
within Turkish society.
About six miles away in central Istan-
bul, riot police red tear gas and used
water cannons on thousands of deant
protesters attempting to regroup and
demonstrate again in the citys main
Taksim Square.
Protesters are angry over the eviction
of overwhelmingly peaceful activists at
Gezi Park, next to Taksim Square, who
oppose government plans to rip down
its trees and erect a replica Ottoman-
era barracks. But the protests quickly
spiraled into a widespread denunciation
of what many say is Erdogans increas-
ingly authoritarian way of governing
charges he vehemently denies.
I N B R I E F
AP PHOTO
Britains Prime Minister David Cameron speaks Friday at
the G8 UK Innovation Conference at the Siemens Crystal
Building in London.
AP PHOTO
A good day at the beach
Backdropped by the French alps, kids
jump into Geneva Lake and enjoy the
sunny and warm weather, in Lutry
Beach near Lausanne, Southwestern
Switzerland, Sunday.
G8 facing uncertain recoveries
ofcials from Group of Eight
economies gathering today
and Tuesday for summit
By DAVID McHUGH and
SHAWN POGATCHNIK
Associated Press
Hospital to
offer hand
transplants
for children
A Boston hospital is starting
the worlds rst hand transplant
program for children, and doc-
tors say it wont be long until
face transplants and other radi-
cal operations to improve ap-
pearance and quality of life are
offered to kids, too.
The move shows the growing
willingness to do transplants
to enhance a patients life rath-
er than to save it as donated
hearts, livers and other organs
have done in the past. More
than 70 hands and at least 20
faces have been transplanted
in adults, and doctors say its
clear these operations are safe
enough to offer to children in
certain cases, too.
We feel that this is justi-
able, Dr. Amir Taghinia said of
the pediatric hand program he
will lead at Boston Childrens
Hospital.
Children will potentially
benet even more from this
procedure than adults because
they regrow nerves more quick-
ly and have more problems
from prosthetic hands, he said.
Only one hand transplant is
known to have been done in a
child a baby in Malaysia in
2000. Because the donor was a
twin who died at birth, her sis-
ter did not need to take drugs to
prevent rejection.
Thats the main risk in offer-
ing children hand transplants
the immune-suppressing
drugs carry side effects and may
raise the risk of cancer over the
long term.
However, one independent
expert thinks the gains may be
worth it in certain cases.
We understand so much
more about immune suppres-
sion that its less of a risk to put
children on it, said Dr. Simon
Horslen, medical director of the
liver and intestine transplant
program at Seattle Childrens
Hospital. This is never going
to be done as an emergency pro-
cedure, so the families will have
plenty of opportunity to weigh
the options.
Also, a hand can be removed
if rejection occurs, and that
would not leave the child worse
off than before the transplant,
Horslen said.
Several types of kids might be
candidates those born with-
out hands, children who lose
them in accidents and children
with infections that wind up
requiring damaged hands to be
amputated.
Face transplants and other
more radical surgeries are
likely to follow, doctors say.
By MARILYNN MARCHIONE
AP Chief Medical Writer
JERUSALEM The surprising vic-
tory of a reformist candidate in Irans
presidential election has put Israel in a
difcult position as it tries to halt the
Iranian nuclear program: With Hasan
Rowhani likely to enjoy an interna-
tional honeymoon, Israel could have
a hard time rallying support for new
sanctions or possible military action
against its arch foe, even as it says
the clock is ticking on Tehrans march
toward nuclear weapons.
The uncertainty facing Israel was
evident Sunday in the reactions among
its leaders, who welcomed the signs of
change in Iran while also warning the
world should not be fooled.
Let us not delude ourselves. The
international community must not
become caught up in wishful thinking
and be tempted to relax the pressure
on Iran to stop its nuclear program,
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
said.
Rowhani swept to a landslide vic-
tory in Fridays election with a call for
outreach and dialogue with the inter-
national community. His predecessor,
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, repeatedly
clashed with the West over the nuclear
issue, isolating the country and draw-
ing several rounds of painful economic
sanctions. Rowhanis victory was wide-
ly seen as a show of discontent with
Ahmadinejad and Irans hardline cleri-
cal establishment.
While Rowhani is considered a rela-
tive moderate and had the backing of
Iranian reformists, the hardline su-
preme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei
remains the ultimate authority on all
state matters, including the nuclear
program.
Israel, along with major Western
countries, suspects that Iran is develop-
ing the infrastructure that would allow
it to make a nuclear bomb. Although Is-
rael believes Iran has not reached weap-
ons capability, Netanyahu has warned
that Iran is inching perilously close to
the red lines where the nuclear pro-
gram could no longer be stopped.
Israeli leaders have welcomed the
sanctions, which have fueled double
digit unemployment and ination in
Iran. But they say the economic pres-
sure isnt enough, and that military ac-
tion cannot be ruled out.
AP PHOTO
Supporters of Iranian presidential candidate Hasan Rowhani celebrate Saturday in Tehran after his victory. Wild
celebrations broke out on city streets that were battleelds four years ago as reformist-backed Rowhani capped a
stunning surge to claim Irans presidency.
Iranian moderate could hinder Israel
Leaders welcome change but still
warn that the world should not be
fooled.
By JOSEF FEDERMAN
Associated Press
D.C. IRS supervisor scrutinized tea party cases
WASHINGTON An In-
ternal Revenue Service su-
pervisor in Washington says
she was personally involved
in scrutinizing some of the
earliest applications from tea
party groups seeking tax-ex-
empt status, including some
requests that languished for
more than a year without ac-
tion.
Holly Paz, who until re-
cently was a top deputy in
the division that handles
applications for tax-exempt
status, told congressional in-
vestigators she reviewed 20
to 30 applications. Her asser-
tion contradicts initial claims
by the agency that a small
group of agents working in
an ofce in Cincinnati were
solely responsible for mis-
handling the applications.
Paz, however, provided no
evidence that senior IRS of-
cials ordered agents to target
conservative groups or that
anyone in the Obama admin-
istration outside the IRS was
involved.
Instead, Paz described an
agency in which IRS supervi-
sors in Washington worked
closely with agents in the
eld but didnt fully under-
stand what those agents
were doing. Paz said agents
in Cincinnati openly talked
about handling tea party
cases, but she thought the
term was merely shorthand
for all applications from
groups that were politically
active conservative and
liberal.
Paz provided no evidence
senior IRS ofcials or anyone
in administration involved.
By STEPHEN OHLEMACHER
Associated Press
AP PHOTO
Jenny Beth Martin, co-founder of the Tea Party Patri-
ots, right, hugs Becky Gerritson, back to camera, of the
Wetumpka, Ala., Tea Party, in Washington.
PLAINS TWP. Police re-
ported the following:
Police responded to the Mo-
hegan Sun Casino at 8:16 p.m.
Thursday for a report of a man
who pointed a gun at another
man.
- A man xing a at tire in
the parking lot had an argu-
ment with another man leav-
ing in a pickup truck. The man
who was xing the at said he
went to the drivers side door
of the truck and the driver
pointed a handgun at his chest
and then left onto state Route
315. Police stopped the truck
but no gun was found on either
the driver or inside his truck.
- Ryan Morresi of Hazle
Township was cited with disor-
derly conduct and harassment
Friday after a disturbance in
the parking lot of Eddies Diner
on East Main Street. Morresi
was a passenger in a car driven
by his mother. He grabbed her
arm and steering wheel caus-
ing the vehicle to go into a
large puddle and then into the
lot, police said.
- Tamara Dunbar of Norris-
town was taken into custody at
2:50 a.m. Sunday after police
responded to a report of a dis-
orderly woman at the Red Roof
Inn.
Dunbar was arguing with
her boyfriend. Police said a
records check showed Dun-
bar was wanted by the Calvert
County Sheriffs Department in
Maryland for a trafc warrant.
She was taken to the Luzerne
County Correctional Facility.
HANOVER TWP. De-
nise Ceppa of the Buttonwood
section of the township re-
ported Sunday morning that a
window was cracked overnight
on her Shasta recreational ve-
hicle while it was parked on
the street.
HAZLETON City police
reported the following:
- Aresidence in the 500 block
of Peace was burglarized early
Sunday morning. The resident
found a white woman with
dirty blond hair, approximate-
ly 25, 5 feet, 7 inches tall and
weighing about 200 pounds
inside around 3:30 a.m. The
woman ed before police were
called.
- Leonard Shenosky, 63, of
Hazleton was cited with public
drunkenness around 12:15 a.m.
Sunday after he was found ly-
ing on the roadway in the 500
block of Grant Street.
- Jose Bonilla, 24, of Hazle-
ton was cited with violating the
citys noise ordinance shortly
after 11 p.m. Saturday. Police
responded to a report of a loud
outdoor party in the 100 block
of West Second Street.
In Memoriams
To Better Serve Our Customers
Mon. deadline is Thurs. at 11am
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Wed. deadline is Fri. at 4pm
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Fri. deadline is Tues. at 4pm
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Sun. deadline is Thurs. at 4pm
For more Info Call 829-7100
The Times Leader publishes
free obituaries, which have a
27-line limit, and paid obituar-
ies, which can run with a photo-
graph. A funeral home repre-
sentative can call the obituary
desk at (570) 829-7224, send a
fax to (570) 829-5537 or e-mail
to tlobits@timesleader.com. If
you fax or e-mail, please call
to conrm. Obituaries must be
submitted by 9 p.m. Sunday
through Thursday and 7:30 p.m.
Friday and Saturday. Obituaries
must be sent by a funeral home
or crematory, or must name
who is handling arrangements,
with address and phone num-
ber. We discourage handwritten
notices; they incur a $15 typing
fee.
OBI TUARY
POL I CY
BOGDAN - John, funeral 11 a.m.
today at the Earl W. Lohman
Funeral Home Inc., 14 W. Green St.,
Nanticoke. Mass of Christian Burial
11:30 a.m. in St. Faustina Parish
(Holy Trinity site), Nanticoke.
Friends may call from 9:30 a.m.
until time of service.
COOMBS - George, funeral 11 a.m.
Tuesday in the Town Hill United
Methodist Church, 417 Town Hill
Road, Shickshinny. Friends may
call 10 a.m. until services.
COYNE - William, funeral 9 a.m.
today at Peter J. Adonizio Funeral
Home, 251 William St., Pittston.
Mass of Christian Burial 9:30 a.m.
in St. John the Evangelist Church,
Pittston.
CULVER - Derek, memorial service
4 to 5 p.m. Saturday, July 6 at
Yeosock Funeral Home, 40 S. Main
St., Plains Township.
CURRY - Thomas, funeral 9 a.m.
today at Paul F. Leonard Funeral
Home, 575 N. Main St., Pittston.
Mass of Christian Burial 9:30
a.m. in Our Lady of the Eucharist
Parish.
DAVIS - Kim, funeral 8 p.m.
Tuesday at the Earl W. Lohman
Funeral Home Inc., 14 W. Green St.,
Nanticoke. Friends may call 6 p.m.
until time of service.
FERRETTI - Mary Ann, Mass of
Christian Burial 9:30 a.m. Tuesday
in St. Barbaras Parish, St. Anthony
of Padua Roman Catholic Church,
Exeter.
GRZYMSKI - Josephine, funeral
9:30 a.m. today at Lehman Family
Funeral Service Inc., 689 Hazle
Ave., Wilkes-Barre. Mass of Chris-
tian Burial 10 a.m. in Holy Family
Church, Sugar Notch.
KOZEMCHAK - Ann, Parastas fu-
neral 10:30 a.m. Wednesday at The
Richard H. Disque Funeral Home
Inc., 2940 Memorial Highway, Dal-
las. Friends may call from 6 to 8
p.m. Tuesday.
MILLER - Clyde Jr., funeral 11 a.m.
today at Hugh B. Hughes & Son
Inc. Funeral Home, 1044 Wyoming
Ave., Forty Fort.
MONTEDONICO - Valentine,
celebration of life with a funeral
Mass 10 a.m. today in Church
of St. Therese, Pioneer Avenue,
Shavertown.
ROBERTS - Joan, funeral 2 p.m.
today at Hugh B. Hughes & Son
Inc. Funeral Home, 1044 Wyoming
Ave., Forty Fort.
RUCKLE - Donald, funeral 11 a.m.
Wednesday at the Clarke Piatt
Funeral Home Inc., 6 Sunset Lake
Road, Hunlock Creek. Friends may
call 6 to 9 p.m. Tuesday.
TRACY - Thomas, funeral 10 a.m.
Tuesday at The Richard H. Disque
Funeral Home Inc., 2940 Memorial
Highway, Dallas. Friends may call 6
to 8 p.m. today.
TUREL - Caroline, funeral 9:30
a.m. today at Kiesinger Funeral
Services Inc., 255 McAlpine St.,
Duryea. Mass of Christian Burial
10 a.m. in Queen Of The Apostles
Parish, Hawthorne Street, Avoca.
Friends may call 8:30 a.m. until
time of service.
WEBB - Samuel, friends may
call 6 to 8 p.m. today at Kniffen
OMalley Funeral Home Inc., 728
Main St., Avoca.
FUNERALS
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com MONDAY, JUNE 17, 2013 O B I T U A R I E S PAGE 6A
DOROTHY C. PATTON,
76, of Evans Falls, passed away
Sunday in the Meadows Nurs-
ing and Rehabilitation Center,
Dallas.
Arrangements are pending
from the Nulton-Kopcza Funeral
Home, 5749 SR 309, (Beau-
mont), Monroe Township.
MR. MARK E. POPECK, 54,
of Hunlock Creek, passed into
Eternal Life Saturday afternoon
in the Wilkes-Barre General
Hospital following a lingering
illness.
Funeral arrangements
are in the care of and pend-
ing from the John V. Morris
Family Funeral Homes Inc.,
North Wilkes-Barre location,
625 N. Main St., Wilkes-Barre.
Complete obituary details will
follow in an upcoming edition of
the newspaper.
William Dorish
June 15, 2013
W
illiam Dorish, 93, of Plains,
died Saturday with his
family at his side at Manor Care
Health Services, Kingston.
He was born April 22, 1920, in
Plains. He was the son of the late
John and Mary Katsack Dorish.
William was a graduate of Plains
Memorial High School. He was
a U.S. Army veteran serving
in World War II as a technician
5th grade, Company of the 48th
Signal Heavy Construction Bat-
talion. He was decorated with
the Good Conduct Medal, the
American Defense Service Med-
al, the American Theater Service
Medal, the European African
Middle Eastern Medal with one
Bronze Star.
William was employed as a
miner; the Superior Combustion
Co. Wilkes-Barre and the Sincav-
age Lumber Yard, Plains.
Surviving are his wife of 68
years, Margaret Andrulavage
Dorish, Plains, and daughter,
Barbara, Piscataway, N.J.; his sis-
ter, Betty Reese, West Pittston.
Funeral services
will be held at 9:30 a.m.
Tuesday at the Simon S.
Russin Funeral Home, 136 Maf-
fett St., Plains, with a Divine
Liturgy and Requiem Services
at 10 a.m. in St. John the Bap-
tist Byzantine Church, Wilkes-
Barre Township, with the Rev.
Mykhaylo Prodanets, pastor, of-
ciating. Interment will follow
in St. Marys Byzantine Catholic
Cemetery, Lake Street, Dallas.
Family and friends may call from
8:30 a.m. until service time at
the funeral home.
The family would like to ex-
tend a heartfelt thank you to
the staff of Manor Care Health
Services for the wonderful care
and compassion that William re-
ceived while in their care.
Walter G. Gasper
June 15, 2013
W
alter G. Gasper, 93, of
Mountain Top, entered
into eternal rest on Saturday at
Smith Health Care, Mountain
Top.
Born in Mountain Top, he was
a son of the late George and So-
phia (Wanta) Gasper.
Walter was a member of St.
Pauls Lutheran Church, Moun-
tain Top. He was also a member
of the American Legion, Moun-
tain Top Post 781 and a veteran
of the U.S. Army having served
in Europe during World War II
and was a Purple Heart recipi-
ent.
Walter was preceded in death,
in addition to his parents, by his
wife, the former Anne Hollock;
his three brothers and his four
sisters.
He is survived by his broth-
ers, Donald Gasper and his wife,
Mary, and Robert Gasper and his
wife, Dorothy, all of Mountain
Top; sisters, Anna Roskowski
and her husband, John, Florida,
and Ruth Ritts, Ashley, as well as
many nieces and nephews.
Funeral will be held
at 10 a.m. on Tuesday at
McCune Funeral Home,
80 S. Mountain Blvd., Mountain
Top. Interment will immediately
follow the service in Albert Cem-
etery, Mountain Top. Relatives
and friends are invited to call
from 6 to 8 p.m. today at the fu-
neral home.
MARY SLESINSKI, of
Lain, passed away peacefully
Sunday morning at the Little
Flower Manor Wilkes-Barre,
surrounded by her family.
A full obituary will appear
in Tuesdays newspaper. Funeral
arrangements are by the Mi-
chael J.Mikelski Funeral Home,
Plains.
Dorothy M. Fischer
June 14, 2013
D
orothy M. Fischer (nee
Scheidel), 90, a resident of
Mountain Top, entered into eter-
nal rest on Friday, with her loving
family beside her.
Born and raised in Wilkes-
Barre, she graduated from St.
Nicholas High School in 1941.
Dorothy was a talented writer.
She wrote numerous short sto-
ries, novels, poems and lastly her
memoir.
Her children and grand-chil-
dren were her life, and she spent
many days enjoying the outdoors
with them. She will be greatly
missed by all who knew and loved
her.
In addition to her parents, Fred-
erick M. and Mary B. Scheidel
(nee Conrad), Dorothy was pre-
ceded in death by her husband,
Francis L., in 1991; her sister Jean
L Cotay in 1998, and her daughter
Deborah in 1956.
She was a member of St. An-
drews Roman Catholic Church in
Avenel, New Jersey, for 60 years
and just recently celebrated her
90th birthday.
Surviving are her daughters
Francine Da Silva and her hus-
band, John, of Colonia, N.J.; Mary
Lou Heitzenroeder and her com-
panion, Phillip Collura, Mountain
Top; her sons, Guy M. Fischer and
his wife, Teri, of Yelm, Wash.; Jay
J. Fischer and his wife, Marilyn,
of Cream Ridge, N.J., and Marc
S. Fischer and his wife, Susan,
of Fairless Hills, Pa. She is also
survived by 13 grandchildren,
Katrina, Allison, Sarah, Jessica,
David, Dean, Stephanie, Marc,
Katherine, Erin, Kevin, Danny
and Michael; seven great-grand-
children, Gina, Alyssa, Kyle, Kat-
lyn, Esmund, Jasmine and Julian,
and several nieces, nephews and
cousins.
A Mass of Christian Burial will
be celebrated at 9:30 a.m. Friday
in St. Nicholas Catholic Church,
Wilkes-Barre. In lieu of owers,
it was Dorothys wish to donate
in her memory to St. Nicholas
Church, 226 S. Washington St.,
Wilkes-Barre, PA 18701. Condo-
lences can be sent to the family at
www.eblakecollins.com.
M. DORIS KROLL, 89, of
Kingston passed away peace-
fully on Saturday at ManorCare,
Kingston.
Funeral arrangements
are pending from the Hugh
B. Hughes & Son Inc. Funeral
Home, 1044 Wyoming Ave.,
Forty Fort.
AP PHOTOS
Farmer David Schwabauer, a partner/manager of Leavens Ranches, a fourth-generation avocado
and lemon grower, gathers avocados on the property in Moorpark, Calif.
Fracking fuels water ghts in nations dry spots
SAN FRANCISCO The
latest domestic energy boom is
sweeping through some of the
nations driest pockets, drawing
millions of gallons of water to
unlock oil and gas reserves from
beneath the Earths surface.
Hydraulic fracturing, or the
drilling technique commonly
known as fracking, has been
used for decades to blast huge
volumes of water, ne sand and
chemicals into the ground to
crack open valuable shale for-
mations.
But now, as energy companies
vie to exploit vast reserves west
of the Mississippi, frackings
new frontier is expanding to the
same lands where crops have
shriveled and waterways have
dried up due to severe drought.
In Arkansas, Colorado, New
Mexico, Oklahoma, Texas, Utah
and Wyoming, the vast major-
ity of the counties where frack-
ing is occurring are also suffer-
ing from drought, according to
an Associated Press analysis of
industry-compiled fracking data
and the U.S. Department of Ag-
ricultures ofcial drought desig-
nations.
While fracking typically con-
sumes less water than farming
or residential uses, the explo-
ration method is increasing
competition for the precious
resource, driving up the price of
water and burdening already de-
pleted aquifers and rivers in cer-
tain drought-stricken stretches.
Some farmers and city leaders
worry that the fracking boom is
consuming too much of a scarce
resource, while others see the
push for production as an op-
portunity to make money by
selling water while furthering
the nations goal of energy inde-
pendence.
Along Colorados Front
Range, fourth-generation farm-
er Kent Peppler said he is fal-
lowing some of his corn elds
this year because he cant afford
to irrigate the land for the full
growing season, in part because
deep-pocketed energy compa-
nies have driven up the price of
water.
There is a new player for wa-
ter, which is oil and gas, said
Peppler, of Mead, Colo. And
certainly they are in a position
to pay a whole lot more than we
are.
In a normal year, Peppler said
he would pay anywhere from $9
to $100 for an acre-foot of water
in auctions held by cities with
excess supplies.
But these days, energy com-
panies are paying some cities
$1,200 to $2,900 per acre-foot.
The Denver suburb of Aurora
made a $9.5 million, ve-year
deal last summer to provide the
oil company Anadarko 2.4 bil-
lion gallons of excess treated
sewer water.
In South Texas, where
drought has forced cotton farm-
ers to scale back, local water of-
cials said drillers are contribut-
ing to a drop in the water table
in several areas.
For example, as much as
15,000 acre-feet of water are
drawn each year from the Car-
rizo-Wilcox Aquifer to frack
wells in the southern half of the
Eagle Ford Shale, one of the na-
tions most protable oil and gas
elds.
Thats equal to about half
of the water recharged annu-
ally into the southern portion
of the aquifer, which spans ve
counties that are home to about
330,000 people, said Ron Green,
a scientist with the nonprot
Southwest Research Institute in
San Antonio.
The Eagle Ford, extending
from the Mexican border into
East Texas, began to boom in
2011, just as Texas struggled
with the worst one-year drought
in its history.
While conditions have im-
proved, most of the state is
still dealing with some level of
drought, and many reservoirs
and aquifers have not been fully
replenished.
The oil industry is doing the
big fracks and pumping a sub-
stantial amount of water around
here, said Ed Walker, general
manager of the Wintergarden
Groundwater Conservation Dis-
trict, which manages an aquifer
that serves as the main water
source for farmers and about
29,000 people in three counties.
When you have a big prob-
lem like the drought and you
add other smaller problems to it
like all the fracking, then it only
makes things worse, Walker
said.
West Texas cotton farmer
Charlie Smith is trying to make
the best of the situation.
He plans to sell some of the
groundwater coursing beneath
his elds to drillers, because it
isnt enough to irrigate his lands
in Glasscock County.
Smiths elds, like the rest of
the county, were declared to be
in a drought disaster area this
year by the USDA.
I was going to bed every
night and praying to the good
Lord that we would get just one
rain on the crop, said Smith,
who hopes to earn several thou-
sand dollars for each acre-foot of
water he can sell.
I realized were not making
any money farming, so why not
sell the water to the oil compa-
nies? Every little bit helps.
The amount of water needed
to hydraulically fracture a well
varies greatly, depending on
how hard it is to extract oil and
gas from each geological forma-
tion.
In Texas, the average well re-
quires up to 6 million gallons of
water, while in California each
well requires 80,000 to 300,000
gallons, according to estimates
by government and trade asso-
ciations.
Depending on state and local
water laws, frackers may draw
their water for free from un-
derground aquifers or rivers, or
may buy and lease supplies be-
longing to water districts, cities
and farmers.
Some of the industrys larg-
est players are also investing
in high-tech water recycling
systems to frack with gray or
brackish water. Halliburton, for
instance, recently started mar-
keting a new technology that al-
lows customers to use recycled
wastewater, calling it an invest-
ment to further the sustainable
development of the oil and gas
industry.
The American Petroleum In-
stitute, the principal lobbying
group for the industry, said its
members are working to be-
come less dependent on fresh
water, and instead draw on oth-
er sources.
Recycling wastewater helps
conserve water use and provide
cost-saving opportunities, said
Reid Porter, a spokesman for
the group.
In some states, regulators
have stepped in to limit the
volume or type of water that en-
ergy companies can use during
drought conditions.
poLicE bLottER
Some farmers worry that the
fracking boom is consuming
too much of a scarce resource.
By GARANCE BURKE
Associated Press
Farmer Kent Peppler stands for his photo in front of two gas
wells on his land near Greeley, Colo. Both wells were fracked ac-
cording to Peppler. Peppler says he is fallowing some of his corn
elds this year because he cant afford to irrigate the land, in
part because deep-pocketed energy companies have driven up
the price of water.
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TH
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three days of golf, food, and range balls. Prizes to be
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Qualifying Round Friday All 3 rounds will count
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TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com MonDAy, JunE 17, 2013 N E W S PAGE 7A
police blotter
WILKES-BARRE City po-
lice reported the following:
The Turkey Hill convenience
store on Carey Avenue was robbed
around 2:45 a.m. Saturday.
A black male with a medium
build, wearing a dark hooded
sweatshirt and a scarf around
his face ordered the clerk to put
money in a plastic bag. The clerk
complied and the robber fed. No
weapon was seen. Police searched
the area but did not fnd the rob-
ber.
A woman Friday said her res-
idence on North Sherman Street
was broken into and items were
fipped over and thrown about,
but nothing was reported miss-
ing.
A woman Friday said her
residence and garage on Tannery
Street were burglarized. The
woman said her vehicle and her
husbands motorcycle were rum-
maged through. A cellphone and
medications were taken from the
residence while she was sleeping.
The soft top of a Jeep parked
on Stanley Street was slashed
overnight Thursday. Nothing was
taken from the Jeep.
A woman said a 42-inch San-
yo high-defnition television and
a Sony PlayStation were stolen
from her sons bedroom in their
residence on Oregon Street be-
tween 11 a.m. and 8 p.m. Tuesday.
A patient in the Wilkes-Barre
General Hospital emergency de-
partment said an 18-inch gold
chain with Jimand a Playboy bun-
ny engraved on a plate attached to
it was stolen Wednesday while he
was undergoing a magnetic reso-
nance imaging test.
Jeffrey Strzelczyk of Center
Avenue Kingston was charged
Wednesday after he allegedly
failed to return a rental vehicle to
Hertz on Kidder Street .
Branch manager Anthony Mon-
teleone said Strzelczyk rented
a Cadillac with Pennsylvania li-
cense plate FPY7533 to Strzelczyk
on April 25 and he was to return
it on April 29. The vehicle had
not been returned as of Wednes-
day. Police were unable to contact
Strzelczyk by telephone.
Javon Isaac, 18, of Wilkes-
Barre, was charged with simple
assault and harassment Thursday
for allegedly punching his juve-
nile girlfriend on June 8.
A man said his keys were sto-
len from his locker on June 9 at
the YMCA and later used to open
his car and steal his wallet.
A man Wednesday said two
televisions, two laptop comput-
ers and a video gaming console
were stolen during a burglary at
his residence in the 200 block of
Academy Street. The break-in oc-
curred between 4 p.m. Tuesday
and 1:32 a.m. Wednesday.
HANOVER TWP. Police
Friday said James Shonlamont
Wilson of North Empire Court,
Wilkes-Barre, was charged with
driving under the infuence in
connection with a May 17 crash
at the intersection of South Main
Street and Spencer Lane.
Police said Wilson was driving
a driving a 2012 Chevrolet Malibu
that pulled out in front of Kath-
leen Volpicelli of Tanya Drive,
Hanover Township. Volpicelli
was driving a 2009 Volkswagen
Passat with a passenger. Neither
Volpicelli nor her passenger were
injured.
Police said Wilson had a blood
alcohol content of 0.24 percent.
An adult driver in Pennsylvania
is considered legally intoxicated
with BAC of 0.08 percent.
HAZLETON City police re-
ported the following:
A break-in around 2:15 a.m.
Saturday at residence in the area
of Maple Street and Fulton Court
is under investigation. The resi-
dents were sleeping at the time.
A gray 2002 Mitsubishi Lanc-
er was stolen from the 700 block
of West First Street between 10
p.m. Friday and 6:15 a.mSaturday.
Reiko Herchenroeder, 36, of
Hazleton Friday said Pennsylvania
license plate HLK8156 was stolen
from his 2003 Chrysler Sebring in
the 200 block of Thirwell Avenue.
Four wheel covers were sto-
len from a Mazda 3 parked in the
area of Seventh and Grant streets
between 6 p.m. Friday and 8 a.m.
Saturday.
A wallet was found around
9:30 a.m. Saturday on Sherman
Court near West Beech Street.
The person who lost the wallet
should contact the Hazleton Po-
lice Department through Luzerne
County 911.
The National Park Service
ignored its own fndings that
construction of a massive
power line across federal lands
near Bushkill would cause se-
rious adverse environmental
impacts, so that it could accept
$66 million in mitigation, an
environmental coalition says
in a federal lawsuit.
Attorneys for the groups
including the Sierra Club
point to internal meeting
minutes they say show clearly
that the National Park Service
originally designated a no
build alternative and an alter-
nate route around the park as
preferred actions.
Pennsylvania-based PPL
Electric Utilities and Public
Service Electric and Gas, of
New Jersey, seek permission
to cross the Delaware Wa-
ter Gap National Recreation
Area, Delaware River and
Appalachian Trail as part of
a two-state electrical line up-
grade.
The park service last fall ap-
proved the power companies
proposal to use and widen an
existing right of way predating
the park to erect taller towers
and more powerful lines.
The park service conducted
an environmental review be-
fore announcing its decision.
Suit states park service ignored
own power line project ndings
Environmental groups say
agency looked the other way
to get $66 million package.
The Pocono Record
7
1
5
5
1
2
ONE
WEEK
ONLY!
TODAY THROUGH FRIDAY, JUNE 21
365 W. Bennett St
Luzerne, PA 18709
570-287-6609
ACCUTONEHEARINGSERVICES
MONDAY, JUNE 17, 2013 PAgE 9A TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com S E RV I NG T HE P UB L I C T RUS T S I NC E 1 8 8 1
OTHER OPINIONS
Phone-spying win for terror
I
F AMERICANS preferred
not to think about how
much they have surrendered
in the war on terror, they
cant avoid doing so now. They
cant make a phone call to their
dentist or hairdresser without
having their home or cellphone
number secretly taken down
by Washington, along with the
other partys number, the time of
the call and length. Its that bad.
If Osama bin Laden were still
alive hed chalk up this surveil-
lance gone wild as a coup for Al
Qaeda. More than a decade after
the 9/11 attack, it still has the
United States living in fear and
trading away freedoms for secu-
rity. This is beginning to look
like a war the U.S. is determined
to lose, one way or another.
With the acquiescence of both
Democratic and Republican in-
telligence leaders in Congress
who fear being branded soft
on terror, both U.S. President
Barack Obamas administration
and that of George W. Bush have
secretly interpreted the Patriot
Act of 2001 so broadly that no
one can escape pervasive scru-
tiny.
Thanks to media leaks Ameri-
cans now know that under the
Patriot Act the secrecy-shrouded
Foreign Intelligence Surveil-
lance Court ordered the Verizon
telecommunications company,
serving 121 million customers,
to hand over to the security ser-
vices its records on an ongoing,
daily basis.
Stung by the leaks, U.S. Di-
rector of National Intelligence
James Clapper has moved to
tamp down a public outcry by
taking the rare step of declassi-
fying some details about the te-
lephony metadata surveillance.
Americans should be reassured
that key members of Congress
have been kept in the loop.
In effect, the U.S. government
is asking its citizens to trust it
as it trolls through their private
lives looking for bad actors. The
sheer audacity of that demand
speaks volumes about Americas
unhealthy obsession with terror.
Its past time to move on.
The Star, Toronto
MALLARD FILLMORE DOONESBURY
A PMs clumsy gender war
Y
ET AGAIN, Julia Gil-
lard has played the gen-
der card to distract vot-
ers from Labors policy
challenges and the continuing
speculation about her leader-
ship, and to set up a phony di-
chotomy with Tony Abbott.
In doing so, the Prime Minis-
ter conrmed she has a tin ear
for understanding the main-
stream of Australian politics.
Before an enthusiastic audience
of Labor women on Tuesday, Gil-
lard launched Women for Gillard
- a fundraising vehicle seeking to
exploit her attempt to manipu-
late a gender divide in the com-
munity. Yet the poorly scripted
speech, replete with an absurd
reference to men who wear blue
ties, conrms how detached Gil-
lard is from mainstream voters.
It is understandable that Aus-
tralias rst female Prime Min-
ister wants to make womens is-
sues a focus of her government,
but her words would have great-
er authority if she had not sup-
ported a man for Speaker who
had sent text messages describ-
ing women in vulgar terms.
Gillard described the election
as a decision about whether,
once again, we banish womens
voices from our political life.
Voters looking for facts to sub-
stantiate this assertion will
search in vain. Labor cannot win
re-election by mounting a case
based on straw-man assump-
tions or personal attacks. Gillard
argued that a Coalition govern-
ment would make abortion a
political plaything of men who
think they know better. In real-
ity, the Opposition Leader has
pledged to make no changes to
abortion laws and to leave deci-
sions about the RU486 abortion
pill to the independent regula-
tor. And under a Coalition gov-
ernment, several women will sit
around the cabinet table, includ-
ing deputy leader Julie Bishop.
The discovery of a tawdry
menu depicting Gillard in sexist
terms at a Coalition fundraiser
undermined the Coalitions re-
buttal of Gillards gender war -
at least until the revelation last
night that it had not been distrib-
uted.
Yet her jarring rhetoric has not
been welcomed by several well-
known feminists who would nor-
mally be in her corner. Eva Cox
said it was a shallow attempt
to appeal to female voters. Jane
Caro said it was clumsy and ma-
nipulative.
The Australian, Sydney
Important victory for Plan B
R
ELUCTANTLY yield-
ing to a federal-court
decision, the Obama
administration an-
nounced on Monday that it will
take steps to allow a version of
the so-called morning-after pill,
known as Plan B One-Step, to be
sold over the counter to girls and
women of all ages.
They will not need a prescrip-
tion, nor will they be required to
showany identication to obtain
the emergency contraceptive.
There will be no restrictions on
where the drug can be sold; it
will be up to the manufacturer to
propose appropriate venues.
The turnabout from the ad-
ministrations previous politi-
cally motivated restrictions on
the pill was hailed as a break-
through, or at least a signicant
step forward, by some advocates
for women.
This latest stance substan-
tially repairs the damage done
when Kathleen Sebelius, the sec-
retary of health and human ser-
vices, intervened in December
2011 to block the Food and Drug
Administration from approving
the morning-after pills for all fe-
males of childbearing age.
In April, the FDA approved
use of Plan B One-Step in girls
ages 15 and 16, but that would
still have required checkout
clerks in drugstores to demand
proof of age.
Now the administration has
abandoned the legal battle and
announced that it will move
to make Plan B One-Step, an
easy-to-use version of the pill,
available without restrictions.
However, it warned that Plan
B One-Step might be granted
marketing exclusivity for a pe-
riod of time.
Ideally, there should be no re-
strictions on these remarkably
safe and effective drugs that can
prevent pregnancy if taken with-
in 72 hours of sexual intercourse.
New York Times
WARM: A radio powerhouse that was more than music
IT IS WITH great interest that I read
recent letters sent to the newspapers that
regionalization is the life blood of our
future.
Also I noted that on Thursday, May 23,
The Institute for Public Policy & Eco-
nomic Development reported population
gains for the rst time since the 1950s in
the Scranton/Wilkes-Barre sector.
Some say the future is in the past, with
that in mind, lets go down memory lane
recalling June 1958, and the New WARM
radio. Until May 1 of that year WARM
was operated by Northeastern Pennsylva-
nia Broadcasting, Inc. The principals of
that corporation were William W. Scranton
and Martin F. Bud Memolo. They sold
WARM to York, PA based Susquehanna
Broadcasting for $195,000.
Shortly there after, The New WARM
rose Phoenix like out of old ABC Network
programming into Top 40 radio with its
live mix of music, news, public service and
sports.
Rapid re changes came to The New
WARM under Art Carlson, general man-
ager, and Charlie Morgan, chief engineer.
In June 1968 for the 10th anniversary of
The New WARM announcer Jack Mur-
phy proclaimed The Susquehanna idea
was to create a sound that would start like
a rumble in a coal shaft and skyrocket to
the heavens, it would be in the air every-
where, but more than that, it would be a
harbinger of things to come.
WARM went on the air June 19, 1940,
at 1370 AM with 250 watts, moving to
590 AM with 5000 watts in 1952, was now
grasping for the ultimate in technological
achievement, the sound of the future, what
Don Stevens, station operations director,
called superior sonic sound, the Mighty
590 with ve towers of power.
Well, you might be saying, what does
this have to do with regionalization? The
new WARM was the rst media outlet,
electronic or print, in this market to use
the concept of regional selling. Before
Susquehanna, people in Scranton and
Wilkes-Barre only listened to the radio
stations, read the newspapers and watched
the TV stations in their hometowns, and
merchants only advertised as such. But,
The New WARM strip-marketed these
two cities and consolidated the areas
around Binghamton, Elmira, New York,
Carbondale down to Hazleton and the
Poconos, into WARMLAND.
The innovation of WARMLAND was
of no small importance. In the mid-1960s
then Congressman Daniel J. Flood used
the WARMLAND idea as his basis for
having the U.S. Census Bureau give of-
cial status to WARMLAND by calling
it Northeastern Pennsylvania, avoiding
a touchy proposition of having one citys
name listed second if a hyphenated desig-
nation using both names were chosen.
With this month being the 55th anniver-
sary of The New WARM, please let us
reect on some of the things that station
brought to the area.
Prior to The New WARM, of the ve
radio stations in Scranton, only WICK,
under Joe Dobbs, was playing rock. Within
six months The New WARM was in full
force. By the start of 1959 WARM was the
dominant number one listened to station
in the region. The dial position, power,
and call letters, were now known far and
wide; the nighttime ratings past the 70
percent mark.
The impact of the original Sensational
Seven; Harry Newman, Don Stevens,
George Gilbert, Jack Murphy, Vince Kier-
ney, Jackson Gower and Len Woloson was
overwhelming. Those disc jockeys and the
others that followed, always had contests
and promotions running, whether it was
lucky birthday, the WARM news-tip, or
tie-ins with sponsors Crystal Club Bever-
ages and Williams Baking Company, to see
the Beatles over in London with Tommy
Woods in January 1965, excitement pre-
vailed at the new WARM.
WARMs blockbuster event in the
summer was WARM Day at Rocky
Glen Park in Moosic. That free event was
tantamount to a legal holiday. WARM ran
them at the park for about a decade. Two
major ones were 1962 and 1965. In 62
they had eight of the top 10 national acts
performing; Bobby Vinton, Freddy Can-
non, the Dovells, Brian Hyland, and Dee
Dee Sharp, among them. Wednesday, June
28, 1965, burst the parks seams. Amuse-
ment Business, a trade paper, estimated
the crowd between 50,000 and 75,000
throughout the day. Ben Sterling, park
owner, called it His biggest day ever!
The rating service, Hooper-Pulse,
crowned WARM the highest rated radio
station in the country at its peak. One
reason would be the Susquehanna commit-
ment to news and public service.
The New WARM was the rst radio
station in this region to develop a separate
news department so the on-air personali-
ties wouldnt have to do re-writes from the
papers or rip and read wire copy. First
news rst is where people found out
what was happening in WARMLAND.
Operation Contact, Operation Snow-
ake, Flashback, P.S.B.B., Look up to
learning - soundoff, and viewpoint were
all part of the editorial voice of WARM-
LAND serving the community and fulll-
ing WARMs civic duty.
WARM introduced outside weather
service to the market with Pinpoint
Weather in the late 1960s to enhance
the National Weather Service. In 1971
WARM became the charter radio outlet
for the State College, private service they
named Accu Weather. WARM, though,
never copyrighted or trademarked Accu
Weather and founder Joel Myers did so.
As a standalone news operation WARM
proved its worth during the coverage given
the 1972 hurricane Agnes ooding.
In a business where the average em-
ployment is three years, it is a tribute
to WARM that personalities Ron Allen,
Bobby Day, George Gilbert, Jerry Heller,
Ray Magwyre, Terry McNulty, Joey
Shaver, Harry West and Tommy Woods are
remembered to this day because of their
log tenure there.
Announcers wanted to be at WARM.
Many aspired and a few attained a spot on
the staff proudly. I was hired there by one
of my mentors, program director George
Gilbert.
In 1983, on the occasion of the 25th an-
niversary of The New WARM, one of the
Scranton newspapers, not always friendly
toward the station, called WARM a
dynasty, noting that no station had been
able to garner more listeners than WARM.
Joe Middleton lives in Wilkes-Barre. He worked at
WARM-AMand other radio stations in the area and
is very familiar with the history of popular music of
the 20th century.
COMMENTARY
J OE MI DDLETON
EDITORIAL
State Rep. Mundy insists
she backs property tax bill
D
espite my many public statements that
I will vote for HB 76 (Property Tax Inde-
pendence Act) if and when the majority
party allows for a vote, and despite my
vote against tabling the bill in the House
Finance Committee last session, certain
members of the local and statewide Tax-
payer Groups continue to insist that I do
not support the bill.
They even go so far as to insist that I am
holding up the bill. Frankly, I have come
to believe that these statements must be
politically motivated.
Why else would they refuse to take yes
for an answer?
Phyllis Mundy
State Representative
120th Legislative District
MAIL BAG | LETTERS FROM READERS
The new WARM was the rst media
outlet, electronic or print, in this market
to use the concept of regional selling.
Before Susquehanna, people in Scranton
and Wilkes-Barre only listened to the
radio stations, read the newspapers and
watched the TV stations in their home-
towns, and merchants only advertised as
such.
(570) 825-8508
www.sectv.com
Sponsored By:
Its sunny & warm outside do you have
a warm feeling about your TV reception?
Monterrey
94/70
Chihuahua
90/69
Los Angeles
79/61
Washington
88/71
New York
85/68
Miami
90/79
Atlanta
88/71
Detroit
84/58
Houston
94/76
Kansas City
83/63
Chicago
84/56
Minneapolis
78/55
El Paso
99/75
Denver
84/55
Billings
81/56
San Francisco
66/54
Seattle
74/54
Toronto
75/53
Montreal
71/52
Winnipeg
73/52
SEVEN-DAY FORECAST
HIGH
LOW
TEMPERATURES
ALMANAC NATIONAL FORECAST
PRECIPITATION
Lehigh
Delaware
Sunrise Sunset
Moonrise Moonset
Today Today
Today Today
Susquehanna Stage Chg Fld Stg
RIVER LEVELS
ACROSS THE REGION TODAY
Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation today. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Shown is
todays weather.
Temperatures are
todays highs and
tonights lows.
SUN & MOON
Key: s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy,
c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms,
r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.
Wilkes-Barre
Scranton
Philadelphia
Reading
Pottsville
Allentown
Harrisburg
State College
Williamsport
Towanda
Binghamton
Syracuse
Albany
Poughkeepsie
New York
PHILADELPHIA
THE JERSEY SHORE
TUE THU
FRI SAT
WED
SUN
TODAY
85
61
A couple
of thun-
derstorms
77 45
Partly
sunny and
nice
83 55
Mostly
sunny
87 60
Partly
sunny
85 60
Clouds and
sun
79 47
A thunder-
storm pos-
sible
81 60
A t-storm
in spots in
the p.m.
COOLING DEGREE DAYS
Degree days are an indicator of energy needs. The more the
total degree days, the more energy is necessary to cool.
Yesterday 0
Month to date 30
Year to date 94
Last year to date 124
Normal year to date 79
Anchorage 81/61/s 81/59/s
Baltimore 89/66/pc 84/60/t
Boston 81/64/t 76/59/c
Buffalo 76/57/pc 68/45/c
Charlotte 86/68/t 85/65/t
Chicago 84/56/t 72/53/pc
Cleveland 83/60/pc 71/49/sh
Dallas 94/75/t 89/76/t
Denver 84/55/t 85/56/t
Honolulu 88/73/s 88/74/s
Indianapolis 85/64/t 81/58/sh
Las Vegas 103/79/s 102/78/s
Milwaukee 79/51/t 66/49/pc
New Orleans 89/74/pc 92/75/s
Norfolk 88/73/t 85/68/t
Okla. City 87/67/t 86/67/t
Orlando 91/73/t 92/73/pc
Phoenix 107/80/s 107/81/s
Pittsburgh 82/62/pc 77/50/t
Portland, ME 75/58/t 75/51/c
St. Louis 86/67/t 84/65/pc
San Francisco 66/54/s 64/52/pc
Seattle 74/54/c 69/52/sh
Wash., DC 88/71/pc 83/62/t
Bethlehem 4.22 +0.16 16
Wilkes-Barre 9.30 +1.99 22
Towanda 6.82 +0.72 16
Port Jervis 6.74 -1.12 18
In feet as of 7 a.m. Sunday.
Today Tue Today Tue Today Tue
Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. 2013
June 23 June 30
July 8
Full Last
New First
July 15
5:30 a.m.
2:11 p.m.
8:39 p.m.
1:08 a.m.
THE POCONOS
Highs: 76-82. Lows: 53-59. Partial sunshine today with a shower or
thunderstorm in spots in the afternoon. Partly cloudy tonight.
Highs: 76-82. Lows: 65-71. Partly sunny and humid today with a thun-
derstorm in spots in the afternoon. Partly cloudy tonight.
THE FINGER LAKES
Highs: 76-82. Lows: 54-60. Times of clouds and sun today with a show-
er or thunderstorm around. Partly cloudy tonight.
NEW YORK CITY
High: 85. Low: 68. Partial sunshine today with a shower or thunder-
storm in spots in the afternoon. Partly cloudy tonight.
High: 88. Low: 68. Sunshine and some clouds today with a shower or
thunderstorm in spots; humid. Partly cloudy tonight.
Wilkes-Barre/Scranton International Airport
through 7 p.m. Sunday
High/low 75/55
Normal high/low 78/57
Record high 92 (1967)
Record low 40 (1961)
24 hrs ending 7 p.m. Trace
Month to date 3.05"
Normal m-t-d 2.22"
Year to date 12.84"
Normal y-t-d 16.02"
85/61
83/58
88/68
86/64
85/62
85/63
86/65
82/61
85/61
84/56
80/56
79/57
82/58
84/60
85/68
Summary: A frontal boundary will produce numerous showers and
thunderstorms for the Southeast and southern Plains today. Some of the
thunderstorms can be strong to severe in these areas.
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com MonDAy, JunE 17, 2013 N E W S PAGE 10A
healthy and yummy for the
kids, Hussa said.
Lunches, programs and ac-
tivities will be offered at the
following parks and the Wilkes-
Barre YMCA:
Coal Street Park: Coal and
North Sherman streets.
Iron Triangle Playground:
Corner of Hickory and Metcalf
streets.
Madison/Flood Park: Cor-
ner of East Maple and North
Washington sreets.
Parsons Playground: 1100
block of Scott Street, behind
Turkey Hill.
Wilkes-Barre YMCA: 40 W.
Northampton St.. Note: Space
is limited to 50 children.
Other locations will offer
only snacks or lunch:
Osterhout Plains Branch
Tuesday and Thursday, snack at
2 p.m.
Osterhout North Branch
Monday, Tuesday and Thurs-
day, lunch at 11 a.m.
Osterhout South Branch
Monday, Tuesday, Thursday
and Friday, snack at 3 p.m.
Mineral Springs Village
Monday-Friday, lunch at 12:30
p.m.
Boulevard Town Homes
Monday-Friday, lunch at noon.
Kistler Pool Monday-
Friday, lunch at noon.
Albright UM Church
Monday-Friday, lunch at 11:30
a.m.
Huber (Mayfower) Park
Monday-Friday, lunch at
noon.
In addition to Wilkes-Barre,
the Commission on Economic
Opportunity operates in oth-
er locations around Luzerne
County. To see a complete list,
visit www.ceopeoplehelping-
people.org.
Continued from Page 1A
FOOD
the union. Recognizing this is
a counter-cultural view, he said,
but it is rooted in natural law
based on the love Jesus had for
his church.
It is a love that found Jesus
loving completely to the point
of losing his life, Bambera
said.
After recognizing the effort
and sacrices the couples en-
dured to reach the milestone,
the bishop had the couples
turned to face one another
within the pews. Many held
hands and looked deeply into
each others eyes. The husbands
began by repeating the words as
Bishop Bambera renewed their
wedding vows. Then the wives
did the same.
After the Mass, John and Car-
mella Gibbons of Swoyersville
said they had celebrated their
54th wedding anniversary on
Feb. 2. Their secret to a long
marriage was to keep their faith
in God.
You have to take the good
with the bad, Carmella said.
Celebrating their 50th anni-
versary this December, Nicholas
and Geraldine Anzelmi of West
Pittston, agreed there were
tough times and good times.
Encouraged by his wife, Nich-
olas jokingly said they never
mentioned divorce during their
marriage, but murder was men-
tioned often.
We were meant to be togeth-
er, Geraldine said.
AIMEE DILGER /THE TIMES LEADER
Scranton Diocese Bishop Bambera discusses marriage during the homily at St. Peters Cathedral
in Scranton where a special Mass was held Sunday celebrating those married 25 years or 50 and
beyond years of marriage.
Continued from Page 1A
MARRIAGE
confned to State College.
There, debate continues about
whether the school should
have agreed to NCAA penal-
ties, whether legendary coach
Joe Paterno was treated fairly
in his ring and a subsequent
university investigation and
what role the football team
should play in campus life.
Sandusky, 69, is serving a
30- to 60-year state prison sen-
tence after being convicted last
year of sexually abusing 10
boys.
He has maintained his in-
nocence and has launched ap-
peals, a process that could take
many years.
For months now, Penn State
has been negotiating with law-
yers for about 30 young men
who assert they were abused
by Sandusky. Many of them
didnt testify against Sandusky
and havent sued, so the nature
of their allegations isnt pub-
licly known.
The universitys goal is to
settle their claims and avoid
trial, and the man brought in to
help facilitate those talks said
hes optimistic the end is near.
Were getting closer, said
Ken Feinberg, who has been in-
volved in many other high-pro-
le group settlements, includ-
ing the compensation funds
for 9/11 and Boston Marathon
bombing victims. We should
have this done, I hope, in the
next couple of weeks. But its
not done yet the discussions
continue.
The NCAA penalties, which
included a $60 million fne, a
four-year ban on postseason
play, a temporary reduction in
football scholarships and the
elimination of 112 Paterno-era
wins, have triggered several
lawsuits, including one by Gov.
Tom Corbett that a federal
judge has dismissed.
Paternos family and others
with Penn State ties have also
sued, and the NCAA has gone
to court to challenge a state
law that mandates the $60 mil-
lion should be spent on child
abuse prevention efforts within
the state, not elsewhere.
Attorney General Kathleen
Kane has ordered a review
into how the Sandusky inves-
tigation was handled under
her predecessors: Corbett and
Linda Kelly, the woman he
picked to complete his term as
the states top prosecutor. The
Sandusky scandal is likely to
be a campaign topic next year,
when Corbett is expected to
seek a second term.
The Legislature is working
on changes to state law based
on shortcomings in child abuse
protection that the Sandusky
case helped expose, and its
probable that some of the pro-
posals will be enacted this year.
The U.S. Department of Ed-
ucation has been investigating
whether Penn State complied
with a federal law regarding
public reporting of campus
crimes.
Also pending are the crimi-
nal proceedings against three
former Penn State administra-
tors accused of covering up
complaints about Sandusky:
former president Graham
Spanier, former vice president
Gary Schultz and former ath-
letic director Tim Curley. They
maintain their innocence.
Schultz and Curley were ar-
rested along with Sandusky
in November 2011, but pros-
ecutors added new charges
late last year and, for the rst
time, charged Spanier. Their
preliminary hearings, which
according to Pennsylvania law
would normally have been held
months ago, have been delayed
indenitely while the courts
sort out a dispute over the
role played in their grand jury
appearances by Penn States
then-general counsel, Cynthia
Baldwin.
The men have argued their
right to legal counsel was vio-
lated when Baldwin accompa-
nied themto grand jury appear-
ances, and they do not want
her to testify against them.
Because of the grand jury in-
vestigation, much of what has
been going on in the criminal
case is occurring in secret,
including a pair of appeals by
Curley and Schultz that the
state Supreme Court turned
down this month. The state at-
torney generals ofce said its
ready to move forward with
the case and blamed delays on
defense motions.
On the eld, the Nittany Li-
ons went 8-4 last season under
coach Bill OBrien, hired as
Paternos permanent replace-
ment. They open the 2013 sea-
son Aug. 31 against Syracuse
at the Meadowlands in New
Jersey.
Continued from Page 1A
PSU
sures, are aimed at phone and
Internet metadata, while two
more target contents of phone
and Internet communications.
Metadata includes logs and
timing of phone calls and lists
of Internet communications,
but does not include the actual
contents of communications.
Even without knowing those
contents, intelligence ofcials
can learn much from metadata,
including likely locations and
patterns of behavior.
A previously reported sur-
veillance program aimed at the
phone logs and location infor-
mation of millions of Americans
is called Mainway, the Post re-
ported. A second program tar-
geting the Internet contact logs
and location information of for-
eign users is called Marina.
A third program, which inter-
cepts telephone calls and routes
their contents to government
listeners, is called Nucleon.
A fourth program, Prism, ex-
posed recently by Snowden, forc-
es major Internet frms to turn
over the detailed contents of In-
ternet communications. Prism is
aimed at foreign users but some-
times also sweeps up the content
of Americans emails and other
Internet communications, off-
cials have acknowledged.
The metadata story does
touch upon Americans in a mas-
sive way with phone records
but not the content. The Prism
story is about foreigners and it
is about content, Hayden said
told NBCs Meet the Press.
Rep. Mike Rogers, who heads
the House Intelligence Commit-
tee, said any phone metadata
from Americans swept up in the
surveillance is held under care-
ful safeguards, kept in a lock-
box that can only be accessed
if it becomes relevant to terror
investigations. U.S. offcials also
said Saturday that gathered data
is destroyed every ve years.
This is a lock box with only
phone numbers, no names, no
addresses in it, weve used it
sparingly, Rogers, R-Mich., said
on CNNs State of the Union.
But one congressional critic
of the secrecy surrounding
the governments surveillance
raised doubts about the effec-
tiveness about the widespread
collection of Americans phone
metadata.
I dont think collecting mil-
lions and millions of Americans
phone calls now this is the
metadata, this is the time, place,
to whom you direct the calls
is making us any safer, said
Sen. Mark Udall, D-Colorado.
Udall said he would introduce
a bill this week to narrow the
reach of that collection to only
those who have a link to terror-
ism.
Hayden said he worried that
news reports about the pro-
grams have often provided erro-
neous information, much to the
harm of a rational national de-
bate. He did not specify those
concerns.
The disclosures, provided in
recent days by both the Post and
the Guardian newspaper, came
from classied documents ex-
posed by Snowden, 29, who was
working as a private contractor
with the NSA and later said he
grew disenchanted by what he
saw as a growing secret Ameri-
can surveillance apparatus. Af-
ter working with the two news-
papers, Snowden turned up in
Hong Kong, prompting concern
that he might cooperate with
Chinese authorities.
I am very, very worried that
he still has additional informa-
tion that he hasnt released yet,
the Chinese would welcome the
opportunity and probably will-
ing to provide immunity for him
or sanctuary for him, if you will,
in exchange for what he presum-
ably knows, Cheney said on
Fox News Sunday.
Cheney added he has trouble
believing Snowden had access
to all the materials he has dis-
closed, suggesting the possibil-
ity Snowden had an accomplice
inside U.S. security circles.
I think you have to ask that
question, Cheney said.
McDonough, speaking on
CBS Face the Nation, declined
to speculate on Snowdens deal-
ings with China or his access to
secret documents, citing a law
enforcement investigation. But
he cautioned against some of
the hyperbole that now is being
thrown around from him and
from others involved in this de-
bate that would somehow cast
a pall on the intelligence com-
munity.
But McDonough also disput-
ed Snowdens claim he had the
ability to listen in on any phone
conversation, including the
presidents.
Thats incorrect, Mc-
Donough said.
AP PHOTO
Penn State board chairman Keith Masser, left, and outreach chairman Joel Myers respond to
questions during a news interview earlier this month in New York.
Continued from Page 1A
SECRET
K
Sports
SECTI ON B
THE TIMES LEADER MONDAY, JUNE 17, 2013 timesleader.com
FRED ADAMS/FOR THE TIMES LEADER
N B A F I N A L S
1 1 3th UNI tED StAtES OPEN ChAMPI ONShI P
W I L K E S - B A R R E D U AT H L O N
Robbins makes it two in a row
Hetrick is top womens finisher in 10th edition of race
WILKES-BARRE After sev-
en second-place finishes and one
third-place finish, last year Sean
Robbins finally got his first win
in the Wilkes-Barre Duathlon.
Yesterday he chalked up victory
No. 2 in the 10th annual race.
Robbins, 43, of Shavertown,
finished the 3-mile run, 16.1-
mile bike and another 3-mile run
in 1 hour, 13 minutes and 40 sec-
onds, winning $100. Chris Garg-
es, 38, from Bethlehem, a 2-time
winner of the event, finished
second, a half minute behind,
winning $75. Kenny Quigley, 42,
of Dunmore, finished third, 2:59
behind Garges,
winning $50.
It was
hard, said
Robbins. I
knew he was
right behind
me. I said to
myself, hes
not letting me go.
Garges was right on Robbins
tail as they approached the sec-
ond transition from bike to run.
And when they ran into Kirby
Park, thats when Robbins made
a big decision.
Somebody yelled to me that
(Garges) was 10 seconds be-
hind me, Robbins said. I had
noticed over the first run that I
seemed to do better than him on
the hills. So I decided to pound
the hill near the tennis courts
and see if I could increase my
lead. I ran the hill with every-
thing I had. I gained a little more
on him. Then I just got myself
into a good pace and held it to
the finish.
Garges said that Robbins just
gradually pulled away from him
over the second run.
I havent been having very
good runs off the bike lately,
Garges said. Sean was just too
good for me today.
Jen Hetrick was just too good
as well, winning the female di-
vision and $100 in 1:26:05. The
32-year-old from Riegelsville
out ran and especially out biked
second-place finisher, Deedra
Porfirio, 36, of West Pittston,
by nearly three minutes. Kristin
Patchell, 32, of Scranton, fin-
ished third, 1:03 behind Porfirio.
It was fun, said Hetrick, who
ran track and cross country for
Moravian College. There were
some hills that proved to sepa-
rate the competitors. Hills make
a race like this more interesting.
I actually took control of the
race about half way through the
first run, said Hetrick, who fin-
Hetrick
By ROBERT MINER
For The Times Leader
See DUATHLON, Page 5B
Sean Robbins,
of Shaver-
town, com-
petes in the
bike portion
of Sundays
Wilkes-Barre
Duathlon.
Robbins won
the race
with a time
of 1 hour, 13
minutes and
40 seconds.
It was the
second vic-
tory in a row
in the event
for Robbins.
ANGUISH FOR PHIL
AS ROSE TRIUMPS
Phil Mickelson reacts
after missing a shot on
the 18th hole Sunday
Mickelson lets one slip away as Englishman takes title
AP PHOTOS
Justin Rose poses with the trophy after winning the U.S. Open at Merion Golf Club on Sunday in Ardmore.
Heartbreak.
This is tough to
swallow after
coming so close.
This was my
best chance
of all of them.
I had a golf
course I really
liked. I felt this
was as good an
opportunity as
you could ask
for. It really
hurts.
Phil Mickelson
A
RDMORE A steady hand gave Justin Rose the
shiny U.S. Open Trophy. A wild ride gave Phil Mick-
elson yet another silver medal.
Rose captured his first major championship on Sunday
with remarkable calm and three pure shots on the punish-
ing closing holes at Merion. A par on the 18th hole gave
him an even-par 70, and that was good enough to become
the first Englishman in 43 years to win Americas national
championship.
Rose hit 5-iron to the first cut of rough,
pin-high on the 17th for an easy par. He
smashed the most important tee shot of
his career down the middle on the final
hole, about 15 feet short of the famous Ben
Hogan plaque. And his 4-iron rolled near
the pin and settled against the collar of the
green.
When I came over the hill and saw my
ball laying in the fairway, I thought, This
is my moment. It was me hitting from the
middle of the fairway, Rose said.
As usual, someones big moment in the
U.S. Open came at Mickelsons expense.
Rose was in the scoring area a half-mile
from the grandstands behind the 18th
green where the fans began to chant, Lets
go Phil! as Mickelson paced off a last-ditch
effort to force a playoff. It was a long shot
the 18th hole didnt yield a single birdie
all weekend. From about 40 yards away,
Mickelsons chip for birdie raced by the
cup, securing Roses victory.
Mickelson, already in the U.S. Open re-
cord book with five second-place finishes,
added another that will hurt as much any
of them.
Sunday was his 43rd birthday. It was
the first time he was equipped with the
outright lead going into the last day. His
week began with a cross-country trip home
to San Diego to watch his oldest daughter
graduate from the eighth grade, return-
ing just three hours before his tee time on
Thursday. This was the same daughter
By DOUG FERGUSON | AP Golf Writer
See OPEN, Page 4B
Ginobilis
big night
lifts Spurs
SAN ANTONIO Manu Ginobili had
24 points and 10 assists in a surprise start
to spark the San Antonio Spurs to a 114-
104 victory over the Miami Heat in Game
5 of the NBA Finals on Sunday night,
pushing the Spurs one victory away from
their fifth championship.
Danny Green scored 24 points and
broke Ray Allens finals record for 3s in
a series with 25. Tony
Parker had 26 points for
San Antonio.
LeBron James scored
25 points on 8-for-22
shooting for the Heat
and Dwyane Wade had
25 points and 10 assists.
But the Heat missed 21
of their first 29 shots to
fall behind by 17 points
in the second quarter of
another uninspired per-
formance.
Game 6 of the best-of-
seven series is Tuesday
night in Miami.
Whirling through the
defense like the Manu
of old, Ginobili shrugged off a postseason
full of disappointment to deliver a perfor-
mance that the Spurs have never needed
more desperately. He hit 8 of 14 shots and
had his highest points total since June 4,
2012.
Tim Duncan had 13 points and 11 re-
bounds, Green was 6 for 10 from 3-point
range, and Parker gutted through 36
minutes on that tender right hamstring.
Kawhi Leonard had 16 points and eight
rebounds, and the San Antonio shot 60
percent to overcome 19 turnovers.
Allen scored 21 points and Chris Bosh
had 16 points and six rebounds for the
Heat, who were stunned by a vintage Gi-
Manu Ginobili tosses in 24 points as
San Antonio takes 3-2 series lead.
The Associated Press
AP PHOTO
Miami Heat forward LeBron James,
right, drives against San Antonio
forward Tim Duncan during the second
quarter of Game 5 of the NBA Finals in
San Antonio on Sunday.
114
SPURS
104
HEAT
See SPURS, Page 4B
www.timesleader.com TIMES LEADER PAGE 2B MONDAY, JUNE 17, 2013 S C O R E B O A R D
B U L L E T I N B O A R D
CAMPS/CLINICS
Bernie Kachinko Lady Monarch
Volleyball Camp will be held at
Kings College from July 30 to
Aug. 2, from 1-5 p.m. daily. The
camp is open to girls entering
grades 6-9. The cost of the camp
is $80, which includes a camp
T-shirt and prizes. For more infor-
mation, call Bernie Kachinko at
208-5900, ext. 5435, or email at
bernardkachinko@kings.edu.
Berwick Boys Basketball Camp
will be held for boys June 18-20.
The cost is $50 per player and
the camp will be for boys entering
grades 1-6. For more information,
visit www.berwickdawgs.com
where a flyer can be downloaded
and mailed or email Coach Jason
Kingery at jkingery@berwicksd.
org.
Crestwood Comet Boys Basket-
ball Camp applications are avail-
able. The camp will be held the
week of June 24-28. The morning
sessions will be for boys entering
grades 3-5, while the afternoon
session is for boys entering grades
6-9. Both sessions will be held
at Crestwood Middle School. For
more information, call coach
Atherton at 825-4116 or email
mark.atherton@csdcomets.org.
Frank Sheptocks Linebacker
School will be Saturday, June 22,
at Schmitt Field at the Ralston
Athletic Complex in Edwardsville.
The school will run from 9 a.m. to
2 p.m. and is for players entering
9-12 grade. The registration form
can be downloaded at www.gow-
ilkes.com. For more information,
call Matthew DiBernardo, assistant
head football coach, at 408-4930
or email matthew.dibernardo@
wilkes.edu.
Holy Redeemer Boys Basketball
Clinic will be held June 20-22 for
boys in grades 4-9. Boys in grades
7-9 will go from 9 a.m. to noon,
and boys in grades 4-6 will go
from 1-4 p.m. Fee is $60. For more
information, call coach Paul Guido
at 760-4262.
Holy Redeemer Volleyball Skills
Camp will be held July 8-12 for
grades 6-12 at the Holy Redeemer
High School gymnasium. The
morning session is for players
going into grades 6-9 and runs
from 9 a.m. to noon. The after-
noon session is for players going
into grades 10-12 and runs from
1-5 p.m. The camp will be directed
by Elijah Porr and will cost $90,
which includes a camp T-shirt. To
ask about team discount informa-
tion or to become a camp sponsor,
call Jack Kablick at 472-2073, Bob
Shuleski at 357-7784 or email
bob@girlsvb.com.
JP Andrejkos Monarch Basket-
ball Camp will be held at Kings
College the weeks of June 24
through June 28 and July 15-19.
The camp is open to boys ages
8-16 and will run from 9 a.m. to
3:30 p.m., except for Friday (9
a.m.-noon). The registration fee
includes: a camp T-shirt, awards,
prizes, and access to the col-
leges swimming pool. For more
information, call JP Andrejko at
208-5900, ext. 5769, or email at
jpandrejko@kings.edu.
Kings College will have a field
hockey camp July 15-19 from 9
a.m. to noon. Camp shirts and
awards are included. For more
Information, call Cheryl Ish at 208-
5900 ext. 5756.
Lake-Lehman Childrens Golf
Camp is being held the week of
June 24-28 at the Twin Oaks Golf
Course. Cost is $80 and includes
lunch daily. For additional informa-
tion and to register by June 17, call
690-5220.
Little Monarch Camp will be held
Aug. 5 through Aug. 8. The camp
runs from 9:30 - 11:30 a.m. and is
open to boys and girls ages 5-13.
Open registration runs through
August 5.
MMI Prep will have a tennis camp
on the MMI Prep campus. The
camp will be conducted by Mark
Dryfoos and Don Cassetori, Kings-
ton indoor tennis pro. The camp
will run from June 24-27. There
will be a 10-and-under session con-
ducted from 9-10 a.m. This session
will be $70. There will be a session
from 10:15 a.m. to noon each day
for students who are somewhat
advanced and also in high school.
The cost of this session will be
$100.
Plains Township Recreation is
still accepting registrations for its
football, tennis, soccer and field
hockey camps. The football camp
runs from June 24-26. The tennis
camp runs from June 24-27. The
soccer camp runs from July 8-11.
The field hockey camp also runs
from July 8-11. Applications can
be picked up at the Plains Town-
ship Municipal Building. For more
information, call Bill Monaghan at
825-5574.
Red and White Softball Skills
Clinic will be held July 15-19 from
9 a.m. to Noon at the MMI Athletic
Complex. The camp is open to
all area girls entering grades 4-9
in the Fall. The registration fee
is $85, register by July 1st and
receive $10 discount. To register,
or for more information, send your
name, phone number and camper
name and grade to mmisoftball@
yahoo.com.
Team Diesel Ed Stanks CPT of
Kingston will be running a speed
and agility clinic for field hockey
players grades 6-12. Camp starts
June 30. Cost is $90. For more
information, call Ed at 852-9352.
Wilkes University will have a
soccer skill and performance camp
every Tuesday and Thursday start-
ing June 25 and ending July 30.
The camp will run from 6 p.m. to
7:30 p.m. each night at the Ralston
Athletic Complex and Schmidt
Stadium. For more information on
the camp or a camp brochure, visit
gowilkesu.com or email Keith Kla-
hold at keith.klahold@wilkes.edu.
Wilkes University Mini Football
Camp will be June 19-21 at Schmitt
Field at the Ralston Athletic
Complex in Edwardsville. The camp
will run from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. each
day and is for ages 5-13. The
camp will be led by Coach Frank
Sheptock, his staff and the Wilkes
University football team. All levels
of experience are encouraged to
attend. The registration form can
be downloaded at www.gowilkes.
com. For more information, call
Matthew DiBernardo, assistant
head football coach, at 408-4930
or email him at matthew.diber-
nardo@wilkes.edu.
Wyoming Seminary Lady Blue
Knights Girls Basketball Clinic
will be held June 24-28 at the
Carpenter Athletic Center on the
Upper School campus in Kings-
ton and is for girls in grades 3-8.
The clinic will be held from 9:00
a.m.-3:00 p.m. June 24- June 27
and will end on June 28 with an
afternoon awards ceremony. Cost
of the clinic is $150 and includes a
free t-shirt. For more information
or to register, visit www.wyoming-
seminary.org/summer.
REGISTRATIONS/TRYOUTS
Ed-Lark Hurricanes Football and
Cheer signups are on the follow-
ing dates: Thursday, June 20, 5
p.m. to 7 p.m. Signups will be at
the Larksville Borough building.
The cost is $40 for the first child
and $5 for each additional child.
Heights Packers Football and
Cheerleading Registrations for
boys and girls between the ages of
6-12 will be held at Coal Street Pa-
villion June 30 between 2-4 p.m.
Must be 6 years old by August 1
and provide a copy of birth certifi-
cate for each child and a physical
form completed by first practice.
If you have any questions please
email us at heightspackers68@
yahoo.com . Cost for registration
are as follows: $35 for one child,
$50 for two children and $65 per
family. All information may also
be found on our website at http://
www.heightspackers.webs.com/.
UPCOMING EVENTS/OTHER
Bass Fishing Tournament will be
held June 22 at Blytheburn Lake
on Blytheburn Road in Mountain
Top. Boats go in the water at 6:30
a.m. and out at 11 a.m. The fee is
$40 per team. The tournament is
limited to 10 boats. This is a fund
raiser for the Lake Association.
For more information, call 868-
6895 or 678 5261.
Crestwood Comet Football Golf
Tournament will be held Saturday,
July 13, at Sand Springs Country
Club with a shotgun start at 8 a.m.
Following golf there will be food
and refreshments inside the club-
house. Cost is $80 per player and
$320 per foursome and includes
golf cart, prizes, food and refresh-
ments, and a gift. The booster
club is also seeking hole sponsors
for $50 and $100. For further
information call Ken Givens at 201-
294-9673 or kgivens@atlanticir-
rigation.com.
Crestwood Wrestling Booster
Club will be hosting the 1st An-
nual Golf Tournament held at
Sugarloaf Golf Club on Sunday
July 21. Registration will be at 9
a.m. with a 10 a.m. shotgun start.
This tournament is a captain and
crew format and the cost is $90
per player which includes cart &
greens fees. Dinner and drinks
will be provided to all golfers at
Cavanaughs Grill in Mountain Top
following the tournament. Guests
may join golfers for dinner at a
cost of $30 per person. Prizes will
be awarded including a $10,000
Hole-in-one prize, longest drive,
closest to the pin and awards to
the winning team and flights. To
register for this event or inquire
about hole sponsorship please
contact Randy Swank at 678-7913
or email rrswank@msn.com.
Dallas Lacrosse Booster Club
Holds Elections for President,
Sectary or Event/Fundraiser
Coordinator will be held Mon-
day, June 17 at 7:30 pm at Dallas
American Legion. Additional nomi-
nations may be accepted at the
meeting. New officers will begin
their positions on August 19. Any
questions email rpricher12@yahoo.
com, backmtngold@msn.com, or
call 239-4896.
Dr. George P. Moses 2nd Annual
Golf Classic will be held July 5 at
Sand Springs Golf Club. A captain
and crew format will be used and
entry deadline is July 1. The cost
is $75 per player, which includes,
green fees, cart, prizes, refresh-
ments and dinner. Checks are to
be made out to Wyoming Valley
Athletic Association with entries
mailed to chairman Jack Monick,
9 Van Horn St., Wilkes-Barre, Pa.
18706. For more information,
email Jacqmonique@gmail.com or
call 647-8010. Proceeds will go to
local charities and youngsters with
serious medical needs.
Keystone Vol. Fire Company #1
will have a golf tournament July
13 at Sand Springs Country Club.
The tournament will be a four-man
scramble with registration from
12:30 p.m. to 1:15 p.m. The tourna-
ment begins at 1:30 p.m. The cost
is $75 per person and all proceeds
will benefit the equipment fund.
For more information, call Scott
Card at 956-3916.
McGlynn Learning Center will
have its eighth annual golf tourna-
ment Friday, June 28, at Sand
Springs Golf Course. Registration
will begin at 9 a.m. with a shotgun
at 10 a.m. The cost is $90 per
golfer, which includes 18 holes,
continental breakfast, mulligan,
Pot O Gold, wine and cheese after
golf, flight prizes, hole-in-one
for an automobile, longest drive,
closest to the pin, and dinner. For
information, call 824-8891.
Pittston Knights of Columbus
will sponsor the annual Albert P.
Leonard Memorial Golf Tourna-
ment on Sunday, June 23, at 1
p.m. at Pine Hills Country Club
on Keyser Avenue in Taylor. The
cost is $80 per golfer. The format
is captain and crew. The cost
includes green fees, cart, prizes,
hole-in-one prizes of Pollock Nis-
san car, trip and golf clubs. One
golfer will take home a 32-inch
TV. There will be a banquet and
awards ceremony at Knights Coun-
cil Home following the tourna-
ment. For more information, call
the Knights home at 655-8311 or
Fran Ankenbrand at 954-8147.
Zachary Shoemaker Sixth An-
nual Dodgeball Tournament will
partner with local caregiver Heinz
Rehab to raise funds to improve
pediatric rehabilitation program-
ming and services for children and
families in the region. More than
300 dodgeball players are antici-
pated to compete in NEPAs largest
charity dodgeball tournament.
The tournament has raised over
$14,000 to date. The double-elim-
ination style tournament starts at
noon Sunday, July 14, and will be
at the Kingston Armory. Teams
should have eight to 10 players on
it. Players can register at dodge-
ball4zack.org. The cost is $15 per
person. Registration deadline is
Wednesday, June 26. Sponsor-
ships are also available. For more
information, call Stef Sikora at
574-5945 or email dodgebal-
l4zack@gmail.com.
L AT E S T L I N E
L O c A L c A L E N D A R
Major League Baseball
FAVORITE LINE UNDERDOG
National League
at Philadelphia -120/+110 Washington
at St. Louis -190/+180 Chicago
at Cincinnati -125/+115 Pittsburgh
at Atlanta -175/+165 New York
at Arizona -220/+200 Miami
at San Fran. -125/+115 San Diego
American League
Kansas City -135/+125 at Cleveland
at Detroit -185/+175 Baltimore
at Texas -110/+100 Oakland
Chicago -125/+115 at Houston
at Los Angeles -170/+160 Seattle
Interleague
at Toronto -135/+125 Colorado
NHL Finals
FAVORITE LINE UNDERDOG
at Boston -125/+105 Chicago
TODAYS EVENTS
LITTLE LEAGUE SOFTBALL
District 16 11-12 Tournament
Mountain Top at Plains-North Wilkes-Barre, 6
p.m.
Jenkins-Pittston at Nanticoke, 6 p.m.
District 31 11-12 Tournament
Kingston/Forty Fort at Northwest, 6 p.m.
West Side at Greater Wyoming Area, 6 p.m. at
Flack Field, Wyoming
AMERICAN LEGION BASEBALL
Senior Division
(All games 5:45 p.m. unless noted)
Wilkes-Barre vs. Greater Pittston at Atlas Field
West Side vs. Back Mountain at Misericordia
(Tambur Field)
Nanticoke vs. Hazleton at Pagnotti Field
Plains vs. Mountain Post B at Mountain Post
Field
Swoyersville vs. Tunkhannock at Tunkhannock
H.S.
TUESDAY
AMERICAN LEGION BASEBALL
Senior Division
(All games 5:45 p.m. unless noted)
West Side vs. Swoyersville at Roosevelt Field
WEDNESDAY
AMERICAN LEGION BASEBALL
Senior Division
(All games 5:45 p.m. unless noted)
Plains vs. Greater Pittston at Atlas Field
Wilkes-Barre vs. Nanticoke at Honeypot Field
Mountain Post B vs. Hazleton at Pagnotti Field
West Side vs. Mountain Post Aat Mountain Post
Field
Back Mountain vs. Swoyersville at Roosevelt
Field
w h AT S O N T v
COLLEGE BASEBALL
3 p.m.
ESPN2 -- World Series, game 5, teams TBD,
at Omaha, Neb.
8 p.m.
ESPN2 -- World Series, game 6, teams TBD,
at Omaha, Neb.
MLB
7 p.m.
CSN Washington at Philadelphia
ESPN -- Chicago Cubs at St. Louis
ROOT Pittsburgh at Cincinnati
SNY N.Y. Mets at Atlanta
NHL
8 p.m.
NBCSN -- Playoffs, fnals, game 3, Chicago at
Boston
SOCCER
2:45 p.m.
ESPN -- Confederations Cup, Group B, Tahiti
vs. Nigeria, at Belo Horizonte, Brazil
T R A N S A c T I O N S
BASEBALL
American League
BOSTON RED SOX--Optioned RHP Rubby De
La Rosa to Pawtucket (IL). Selected the contract
of RHP Pedro Beato from Pawtucket.
CLEVELAND INDIANS--Sent RHP Chris Perez
to Lake County (MWL) for a rehab assignment.
Agreed to terms with RHPs Cole Sulser and
Ben Heller and OF Thomas Pannone on a minor
league contract.
TAMPA BAY RAYS--Recalled RHP Josh Lueke
from Durham (IL). Placed RHP Alex Cobb on the
seven-day DL.
National League
CINCINNATI REDS--Optioned RHP Pedro Vil-
larreal to Louisville (IL). Reinstated RHP Johnny
Cueto from the 15-day DL.
COLORADO ROCKIES--Optioned RHP Chris
Volstad to Colorado Springs (PCL). Recalled RHP
Logan Kensing from Colorado Springs.
LOS ANGELES DODGERS--Claimed C John
Baker off waivers from San Diego and optioned
him to Albuquerque (PCL).
SAN DIEGO PADRES--Agreed to terms with
OF Marcus Davis, SS Dustin Peterson and RHP
Travis Remillard on minor league contracts.
WASHINGTON NATIONALS--Optioned LHP
Xavier Cedeno to Syracuse (IL). Reinstated RHP
Stephen Strasburg from the 15-day DL.
American Association
ST. PAUL SAINTS--Released RHP Greg Jen-
sen.
WICHITA WINGNUTS--Released OF Tim
Rotola.
Atlantic League
LONG ISLAND DUCKS--Placed INF Dan Lyons
on the inactive list. Reinstated P Matt Way to the
active list.
Can-Am League
NEW JERSEY JACKALS--Signed RHP Bran-
don Moore.
ROCKLAND BOULDERS--Released LHP Kilby
Pena.
BASKETBALL
National Basketball Association
SACRAMENTO KINGS--Named Pete
DAllesandro general manager.
FOOTBALL
Canadian Football League
EDMONTON ESKIMOS--Released WRs Is-
mael Bamba and Dobson Collins, OL Johnny
Culbreath, DBs Carry Harris and Otis Merrill, WR
Owen Spencer and DL Jorge Wright.
U.S. OPEN SCORES
Sunday
At Merion Golf Club (East Course)
Ardmore, Pa.
Purse: TBA ($8 million in 2012)
Yardage: 6,996; Par: 70
Final
a-amateur
Justin Rose 71-69-71-70--281
Jason Day 70-74-68-71--283
Phil Mickelson 67-72-70-74--283
Jason Dufner 74-71-73-67--285
Ernie Els 71-72-73-69--285
Billy Horschel 72-67-72-74--285
Hunter Mahan 72-69-69-75--285
Luke Donald 68-72-71-75--286
Steve Stricker 71-69-70-76--286
Hideki Matsuyama 71-75-74-67--287
Nicolas Colsaerts 69-72-74-72--287
Gonzalo Fernandez-Castao 71-72-72-72--287
Rickie Fowler 70-76-67-74--287
Charl Schwartzel 70-71-69-78--288
Lee Westwood 70-77-69-73--289
John Senden 70-71-74-74--289
John Huh 71-73-75-71--290
Brandt Snedeker 74-74-70-72--290
David Lingmerth 74-71-71-74--290
a-Michael Kim 73-70-71-76--290
Martin Laird 74-73-76-68--291
David Hearn 78-69-73-71--291
Padraig Harrington 73-71-75-72--291
Mathew Goggin 68-74-76-73--291
Bo Van Pelt 73-71-72-75--291
Ian Poulter 71-71-73-76--291
Henrik Stenson 74-68-73-76--291
Mike Weir 72-76-75-69--292
John Parry 76-71-72-73--292
Matt Kuchar 74-73-72-73--292
Morten Orum Madsen 74-74-70-74--292
Kevin Chappell 72-76-74-71--293
Geoff Ogilvy 74-70-77-72--293
Webb Simpson 71-75-75-72--293
K.J. Choi 70-76-75-72--293
Tiger Woods 73-70-76-74--293
Jamie Donaldson 73-73-73-74--293
Edward Loar 73-71-73-76--293
Bubba Watson 71-76-70-76--293
Paul Lawrie 76-71-69-77--293
Carl Pettersson 72-75-74-73--294
Scott Langley 75-70-75-74--294
Rory McIlroy 73-70-75-76--294
Jerry Kelly 70-73-75-76--294
Steven Alker 73-75-75-72--295
Russell Knox 69-75-77-74--295
Sergio Garcia 73-73-75-74--295
Bio Kim 72-75-73-75--295
Adam Scott 72-75-73-75--295
a-Cheng-Tsung Pan 72-72-75-76--295
Charley Hoffman 71-73-72-79--295
Paul Casey 73-72-71-79--295
Scott Stallings 71-76-76-73--296
Matt Bettencourt 72-71-76-77--296
Dustin Johnson 71-77-75-74--297
Nicholas Thompson 72-76-74-76--298
Josh Teater 74-74-74-76--298
George Coetzee 71-73-77-77--298
Shawn Stefani 72-73-85-69--299
Martin Kaymer 76-72-77-74--299
Marcel Siem 73-71-77-78--299
a-Kevin Phelan 71-77-78-74--300
Matt Weibring 75-73-76-76--300
a-Michael Weaver 74-74-78-75--301
Peter Hedblom 70-78-79-75--302
David Howell 77-71-77-77--302
Kevin Sutherland 73-74-84-72--303
John Peterson 73-75-78-77--303
Jim Herman 76-72-76-79--303
Alistair Presnell 73-75-76-79--303
Robert Karlsson 74-72-86-73--305
Simon Khan 74-74-82-76--306
Kyle Stanley 71-74-85-78--308
G O L f
SPRINT CUP RESULTS
Quicken Loans 400 Results
Sunday
At Michigan International Speedway
Brooklyn, Mich.
Lap length: 2 miles
(Start position in parentheses)
1. (19) Greg Biffe, Ford, 200 laps, 127.7 rating, 48
points, $235,260.
2. (21) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 200, 104.3, 42,
$173,781.
3. (13) Martin Truex Jr., Toyota, 200, 111.6, 41,
$145,670.
4. (9) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 200, 96.1, 40, $148,803.
5. (14) Tony Stewart, Chevrolet, 200, 95.6, 39,
$142,085.
6. (8) Matt Kenseth, Toyota, 200, 113.4, 38,
$136,026.
7. (27) Clint Bowyer, Toyota, 200, 78.5, 37,
$131,943.
8. (1) Carl Edwards, Ford, 200, 104.1, 37,
$138,910.
9. (6) Joey Logano, Ford, 200, 110.4, 36,
$119,593.
10. (18) Jeff Burton, Chevrolet, 200, 83.1, 34,
$100,685.
11. (7) Austin Dillon, Chevrolet, 200, 83, 0,
$108,893.
12. (16) Brad Keselowski, Ford, 200, 91.9, 32,
$139,251.
13. (37) Danica Patrick, Chevrolet, 200, 69.2, 31,
$90,910.
14. (4) Paul Menard, Chevrolet, 200, 87.2, 30,
$124,126.
15. (25) Trevor Bayne, Ford, 200, 73, 0, $89,435.
16. (15) Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Ford, 200, 75.4, 28,
$132,571.
17. (5) Aric Almirola, Ford, 200, 79.6, 27,
$124,221.
18. (35) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 200, 67.1, 26,
$121,043.
19. (32) A J Allmendinger, Toyota, 200, 58.4, 25,
$110,643.
20. (10) Juan Pablo Montoya, Chevrolet, 200,
78.2, 24, $114,474.
21. (24) Casey Mears, Ford, 200, 59.4, 24,
$107,818.
22. (26) David Gilliland, Ford, 200, 58.5, 22,
$96,993.
23. (23) Marcos Ambrose, Ford, 200, 57, 21,
$112,199.
24. (40) J.J. Yeley, Chevrolet, 200, 54.3, 21,
$84,685.
25. (31) David Ragan, Ford, 200, 45.2, 20,
$102,557.
26. (22) Mark Martin, Toyota, 200, 68.6, 18,
$91,710.
27. (41) Travis Kvapil, Toyota, 200, 47.1, 18,
$89,010.
28. (17) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 199, 99.8,
17, $129,796.
29. (34) David Stremme, Toyota, 199, 44.8, 15,
$80,660.
30. (11) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 199, 54.6, 14,
$101,885.
31. (36) Dave Blaney, Chevrolet, 199, 39.2, 13,
$80,435.
32. (33) David Reutimann, Toyota, 198, 38.1, 12,
$80,335.
33. (28) Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet, 196, 72.7,
12, $106,605.
34. (39) Ken Schrader, Ford, 195, 33.3, 10,
$80,160.
35. (2) Kurt Busch, Chevrolet, 193, 59.1, 10,
$107,340.
36. (42) Joe Nemechek, Toyota, 193, 29.9, 0,
$79,940.
37. (12) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, engine,
131, 103.7, 8, $97,884.
38. (3) Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet, accident, 103,
102.5, 7, $93,590.
39. (29) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, accident, 52,
26.5, 5, $118,026.
40. (38) Josh Wise, Ford, vibration, 51, 30.1, 0,
$67,090.
41. (43) Mike Bliss, Toyota, vibration, 50, 35.5, 0,
$63,090.
42. (30) Michael McDowell, Ford, vibration, 36,
34.4, 3, $59,090.
43. (20) Bobby Labonte, Chevrolet, accident, 5,
29.9, 1, $63,590.
Race Statistics
Average Speed of Race Winner: 139.278 mph.
Time of Race: 2 hours, 52 minutes, 19 seconds.
Margin of Victory: 2.989 seconds.
Caution Flags: 8 for 38 laps.
Lead Changes: 22 among 13 drivers.
Lap Leaders: Ku.Busch 1-21; J.Yeley 22;
D.Ragan 23; M.McDowell 24; C.Edwards 25;
J.Logano 26-42; J.McMurray 43-63; J.Johnson
64-76; D.Earnhardt Jr. 77; C.Mears 78-79;
D.Earnhardt Jr. 80-89; K.Kahne 90-103; J.Johnson
104; D.Earnhardt Jr. 105-127; J.Johnson 128-131;
G.Biffe 132; T.Kvapil 133-134; J.Logano 135;
C.Edwards 136-150; G.Biffe 151-165; J.Logano
166-168; G.Biffe 169-200.
Leaders Summary (Driver, Times Led, Laps
Led): G.Biffe, 3 times for 48 laps; D.Earnhardt
Jr., 3 times for 34 laps; J.Logano, 3 times for 21
laps; J.McMurray, 1 time for 21 laps; Ku.Busch,
1 time for 21 laps; J.Johnson, 3 times for 18 laps;
C.Edwards, 2 times for 16 laps; K.Kahne, 1 time
for 14 laps; C.Mears, 1 time for 2 laps; T.Kvapil, 1
time for 2 laps; J.Yeley, 1 time for 1 lap; D.Ragan,
1 time for 1 lap; M.McDowell, 1 time for 1 lap.
Top 12 in Points: 1. J.Johnson, 538; 2.
C.Edwards, 507; 3. C.Bowyer, 489; 4. K.Harvick,
476; 5. M.Kenseth, 456; 6. Ky.Busch, 452; 7.
D.Earnhardt Jr., 447; 8. G.Biffe, 443; 9. Bra.Ke-
selowski, 430; 10. T.Stewart, 417; 11. P.Menard,
415; 12. K.Kahne, 407.
N A S c A R
h A R N E S S R A c I N G
POCONO DOWNS RESULTS
Saturday
First - $12,000 Pace 1:51.2
2-Get It Now (Napolitano Jr) 3.40 3.40 2.40
9-Dear Mac (An McCarthy) 16.20 6.60
3-Tamayo (Ma Miller) 2.20
EXACTA (2-9) $116.40
50 CENT TRIFECTA (2-9-3) $372.40
50 CENT TRIFECTA (50 Cent) $93.10
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (2-9-3-8) $3,700.00
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (10 Cent) $185.00
Second - $20,000 Trot 1:55.4
4-Ruddy Rusty (Br Zendt) 9.80 4.80 3.40
7-Marat (Ma Romano) 4.80 3.60
1-Wartech (Ho Parker) 4.60
EXACTA (4-7) $41.40
50 CENT TRIFECTA (4-7-1) $133.40
50 CENT TRIFECTA (50 Cent) $33.35
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (4-7-1-8) $978.80
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (10 Cent) $48.94
DAILY DOUBLE (2-4) $23.80
Scratched: San Donato
Third - $14,000 Pace 1:50.1
7-Barn Art (Ma Miller) 7.80 5.00 3.00
6-Rocinante (An Napolitano) 36.60 7.40
4-St Pete Star (Ty Buter) 4.00
EXACTA (7-6) $269.80
50 CENT TRIFECTA (7-6-4) $684.00
50 CENT TRIFECTA (50 Cent) $171.00
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (7-6-4-3) $22,901.20
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (10 Cent) $1,145.06
PICK 3 - 15% TAKEOUT (2-4-7) $157.80
Fourth - $20,000 Trot 1:54.1
5-Sailer Eddie (McCarthy) 9.80 3.80 2.80
4-Me And Cinderella (Napolitano) 2.40 2.10
1-Devries Hanover (Ma Kakaley) 3.40
EXACTA (5-4) $17.60
50 CENT TRIFECTA (5-4-1) $82.00
50 CENT TRIFECTA (50 Cent) $20.50
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (5-4-1-6) $289.40
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (10 Cent) $14.47
Fifth - $16,000 Pace 1:49.4
6-Best Ears (Ja Morrill Jr) 7.00 3.20 3.80
1-Arts Delight (Ty Buter) 6.60 5.00
2-Sir Howies Z Tam (Br Miller) 5.80
EXACTA (6-1) $62.40
50 CENT TRIFECTA (6-1-2) $525.40
50 CENT TRIFECTA (50 Cent) $131.35
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (6-1-2-8) $2,179.00
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (10 Cent) $108.95
Sixth - $20,000 Trot 1:54.2
7-Spiro De Vie (Rawlings) 22.00 6.80 8.40
3-Panamanian Hanover (Morrill) 4.60 2.80
2-Shockoe Hanover (Ma Kakaley) 8.00
EXACTA (7-3) $81.40
50 CENT TRIFECTA (7-3-2) $621.60
50 CENT TRIFECTA (50 Cent) $155.40
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (7-3-2-5) $2,077.60
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (10 Cent) $103.88
PICK 3 - 15% TAKEOUT (5-6-7) $468.40
Seventh - $15,000 Pace 1:49.2
2-Sunfre Blue Chip (Morrill) 4.00 2.40 2.20
6-A Sweet Ride (An McCarthy) 2.80 3.60
5-Duel In The Sun (Ty Buter) 5.20
EXACTA (2-6) $14.60
50 CENT TRIFECTA (2-6-5) $44.60
50 CENT TRIFECTA (50 Cent) $11.15
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (2-6-5-7) $151.40
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (10 Cent) $7.57
Eighth - $20,000 Trot 1:56.1
2-Hall Of Muscles (Kakaley) 3.60 2.60 2.10
1-Prince Lauxmont (Wa Long) 17.20 7.80
6-Vitamin Hanover (Ty Buter) 9.00
EXACTA (2-1) $43.40
50 CENT TRIFECTA (2-1-6) $380.60
50 CENT TRIFECTA (50 Cent) $95.15
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (2-1-6-3) $6,632.80
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (10 Cent) $331.64
Ninth - $19,000 Pace 1:49.3
4-Outrageous Art (Kakaley) 3.60 2.20 2.20
1-White Mountain Top (Ty Buter) 9.20 4.20
2-Martial Bliss (Ge Napolitano Jr) 4.00
EXACTA (4-1) $27.00
50 CENT TRIFECTA (4-1-2) $64.00
50 CENT TRIFECTA (50 Cent) $16.00
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (4-1-2-9) $1,154.00
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (10 Cent) $57.70
PICK 3 - 15% TAKEOUT (2-2-4) $22.00
Tenth - $25,000 Pace 1:48.4
4-Bet On The Law (Pavia) 13.60 5.40 2.80
3-Hurrikane Kingcole (Br Miller) 4.20 2.40
6-Musselsfrmbrussels (Napolitano Jr) 3.80
EXACTA (4-3) $58.40
50 CENT TRIFECTA (4-3-6) $223.00
50 CENT TRIFECTA (50 Cent) $55.75
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (4-3-6-1) $1,215.40
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (10 Cent) $60.77
Eleventh - $21,000 Pace 1:49.1
2-Dynamic Youth (McCarthy) 3.20 2.10 2.10
4-Bestjetyet (Ja Morrill Jr) 2.80 2.60
5-Diamond Cowboy (Br Miller) 4.80
EXACTA (2-4) $6.60
50 CENT TRIFECTA (2-4-5) $28.40
50 CENT TRIFECTA (50 Cent) $7.10
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (2-4-5-6) $94.60
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (10 Cent) $4.73
Scratched: Steelhead Hanover
Twelfth - $25,000 Trot 1:51.1
4-Guccio (Ji Takter) 2.80 2.10 2.10
2-Opening Night (Ty Buter) 2.80 2.40
3-Keystone Thomas (Jo Pavia Jr) 3.60
EXACTA (4-2) $5.20
50 CENT TRIFECTA (4-2-3) $21.60
50 CENT TRIFECTA (50 Cent) $5.40
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (4-2-3-1) $78.00
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (10 Cent) $3.90
PICK 3 - 15% TAKEOUT (4-2-4) $76.00
Thirteenth - $19,000 Pace 1:49.3
6-Ideal Matters (Napolitano) 3.00 2.40 2.40
3-Mustang Art (An McCarthy) 3.00 3.20
1-Aliveandwell N (Ma Miller) 11.20
EXACTA (6-3) $10.20
50 CENT TRIFECTA (6-3-1) $50.40
50 CENT TRIFECTA (50 Cent) $12.60
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (6-3-1-4) $264.80
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (10 Cent) $13.24
Fourteenth - $15,000 Pace 1:50.1
7-Atta Boy Dan (Morrill Jr) 12.40 6.20 3.60
9-Mosee Terror (Er Carlson) 22.80 9.20
4-Road Untraveled (Mi Simons) 4.80
EXACTA (7-9) $206.20
50 CENT TRIFECTA (7-9-4) $1,574.20
50 CENT TRIFECTA (50 Cent) $393.55
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (7-9-4-1) $13,701.80
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (10 Cent) $685.09
Fifteenth - $20,000 Trot 1:56.4
1-Celebrity Stimulus (Jacksn) 3.00 2.40 2.20
4-Raven De Vie (Ja Morrill Jr) 10.00 6.80
3-Big Short (Mi Simons) 3.00
EXACTA (1-4) $23.80
50 CENT TRIFECTA (1-4-3) $153.20
50 CENT TRIFECTA (50 Cent) $38.30
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (1-4-3-2) $549.80
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (10 Cent) $27.49
Sixteenth - $20,000 Trot 1:55.0
5-Maxamillus (Br Miller) 5.20 2.80 2.40
4-Glister Hanover (Ja Morrill Jr) 2.40 2.40
3-Classical Caviar (Ra Romanetti) 3.60
EXACTA (5-4) $14.40
50 CENT TRIFECTA (5-4-3) $127.20
50 CENT TRIFECTA (50 Cent) $31.80
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (5-4-3-1) $414.40
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (10 Cent) $20.72
LATE DOUBLE (1-5) $11.20
Total Handle-$287,035
EASTERN LEAGUE
Eastern Division
W L Pct. GB
Binghamton (Mets) 42 26 .618 --
Portland (Red Sox) 35 32 .522 6
Trenton (Yankees) 33 35 .485 9
New Ham. (Blue Jays) 33 36 .478 9
New Britain (Twins) 32 36 .471 10
Reading (Phillies) 28 39 .418 13
Western Division
W L Pct. GB
Erie (Tigers) 36 31 .537 --
Harrisburg (Nationals) 37 32 .536 --
Richmond (Giants) 34 33 .507 2
Akron (Indians) 34 34 .500 2
Bowie (Orioles) 31 34 .477 4
Altoona (Pirates) 30 37 .448 6
Saturdays Games
Altoona 4, Trenton 0
Akron 6, Portland 2
Reading 3, Richmond 1
New Britain 8, Harrisburg 1
Binghamton 7, Bowie 3
Erie 16, New Hampshire 2
Sundays Games
Portland 7, Akron 4
Binghamton 5, Bowie 4
Harrisburg 5, New Britain 2
New Hampshire 22, Erie 1
Reading 5, Richmond 4
Altoona 2, Trenton 1
B A S E B A L L
INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE
North Division
W L Pct. GB
Pawtucket (Red Sox) 40 28 .588 --
Lehigh Valley (Phillies) 36 33 .522 4
Buffalo (Blue Jays) 35 33 .515 5
Rochester (Twins) 34 36 .486 7
RailRiders (Yankees) 30 37 .448 9
Syracuse (Nationals) 27 40 .403 12
South Division
W L Pct. GB
Durham (Rays) 44 26 .629 --
Norfolk (Orioles) 38 32 .543 6
Charlotte (White Sox) 29 41 .414 15
Gwinnett (Braves) 28 43 .394 16
West Division
W L Pct. GB
Indianapolis (Pirates) 46 25 .648 --
Louisville (Reds) 35 35 .500 10
Columbus (Indians) 34 36 .486 11
Toledo (Tigers) 30 41 .423 16
Saturdays Games
Buffalo 2, Pawtucket 1
Scranton/Wilkes-Barre 7, Lehigh Valley 0
Toledo 2, Syracuse 1
Louisville 2, Norfolk 1
Durham 4, Indianapolis 2
Rochester 6, Gwinnett 5
Columbus 4, Charlotte 2
Sundays Games
Rochester 6, Gwinnett 3
Louisville 1, Norfolk 0
Pawtucket 5, Buffalo 3
Lehigh Valley 5, Scranton/Wilkes-Barre 4, 11
innings
Toledo 8, Syracuse 4, 10 innings
Charlotte 6, Columbus 3
Durham 5, Indianapolis 2
Todays Games
Rochester at Scranton/Wilkes-Barre, 5:35 p.m.,
1st game
Lehigh Valley at Toledo, 7 p.m.
Indianapolis at Norfolk, 7:05 p.m.
Louisville at Durham, 7:05 p.m.
Pawtucket at Columbus, 7:05 p.m.
Gwinnett at Buffalo, 7:05 p.m.
Syracuse at Charlotte, 7:15 p.m.
Rochester at Scranton/Wilkes-Barre, 8:05 p.m.,
2nd game
Tuesdays Games
Lehigh Valley at Toledo, 7 p.m.
Gwinnett at Buffalo, 7:05 p.m.
Pawtucket at Columbus, 7:05 p.m.
Louisville at Durham, 7:05 p.m.
Indianapolis at Norfolk, 7:05 p.m.
Rochester at Scranton/Wilkes-Barre, 7:05 p.m.
Syracuse at Charlotte, 7:15 p.m.
COLLEGE WORLD SERIES
At TD Ameritrade Park Omaha
Omaha, Neb.
All Times EDT
Double Elimination
x-if necessary
Saturday, June 15
Mississippi State 5, Oregon State 4
Indiana 2, Louisville 0
Sunday, June 16
N.C. State 8, North Carolina 1
Game 4 -- UCLA (44-17) vs. LSU (57-9), 8 p.m.
Monday, June 17
Game 5 -- Oregon State (50-12) vs. Louisville (51-
13), 3 p.m.
Game 6 -- Mississippi State (49-18) vs. Indiana
(49-18), 8 p.m.
Tuesday, June 18
Game 7 -- North Carolina (57-11) vs. Game 4
loser, 3 p.m.
Game 8 -- N.C. State (50-14) vs. Game 4 winner,
8 p.m.
Wednesday, June 19
Game 9 -- Game 5 winner vs. Game 6 loser, 8
p.m.
Thursday, June 20
Game 10 -- Game 7 winner vs. Game 8 loser, 8
p.m.
Friday, June 21
Game 11 -- Game 6 winner vs. Game 9 winner,
3 p.m.
Game 12 -- Game 8 winner vs. Game 10 winner,
8 p.m.
Saturday, June 22
x-Game 13 -- Game 6 winner vs. Game 9 winner,
3 p.m.
x-Game 14 -- Game 8 winner vs. Game 10 win-
ner, 8 p.m.
If only one game is necessary, it will start at
8:30 p.m.
Championship Series
(Best-of-3)
Monday, June 24: Pairings TBA, 8 p.m.
Tuesday, June 25: Pairings TBA, 8 p.m.
x-Wednesday, June 26: Pairings TBA, 8 p.m.
c O L L E G E B A S E B A L L
NBA FINALS
All Times EDT
(Best-of-7; x-if necessary)
San Antonio 3, Miami 2
Thursday, June 6: San Antonio 92, Miami 88
Sunday, June 9: Miami 103, San Antonio 84
Tuesday, June 11: San Antonio 113, Miami 77
Thursday, June 13: Miami 109, San Antonio 93
Sunday, June 16: San Antonio 114, Miami 104
Tuesday, June 18: San Antonio at Miami, 9 p.m.
x-Thursday, June 20: San Antonio at Miami, 9 p.m.
B A S k E T B A L L
h O c k E Y
STANLEY CUP FINALS
All Times EDT
(Best-of-7; x-if necessary)
Chicago 1, Boston 1
Wednesday, June 12: Chicago 4, Boston 3, 3OT
Saturday, June 15: Boston 2, Chicago 1, OT
Monday, June 17: Chicago at Boston, 8 p.m.
Wednesday, June 19: Chicago at Boston, 8 p.m.
Saturday, June 22: Boston at Chicago, 8 p.m.
x-Monday, June 24: Chicago at Boston, 8 p.m.
x-Wednesday, June 26: Boston at Chicago, 8 p.m.
CALDER CUP FINALS
All Times EDT
(x-if necessary)
BEST OF 7
Grand Rapids 3, Syracuse 2
Saturday, June 8: Grand Rapids 3, Syracuse 1
Sunday, June 9: Grand Rapids 6, Syracuse 4
Wednesday, June 12: Grand Rapids 4, Syracuse
2
Friday, June 14: Syracuse 3, Grand Rapids 2
Saturday, June 15: Syracuse 5, Grand Rapids 2
Tuesday, June 18: Grand Rapids at Syracuse, 7
p.m.
x-Thursday, June 20: Grand Rapids at Syracuse,
7 p.m.
Todays Games
No games scheduled
Tuesdays Games
Portland at Reading, 6:05 p.m., 1st game
Binghamton at Richmond, 6:35 p.m.
New Hampshire at Altoona, 7 p.m.
New Britain at Erie, 7:05 p.m.
Trenton at Akron, 7:05 p.m.
Harrisburg at Bowie, 7:05 p.m.
Portland at Reading, 8:35 p.m., 2nd game
MONDAY, JUNE 17, 2013 PAgE 3B TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com S P O R T S
S TA N D I N G S S TAT S
AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Division
W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home Away
Boston 42 29 .592 5-5 L-1 21-14 21-15
Baltimore 40 30 .571 1 6-4 W-1 20-15 20-15
New York 38 31 .551 3 4-6 W-1 19-13 19-18
Tampa Bay 36 33 .522 5 2 4-6 L-1 21-16 15-17
Toronto 32 36 .471 8 5 8-2 W-5 16-17 16-19
Central Division
W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home Away
Detroit 38 29 .567 7-3 W-1 22-10 16-19
Cleveland 34 34 .500 4 3 4-6 W-1 20-13 14-21
Kansas City 33 34 .493 5 4 8-2 W-1 17-16 16-18
Minnesota 30 36 .455 7 6 4-6 L-1 16-17 14-19
Chicago 28 38 .424 9 8 4-6 L-4 16-14 12-24
West Division
W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home Away
Oakland 42 29 .592 6-4 W-1 22-12 20-17
Texas 38 31 .551 3 2-8 L-6 19-14 19-17
Seattle 31 39 .443 10 7 5-5 L-1 18-17 13-22
Los Angeles 30 39 .435 11 8 4-6 L-1 17-19 13-20
Houston 26 44 .371 15 12 4-6 W-4 13-23 13-21
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Division
W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home Away
Atlanta 41 28 .594 4-6 W-2 23-8 18-20
Washington 34 34 .500 6 6 5-5 L-1 18-13 16-21
Philadelphia 33 37 .471 8 8 3-7 L-2 16-15 17-22
New York 25 39 .391 13 13 3-7 W-1 14-23 11-16
Miami 21 47 .309 19 19 5-5 W-1 13-23 8-24
Central Division
W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home Away
St. Louis 44 25 .638 6-4 L-1 19-12 25-13
Cincinnati 42 28 .600 2 6-4 W-1 24-12 18-16
Pittsburgh 41 28 .594 3 6-4 W-1 25-13 16-15
Chicago 28 39 .418 15 12 4-6 L-1 15-21 13-18
Milwaukee 28 40 .412 15 12 6-4 L-1 16-20 12-20
West Division
W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home Away
Arizona 37 32 .536 3-7 L-3 17-14 20-18
Colorado 37 33 .529 4 5-5 W-2 23-17 14-16
San Francisco 35 33 .515 1 5 4-6 L-2 21-11 14-22
San Diego 35 34 .507 2 6 8-2 W-6 22-14 13-20
Los Angeles 29 39 .426 7 11 4-6 L-1 19-20 10-19
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Saturdays Games
Boston 5, Baltimore 4
Toronto 6, Texas 1
Tampa Bay 5, Kansas City 3
Houston 4, Chicago White Sox 3
Minnesota 6, Detroit 3
L.A. Angels 6, N.Y. Yankees 2
Seattle 4, Oakland 0
Washington 7, Cleveland 6
Sundays Games
Cleveland 2, Washington 0
Baltimore 6, Boston 3
Kansas City 5, Tampa Bay 3
Houston 5, Chicago White Sox 4
Detroit 5, Minnesota 2
Toronto 7, Texas 2
N.Y. Yankees 6, L.A. Angels 5
Oakland 10, Seattle 2
Mondays Games
Kansas City (Shields 2-6) at Cleveland (Carrasco
0-2), 7:05 p.m.
Colorado (J.De La Rosa 7-4) at Toronto (Jo.John-
son 0-2), 7:07 p.m.
Baltimore (Arrieta 1-1) at Detroit (Scherzer 9-0),
7:08 p.m.
Oakland (Straily 4-2) at Texas (Tepesch 3-6), 8:05
p.m.
Chicago White Sox (Quintana 3-2) at Houston
(B.Norris 5-6), 8:10 p.m.
Seattle (Harang 3-6) at L.A. Angels (Vargas 5-4),
10:05 p.m.
Tuesdays Games
Tampa Bay at Boston, 1:05 p.m., 1st game
Kansas City at Cleveland, 7:05 p.m.
L.A. Dodgers at N.Y. Yankees, 7:05 p.m.
Colorado at Toronto, 7:07 p.m.
Baltimore at Detroit, 7:08 p.m.
Tampa Bay at Boston, 7:10 p.m., 2nd game
Oakland at Texas, 8:05 p.m.
Chicago White Sox at Minnesota, 8:10 p.m.
Milwaukee at Houston, 8:10 p.m.
Seattle at L.A. Angels, 10:05 p.m.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Saturdays Games
Chicago Cubs 5, N.Y. Mets 2
L.A. Dodgers 5, Pittsburgh 3, 11 innings
Atlanta 6, San Francisco 5
Milwaukee 6, Cincinnati 0
Colorado 10, Philadelphia 5
St. Louis 13, Miami 7
Washington 7, Cleveland 6
San Diego 6, Arizona 4
Sundays Games
Cleveland 2, Washington 0
N.Y. Mets 4, Chicago Cubs 3
Cincinnati 5, Milwaukee 1
Miami 7, St. Louis 2
Pittsburgh 6, L.A. Dodgers 3
San Diego 4, Arizona 1
Colorado 5, Philadelphia 2
Atlanta 3, San Francisco 0
Mondays Games
Chicago Cubs (T.Wood 5-5) at St. Louis (S.Miller
7-4), 7:05 p.m.
Washington (Haren 4-8) at Philadelphia (Lannan
0-1), 7:05 p.m.
Colorado (J.De La Rosa 7-4) at Toronto (Jo.John-
son 0-2), 7:07 p.m.
N.Y. Mets (Gee 5-6) at Atlanta (Hudson 4-6), 7:10
p.m.
Pittsburgh (Liriano 5-2) at Cincinnati (Leake 6-3),
7:10 p.m.
Miami (Ja.Turner 1-0) at Arizona (Corbin 9-0),
9:40 p.m.
San Diego (Volquez 5-5) at San Francisco (Zito
4-5), 10:15 p.m.
Tuesdays Games
N.Y. Mets at Atlanta, 1:10 p.m., 1st game
L.A. Dodgers at N.Y. Yankees, 7:05 p.m.
Washington at Philadelphia, 7:05 p.m.
Colorado at Toronto, 7:07 p.m.
N.Y. Mets at Atlanta, 7:10 p.m., 2nd game
Pittsburgh at Cincinnati, 7:10 p.m.
Milwaukee at Houston, 8:10 p.m.
Chicago Cubs at St. Louis, 8:15 p.m.
Miami at Arizona, 9:40 p.m.
San Diego at San Francisco, 10:15 p.m.
Rockies 5, Phillies 2
Philadelphia Colorado
ab r hbi ab r hbi
Revere cf 4 1 1 0 Fowler cf 4 0 1 0
Frndsn 2b 4 0 1 0 Rutledg ss 3 1 0 0
Rollins ss 4 1 1 1 CGnzlz lf 4 2 2 2
Howard 1b 4 0 2 1 Cuddyr rf 4 1 2 0
DBrwn lf 4 0 1 0 WRosr c 4 1 2 1
Mayrry rf 3 0 0 0 Pachec 1b 4 0 0 1
Galvis 3b 3 0 0 0 Arenad 3b 3 0 1 1
Quinter c 2 0 0 0 LeMahi 2b 3 0 0 0
MYong ph 1 0 0 0 Chacin p 3 0 1 0
Lerud c 0 0 0 0 Brothrs p 0 0 0 0
Hamels p 2 0 0 0
DeFrts p 0 0 0 0
Bastrd p 0 0 0 0
L.Nix ph 1 0 0 0
Totals 32 2 6 2 Totals 32 5 9 5
Philadelphia 000 000 002 2
Colorado 010 000 22x 5
DP-Philadelphia 1, Colorado 1. LOB-Philadelphia
3, Colorado 6. 2B-Rollins (17), Cuddyer (16), Are-
nado (12). HR-C.Gonzalez (20), W.Rosario (11).
IP H R ER BB SO
Philadelphia
Hamels L,2-10 7 6 3 3 2 7
De Fratus 0 2 2 2 1 0
Bastardo 1 1 0 0 0 0
Colorado
Chacin W,5-3 8 2-3 6 2 2 0 3
Brothers S,3-4 1-3 0 0 0 0 1
De Fratus pitched to 3 batters in the 8th.
WP-Hamels, De Fratus.
Umpires-Home, Marvin Hudson; First, Tim Mc-
Clelland; Second, Mike Muchlinski; Third, Wally
Bell.
T-2:18. A-45,186 (50,398).
Mets 4, Cubs 3
Chicago New York
ab r hbi ab r hbi
Valuen 3b 4 1 2 0 Vldspn 2b 4 0 0 0
SCastro ss 4 1 2 0 DnMrp 1b 3 0 0 0
Schrhlt rf 3 1 1 0 DWrght 3b 4 0 1 0
ASorin lf 4 0 1 1 Byrd rf 4 1 1 1
Marml p 0 0 0 0 Duda lf 2 1 1 0
Rizzo 1b 4 0 0 0 Buck c 4 1 2 0
DNavrr c 4 0 0 0 Quntnll ss 3 0 0 0
Sweeny cf 4 0 0 0 Niwnhs cf 3 1 1 3
Barney 2b 4 0 1 0 Hefner p 1 0 0 0
Garza p 3 0 0 0 JuTrnr ph 1 0 0 0
Russell p 0 0 0 0 CTorrs p 0 0 0 0
Borbon ph-lf 1 0 0 0 Satin ph 1 0 0 0
Ardsm p 0 0 0 0
Parnell p 0 0 0 0
Totals 35 3 7 1 Totals 30 4 6 4
Chicago 100 020 000 3
New York 000 000 004 4
One out when winning run scored.
E-S.Castro (10), D.Wright (6), Dan.Murphy (6).
DP-Chicago 1. LOB-Chicago 6, NewYork 6. 2B-D.
Wright (11), Duda (12). HR-Byrd (11), Nieuwen-
huis (1). S-Quintanilla.
IP H R ER BB SO
Chicago
Garza 7 3 0 0 2 5
Russell H,9 1 0 0 0 0 1
Marmol L,2-4 BS,3-5 1-3 3 4 4 1 0
New York
Hefner 5 6 3 1 1 5
C.Torres 2 1 0 0 0 1
Aardsma 1 0 0 0 0 1
Parnell W,5-3 1 0 0 0 0 0
HBP-by Garza (Duda).
Umpires-Home, Lance Barrett; First, Lance Barks-
dale; Second, Gary Cederstrom; Third, Vic Cara-
pazza.
T-2:51. A-30,256 (41,922).
Yankees 6, Angels 5
New York Los Angeles
ab r hbi ab r hbi
Gardnr cf 4 1 2 0 Bourjos cf 5 0 2 1
ISuzuki rf 2 0 0 0 Trout lf 3 1 2 0
Cano 2b 4 1 1 0 Pujols dh 4 1 0 0
Hafner dh 3 1 1 3 Trumo rf 4 1 1 1
V.Wells lf 3 1 1 1 HKndrc 2b 4 0 1 0
Overay 1b 4 1 1 1 Iannett c 2 0 0 0
J.Nix 3b 4 0 3 1 Shuck ph 0 1 0 0
Brignc ss 4 0 0 0 Aybar ss 4 0 1 1
CStwrt c 3 1 0 0 Callasp 3b 4 1 1 2
BHarrs 1b 3 0 0 0
Hawpe ph 1 0 1 0
Totals 31 6 9 6 Totals 34 5 9 5
New York 005 000 010 6
Los Angeles 000 000 005 5
E-Aybar (7), Iannetta (2). DP-New York 2, Los
Angeles 3. LOB-New York 3, Los Angeles 7.
2B-Gardner (16), Cano (15), Overbay (14), J.Nix
(5), Trout (21). HR-Hafner (11). SB-Gardner (11),
I.Suzuki (9). SF-V.Wells.
IP H R ER BB SO
New York
Sabathia W,7-5 8 5 2 2 3 6
D.Robertson 1-3 1 2 2 1 1
Rivera S,24-25 2-3 3 1 1 1 1
Los Angeles
Weaver L,1-3 6 7 5 5 4 6
Williams 3 2 1 1 0 1
Sabathia pitched to 2 batters in the 9th.
Umpires-Home, Larry Vanover; First, Brian Gor-
man; Second, Manny Gonzalez; Third, Tony Ran-
dazzo.
T-2:58. A-41,204 (45,483).
Indians 2, Nationals 0
Washington Cleveland
ab r hbi ab r hbi
Span cf 4 0 1 0 Bourn cf 3 1 1 0
Rendon 2b-3b 4 0 3 0 Aviles ss 3 0 0 0
Zmrmn dh 4 0 0 0 Kipnis 2b 1 1 1 1
AdLRc 1b 4 0 0 0 CSantn dh 4 0 1 1
Werth rf 3 0 2 0 Brantly lf 3 0 0 0
Dsmnd ss 3 0 0 0 MrRynl 1b 3 0 0 0
Tracy 3b 2 0 0 0 YGoms c 3 0 1 0
Lmrdzz ph-2b 2 0 1 0 JMcDnl 3b 2 0 0 0
JSolano c 3 0 0 0 Stubbs rf 3 0 0 0
Berndn lf 3 0 0 0
Totals 32 0 7 0 Totals 25 2 4 2
Washington 000 000 000 0
Cleveland 000 100 01x 2
E-J.Solano (1), Jo.McDonald (1), Mar.Reynolds
(8). DP-Washington 1, Cleveland 3. LOB-Wash-
ington 7, Cleveland 5. 2B-Rendon (7), Werth (4),
Bourn (9). SB-Kipnis (15), Y.Gomes (1). S-Aviles.
SF-Kipnis.
IP H R ER BB SO
Washington
Strasburg L,3-6 5 1 1 1 4 4
Abad 1 1 0 0 0 1
Stammen 2 2 1 1 0 1
Cleveland
Kluber W,5-4 8 7 0 0 0 8
Pestano S,1-3 1 0 0 0 1 0
HBP-by Kluber (Desmond).
Reds 5, Brewers 1
Milwaukee Cincinnati
ab r hbi ab r hbi
Aoki rf 4 0 0 0 DRonsn cf 4 0 1 0
Segura ss 4 0 1 0 Cozart ss 4 1 2 0
CGomz cf 4 1 1 1 Votto 1b 4 0 2 0
Lucroy c 4 0 2 0 Phillips 2b 4 0 0 1
LSchfr lf 4 0 0 0 Bruce rf 4 1 1 1
JFrncs 1b 4 0 0 0 Paul lf 3 1 0 0
Weeks 2b 4 0 1 0 Hannhn 3b 3 1 1 0
YBtncr 3b 3 0 1 0 Hanign c 4 1 1 0
WPerlt p 2 0 1 0 Cueto p 1 0 0 1
McGnzl p 0 0 0 0 Lutz ph 1 0 1 2
Gennett ph 1 0 0 0 Simon p 1 0 0 0
D.Hand p 0 0 0 0
Badnhp p 0 0 0 0
Totals 34 1 7 1 Totals 33 5 9 5
Milwaukee 100 000 000 1
Cincinnati 012 002 00x 5
E-Weeks (7). LOB-Milwaukee 6, Cincinnati 7.
2B-Lucroy (7), D.Robinson (4), Cozart (14), Han-
nahan (3), Hanigan (3). HR-C.Gomez (12), Bruce
(12). S-Cueto.
IP H R ER BB SO
Milwaukee
W.Peralta L,4-8 5 1-3 7 5 4 2 2
Mic.Gonzalez 2-3 1 0 0 0 1
D.Hand 1 1 0 0 0 0
Badenhop 1 0 0 0 0 1
Cincinnati
Cueto W,4-0 6 5 1 1 0 3
Simon S,1-2 3 2 0 0 0 6
Umpires-Home, Sam Holbrook; First, Andy Fletch-
er; Second, Rob Drake; Third, Joe West.
T-2:54. A-39,088 (42,319).
Cardinals 13, Marlins 7
St. Louis Miami
ab r hbi ab r hbi
Jay cf 5 1 1 0 Pierre lf 5 1 2 0
Beltran rf 6 3 3 2 Lucas 3b-1b 4 2 2 1
SRonsn rf 0 0 0 0 Stanton rf 4 1 2 2
Hollidy lf 5 2 2 0 Ozuna cf 5 0 0 0
KButlr p 0 0 0 0 Dietrch 2b 4 1 0 0
Craig 1b 4 2 1 1 Hchvrr ss 5 2 2 1
YMolin c 5 1 2 3 Dobbs 1b 3 0 1 0
Freese 3b 4 3 3 2 DJnngs p 0 0 0 0
Descals 2b 4 1 3 1 Olmos p 0 0 0 0
Kozma ss 5 0 1 1 Brantly c 3 0 2 3
Lynn p 2 0 1 2 Koehler p 2 0 0 0
Maness p 0 0 0 0 Webb p 0 0 0 0
MAdms ph 1 0 0 0 JBrown ph 1 0 0 0
Choate p 0 0 0 0 ARams p 0 0 0 0
Rosnthl p 0 0 0 0 Polanc 3b 0 0 0 0
Wggntn ph-lf 1 0 0 0
Totals 42131712Totals 36 711 7
St. Louis 511 020 031 13
Miami 420 010 000 7
DP-St. Louis 1, Miami 2. LOB-St. Louis 8, Miami 8.
2B-Descalso 2 (12), Lucas (2), Dobbs (7), Brantly
(8). 3B-Beltran (1), Pierre (2). HR-Beltran 2 (16),
Freese (4), Stanton (5). S-Lynn. SF-Brantly.
IP H R ER BB SO
St. Louis
Lynn W,9-1 5 9 7 7 3 6
Maness H,4 1 1 0 0 0 0
Choate H,8 1 0 0 0 0 2
Rosenthal 1 1 0 0 0 0
K.Butler 1 0 0 0 0 2
Miami
Koehler L,0-5 4 2-3 8 9 9 2 3
Webb 1-3 2 0 0 0 0
A.Ramos 2 5 3 3 1 2
Da.Jennings 1 1 0 0 1 0
Olmos 1 1 1 1 0 2
A.Ramos pitched to 3 batters in the 8th.
HBP-by Lynn (Dobbs), by Rosenthal (Polanco), by
Koehler (Craig). WP-Da.Jennings.
Umpires-Home, Tom Hallion; First, Chris Guc-
cione; Second, Ron Kulpa; Third, Phil Cuzzi.
T-3:17. A-16,098 (37,442).
Orioles 6, Red Sox 3
Boston Baltimore
ab r hbi ab r hbi
Ellsury cf 4 0 2 0 Markks rf 5 3 4 0
Iglesias 2b 4 0 1 0 Machd 3b 4 1 2 1
Nava rf-1b 4 0 0 0 Hardy ss 4 0 1 1
D.Ortiz dh 4 0 0 0 A.Jones cf 4 1 2 1
JGoms lf 4 0 0 0 C.Davis 1b 4 1 2 3
Carp 1b 2 0 1 0 Wieters c 4 0 1 0
Victorn pr-rf 1 1 0 0 Valenci dh 4 0 2 0
Sltlmch c 3 1 1 0 Pearce lf 4 0 0 0
Mdlrks 3b 4 1 1 3 Dickrsn pr-lf 0 0 0 0
Drew ss 3 0 0 0 ACasill 2b 4 0 0 0
Totals 33 3 6 3 Totals 37 614 6
Boston 000 000 300 3
Baltimore 003 020 10x 6
E-Carp (1), Machado (4). DP-Baltimore 1. LOB-
Boston 5, Baltimore 8. 2B-Carp (10), Markakis 2
(15), Machado (32), A.Jones 2 (21), C.Davis (22).
HR-Middlebrooks (9), C.Davis (23). S-Machado.
IP H R ER BB SO
Boston
Lester L,6-4 5 9 5 5 0 8
Beato 1 0 0 0 0 1
Tazawa 1-3 3 1 1 0 0
A.Miller 1 2-3 2 0 0 0 2
Baltimore
Mig.Gonzalez W,5-2 6 1-3 5 3 3 2 2
Matusz H,10 1 1-3 1 0 0 0 0
Tom.Hunter H,8 1-3 0 0 0 0 0
Ji.Johnson S,25-29 1 0 0 0 0 0
Pirates 6, Dodgers 3
Los Angeles Pittsburgh
ab r hbi ab r hbi
Schmkr 2b 4 0 0 0 Presley lf-rf 4 1 3 1
Punto ss 4 1 1 0 Mercer ss 4 1 2 0
AdGnzl 1b 4 1 1 0 McCtch cf 4 1 0 0
Puig rf 4 1 3 0 GJones 1b 3 1 2 2
Ethier cf 4 0 2 2 Melncn p 0 0 0 0
Fdrwcz c 2 0 0 1 Grilli p 0 0 0 0
M.Ellis ph 1 0 0 0 Walker 2b 2 1 0 0
L.Cruz 3b 3 0 0 0 PAlvrz 3b 4 1 1 3
Guerrir p 0 0 0 0 Snider rf 3 0 1 0
Belisari p 0 0 0 0 JuWlsn p 0 0 0 0
A.Ellis ph 0 0 0 0 GSnchz 1b 1 0 0 0
Cstllns lf 3 0 0 0 McKnr c 4 0 1 0
HRmrz ph 1 0 0 0 Cole p 1 0 0 0
Greink p 2 0 0 0 SMarte lf 2 0 0 0
HrstnJr 3b 0 0 0 0
Totals 32 3 7 3 Totals 32 610 6
Los Angeles 010 101 000 3
Pittsburgh 200 031 00x 6
DP-Pittsburgh 2. LOB-Los Angeles 5, Pittsburgh
6. 2B-Ad.Gonzalez (14), Mercer (7), G.Jones (15).
HR-Presley (2), P.Alvarez (15). SB-Puig (1). S-
Cole.
IP H R ER BB SO
Los Angeles
Greinke L,3-2 5 8 5 5 2 3
Guerrier 2 2 1 1 0 4
Belisario 1 0 0 0 0 1
Pittsburgh
Cole W,2-0 5 2-3 7 3 3 0 1
Ju.Wilson H,6 1 1-3 0 0 0 2 1
Melancon H,21 1 0 0 0 0 1
Grilli S,25-25 1 0 0 0 1 2
HBP-by Greinke (Walker). WP-Greinke.
Umpires-Home, Mike Estabrook; First, Greg Gib-
son; Second, Hunter Wendelstedt; Third, Alan
Porter.
T-3:07 (Rain delay: 1:28). A-37,263 (38,362).
Royals 5, Rays 3
Kansas City Tampa Bay
ab r hbi ab r hbi
AGordn lf 3 0 1 2 Joyce rf 4 1 1 0
Hosmer 1b 5 1 2 0 Zobrist 2b 5 0 1 0
S.Perez c 5 0 0 0 Scott lf 4 1 1 1
BButler dh 5 0 2 1 Longori dh 2 0 0 0
Lough cf 5 0 0 0 Loney 1b 4 0 0 0
Mostks 3b 4 0 1 0 DJnngs cf 4 0 1 1
EJhnsn 2b 4 1 1 0 KJhnsn 3b 3 0 1 0
Francr rf 3 2 1 1 JMolin c 2 0 0 0
AEscor ss 4 1 3 1 Loaton ph-c 2 1 1 1
YEscor ss 4 0 1 0
Totals 38 511 5 Totals 34 3 7 3
Kansas City 100 012 010 5
Tampa Bay 200 000 001 3
E-Scott (1). LOB-Kansas City 10, Tampa Bay 8.
2B-B.Butler (14), E.Johnson (2), A.Escobar (10),
Zobrist (17), Scott (4). HR-Francoeur (3), Lobaton
(4). CS-Moustakas (2). SF-A.Gordon.
IP H R ER BB SO
Kansas City
W.Davis W,4-5 6 5 2 2 2 4
Crow H,12 1-3 1 0 0 0 0
Collins H,9 1 1-3 0 0 0 1 1
K.Herrera H,7 1-3 0 0 0 0 0
G.Holland S,14-16 1 1 1 1 1 3
Tampa Bay
Ro.Hernandez L,4-7 5 2-3 9 4 4 1 2
McGee 1-3 1 0 0 0 0
Lueke 1 0 0 0 1 1
C.Ramos 1 1 1 1 0 1
Farnsworth 1 0 0 0 0 0
HBP-by Ro.Hernandez (A.Gordon). WP-McGee,
Lueke, C.Ramos. PB-J.Molina.
T-3:08. A-27,442 (34,078).
Astros 5, White Sox 4
Chicago Houston
ab r hbi ab r hbi
De Aza cf 5 2 2 2 BBarns cf 3 0 1 0
AlRmrz ss 4 0 0 1 Altuve 2b 4 1 1 0
Rios rf 3 0 1 0 JCastro dh 4 1 2 2
Konerk dh 4 0 0 0 Corprn c 4 0 0 0
Viciedo lf 4 1 1 0 Carter lf 4 1 2 0
A.Dunn 1b 4 0 1 0 Pareds rf 0 0 0 0
Kppngr 3b 3 0 1 1 C.Pena 1b 3 1 0 0
Bckhm 2b 4 1 2 0 Crowe rf-lf 2 1 0 0
Flowrs c 2 0 0 0 Dmngz 3b 4 0 1 3
Gillaspi ph 0 0 0 0 MGnzlz ss 3 0 0 0
Gimenz c 1 0 0 0
Totals 34 4 8 4 Totals 31 5 7 5
Chicago 000 001 102 4
Houston 030 000 20x 5
E-Beckham (2). LOB-Chicago 7, Houston 6. 2B-
Carter (6), Dominguez (12). 3B-De Aza (1), Vicie-
do (1). HR-De Aza (8), J.Castro (10). SB-Altuve
(12). CS-C.Pena (3). SF-Al.Ramirez.
IP H R ER BB SO
Chicago
H.Santiago L,2-5 5 1-3 5 3 3 4 8
N.Jones 1 1 1 1 0 1
Thornton 1 1 1 1 0 1
Troncoso 2-3 0 0 0 0 0
Houston
Keuchel W,4-3 6 1-3 4 2 2 2 4
Cisnero H,3 2-3 1 0 0 1 1
Ambriz H,12 2-3 1 0 0 0 0
Blackley H,11 1-3 0 0 0 0 1
Veras S,14-17 1 2 2 2 0 0
WP-N.Jones.
Tigers 5, Twins 2
Detroit Minnesota
ab r hbi ab r hbi
AJcksn cf 5 2 2 2 Thoms cf 4 0 1 1
TrHntr rf 5 1 2 3 Mauer c 4 0 0 0
MiCarr 3b 4 0 1 0 Doumit dh 3 0 0 0
Fielder dh 4 0 1 0 Mornea 1b 4 0 0 0
VMrtnz 1b 3 0 1 0 Arcia lf 4 0 0 0
JhPerlt ss 3 0 0 0 Plouffe 3b 3 0 0 0
Dirks lf 4 0 0 0 Parmel rf 3 0 0 0
Infante 2b 4 1 2 0 Dozier 2b 3 2 2 1
Avila c 3 1 2 0 Flormn ss 2 0 0 0
B.Pena pr-c 0 0 0 0
Totals 35 511 5 Totals 30 2 3 2
Detroit 200 200 001 5
Minnesota 000 001 010 2
DP-Minnesota 3. LOB-Detroit 7, Minnesota 3. 2B-
Tor.Hunter (18), Avila (4), Dozier (5). HR-A.Jack-
son (3), Tor.Hunter (3), Dozier (4). SB-A.Jackson
(6). CS-Jh.Peralta (2).
IP H R ER BB SO
Detroit
Fister W,6-4 7 2-3 2 2 2 2 7
Benoit S,4-4 1 1-3 1 0 0 0 1
Minnesota
Walters L,2-2 5 1-3 9 4 4 3 4
Swarzak 1 2-3 0 0 0 0 2
Duensing 1 1-3 1 1 1 0 2
Roenicke 2-3 1 0 0 0 1
HBP-by Duensing (Avila). WP-Roenicke.
Blue Jays 7, Rangers 2
Toronto Texas
ab r hbi ab r hbi
MeCarr lf 4 0 2 0 Profar 3b 4 0 1 0
Bonifac pr-lf 1 1 0 0 Andrus ss 5 0 1 1
Bautist dh 4 1 1 1 Kinsler 2b 4 0 0 1
Thole ph-dh 1 0 0 0 Beltre dh 5 0 1 0
Encrnc 3b 3 1 1 0 Przyns c 4 0 2 0
Kawsk ph-ss 1 0 0 0 N.Cruz rf 3 0 0 0
Lind 1b 5 1 3 3 DvMrp lf 3 1 1 0
DeRosa 2b-3b 4 0 1 0 McGns 1b 4 0 1 0
RDavis rf 4 0 1 0 LMartn cf 3 1 1 0
ClRsms cf 4 2 1 1
Arencii c 4 1 2 2
MIzturs ss-2b 4 0 0 0
Totals 39 712 7 Totals 35 2 8 2
Toronto 020 100 400 7
Texas 000 000 002 2
E-DeRosa (3). DP-Toronto 1. LOB-Toronto 6,
Texas 11. 2B-Me.Cabrera (13), Arencibia (12),
L.Martin (5). HR-Lind (8), Col.Rasmus (13), Aren-
cibia (14).
IP H R ER BB SO
Toronto
Wang W,1-0 7 7 0 0 2 5
J.Perez 1 2-3 1 2 0 2 2
Wagner S,1-1 1-3 0 0 0 1 0
Texas
D.Holland L,5-4 6 10 4 4 0 6
McClellan 1 2 3 3 1 1
Scheppers 1 0 0 0 0 2
Nathan 1 0 0 0 0 1
D.Holland pitched to 1 batter in the 7th.
Athletics 10, Mariners 2
Seattle Oakland
ab r hbi ab r hbi
EnChvz cf 4 0 2 2 Crisp cf 4 0 1 1
Frnkln 2b 3 0 1 0 CYoung cf 0 0 0 0
Seager 3b 4 0 1 0 Jaso c 1 1 1 1
KMorls dh 4 0 0 0 Cespds dh 5 1 2 1
Ibanez lf 4 0 0 0 Moss 1b 5 1 2 2
Morse 1b 3 1 2 0 Dnldsn 3b 5 2 2 1
Triunf ph 1 0 0 0 S.Smith lf 5 2 2 2
Bay rf 3 1 1 0 Reddck rf 5 2 4 2
Liddi ph 1 0 0 0 Rosales ss 4 1 1 0
Zunino c 3 0 1 0 Sogard 2b 4 0 2 0
Ryan ss 3 0 0 0
Totals 33 2 8 2 Totals 38101710
Seattle 020 000 000 2
Oakland 000 220 42x 10
DP-Seattle 1, Oakland 2. LOB-Seattle 5, Oakland
10. 2B-Cespedes (9), Donaldson (20), S.Smith
(16), Sogard (9). 3B-Reddick (1). HR-Moss (12),
Donaldson (10), S.Smith (6), Reddick (3). S-Ro-
sales. SF-Jaso.
IP H R ER BB SO
Seattle
Iwakuma L,7-2 5 8 4 4 3 3
Beavan 1 1-3 6 4 4 0 1
Wilhelmsen 2-3 1 0 0 1 0
Capps 1 2 2 2 0 1
Oakland
Colon W,9-2 7 8 2 2 0 3
Doolittle 1 0 0 0 1 0
Otero 1 0 0 0 0 1
Padres 4, Diamondbacks 1
Arizona San Diego
ab r h bi ab r h bi
GParra rf 3 0 0 0 EvCarr ss 4 1 3 0
Blmqst 2b 4 0 2 0 Ciriaco ss 0 0 0 0
Gldsch 1b 4 0 0 0 Amarst cf 3 0 0 0
MMntr c 4 0 1 0 Headly 3b 3 1 0 0
C.Ross lf 4 0 0 0 Blanks 1b 4 1 1 3
Prado 3b 3 0 1 0 Kotsay lf 4 0 1 0
Pollock cf 3 0 0 0 Street p 0 0 0 0
Pnngtn ss 3 1 1 0 Forsyth 2b 3 0 0 0
Kenndy p 2 0 2 1 Venale rf 3 1 1 1
Ziegler p 0 0 0 0 Hundly c 3 0 0 0
Nieves ph 1 0 1 0 Richrd p 2 0 0 0
DHrndz p 0 0 0 0 Denorf ph-lf 1 0 0 0
Totals 31 1 8 1 Totals 30 4 6 4
Arizona 001 000 000 1
San Diego 001 000 03x 4
E-Pennington (6). DP-San Diego 2. LOB-Arizona
4, San Diego 4. 2B-M.Montero (8), Prado (13),
Pennington (8). HR-Blanks (8), Venable (9). SB-
Pennington (2). CS-G.Parra (8), Ev.Cabrera (7).
S-G.Parra.
IP H R ER BB SO
Arizona
Kennedy 6 4 1 1 1 6
Ziegler 1 0 0 0 0 1
D.Hernandez L,2-4 1 2 3 3 1 0
San Diego
Richard W,2-5 8 7 1 1 0 1
Street S,13-14 1 1 0 0 0 0
Kennedy pitched to 2 batters in the 7th.
ALLENTOWN After tying
the game in the top of the ninth
to send it into extra innings, the
RailRiders fell short as Cody
Overbeck hit a game-winning
sacrifice fly in the bottom of the
11th to lead Lehigh Valley to a
5-4 victory.
Sc ra nt on/Wi l kes - Ba r re
jumped out early, scoring three
runs in the top of the first.
Bobby Wilson led the way with
an RBI single, scoring Addison
Maruszak and Zoilo Almonte. In
the ensuing at-bat, Alberto Gon-
zalez ripped a liner to left field
to give the RailRiders a 3-0 ad-
vantage.
Despite the fast start, Scran-
ton/Wilkes-Barre failed to score
in the next seven innings. Mean-
while, the IronPigs tacked four
runs to take a 4-3 lead heading
into the top of the ninth.
Cody Grice smashed a triple to
right field in the top of the ninth
with one out to get things start-
ed for the RailRiders. Almonte
took advantage of the runner in
scoring position with a single to
tie the game at four.
After a scoreless 10th inning,
Grice and Almonte hit back-to-
back singles and Dan Johnson
walked to load the bases in the
top of the 11th, but Josh Bell
struck out looking to end the
scoring threat.
Ivan Nova pitched six and two-
thirds innings for the RailRiders,
allowing five hits and one earned
run while striking out four. Nova
remains undefeated in three
starts with Scranton/Wilkes-
Barre with two victories and a
2.04 ERA.
Cesar Jimenez earned the vic-
tory as he worked his way out of
a jam in the top half of the 11th.
The RailRiders return home
today to face off against Roches-
ter in a doubleheader starting at
5:35 p.m.
IronPigs 5, RailRiders 4
RailRiders Lehigh Valley
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Maruszak rf 5 1 1 0 Mitchell cf 5 2 1 0
Grice cf 6 1 2 0 Hernandez 2b 5 0 1 0
Almonte lf 6 1 3 1 Ruiz c 3 1 1 0
Johnson 1b 5 0 0 0 Rupp c 1 0 0 0
Bell dh 4 1 1 0 Abreu pr 0 1 0 0
Wilson c 3 0 1 2 Ruf dh 3 0 1 2
Gonzalez ss 5 0 3 1 Asche 3b 4 1 1 1
Ibarra 2b 5 0 3 0 Overbeck 1b 3 0 0 2
Fiorito 3b 5 0 2 0 Castro lf 4 0 1 0
Susdorf rf 4 0 2 0
Orr ss 4 0 0 0
Totals 44 414 4 Totals 36 5 8 5
RailRiders 300 000 001 00 4
Lehigh Valley 000 200 110 01 5
E Nova (1), Johnson (4), Fiorito (1). LOBLEH
6, SWB 13. TEAM RISP LEH 3-for-9, SWB
3-for-15. 2B LEH Mitchell (12); SWB Almonte
(12), Gonzalez (3), Fiorito (1), Maruszak (15). 3B
SWB Grice (1). HR LEH Asche (8). SF LEH
Overbeck 2, Ruf 1.
IP H R ER BB SO
Lehigh Valley
Cochran 5 6 3 3 4 4
Miner 3.1 4 1 1 0 3
Robles 1.2 2 0 0 1 0
Jimenez (W, 3-1) 1 2 0 0 1 1
RailRiders
Nova 6.2 5 3 1 0 4
Spence 0.1 2 1 1 0 0
Miller 3 1 0 0 0 5
Betances (L, 4-4) 0.1 0 1 1 2 0
T 3:39
Pigs derail
Riders in
extras
The Times Leader staff
The Associated Press
ARLINGTON, Texas Chris
Davis hit his major league-lead-
ing 23rd home run, Nick Marka-
kis had four hits and scored
three runs, and the Baltimore
Orioles beat Jon Lester and the
Boston Red Sox 6-3 on Sunday.
Manny Machado extended his
hitting streak to a career-high 14
games and drove in a run for the
Orioles, who took three of four
from first-place Boston to move
within 1 games of the AL East
lead. Baltimore has won six
straight series over the Red Sox.
Davis gave the Orioles a 3-0
lead in the third inning with his
100th career homer and seventh
in 10 games against Boston.
Davis doubled in a run in the
fifth to give him 60 RBIs.
Yankees 6, Angels 5
ANAHEIM, Calif. Mariano
Rivera struck out Albert Pujols
with the bases loaded to end
the Angels five-run rally in the
ninth inning, and the New York
Yankees snapped their five-game
losing streak with a wild victory
over Los Angeles.
CC Sabathia pitched five-hit
ball into the ninth, and Travis
Hafner hit a three-run homer off
Jered Weaver, but the Yankees
barely survived when Rivera
fanned the Angels star slugger.
New Yorks famed closer gave
up three hits and a walk, but
still got his 24th save.
Tigers 5, Twins 2
MINNEAPOLIS Doug
Fister held Minnesota hitless
until the sixth inning and Torii
Hunter connected for his 300th
career home run, leading De-
troit over the Twins.
Royals 5, Rays 3
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.
Wade Davis stopped his
five-game winless streak, Jeff
Francoeur homered, and Kansas
City beat Tampa Bay.
Davis (4-5) gave up two runs
and five hits in six innings for
his first win since he beat the
Los Angeles Angels on May 15.
It was the right-handers first
game against the Rays, who
traded him to the Royals during
the offseason.
Astros 5, White Sox 4
HOUSTON Jason Castro
homered for the second straight
game and Matt Dominguez hit a
three-run double to help Hous-
ton top the Chicago White Sox
for its fourth straight win.
Blue Jays 7, Rangers 2
ARLINGTON, Texas
Chien-Ming Wang won for
the first time in more than a
year, Colby Rasmus homered
for a third straight game, and
Toronto completed a four-game
sweep by beating Texas for its
fifth straight victory.
Athletics 10, Mariners 2
OAKLAND, Calif. Bartolo
Colon worked seven strong
innings to win his sixth straight
decision, Josh Reddick homered
and matched a career high with
four hits, and Oakland avoided
a sweep with a victory over
Seattle.
Indians 2, Nationals 0
CLEVELAND Corey
Kluber pitched eight shutout
innings, and Cleveland spoiled
Stephen Strasburgs return with
a win over Washington.
Orioles get past Red Sox,
inch closer to first place
N AT I O N A L L E A g U E R O U N D U P
AP PHOTO
Colorado Rockies relief pitcher Rex Brothers works against the
Philadelphia Phillies in the ninth inning of the Rockies 5-2 vic-
tory in Denver on Sunday.
Braves 3, Giants 0
San Francisco Atlanta
ab r hbi ab r hbi
GBlanc cf 4 0 0 0 Smmns ss 3 1 0 0
BCrwfr ss 4 0 0 0 Heywrd rf 3 0 0 0
Posey c 4 0 2 0 J.Upton lf 3 1 0 0
Pence rf 4 0 1 0 FFrmn 1b 4 0 3 1
Belt 1b 4 0 2 0 BUpton cf 4 0 1 1
AnTrrs lf 3 0 0 0 McCnn c 2 0 0 0
Arias 3b 4 0 1 0 CJhnsn 3b 4 0 2 0
Noonan 2b 4 0 1 0 R.Pena 2b 4 1 1 0
Linccm p 1 0 0 0 Tehern p 2 0 0 0
HSnchz ph 1 0 0 0 JSchafr ph 0 0 0 1
Mijares p 0 0 0 0 Avilan p 0 0 0 0
Dunnng p 0 0 0 0 Walden p 0 0 0 0
Kimrel p 0 0 0 0
Totals 33 0 7 0 Totals 29 3 7 3
San Francisco 000 000 000 0
Atlanta 101 001 00x 3
E-An.Torres (5). DP-San Francisco 1. LOB-San
Francisco 8, Atlanta 8. 2B-B.Upton (6), C.Johnson
(15). SB-Simmons (3). S-Lincecum, J.Schafer.
IP H R ER BB SO
San Francisco
Lincecum L,4-7 6 6 3 2 5 3
Mijares 1 0 0 0 0 1
Dunning 1 1 0 0 0 0
Atlanta
Teheran W,5-3 6 7 0 0 1 8
Avilan H,10 1 0 0 0 0 1
Walden H,3 1 0 0 0 0 1
Kimbrel S,19-22 1 0 0 0 0 2
WP-Dunning.
Umpires-Home, Paul Emmel; First, Bruce Dreck-
man; Second, Gary Darling; Third, Jerry Meals.
T-2:54. A-33,681 (49,586).
Chacin, Rockies
stop Philadelphia
The Associatd Press
DENVER Jhoulys Cha-
cin came within an out of his
second career shutout, and
Colorado topped Philadelphia
5-2 Sunday afternoon.
Chacin gave up six hits,
struck out three and didnt
walk a batter. His 8 2-3 innings
marked the longest outing by a
Rockies starter this season.
Jimmy Rollins hit an RBI
double with two outs in the
Phillies ninth, and Ryan How-
ard followed with a single to fin-
ish Chacin (5-3). Rex Brothers
got the final out for his second
save of the season.
Mets 4, Cubs 3
NEW YORK Kirk Nieu-
wenhuis hit a three-run homer
that capped a four-run rally in
the bottom of the ninth inning,
and the New York Mets sal-
vaged what had been shaping
up as another sorry afternoon,
startling the Chicago Cubs.
Matt Garza pitched seven
scoreless innings, and the Cubs
scored twice on a madcap play
that featured three bad throws
by Mets infielders, giving Chi-
cago a 3-0 lead.
Reds 5, Brewers 1
CINCINNATI Johnny
Cueto pitched six solid innings
in his return to Cincinnatis rota-
tion and Jay Bruce homered in a
win over Milwaukee.
Marlins 7, Cardinals 2
MIAMI Ricky Nolasco
allowed one run and three hits
in seven innings to help Miami
take the rubber game of its
three-game series against St.
Louis.
Pirates 6, Dodgers 3
PITTSBURGH Rookie
Gerrit Cole won again, getting
home run help from Pedro Alva-
rez and pitching Pittsburgh past
Los Angeles.
Cole (2-0) allowed three runs
on seven hits and no walks in 5
2-3 innings. The top pick from
the 2011 draft won in his big
league debut last week.
Padres 4, Diamondbacks 1
SAN DIEGO Kyle Blanks
hit a three-run homer with two
outs in the bottom of the eighth
inning to a snap a tie and lift
San Diego to its season-high
sixth straight victory.
Braves 3, Giants 0
ATLANTA Freddie Free-
man singled three times and
drove in one run, Julio Teheran
pitched six scoreless innings
and the Atlanta Braves beat the
San Francisco Giants.
Teheran (5-3) allowed seven
hits and one walk.
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www.timesleader.com TIMES LEADER PAGE 4B MONDAY, JUNE 17, 2013 S P O R T S
N H L
After 10 periods, time for Stanley Cup Game 3
U P N E X T
GAME 3
Chicago
Blackhawks
at Boston Bruins
8 p.m. today
NBCSN
BOSTON Tyler Seguin knew
something had to be said.
Andhewas prettysureit wouldnt
be fit for public consumption.
After the Chicago Blackhawks
badly outplayed the Boston Bruins
in the first period of Game 2 of the
Stanley Cup finals Saturday night,
Seguin ditched the microphone he
had been wearing as part of the TV
broadcast. Then he headed back
into the dressing room so the team
could hash out its problems in
peace.
It was really a mix of everybody
saying something, Seguin said. I
definitely knew it was coming, so
I threw my shoulder pads in the
training room and put a towel over
it so no one could hear what we
were saying. I think we needed that
team wake-up call.
The 2010 and 11 Stanley Cup
champions were in Boston on Sun-
day for the third game of the best-
of-seven finals tonight. Neither
team skated on the off-day, instead
choosing to conserve their energy
after playing 10 periods while trad-
ing overtime victories that left the
series tied at one game apiece.
Its a lot about getting your rest,
Blackhawks defenseman Duncan
Keith said after arriving in Boston
about an hour late because of air
traffic. Its not rocket science, you
just get sleep and do as best you
can and do all those little things to
get ready to go.
Chicago took the first one, win-
ning a triple-OT thriller after 52
extra minutes. Then the Black-
hawks started Game 2 by sending
19 shots to Bostons four at
Bruins goalie Tuukka Rask in the
first period to take a 1-0 lead.
Not much needed to be said
after that first period, said Chris
Kelly, who was one of the more vo-
cal players in the dressing room.
I think Tuukka pointed out that
was a pretty terrible period by our
team. If it wasnt for Tuukka, it
would have been a lot worse.
Neither Kelly nor coach Claude
Julien nor any of the other Bruins
would divulge what was said in the
room.
But something snapped them
out of their funk.
Claude came in a little bit later,
but I think we were all equally up-
set about that first period, said
Daniel Paille, who scored at 13:48
of overtime to end it. Definitely,
Claude let us know and it was a
way for us to wake up. And, also,
players were keeping each other ac-
countable, too, so it was good.
Whatever was said, the Black-
hawks managed only 15 shots over
the next two-plus periods to Bos-
tons 24. For the game, the Bruins
had 50 hits 10 by Milan Lucic
to 34 for Chicago.
Theyre in the Stanley Cup final
for a reason, Blackhawks forward
Patrick Kane said. Its not like
youre going to have the momen-
tum or dominate for three periods.
Obviously, wed love that.
We know momentum is huge in
the playoffs. You want to keep it as
long as you can.
But Blackhawks forward Dave
Bolland said they relaxed after
taking an early lead and dominat-
ing the first period. Another goal
was disallowed when the referee
lost sight of the puck and blew the
whistle moments before it rolled
under Rask and over the goal line.
You always have to have your
By JIMMY GOLEN
AP Sports Writer
Mountain Post, Back Mountain split twinbill
The Times Leader staff
DALLAS Mountain Post
A gutted out a ninth-inning
victory and Back Mountain
answered with a two-hitter as
the senior legion squads split
a doubleheader on Sunday at
Misericordia.
Dom Sartini hit a two-run
double in the top of the ninth of
the first game to help lift Moun-
tain Post to a 4-1 win. In the
second game, Condo gave up
just two hits, struck out seven
and didnt allow a walk to give
Back Mountain the split with a
9-0 victory.
In the opener, Mountain
Post held Back Mountain to
just three hits in nine innings.
Starter Brian Markowski gave
up only one and struck out 12 in
six innings. Matt Kaster pitched
three innings of relief for the
win. Back Mountains Nick Oley
had two of the three hits, adding
a double and an RBI.
Nigel Stearns had four hits
himself for Back Mountain in
the second game. Oley and Con-
nor Balloun each drove in a pair.
Mountain Post A 4, Back Mountain 1
Mountain Post A AB R H BI 2B 3B HR
Tyler Sadvary 2b 5 0 1 0 0 0 0
Drew Munisteri cf 5 0 0 0 0 0 0
Tom Goyne c 4 0 0 0 0 0 0
Jon Wychock 3b 3 1 1 0 0 0 0
Brian Markowski p 1 1 0 0 0 0 0
Matt Kaster p 1 0 0 0 0 0 0
Elliot Snyder ss 2 1 1 1 1 0 0
Dom Sartini 1b 4 1 1 2 1 0 0
Ethan Markowski rf 3 0 0 0 0 0 0
Abhay Metgud lf 2 0 1 1 1 0 0
Derek Sartini ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 0
Totals 31 4 5 4 3 0 0
Back Mountain AB R H BI 2B 3B HR
Nigel Stearns cf 4 0 0 0 0 0 0
Deep Patel ss 2 0 0 0 0 0 0
Greg Petorak lf 4 0 0 0 0 0 0
Connor Balloun 1b 3 0 0 0 0 0 0
Pat Condo pr 0 1 0 0 0 0 0
Cody Paraschak c 3 0 1 0 0 0 0
Nick Oley 3b 4 0 2 1 1 0 0
C.J. Carey 2b 3 0 0 0 0 0 0
K. Baker dh 2 0 0 0 0 0 0
Scott Bean p 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Jon Strausser dh 1 0 0 0 0 0 0
Rosario Bevevino p 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
R. Martin rf 2 0 0 0 0 0 0
Totals 28 1 3 1 1 0 0
Mountain Post A 000 000 103 4
Back Mountain 000 000 100 1
Mountain Post A IP H R ER BB SO
B. Markowski 6.0 1 1 1 3 12
Kaster (W) 3.0 2 0 0 2 0
Back Mountain IP H R ER BB SO
Bean (L) 8.2 5 4 4 6 7
Bevevino 0.1 0 0 0 0 0
Back Mountain 9, Mountain Post A 0
Back Mountain AB R H BI 2B 3B HR
Nigel Stearns cf 5 2 4 0 0 0 0
Deep Patel ss 4 1 0 0 0 0 0
Greg Petorak lf 3 1 0 1 0 0 0
Connor Balloun 3b 2 1 2 3 0 0 0
Jon Strausser 1b 4 1 2 0 0 0 0
Nick Oley 2b-rf 2 0 1 2 0 0 0
Lee Eckert p 1 1 1 0 1 0 0
Cody Paraschak dh 3 0 0 0 0 0 0
Pat Condo p 1 0 1 0 0 0 0
K. Baker rf 1 0 0 0 0 0 0
C.J. Carey 2b 3 1 0 1 0 0 0
J. Orlandini c 3 1 0 0 0 0 0
Totals 32 9 11 7 1 0 0
Mountain Post A AB R H BI 2B 3B HR
Tyler Sadvary 2b 3 0 0 0 0 0 0
Drew Munisteri cf 3 0 1 0 0 0 0
Tom Goyne c 1 0 0 0 0 0 0
Derek Sartini c 1 0 0 0 0 0 0
Dom Sartini 1b 3 0 0 0 0 0 0
Elliot Snyder ss 3 0 0 0 0 0 0
Ryan Murphy rf-p 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Brian Markowski dh 3 0 1 0 1 0 0
Jon Wychock 3b 3 0 0 0 0 0 0
Ethan Markowski p 2 0 0 0 0 0 0
Jake Gallagher p 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Abhay Metgud lf 2 0 0 0 0 0 0
Totals 24 0 2 0 1 0 0
Back Mountain 300 013 2 9
Mountain Post A 000 000 0 0
Back Mountain IP H R ER BB SO
Condo (W) 7.0 2 0 0 0 7
Mountain Post A IP H R ER BB SO
E. Markowski (L) 5.0 7 4 4 3 3
Gallagher 0.1 1 2 2 2 1
Murphy 1.2 3 3 3 0 0
Wilkes-Barre 5, Plains 4
A four-run fourth innings
helped spark Wilkes-Barre to a
victory over Plains.
John Yurkoski led Wilkes-
Barre with two hits, including a
double, and two RBI.
Dakota Owen chipped in
two hits and an RBI for Wilkes-
Barre, while Wil Amesbury and
Eric Shorts added a hit and an
RBI apiece.
Mike Delaney recorded two
hits and two RBI for Plains in
the loss.
Plains AB R H BI 2B 3B HR
Dave Parsnik rf 4 1 2 0 1 0 0
Felix Mascelli ss 3 1 2 1 0 0 0
Mike Delaney cf 4 0 2 2 0 0 0
Sam Andrews 1b 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Jim Graziosi dh 4 1 0 0 0 0 0
Mike Carey lf 3 0 0 0 0 0 0
Eric Adamczyk c 3 0 1 1 1 0 0
R.J. Kenzakoski p 3 0 0 0 0 0 0
Justin Glasgow p 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Danny Constanino 3b 2 0 0 0 0 0 0
D.J. Slavish ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 0
Christian Rivera 2b 1 1 1 0 0 0 0
Brandon Butry 2b 2 0 0 0 0 0 0
Totals 30 4 8 4 2 0 0
Wilkes-Barre AB R H BI 2B 3B HR
Szafran ss 4 0 0 0 0 0 0
Kendra 2b 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Preston dh 4 1 1 0 1 0 0
Hoggarth cf 4 1 2 0 0 0 0
Owen c 4 1 2 1 0 0 0
Shorts rf 4 1 1 1 0 0 0
Zionce p 1 1 0 0 0 0 0
Yurkoski 3b 3 0 2 2 1 0 0
Amesbury 1b 3 0 1 1 0 0 0
Lovecchio lf 3 0 1 0 0 0 0
Totals 30 5 10 5 2 0 0
Wilkes-Barre 000 401 0 5
Plains 101 001 1 4
Plains IP H R ER BB SO
Kenzakoski (L) 4.0 6 4 4 1 2
Glasgow 1.0 2 1 1 0 1
Andrews 2.0 2 0 0 1 2
Wilkes-Barre IP H R ER BB SO
Zionce (W) 7.0 8 4 4 3 7
Greater Pittston 6,
Hazleton 1
Jake Granteed went the dis-
tance, holding Hazleton to four
hits while striking out eight in
Greater Pittstons home win.
Bart Chupka led the way at
the plate with two hits, includ-
ing a solo home run.
Hazleton AB R H BI 2B 3B HR
Gawel 3b 3 0 1 0 0 0 0
Klein cf 3 0 0 0 0 0 0
Rogers 2b 3 0 1 0 0 0 0
Cara lf 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Stawick dh 3 0 0 0 0 0 0
John c 2 0 0 0 0 0 0
ODonnell ss 3 1 1 0 0 0 0
Hernandez p 3 0 2 1 1 0 0
Chirico 1b 3 0 0 0 0 0 0
Wolfe rf 3 0 0 0 0 0 0
Totals 26 1 4 1 1 0 0
Greater Pittston AB R H BI 2B 3B HR
Zezza lf 3 0 0 0 0 0 0
Carey 2b 3 0 0 0 0 0 0
Chupka 1b 3 1 2 1 0 0 1
Grove c 3 1 1 0 0 0 0
Gavenonis 3 2 1 0 1 0 0
Mott rf 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Loftus dh 3 0 0 0 0 0 0
Granteed p 2 1 1 1 0 0 0
Martinelli ss 3 1 1 1 0 0 0
Walkowiak cf 2 0 0 1 0 0 0
Totals 25 6 6 4 1 0 1
Hazleton 010 000 0 1
Greater Pittston 000 402 x 6
Hazleton IP H R ER BB SO
Hernandez (L) 7.0 6 6 6 0 5
Greater Pittston IP H R ER BB SO
Granteed (W) 7.0 4 1 1 0 8
Nanticoke 5,
Mountain Post 781 B 1
Mike Bugonowicz allowed
four hits and one earned run
while striking out eight to lead
Nanticoke to a victory over
Mountain Post.
Nick Deno led the Nanticoke
offense with a single and an
RBI.
John Chupka recorded a hit
and an RBI for Mountain Post in
the loss.
Nanticoke AB R H BI 2B 3B HR
Kollar ss 2 1 1 0 0 0 0
Bob Kinney ss 1 0 0 0 0 0 0
Pack 2b 2 1 0 0 0 0 0
Myers 2b 1 0 0 0 0 0 0
Ferrence lf 2 0 0 0 0 0 0
Larry Youngblood lf 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Deno dh 4 0 1 1 0 0 0
Winte 1b 3 1 0 0 0 0 0
Bob Briggs 3b 2 1 0 0 0 0 0
Kevin Volkel 3b 1 0 1 0 0 0 0
Mike Bugonowicz p 3 1 0 0 0 0 0
Kuhl cf 1 0 0 0 0 0 0
Mike Blazaskie cf 1 0 0 0 0 0 0
Morgan Higgs c 2 0 0 0 0 0 0
Marcinkowski p 1 0 0 0 0 0 0
Totals 27 5 4 1 0 0 0
Mountain Post AB R H BI 2B 3B HR
J. Rinehimer c 2 0 0 0 0 0 0
Hopkins c 1 0 0 0 0 0 0
Madrovsky 1b 4 0 0 0 0 0 0
Eric Rinehimer 2b 3 0 0 0 0 0 0
Dotzel 2b 1 0 0 0 0 0 0
T. Jones lf 3 1 1 0 0 0 0
Chase Jones 3b 3 0 1 0 0 0 0
John Chupka rf 2 0 1 1 0 0 0
Josh Grzech cf 3 0 1 0 0 0 0
Nick Gavio rf 1 0 0 0 0 0 0
Matt Madry ss 3 0 0 0 0 0 0
Totals 26 1 4 1 0 0 0
Nanticoke 400 100 0 - 5
Mountain Post 010 000 0 - 1
Nanticoke IP H R ER BB SO
Bugonowicz 6 4 1 1 4 8
Marcinkowski 1 0 0 0 1 2
Mountain Post IP H R ER BB SO
Grzech 4 3 0 0 2 0
Grottola 2 1 0 0 0 3
Gower 1 0 0 0 1 2
Tunkhannock 2,
West Side 1, Game 1
Jordan Hannon smacked a
walk-off hit in the bottom of the
eighth to give Tunkhannock the
victory over West in game one
of a doubleheader.
Ty Weiss pitched a complete
game, allowing four hits and
one earned run while striking
out six for Tunkhannock in the
win.
West Side AB R H BI 2B 3B HR
Lapatka cf 3 0 0 0 0 0 0
Gushka 2b 3 0 1 0 0 0 0
Lescavage 1b 3 0 0 0 0 0 0
Zezza ss 3 0 1 0 0 0 0
Michaels p/ss 3 1 1 0 0 0 0
Musto c 3 0 0 0 0 0 0
K. Charney p/ss 3 0 0 0 0 0 0
Steinberger lf 3 0 0 1 0 0 0
Kaslavage rf 2 0 0 0 0 0 0
Totals 26 1 4 1 0 0 0
Tunkhannock AB R H BI 2B 3B HR
Sherry cf 3 0 0 0 0 0 0
Faux 2b 4 0 0 0 0 0 0
Ty Weiss p 2 1 1 0 0 0 0
Bernoski 3b 3 0 1 0 0 0 0
Brett Soltysiak pr 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Sean Soltysiak 1b 4 1 1 0 0 0 0
Thomas c 3 0 0 1 0 0 0
Hannon ph 1 0 1 1 0 0 0
Ryan Weiss lf/rf 1 0 1 0 0 0 0
Clark rf 1 0 0 0 0 0 0
Sick lf 2 0 0 0 0 0 0
Brown ss 3 0 0 0 0 0 0
Totals 27 2 5 2 0 0 0
West Side 000 010 00 - 1
Tunkhannock 010 000 01 - 2
West Side IP H R ER BB SO
Charney 2.2 3 1 1 2 0
Michaels 5.1 2 1 1 2 2
Tunkhannock IP H R ER BB SO
Ty Weiss 8 4 1 1 0 6
Tunkhannock 6,
West Side 2, Game 2
Aaron Holton allowed five
hits and two earned runs while
striking out five in seven innings
of work to lead Tuckhannock to
a victory over West Side in the
second game of a doubleheader
at Tunkhannock High School.
Ty Weiss recorded two
doubles, two runs and two RBI
to lead Tunkhannock on offense.
West Side AB R H BI 2B 3B HR
Lopatka cf 3 0 1 1 0 0 0
Gushka 2b 2 0 0 0 0 0 0
Zezza 1b 3 0 0 0 0 0 0
Michaels 3b/p 3 0 1 1 1 0 0
K. Charney ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 0
Lescavage ss 2 0 1 0 0 0 0
Homza ph 1 0 1 0 1 0 0
Kusakavitch c 2 0 0 0 0 0 0
Steinberger lf 3 0 0 0 0 0 0
Forlenza rf 3 1 1 0 0 0 0
Kaslavage p/3b 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Charney dh 1 1 0 0 0 0 0
K. Musta ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 0
Totals 25 2 5 2 2 0 0
Tunkhannock AB R H BI 2B 3B HR
Sherry cf 3 2 2 0 0 0 0
Faux 2b 4 0 2 0 0 0 0
Ty Weiss 3b 4 2 2 2 2 0 0
Bernoski c 3 0 1 0 0 0 0
Clark ph 1 0 1 1 0 0 0
Sean Soltysiak 1b 3 1 0 1 0 0 0
Swilley ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 0
Sick lf 3 0 0 0 0 0 0
Hannon ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 0
Holton p 3 0 1 0 0 0 0
Ryan Weiss rf 2 0 0 0 0 0 0
Brown ss 2 0 0 0 0 0 0
McClain ss 1 1 1 0 1 0 0
Totals 31 6 10 4 3 0 0
West Side 001 010 0 - 2
Tunkhannock 000 210 3 - 6
West Side IP H R ER BB SO
Kaslavage 6.2 10 6 4 2 1
Michaels 0.1 0 0 0 0 1
Tunkhannock IP H R ER BB SO
Holton 7 5 2 2 1 5
A M E R I C A N L E G I O N B A S E B A L L
born the day after his first
runner-up finish in 1999.
All the stars were aligned.
None of the putts fell in.
Mickelson surged back into
the lead by holing out from
75 yards in thick rough on the
10th hole for eagle, another
moment that made it seem like
surely was his time. The cheer
could be heard across the road,
through the trees, loud enough
that Rose knew exactly what
had happened.
But on the easiest hole at
Merion, Mickelson drilled a
wedge over the green on the
par-3 13th and made bogey.
What hurt Mickelson even
more was a wedge from about
121 yards on the 15th hole. It
should have given him a good
look at birdie, but it came up
so short that Mickelsons best
chance was to use one of his
five wedges to chip from the
front of the green. He hit that
one too far, 25 feet by the hole,
and the bogey wound up cost-
ing him a chance at the major
he covets.
Mickelson wound up with a
bogey on the 18th for a 74 and
tied for second with Jason Day,
who closed with a 71.
Heartbreak, Mickelson
said.
This is tough to swallow
after coming so close. This was
my best chance of all of them. I
had a golf course I really liked.
I felt this was as good an op-
portunity as you could ask for.
It really hurts.
Day appeared to salvage his
round by chipping in for bogey
on the 11th hole, and he was
still in the picture when he
made a 12-foot par putt on the
17th to stay one shot behind.
But he put his approach into
the bunker left of the 18th
green, blasted out to about 7
feet and missed the putt.
The back nine was a four-
way battle that included
Hunter Mahan, who played in
the last group with Mickelson.
He was one shot out of the lead
until he three-putted the 15th
hole for a double bogey, and
then closed with back-to-back
bogeys when his hopes were
gone. Mahan had a 75 and tied
for fourth with Billy Horschel
(74), Ernie Els (69) and Jason
Dufner, who had a 67 despite
making triple bogey on the
15th hole.
Rose finished at 1-over 281,
eight shots higher than David
Grahams winning score in
1981 when the U.S. Open was
last held at Merion. The short-
est course for a major champi-
onship in nearly a decade held
up just fine. It was the third
time in the last four years that
no one broke par in the tough-
est test of golf.
The last Englishman to win
the U.S. Open was Tony Jacklin
at Hazeltine in 1970, though
Rose added to recent domi-
nance of the Union Jack at the
U.S. Open as the third winner
in four years.
The others were Graeme
McDowell (2010) and Rory
McIlroy (2011) of Northern
Ireland.
Walking off the 18th green,
he looked through the patchy
clouds and point to the sky, a
nod to his late father, Ken, who
died of leukemia in September
2002.
I couldnt help but look up
at the heavens and think my
old man Ken had something to
do with it, Rose said.
It seems like more than
15 years ago when Rose first
starred on the major scene
as a 17-year-old amateur who
chipped in on the final hole at
Royal Birkdale in the 1998 Brit-
ish Open and tied for fourth.
He turned pro the next week,
and then missed the cut in his
first 21 tournaments. But he
stayed the course and slowly
picked off big tournaments
including the AT&T National
in 2010 just down the road at
Aronimink.
The U.S. Open takes him to
another level and moves him to
No. 3 in the world.
Just for the last few years
has been known as one of the
best ball-strikers in the game.
He showed that today, said
Luke Donald, who played
alongside him. To win a U.S.
Open, you have to have the
ultimate control of your golf
ball. He did that. He hit some
really clutch iron shots down
the stretch.
OPEN
Continued from Page 1B
nobili performance early and
never really recovered.
Miami missed 21 of its first 29
shots and Green hit three straight
3s in the middle of the second
quarter to tie Allens record of 22.
The Spurs led 47-30 on Duncans
two free throws before the Heat
finally showed some fight.
A12-0 run got themback with-
in striking distance at 47-42 and
the Heat surged out of the half-
time gates to cut San Antonios
lead to 61-59 in the first 1:17 of
the third.
San Antonio pushed right
back, getting a jumper from
Parker, a 3-pointer from Green
that broke Allens record and a
lefty layup from Ginobili to get a
little breathing room.
Ginobili closed the third with a
twisting, off-balance, left-handed
runner and a right-handed drive
to the bucket to bring cheers of
Manu! Manu!
Nowhere to be found in the
first four games, and for most of
these playoffs, Ginobili had his
fingerprints all over the opening
of Game 5. He hit a step-back
jumper, had two pretty assists on
a backdoor cut from Green and
a thunderous dunk from Dun-
can and knocked down two free
throws for an early 9-4 lead.
Ginobilis 3-pointer from the
wing made it 15-10, bringing the
nervous crowd to its feet. The
awakening was a welcome sign
for the Spurs, who desperately
missed their playmaking dare-
devil.
SPURS
Continued from Page 1B
MONADY, JUNE 17, 2013 PAgE 5B TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com W I L K E S - B A R R E D U A T H L O N
DUATHLON
Continued from Page 1B
FRED ADAMS PHOTOS/FOR THE TIMES LEADER
Competitors take off for the start of Sundays Wilkes-Barre Duathlon.
ished third in her only other
time running in the event in
2010. I battled (Porfirio) on
the bike and got myself a pret-
ty good lead.
Porfirio felt that the bike
phase of the event was the dif-
ference.
I was right behind her dur-
ing the run, said Porfirio.
But she killed me on the
bike.
NOTES
At the turnaround point
of the bike race, Robbins had
an interesting comment: I
looked over and saw nobody.
I thought, Thats bad. That
means, hes right on my tail.
Team Ruxin (runner-
Zack Deubler, 28, of Dallas
and biker-Joe Liparela, 28,
Harveys Lake) won top re-
lay race honors, finishing in
1:21:36
10th annual Wilkes-Barre Duathlon (3 mile
run, 16.1 mile bike, 3 mile run) results
Top 3 males
1. Sean Robbins, 43, Shavertown, 1:13:40,
$100
2. Chris Garges, 38, Bethlehem, 1:14:11, $75
3. Kenny Quigley, 42, Dunmore, 1:17:01, $50
First relay team to fnish: Team Ruxin (run-
Zack Deubler, 28, Dallas, bike-Joe Liparela,
28, Harveys Lake) 1:21:36
Male age group winners: 14 &under: None.
15-19: 1. John Kane, Shavertown, 1:43:53.
20-24: 1. Scott Burnham, Clarks Summit,
1:30:75; 2. Scott Skammer, Dallas, 1:33:45;
3. Sam Miller, Harris, N.Y., 1:45:38. 25-29:
1. Nick Hetro, Wyoming, 1:17:18; 2. George
Watson, Dickson City, 1:35:01; 3. Tom Leigh-
ton Jr., Wilkes-Barre, 1:46:03. 30-34: 1. Joe
Maskalis, Fort Drum, N.Y., 1:24:20; 2. Andy
McDonald, Clarks Summit, 1:26:34; 3. James
Bobeck, Kingston, 1:33:09. 35-39: 1. Corey
Strauch, Spring Brook Twp., 1:19:49; 2. Jer-
emy Garges, Perkasie, 1:20:03; 3. Jeff Pellis,
New York City, 1:21:30. Masters division:
40-44: 1. George Fair, Scotrun, 1:17:58; 2.
Tim Scanlan, Philadelphia, 1:20:46. 45-49: 1.
Mike Brown, Milford, 1:24:33; 2. Bob Guzen-
ski, Wyoming, 1:31:05; 3. Todd Egry, Wal-
nutport, 1:31:55. 50-54: 1. Mike McAndrew,
Avoca, 1:28:10; 2. Jeff Umbreit, Wilkes-Barre,
1:31:25; 3. Scott Meuser, Exeter, 1:32:35. 55-
59:1. Ted Riviello, Pittston, 1:38:31; 2. Joe
McHugh, Kingston, 1:39:47; 3. Greg Martin,
Moosic, 1:43:28. 60-64: 1. Tom Walski, Nan-
ticoke, 1:45:22; 2. Mike last, Wilkes-Barre,
1:55:07. 65-69: 1. Ron Rawls, Mountain Top,
1:49:15. 70 & over: 1. Tom Berezich, Trucks-
ville, na.
Top 3 females
1. Jen Hetrick, 32, Riegelsville, 1:26:05, $100
2. Deedra Porfrio, 36, W. Pittston, 1:29:00,
$75
3. Kristin Patchell, 32, Scranton, 1:30:03, $50
Female age group winners: 15-19: 1. Ana-
heim Bozetka, Kingston, 1:53:18. 20-24: 1.
Rachel Lacek, Wilkes-Barre, 2:07:57. 25-29:
1. Elizabeth Karat, Baltimore, Md., 1:44:26; 2.
Danielle Hirt, Wyomissing, 2:02:46. 30-34: 1.
Charlene Aquilina, Scranton, 1:30:37; 2. Jac-
quelyn Stevenson, Mountain Top, 1:36:14;
3. Sarah Leskosky, Drums, 1:38:25. 35-39:
1. Michele Covington, Olyphant, 1:35:03; 2.
Mary Stabinsky, Plains Twp., 1:42:16; 3. Liza
Pvokop, Wilkes-Barre, 1:44:39. Masters di-
vision: 40-44: 1. Ann Zoranski, Swoyersville,
1:30:21; 2. Michael Wilczyhski, Mountain Top,
1:31:01; 3. Joelle Fair, Scotrun, 1:33:01. 45-
49: 1. Liz Naro, Scranton, 1:42:13; 2. Lea Ann
Kish, New York City, 1:48:20; 3. Cheri Balmer,
Dallas, 2:01:18. 50-54: 1. Deb Barcklow, Wil-
kes-Barre, 1:37:46; 2. Irene Ghezzi, Dallas,
1:47:58; 3. Colleen Hosey Morda, Kingston,
1:53:29. 55-59: None. 60-64: None. 65-69:
None. 70 & over: None.
Field: 175 (149 individuals and 26 teams).
Pace vehicle: Don Lasoski and W.T. Jones.
Starters: Vicky Puchucki. Public address
announcer: Suzanne Youngblood. Traffc
control: Flagger Force. Timing and results:
Compuscore (www.compuscore.com). Race
directors: Vicky Puchucki (YMCA) and Bill
Buzza (JCC).
Schedule
Thursday, July 4: Wilkes-Barre YMCAs 30th
annual 3 Mile Run/Walk at the YMCA, Frank-
lin and Northampton streets, Wilkes-Barre.
Walk, 8:30 a.m., Run, 9:10 a.m. Info: YMCA,
823-2191, ext. 112.
Saturday, July 13: Susquehanna River Run-
ners Clubs inaugural Runners Pentathlon
(100 meter, 400 meter, 800 meter, 1 mile and
2 mile) at Mangelsdorf Field track, Misericor-
dia University at 5:30 p.m.. Info: Chris Wadas,
592-2820.
Saturday, July 20: Pennsylvania Summer Bi-
athlon (run and shoot) at Whitetail Preserve,
118 Blvd. Road, Bloomsburg at 9:15. there
is a safety clinic mandatory for frst time
shooters at 8 a.m.
Thursday, Aug. 1: Jack Daniels Mile at Tioga
Street and Franklin Avenue, Tunkhannock at
7 a.m. Info: Dick Daniels, 240-1932.
INDIVIDUAL RESULTS
Place Name Age Sex Finish
1.Sean Robbins 44 M 1:13:40
2.Christopher Garges 38 M 1:14:11
3.Kenny Quigley 41 M 1:17:01
4.Nicholas Hetro 25 M 1:17:18
5.George Fair 44 M 1:17:58
6.Corey Strauch 35 M 1:19:49
7.Jeremy Garges 37 M 1:20:03
8.Timothy Scanlan 40 M 1:20:46
9.Jeff Pellis 37 M 1:21:30
10.Brian Davidson 39 M 1:22:07
11.Chaz Ross 37 M 1:22:52
12.Brian Hilbart 35 M 1:23:24
13.Joe Maskalis 32 M 1:24:20
14.Michael Brown 49 M 1:24:33
15.Jennifer Hetrick 32 F 1:26:05
16.Andy Mcdonald 33 M 1:26:34
17.Mike Adamshick 35 M 1:26:38
18.Alec Barcklow 35 M 1:26:55
19.Charles Fino 41 M 1:28:08
20.Michael Mcandrew 54 M 1:28:10
21.Ryan Walp 41 M 1:28:58
22.Deedra Porfrio 37 F 1:29:00
23.Earl Marshall 38 M 1:29:22
24.Kristin Patchell 32 F 1:30:03
25.Scott Burnham 24 M 1:30:15
26.Ann Zoranski 42 F 1:30:21
27.Jonathan Bilbow 36 M 1:30:33
28.Charlene Aquilina 32 F 1:30:37
29.Michael Wilczyhski 41 M 1:31:01
30.Bob Guzenski 47 M 1:31:05
31.Jason Schuler 35 M 1:31:20
32.Jeff Umbreit 54 M 1:31:25
33.Randy Lyback 44 M 1:31:26
34.Craig Borders 43 M 1:31:29
35.William Deamer 42 M 1:31:31
36.Todd Egry 48 M 1:31:55
37.Scott Meuser 51 M 1:32:35
38.Chris Krall 54 M 1:32:43
39.John Tulaney 46 M 1:32:46
40.Gerry Mihalick 45 M 1:32:56
41.Joelle Fair 44 F 1:33:01
42.James Bobeck 34 M 1:33:09
43.Louis Ciampi 50 M 1:33:18
44.Scott Skammer 23 M 1:33:45
45.Bernie Mcgroarty 39 M 1:33:46
46.John Kurovsky 53 M 1:34:16
47.George Watson 27 M 1:35:01
48.Michele Covington 39 F 1:35:03
49.Jacquelyn Stevenson 30 F 1:36:14
50.Ryan Andrews 46 M 1:37:12
51.Daniel Rosa 44 M 1:37:38
52.Cory Brechbill 39 M 1:37:43
53.Deb Barcklow 51 F 1:37:46
54.Sarah Leskosky 32 F 1:38:25
55.Ted Riviello 56 M 1:38:31
56.Stephen Conn 38 M 1:38:41
57.Joseph Mc Hugh III 56 M 1:39:47
58.John Weidler 43 M 1:39:53
59.Christopher Keller 38 M 1:40:56
60.Jeff Brown 48 M 1:41:14
61.Liz Naro 46 F 1:42:13
62.Mary Stabinsky 37 F 1:42:16
63.Dave Repshas 52 M 1:42:47
64.David Bass 47 M 1:43:24
65.Gregory Martin 58 M 1:43:28
66.John Kane 17 M 1:43:53
67.John Loforte 35 M 1:43:59
68.Joe Morris 35 M 1:44:23
69.Elizabeth Karat 25 F 1:44:26
70.Liza Pvokop 36 F 1:44:39
71.Scott Barnes Jr 31 M 1:45:05
72.Tom Walski 63 M 1:45:22
73.Sam Miller 22 M 1:45:38
74.Thomas Leighton Jr 25 M 1:46:03
75.Jill Fogleman 41 F 1:46:05
76.Robert Switzer 48 M 1:46:06
77.James Igoe 38 M 1:46:22
78.Carl Lutkowski 29 M 1:47:06
79.Nicole Sennett 36 F 1:47:23
80.Irene Ghezzi 52 F 1:47:58
81.Lea Ann Kish 48 F 1:48:20
82.Jeff Hirt 50 M 1:49:12
83.Ronald Rawls 65 M 1:49:15
84.Edward Doukas Jr 52 M 1:49:33
85.Stephanie Siekierka 39 F 1:49:42
86.Michelle Garges 38 F 1:50:15
87.Julie Mcgroarty 35 F 1:50:56
88.James Albert 42 M 1:53:17
89.Anah Bozetka 16 F 1:53:18
90.Colleen Hosey Morda 53 F 1:53:29
91.Mark Hannon 51 M 1:54:17
92.Scott Majikes 29 M 1:54:30
93.Michael Last 61 M 1:55:07
94.Matthew Kearns 37 M 1:58:04
95.Sarah Argo 30 F 1:58:43
96.Stacey Cummings 31 F 1:58:56
97.Ken Bond 47 M 2:00:34
98.John Kovac 40 M 2:01:03
99.Jennifer Escarge 38 F 2:01:11
100.Cheri Blamer 46 F 2:01:18
101.Carmen Campione 51 F 2:02:05
102.Danielle Hirt 25 F 2:02:46
103.Kimberly Keller 40 F 2:02:55
104.Elizabeth Moran 52 F 2:03:48
105.Karen Belles 45 F 2:04:20
106.Jamie Fedor 36 F 2:04:20
107.Rob Heist 43 M 2:04:40
108.Brian Burns 34 M 2:05:17
109.Robert Angeli 58 M 2:06:27
110.Karin Getz 38 F 2:06:29
111.John Lee 51 M 2:07:09
112.Rachel Lacek 20 F 2:07:57
113.Denise Thomas 53 F 2:11:06
114.Jackie Kotch 46 F 2:11:18
115.Tom Berezich 71 M 2:28:23
Relay Results
1.Team Ruxin 1:21:36
2.Intensity Won 1:21:38
3.Lama Lords Of Science 1:23:07
4.Team Defeat Als 1:25:37
5.Klu Elite 1:26:19
6.Cedar Bike & Paddle 1:27:06
7.Lucky Thirteen 1:28:49
8.Kenyan Connection 1:29:13
9.Intensity Too 1:29:59
10.Team Ckal 1:30:48
11.The Old Man And The Son 1:30:49
12.I Love Lamp 1:32:21
13.Team Djrp 1:32:52
14.TeamAwesome 1:33:16
15.The Valedrinktorians 1:34:01
16.Shoes On Fire 1:35:21
17.Team Swaganaugh 1:38:55
18.Wednesday Runners 1:40:35
19.Moms On The Run 1:44:57
20.Team W-B 1:45:02
21.Dream Pink 1:56:25
22.Meet Me Behind The D 1:59:37
23.Team J&a 2:06:42
24.Arc De Triumph 2:09:23
25.Wii Fat 2:15:12
Chaz Ross makes the turn from Public Square on to South Main Street Sunday.
Ryan Andrews takes off for second run of the race after making
the transition from the bike course.
Cheri Blamer leades a group of racers as they enter Hanover
Township on South Main Street.
Jennifer Hetrick crosses the finish line.
Chris Garges was first out of the
transition and on to his bicycle.
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www.timesleader.com TIMES LEADER PAGE 6B MOMDAY, JUNE 17, 2013 S P O R T S
AP PHOTO
Sprint Cup Series driver Greg Biffle celebrates his win in the
NASCAR Quicken Loans 400 at Michigan International Speed-
way on Sunday, June 16 in Brooklyn, Mich.
BROOKLYN, Mich. Greg
Biffle gave Ford a milestone vic-
tory right down the road from
company headquarters.
Biffle raced to his second
straight Sprint Cup win at Mich-
igan International Speedway,
easily holding off Kevin Harvick
after points leader Jimmie John-
son smacked the wall in the final
laps Sunday. It was the 1,000th
victory for Ford Motor Company
across NASCARs three national
series Cup, Nationwide and
Truck.
What a great moment this
is, said Jamie Allison, director
of Ford Racing. We couldnt be
prouder to have this moment
come here today at Michigan
in front of so many of our Ford
friends. What a great race and a
great day for Ford.
It was Biffles first win since
he overtook Johnson to win at
MIS in August. Johnsons engine
faltered with six laps left in that
race. This time, he was about a
second behind Biffle with three
laps to go but a tire give way,
and he dropped all the way to
28th.
I dont want to see anybody
wreck, Biffle said. It makes you
feel good when you push the guy
over the edge. He made a mis-
take, and thats what makes you
feel good. You outsmarted him,
or you beat him at his game.
Harvick was second, 3 sec-
onds behind Biffle. Martin Truex
Jr. was next, followed by Kyle
Busch and Tony Stewart.
Johnson wasnt the only big
name who ran into trouble. Jeff
Gordon was out of contention
almost immediately when he hit
a spinning Bobby Labonte less
than 10 laps into the 200-lap,
400-mile race. Gordon finished
39th, one spot behind Kasey
Kahne, who led at the halfway
point but appeared to blow a tire
and went sliding into the wall.
Kahnes car caught fire, but he
was able to climb out quickly.
Dale Earnhardt Jr., who won
at MIS last June, finished 37th
Sunday. He led for 34 laps, but
his engine acted up about two-
thirds of the way through the
race. There were eight cautions
for 38 laps.
Biffle cruised to the finish
in his No. 16 Ford. He finished
second to Johnson the previous
weekend at Pocono, but this
time there was nobody left to
challenge him at the end.
It was Fords third Cup victory
of the year Carl Edwards and
David Ragan won at Phoenix and
Talladega. Sunday was Ford Mo-
tor Companys 110th birthday.
There have been a lot of great
teams and a lot of great drivers,
a lot of great engine builders
that have contributed to Fords
success, Roush Fenway Racing
owner Jack Roush said. Im just
proud and honored to be part of
that.
This was the second Cup win
of the year for Roush Fenway.
Its been an emotional week
for the racing community after
the death of driver Jason Lef-
fler on Wednesday at a dirt-track
race in New Jersey. Biffle was
quick to acknowledge Leffler
while he celebrated his Fathers
Day victory.
We are thinking about little
Charlie Leffler that doesnt have
a father today, he said.
Biffle earned his 19th career
victory and boosted his chances
to reach the Chase for the Sprint
Cup, moving from10th to eighth
in the standings. Biffle finished
in the top 10 for the 13th time in
21 races at MIS, which is about
60 miles from Ford headquarters
in Dearborn.
Edwards finished eighth. Kurt
Busch qualified second but went
into an early spin and finished
35th.
Johnson still has a comfort-
able lead in standings, although
Edwards closed the gap at the
top from 51 points to 31. John-
son had a chance at his fourth
victory of the year before scrap-
ing the wall late.
Biffle holds on to win again at Michigan
A U T O R A C I N G
By NOAH TRISTER
AP Sports Writer
The Northeastern Pennsylvania Philharmonic held the fun-
draiser Season Finale Tapas Brunch June 9 at Ruths Chris
Steak House in Plains Township. Lizzy Kuna of Pittston,
left, and Mina Hailstone of Forty Fort were there.
Philharmonic SeaSon
Finale TaPaS Brunch
BILL TARUTIS phoToS/FoR ThE TIMES LEADER
Alexis Kwon of Dallas, left, and Catherine and John Shafer
of Kingston
Click
THE TIMES LEADER MONDAY, JUNE 17, 2013
SECTI ON C
timesleader.com
Ben Minnich and Maggie Murphy, both of Bethlehem
Apprentice conductor Michelle Merrill and Steve Merrill,
both of Jacksonville, Fla.
Marita and Dr. Sal Lawrence of Roaring Brook
The Volunteers in Medicine fundraiser, Music, Memories and
Medicine Gala Event, was held Friday at The Lands at Hillside
Farms. Katie and Gary Lambert of Wyoming were there.
VolunTeerS in medicineS
muSic, memorieS Gala
BILL TARUTIS phoToS/FoR ThE TIMES LEADER
Kathleen Hirthler of Shavertown, left, Alyssa Golden of Moun-
tain Top, and Kelly Ranieli of Plains Township
Liz Brogna of Lain, left, and Marie Panzitta of Wilkes-Barre
Irene Nardone of Shavertown, left, and Joey and Judy Shaver
of Harveys Lake
Joanne and Carlo Santarelli of Dallas
The Opening of Georgiana Cray Bart and students art show
was held Saturday at the LCCC Student Center, Schulman
Gallery. Sharon and Aubrey Cox of Hazleton were there.
GeorGiana cray BarT
and STudenTS exhiBiT
BILL TARUTIS phoToS/FoR ThE TIMES LEADER
Jean Miller of Forty Fort, left, and Georgiana Cray Bart of
Wilkes-Barre
Julia Priest, left, Jim Rhodes, and Tara Priest-Rhodes, all of
Swoyersville
Dolores and Harry Grozio of Hanover Township
Kim and Jim Richmond of Hanover Township
Editors note: View a list
of Volunteer Opportunities at
www.timesleader.com by click-
ing Community News under
the People tab. To have your
group listed, visit the United
Way of Wyoming Valleys volun-
teer page at www.unitedwaywb.
org. For more information, con-
tact Kathy Sweetra at 970-7250
or ksweetra@civitasmedia.com.
LUZERNE: Knights of Co-
lumbus Assembly 1928 is hold-
ing election of ofcers at 7:30
p.m. on June 26 at the Knights
of Columbus Hall, 54 Parry
Street. Every fourth-degree
member is welcome and any
member interested in running
for an ofce must attend or
send in a letter of intent.
MOOSIC: Northeastern Penn-
sylvania Boy Scout Council
recently held Great Medicine
XXI, a National Youth Lead-
ership Training Conference
developed by Boys Scouts of
America. Scouts throughout
Northeast Pennsylvania at-
tended the event held at Goose
Pond Scout Reservation, Ham-
lin, on April 26-28 and May 3-5.
Thirty-two youths, ages
14-17, graduated from the
program. Local graduates were
Nick Hannon, Ashley, Hanover
Township Troop T-166; Tyler
Sepcoski, Bear Creek Town-
ship, Avoca Troop C-2025; and
Joshua Laskowski, Plymouth,
Plains Township Troop T-100.
The intense two-weekend
program teaches boys and girls
the elements of leadership.
Each youth must be recom-
mended by his Crew Advisor
or Troop Scoutmaster in order
to participate in the program.
Youths must already hold a
leadership position with their
troop or venturing crew and
must have completed pre-requi-
site leadership training.
PITTSTON: Tobyhanna
Army Depot retirees will meet
at 8 a.m. on Wednesday at the
Perkins Restaurant and Bakery,
Route 315. All depot retirees
and current employees are
welcome to attend. For more
information contact Bernie
Petrasek at 287-9093, 239-1682
or bjpetra@juno.com.
WYOMING: Wyoming Memo-
rial High School Class of 1960
will meet for lunch at 1 p.m.
on Tuesday at Bo Brothers. All
class members and guests are
invited. Contact wmhs1960@
yahoo.com or Diane at 570-388-
6600 with any questions or to
respond.
DALLAS: The NEPA Coast
Guard Veterans Association will
meet at 6:30 p.m. on Wednes-
day at the Dallas American
Legion Post on the Dallas
highway. Any Coast Guard
veteran or Coast Guard Reserve
interested in more information
is welcome to attend the meet-
ing or contact Neil Morrison at
288-6817.
MOUNTAIN TOP: The Amer-
ican Legion Mountain Post
781 is hosting the District 12
meeting at 2 p.m. on Sunday.
Venture Crew 461 will receive
an award for the Pennsylvania
Outstanding Crew of the Year.
All members are invited.
The post will hold its month-
ly meeting at 7:30 p.m. on July
8. All members are encouraged
to attend.
For more information, call
John Columbo at 570-678-7105.
NANTICOKE: The West Side
Auxiliary will meet at 6 p.m. on
Wednesday at the club house.
Rita Swain is the hostess.
SCRANTON: Timmys Town
Center, an interactive childrens
museum located in the Mall
at Steamtown, recently an-
nounced the launch of Blue Star
Museums 2013, a collaboration
with the National Endowment
for the Arts, Blue Star Families,
the Department of Defense,
and more than 1,800 museums
across America to offer free
admission to all active military
personnel and their families
from Memorial Day through
Labor Day 2013.
Leadership support for the
Blue Star Museums Initiative
has been provided by MetLife
Foundation through Blue Star
Families. This is the fourth
year that Timmys Town Center
is participating. To view the
complete list of participating
museums, please visit http://
arts.gov/bluestarmusems.
For more information about
Timmys Town Center, includ-
ing hours and exhibits, call
570-341-1511 or visit www.
timmystowncenter.org
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Tues, Thur, Fri, Sat 10-5, Sun 11-5
288-9187
For Directions agmap.psu.edu/businesses/6461
or
259 Wyoming Ave., Wyoming
Tues., Wed., Thurs. 9 AM - 5:30 PM Fri 9 AM - 6 PM SAT. 10 AM - 3 PM
693-5910
Diamonds
Wedding Bands
Stone Remounting
W
atch Bands
& Batteries
Gold & Silver Jewelry
Complete Jewelry Repairs (Done on Premises)
S
in
ce
1
9
8
9
www.timesleader.com TIMES LEADER PAGE 2C MONDAY, JUNE 17, 2013 C O M M U N I T Y N E W S
News for VeteraNs IN BrIef
VoluNteer
opportuNItIes
Brownie Troop 32647, Dallas, recently held its bridging ceremony at the Dallas Elementary School. The troop bridged to the
next level of Girl Scouts, Juniors. The troop consists of 17 scouts, most of whom have been together since their rst year of Girl
Scouts at the Daisy level. New Junior members, from left, rst row, are Jessica Allen, Maggie Ropietski, Madison Carlsson, Mor-
gan Sakulich, Emily Williams, Lauren Butwin, Ryan Costello and Morgan Williams. Second row: Cara Pocono; Alyssa Pritchard;
Elena Berti; Nadia Evanosky; Jordan Banks; Chloe Zondlo; Hannah Blazure; Shani Williams troop leader; and Emma Brown. Third
row: Marigrace Huntington
8
2
1
3
5
4
Best Family Value this Summer!
Tues. June 18
to
Sun. June 23
Located just off Route
315 Pittston Township,
1 mile from I-81 & I-476.
A Pennsylvania Fair Showcasing Agriculture, Horticulture, Home
Gardening, Home Arts, Entertainment, Food, Fun and More!
PAY ONE PRICE Only $10
Age 2 & under FREE Receive with Admission:
Unlimited FREE Rides, FREE Parking,
FREE Concerts, FREE Entertainment, and
FREE Motor Sports Shows
Daily Shows
Over 25 Rides by
Reithoffer Shows
America's Most Spectacular Carnival Midway
Buffo the Clown Kountry K-9 Show
Exotic Animal Zoo Petting Zoo
Ron Diamond,Hypnotist & Magician
Educational Segments
Community Group Shows
And Much More!
MOTOR SPORTS
Thu. 6/20- MONSTERTRUCKS!
Fri. 6/21- ChampionshipDoubleFigure8
Racing&Compact Car DemolitionDerby
Sat. 6/22- Full SizeCar Demolition
DerbyChampionships
Concerts
Tues. Original Music Showcase
Wed. Cast of Beatlemania
Thurs. Shawn Klush Elvis Tribute
Fri. Jam Stampede
Sat. George Wesley Band
Sun. Shawn Klush Elvis Tribute
HOURS:
Tues thru Thurs, 6/18-6/20
5 pm
Fri, 6/21, Group & Family Day
9 am
Sat and Sun, 6/22 & 6/23
1 pm
Educate, Celebrate &
Have Fun!
Friday, June 21
Fairgrounds open 9:00 am.
Many morning & afternoon
educational and entertainment
activities for kids and early teens.
PLUS, unlimited FREE rides.
Group & Family Day
Saturday & Sunday Special 1 to 4 pm Only $7 Good to Closing
Custom Homes
Additions Remodeling
Roong Siding
Interior Damage
Fire, Water and Storm
Restoraton
We Will Work With Your
Insurance Company!
DOMBROSKI BUILDERS, LLC
Prompt Reliable Professional
570-406-5128 / 570-406-9682
Over 26 Years Experience
PA#088686 Fully Insured
WASHERS PRICE ON TUES & WED
20 LB., 40 LB., & 55 LB. WASHERS
OPEN 24 HOURS 7 DAYS A WEEK!
355 S. MAIN ST. WILKES-BARRE 570-371-3861
ON THE CORNER OF ACADEMY & SOUTH MAIN
Over 75 brand new machines including large capacity washers and dryers perfect
for bed spreads, comforters & sleeping bags p g g
Continental Super-Load Washers ntinental Super Load Washer
Wash, Dry & Fold Service Wash, Dry & Fold Service W
Dry Cleaning Drop-Off & Pick-Up Service y g p
5 Flat ScreenTVs
Clean Bathrooms
Weekly Prizes! y
Fully Attended y
Free Coffee &Wi-Fi
, comf
CC
monday, june 17, 2013 Page 3C TImeS LeadeR www.timesleader.com C O M M U N I T Y N E W S
Photographs and information must
be received two full weeks before
your childs birthday.
Your information must be typed
or computer-generated. Include
your name and your relationship
to the child (parent, grandparent
or legal guardians only, please),
your childs name, age and birth-
day, parents, grandparents and
great-grandparents names and
their towns of residence, any sib-
lings and their ages. Dont forget to
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number. Without one, we may be
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nouncement on time.
We cannot guarantee return of
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do not return community-news
or publicity photos. Please do not
submit precious or original profes-
sional photographs that require
return because such photos can
become damaged, or occasionally
lost, in the production process.
Email your birthday announce-
ment to people@timesleader.com
or send it to: Times Leader Birth-
days, 15 North Main St., Wilkes-
Barre, PA 18711-0250. You also may
use the form under the People tab
on www.timesleader.com.
Childrens birthdays (ages 1-16) will be published free of charge
GUIDELINES
HAPPY BIRTHDAY!
Larissa B. Derr
Grace V. Sims
Larissa Beth Derr, daughter of
Erik and Jenny Derr, Swoyersville,
celebrated her fourth birthday
June 14. Larissa is a granddaugh-
ter of John and Susan Frohman,
Swoyersville, and Brent and
Gretchen Sevison, Wilkes Barre.
Grace Vivian Sims, daughter
of Jenn and Dave Sims, Collin-
gswood, N.J., is celebrating her
second birthday today, June 17.
Gracie is a granddaughter of Pat
and Tom Hite, Dallas; Eleanor
Sims, Westmont, N.J.; and the
late John Sims.
Benjamin
Zboray, son
of Brian and
Kim Zboray,
West Hazle-
ton, recently
received The
Rotary Club
of Hazletons
annual scholarship award
worth $4,000. Zboray is a 2013
graduate of Hazleton Area
High School. He was president
of the mock trial/speech and
debate team, vice president
of the Pennsylvania Junior
Academy of Science, member
of the National Honor Society
and FBLA, 2012-2013 secretary
of the trap and skeet team and
a member of the class of 2013
executive council. He teaches
an adult learner ESL citizen-
ship course with the Greater
Hazleton Metro Ministries.
He is a member of the Serento
Gardens Student Board and a
graduate of the Hazleton Area
Junior Leadership Program.
Zboray will continue his educa-
tion at Gettysburg College,
where he will major in political
science. He hopes to enter law
school after college. The Rotary
Club of Hazleton scholarship
is awarded to a senior residing
in the geographic boundaries
of the Hazleton area who has
shown exemplary volunteerism,
academic achievements and
community involvement. Zbo-
ray will be the guest speaker at
the Rotarys weekly meeting on
July 24.
Jessica Jennings, a recent
graduate of Crestwood High
School, has earned the Girl
Scouts highest honor, the Gold
Award. Jennings recently com-
pleted her Gold Award project,
Rescue Me Adoption Fair.
The project, developed and ex-
ecuted by Jennings, focused on
the serious issue of animal over-
population in animal shelters.
Jennings taught people about
pet shelter overpopulation by
hosting informational booths,
distributing informational
materials and hosting meet-
and-greet events with a dog
named Diego. Jennings, along
with 80 other Gold Award re-
cipients from across central and
northeastern Pennsylvania, will
be honored at a special Gold
Award luncheon on Saturday in
Hershey. Jennings, a member of
Troop 33968, is also a member
of the 2012 state champion var-
sity eld hockey team, captain
of the varsity track and eld
team and a member of the Lit-
erary Magazine at Crestwood
High School. Jennings will
attend Misericordia University
in the fall. She plans to major in
speech-language pathology.
NAmeS AND FAceS
Zboray
Wilkes-Barre Rotary donates to Osterhout Free Library
The Rotary Club of Wilkes-Barre recently donated $5,900 to the
Osterhout Free Library. The funds were raised from the 29th annual
George Ralston Golf Classic held April 26 at Mill Race Golf Course,
Benton. The Rotarys donation will benet childrens programs held
throughout the year at the Osterhout Library and its three branches.
The co-chairs for the golf classic were Robert Lawrence and Kim Car-
done and the honorary chairperson was Drew Speier, WBRE-TV anchor.
The Rotary Club recently received a plaque that will be permanently
displayed in the Osterhout Librarys Ken L. Pollock Childrens Wing in
appreciation of a decade of generosity. The club has donated $45,970
to help fund childrens programs since 2003. At the plaque presenta-
tion, from left: John Stachacz, president, Rotary Club of Wilkes-Barre;
Elaine Rash, youth services coordinator, Osterhout Free Library; and
Christopher Kelly, development director, Osterhout Free Library.
Wine and Dine Festival planned for June 29
The Dallas Rotary Club, in association with the Dallas Area Fall Fair, Inc., is sponsoring a Wine and Dine Festival for charity from 11 a.m. to 6
p.m. on June 29 at the Luzerne County Fairgrounds, Route 118, Dallas. The event will feature tastings of the nest wines and specialty foods
from the Back Mountain and Endless Mountains areas. A variety of goods will also be on sale by area crafters and there will be live musical en-
tertainment all day long. Tickets are $15 in advance and $25 at the door. Designated drivers will be admitted for a reduced fee of $5 and will be
given special identication. Food or craft vendors interested in participating should call Melissa at 852-9591 or saxonm5@hotmail.com. Informa-
tion is also available at www.DallasRotaryWineandDine.com or on Facebook. Tickets are available at the following merchants, J&J Deli, Dallas;
Maiolatesi Wine Cellars, Scott Township; Nimble Hill Vineyard and Winery, Tunkhannock; Pierce Drugs, Kingston; The Gluten Free Basket, Dallas;
Valentines Fine Jewelry, Dallas; and OLive, Sweet Valley. At a sign for the event, from left, kneeling, are Todd Buckley, Jason Jolley, Paul Saxon
and Ken Chapple. Second row: Melissa Saxon, Art Peoples, Kerry Freeman, Grace Reishus, Jon Pomrinke and Randy Loyd.
Dallas Brownie Troops hold bridging ceremony
Ofcers receive new bulletproof vests
Three law enforcement ofcers recently received new bulletproof vests on behalf
of the Adopt A Cop Program created by Fallen Ofcers Remembered. The funding
was raised during an indoor cycle fundraiser hosted by Corinne Farrell at Vive Health
and Fitness, Kingston. Kranson Uniform was instrumental with the purchase and
tting of the body armor. Recipients were Ofcer Steven Price, Roaring Brook Town-
ship, Lackawanna County; Ofcer Susan Laguzzi, Avoca, Luzerne County; and Ofcer
Robert Stevens, Moscow, Lackawanna County. For more information, contact Jaclyn at
570-760-9034 or faloffrem@aol.com. From left: Ryan Kranson, vice president, Kranson
Uniform; Laguzzi; and Jaclyn Mosley, Fallen Ofcers Remembered.
www.timesleader.com TIMES LEADER PAGE 4C MONDAY, JUNE 17, 2013 T E L E V I S I O N
6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30
0
News World
News
News-
watch 16
Inside
Edition
The Bachelorette The men compete for
Desirees affection. (N) (CC) (TV14)
(:01) Mistresses (N)
(CC) (TV14)
News Jimmy
Kimmel

Sanford &
Son
Sanford &
Son
Maude
(TVPG)
Maude
(TVPG)
The
Nanny
The
Nanny
Be a Mil-
lionaire
Seinfeld
(TVPG)
News-
watch 16
Inside
Edition
News Diffrent
Strokes
6
News Evening
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How I Met Mike &
Molly
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Mike &
Molly
Hawaii Five-0
Kekoa (CC) (TV14)
News at
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Letterman
<
Eyewitn
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Wheel of
Fortune
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The Voice Live Final Performances The
remaining artists perform. (TVPG)
(:01) The Winner Is...
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Eyewitn
News
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Access
Hollywd
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Guy (CC)
Simpsons Family
Guy (CC)
Oh Sit! Luciana (N)
(CC) (TVPG)
The Carrie Diaries
(CC) (TV14)
The Office
(CC)
30 Rock
(TV14)
30 Rock
(TV14)
That 70s
Show
n
The Rifle-
man
The Rifle-
man
M*A*S*H
(TVPG)
M*A*S*H
(TVPG)
Bewitched Dream of
Jeannie
Mary T.
Moore
Dick Van
Dyke
The Odd
Couple
Hogans
Heroes
Night Gal-
lery
Perry
Mason
L
PBS NewsHour (N)
(CC)
degrees
that wk
degrees
that wk
Doo Wop Discoveries (My Music) R&B and
pop vocal groups. (CC) (TVG)
Independent Lens
(N) (TVPG)
Nightly
Business
Charlie
Rose (N)
U
The Peoples Court
(CC) (TVPG)
The Doctors (CC)
(TVPG)
Law & Order: Special
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Law & Order: Special
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Law & Order: Crimi-
nal Intent (TV14)
Cosby
Show
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Dad
X
Two and
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Big Bang
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Raising
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Anger News
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10:30
How I Met The Office
(CC)

Criminal Minds (CC)


(TVPG)
Criminal Minds (CC)
(TVPG)
Criminal Minds No
Way Out (TV14)
Criminal Minds (CC)
(TV14)
Criminal Minds (CC)
(TV14)
Criminal Minds (CC)
(TVPG)
#
News Evening
News
Entertain-
ment
omg!
Insider (N)
How I Met Mike &
Molly
2 Broke
Girls
Mike &
Molly
Hawaii Five-0
Kekoa (CC) (TV14)
News Letterman
)
Dish
Nation (N)
How I Met How I Met King of
Queens
Law & Order: Special
Victims Unit
Law & Order: Special
Victims Unit
The 10
News
King of
Queens
(:05) Dish
Nation
Love-Ray-
mond
+
Engage-
ment
Family
Guy (CC)
Two and
Half Men
Two and
Half Men
Oh Sit! Luciana (N)
(CC) (TVPG)
The Carrie Diaries
(CC) (TV14)
PIX News at Ten (N)
(CC)
Seinfeld
(TVPG)
Seinfeld
(TVG)
1
Two and
Half Men
Two and
Half Men
Big Bang
Theory
Big Bang
Theory
Law & Order: Special
Victims Unit
Law & Order: Special
Victims Unit
Action
News
Friends
(TVPG)
30 Rock
(TV14)
30 Rock
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AMC
Kingdom of Heaven (5:00) (R, 05)
Orlando Bloom, Eva Green. (CC)
King Kong (PG-13, 05) Naomi Watts, Jack Black, Adrien Brody. A beauty
tames a savage beast. (CC)
AP
Gator Boys (TVPG) Call-Wild-
man
Call-Wild-
man
Call of
Wildman
Call-Wild-
man
Off the
Hook
Off the
Hook
Top Hooker River
Rumble (TVPG)
Call of
Wildman
Call-Wild-
man
ARTS
Criminal Minds (CC)
(TV14)
Criminal Minds (CC)
(TV14)
Criminal Minds (CC)
(TV14)
The Glades Magic
Longworth (TV14)
Longmire (N) (CC)
(TV14)
(:01) Longmire (CC)
(TV14)
CNBC
Mad Money (N) The Kudlow Report
(N)
The Car Chasers Mob Money: Mur-
ders and
American Greed Fast Money
CNN
(5:00) The Situation
Room (N)
Erin Burnett Out-
Front (N)
Anderson Cooper
360 (N) (CC)
Piers Morgan Live
(N) (Live)
Anderson Cooper
360 (CC)
Erin Burnett OutFront
COM
Always
Sunny
(:27)
Tosh.0
Colbert
Report
Daily
Show
Key &
Peele
(:29)
Futurama
South
Park
South
Park
South
Park
South
Park
Daily
Show
Colbert
Report
CS
SportsNite
(N)
Phillies
Pregame
MLB Baseball Washington Nationals at Philadelphia Phillies.
From Citizens Bank Park in Philadelphia. (Live)
SportsNite (N) (Live)
(CC)
Phillies
Club.
Net
Impact
CTV
Faith &
Culture
Pope Pius
XII
Daily
Mass
The Holy
Rosary
The Journey Home
Alexander Deriev
Evangeli-
zation
Solemn
Novena
World Over Live Remem-
bering
Women of
Grace
DSC
Fast N Loud (CC)
(TV14)
Fast N Loud (CC)
(TV14)
Fast N Loud:
Revved Up (TV14)
Fast N Loud (N)
(CC) (TV14)
Street Outlaws (N)
(CC) (TV14)
Fast N Loud (CC)
(TV14)
DSY
Good
Luck
Charlie
Jessie
(CC)
(TVG)
Dog With
a Blog
(TVG)
Good
Luck
Charlie
Shake It
Up! (CC)
(TVG)
Austin &
Ally (CC)
(TVG)
Hannah Montana: The Movie (G, 09)
Miley Cyrus, Billy Ray Cyrus, Emily
Osment. (CC)
Dog With
a Blog
(TVG)
Austin &
Ally (CC)
(TVG)
E!
Keeping Up With the
Kardashians
E! News (N) Wanted
Life
Bring It On: All or Nothing (PG-13,
06) Hayden Panettiere, Rihanna.
Chelsea
Lately
E! News
ESPN
SportsCenter (N)
(Live) (CC)
MLB Baseball Chicago Cubs at St. Louis Cardinals. From Busch
Stadium in St. Louis. (N Subject to Blackout) (CC)
Baseball Tonight (N)
(Live) (CC)
SportsCenter (N)
(Live) (CC)
ESPN2
SportsNation (N)
(CC)
NFL Live (N) (CC) College Baseball NCAA World Series, Game 6: Teams TBA.
From Omaha, Neb. (N) (Live) (CC)
SportsNation (CC)
FAM
The Fosters Conse-
quently (TV14)
Switched at Birth
(CC) (TV14)
Switched at Birth (N)
(CC) (TV14)
The Fosters Hostile
Acts (N) (TV14)
Twisted Pilot (CC)
(TV14)
The 700 Club (CC)
(TVG)
FOOD
Diners,
Drive
Diners,
Drive
Diners,
Drive
Diners,
Drive
Diners,
Drive
Diners,
Drive
Diners,
Drive
Diners,
Drive
Diners,
Drive
Diners,
Drive
Diners,
Drive
Diners,
Drive
FNC
Special Report With
Bret Baier (N)
FOX Report With
Shepard Smith
The OReilly Factor
(N) (CC)
Hannity (N) On Record, Greta
Van Susteren
The OReilly Factor
(CC)
HALL
Little House on the
Prairie (CC) (TVG)
Little House on the
Prairie (CC) (TVPG)
Little House on the
Prairie (CC) (TVG)
Frasier
(TVPG)
Frasier
(TVPG)
Frasier
(TVPG)
Frasier
(TVPG)
Frasier
(TVPG)
Frasier
(TVPG)
HIST
American Pickers
(CC) (TVPG)
American Pickers
(CC) (TVPG)
Pawn
Stars
Pawn
Stars
American Pickers (N)
(CC) (TVPG)
Pawn
Stars
Pawn
Stars
Restora-
tion
Restora-
tion
H&G
Property
Virgins
Property
Virgins
Love It or List It (CC)
(TVG)
Love It or List It (CC)
(TVG)
Love It or List It (N)
(CC) (TVG)
House
Hunters
Hunters
Intl
Love It or List It (CC)
(TVG)
LIF
No Reservations (PG, 07) Catherine
Zeta-Jones, Aaron Eckhart. (CC)
Miss Congeniality 2: Armed and Fab-
ulous (PG-13, 05) Sandra Bullock.
The Nanny Diaries (PG-13, 07)
Scarlett Johansson, Laura Linney. (CC)
MTV
Mind
Right
Mind
Right
Ridicu-
lousness
Ridicu-
lousness
Ridicu-
lousness
Ridicu-
lousness
Teen Wolf A possible
clue. (TV14)
Teen Wolf Fireflies
(N) (TV14)
Hooked,
Catfish
Teen Wolf
NICK
Sponge-
Bob
Sam &
Cat (CC)
Victorious Figure It
Out (N)
Full
House
Full
House
Full
House
Full
House
The
Nanny
The
Nanny
Friends
(TVPG)
(:33)
Friends
OVAT
The Adventures of
Baron Munchausen
Freddie Mercury:
The Untold Story
Viewers
Choice
Viewers
Choice
Viewers
Choice
Viewers
Choice
Viewers
Choice
Viewers
Choice
Viewers
Choice
Viewers
Choice
SPD
NASCAR Race
Hub (N)
Pass Time Pass Time Pinks - All Out
(TVPG)
Faster
Than
Faster
Than
Dumbest
Stuff
Dumbest
Stuff
Pinks - All Out
(TVPG)
SPIKE
(5:52) Bar Rescue
(TVPG)
(6:58) Bar Rescue
(TVPG)
(:05) Bar Rescue
(TVPG)
(:11) Bar Rescue The Bamboo
Beach Tiki Bar. (TVPG)
(:18) Bar Rescue
(TVPG)
(:24) Bar
Rescue
SYFY
The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince
Caspian (5:00) (PG, 08) (CC)
Defiance (CC) (TV14) Defiance (N) (CC)
(TV14)
Warehouse 13 (N)
(CC) (TV14)
Defiance (CC) (TV14)
TBS
King of
Queens
Seinfeld
(TVPG)
Seinfeld
(TVPG)
Seinfeld
(TVPG)
Family
Guy (CC)
Family
Guy (CC)
Family
Guy (CC)
Family
Guy (CC)
Deon
Coles
Family
Guy (CC)
Conan Seth Rogen;
Earthquake. (TV14)
TCM
Sunrise at Campobello (5:30) (60)
Ralph Bellamy. (CC)
Scaramouche (52) Stewart
Granger, Eleanor Parker, Janet Leigh.
Interrupted Melody (55) Eleanor
Parker, Glenn Ford. (CC)
TLC
Toddlers & Tiaras
(CC) (TVPG)
Best Funeral Ever
(CC) (TVPG)
Cake
Boss
Cake
Boss
Cake
Boss (N)
Cake
Boss (N)
Honey Do
(N)
Honey Do
(N)
Cake
Boss
Cake
Boss
TNT
Castle Nanny
McDead (TVPG)
Castle (CC) (TVPG) Major Crimes Final
Cut (TV14)
Major Crimes (N)
(CC) (TV14)
King & Maxwell (N)
(CC) (TV14)
(:02) Major Crimes
(CC) (TV14)
TOON
Advent.
Time
Regular
Show
Regular
Show
Advent.
Time
Regular
Show (N)
MAD (N)
(TVPG)
King of
the Hill
King of
the Hill
American
Dad
American
Dad
Family
Guy (CC)
Family
Guy (CC)
TRVL
Bizarre Foods With
Andrew Zimmern
Man v.
Food
Man v.
Food
Man v.
Food
Man v.
Food
Burger
Land (N)
Burger
Land
Bizarre Foods Amer-
ica (TVPG)
Bizarre Foods Amer-
ica (TVPG)
TVLD
(5:48)
M*A*S*H
(:24)
M*A*S*H
Friends
(TVPG)
Friends
(TVPG)
Friends
(TVPG)
Friends
(TVPG)
Friends
(TVPG)
Friends
(TV14)
Friends
(TV14)
Friends
(TV14)
(:05)
Friends
(:36)
Friends
USA
NCIS Forced Entry
(CC) (TVPG)
NCIS Chained (CC)
(TVPG)
WWE Monday Night RAW Will Triple H finally be allowed to com-
pete? (N) (Live) (CC)
(:05) Graceland (CC)
(TV14)
VH-1
(5:51) Behind the
Music (CC) (TVPG)
Love & Hip Hop:
Atlanta (TV14)
Love & Hip Hop:
Atlanta (N) (TV14)
Hit the Floor
Rebound (N) (TV14)
Love & Hip Hop:
Atlanta (TV14)
Hit the Floor
Rebound (TV14)
WE
Charmed Black as
Cole (CC) (TVPG)
Charmed Muse to
My Ears (TVPG)
CSI: Miami Miami
Confidential (TV14)
CSI: Miami Raising
Caine (TV14)
CSI: Miami (CC)
(TV14)
CSI: Miami Ambush
(CC) (TV14)
WGN-A
Americas Funniest
Home Videos (CC)
Americas Funniest
Home Videos (CC)
Americas Funniest
Home Videos (CC)
Americas Funniest
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WGN News at Nine
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Americas Funniest
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WYLN
Lets Talk Legislative
Rpt.
Topic A: Live at Five Legally
Speaking
Storm
Politics
Crime
Strike (N)
Physical
Therapy
Late Edition Classified Beaten
Path
YOUTO
Kipkay TV Kipkay TV Kipkay TV Kipkay TV Digivan-
gelist
Digivan-
gelist
EP Daily
(TVG)
Adrena-
lina
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Magic Mike (R, 12) Channing
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Love, Marilyn (12) Premiere. Letters,
diaries and rare footage of actress Marilyn
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True Blood A group
flees the Authority
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thugs in an L.A. high-rise. (CC)
Real Time With Bill
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Fam-
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The Debt (R, 10)
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Mr. & Mrs. Smith (PG-13, 05) Brad
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Sexy Wives Sinsa-
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Boogeyman (5:30)
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Magic City (CC)
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The Ladykillers (R, 04)
Tom Hanks, Irma P. Hall. (CC)
Magic
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TV TALK TODAY
6 a.m. CNN New Day The latest
news, weather and high interest
stories. (N)
6 a.m. FNC FOX and Friends (N)
7 a.m. 3, 22 CBS This Morning
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7 a.m. 28 Today TV personality
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8 a.m. 56 Better (N) (TVPG)
9 a.m. 16 Live! With Kelly and
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9 a.m. 28 Today Popular Internet
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9 a.m. 53 Dr. Phil A mother tells
what she recently found in her
teen sons bedroom that shocked
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(N)
10 a.m. 16 The Ellen DeGeneres
Show Entertainer Madonna.
(TVG)
10 a.m. 28 Today Heidi Klum;
damage control; affordable surf
and turf. (N)
10 a.m. 53 The Steve Wilkos
Show Men accused of molesting
their daughters. (TV14)
11 a.m. 56 Maury Cedric wants
a DNA test; Dooger denies being
the father. (N) (TV14)
11 a.m. 16 The View Zachary
Quinto; Amanda Knox and her
mother, Edda Mellas. (N) (TV14)
11 a.m. 53 The Wendy Williams
Show Comic Sherri Shepherd;
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accompany all children under 17 to an R Rated feature
*No passes accepted to these features.
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***3D features are the regular admission price plus a surcharge of $2.50
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First Matinee $5.50 for all features (plus surcharge for 3D features).
Man Of Steel in RealD 3D/DBox
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**Man Of Steel in RealD 3D - PG13
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*Man Of Steel 2D - PG13 - (12:00), (1:45),
(3:40), (5:00), 7:00, 8:30, 10:00
*This Is The End - R - 110 min - (1:30),
(4:00), 7:15, 9:40
The Internship PG13 125 min
(1:00), (1:45), (3:35), (4:20), 7:00, 7:40, 9:35,
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Now You See Me PG13 120 min
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After Earth PG13 105 min
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Fast & Furious 6 PG13 135 min
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AFTEREARTH(DIGITAL) (PG-13)
10:35AM1:00PM3:55PM6:25PM9:25PM
BEFOREMIDNIGHT (DIGITAL) (R)
10:40AM1:15PM4:25PM7:20PM
9:55PMNEWMOVIE
EPIC(3D) (PG)
1:30PM7:00PM
EPIC(DIGITAL) (PG)
10:55AM4:15PM9:30PM
FAST&FURIOUS6 (DIGITAL) (PG-13)
1:05PM4:05PM7:05PM10:05PM
GREAT GATSBY, THE(2013) (3D)(PG-13)
(2:20PMNOTONSUN6/16 ORWED
6/19) (9:00PMNOTONWED6/19)
GREAT GATSBY, THE(2013)
(DIGITAL) (PG-13)
(11:10AMNOTONSUN6/16 ORWED
6/19) (5:45PMNOTONWED6/19)
HANGOVERPARTIII, THE(DIGITAL)(R)
12:15PM2:45PM(5:15PM7:45PM
NOTONWED6/19) (10:25PMNOT
ONWED6/19 ORTHURS6/20)
INTERNSHIP, THE(DIGITAL) (PG-13)
10:25AM12:20PM3:05PM4:20PM
5:55PM8:40PM10:10PM
IRONMAN3 (DIGITAL) (PG-13)
1:25PM7:15PM
MANOF STEEL(3D) (PG-13)
11:10AM1:10PM2:30PM4:30PM
5:50PM7:50PM9:10PMNEWMOVIE
MANOF STEEL(DIGITAL) (PG-13)
10:30AM11:50AM1:50PM3:10PM
5:10PM6:30PM8:30PM9:50PM
NEWMOVIE
NOWYOUSEEME(DIGITAL) (PG-13)
11:00AM12:25PM1:45PM3:15PM
4:40PM6:10PM7:30PM9:05PM10:30PM
PURGE, THE(DIGITAL) (R)
10:30AM11:40AM12:40PM1:50PM
3:00PM4:10PM 5:20PM6:35PM7:40PM
8:50PM10:00PM
STARTREKINTODARKNESS(3D) (PG-13)
11:20AM5:30PM
STARTREKINTODARKNESS(DIGITAL)(PG-13)
2:25PM(8:45PMNOTONTHURS. 6/20)
THISISTHEEND(DIGITAL) (R)
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MONDAY, JUNE 17, 2013 PAgE 5C TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com D I V E R S I O N S
UNIVERSAL SUDOKU
MINUTE MAZE
W I T H O M A R S H A R I F & T A N N A H H I R S C H
CRYPTOQUOTE
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B Y M I C H E A L A R G I R I O N & J E F F K N U R E K
JUMBLE
B Y H O L I D A Y M A T H I S
HOROSCOPE
CROSSWORD
PREVIOUS DAYS SOLUTION
HOW TO CONTACT:
Dear Abby: PO Box 69440, Los Ange-
les, CA 90069
For more Sudoku go to www.timesleader.com
O N T H E W E B
Dear Abby: My
husband and I have
five kids, all un-
der 6 years of age.
The youngest are
7-month-old twins.
A family in our
church has offered
to watch them so my husband and I
can go out on a date. We havent been
alone together in a year. We have
no family or friends nearby to offer
respite.
I would like to accept their kind
offer, but two things are holding me
back. First, I dont think they realize
the enormity of the task, and it feels
like we might be imposing.
Second, I dont have anything to
say to my husband. A date would be
awkward and most likely consist of
relations. I like my husband, but
Id rather be left alone. What would
you do?
Frazzled Mom With No Support
Dear Frazzled: Before placing your
small children in the care of others,
invite the family over to see exactly
how much work would be involved
in watching them. Then discuss with
your husband what date night will en-
tail and see if you can agree on what
would be a fun night out.
You definitely need a break, and
some alone time should be something
to look forward to. That it isnt is of
concern to me. Its possible you could
benefit from marriage counseling to
help re-establish a line of verbal com-
munication. And equally important,
because you suspect the evening
might result in relations, make sure
you have birth control to prevent an
accidental pregnancy.
Dear Abby: In this season of gradu-
ations and weddings, I would like
to urge the honorees to send proper
thank-you notes to friends and fam-
ily who give them gifts and money.
Time, money and preparation are
put into these events, and the effect
is spoiled when guests have to con-
tact stores or scrutinize their bank
statements to learn if their gifts
were, indeed, received but simply
not acknowledged.
Thank-yous arent difficult. Some
rules: Rather than text or email,
write a note on paper and mail it with
a stamp via the U.S. mail. If you do,
you will be forever known as that
polite young couple or the young
man/woman who sent the nice note.
Three lines are all that are needed:
Thank you for the . I look for-
ward to using/enjoying it when we
entertain/grill/vacation/walk the
dog, etc. Again, I appreciate your
thoughtfulness. Thats it!
If showing good manners isnt
incentive enough, remember this:
These are the people you will be invit-
ing to weddings, baby showers, and
your own childrens graduations and
weddings in the not-so-distant future.
A little courtesy goes a long way.
Appreciative in Hitchcock, Texas
Dear Appreciative: While letter-
writing may always seem like a chore
to some people, there are occasions
when a written message is the proper
means of communication. Acknowl-
edging the generosity of others is one
of those times. Failure to do so indi-
cates that the persons gesture was of
so little importance that it was not
noticed by the recipient. And frankly,
it also indicates a distinct lack of
manners.
DEAR ABBY
A D V I C E
Mother who is up to her ears in kids just wants time to be left alone
To receive a collection of Abbys most
memorable and most frequently re-
quested poems and essays, send a busi-
ness-sized, self-addressed envelope, plus
check or money order for $3.95 ($4.50 in
Canada) to: Dear Abbys Keepers, P.O.
Box 447, Mount Morris, IL 61054-0447.
(Postage is included.)
ARIES (March 21-April 19). Life has
been so packed full of obliga-
tions lately that you havent had
the time to sit and read, play
basketball, or dance. Take back
the reins on your schedule, and
slow this ride down a bit.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20). Youll
be simplifying things around the
house, and this will make you
feel better about your work, too.
One act of organization leads to
the next, and suddenly youve
tamed the chaos.
GEMINI (May 21-June 21). The
interaction youve been worried
about will come together, and
youll experience a satisfaction
akin to flipping an omelet at just
the right moment.
CANCER (June 22-July 22). Youre
in the mood to veer off the script
at work, and youll meet just the
person who pushes you to do
it, too. Being in the moment will
feel glorious.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). Youre not
afraid to be seen and heard,
which youll prove. Someone has
to speak up, and it may as well
be you. Youre also likely to wear
your noisy shoes and tap proudly
across public tiles.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). You
dont believe in waiting for the
day to start. Youll hit the ground
running. Pack water and snacks
because youre going to need to
keep up your strength.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). Perhaps
you could use a few more com-
mon interests with a dear one.
Some of what you had in com-
mon has dropped off over the
years. What new interest could
you add to take the place?
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). Avoid
social comparison of all kinds,
even the harmless check to
see who is wearing what, living
where or dating whom. You need
all of your concentration focused
on your own goals.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21).
Some studies suggest that own-
ing fewer things leads to greater
happiness. Youll test the theory
by getting rid of unwanted items
for cash or karma points.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19).
Youre likely to get wedged in a
tight spot ethically and/or social-
ly. Remember that dishonesty
is never really the easier route
when you calculate all the stress
and remembering that comes
with telling lies.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18).
Doesnt it make you smile to see
someone nonchalantly wearing
something strange? You could
give that gift to the world today
if you wanted to, or maybe just
give it to someone you love.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). You
still may be experiencing some
anxiety about an upcoming
meeting, but just relax. You will
be well received. It will be as
comfortable as slipping on warm
sandals that have been sitting in
the sun.
TODAYS BIRTHDAY (June 17).
The world will meet more of
your terms because you know
what they are. Relationships will
favorably change in July. Dates,
excursions and shows are part of
the August fun. Youll participate
in a kind of mastermind group in
September. Your lucky numbers
are: 7, 2, 22, 14 and 9.
F U N N I E S MONDAY, JUNE 17, 2013 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
SALLY FORTH
CLASSIC PEANUTS
STONE SOUP
BLONDIE
BEETLE BAILEY
THATABABY
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
GET FUZZY
CLOSE TO HOME
ARGYLE SWEATER
B.C.
PICKLES
PARDON MY PLANET
MARMADUKE HERMAN
DRABBLE
GARFIELD
HAGAR THE HORRIBLE
MOTHER GOOSE & GRIMM
TUNDRA
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com MONDAY, JUNE 17, 2013 PAGE 1D
MARKETPLACE
412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale
412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale
135 Legals/
Public Notices
135 Legals/
Public Notices
135 Legals/
Public Notices
135 Legals/
Public Notices
135 Legals/
Public Notices
INVITATION TO BID
Notice is hereby given that sealed bids will be received by
Luzerne County Community College (LCCC), 1333 South
Prospect Street, Nanticoke, PA 18634 until 12:00 P.M., prevailing
time on June 21, 2013 for the following projects:
1. Building #14 Campus Center Chiller & Pump Replacement
2. #2 and 3 Circuit Breaker Replacement
3. Buildings #4, 8, 10, and 12 Lighting Fixture Replacement
Sealed bids will be opened at the Administration Building #5 Pur-
chasing Departments office (Room 513) at the above mentioned
address and referred to the Board of Directors for final award /
approval. Bidders and other interested parties may attend the
bid opening, which will be held immediately after the receipt of
bids.
Contract documents and drawings may be obtained electroni-
cally through the office of the Engineer, Barry Isett & Associates,
Inc. 100 W. Broad Street, Suite 200, Hazleton, PA 18201 Phone:
570-455-2999 between the hours of 8:00 A.M. and 4:30 P.M.
Primary bidders may secure contract documents for $25.00 per
set, per project, non-refundable, beginning at noon on Friday,
June 7, 2013. The check for the bidding documents should be
made payable to Barry Isett & Associates, Inc. The documents
may be sent hard-copy via Fed-Ex, upon request, with a sup-
plied Fed-Ex account number or receipt of a separate, non-
refundable check in the amount of $25.00 made payable to
Barry Isett & Associates, Inc. for shipping fees.
Bids must be accompanied by a Bid Guaranty which shall not
be less than ten percent (10%) of the amount of the Total Base
Bid as heinafter specified under the Conditions of Bid.
A pre-bid meeting for each project will be held on June 13, 2013
at the following times and locations. All prospective bidders are
encouraged to attend.
1. Campus Center Chiller & Pump Replacement June 13, 2013
at 9:00 AM Building #14
2. Circuit Breaker Replacement June 13, 2013 at 10:00 AM
Building #2
3. Lighting Fixture Replacement June 13, 2013 at 11:00 AM
Building #4
Questions may be submitted in writing via fax (570-454-9979) or
by email to Mr. Timothy Sisock (tsisock@barryisett.com) at the
engineers office on or before June 18, 2013 at 3:00 P.M.
Responses will be provided to all registered plan holders not
later than June 19, 2013 at 3:00 P.M.
Luzerne County Community College reserves the right to waive
any informalities, irregularities, defects, errors or omissions in, or
to reject, any or all proposals or parts thereof.
LEGAL NOTICE
INVITATION FOR BIDS
The Earth Conservancy will receive bids
for the Hanover 9 Phase 2 Areas B, C,
and D Reclamation Projects in Hanover
Township until 12:00 p.m. (local time) on
the 22th day of July, 2013 at the Earth
Conservancy office located at 101 South
Main Street, Ashley, PA 18706. Bids will be
opened and publicly read aloud at their
offices at 12:15 p.m.
CONTRACT DOCUMENTS, including a
PROJECT MANUAL, may be examined and
obtained at Earth Conservancy, 101 South
Main Street, Ashley, PA 18706.
PROJECT MANUAL is in one binding and
drawing set. Bidders may secure a PRO-
JECT MANUAL upon payment of one hun-
dred dollars ($100.00). (Please add
$20.00 for U.S. Mail delivery or $45.00 for
FedEx delivery without a FedEx account.)
All construction work is included in one
Prime Contract.
Checks shall be made payable to Earth
Conservancy, and will not be refunded. A
pre-bid conference will be held at the
offices of Earth Conservancy on July 12th
at 10:00 a.m.
Each BID, when submitted, must be
accompanied by a "Bid Security" which
shall not be less than ten percent (10%) of
the amount of the BID. A Non-Collusion
Affidavit of Prime Bidder (NCAB-1), and
Statement of Bidders Qualifications (BQ-1)
shall also be submitted with the Bid.
Bidders attention is called to the fact that
not less than the minimum wages and
salaries in accordance with the provisions
of the Davis-Bacon Wage Act and con-
tained in the Contract documents, must be
paid throughout the duration of this proj-
ect.
The Labor Standards, Wage Determination
Decision and Anti-Kickback regulations
(29 CFR, Part 3) issued by the Secretary of
Labor are included in the Contract Docu-
ments of this project and govern all work
under the Contract.
Non-discrimination in Employment Bid-
ders on this work will be required to com-
ply with the Presidents Executive Order
11246 and will be required to insure that
employees and applicants for employment
are not discriminated against on the basis
of their race, color, national origin, sex,
religion, age, disability or familial status in
employment or the provisions of services.
The Contractor, in accordance with Exec-
utive Order 11625 and 12138, must utilize
to the greatest extent feasible minority
and/or women owned business concerns
which are located within the municipality,
county or general trade area.
Earth Conservancy is an Equal Employ-
ment Opportunity Employer.
The successful Bidder will be required to
furnish and pay for a satisfactory Perfor-
mance Bond and a Labor and Material
Payment Bond.
The Earth Conservancy reserves the right
to reject any or all bids and to waive infor-
malities in the Bidding.
BIDS may be held by OWNER for a period
not to exceed ninety (90) days from the
date of the opening of BIDS for the pur-
pose of reviewing the BIDS and investigat-
ing the qualifications of Bidders, prior to
awarding of the CONTRACT.
INVITATION TO BID
Notice is hereby given that sealed bids
will be received by Luzerne County
Community College
(LCCC), 1333 South Prospect Street, Nan-
ticoke, PA 18634 until 12:00 P.M., prevail-
ing time on June 25, 2013 for the Building
#8 Gymnasium Hot Water Heater
Replacement Project. Sealed bids will be
opened at the Administration Building #5
Purchasing Departments office (Room
513) at the above
mentioned address.
Contract documents and drawings may be
obtained electronically through the office
of the Architect,
Quad 3 Group, Inc., 37 N. Washington
Street, Wilkes-Barre, PA 18701 Phone:
570-829-4200 between
the hours of 8:00 A.M. and 4:00 P.M. Pri-
mary bidders may secure a compact disc
in .pdf format of the
contract documents for a non-refundable
sum of $25.00 per disc, on Tuesday, June
11, 2013. The nonrefundable
check for the bidding documents shall be
made payable to Quad 3 Group, Inc. The
documents
may be sent hard-copy via Fed-Ex or UPS,
upon request, with a supplied Fed-Ex or
UPS account number,
and a non-refundable check in the amount
of $75.00 made payable to Quad 3 Group,
Inc. Cut-off date for
issuing Bidding and Contract Documents
shall be Thursday, June 20, 2013 at 4:00
p.m.
Bids must be accompanied by a Bid
Guaranty which shall not be less than ten
percent (10%) of the
amount of the Total Base Bid as heinafter
specified under the Conditions of Bid.
Questions may be submitted in writing via
fax (570-829-3732) or by email to David
Short
(dshort@quad3.com) at the Architects
office on or before Friday, June 21, 2013 at
4:00 P.M. Responses
to Request for Interpretations will be
returned to the Requesting Bidder ONLY.
Any response that
results in a change to the documents will
be issued as an addendum to all Bidders.
Luzerne County Community College
reserves the right to waive any informali-
ties, irregularities, defects, errors or omis-
sions in, or to reject, any or all proposals
or parts thereof.
LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that at the
regular meeting of the West Pittston Bor-
ough Council to be held on Tuesday, July
2, 2013, at 6:30 p.m., prevailing time, at
the Borough Building, 555 Exeter Avenue,
West Pittston, Pennsylvania, a proposed
Ordinance shall be considered and pro-
posed for enactment and passage, and
public comment is solicited. Said proposed
Ordinance is entitled as follows:
AN ORDINANCE OF THE BOROUGH
OF WEST PITTSTON AMENDING
CHAPTER 164, (VEHICLES AND
TRAFFIC) SECTIONS 164-11, 164-12
AND 164-13, OF THE CODE OF THE
BOROUGH OF WEST PITTSTON
The provisions of the said proposed
Ordinance are summarized as follows:
1. Amendment of Sections
164-11, 164-12 and 164-13
Chapter 164, Sections 164-11, 164-12
and 164-13 of the Code of the Borough of
West Pittston specifically dealing with traf-
fic regulations as set forth in Article II shall
be amended as follows:
A. Damon Street is hereby amended
from a two-way roadway to one-way
roadway with traffic in the direction from
Exeter Avenue to Luzerne Avenue. One
way traffic signs shall also be placed at the
intersecting corners of Foundry Street and
Jenkins Street;
B. Westbound Intersection of Wyoming
Avenue and Third Street, east of Wyoming
Avenue; no right turn;
C. Third Street between Delaware
Avenue and Wyoming Avenue; one way
northbound.
A copy of the full text of the said pro-
posed Ordinance is available for examina-
tion at the Borough Building in the office of
the Borough Secretary during regular
office hours, Monday through Friday. Also,
a copy of the proposed Ordinance has
been provided to the newspaper of gener-
al circulation in which this legal notice is
being published.
MARK W. BUFALINO, ESQUIRE
West Pittston Borough Solicitor
225 Wyoming Avenue
West Pittston, PA 18643
New 2013 Volvo S60 T5
Sedan FWD
MSRP $32,795 STK# V1076
1-800-223-1111
339 HIGHWAY 315
PITTSTON, PA
www.VOLVOofWBS.com
* 24 Months, 10,000 Miles Per Year with $1,396.92 down plus $603.07
fees = $1,999.99 total due at delivery. Residual $22,956.50. Must qualify
tier 1. Zero security deposit. Ofer good through 7/1/2013.

$
269
LEASE FOR ONLY:
Per Mo.
Plus Tax
Hours:
Mon-Fri 9-8pm ;
Sat 9-5pm
713 North State St.
Clarks Summit, PA 18411
570-586-6676
www.chermakauto.com
Tango Red, Beige heated Leather
6cyl, Auto Trans, Moonroof
Navigation, Heated Seats, PW, PL, CC,
Alloy Wheels, Perfect 1 Owner
12K Miles
Chermak
Suzuki/Saab
$
25,995
100
ANNOUNCEMENTS
110 Lost
ALL JUNK
VEHICLES
WANTED!!
CALL ANYTIME
HONEST PRICES
FREE REMOVAL
CA$H PAID
ON THE SPOT
570.301.3602
BEST PRICES
IN THE AREA
CA$H ON THE $POT,
Free Anytime
Pickup
570-301-3602
570-301-3602
CALL US!
TO JUNK
YOUR CAR
All
Junk
Cars &
Trucks
Wanted
Highest
Prices
Paid In
CA$H
FREE
PICKUP
570-574-1275
LOST. Mothers
ring, multi-stone.
Childrens names on
ring. Sentimental
value. Reward.
570-823-2325.
120 Found
LIKE
NEW
Used Tires
&
Batteries
for $20
& Up
VITOS
&
GINOS
949 Wyoming Ave.
Forty Fort
288-8995
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
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135 Legals/
Public Notices
BID
SOLICITATION
The Dallas School
Board of Directors
solicits sealed pro-
posals for the
removal of Garbage
and Recyclable
Materials. Specifi-
cations and the
non-collusion affi-
davit may be
secured from the
Business Manager,
Grant S. Palfey, at
the Administration
Office, Conyngham
Avenue, Dallas, PA
18612 and also via
the district website
@www.dallassd.com
Business Office.
Bids must be in the
hands of the Busi-
ness Manager by
1:00 p.m. on June
26, 2013.
By order of the
Board,
Nancy Merithew,
Board Secretary
135 Legals/
Public Notices
LEGAL NOTICE
DEADLINES
Saturday
12:30 on Friday
Sunday
4:00 pm on
Friday
Monday
4:30 pm on
Friday
Tuesday
4:00 pm on
Monday
Wednesday
4:00 pm on
Tuesday
Thursday
4:00 pm on
Wednesday
Friday
4:00 pm on
Thursday
Holidays
call for deadlines
You may email
your notices to
mpeznowski@
civitasmedia.com
or fax to
570-831-7312
or mail to
The Times Leader
15 N. Main Street
Wilkes-Barre, PA
18711
For additional
information or
questions regard-
ing legal notices
you may call
Marti Peznowski
at 570-970-7371
or 570-829-7130
LINE UP
A GREAT DEAL...
IN CLASSIFIED!
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on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
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135 Legals/
Public Notices
INVITATION TO
BID
Luzerne County
Community College
Purchasing Depart-
ment will receive
sealed bids related
to: Interior/Exterior
Door Upgrade;
Gymnasium Interior
Painting. Each bid
must be accompa-
nied by a bid guar-
anty, which shall not
be less than 10% of
the total bid. Firms
interested in sub-
mitting a bid should
call the Colleges
Purchasing Office at
5 7 0 - 7 4 0 - 0 3 7 0 ,
Monday through Fri-
day, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
to request specifi-
cations. Bids must
be received
before Noon
local prevailing
time, on Friday,
June 21, 2013 at
which time the bids
will be opened and
publicly read at the
College. Luzerne
County Community
College reserves
the right to waive
any informalities,
i r r e g u l a r i t i e s ,
defects, errors, or
omissions in, or to
reject any or all bids
or parts thereof.
Shopping for a
new apartment?
Classified lets
you compare costs -
without hassle
or worry!
Get moving
with classified!
LEGAL NOTICE
There will be a
meeting of the
Lehman Township
Zoning Hearing
Board on Tuesday,
June 25, 2013 at
7:00 P.M. (local
time) at the Lehman
Township Municipal
Building, 1183 Old
Rte. 115, Dallas, PA
18612.
CASE NO. ZHB-
04.13 OF 2013:
Application to the
Lehman Township
Zoning Hearing
Board, received
from Mark Kretch-
mer, 57 Briarcrest
Road, Dallas PA
18612. Applicant
seeks one variance
under Article 5 Sec-
tion 509 Area, Bulk
& Density Regula-
tions. The property
is located in the R-1
(Single Family Resi-
dential District), the
side yard setback
requirement is
twenty feet (20) the
applicant would like
to construct an
addition to the exist-
ing home. The appli-
cant is seeking a
four foot (4) vari-
ance, pursuant to
section 1609 of the
Lehman Township
Zoning Ordinance.
Also, the board shall
conduct any other
business as pre-
sented.
Michael Sholtis,
Lehman Township
Zoning Officer
135 Legals/
Public Notices
PUBLIC NOTICE
TO BIDDERS
Notice is hereby
given that sealed
bids will be received
by the Penn Estates
Property Owners
Association in
Stroud Township,
Pennsylvania for
LEGAL SERVICES
and the labor asso-
ciated thereto. Bids
must be submitted
in a sealed envelope
bearing on the out-
side the name and
address of the bid-
der and marked
"BID FOR LEGAL
SERVICES and
addressed to:
PEPOA Secretary,
304 Cricket Drive,
East Stroudsburg,
PA 18301. Bids are
to be received no
later than 3:00 PM
on Friday, JULY 19,
2013, and the Sec-
retary shall unseal
the bids, record
their contents and
transmit them to the
Community Manag-
er no later than Fri-
day, July 26, 2013.
The contract shall
be awarded by the
Board of Directors
and the Board of
Directors reserves
the right to reject
any or all bids that it
deems are not in
the best interest of
the Association and
or cancel procure-
ment.
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
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Youre in bussiness
with classified!
LEGAL NOTICE
Proposals for
Building
Inspector Being
Accepted
Swoyersville Bor-
ough Council is
accepting propos-
als for building
inspector. Please
submit the follow-
ing: Experience in
building inspections;
state certifications
and fee schedule to
include electrical
inspections and
plan review fees.
Permit applications
will be given out at
Swoyersville Munici-
pal Building and
completed applica-
tions will be picked
up there as well.
There are no bid
specs but a bid
application for must
be included with
proposal. Bid appli-
cation forms can be
picked up at the
Swoyersville Bor-
ough Building, 675
Main St., Swoy-
ersville, PA from
9AM-4PM, M-F.
Sealed bids must
be returned by
2PM, July 1, 2013 to
the Borough Coor-
dinators Office,
Swoyersville Bor-
ough Building, 675
Main St., Swoy-
ersville, PA. Swoy-
ersville Borough
Council will open
bids at their regu-
larly scheduled
meeting on Mon-
day, July 1, 2013,
6:30 PM at the
Swoyersville Bor-
ough Building, 675
Main St., Swoy-
ersville, PA.
Gene Breznay
Borough Secretary
135 Legals/
Public Notices
LEGAL NOTICE
The Wilkes-Barre
Area School District
is soliciting sealed
proposals for
ANNUAL FOOD
SERVICE SMALL-
WARES, until 3:00
P.M., Thursday,
June 27, 2013. All
proposals shall be
addressed to
Leonard B. Przy-
wara, Secretary,
730 South Main
Street, Wilkes-
Barre, PA 18711-
0375. The envelope
containing the Bids
to be marked,
FOOD SERVICE
BID. Proposals will
be opened publicly
on Thursday, June
27, 2013 at 3:00
PM in the Board
Room, 730 S. Main
Street, Wilkes-
Barre, The Board of
School DIrectors
reserves the right
to reject any and all
proposals.
By Order of the
Board
James G. Post
PURCHASING
AGENT
Let the Community
Know!
Place your Classified
Ad TODAY!
570-829-7130
145 Prayers
SAINT JUDE
NOVENA
May the sacred
heart of Jesus be
praised, adored &
glorified throughout
the world forever.
St. Jude pray for
us. St. Therese
pray for us. C.O.
150 Special Notices
ADOPTING
YOUR NEWBORN
is our dream.
Endless love, joy,
security awaits.
Maryann and Matt
888-225-7173
Expenses Paid
< < < < < <
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A GREAT DEAL...
IN CLASSIFIED!
Steel
drummers and
a ukulele player
are fun ideas
for a summer
wedding
entertainment!
bridezella.net
150 Special Notices
FOSTER PARENT(S)
NEEDED
IMMEDIATELY
for teens or sibling
groups.
Compensation,
training, and 24
hour on-call sup-
port provided.
Please call
FRIENDSHIP
HOUSE (570)
342-8305 x 2058.
Compensation up
to $1200.00 per
month per child.
Looking for that
special place
called home?
Classified will address
Your needs.
Open the door
with classified!
IF YOURE NOT
SELLING YOUR
JUNK VEHICLES
OR HEAVY
EQUIPMENT,
TRACTORS, TRAILERS,
SCHOOL BUSSES, DUMP
TRUCKS TO
HAPPY HAPPY TRAILS TRAILS
YOURE LOSING
MONEY
570-760-2035
570-542-2277
Free Pick up!
330 Child Care
DAYCARE
In my Kingston home.
Licensed. Accepting
Co-ordinated Childcare
570-283-0336
Experienced Mom
will watch your
children in my
home. Summer
care also avail-
able. Dont pay
day care rates for
the same quality
of care. Exeter
area. 262-2827
380 Travel
Black Lake, NY
Come relax & enjoy
great fishing &
tranquility at its finest.
Housekeeping
cottages on the water
with all the
amenities of home.
NEED A VACATION?
Call
Now!
(315) 375-8962
daveroll@black
lakemarine.com
www.blacklake4fish.com
380 Travel
CAMEO
HOUSE
BUS TOURS
Sun., July 21
NYC
N.Y. Botanical
Garden
Wild Medicine
Healing Plants From
Around The World.
Dinner in the Real
Little Italy - Arthur
Ave. Bronx
Sat., August 24
Note new date
WILMINGTON
DELAWARE
Neumors Mansion
& Brunch
2013 SCHEDULE
AVAILABLE
PLEASE CALL
570-655-3420
or email
anne.cameo@
verizon.net
OR GO TO
www.
cameohouse
bustours.com
Travel
380 Travel
FUN GETAWAYS!
Yankees/
Tampa Bay 6/23
OLD TIMERS DAY
Phillies vs. Mets
6/23
Knoebels Park
6/26
9/11 Memorial
with free time in
NYC - 7/6
Kutztown
Folk Festival 7/6
Boston/Salem &
Gloucester
4 Day - 7/11-14
Taylor Swift
Concert - 7/19
1-800-432-8069
Collect cash, not dust!
Clean out your
basement, garage
or attic and call the
Classified depart-
ment today at 570-
829-7130!
Motorcycle for sale?
Let them see it here
in the Classifieds!
570-829-7130
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INCLASSIFIED!
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INCLASSIFIED!
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in classified
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INCLASSIFIED!
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150 Special Notices 150 Special Notices
412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale
Octagon Family
Restaurant
375 W Main St, Plymouth, PA 18651
570-779-2288
WEDNESDA WEDNESDAY Y SPECIAL SPECIAL
40 Wings
THURSDA THURSDAY Y SPECIAL SPECIAL
Large Pie for $7.95
In House Only; Cannot be combined with other offers;
Wing Special requires minimum purchase of a dozen.
Home of the Original O-Bar Pizza
8
2
3
1
8
4
OVER 89 IN STOCK!
FAIRWAY CHEVROLET ALL STAR EDITION
w
w
w
.fairwaymotors.com www.fairwaysubaru.com
FAIRWAYCHEVROLET
Sales Hours: Mon.-Thurs. 8:30am-8pm; Fri. 8:30am-6pm; Sat. 8:30am-3pm; Sun. Closed.
1101 N. Church St. (Rt. 309), HazleTownship, PA 18202
570-455-7701 or 877-OK-FAIRWAY
TO GUARANTEE OUR QUALITY, WE BACK IT
100,OOO-MILE/5-YEAR
POWERTRAIN WARRANTY
Whichever comes rst. See dealer for limited warranty
www.fairwaymotors.com
WELL BEAT EVERYBODYS PRICE
GUARANTEED!!!
BRING YOUR BEST OFFER. WE GUARANTEE!

WE CAN BEAT IT OR WELL PAY YOU


$
2,000!
2013 CHEVY SILVERADO
1500 EXT CAB 4X4
ALL STAR EDITION
2013 CHEVY SILVERADO
1500 LT CREW CAB 4X4
ALL STAR EDITION
PRICES WILL NEVER BE LOWER!! THEY ALL MUST GO BY JULY 1ST!
$
11,670
SAVE UP TO

The Lowest Price Guarantee


1.
The deal we have to beat must be in writing on a sales order, signed and approved by the general manager or a sales manager by a franchised dealer.
2.
It must be the same
model, with identical equipment, same year, and in stock.
3.
Both our deal and the one we guarantee to beat must have credit approval from a bank or nance company.
4.
Offer
applicable only when both deals involve new, unregistered vehicles that have not been used as demos or company cars.
5.
The dealer offering rst deal must be willing to sell
the same vehicle to Fairway Motors, Inc. for the price quoted to you.
6.
The lowest price guarantee does not apply when a trade-in is involved.
7.
The lowest price guarantee
does not include special delivery, limited production or discontinued vehicles. Automobile dealers are ineligible for this offer.
8.
Fairway Motors, Inc., reserves the right of rst refusal to beat other dealers price.
*39 Mo. 10K/yr. Incl. Owner Loyalty. $1,500 down, tax, tags, rst payment due on approved credit through GM Financial tier 1. Incl. Truck Loyalty & Trade Assist. Truck
Loyalty must own a qualifying 99 or newer GM. **39 Mo. 10K/yr. Incl. Owner Loyalty. $1,500 down, tax, tags, rst payment due on approved credit through GM Financial
tier Incl. Truck Loyalty & Trade Assist. Truck Loyalty must own a qualifying 99 or newer GM truck. Trade Assist. Must trade a 99 or newer vehicle or truck.
Stk. #26692
MSRP $38,530 MSRP $29,446
Stk. #26470
SALE PRICE
$
29,446
**
SALE PRICE
$
26,860
*
$
245
*
ONLY
OR
LEASE FOR
$
276
**
ONLY
OR
LEASE FOR
FAIRWAY CHEVROLET
GUARANTEES The Lowest Price
ON NEW CHEVROLET MODELS!
AUTO
SERVICE
DIRECTORY
468 Auto Parts
VITO & GINOS
LIKE NEW
USED TIRES &
BATTERIES
$20 & UP
570-288-8995
Forty Fort
472 Auto Services
$ WANTED JUNK $
VEHICLES
LISPI TOWING
We pick up 822-0995
WANTED
Cars & Full Size
Trucks. For prices...
Lamoreaux Auto
Parts 477-2562
472 Auto Services
All
Junk
Cars
&
Trucks
Wanted
Highest
Prices
Paid In
CA$H
FREE
PICKUP
570-574-1275
LAW
DIRECTORY
Call 829-7130
To Place Your Ad
Dont Keep Your
Practice a Secret!
310 Attorney
Services
BANKRUPTCY
FREE CONSULT
Guaranteed
Low Fees
Payment Plan!
Colleen Metroka
570-592-4796
Mention this ad
when you call!
DIVORCE No Fault
$295 divorce295.com
Atty. Kurlancheek
800-324-9748 W-B
310 Attorney
Services
FREE Bankruptcy
Consultation
Payment plans.
Carol Baltimore
570-283-1626
SOCIAL SECURITY
DISABILITY
Free Consultation.
Contact Atty. Sherry
Dalessandro
570-823-9006
380 Travel
NYC
JUNE SPECIAL
$25.
GO SEE A
BROADWAY
PLAY AT THE
RIGHT PRICE!!
JUNE 26 WED
Chicago $99
Cinderella $109
JUNE 29 SAT.
Jersey Boys
$139
Matilda $155
WATKINS GLEN
WINE FESTIVAL
7/13 $63
ATLANTIC CITY
7/5 & 7/7 $36.
Park/Ride
R309/R315
RAINBOW
TOURS
570-489-4761
NEW SHIPS
ON SALE
at TENENBAUMS
TRAVEL now!
NCLs Breakaway
from only $734.00
per person
Royal
Caribbeans
Quantum of the
Seas from only
$1074.00
per person
Departs New York
to the Bahamas
Rates are per per-
son, based on two
sharing one cabin,
subject to availabili-
ty and change.
Call 570.288.8747
for more info!
406 ATVs/Dune
Buggies
HAWK UTILITY ATV
NEW!! Full size
adult ATV. Strong 4
stroke motor. CVT
fully automatic
transmission with
reverse. Electric
start. Front & rear
luggage racks.
Long travel suspen-
sion. Disc brakes.
Dual stage head
lights. Perfect for
hunters & trail rid-
ers alike.$1,995
takes it away.
570-817-2952
TOMAHAWK
ATV, 110 CC. Brand
New Tomahawk
Kids Quad. Only
$695 takes it away!
570-817-2952
Wilkes-Barre
409 Autos under
$5000
CHEVROLET `03
MALIBU
82,000 miles, V6,
cold AC, 26 MPG,
premium wheels,
CD player, shines
and runs like new.
Garage kept, very
well maintained.
Same owner,
last 10 years.
$4,975 Firm.
570-592-0997
CHEVROLET 97
LUMINA
V-6, automatic nice,
only 56,000 miles.
MUST SELL! $2,750.
OBO (570) 760-0511
LINCOLN 99
CONTINENTAL
107,000 miles. Fully
loaded, sunroof,
alpine radio system
6 disc CD. $1,500
OBO, Call:
David - 735-7412
PONTIAC `87 GRAND
PRIX
79,800 original
miles, needs some
work. $800.
(570) 288-0728
PONTIAC `99
BONNEVILLE
Automatic, 4 door,
Spacious, with CD
player. New anti-
lock brakes & new
starter. Great
engine, runs fine.
Will need new tires
& minor repair.
$1,500 firm.
(570)852-7746
SATURN `99 SL
Engine rebuilt, new
radiator & hoses.
4 new tires.
Inspected through
11/13. $1,500
570-472-1149
TOYOTA `00 RAV4
LIMITED
New engine, 154K,
new a/c and com-
pressor. Good
Condition. Asking
$3,400
(570) 824-9057
412 Autos for Sale
ACME AUTO SALES
343-1959
1009 Penn Ave
Scranton 18509
Across from Scranton Prep
GOOD CREDIT, BAD
CREDIT, NO CREDIT
Call Our Auto Credit
Hot Line to get
Pre-approved for a
Car Loan!
800-825-1609
www.acmecarsales.net
11 AUDI S5 CONV.
Sprint blue, black
/ brown leather
int., navigation,
7 spd auto turbo,
AWD
08 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX
blue, auto, V6
07 BUICK LUCERNE
CXL, silver, grey
leather
06 VW JETTA GLS
blue, auto, sunroof
06 DODGE STRATUS SXT
black, auto 4 cyl
06 HYUNDAI SONATA
gls grey, auto,
4 cyl
06 AUDI A8L
grey, blue leather,
navigation AWD
05 INFINITI GX35
AWD grey, black,
leather, sunroof
05 CHEVY MONTE
CARLO LT
white V6
05 AUDI A6
All Road. Green
2 tone, leather
AWD
05 VW JETTA GLS
grey, black leather,
sunroof, alloys
03 SUZUKI AERO
Silver, 5 speed
02 VW BEETLE GLS
lime green 5 speed,
4 cylinder
00 PLYMOUTH HIGHLINE
purple, auto,
4 cyl.
73 PORSCHE 914
green & black, 5
spd, 62k miles.
SUVS, VANS,
TRUCKS, 4 X4s
08 JEEP PATRIOT
SPORT black, 4
cyl. 5 speed 4x4
08 FORD EDGE SE
white V6 AWD
07 GMC YUKON 4X4
DENALI black, 3rd
seat, Navigation
07 DODGE CARAVAN
SXT green,
4 door, 7 pass
mini van
06 MERCURY MARINER
silver, V6, AWD
06 JEEP COMMANDER
LTD blue, grey, 3rd
seat, leather 4x4
06 PONTIAC TURRANT
red, grey leather
AWD
06 CHEVY EQUINOX LT
grey, V6, AWD
06 HONDA PILOT EX
silver, 3rd seat,
4x4
06 CHEVY 1500
SILVERADO REG CAB
truck red, 4x4
06 NISSAN XTERRA
black, V6, 4x4
06 JEEP GRAND
CHEROKEE LAREDO,
gold, V6 4x4
06 DODGE RAM 1500
QUAD CAB, Black,
V8, 4x4 truck
06 CHEVY TRAILBLAZER
LS, SILVER, 4X4
05 DODGE DURANGO
SXT blue, 3rd seat
4x4
05 CHEVY TRAILBLAZER
white, V6, 4x4
05 CHEVY COLORADO
CLUB CAB grey
4x4 truck
05 CHRYSLER TOWN &
COUNTRY TOURING,
blue, 7 passenger
mini van
05 FORD ESCAPE XLT
Red, V6 4x4
05 TOYOTA SIENNA LE
gold, 7 passenger
mini van
05 HYUNDAI TUSCON LX
green auto, AWD
04 JEEP GRAND
CHEROKEE LAREDO
silver V6, 4x4
04 CHEVY AVALANCHE
LT green, grey
leather, 4 door
4x4 truck
03 DODGE RAM 1500
SLT QUAD CAB
white & grey,
4x4 truck
03 FORD EXPEDITION
XLT silver, 3rd
seat, 4x4
03 NISSAN PATHFINDER
black V6 4x4
03 MITSUBISHI
OUTLANDER XLS
red, V6, 4x4
02 MERCURY
MOUNTAINEER PREMIER
black, tan leather
3rd row seat awd
02 TOYOTA TUNDRA
SR5 XCAB TRUCK
white 4x4
01 FORD ESCAPE XLT
red, 4 door, 4x4
01 DODGE DAKOTA
CLUB CAB SPORT
blue, V6, 4x4
truck
99 FORD F150 SUPER
CAB, silver 4x4
truck
BUICK `97 LESABRE
Excellent running
condition, mainte-
nance free. $3,200.
570-287-0600
CHEVROLET `08 AVEO
4 door, hatchback,
Alpine stereo, low
mileage. A good
college car. A must
see! $6,000
570-218-2006
CHEVROLET `86
CORVETTE
Automatic, black
with red interior.
66,350 miles, ZR
tires. All options.
$7,650. Call after 3
p.m. 570-868-3866
LEOS AUTO SALES
93 Butler Street
Wilkes-Barre, PA
570-825-8253
Ford 98
Explorer XLT
4 door, 6 cyl., auto,
sun roof, leather,
4WD. Good
condition
$1,950
Chevy 97 Blazer
4 door, 6 cyl., auto,
4WD, new tires.
Very good
condition.
$1,850
Current Inspection
On All Vehicles
DEALER
412 Autos for Sale
FORD`08 MUSTANG,
COUP,4,250 miles,
V8, 5 speed manual
Transmission,Vapor
Charcoal metallic
exterior, dark Char-
coal interior. Rear
deck spoiler, hood
air scoop. AM/FM
stereo, 6 CD, in
dash MP3,$20,000.
570-256-3983
VITOS
&
GINOS
Auto Sales
949 Wyoming
Ave, Forty Fort
288-8995
00 Toyota
Corolla
4 door, 4 cylin-
der, automatic.
Runs great.
$2,995
Grand Cherokee
V8. Runs great.
Power windows
& doors.
$2,495
96 F150 Pickup.
auto, runs good.
$1,995
96 Pontiac
Grand Prix.
White, air,
power windows
& brakes, 4
door, runs good,
106K. $2,395
01 Ford Taurus
SES
4 door, air, power
doors & win-
dows.
$2,995
99 Chevy S10
Blazer 4 door,
power windows,
doors & seats.
126,000 miles.
$2,995
03 Ford Wind-
star 4 door, all
power options.
96,000 miles.
$3,400
04 Nissan
Armada, 7 pass-
enger. 4wd.
Excellent condi-
tion. $10,900
09 Mercedes
GL450, 7 pass-
enger. Too many
options to list. 30K
miles. Garage
kept. Cream puff.
$42,500
FINANCING
AVAILABLE
Buying
Junk Cars
Used Cars
&Trucks
Highest Prices Paid
574 -1275
HONDA `05 CR-V
4x4, silver, moon-
roof, keyless entry,
new tires. One
owner, garage kept.
59,000 miles, auto-
matic. Show Room
Condition. $13,500
570-899-3874
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
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in classified
is the best way
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Youre in bussiness
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LINCOLN `98
TOWN CAR
SIGNATURE SERIES
One owner, 72,600
miles, excellent
condition. $3,600.
570-498-1804
WANTED!
ALL
JUNK
CARS!
CA$H
PAID
570-301-3602
MERCURY `04
GRAND MARQUIS GS
Excellent condition,
leather interior, all
power, well main-
tained, regularly
serviced. 25mpg
highway. Asking
$4,500.
(570)639-1390
OLDSMOBILE `99
BRAVADA
New parts. Needs
some body work.
$3,400
(570)760-2791
TOYOTA 04 CELICA GT
112K miles. Blue,
5 speed. Air,
power
windows/locks,
CD/cassette, Key-
less entry, sun-
roof, new battery.
Car drives and
has current PA
inspection. Slight
rust on corner of
passenger door.
Clutch slips on
hard acceleration.
This is why its
thousands less
than Blue Book
value. $6,500
OBO. Make an
offer! Call
570-592-1629
VOLKSWAGEN `04
TOUAREG
One owner, super
clean, V8, All
options, 102,000
miles. $9,500, OBO
570-814-3666
415 Autos-Antique
& Classic
JEEP WILLYS
1949 CJ3
Flat head, new
starter, alternator,
battery, radiator,
muffler, tail pipe,
wires, seats, newer
end, rear spring,
paint. Looks good,
runs really good!
$7,500
(570) 735-3479
MAZDA `88 RX-7
CONVERTIBLE
1 owner, garage
kept, 65k original
miles, black with
grey leather interior,
all original & never
seen snow. $6,995.
Call 570-237-5119
PONTIAC `78
TRANS AM
Red on white, T-
Tops, 400/500,
AOD, 3:42 Posi,
Nitrous, Classic,
Modified Stock,
show and go. 5k on
drivetrain. Excellent
condition, in and
out, New paint.
570-443-7757
439 Motorcycles
HARLEY
DAVIDSON 08
Screaming Eagle
Springer, 110
Crystal, copper and
black onyx. Vance
and Hines, fuel pac,
3 chrome fore-
ward controls.
Exterior chrome
custom seat, dark
brown, chrome bolt
covers, sissy bar,
LED lights. Only
2,400 miles.
Garage kept with
cover. $22,500
Joe, 570-332-1246
A Must See.
Harley Springer
Softail 01
8,900 miles, Vance
& Hines Pipes, soft
bags, luggage rack,
wind shield, all
chrome. Excellent
condition. $12,900
570-751-3036
SCOOTER 12
All ready to ride,
electric start, auto-
matic transmission,
disk brakes, rear
luggage trunk,
under seat storage,
around 100 mpg,
fully street legal, all
ready to go! only
$1,595. Call
570-817-2952
SUZUKI 01 VS 800
GL INTRUDER
Garage kept, no
rust, lots of
chrome, black with
teal green flake.
Includes storage
jack & 2 helmets.
$3600
570-410-1026
451 Trucks/
SUVs/Vans
DODGE `97 B3500
Ram, Van, full-size
V8, Automatic.
Good Condition.
93,000 miles. Must
Sell! $3,800 OBO.
(570)760-0511
HONDA `05
ELEMENT LX
4 wd, auto, 58k
miles, excellent
condition. $11,000
(570)472-9091
LINE UP
A GREAT DEAL...
IN CLASSIFIED!
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
JEEP 06
COMMANDER
(LIMITED)
WHITE
(PRICED TO SELL)
MANY EXTRAS,
LUGGAGE RACK,
TOWING
PACKAGE.
CUSTOM
FITTED RUBBER
MATS. GREAT
CONDITION
$11,800. CALL:
570-709-7210
LEXUS 05 RX330
AWD, grey/black
leather.
Excellent condition,
90k miles.
$15,995
444 Market St.
Kingston
MAFFEI
Auto Sales
570-288-6227
457 Wanted to Buy
Auto
All
Junk
Cars &
Trucks
Wanted
Highest
Prices
Paid In
CA$H
FREE
PICKUP
570-574-1275
506 Administrative/
Clerical
OFFICE CLERK
Multi-line auto deal-
ership has an imme-
diate opening avail-
able for an office
clerk. Duties
include data man-
agement, vehicle
sales processing,
and overall Dealer
Management Sys-
tem interaction.
Ideal candidate will
have office experi-
ence, a strong will-
ingness to learn,
and must be very
comfortable using
computers, espe-
cially Microsoft
Office. We provide
a fast-paced pleas-
ant work environ-
ment, extensive
training and sup-
port, and a strong
compensation/ben-
efit package. Send
your resume and
salary requirements
to Anne D. Bazil at:
WYOMING VALLEY
MOTORS
P.O. BOX 1308
KINGSTON, PA
18704
Fax: 570-718-6201
adbazil@wyoming
valleymotors.com
Shopping for a
new apartment?
Classified lets
you compare costs -
without hassle
or worry!
Get moving
with classified!
RECEPTIONIST
Full time position
for busy automo-
tive dealership.
Some Satur-
days required.
Must be able to
handle multi-line
phone system.
Must be neat,
outgoing and
very people
oriented.
Computer skills
a plus.
Benefits include:
Blue Cross/Blue
Shield Health
Coverage
Vacation * 401k
Retirement Plan
Send resume to:
Box 4415
c/o Times Leader
15 N. Main Street
Wilkes-Barre, PA
18711
506 Administrative/
Clerical
SALES DEPARTMENT
ADMINISTRATOR
Highway equipment
& supply company
has an immediate
opening for a sales
department admin-
istrator at Drums,
Pa. This position will
provide direct
administrative sup-
port to manage-
ment in the field
sales group. The
administrator would
be responsible for a
wide variety of
administrative situa-
tions involving cleri-
cal and administra-
tive functions of the
sales department.
Full benefit package
is included in this
position. Please
send resume to:
Highway equipment
& supply company
PO Box 127
Drums, PA 18222
Or email to:
bobp@hwyequip.com
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
522 Education/
Training
Hazleton Area
School District
CHEMISTRY TEACHER
Current chemistry
certification is
required. Acts 24
(82), 34, 114 &151
clearances, pre-
employment drug
test and physical
with TB test are
required prior to
employment. Please
send letter of inter-
est, application,
resume, certifica-
tion, clearances and
letters of recom-
mendation to: Dr.
Craig Butler, Assis-
tant Superintendent,
HASD Administra-
tion Building, 1515
West 23rd Street,
Hazle Township, PA
18202 no later than
June 27, 2013 by
3:00 pm.
HASD is an EOE.
522 Education/
Training
SECONDARY ENGLISH
TEACHER
(Full Time Position
beginning 2013-
2014 school year)
Grades 9 thru 12
MUSIC EDUCATION
TEACHER
(Half Time Position
beginning 2013-
2014 school year)
Grades 9 thru 12
Applicant must
possess a valid PA
Teaching Certificate
Deadline for
applications-
July 5, 2013
Please Send:
Cover Letter,
Resume, College
Transcripts, Act 34,
114, 151 Clearances,
Standard PA Teach-
ing Application
Mrs. Nancy Tkatch
Administrative
Director
West Side Career
& Technology
Center
75 Evans St
Kingston, PA 18704
E.O.E
527 Food Services/
Hospitality
Healthcare
Services Group at
Kingston
Healthcare Center
is currently accept-
ing resumes for the
Food Service
Director Posi-
tion. A certified
dietary manager
credidation
preferred, but not
required. Email
resume to:
mike.turak@hcsgcorp.com
or fax to
800-858-2398
LINE UP
A GREAT DEAL...
IN CLASSIFIED!
533 Installation/
Maintenance/
Repair
Office Max Office Max
Hazleton Hazleton
Distribution Center
Positions available
Distribution Lead
Specialist,
Powered Industrial
Truck Technician,
2nd Shift Mainte-
nance Mechanic
Interested Candi-
dates may apply at
www.OfficeMax.com
/careers
OfficeMax is an
Equal Opportunity
Employer and has
been named one of
2013's World's
Most Ethical
Companies by
Ethisphere Institute
533 Installation/
Maintenance/
Repair
LOOKING FOR
CAREER CHANGE?
WE PROVIDE INITIAL &
ONGOING TRAINING.
OUR TECHNICIANS
APPLY FERTILIZER, LIME
& WEED PREVENTATIVES
AS WELL AS INSECT
CONTROL & TURF AERA-
TION SERVICES FOR RES-
IDENTIAL & COMMER-
CIAL CUSTOMERS.
FULL TIME WORK
MONDAY-FRIDAY
8 AM 5 PM
MUST HAVE GOOD MATH
SKILLS, CLEAN DRIVING
RECORD & PASS PHYSI-
CAL & DRUG TEST.
APPLY ONLINE AT:
WWW.GRASSHOPPER
LAWNS.COM
OR STOP IN FOR
APPLICATION AT:
470 E. STATE STREET
LARKSVILLE, PA 18651
QUESTIONS? EMAIL
BRIAN PHILLIPS AT:
GRASSHOPPER.JOBS
@GMAIL.COM
LAWN CARE
TECHNICIAN
542 Logistics/
Transportation
DISPATCHER
Due to a retirement
we are in need of an
experienced truck-
load carrier dis-
patcher. Excellent
salary & benefits.
Apply in person
Calex
58 Pittston Ave.,
Pittston, Pa. or
email resume to:
hr@
calexlogistics.com
EOE
DRIVER
Experienced
Limousines/Sedans.
Part-time. Days/
Nights/Weekends.
Knowledge of major
airports and NYC
recommended.
570-288-5466
542 Logistics/
Transportation
MECHANIC/TECH
Mechanical ability
and experience
with automotive
electronics. Apply:
197 Main Street
Luzerne,PA
Monday-Friday
8am-4:30pm
Looking for that
special place
called home?
Classified will address
Your needs.
Open the door
with classified!
545 Marketing/
Product
RELATIONSHIP
MANAGER
A local not-for-profit
agency is seeking
an energetic and
outgoing profes-
sional with excellent
computer, written
and verbal skills to
join our develop-
ment team. Must
be able to build and
maintain effective
working relation-
ships with donors,
volunteers and
staff. Office and
relationship man-
agement skills, plus
2 years of develop-
ment/sales experi-
ence are required.
Bachelors degree
and data manage-
ment experience
preferred.
c/o Times Leader
Box 4420
15 N. Main Street
Wilkes-Barre, PA
18711
548 Medical/Health
RSAs,
Housekeeping,
Receptionist,
Activities Direc-
tor (requires
experience) &
activities aid
dietary aides.
Apply in Person
No Phone Calls
TIFFANY COURT
700 Northampton St
Kingston, PA
PAGE 2D MONDAY, JUNE 17, 2013 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
Say it HERE
in the Classifieds!
570-829-7130
Say it HERE
in the Classifieds!
570-829-7130
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
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in classified
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Motorcycle for sale?
Let them see it here
in the Classifieds!
570-829-7130
COCCIA
COCCIA COCCIA
FORD - LINCOLN
GUARANTEED LOWEST PRICES!
400
400 400
VEHICLES AVAILABLE VEHICLES AVAILABLE
OVER OVER
100
100 100
PRE-OWNED VEHICLES PRE-OWNED VEHICLES
OVER OVER
2012 PRESIDENT S
2012 PRESIDENT S 2012 PRESIDENT S
AWARD WINNER!
AWARD WINNER! AWARD WINNER!
CALL US AT 570-823-8888 CALL US AT 570-823-8888
VISIT US AT COCCIACARS.COM VISIT US AT COCCIACARS.COM
#1
#1 #1
VOLUME FORD & LINCOLN
DEALER IN NEPA FOR OVER
24
24 24
CONSECUTIVE
YEARS
CONVENIENTLY LOCATED
BETWEEN SCRANTON &
WILKES-BARRE
CHECK
CHECK CHECK
US OUT
US OUT US OUT
BEFORE
BEFORE BEFORE
YOU
YOU YOU
BUY!
BUY! BUY!
548 Medical/Health
Pennsylvania
MENTOR
is seeking
DIRECT SUPPORT
PROFESSIONALS
in Kingston, PA
area: The primary
responsibility is to
assist adults with
intellectual disabili-
ties in their homes.
Full time and Part
time positions
are available.
Applicants must be
available to work
overnights and
weekends. Appli-
cants must possess
a valid PA drivers
license and a high
school diploma
or equivalency.
Duties include:
Personal hygiene
& grooming
Household chores
and upkeep
Meal preparation
& Cooking
Administration of
Medication
Community Inte-
gration & Outings
Peer interactions &
socialization
Engaging individu-
als in activities to
increase skills and
independence
Working with
individuals on
their treatment
plan goals
Providing
transportation
for individuals
Please forward
resumes to
Randi Farr at
Randi.Farr@the
mentornetwork.com
551 Other
HOUSE MANAGER
Full-time, year
round live-in
position. Refer to
www.csiu.org/jobs
for full information.
Apply by 7/1/13 EOE
Shopping for a
new apartment?
Classified lets
you compare costs -
without hassle
or worry!
Get moving
with classified!
STAFF NEEDED FOR 8
WEEK DAY CAMP
Lifeguards, Canoe-
ing, Kayacking, and
Archery Instructors
needed.
Call Rick Evans at
947-6766 for an
appointment
554 Production/
Operations
PRODUCTION WORKER
Local manufactur-
ing company, seek-
ing persons to fill a
temporary position,
which may lead to a
permanent position.
Candidate must be
prepared to join
existing shift work-
ing teams. Although
not essential, previ-
ous manufacturing
experience is pre-
ferred. Pre-employ-
ment medical
exam/ drug screen-
ing required.
Send resume to:
The Times Leader
Box 4410
15 N. Main St.
Wilkes-Barre, PA
18711
560 Quality
Assurance/Safety
QUALITY CONTROL
TECHNICIAN
Local manufactur-
ing company has an
opening for a tem-
porary position,
which may lead to a
permanent position,
for an experienced
Quality Control
Technician. Respon-
sibilities include
testing and record
keeping from raw
materials through
finished product to
guide production.
Shift work required.
Prior test lab expe-
rience preferred.
Knowledge of
Microsoft Office
is a plus.
Pre-employment
medical exam/drug
screening required.
Send Resume To:
The Times Leader
Box 4405
15 N. Main St.
Wilkes-Barre, PA
18711
566 Sales/Retail/
Business
Development
B2B SALES REP
Growing company
looking for B2B
Sales Rep. Looking
for a well spoken,
motivated and
dependable person
to join our team!
Mon-Fri 9am-5pm
Interested candi-
dates should call
570-408-9260
Starting pay $8
hour plus
commission
Gateway Ford
in Tunkhannock is
expanding and
we need a Sales
Consultant and
Experienced Ser-
vice Technician to
join our team.
We offer health
insurance, paid
vacation and ford
certified training.
Call 570-836-3135
Email
gtwford@epix.net
Ask for Paul
NOW HIRING:
AUTOMOTIVE
SALES
CONSULTANT
&
SERVICE
TECHNICIAN
566 Sales/Retail/
Business
Development
SALES OPPORTUNITY
DelBaso Ford is now
accepting applica-
tions for Sales Posi-
tions. We are look-
ing for an energetic,
self-motivated indi-
vidual to join our
award winning
organization.
Apply in person to:
249 Market Street
Kingston
Email: PatandDans
@aol.com or
Call 570-288-4501
600
FINANCIAL
610 Business
Opportunities
Existing Local
Coffee & Donut
Shop For Sale
Confidential
Inquiries. Call JP
@ 570-371-8613
JAN-PRO
COMMERCIAL
CLEANING OF
NORTHEASTERN PA
Concerned
about your
future?
BE YOUR OWN BOSS
Work Full or
Part time
Accounts
available
NOW
throughout
Luzerne &
Lackawanna,
Counties
We guarantee
$5,000. to
$200,000
in annual billing.
Investment
Required
Were ready
Are you?
contact JAN-
PRO for more
info and about
VetConnection
(Discount for
Vets)
5 7 0 - 8 2 4 - 5 7 7 4
Jan-Pro.com
WILKES-BARRE
531 Scott St.
After 38 years the
owner is retiring!
Turn key night
club/bar, with
restaurant potential
in a PRIME location.
2 bars with addi-
tional licensed out-
side patio space.
Owner is open to
creative financing.
MLS 13-2446
$59,900
John Shelley
570-702-4162
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
630 Money To Loan
We can erase
your bad credit -
100% GUARAN-
TEED. Attorneys
for the Federal
Trade Commission
say theyve never
seen a legitimate
credit repair opera-
tion. No one can
legally remove
accurate and timely
information from
your credit report.
Its a process that
starts with you and
involves time and a
conscious effort to
pay your debts.
Learn about manag-
ing credit and debt
at ftc. gov/credit. A
message from The
Times Leader and
the FTC.
To place your
ad call...829-7130
700
MERCHANDISE
702 Air
Conditioners
AIR CONDITIONER
Amcor ultra clean
portable $125.
570-417-2653
BIKES Boy & Girl
Huffy 28 great for
the shore with car
rack and baskets
$65 570-417-2653
SNOW BLOWER 20
discharge chute
hand push $50.
570-417-2653
706 Arts/Crafts/
Hobbies
AIR CRAFT, RC,
complete, Katana
50, includes JR
Radio, X9503. 10 CC
gas engine, digital
servos, flight box.
Lots of spare parts.
Flight Ready! $1,000
570-218-2006
708 Antiques &
Collectibles
ANTIQUES
One item or entire
contents of homes.
CASH PAID
570-814-3371
570-328-4420
708 Antiques &
Collectibles
$ ANTIQUES BUYING $
Old Toys, model kits,
Bikes, dolls, guns,
Mining Items, trains
&Musical Instruments,
Hess. 474-9544
BARBERS CHAIR,
Vintage Koken.
Reupholstered, very
good, all work. $650
TABLES, (1) solid
cherry coffee and
(2) solid cherry end
$280. 855-2506
Collect cash, not dust!
Clean out your
basement, garage
or attic and call the
Classified depart-
ment today at 570-
829-7130!
BASEBALL CARDS,
(800) 1994 DonRuss
$6. (800) 1989,
Topps $6. (800)
1993, Topps $6.
(800) 1987 Topps,
$6. (800) 1991
Upper Deck $6.
(800) 1990 Topps
$6, (800) 1994
Fleer, $6. (413) 1991
Topps, $3. (430)
1992 Score, $3.
570-313-5214
570-313-3859
COINS, Washington
quarters, 1938-P-
1 939- D- 1 940- S,
1949-P-1955-P. $60.
570-287-4135
PLANET JR.
ATTACHMENTS,
including plows, cul-
tivator, sweeps,
harrows etc. 40
pieces $200. Old
potato shovel $25.
Log rolling tool, $40.
Wheelbarrow with
steel front wheel
$25. Log rolling tool.
OBO 570-693-1918
TAP 12 Budweiser
tap $8. 50 beer
openers .50 each. 2
folding tables $1. &
$2. 4 8 carriage
wheels $1. 30 small-
er wheels Free. 1
metal & wood swing
$5. metal wheelbar-
row $4. 1 50 gallon
burn barrels no bot-
tom $3. 200 beer &
soda cans .25 each.
25 old bottles .50
each. 3 pair ladies
shorts $1. each. 3
pair ladies long
pants $1. each.
Antique iron $10.
kerosene torch $5.
Antique brace & bits
$3. each. 33 1/3
country & modern
record $1. each.
570-823-6986
710 Appliances
DISHWASHER. GE.
$75, STOVE, electric
Spectra $125. Both
5 years old and in
great shape.
570-902-9805
DRYER, Kenmore,
Gas. Good condi-
tion. $125. DEHU-
MIDIFIER, automat-
ic, mint condition.
$75. 570-825-4031
REFRIGERATOR,
Gibson white, no
frost top freezer,
$100, Dehumidifier,
$75, Deep Fryer,
extra large, $30
570-902-5598
SMALL appliances,
$ 6. each toasters &
$1 each toaster
oven all in good
working condition.
570-735-6638
VACUUM, Kirby
Classic, with rug
renovator $50. OBO
570-693-1918
712 Baby Items
BABY STROLLER
Graco very good
condition $20.
570-735-6638
TV childrens giraffe
9.6 flat screen LCD
perfect for a nursery
or childs room. TV
enclosed within a
soft, plush giraffe.
Wonderfully tactile &
safe. Oversized
control buttons
designed for tiny fin-
gers. C $50 OBO. 4
Childrens jungle
animals/ theme pic-
tures. Each picture
is 9X9 perfect for
a nursery or a chil-
drens room. All are
in excellent condi-
tion. $40 OBO.
718-839-5599.
714 Bridal Items
BR I DA L GOWN.
Maggie Sottero.
Never worn; tags
still attached. Size 8
Color Ivory. $450
570-693-4629
716 Building
Materials
LOUVERED DOORS,
4 bi-fold, three, 6,
5 and 2-4. $100 all
570-822-1824.
PANELS. Soffit, 41
pieces, 51 long 12
wide. Equals 14.5
12 pieces. VINYL,
Owens Corning T4
White in original
boxes. $95 both
570-735-7658
PRESSURE TREAT-
ED Wood pieces
2x8x6 average,
25 pieces $20.
570-693-1918
726 Clothing
WOMENS CLOTH-
ING, jeans, pants,
(4) jackets, (1) jean
jacket. Tops, all
excellent condition.
Must See! $20.
570-655-1808
730 Computer
Equipment &
Software
LAPTOP, HP mini.
Delivery best offer.
$100.
570-654-0574
732 Exercise
Equipment
BIKE, dirt. Mens 26
speed. Schwinn,
new condition, 26.
$140, 570-655-2154
Line up a place to live
in classified!
BIKE, dirt. Mens 26
speeds, front sus-
pension, Schwinn,
26. $140, 655-2154
TREADMILL Weslo
Cadence, good
condition. $60.
570-655-0952
742 Furnaces &
Heaters
HEAT your entire
home, water, and
more with an OUT-
DOOR WOOD FUR-
NACE from Central
Boiler. B & C Out-
door Wood Furnace,
LLC. 570-477-5692
STOVE. Alaska Stok-
er coal with water
jacket for hot water.
All pipes and circu-
lator pump. Good
condition. $550
570-256-3677
744 Furniture &
Accessories
5 GLIDER/ROCKER
chairs with 5
ottomans, cush-
ioned seats and
back, $50 each.
COFFEE TABLE,
$40, END TABLES,
(3) $25 each. BED-
ROOM SET, double
bed, dresser, chest
of drawers, night
stand, $150. END
TABLE, $25. SOFA
TABLE, 48x15,
$40. 570-675-2679
BAR, 5 1/2 and 2
stools. $100.
570-735-4892
CHAIR, cushion
couch, lift out of
seat and recline.
Good condition.
Electric and battery.
$100. 570-825-4031
CHAIRS, (2)
Genuine
leather, cus-
tom made
recliners.
Taupe color,
like new. $550
each.
570-675-5046
COFFEE TABLE,
Oak, with 3 glass
inserts. Excellent
shape. $40. BOOK
SHELF, 5 shelves,
Sauder, $40. CAVA-
LIER CHEST, Cedar,
Antique, Very nice.
1928, $600. NEG.
570-829-2599
DINING ROOM set.
solid wood table
and chairs, leaf and
pad. $350. CASE,
golf club, hard travel
case, $30
570-357-8089
D I N I N G R O O M
table, 6 chairs,
china, 2 leaves,
$500. KITCHEN
SET, table 5 chairs,
2 leafs, $200, BED-
ROOM SUITE, black
lacquer. dresser,
night stand,
armoire, $100,
ENTERTAINMENT
CENTER, oak finish,
$100. Best offers
accepted. 287-4741
DRESSER, 9 draw-
ers, with mirror.
Solid wood. Brown
with black trim. $75.
570-706-5179
KITCHEN TABLES,
retro, both for $100
Double bed head-
board & footboard,
$25, dresser with
mirror, $50 OBO.
570-693-1918
MATTRESS SALE
We Beat All
Competitors Prices!
Mattress Guy
Twin sets: $159
Full sets: $179
Queen sets: $239
All New
American Made
570-288-1898
MATTRESS
SETS! BRAND
NEW $ave 60%-
80% on factory
direct mattresses,
THESE ARE NOT
USED or re-manu-
factured. KINGS
$250-QUEENS
$170 FULLS $130-
TWINS $100 -
MUST LIQUIDATE
IMMEDIATELY!
BEDROOM FURNI-
TURE starts at
$299 a set! Sleigh
beds $299! YOU
WILL NOT BE DIS-
APPOINTED Call
570-406-2009
SOFA BED. 2 years
old, moving must
pick up 6/8-6/9.
FREE 570-829-1456
SOFA, clean, FREE
822-9697.
TABLE and chairs,
$25. CHAIR, for an
office $10. 814-1842
TABLE. Kitchen, 4
chairs, dark wood.
Excellent $150
570-735-4892
ATTENTION VENDORS
Decorative/Sea-
sonal/Accent
Pieces for sale.
Purchase sepa-
rately or all.
Call 675-5046
after 6PM
Hanover Township
17 Adams Street
Sat., June 22, 8-2
Household items,
bedroom furniture,
electronics, clothes,
pictures, baby
items, odds and
ends, holiday deco-
rations, tools, and
car parts.
LUZERNE
Rain or Shine
484 Charles Street
Sun, June 16.,
Mon., 17, & Sat., 22
8 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Many Items, some-
thing for everyone!
752 Landscaping &
Gardening
RIDING MOWER,
John Deere, LX 172.
Just serviced, with
manual. Excellent
condition. $750.
570-878-2849
754 Machinery &
Equipment
GENERATOR. 400
watt portable. 2
year warranty, $360
Firm. 570-788-2388
L AWN MOWE R .
Craftsman Self pro-
pelled. Excellent
condition, comes
with bagger. Barely
used. $200
570-788-5005
L AWN MOWE R .
Yardman, 22 cut,
$75 firm, Hedge
Hog, Black & Deck-
er, $20, Chipper-
shredder, Sears
$150, Saw, 10
mitre, $60. After 3
570-655-3197
MILLING/DRILLING
MACHINE. Heavy
duty. 2 hp, 110 volts,
12 speeds. Variable
table power feed,
like new, bench
model on stand.
$900. 570-899-1910
756 Medical
Equipment
PATIENT
HYDRAULIC LIFT,
with polyester mesh
sling with commode
opening. New $450.
P OWE R CHA I R .
Golden Compass.
Includes fully
charged battery and
cord. 2 speeds,
$425.
570-474-6549
P OWE R CHA I R .
Jazzy, barely used.
Joystick, perfect
upholstery, no wear
on tires. Needs bat-
tery, $300
570-406-8304
P OWE R CHA I R .
Jazzy. Good condi-
tion, batteries,
approximately 1
year old. $475
570-288-3231 - Joe
758 Miscellaneous
FREE AD POLICY
The Times Leader
will accept ads for
used private
party merchan-
dise only for items
totaling $1,000 or
less. All items must
be priced and state
how many of each
item. Your name
address, email and
phone number must
be included. No
ads for ticket
sales accepted.
Pet ads accept-
ed if FREE ad
must state FREE.
You may place your
ad online at
timesleader.com,
or email to
classifieds@
timesleader.com or
fax to 570-831-7312
or mail to Classified
Free Ads: 15 N.
Main Street, Wilkes-
Barre, PA.
SORRY NO
PHONE CALLS.
FREE AD POLICY
The Times Leader
will accept ads for
used private
party merchan-
dise only for items
totaling $1,000 or
less. All items must
be priced and state
how many of each
item. Your name
address, email and
phone number must
be included. No
ads for ticket
sales accepted.
Pet ads accept-
ed if FREE ad
must state FREE.
You may place your
ad online at
timesleader.com,
or email to
classifieds@
timesleader.com or
fax to 570-831-7312
or mail to Classified
Free Ads: 15 N.
Main Street, Wilkes-
Barre, PA.
SORRY NO
PHONE CALLS.
All
Junk
Cars
&
Trucks
Wanted
Highest
Prices
Paid In
CA$H
FREE
PICKUP
570-574-1275
ANTIFREEZE and
coolant. Prestone, 3
gallons, $5 each
3/$13. 655-2154
AQUARIUM TANK,
30X12, $25.
CHEST FREEZER, 5
Cu.Ft., $50.
570-675-2679
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com MONDAY, JUNE 17, 2013 PAGE 3D
746 Garage Sales/
Estate Sales/
Flea Markets
746 Garage Sales/
Estate Sales/
Flea Markets
VALLEYCHEVROLET.COM
VALLEY
CHEVROLET
821.2772 1.800.444.7121
valleychevrolet.com
601 Kidder Street, Wilkes-Barre, PA
YOU CAN FIND US
ON FACEBOOK &
TWITTER!

Scan From
Mobile Device
For More Specials
We Accept
ALL Trades!
Cars, Trucks, ATVs, Campers,
Boats, Motorcycles...
You
Bring It...
WELL
TRADE IT!
* All prices plus tax & tags. All lease payments are plus tax & tags. Prices & lease payments include all applicable rebates; Competitive Lease Ofer (if applicable); Business Choice Rebate (if applicable); All Star Edition incentive (if applicable);
Truck Loyalty Bonus Cash (if applicable);Trade-in Bonus Cash (if applicable); Competitive Lease Private Ofer (if applicable); CRUZE - Lease for $139 per mo. plus tax for 36 mos., 12K miles per year, $2,559 at lease signing to well qualifed
buyers; any applicable lease incentives have been applied. EQUINOX - Lease for $189 per mo. plus tax for 36 mos., 12K miles per year, $3,119 at lease signing to well qualifed buyers; any applicable lease incentives have been applied. MALIBU
- Lease for $159 per mo. plus tax for 36 mos., 12K miles per year, $3,189 due at lease signing to well qualifed buyers; any applicable lease incentives have been applied. SILVERADO - Lease for $299 per mo. plus tax for 39 mos., 12K miles per
year, $2999 (cash or trade) due at lease signing to well qualifed buyers; any applicable lease incentives have been applied. CAMARO - Lease for $229 per mo. plus tax for 36 mos., 12K miles per year, $2,199 due at lease signing to well qualifed
buyers; any applicable lease incentives have been applied.TRAVERSE - Lease for $249 per mo. plus tax for 36 mos., 12K miles per year, $2,509 (cash or trade) due at lease signing to well qualifed buyers; any applicable lease incentives have
been applied. Not responsible for typographical errors. Pictures for illustration purposes only; See dealer for warranty details. Prices & payment ofers end 7/1/13.
Stk. #13631. 1.8 VVT DOHC 4Cyl., 5 Speed
Manual Trans., Stabilitrak, Air, PW, PDL, Onstar, XM
Satellite, Bluetooth, Tinted Glass, Remote Panic Alarm
$
14,499
*
Sale
Price
Starting
At
MSRP $14,995 MSRP $14,995
2013 CHEVY
SONIC LS
AUTOMATIC CRASH RESPONSE
EMERGENCY
NO MATTER WHAT HAPPENS ON THE ROAD, WE CAN HELP
SECURITY
ONSTAR FMV CAN HELP GET YOU BACK ON THE ROAD QUICKLY
NAVIGATION
GET DIRECTIONS AT THE TOUCH OF A BUTTON
CONNECTIONS
ONSTAR FMV OFFERS BUILT-IN WIRELESS CALLING SERVICE
BLUETOOTH

BLUETOOTH WIRELESS TECHNOLOGY


TO GUARANTEE OUR QUALITY, WE BACK IT
100,000-MILE/5-YEAR
POWERTRAIN WARRANTY
Whichever comes rst. See dealer for limited warranty details.
2013 CHEVY
SPARK LS
Stk. #13424, Ecotech 1.2L 4 Cyl., 4 Speed Auto.
Trans., Air, PW, Tinted Glass, Onstar w/ Turn-By-Turn
Navigation, Stabilitrak, Rear Spoiler, Rear Defroster
Stk. #14006, Silver Topaz Metallic, Ecotech 2.5L DOHC 6 Speed Automatic, PW,
PDL, Tinted Glass, Extended Range Remote Keyless Entry, Air Conditioning, 6-way
Power Driver Seat, OnStar w/Turn-by-Turn Navigation, Color Infortainment Display,
Stabilitrak, Cruise, XM & HD Radio, Bluetooth
ALL NEW 2014 CHEVY
IMPALA LS
2013 CHEVY
CRUZE LS
Stk. #13445, 1.8L 4 Cyl., 5 Speed Manual Transmission, Air
Conditioning, Tilt Steering, PW, PDL, Bluetooth for Phone,
OnStar w/ Turn-By-Turn Navigation, XM Satellite Radio,
Remote Keyless Entry, Stabilitrak, Premium Cloth Seating
MSRP $17,940
2013 CHEVY
CAMARO LS COUPE
Stk. #13020, 3.6L SIDI 6 Speed Manual Transmission, PW,
PDL, Air, Rear Spoiler, Limited Slip Dierential,
18 Heritage Steel Wheels, Onstar w/ Turn-By-Turn
Navigation, XM Satellite Radio, Bluetooth, AM/FM/CD
MSRP $24,245
2013 CHEVY
TRAVERSE LS FWD
#13407, 3.6L V6 6 Speed Auto., A/C, 2nd/3rd Row Split
Bench Seat, Rear Vision Camera, Onstar w/ turn-by-turn
navigation, XM Satellite, Color Touch AM/FM Radio w/
CD Player, Rear Spoiler, Heated Mirrors
MSRP $32,185
2013 CHEVY
EQUINOX LS FWD
Stk. #13730, 2.4L DOHC 4 Cyl., 6 Speed Automatic, A/C,
Onstar w/ Turn-By-Turn Navigation, Bluetooth for Phone,
AM/FM/CD, 17 Aluminum Wheels, PW, PDL, Cruise,
Remote Keyless Entry, XM Satellite Radio
$
189
*
PER MO.
FOR 36 MOS.
OR Lease
For Only
$
22,999
*
MSRP $25,015
Stk. #13584, ECOTEC 2.5L DOHC 6 Speed Automatic,
PW, PDL, Air, P. Mirrors, Tinted Glass, Stabilitrak, XM
Satellite Radio, Onstar w/ Turn-By-Turn Navigation,
Compass Display, 16 Aluminum Wheels, Tilt & Telescopic
Steering Column
MSRP $22,805
$
159
*
PER MO.
FOR 36 MOS.
OR Lease
For Only
$
19,899
*
2013 CHEVY
MALIBU LS
2013 CHEVY
SILVERADO
1500 EXT CAB 4X4
$
299
*
PER MO.
FOR 39 MOS.
OR Lease
For Only
$
26,999
*
Stk. #13213, Vortec 5.3L V8, 6 Speed Automatic, Locking Rear Dierential,
Trailering Pkg., Aluminum Wheels, Dual Zone A/C, Bluetooth, CD w/ USB
Port, PW, PDL, EZ-Lift Tailgate, Onstar, XM Satellite, Cruise & More
ALL STAR EDITION
MSRP $37,355
2013 CHEVY
SILVERADO
1500 CREW CAB 4X4
Stk. #13194, 5.3L V8 6 Speed Auto., A/C, XM Satellite
Radio, OnStar w/ Turn-by-Turn Navigation, Remote Start
Pkg., PW, PDL, Cruise, Power Heated Mirrors
$
29,999
*
Sale Price Starting At
$
13,499
*
Sale
Price
Starting
At
$
26,999
*
Sale
Price
Starting
At
$
139
*
PER MO.
FOR 36 MOS.
$$$
OR Lease
For Only
$
16,599
*
Sale Price
Starting At
$
229
*
PER MO.
FOR 36 MOS.
OR Lease
For Only
$
22,699
*
Sale Price
Starting At
$
249
*
PER MO.
FOR 36 MOS.
OR Lease
For Only
$
29,497
*
Sale Price
Starting At
Sale Price
Starting At
Sale Price
Starting At
Sale Price
Starting At
MSRP $37,390
0% APR
For 60 Mos.
Available
0% APR
For 60 Mos.
Available
0% APR
For 60 Mos.
Available
0% APR
For 60 Mos.
Available
NOW IN
STOCK!
ALL NEW
2014
CHEVY
SILVERADO
PAGE 4D MONDAY, JUNE 17, 2013 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale
522 Education/
Training
468 Auto Parts
506 Administrative/
Clerical
522 Education/
Training
468 Auto Parts
506 Administrative/
Clerical
522 Education/
Training
522 Education/
Training
503 Accounting/
Finance
503 Accounting/
Finance
Contract Administrator
Fehlinger Construction Group, LLC is currently
seeking applicants for the position of Construction
Administrator for our Shavertown, PA office.
Duties and responsibilities will include providing
administrative support to the Project Managers, Direc-
tor of Operations, and the Vice President and Presi-
dent; assist in the preparation, review and administra-
tion of contract agreements relating to construction
projects; manage all bid subscription services,
preparing all bid documents, contracts, sub-contracts,
Purchase Orders, billings and sub-contractor
insurance requirements.
Applicant should have a minimum of 3 years
experience in the construction industry along with
knowledge of Microsoft Office software and account-
ing procedures. Knowledge of HCSS HeavyJob soft-
ware and PennDot ECMS is helpful but not required.
Please submit your resume along with references via
email to Anthony Barbose, Director of Operations at
tbarbose@fehlingerconstruction.com
*Leases: 39 mos., 10,000/yr., Tier 1 Credit Approved, $2999 due @ signing.
Payments plus tax. All Rebates Applied. See Dealer for Details.
6/30/13
6/30/13
6/30/13
6/30/13
6/30/13
6/30/13
2013 Buick Verano
STK# 2285
Lease For
$
199per mo.*
+ Tax
MSRP $23,975
2013 Buick Regal Turbo
STK# 2275, Premium I
Lease For
$
259per mo.*
+ Tax
MSRP $33,540
2009 Buick Enclave CXL AWD
Leather Seating, Moonroof, Navigation,
Chrome Wheels, Local One Owner, 75K Miles
$
22,995
*
2013 Buick Lacrosse
STK# 2213, Leather Group
Lease For
$
355per mo.*
+ Tax
MSRP $36,955
2006 GMC Sierra X-Cab 4x4
SLE Equipment, High Miles - Low Price
2013 Buick Encore AWD
In Transit, Premium Group
Lease For
$
329per mo.*
+ Tax
MSRP $33,030
2013 GMC Terrain SLE1 AWD
STK# 2286
Lease For
$
226per mo.*
+ Tax
MSRP $28,880
2010 Ford Escape XLT 4x4
Local Trade, Black Beauty,
Just 45K Miles
2010 Chevy Impala LT
Local One Owner, 41K Miles,
Moonroof, Rear Spoiler
2006 Chevy Impala LS
Black Beauty, Local Trade,
2009 Chevy Silverado X-Cab Z-71 4x4
Local One Owner, 75K Miles,
Hurry On This One!
2000 Buick Park Avenue
Local Trade, Extra Clean,
High Miles-Low, Low Price
2007 Chrysler Town & Country
Local New Car Trade, Just Serviced,
90K Miles
$
6,995
*
As-Traded
$
16,995
*
$
14,995
*
$
11,995
*
$
20,995
*
$
5,995
*
$
7,995
* Education
McCann School Of Business & Technology
Is Seeking Adjunct Instructors In:
Accounting - Day/Eve
Business Administration - Day/Eve
Psychology - Master's Degree Required- Day/Eve
Math - Master's Degree Required - Day/Eve
Medical Technologists ASCP certified - Day/Eve
Medical Assistant - Day/Eve
Health Info Technology/Medical Administrative
- Day/Eve
Please Send Resume To:
TJ.Eltringham@McCann.Edu
No Phone Calls Please
DALLAS SCHOOL DISTRICT - EOE
is accepting applications for the following
teaching positions for the 2013-2014 School
Year:
Full Time
High School Technology Education
Elementary
Long Term Substitutes
Middle School English
Middle School Special Ed
Elementary
If a complete application packet is on file,
please submit a letter of interest only. All
others submit a complete application packet.
For details visit the Employment page of the
district web site, www.dallassd.com. All
application packets must be received by
Deadline: June 24, 2013.
AS ALWAYS ***HIGHEST PRICES***
PAID FOR YOUR UNWANTED
VEHICLES!!!
DRIVE IN PRICES
Call for Details (570) 459-9901
Vehicles must be COMPLETE!!
PLUS ENTER TO WIN $500 CASH!!
DRAWINGTO BE HELD LAST DAY
OF EACH MONTH
www.wegotused.com
AUTOMOTIVE CASHIER
221 ConynghamAve.,Wilkes-Barre
570-821-2778
PARTTIME
VALLEY CHEVROLET
SERVICE COMPLEX
Position includes data-entry,
fling & automotive service
cashier duties.
Phone skills a plus.
Saturdays required.
Send resume to:
pkarnafel@kenwallace.com
758 Miscellaneous
BAR, L shape, 7
swivel back chairs,
must assemble,
$400. AWNING, alu-
minum, $125, TIRE,
Firestone, $50.
CHEST, storage,
$25. 570-826-0076
BOOK WREATHS,
(2) Vintage, home
made, large $35,
small, $25.
570-829-2599
BOWS church wed-
ding bows pew dec-
orations $7. each.
Kitchen curtains
assorted $2.50 pair.
Bath towels $2.
each. 474-5653
CAGES, Pet small
$20, large, $25.
FENCE, dog, new in
box, $150
570-655-2154
CHAIRS, commode
$5, potty, $5, Scale,
$5, Salad Bowl, $5,
Steam pot, $25,
Container, $5, Lug-
gage, $5.
570-574-5985
COMPUTER. 15 Dell
flat screen with key-
board, speaker set.
$75. BATH TUB.
American Standard
Princeton Premium,
right handed,
almond. 80x30x14.
Still in shipping box.
$375. 570-574-1395
CURIO CABINET,
with light, Dark
cherry finish, 5 glass
shelves. 75H,
23W, asking $175.
570-639-3151
DOG FENCE. Wire-
less. New in box.
$150. 570-693-4219
ESTATE SALE
LEFTOVERS
DESK PHONE, black
rotary, bell system,
western electric,
$25, TYPEWRITER,
60s, Sperry Rand
Manual, $25, LIGHT
FIXTURE, Florescent
8 with bums and
extra ballast. $30.
OBO
570-829-7859
FAN, steel window,
with expandable
sides and exhaust
features. $25.
570-693-1918
FLAT BED TRAILER
6x4x12 load car-
rying area, 2,000
lbs payload, 15
tires, split ramp
gates, 4 tongue, 2
coupler metal side
rails. $700. Very
good condition.
570-457-4547
G O L F C L U B S ,
Ladies. Various, $75
CABINET Crafts-
man, rolling, $75,
WADERS, ladies and
mens, never worn,
$25 a pair, VEST,
Fishing, Cabelas,
never worn, $15
570-332-2715
HUTCH. (1) large Agi
Plastics group calf
hutch. $300. Good
for housing calfs,
mini horses, goats,
sheep or poultry.
TANKS, 2 stock,
$100. 570-351-6145
INSULATION, Differ-
ent types, call for
details. 3 rolls, $25
a roll, 11 rolls $30 a
roll. CURIO cabinet,
$75, CHAIR mat,
$30, SOFA, chair
and ottoman, $75,
TIRE, BF Goodrich,
215/75/R14, $20,
TUB, stone laundry,
$45, TOOL BOx,
metal for trucks,
$45. 570-868-4444
BEST PRICES
IN THE AREA
CA$H ON THE $POT,
Free Anytime
Pickup
570-301-3602
570-301-3602
CALL US!
TO JUNK
YOUR CAR
POOL 18 Intex
above ground 42
deep used a sea-
son, brand new,
never used pump,
ladder, paid $500.
Asking $350. Little
Tikes table & chair
set $10. 817-7307
PUNCH BOWL,
Carved. 10 match-
ing goblets and
ladle Like new. $15.
570-332-3341
RACKS, Ladder
metal with spoiler
for vans, mini vans,
SUV, etc. Adjusts to
width. Weather
Guard. $75
570-735-7658
REFRIGERATOR,
Frigidaire, 10 cubic
ft., top mount freez-
er with ice maker,
like new. Asking
$375. 284-2487
RIMS set of 4 16
chrome rims with
tires & lug nuts. Like
new & ready to
mount. Bought 1
year ago for $950 at
Sears. 5 bolt pattern
& locks sacrifice
$290 Firm.
570-313-5538
SAFE on wheels,
Sentry, rotary com-
bination. 19deep,
12wide and 14
high, $100.
570-288-0924
SALON equipment.
styling station,
backwash unit,
chair, rectangular
anti fatigue mat. All
equipment 3 years
old. Sell for $975.
570-709-7271
SHAMPOOER,
Hoover Rug, used
twice, $50, TREAD-
MILL, $100, SOFA
BED, chair and 2
ottomans. Royal
blue, $250.
570-333-4250
SNOW THROWER,
MTD, 2 cycle, new
skid plates, auger
pads, new belt and
rebuilt carburator.
$150. 288-0294
758 Miscellaneous
STOVE, Coal Burn-
ing, White Dickson.
$550. CANES &
WALKING sticks,
over 30, made from
slippery maple trees
$5 & $6 each.
Christmas & house-
hold items. over
200 items, Sam-
sonite belt mas-
sager, luggage
much more! all for
$60! Telephones,
wall and table. $9
each. 735-2081
TIRES (2) Winter-
force snow. 75/70R
/ 13, mounted on 92
Geo Prizm rims.
Like new, $100 for
all. 570-825-8438
TIRES, Bridgestone
Blizzak (4) 8/32
treads, 225/50R17.
$50 each. 814-8010
TIRES. (4) Michelin
Tour HP. $200 for
all. P225/6017.
Excellent. 655-6399
WATERBED, King
Size, $25. ROLLER
SKATES, size 9,
ladies, $3. BOTTLE
DISPENSERS, $10.
KENNEL, for dogs,
chain links, 6-6x6
panels, $125. JACK-
ET, Budwieser,
NASCAR, size,
Large, $20.
570-814-1842
WOOD STOVE,,
New, $200, Tape,
wheel measuring,
$50, SPRAY GUN,
Craftsman, $75,
BOW, Compound,
$200, Cabinet, gun,
$85, China Service
for 8, $85, Coffee
Urn, 42 cup, $55,
Tuner, $150, CD
player, $100. Call
details on all of the
above. 735-2236
762 Musical
Instruments
ORGAN, electric,
Thomas Trouba-
dour, 186. Free.
Call: 570-836-4636
PIANO. Acrosonic
upright with bench.
Good condition.
$300 OBO. Must
pick up Swoyersville
570-899-1963
PIANO. Kimball
upright. 25 years
old. Looks great and
sounds great,
needs to be tuned.
Includes original
padded bench. $199
570-823-2903
770 Photo
Equipment
MONO-POD, Man-
frotto, model 681B
Excellent. $50 OBO
570-788-2388
776 Sporting Goods
BASEBALLS, 22
new Wilson base-
balls in box $50. 1
dozen new softballs
$25. 4 wooden
bats. $25 OBO
570-693-1918
BINOCULARS PEN-
TAX 20 x 60 PCF
WP LIKE NEW $150
570-287-8265
BOAT, 12 ft. alu-
minum, includes
trailer, 2 motors,
one gas and one
electric. 2 uphol-
stered seats with
backs. $875.
570-542-5930
GOLF CLUBS. Lefty.
with woods, driver,
putter, bag. Excel-
lent condition. $100
570-417-1502
POTOMAC KAYAK,
NEW. $150.
570-814-1842
780 Televisions/
Accessories
TELEVISION TELEVISION
48 TV and 2
shelf stand.
HD, BBE, Digi-
tal. $350
570-675-5046
after 6 PM
784 Tools
LADDER, West Way
166 folding, multi
purpose, $80, SAW,
Scroll, Sears $50,
SAW, Power Band,
71/2, $50
570-417-7097
LOG SPLITTER,
vertical/horizontal.
Used only 30 hours.
Garage kept, excel-
lent condition. Paid
$1,200, asking
$700. 379-3829
SAW, Craftsman cir-
cular, $60,
BUFFER/POLISHER,
$75, BLADE SET,
bimetal reciprocat-
ing saw set, $30, 2
pack set for wood,
$12, DRILL DRIVER,
Craftsman, $70,
SANDER, $30, SAW,
Dewalt reciprocat-
ing, $90
570-474-6442
SAW, Craftsman
professional scroll
with stand. 20
throat. Incl. stand
and manual, $125,
ROUTER/SHAPER,
Delta, manual, $125
SAW, Black & Deck-
er radial arm, stand,
$100. 570-362-
0823/655-2020
SNOW PLOW, for
mower, Craftsman,
$30. SNOW BLOW-
ER, Craftsman $125
570-814-1842
786 Toys & Games
FOOSEBALL TABLE.
Full size, good
shape. $50.
570-287-8107
788 Stereo/TV/
Electronics
TV, Emerson, Flat
screen, 42, new.
$300, OBO.
ADAPTER, Netgear,
G54/N150, wireless,
USB. 570-829-2599
790 Swimming
Pools/Hot Tubs
POOL. 15 round alu-
minum. 5 deep,
very good. Small
deck, ladder, filter,
pump (rebuilt last
year), solar cover
and cleaning equip-
ment. $175.
570-902-5244
796 Wanted to Buy
Merchandise
LAWN MOWER,
gently used, push
type with mulch/rear
bag. 570-675-0528
After 5:30.
WANTED
JEWELRY
WILKES BARREGOLD
( 570) 48GOLD8
( 570) 484- 6538
Highest Cash Pay-
Outs Guaranteed
Open 6 Days
a Week
10am- 6pm
Cl osed Thursdays
1092 Highway 315 Blvd.
( Pl aza 315)
315N, 1/ 2 mi l e
bef ore Mohegan
Sun Casi no
We Pay At Least
80% of the London
Fix Market Price
for All Gold Jewelry
WilkesBarreGold.com
or email us at
wilkesbarregold@
yahoo.com
London PM
Gold Price
June 14- $1,391.25
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
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Youre in bussiness
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800
PETS & ANIMALS
810 Cats
Cat and Kitten, Free
to good home. 1 yr
old female, 10 week
old male, cannot
walk straight.
Needs special
home. 328-2316
KITTENS, (7) FREE
to a good home. 10
weeks, males and
females. Black,
white, orange, tiger
greys. 575-9984
KITTENS, FREE, 9
weeks old, very
people friendly. 5
available. 740-1445
Call Sunday or
evenings.
815 Dogs
BEAGLE PUPPIES
7 weeks old, AKC
Registered. First
shots and wormed.
$250 each.
570-441-3501
ENGLISH BULL
DOG AKC
REGISTERED
Female 13 months
old with papers
Serious Inquires
only. Contact
(570) 313-2236
GERMAN SHEPHERD
PUPPIES
AKC Registered. 1st
shots and wormed.
Parents on
premises. $450
NO CHECKS.
570-328-4966
POMERANIAN
Puppies
AKC registered.
1 male, orange
and white. All
Shots & wormed.
14 weeks, $300
570-864-2643
ROTTIES HUSKIES
Yorkies, Chihuahuas
Labs & More
Bloomsburg
389-7877
Hazleton 453-6900
Hanover 829-1922
YORKIE PUPPY
Female, CKC, 12
weeks. Non-shed-
ding & hypo-aller-
genic, all shots.
$850
570-436-5083
835 Pets-
Miscellaneous
GUINEA PIGS. Free
to good home. 2
young females,
friendly. Includes
cage, food and all
accessories.
570-883-7261
900
REAL ESTATE
FOR SALE
906 Homes for Sale
Having trouble
paying your mort-
gage? Falling
behind on your
payments? You
may get mail from
people who promise
to forestall your
foreclosure for a fee
in advance. Report
them to the Federal
Trade Commission,
the nations con-
sumer protection
agency. Call 1-877-
FTC-HELP or click
on ftc.gov. A mes-
sage from The
Times Leader and
the FTC.
BEAR CREEK
Spaciously satisfy-
ing from the open
kitchen/eating area,
impressive.
Fireplace in great
room to an expand-
ed family room, you
will enjoy life more
in this picturesque
4 bedroom in Laurel
Brook Estates.
MLS#13-1587
$395,000
Arlene Warunek
570-714-6112
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-696-1195
DALLAS DALLAS
16 Westminster Dr.
You CAN judge a
book by its cover!
Attractive both
inside and out with
many upgrades and
all of the must
haves. Such as
hardwood floors,
modern kitchen-
baths, lower level
rec room for addi-
tional living space
and so much more!
Lovely rear con-
crete patio with
above ground pool
MLS 13-1373
$189,900
Jay A. Crossin
Extension 23
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
DALLAS DALLAS
19 Glen Riddle Lane
Peaceful surround-
ings overwhelm the
senses when you
step foot on this
lovely property.
Tudor style 2 story
with 4 bedrooms
and 2.5 baths, fami-
ly room with fire-
place. Accessible
outdoor deck from
kitchen, family room
Basement area can
be finished off for
additional living
space.
MLS 13-1818
$284,500 $284,500
Jay A. Crossin Jay A. Crossin
Extension 23 Extension 23
CROSSIN CROSSIN REAL REAL
EST ESTA ATE TE
570-288-0770 570-288-0770
DALLAS
3 Crestview Drive
Sprawling multi-
level, well-con-
structed and contin-
uously maintained.
5,428 sq. ft. of living
space. Living room
and formal dining
room with two-way
gas fireplace and
hardwood flooring.
Eat-in kitchen with
island. Florida room
with flagstone floor.
5 bedrooms, 4
baths, 2 half-baths.
Lower level rec-
room with fireplace
and wet bar leads to
heated, in-ground
pool. Beautifully
landscaped two-
acre lot. $525,000.
MLS#13-1309
Call Joe Moore
570-288-1401
DALLAS
Beautiful well kept 2
story Colonial fea-
tures 3,900 square
feet, 5 bedrooms,
3.5 baths, hard-
wood & tile floors,
gorgeous entry
foyer, built-in POOL,
fenced yard,
3 car garage.
ONE YEAR HOME
WARRANTY
INCLUDED.
MLS 13-1932
$469,000
Tracy Zarola
574-6465
696-0723
906 Homes for Sale
DALLAS
FINANCING AVAILABLE!
2,300 sq. ft. +!
Totally remodeled
kitchen, ceramic tile
floors &, back
splash, new appli-
ances, granite
counters, new roof
& porch windows,
finished hardwoods.
$279,900
570-793-0140
DALLAS
FOR SALE
BY OWNER
9 Westminster Dr.
4 bedroom brick
ranch. 2,800 sq. ft.
Totally renovated. 2
1/2 car garage. Low
taxes, corner lot.
See ZILLOW for
details. $274,000.
Call 570-878-3150
SCRANTON
HOUSE FILPPERS
INVESTORS
Scranton 2 Unit
Duplex. $6,000. 1/2
double, new bath,
$2,000. Send SASE
to Porter, P.O. box
69, Chinclilla, PA
18410
906 Homes for Sale
DALLAS
NEWBERRY ESTATE
Exceptional 4 bed-
room, 3 bath town-
house. Hardwood
floors. Bright & airy
kitchen. Finished
lower level with
walk-out to patio.
Enjoy carefree living
with swimming, golf
& tennis amenities.
MLS#13-2185
$199,000
Call Geri
570-862-7432
696-0888
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
906 Homes for Sale
DALLAS
Newberry Estate -
The Greens
4,000 sq. ft. condo
with view of ponds
& golf course. Three
bedrooms on 2
floors. 5 1/2 baths, 2
car garage & more.
$425,000
MLS# 12-1480
Besecker Realty
570-675-3611
GET THE WORD OUT
with a Classified Ad.
570-829-7130
DALLAS
45 Old Grandview
Ave. Immaculate 3
bedroom, 2 3/4
bath, attached 2
car garage, Bi-
Level is close to
Dallas Area
schools, shopping
and 309/415. Each
bedroom boasts
double closets.
Lower level family
room with fireplace,
and LL laundry.
Landscaped, new
roof, screened
porch and patio.
MLS#13-626
$199,500
Barbara Mark
696-5414
Smith Hourigan
Group
696-1195
DALLAS
Oak Hill
19 Sunset Drive.
3 bedroom, 2 bath
rancher with gas
hot water base-
board heat. Central
air conditioning. 12
x 24 three season
porch. Gorgeous
rear yard. Over-
sized 2 car garage.
(PHFA financing:
$4,400 dn, $671
mo., 4% int., 30
yrs.) MLS # 13-1939.
$144,900.
Ask for Bob
Kopec, Humford
Realty 822-5126.
DRUMS
Bright, sunny raised
ranch with beauti-
fully landscaped
yard. Cul-de-sac
location. Large oak
kitchen with sky-
lights and beamed
ceiling in dining
area. Woodburning
fireplace in the liv-
ing room. Large
Master bedroom
suite. Family room,
hobby room, huge
garage and deck.
Call Mary Ann
Desiderio
570-715-7733
$172,500
MLS#13-1638
Smith Hourigan
Group
Mountain Top
570-474-6307
FELL TWP.
RENT TO OWN
2 story single home
& garage in nice
neighborhood.
Own for only $295/
month for 12 years.
No money down, no
interest. Send
SASE to Porter, P.O.
Box 69, Chinchilla
PA 18410
906 Homes for Sale
DUPONT
PENDING PENDING
334 Lidy Road
2 bedroom Ranch
with a large yard,
could be cute little
home with TLC.
www.atlasrealty-
inc.com.
MLS 13-2077
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
DUPONT
REDUCED
$68,500
424 Simpson St.
Good condition
Cape Cod. 3 bed-
room, 1 full bath in
quiet neighborhood.
For more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 12-4357
Brian
Harashinski
570-237-0689
To place your
ad call...829-7130
DURYEA
$339,900
316 Raspberry
Rd.
Blueberry Hills
Like new 2 story
home with first
floor master
bedroom and
bath. Inground
pool on nice
corner lot with
fenced in yard.
Sunroom, hard-
wood floors, 2
car garage, full
unfinished
basement
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 13-610
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
S
O
L
D
DURYEA
154 Pettebone St.
3 bedroom, 1.5,
Bath, New Every-
thing! (12-2287)
$114,900
Listed by:
Chris Shiner
O'BOYLE REAL
ESTATE, LLC
570.586.2911
HUNTINGTON TWP.
Immaculate Cape
Cod in the country
with a beautiful
view. Three bed-
rooms, Florida room
& eat in kitchen.
MLS #13-1664
$159,900
Ken Williams
542-8800
Five Mountains
Realty
570-542-2141
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com MONDAY, JUNE 17, 2013 PAGE 5D
LINEUP
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906 Homes for Sale
DURYEA
Commercial or
Residential
Great opportunity to
live and work in the
same location OR
maintain current
tenant & rent out
the store front!
Spacious two floor,
3 bedroom living
quarters with large
open concept com-
mercial/office store
front. Newer roof,
separate utilities
&200 AMP electrical
service.
$65,000
CALL CHRISTINE
(570) 332-8832
613-9080
DURYEA
REDUCED
$85,900
226 Church St.
Large 2 story with 3
bedrooms and 2 full
baths. Extra large
room sizes, stained
glass and natural
woodowork. Not
flooded in 2011.
MLS #13-190. For
more information
and photos visit
atlasrealtyinc.com.
Call Charlie
829-6200
EDWARDSVILLE
Beautiful, Large
Brick Home with 5
bedrooms, 2 full
baths, 2 car gar-
age, large fenced-in
yard, sunporch.
Patio, lots of closets
& storage. Hard-
wood floors, large
kitchen with appli-
ances, 1st floor bed-
room suite. 2nd
kitchen in base-
ment. Was an old
rectory so has much
room to entertain.
Must see this home
to appreciate all it
has to offer. No
Water 2011 Flood.
MLS# 12-1536
$184,500
Linnea Holdren
570-371-1798
S E L E CT GROUP
5 7 0 - 4 5 5 - 8 5 2 1
570-455-8521
EDWARDSVILLE
Priced to sell!
Charming home on
a nice tree lined
street. 3 bedrooms
1 bath, great room
sizes. Large eat in
kitchen, 1 bedroom
offers a walk in clos-
et, hardwood floors
in bedrooms, 3 year
old above ground
pool with deck, pool
comes with an
extra, brand new,
liner, modern bath-
room. A great home
at a great price just
waiting for its new
owner. Sold as is;
inspections are for
buyer information
only.
MLS #13-2085
$47,900
Call/text Donna Cain
947-3824 or
Tony Wasco
855-2424
570-901-1020
EXETER
$69,900
OPEN HOUSE
SUN. 6/16
12-1:30 PM
1156 Wyoming Ave.
Large home with 4
bedrooms, yard
with detached 2 car
garage, private
yard. Home needs
a little updating but
a great place to
start! www.atlasre-
altyinc.com
MLS 13-865
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
MOUNTAINTOP
Townhome
Nice end unit on
large corner lot.
laminate floors in
dining room,
ceramic tile floors in
kitchen and baths.
New stainless steel
appliances. New LG
front loading steam
washer, back up
generator system.
$117,900. NEG.
570-262-0486
906 Homes for Sale
EXETER
$89,900
19 Thomas St.
4 bedroom, 2 bath
with 2 car garage
on quiet street.
Super yard, home
needs TLC, being
sold AS IS.
www.atlasrealty-
inc.com.
MLS 13-317
Call Tom
570-262-7716
Exeter
303 Bluebell Court
Very nice, 2-story
townhouse with a
brick front. 3 bed-
rooms, 1.5 baths,
eat-in kitchen with
laminate floor and
oak cabinets. Fin-
ished lower level,
gas heat and cen-
tral air. MLS#13-786
$119,900
Call Annie Dreesen
570-905-0253
EXETER
362 Susquehanna
Avenue
Completely remod-
eled, spectacular,
2 story Victorian
home, with 3 bed-
rooms, 1.5 baths,
new rear deck, full
front porch, tiled
baths & kitchen,
granite counter-
tops. All cherry
hardwood floors
throughout, all new
stainless steel
appliances & light-
ing. New oil fur-
nace, washer/dryer
in first floor bath.
Great neighbor-
hood, nice yard.
$174,900 (30 year
loan, $8,750 down,
$739/month, 30
years @ 3.25%)
NOT IN FLOOD
Call Bob at
570-654-1490
EXETER TWP.
NEW PRICE
Stately brick 2
story, with in
ground pool, cov-
ered patio, finished
basement, fireplace
& wood stove. 3
car attached gar-
age, 5 car
detached garage
with apartment
above.
MLS #11-1242
$499,000
Call Joe 613-9080
Line up a place to live
in classified!
EXETER
13 Thomas Street
Handicap accessi-
ble. 2 bedroom
rancher with vinyl
siding. Modern
kitchen and walk-in
shower. Central air
conditioning. One
car garage. 3
season porch. Nice
fenced rear yard.
MLS # 13-2428.
$95,000.
Ask for
Bob Kopec
Humford Realty,
Inc.
570-822-5126.
FORTY FORTY FORT FORT
1426 Wyoming Ave.
You will fall in love
with the grand Vic-
torian with magnifi-
cent entry foyer,
modern kitchen
with new counter
tops, enclosed 3
season side and
rear porch. Reno-
vated large front
porch, off street
parking and so
much more! Prop-
erty could also be
Professional office
in home use.
MUST SEE
MLS 12-3604
$199,900 $199,900
Jay A. Crossin Jay A. Crossin
Extension 23 Extension 23
CROSSIN CROSSIN REAL REAL
EST ESTA ATE TE
570-288-0770 570-288-0770
WARRIOR RUN
2 story, 2 bedroom
with fenced in yard,
all appliances
included. $51,900
Call Ed Appnel
570-817-2500
906 Homes for Sale
GLEN LYON
194-196 E. Main St.
Large home with
mother in law suite
that can either be
open to the rest of
the house or closed
off with its own
entrance and used
as an apartment.
This home has vinyl
siding, newer elec-
trical, replacement
windows, large yard
and 2 car garage.
Home offer a 1st
floor master and
bath, 3 fireplaces
and tons of room.
Come check out all
the possibilities for
yourself.
MLS 13-2419
$87,500
John Polifka
570-704-6846
FIVE MOUNTAINS
REALTY
570-542-2141
GOULDSBORO
BIG BASS LAKE
REDUCED
$120,000.
This large Chalet
has a full kitchen on
the ground floor
with full bath. Great
for two families to
share, or in-laws
quarters. In Big
Bass Lake Commu-
nity with indoor &
outdoor pools, club
house, gym & lake-
front beaches. Con-
veniently located
near Rts. 380, 435
& 307.
Call Tom
cell 516-507-9403
570-842-2300
HANOVER TWP.
Lyndwood Gardens
Newer 2 story.
kitchen with island &
breakfast area open
to family room with
fireplace. Formal
dining room, living
room, master suite
& 3 additional bed-
rooms with main
bath on second
floor. 2 car garage.
Fenced yard. Deck.
Central air. Home
warranty included.
MLS# 12-3070
$249,900
Call Linda
(570) 956-0584
Coldwell Banker
Rundle Real Estate
570-474-2340,
ext 19
HANOVER TWP.
209 Constitution
Avenue
Meticulously main-
tained 4 bedroom, 2
story, vinyl sided, 5
year old home situ-
ated on a generous
lot. Large, modern
kitchen, 3 baths, 1st
floor family room, 2
car garage, deck
and soooo much
more!
MLS #11-2429
$269,900
Call Florence
Keplinger @
715-7737
Smith Hourigan
Group
474-6307
HANOVER TWP.
291 Vanessa Drive
DIR: From Wilkes-
Barre to Sans Souci
Parkway, left on St.
Marys Rd, right on
Sively, left on Mark
Hill Rd., left on
Vanessa Drive.
Property is the last
home on the left.
Custom built colo-
nial two-story. 4
bedrooms, 4 baths,
two vehicle garage.
View of the Wyo-
ming Valley. Located
on a dead end, pri-
vate street, just
minutes from the
Wyoming Valley
Country Club, Han-
over Industrial Park,
& public transporta-
tion. Sun room, fam-
ily room with wood
burning fireplace,
hardwood floors on
1st & 2nd floors, 1st
floor laundry room &
bathroom. Central
cooling fan. Lower
level recreation
room with bar, lots
of closets & stor-
age, coal/wood
stove, office/5th
bedroom & bath.
MLS #12-4610
PRICE REDUCED
TO
$269,900
Louise Laine
283-9100 x20
283-9100
906 Homes for Sale
HANOVER TWP.
Extraordinary
quality built
4000+ sq. ft.
Home - rear yard
with stone patio
backs up to the 8th
Fairway of the
Wyoming Valley
Country Club!
Custom cherry eat-
in kitchen with
island, formal living,
dining & family
rooms have custom
hardwood floors,
1st floor family room
has Vermont Stone
fireplace & wet bar,
1st floor Master
Suite has his & her
dressing rooms &
powder rooms
opening to a tiled
master bath with
jetted tub & sepa-
rate tiled shower.
Second floor has 3
additional bed-
rooms with walk in
closets, 2 full baths
& large attic, gigan-
tic lower level family
room has stone
fireplace, seated
bar area with sink &
mirrored back-
splash, workout
area & powder
room. Stunning
landscaping with an
indoor & outdoor
speaker system,
oversized 2 car
garage & under-
ground sprinkler
system.
$395,000
Call Pat today @
570-287-1196
Smith Hourigan
Group
570 287-1196
HANOVER TWP.
NEW LISTING!
Like new town-
home. 3 bedrooms,
2.5 bath; two-story
townhome featuring
a two-story Great
room, hardwood
flooring throughout,
gas fireplace, gran-
ite tops, stainless
steel appliances,
maple glazed cabi-
nets in the kitchen
and a two-car
garage.
MLS #13-1960
$245,000
Maribeth Jones
696-6565
696-2600,
Ext. 210
HARVEYS LAKE
PRICE REDUCED!
22 Wood Street
Nice cottage with
lake rights, close
to the public boat
dock. New kitchen
& living room ceil-
ings & insulation
just completed.
Enjoy this place
during the Summer
months or year
round. Recently
updated with new
roof & floors.
MLS# 12-3820
$64,900
Pat Doty
394-6901
696-2468
HARVEYS LAKE
205 Lakeside Drive
3 bedroom 3 bath,
Lake Front Cape
Cod with very spa-
cious rooms. Cen-
tral air, first floor
master bedroom
and oversized dock
with boatslip. Home
also features a two
car garage. There is
a sewer hookup.
Permit already in
place for the
Lakeshore. Build
your boathouse this
summer! $ 480,000
Make an Offer!
MLS# 12-1362
Mark Nicholson
Or Buz Boback
570-696-0724
Lewith & Freeman
Real Estate, Inc.
570-696-6400
JENKINS TOWNSHIP
HIGHLAND HILLS
FABULOUS VIEW!
3 bedroom, 3.5
bath, bi-level. Stain-
less kitchen with
granite counter-
tops. Porcelain tile
& laminate through-
out. In-ground pool.
Economical heating.
$219,900
Call 570-655-8034
906 Homes for Sale
HARVEYS LAKE
30 Pine Street
4 bedroom contem-
porary with a very
happy open floor
plan. Plenty of natu-
ral light and high
quality finishes.
Nestled in a private
setting. The beauti-
ful in ground pool
even has its own
cabana with a full
bath. This home
also features natu-
ral cedar exterior
and a two car
garage. $324,000.
MLS# 13-1330
Mark Nicholson
570-696-0724
Lewith & Freeman
Real Estate, Inc.
570-696-6400
HUGHESTOWN
reduced
$189,900
184 Rock St.
Spacious brick
Ranch with 3 bed-
rooms, large living
room with fireplace.
3 baths, large Flori-
da room with AC.
Full finished base-
ment with 4th bed-
room, 3/4 bath,
large rec room with
wet bar. Also a
cedar closet and
walk up attic. www.
atlasrealtyinc.com
MLS 12-3626
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
HUGHESTOWN
REDUCED
$59,900
64 Center St.
Large 4 bedroom
with master bed-
room and bath on
1st floor. New gas
furnace and water
heater with updated
electrical panel.
Large lot with 1 car
garage, nice loca-
tion. www.atlasreal-
tyinc.com.
Must be sold to
settle estate
MLS 13-294
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
JENKINS TWP.
$129,900
689 R. Westmin-
ster Very private
2 bedroom
home located on
1.48 acres. Cen-
tral air,
screened in
porch, 1.5
baths, large liv-
ing/dining room,
extra 1 story
building could
be converted
into 2 car
garage. 16x8
screened in
porch, fresh
paint.
www.atlas
realtyinc.com.
MLS 13-1622
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
P
E
N
D
I
N
G
MOCANAQUA
Nice 2 bedroom
Cape Cod with oak
kitchen cabinets,
walk in closet,
Anderson windows,
attic, sunroom,
open front porch,
10 X 14' rear deck
& detached garage.
Live in yourself or
use as rental.
Owner will consider
reasonable offer.
MLS# 12-2532
$62,000
Call Ken Williams
570-542-8800
Five Mountains
Realty
570-542-2141
906 Homes for Sale
JENKINS TWP.
46 Old Mill Road
Stunning English
Tudor in a desirable
neighborhood.
Modern kitchen
with cherry cabi-
nets, stainless steel
appliances, island
with Jenn air and
tile floor. Separate
glass surrounded
breakfast room.
Family room with
gas fireplace, and
hardwood floors.
Formal dining room
with bay window.
French doors
throughout. Master
bedroom suite with
master bath, walk-
in closet and sepa-
rate sitting room.
Lower level rec-
room and office.
Two car garage.
Pittston Area
School District.
MLS#13-1076
Price Reduced
$298,000
Call
Sandra Gorman:
570-696-5408
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-696-1195
JENKINS TWP.
$239,000
Updated bi-level
with 2nd story mas-
ter suite addition
features a jetted
tub, separate show-
er, water closet &
two huge walk in
closets! Lower level
has 2nd kitchen &
can function as an
in-law suite. Fire-
place in 1st floor
family room, all new
windows, central air
& corner lot.
This is a Must See!
Call Christine
332-8822
613-9080
KINGSTON
$139,900
129 S. Dawes Ave.
Three bedroom, 2
bath cape cod with
central air, new
windows, doors,
carpets and tile
floor. Full concrete
basement with 9'
ceilings. Walking
distance to Wilkes
Barre. Electric and
Oil heat. MLS #12-
3283. For more
information and
photos visit
www.atlasrealty-
inc.com.
Call Tom
570-262-7716
KINGSTON
561 MERCER AVE.
This roomy 2-Story
includes a modern
kitchen & bath, liv-
ing & dining rooms,
3 bedrooms & a
family room in the
lower-level. The
yard is small, but
there is generous
off-street parking.
Enjoy the outdoors
from your 15 x 10
two-tier deck, or the
new front porch.
This home includes
2 free-standing gas
stoves. For more
details & to view the
photos online, go to:
www. pr udent i al
realestate.com &
enter PRU8N9T9 in
the Home Search.
Listed at $94,500.
MLS#13-1538.
Call today to
schedule a private
showing.
Mary Ellen Belchick
696-6566,
Walter Belchick
696-2600 ext. 301.
696-2600
LAFLIN
3 bedroom Bi-Level
situated on lovely
lot with formal din-
ing room, lower
level family room
with gas fireplace,
central air, conven-
iently located to
interstates &
Casino.
A must see!
MLS #13-1100
$199,000
Marie Montante
881-0103
288-9371
906 Homes for Sale
KINGSTON
Charming three
bedroom 2 story
featuring pretty
living room. Formal
dining room. New
kitchen with stain-
less steel appli-
ances. Beautiful
hardwood floors.
Third floor bonus
room. Gas heat.
Private drive
provides plenty of
off street parking.
MLS# 13-754
$111,900
Call Ruthie
570-714-6110
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-287-1196
KINGSTON KINGSTON
80 James St.
This stately 4 bed-
room, 1.5 bath
Kingston home has
the WOW factor!
Meticulously well
cared for with old
world touches
throughout. Like a
stained glass win-
dow, built ins and
tiled fireplace in liv-
ing room. Kitchen is
modern eat in with
washer/dryer closet
for convenience.
Large front porch,
rear deck and
detached garage.
MLS 13-1761
$289,000 $289,000
Jay A. Crossin Jay A. Crossin
Extension #23 Extension #23
CROSSIN REAL CROSSIN REAL
EST ESTA ATE TE
570-288-0770 570-288-0770
LAFLIN
$109,000
147 Haverford Drive
Nicely kept 2 bed-
room, 1.5 bath
townhome in desir-
able neighborhood.
Great looking family
room in lower level.
Spacious rooms
with plenty of clos-
ets. Outdoor patio
with pavers and
trees for privacy.
Carpet, tiled kitchen
counter and AC unit
are ALL NEW! Move
in condition. www.
atlasrealtyinc.com
MLS 13-909
Call Terry
570-885-3041
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
LAFLIN
$229,000
7 Concord Drive
Beautifully main-
tained 2 story in
Oakwood Park. 3
bedrooms, 2.5
baths with 2 car
garage and private
rear yard. Mature
landscaping,
gas/electric heat
with central air.
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 13-2215
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
LAFLIN
$254,900
24 Fordham Road
Great Split Level in
Oakwood Park,
Laflin. 13 rooms, 4
bedrooms, 2 1/2
baths. 2 car garage
and large corner
lot. Lots of space
for the large or
growing family.
www. atlasrealty-
inc.com
MLS 13-452
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
NANTICOKE
38 E. Union Street
Nice single, 3 bed-
rooms, gas heat,
large yard.
Central location.
Affordable @
$64,900
TOWNE &
COUNTRY
REAL ESTATE
Call
570-735-8932 or
570-542-5708
906 Homes for Sale
LAFLIN
PRICE REDUCED!
OAKWOOD PARK
If you like comfort &
charm, youll love
this sparkling 4,100
+ sq. ft. 5 bedroom,
4 bath two story tra-
ditional home in per-
fect condition in a
great neighborhood.
Nothing to do but
move right in. Off-
ers formal living &
dining rooms, 1st
floor family room
with fireplace, gran-
ite countertops in
kitchen & baths,
lower level recre-
ation room with fire-
place & wet bar.
MLS #13-549
Only $324,900
Call
Barbara Metcalf
570-696-0883
570-696-3801
LAFLIN
new price
$124,900
111 Laflin Road
Nice 3 edroom, 1.5
bath Split Level
home with hard-
wood floors, 1 car
garage, large yard
and covered patio
in very convenient
location. Great curb
appeal and plenty
of off street park-
ing. Rt. 315 to light
@ Laflin Rd. Turn
west onto Laflin Rd.
Home is on left.
For more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 12-2852
Keri Best
570-885-5082
LAFLIN
PRICE REDUCED
$360,000
10 Fairfield Drive
Exceptional & spa-
cious custom built
cedar home with
open floor plan and
all of the amenities
situated on 2 lots in
picturesque setting.
Create memories in
this 5 bedroom, 4
bath home with 18
ceiling in living
room, gas fireplace,
granite kitchen,
large 2 story foyer,
huge finished lower
level for entertain-
ing with bar/full
kitchen & wine cel-
lar. Inground pool &
hot tub. Directions:
Rt 315 to Laflin Rd.,
right onto Oakwood
Dr., right onto Ford-
ham Rd, left onto
Fairfield Dr., home
is on the right.
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 12-4063
Call Keri Best
570-885-5082
LARKSVILLE
$149,900
511 E. State St.
Everything you
need is in this
house. 4 bedrooms,
lower level family
room, den open
living/dining room,
nice yard with
above ground pool
and covered patio,
extra parking. 1 car
garage. Very well
maintained home.
Move right in!
MLS 13-2432
CALL COLLEEN
MOUNTAINTOP
GLEN SUMMIT
Beautiful private
setting surrounds
this 4,200 sq. ft. two
story. Cherry kit-
chen, 2nd floor rec
room, 4 bedrooms
& 3 1/2 baths.
Nature at the door
with wildlife, plus
hiking & biking trails.
MLS#13-1233
$249,900
Call Dave @
570-715-7750
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-474-6307
906 Homes for Sale
LARKSVILLE
OPEN HOUSE!!!
Sat., June 15th
Noon-2PM
Cutie with a large
lot. Nice kitchen.
Roomy living room.
Well kept home.
Seller will give a
carpet allowance
for second floor
carpet. Great
starter home- why
pay rent when you
can buy? This
would also make a
super investment
property.
MLS# 12-3707
$49,900
Tracy Zarola
696-0723
696-3801
MOOSIC
REDUCED
$87,500
R. 1104 Springbrook
Cape Cod home
with endless possi-
bilities. 3-4 bed-
room, 1 bath, cen-
tral air, plenty of
storage. Enclosed
porch, garage with
carport. Situated on
3 lots. Directions: 1-
81, Exit 180 Moosic
(Rt. 11) L. onto 502,
straight 1/2 mile.
Turn R onto 8th St.,
up hill, turn left,
house 3rd on right.
www.atlasrealty-
inc.com
MLS 13-607
Call Keri Best
570-885-5082
Looking for that
special place
called home?
Classified will address
Your needs.
Open the door
with classified!
HANOVER TWP.
LIBERTY HILLS
An absolutely won-
derful, must see,
home with many
desirable features
including hardwood,
tile & pergo style
flooring, oak wood
trim throughout,
master bath with
garden tub & 1st
floor laundry, Lower
level is a-1 grade
including family
room with fantastic
gas fire place, wet
bar, 3/4 bath & addi-
tional 4th bedroom.
The original owners
enjoyed this home
for 13 years and
now it's your
chance.
MLS# 13-2335
$265,000
Call Jim Banos
570-991-1883
For appointment
COLDWELL
BANKER RUN-
DLE REAL ESTATE
570-474-2340
MOUNTAIN TOP
Expansive 4 bed-
room 2 story on
nearly 3 acres
offers incredible
views! Modern
kitchen with new
quartz counters,
family room with
fireplace, new hard-
wood on first floor,
new heat pump,
first floor bedroom,
finished lower level,
3 car garage re-
tractable awning on
deck & more! Call
for an appointment
today!
MLS 13-251
$465,000
Call Linda Gavio
(570) 956-0584
Coldwell Banker
Rundle Real Estate
570-474-2340,
ext. 19
NANTICOKE
$124,500
WOW A MODERN
RANCH! King size
brick Ranch located
on the outskirts of
Nanticoke, Open
floor plan with large
sunny sunken living
room, tiled kitchen,
formal dining room
3 bedrooms. Bath
with tiled garden
tub and glass
shower. Finished
lower level with fire-
place, 3/4 bath with
laundry area and
carport. Newer
roof, furnace and
electrical. Newly
landscaped back
yard. Must See
MLS 12-4107
Michele Hopkins
570-540-6046
906 Homes for Sale
NANTICOKE
Perfect opportunity
in Nanticoke. Move
in ready home that
has it all. Great
kitchen, huge living
room/dining room
combo, generous
bedroom sizes, fin-
ished room in base-
ment, covered
deck, nice yard, &
in a great section of
town. If you are
looking in Nanticoke
this house has to
be put on the top of
your list.
MLS#13-1374
$110,000
Call Dave, Jr.
885-2693
Rubbico Real
Estate
826-1600
NANTICOKE
265 Kirmar Park-
way. 3 bedroom
Cape Cod style
home on large lot
with off street park-
ing. 1st floor master
bedroom, 2 season
sunroom, partial fin-
ished basement,
fenced yard, lots
of storage, large
modern eat in
kitchen.
MLS 13-1077
$89,900
ANTONIK &
ASSOCIATES,
INC.
Patricia Lunski
570-735-7497
NANTICOKE
265 Kirmar Park-
way. 3 bedroom
Cape Cod style
home on large lot
with off street park-
ing. 1st floor master
bedroom, 2 season
sunroom, partial fin-
ished basement,
fenced yard, lots
of storage, large
modern eat in
kitchen.
MLS 13-1077
$89,900
ANTONIK &
ASSOCIATES,
INC.
Patricia Lunski
570-735-7497
NANTICOKE
393 E. Noble St.
Check out this 4
bedroom, 1.5 bath
home with 1 car
detached garage.
This home features
a Jacuzzi tub,
newer roof, fur-
nace, hot water
heater, replacement
windows, fenced
yard and large
covered deck.
MLS 13-613
$77,900
Call John Polifka
570-704-6846
FIVE MOUNTAINS
REALTY
570-542-2141
NANTICOKE
PRICE
REDUCTION
260-262
E. Green Street
Double Block
Plenty of parking
with paved back
alley. Close to
LCCC. New roof
installed in 2007
along with a kitchen
& bath update
in #260.
MLS #13-694
$59,900
Call Dana Distasio
570-715-9333
LINE UP
A GREAT DEAL...
IN CLASSIFIED!
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
NANTICOKE
Modern, well main-
tained 4 bedroom
home in move in
condition. Covered
patio, in ground
pool, private fenced
yard, ductless air,
vinyl siding.
Immaculate!
MLS# 13-534
REDUCED TO
$154,900
Call Ann Marie
Chopick
570-288-6654
PAGE 6D MONDAY, JUNE 17, 2013 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
906 Homes for Sale
NANTICOKE
R. 395
E. Washington St.
Nice double block.
Two bedrooms
each side. Sepa-
rate heat & electric.
Close to College.
Affordable @
$49,500
Towne & Country
R.E. Co.
735-8932
or 542-5708
NANTICOKE
REDUCED!
$64,900
245 East Ridge St.
Great home in move
in condition. Modern
kitchen & bath, din-
ing room, living
room, 3 bedrooms,
Appliances, de-
tached garage in
rear of lot. Alu-
minum siding.
$64,900
Shown by
appointment
CAPITOL
REAL ESTATE
Call
John Vacendak
Your Neighborhood
Professional
570-735-1810
570-823-4290
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
NANTICOKE
1210 S. Hanover St.
Large 3 bedroom 1
bath home with a
big yard. Possible
off street parking in
the back off the
alley. This home has
replacement win-
dows on the second
floor and awnings
over the windows.
This will be a great
home with a little
TLC. MLS# 13-2093
$59,900
John Polifka
570-704-6846
FIVE MOUNTAINS
REALTY
570-542-2141
NANTICOKE
Seller will enter-
tain all reason-
able offers.
117-119 Park St.
off Hanover Street
(Double Side x Side)
A great Double
Block house, in
good condition,
great investment
opportunity,
separate utilities
2 bedrooms each
side, Vinyl siding,
gas heat, hot water
baseboard, Large
lot, new fencing.
"THIS IS AN ESTATE,
NO SELLERS
DISCLOSURE".
HOUSE BEING
SOLD IN "AS IS
CONDITION",
ALL TEST, INSPEC-
TIONS, are for
informational
purposes only.
Shown to qualified
buyers. Need extra
notice to show,
tenant occupied
one side.
Call for appointment
and any other
questions.
Capitol
Real Estate
John Vacendak
Broker
Your neighborhood
Professional
570-735-1810
579-823-4290
NANTICOKE
1472 S. Hanover St.
Well maintained
bi-level house fea-
tures 2 bedrooms,
1 3/4 baths, recre-
ation room with
propane stove. Wall
to wall, 3 season
porch. Profession-
ally landscaped
yard. Storage
shed, new appli-
ances, ceiling fans.
Close to LCCC.
REDUCED!
$145,000
Call 570-735-7594
or 570-477-2410
906 Homes for Sale
OPEN HOUSE!
SAT. & SUN
15 & 16, 12-3
DALLAS
23 Idlewood Dr.
3/4 bedrooms, 2.5
baths, Central Air,
Gas Heat, Large
Cherry Kitchen.
Ceramic,
Hardwood, Carpet.
Lots of closets,
storage & unfin-
ished basement.
Beautiful land-
scape. New roof &
water heater.
Large 3 Car
Garage. $325,900
Call 570-675-4700
PARSONS
JUST LISTED
$134,900
35 Wyndwood Dr.
Like new 2 bed-
room, 2 bath
attached ranch.
Upgraded kitchen,
vaulted living
room, sunroom,
master bedroom
www.35wyndwood
.com Call Mark
215-275-0487
C-21 TRES
610-485-7200
ext 142
PITTSTON
$134,900
15 High St.
Well kept newly
remodeled, 2 story
home, with modern
kitchen, central air,
new triple pane
replacement win-
dows and custom
made blinds for
each window.
Home is in move in
condition, with plas-
ter walls and design
ceilings, plus much,
much more. A
MUST SEE!
MLS 13-1088
Fred Mecadon
570-817-5792
PITTSTON
$89,900
57 Dewitt St.
Cute Cape Cod with
3 bedrooms, vinyl
replacement win-
dows, Pergo floor-
ing and walk up
attic. Put this one
on your list.
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 13-1038
CALL CHARLIE
570-829-6200
Job Seekers are
looking here!
Where's your ad?
570-829-7130 and
ask for an employ-
ment specialist
PITTSTON
PRICE REDUCTION
Lots of room to
breathe in this spa-
cious 2 story with an
open floor plan.
New gas furnace,
replacement win-
dows, dual zone
heat. First floor is
updated, 2nd floor
needs modernizing.
MLS #13-405
$90,000
Call Arlene Warunek
570-714-6112
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-696-1195
PITTSTON
PRICE REDUCTION
$179,900
69 Curtis St.
Spacious 3 bed-
rooms home, rebuilt
in 1980 with 2 full
baths and a 3/4
master bath. Pri-
vate pool area with
brand new liner, 2
car garage with 1/2
bath and full 2nd
story for hobby
room, etc. Located
at the end of dead
end street, affords
lots of privacy.
www.atlasrealty-
inc.com
MLS 13-2079
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
906 Homes for Sale
PITTSTON
REDUCED
$106,900
67 Carroll St.
The WOW factor!
Move right in and
enjoy this renovat-
ed home with no
worries! 3 bed-
rooms with lots of
closet space. 2 full
baths including a 4
piece master bath
with custom tile
work, open floor
plan with modern
kitchen with island,
corner lot with off
street parking and
nice yard. Come
and take a look!
www.atlasrealty-
inc.com
MLS 13-863
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
PITTSTON
REDUCED
$109,000
25 Swallow St.
Grand 2 story home
with Victorial fea-
tures, large eat in
kitchen with laun-
dry, 3/4 bath on
first floor, 2nd bath
with claw foot tub,
lots of closet
space. Move in
ready, off street
parking in rear.
MLS 12-3926
Call Colleen
570-883-7594
PITTSTON
REDUCED
$99,900
328 S. Main St.
3 story Victorial
with 10 rooms, 4
bedrooms, 2 baths,
2 car garage with
newer driveway.
Central air, large
yard. www.atlasre-
altyinc.com
MLS 13-1073
Call T Call Tom om
570-262-7716 570-262-7716
PLAINS
''Busy People
Compatible''. Enjoy
the daily conven-
ience of living in the
vicinity of what's
happening
''Woodcrest
Estates''. Move in
ready, finished
lower level, relax on
rear deck with view
of Mohegan Sun.
MLS#13-1110
$120,000
Arlene Warunek
570-714-6112
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-696-1195
PLAINS
Cozy Two Bedroom
in the heart of
Plains! Eat in
kitchen with mod-
ern bath, large bed-
rooms. Fenced in
yard & large open
basement.
MLS#13-1954
$89,900
Call Dave, Jr.
885-2693
Rubbico Real
Estate
826-1600
PLAINS TOWNSHIP
FOR SALE BY OWNER
3 bedroom ranch, 1
1/2 baths, large eat
in kitchen. Family &
sun rooms. Fin-
ished basement
with laundry room,
1.5 car garage. Lots
of storage & closet
space. New roof,
service panel &
newer appliances.
Hardwood floors &
vinyl siding. 1 mile
from Wyoming Val-
ley Mall & VA Hospi-
tal. Easy access to
I-81 & 315.
$177,900
(570)824-6533
906 Homes for Sale
PLAINS
REDUCED
$209,900
4 Spruce Ave.
BIRCHWOOD HILLS
3 bedrooms, 3
baths. Hardwood
floors, central air.
Finished basement
with fireplace, great
yard, super loca-
tion. www.atlas
realtyinc.com.
MLS 13-1251
Call T Call Tom om
570-262-7716] 570-262-7716]
Shopping for a
new apartment?
Classified lets
you compare costs -
without hassle
or worry!
Get moving
with classified!
PLAINS TWP
$189,900
20 Nittany Lane
Affordable 3 level
townhome features
2 car garage, 3
bedrooms, 3.5
baths, lower level
patio and upper
level deck, gas fire-
place, central air
and vac and stereo
system www.atlas-
realtyinc.com
MLS 13-871
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
PLYMOUTH
NEW LISTING
433 FAIRVIEW ST.
A great home in a
nice neighborhood,
well out of the flood
zone. Watch the
sunrise & other
great views from
the front porch.
Modern kitchen with
vaulted ceiling,
modern bath, living
& dining rooms, & 2
generous bed-
rooms. Updates
include: new roof,
windows, front door,
lighting, wall-to-wall
carpeting, interior
/exterior painting,
security system,
etc. Off-street
parking & large,
level yard with
mature trees &
flowering bushes.
For more details &
to view the photos
online, go to:
www. pr udent i al
realestate.com &
enter PRU5B4G9 in
the Home Search.
Listed at $79,500
MLS#13-2080
Mary Ellen Belchick
696-6566,
Walter Belchick
696-2600 ext. 301.
696-2600
SHAVERTOWN
$197,500
60 Vonderheid St.
Well maintained
traditional colonial
minutes from the
cross valley in a
quiet neighborhood.
7 rooms with 3
bedrooms and 2
baths, fireplace,
large yard, & deck.
Kitchen and bath-
rooms recently ren-
novated and MORE!
Call Andy
570-762-4358
SHICKSHINNY LAKE
Have you always
dreamed of owning
a lakefront home?
Don't miss the
opportunity to own
this stunning 3,000
sq. ft. 3 bedroom, 3
bath home w/100'
lakefront with dock.
Offers attractive
Florida room with
vaulted ceiling over-
looking the lake,
plus formal living
room with fireplace,
dining room, family
room with fireplace,
den & 2 car garage.
Power boat for
water skiing & jet
skiing permitted.
MLS# 13-310
$339,900
Call
Barbara Metcalf
570-696-0883
570-696-3801
906 Homes for Sale
SUGARLOAF
Beautiful home in a
beautiful location.
2003 custom built
Cape Cod offers
4.89 cleared acres.
Heated in ground
pool, 3 full baths, 1st
floor master bed-
room & laundry & an
modern kitchen. 2
car attached gar-
age with bonus
room above. Close
to Humboldt Indus-
trial Park & Eagle
Rock Resort.
MLS# 13-894
$309,000
Call/text Donna Cain
947-3824 or
Tony Wasco
855-2424
570-901-1020
SWOYERSVILLE
$129,900
77 Scott St.
Ranch in excellent
condition with 3
bedrooms, 1 bath,
roof in 2004,
kitchen in 2003,
newer windows,
great lot. Move in
condition. Ductless
a/c units.
MLS 13-2171
Tom Salvaggio
570-262-7716
To place your
ad call...829-7130
SWOYERSVILLE
STEEPLECHASE
50 Grandville Drive
Outstanding 3 bed-
room, 2 1/2 bath
townhouse out of
the flood zone.
Formal dining room,
family room, master
bedroom suite, pri-
vate guest suite
also on upper level.
Central air and cen-
tral vacuum. Deck,
garage + many
extras. Freshly
painted and carpet-
ed, so move right in!
$169,900
MLS # 13-195.
Ask for Bob Kopec
Humford Realty Inc
570-822-5126
SWOYERSVILLE
Amazing view of the
valley from this
lovely 2 bedroom
home. Nice room
sizes, parquet floor-
ing in Living room,
out of flood zone,
big fenced in back
yard includes large
storage shed and a
beautiful deck over-
looking a peaceful
wooded area, mod-
ern kitchen, off
street parking PLUS
room to expand if
needed. All this plus
a 1 year home
warranty!
MLS#13-2279
$110,900
Call/text Donna Cain
947-3824 or
Tony Wasco
855-2424
570-901-1020
WILKES-BARRE
Totally redone two
bedroom. with
Custom kitchen and
ex large bath. New
hot air furnace. Off
street parking with
detached one car
garage.
MLS #12-4619
$69,900
Call Dave, Jr.
885-2693
Rubbico
Real Estate
826-1600
WILKES-BARRE
NEW LISTING!
Spacious brick
ranch home boasts
3 large bedrooms,
1.5 baths. New car-
pet in bedrooms &
living room. New
flooring in kitchen.
Large deck with
above ground pool.
Recently installed
new roof, furnace &
water heater.
MLS# 13-1887
$120,000
Christine Pieczynski
696-6569
906 Homes for Sale
WAPWALLOPEN
359 Pond Hill
Mountain Road
4 bedroom home
features a great
yard with over 2
acres of property.
Situated across
from a playground.
Needs some TLC
but come take a
look, you wouldnt
want to miss out.
There is a pond at
the far end of the
property that is
used by all sur-
rounding neighbors.
This is an estate
and is being sold as
is. No sellers prop-
erty disclosure. Will
entertain offers in
order to settle
estate. MLS 11-962
$49,900
Call Karen
Coldwell Banker
Rundle Real Estate
570-474-2340
WEST PITTSTON
$109,900
OPEN HOUSE
SUN. 6/16 AND 6/23
2:30 - 4PM
214 FREMONT ST.
Very well cared for
3 bedroom home in
move in condition.
Large eat in
kitchen, nice yard,
freshly painted bed-
rooms with new
carpet. Newer win-
dows. Not Flooded
www.atlasrealty-
inc.com
MLS 13-2032
Colleen Turant
570-237-0415
WEST PITTSTON
Lovely four square
home with great
curb appeal.
Beautiful chestnut
woodwork through-
out from the two
way staircases,
French doors from
foyer & built in
bookcases separat-
ing the living & din-
ing rooms. Relax
on the flagstone
front porch.
MLS#13-2038
$205,000
Arlene Warunek
570-714-6112
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-696-1195
WEST PITTSTON
PRICE REDUCED!
Mt. Zion Road.
Single family two
story - a place for
kids! Four bed-
rooms & bath up-
stairs. 1st floor has
formal dining room,
living room, family
room & laundry
room. Master bed-
room & bath added
to the 1st floor.
Good sized kitchen.
2,126 sq. ft. total on
1 acre. Wyoming
Area School Dis-
trict.
MLS # 13-700
$119,900
Call Ruth K. Smith
570-696-5411
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-696-1195
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
WEST WYOMING
$74,500
384 Tripp St.
3 bedroom, 1 bath,
2 story with large
kitchen, dining room
and living room. Pri-
vate rear yard, nice
neighborhood gas
heat. www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 13-2179
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
906 Homes for Sale
WEST WYOMING
$74,500
384 Tripp St.
3 bedroom, 1 bath,
2 story with large
kitchen, dining room
and living room. Pri-
vate rear yard, nice
neighborhood gas
heat. www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 13-2179
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
ATLAS REALTY,
INC.
570-829-6200
It's that time again!
Rent out your
apartment
with the Classifieds
570-829-7130
WEST WYOMING
$99,900
1565 Shoemaker
Avenue
Well taken care of
Cape Cod with 3
bedrooms, 1 bath,
hardwood floors,
detached 1 car
garage.
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 13-2280
Tom Salvaggio
570-262-7716
WHITE HAVEN
501 Birch Lane
Beautiful 4 bed-
room, 3 bath. Enjoy
the amenities of a
private lake, boat-
ing, basketball
courts, etc. The
home has wood
floors and carpeting
throughout. French
doors in the kitchen
that lead you out to
the large rear deck
for entertaining. The
backyard has 2 utili-
ty sheds for storage
MLS 12-1695
NEW PRICE
$174,900
Call Karen
Coldwell Banker
Rundle Real Estate
570-474-2340
WILKES BARRE
PRICE REDUCED
$49,900
735 N. Washington
Street
Spacious 2 story, 3
bedrooms with 2 ca
detached garage,
good starter home,
needs TLC. MLS #12
3887. For more
information and pho
tos visit www.atlasre
altyinc.com.
Call Tom
570-262-7716
WILKES BARRE
REDUCED
$39,900
61 Puritan Lane
Are you spending
more than $400/mo
on rent?? Owning
this home could
cost you less! With
3 bedrooms and a
fenced in yard, this
home makes a per-
fect place to start
your homeowner-
ship experience.
Ask me how!
MLS #12-1823. For
more information
and photos visit
www.atlasrealty-
inc.com.
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
WILKES- BARRE
$112,000
43 Richmont Ave.
Worth more than
listed price, this 3
bedroom, 2 bath
Cape Cod home
has central air,
hardwood floors,
fenced yard, above
ground pool, mod-
ern kitchen and
baths. www.atlasre-
altyinc.com
MLS 13-789
Tom Salvaggio
570-262-7716
906 Homes for Sale
WILKES-BARRE
$174,900
105 Plymouth Ave.
This lovely Bi-level
home features 3
bedrooms, 1 and
1/2 bathrooms, in
ground pool with
pool bar and deck,
central air. Hard-
wood floors, gas
fireplace, finished
lower level, fenced
in yard and 2 year
garage with ONE
YEAR HOME WAR-
RANTY. (directions:
Old RIver Road to
Dagobert, at 2nd
stop sign turn R
onto Plymouth Ave.
Home is on left in
2nd block)
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 13-2144
Keri Best
570-885-5082
WILKES-BARRE
$62,400
42 Bradford St.
Well maintained,
move in ready!
MLS 13-1531
Kevin Sobilo
570-817-0706
WILKES-BARRE
$72,500
319 N. Washington
Street.
Large 3 story home
with 3 bedrooms of
each of the 2nd and
3rd floors. Hard-
wood floors in living
room and dining
room, gas heat,
first floor laundry. 1
3/4 baths, large eat
in kitchen, central
vac, alarm system,
low taxes.
MLS 13-2348
CALL COLLEEN
WILKES-BARRE
$72,900
35 Hillard St.
STOP WASTING
MONEY!! If you are
paying more than
$600/month rent
you need to look at
this house. Your
mortgage, taxes
and insurance could
be less!!! Ask me
how! Move in con-
dition 3 bedroom
home with nice
yard, modern
kitchen and 1st floor
laundry. For more
info and photos
visit: www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 12-1655
Colleen Turant
570-237-0415
WILKES-BARRE
$87,500
Best of both
worlds...Commer-
cial space plus 2-3
bedroom home
complete with
detached garage
and off street park-
ing with yard.
Home has been
nicely remodeled
with 1 3/4 baths,
hardwood floors,
move in condition.
Commercial space
is 14x26 with end-
less possibilities.
www. atlasrealty
inc.com
MLS 13-982
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
WILKES-BARRE
COMPLETELY RENO-
VATED
Quiet area, 3 bed-
rooms, 2 baths,
large eat in kit-
chen, dining & liv-
ing rooms, walk in
closet, huge
bonus room.
Recent roof, new
boiler, up-graded
plumbing & elec-
tric. New carpet-
ing & vinyl, huge
backyard, drive-
way, front & rear
porch, patio, new
windows.
Appraised at
$86,900, for sale
at $54,900.
610-389-8226
906 Homes for Sale
WILKES-BARRE
$99,900
77 Schuler St.
NOTHING to do but
move right in! This
home has every-
thing you need...3
bedrooms, 2.5
baths, large fenced
in yard, screened in
porch, off street
parking, quiet
neighborhood.
Home recently
remodeled inside &
out. www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 13-467
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
WILKES-BARRE
PRICE REDUCED
TO
$79,900
Charming Cape Cod
style home with nice
curb appeal. Loc-
ated on a tree lined
street near parks,
schools & shopping.
Deceptively large
with 4 bedrooms,
two baths, fireplace
in the living room, 2
car garage, corner
lot. Needs some
updating, but has
great potential.
MLS#13-1295
Karen Ryan
283-9100, ext. 14
283-9100
WILKES-BARRE
PRICE
REDUCTION
Charming 1,000+
sq. ft. 2 bedroom,
1/1/2 bath with sep-
arate driveway on a
quiet street. Lower
level was finished
for former business
- has separate
entrance, 1/2 bath
& electric base-
board heat (not
included in
total sq. ft).
MLS #13-1592
$49,000
Dana Distasio
570-715-9333
WILKES-BARRE
Beautiful Cape Cod
3 bedrooms, 2.5
baths, garage,
hardwood floors,
freshly painted, new
counter/tops, sinks,
faucets, fenced
yard, move in
condition, in a
great location.
MLS 13-1652
$149,900
Call Dave, Jr.
885-2693
Rubbico Real
Estate
826-1600
WILKES-BARRE
296 N. Main St.
Elegance and
charm. Absolutely
pristine, highly pol-
ished woodwork,
hardwood floors,
trim. French doors,
fireplace, newer
roof, furnace, wiring
and replacement
windows. A unique-
ly solid home with
conspicuous archi-
tectural beauty.
Very refined.
MLS 13-1775
$133,000
Ronald Kozak
570-675-5100
WILKES-BARRE
66 Catlin Ave.
Very well kept Cape
Cod 3 bedroom
home. Basement
easily finished off,
all new Pella win-
dows. Newer roof.
New water heater,
zoned heat. Was
not flooded in 2011.
Lighted crawl
spaces. Tons of
storage. Large cov-
ered deck, fenced
in yard. Nice neigh-
borhood, quiet
street. A must see
MLS 12-4420
$115,000
Jackie Roman
Extension #39
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
906 Homes for Sale
WILKES-BARRE
REDUCED PRICE
$242,000
75 Mercedes Drive
Beautifully kept split
level in desirable
Barney Farms. 3
car attached
garage, finished
basement & attic.
Landscaped lot,
covered deck with
custom pull down
shades. Hard-
wood living room,
formal dining room
both freshly paint-
ed, cathedral ceil-
ings in living room &
kitchen. Full wet
bar in finished
basement, walk out
patio for your
parties/cookouts.
MLS#12-1874
Ann Devereaux
570-212-2038
Classic
Properties
570-587-7000
790 Northern Blvd.
Clarks Summit,
PA 18411
LINE UP
A GREAT DEAL...
IN CLASSIFIED!
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
WILKES-BARRED
Move right into this
nice clean well
maintained 14 room
6 bedroom home
with grand foyer
and staircase.
Interior recently ren-
ovated, 5 fireplaces,
4 pocket doors,
Chestnut wood trim,
heated sun room,
large rear deck.
Handicap entrance
& first floor bath &
laundry. Private rear
yard. New roof, all
replacement win-
dows. Hardwood
floors, wood work
throughout, built in
kitchen cabinets,
butler staircase &
much more.
Must See!
MOS #13-1901
$137,000
Castrignano
Realty
570-824-9991
WILKES-BARRE
37 Flick Street
Nice 2 possibly 3
bedroom home with
a large driveway
and garage. This
home has a newer
kitchen and a full
bath with laundry
area on the 1st
floor. There is a
nice yard and deck
for your outside
enjoyment. There is
a newer furnace
and roof also.
Come and check it
out. MLS# 13-2103
$45,000
John Polifka
570-704-6846
FIVE MOUNTAINS
REALTY
570-542-2141
YATESVILLE
$139,900
617 Willowcrest Dr.
End unit. 2 bed-
room townhome
with master bath on
2nd floor. Needs a
little TLC.
MLS 13-569
Call Tom
570-262-7716
YATESVILLE
$159,900
12 Reid St.
Spacious Bi-level
home in semi pri-
vate location with
private back yard, 3
season room, gas
fireplace in lower
level family room.
Recently updated
kitchen, 4 bed-
rooms, 1 3/4 baths,
garage. www.atlas-
realtyinc.com
MLS 13-1949
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com MONDAY, JUNE 17, 2013 PAGE 7D
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
Need a Roommate?
Place an ad and
find one here!
570-829-7130
Say it HERE
in the Classifieds!
570-829-7130
Say it HERE
in the Classifieds!
570-829-7130
PAGE 8D MONDAY, JUNE 17, 2013 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
906 Homes for Sale 906 Homes for Sale
(570) 885-2474
3 Bedrooms, 2 tile baths, hardwood oors, granite counter tops
Conveniently located just o Route 315
Minutes to Route 81, the Cross Valley Expressway or Wilkes-Barre
$199,900
NOW AVAILABLE!
Residential Lots Also Available
906 Homes for Sale
YATESVILLE
$69,900
9 Pittston Ave
2 story home
located in a very
privet setting. 3
bedrooms, 1.5
baths and work-
shop attached
to living space,
great for home
business or the
hobbyist. Low
taxes, great
community.
Garage has 1
detached space
and 1 built in.
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 13-1009
CALL CHARLIE
570-829-6200
P
E
N
D
I
N
G
YATESVILLE
REDUCED
$169,900
603 Willowcrest Dr.
Super end unit
townhouse, no
fees. 2 bedrooms,
3 baths, central air,
electric heat, cathe-
dral ceiling with
skylights. Large
family room with
propane stove and
its own ductless
air. MLS 13-482
Call Tom
570-262-7716
909 Income &
Commercial
Properties
BEAR CREEK
$149,900
1255 Laurel Run Rd.
Bear Creek Twp.,
large commercial
garage/warehouse
on 1.214 acres with
additional 2 acre
parcel. 2 water
wells. 2 newer
underground fuel
tanks. May require
zoning approval.
For more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 12-208
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
DURYEA
REDUCED
$29,900
93 Main St.
Four units. 3 resi-
dential and one
storefront.Great
corner location,
flood damaged
home being sold as
is. For more info
visit: www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 12-1948
Call Tom
570-262-7716
EDWARDSVILLE
612-616 Main St.
Bring back clam
night. Unlimited
potential in the
once iconic loca-
tion. Space can be
used as restaurant,
(coolers & equip-
ment on site) bar &
grill. Includes office
and living space the
possibilities are
endless! Call agent
to make an appoint-
ment and a deal.
MLS 13-2445
$84,900
John Shelley
570-702-4162
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
HUNTINGTON
MILLS
Great Old 80 Acre
Farm, Location Next
to Northwest High
School with approx.
35 acres of fields &
45 acres wooded.
Small pond, barn,
old farmhouse with
out buildings (in
poor condition - little
or no value) plenty
of road frontage.
MLS #13-807
$312,000
Call Richard Long
406-2438
570-675-4400
909 Income &
Commercial
Properties
KINGSTON
Great opportunity
for this 2,900 sq. ft.
professional office
building in high traf-
fic area. Last used
as a veterinary clin-
ic, but is easily
adapted for other
uses. See how this
space can be used
for you! Open
entry space, individ-
ual offices, full base-
ment for storage,
central air, and gas
heat. Parking for 12
cars.
MLS-12-416
$339,000
Call Rhea for
details
570-696-6677
Find Something?
Lose Something?
Get it back where it
belongs
with a Lost/Found ad!
570-829-7130
NANTICOKE
Newly remodeled,
immaculate office
building. 1,600 sq.
ft, central air, plenty
of parking, abun-
dant storage areas,
h a n d i c a p p e d
accessible.
MLS #13-667
$79,900
Dana Distasio
570-9333
PITTSTON
$129,900
224 William St.
Are you a hair-
dresser or barber?
Need a space for
an in home busi-
ness? This might be
just what youre
looking for. Well
maintained 4 bed-
room home with
salon (previously a
barber shop for 60
years). Very well
established, high
visibility location
and additional home
with 3 bedrooms
currently rented to
a tenant. Must be
sold as one pack-
age. www.atlasreal-
tyinc.com
MLS 13-216
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
PITTSTON
$129,900
224 William St.
Are you a hair-
dresser or barber?
Need a space for
an in home busi-
ness? This might be
just what youre
looking for. Well
maintained 4 bed-
room home with
salon (previously a
barber shop for 60
years). Very well
established, high
visibility location
and additional home
with 3 bedrooms
currently rented to
a tenant. Must be
sold as one pack-
age. www.atlasreal-
tyinc.com
MLS 13-216
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
PITTSTON
68 William St.
Great investment
property with 3
units and separate
utilities. Each unit
has 2 entrances
and washer hook
up. Roof is 5 years
old. For more info
visit: www.atlas
realtyinc.com.
MLS 12-1897
$69,900
Call Tom
570-262-7716
SWEET VALLEY
3.8 acres, zoned B2
commercial with
home & pond.
Priced for quick
sale. High traffic
area Located at the
intersection of
Rt. 118 & Main Road.
$89,000
Call Richard Long
406-2438
675-4400
909 Income &
Commercial
Properties
PITTSTON AREA
$134,900
Well established
meat and deli store
with large variety of
specialty items for
sale. Homemade
sausage, porketta-
prosciutto, to men-
tion a few. Owners
will sty on to teach.
give recipes and
contacts. Also a
newly remodeled
apartment above
store and 4 car
garage to help pay
the mortgage.
MLS 13-535
For an appointment
call:
Fred Mecadon
570-817-5792
PLYMOUTH
$52,900
New Listing! Afford-
able for you!. Set
back off Main st.,
this double block
has had many
updates. Unit #1:
formal dining room
2 bedrooms, 1 bath
and deck. Unit #2:
spacious open floor
plan, large living
room, formal dining
room, genuine
hardwood floors, 4
bedrooms with new
carpeting, 1.5
baths, lots of closet
space and enclosed
balcony.
MLS 13-1176
Michele Hopkins
570-540-6046
SWOYERSVILLE
Great investment
property. On corner
lot. Close to all
major highways &
conveniences.
Bring all offers. 1
unit needs to be
updated & you are
all done.
MLS #13-1983
$160,000
Call Pat Doty at
570-394-6901
570-696-2468
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
WEST NANTICOKE
$139,900
30 E. Poplar St.
Multi - Family
5 apartments and a
2 car garage, all
rented. Off street
parking for 8 cars.
Great investment.
www.atlasrealty-
inc.com
MLS 13-680
Tom Salvaggio
570-262-7716
WEST SIDE
Well established
Italian Restaurant
on the West Side
with seating for 75.
Business only
includes good will,
all furniture and fix-
tures, all kitchen
equipment and
delivery van for
$150,000. Building
sold separately.
Restaurant on 1st
floor and 2 bed-
room luxury apart-
ment on 2nd floor
for $250,000.
www.atlasrealty
inc.com
MLS 12-3433
Call Charlie
909 Income &
Commercial
Properties
WILKES-BARRE
Everything is Ready!
Just bring your busi-
ness to this great
location with over
15,000 sq. ft. of
parking space. The
building is equipped
for fast food,
restaurant, pizza,
carry-out, etc. Will
rent with option to
buy. Excellent
opportunity for the
right party!
$269,000
Call Ruth
@ 570-696-1195
or 570-696-5411
Smith Hourigan
Group
WILKES-BARRE
531 Scott St.
After 38 years the
owner is retiring!
Turn key night
club/bar, with
restaurant potential
in a PRIME location.
2 bars with addi-
tional licensed out-
side patio space.
Owner is open to
creative financing.
MLS 13-2446
$59,900
John Shelley
570-702-4162
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
912 Lots & Acreage
BEAR CREEK
LOT FOR SALE
Wonderful opportu-
nity! Beautiful 3.45
acre wooded build-
ing lot for your new
home. Has a 200
frontage on a paved
road. Lot needs well
and septic. $37,500
MLS#13-157
Call Mary Ann
Desiderio
570-715-7733
Smith Hourigan
Group
Mountain Top
570-474-6307
DALLAS
VACANT LAND
1.19 acres in nice
Back Mountain
location. Septic &
well will be
required. Seller will
provide perc test
on this parcel.
MLS#11-268
$59,500
Call Rhea Simms
for details
570-696-6677
570-696-3801
DALLAS
VIEWMONT ACRES
All this 2.8+ acre lot
needs is your vision
for your dream
home. Located in a
quiet country set-
ting, this partially
cleared lot has a
great view of the
mountains. Septic is
already on site and
ready for Summer
building.
MLS #13-1705
Only $65,000
Call
Barbara Metcalf
570-696-0883
570-696-3801
DALLAS
GREENBRIAR
RETIREMENT COMMUNI-
TY
Only eight
lots left. Custom
design you home
the way you want it.
Call 570-675-1300
DALLAS
BROWN MANOR
VACANT LAND
Attention builders!
Six lots available in
subdivision - rang-
ing from .4 to 1.3
acres each.
Access to public
sewer & water.
MILS#13-1144
$212,000
Call Rhea Simms
for details
570-696-6677
570-696-3801
Line up a place to live
in classified!
DALLAS TOWNSHIP
63 acres with about
5,000 roadfront on
2 roads. All Wood-
ed. $385,000. Call
Besecker Realty
570-675-3611
912 Lots & Acreage
DALLAS TOWNSHIP
2 acres $39,900 or
7 acres $89,900,
blacktop road,
soil tested
and approved for
building. Nice
woods, great
views, wide
frontage, great
property/neighbor-
hood for kids, #1
rated Dallas School
District. Call
570-245-6288
EARTH CONSERVANCY
Land For Sale
Price Reduction
61 +/- Acres
Nuangola $88,000
46 +/- Acres
Hanover Twp.
$69,000
Highway
Commercial KOZ
Hanover Twp. 3+/-
Acres 11 +/- Acres
Wilkes-Barre Twp.
Acreage Zoned
R-3
Sugar Notch Lot
$11,800
See Additional
Land for Sale at:
www.earth
conservancy.org
Call: 570-823-3445
LAFLIN
$32,900
Lot#9
Pinewood Dr
Build your new
home in a great
neighborhood. Con-
venient location
near highways, air-
port, casino and
shopping
156 X 110 X 150 X 45
DIRECTIONS Rt 315
to laflin Rd; make
left off Laflin Rd onto
Pinewood Dr. Lot is
on corner of
Pinewood Dr. and
Hickorywood Dr.
MLS 13-23
atlas realtyinc.com
Call Keri Best
570-885-5082
Say it HERE
in the Classifieds!
570-829-7130
LAFLIN
$99,500
2.44 acres of land
zoned R-3 for town-
house or could be
used for single fam-
ily building lots (with
approval). Public
water and sewer
available.
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 13-1389
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
LAKE TOWNSHIP
32 acres, wooded
& cleared. Well, 6
room older house,
currently rented.
No Realtors.
570-675-2572
KINGSTON
COMMERCIAL
PROPERTY
New on Market
Highly visible corner
lot1900 square
foot building with
large front win-
dowsoff street
parking for 8 cars.
Gas heat and cen-
tral air. Can be used
for retail or office.
Ready for occupan-
cy. MLS 13-1772
$215,000
Call Rhea Simms
570-696-6677
570-696-3801
MOUNTAIN TOP
VACANT LAND
2.87 wooded
acres located in
the Ice Lakes
MLS #13-1498
$89,900
Call
Evelyn Hogan
262-5956
MOUNTAIN TOP
Church Road
2 acres + or -, all
utilities. $59,900.
570-474-5418 or
570-709-6304
MOUNTAIN TOP
Unbelievable Buy!
1/3 acre building lot
with water & sewer.
$18,900 Call Dave @
570-715-7750
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-474-6307
NEWPORT TWP.
LOTS LOTS - - LOTS LOTS - - LOTS LOTS
1 mile south of
L.C.C.C.
Established
developement with
underground utili-
ties including gas.
Cleared lot. 100
frontage x 158.
$35,000.
Lot 210 frontage
158 deep on hill
with great view
$35,000.
Call 570-736-6881
ONEDIA NEW YORK
11.5 ACRES
Asking $20,000
Call 570-256-8618
912 Lots & Acreage
ROSS TWP.
Beautiful 40 acre
wooded parcel on
both sides of
the road.
MLS#12-2239
$200,000
Call Ken Williams
570-542-8800
Five Mountains
Realty
570-542-2141
SHAVERTOWN
Beautiful 1 acre
building lot located
in established back
Mountain sub-divi-
sion. Buy now and
start building your
dream home in the
spring. Lot has
underground utili-
ties, public sewer
and private well.
MLS #13-137
$62,400
Christine Pieczynski
696-6569
696-2600
SHICKSHINNY
23+/- acres of
wooded land and
farmland with barn
in good condition
and a nice travel
trailer. Well on
property.
MLS#12-2572
$115,000
Ken Williams
542-8800
Five Mountains
Realty
542-2141
Looking for that
special place
called home?
Classified will address
Your needs.
Open the door
with classified!
SHICKSHINNY LAKE
Build your dream
home on this
attractive 1.2 acre
level lot with lake
privileges. Priced to
sell. HOA FEE
IS $140 YEARLY.
MLS#13-40
$50,000
Call
Barbara Metcalf
570-696-0883
570-696-3801
SHICKSHINNY LAKE
CHOICE LOCATION
Central water, low
($140) association
dues. Priced to sell!
MLS# 11-1269
$159,900
Call Dale Williams
Five Mountains
Realty
570-256-3343
SWOYERSVILLE
100 x 150, cleared,
surveyed level
building lot. Utilities
are available.
$24,900.
Call: 570-288-4899
WEST PITTSTON
3 bedroom split
level in lovely neigh-
borhood. Two lower
levels have been re
novated due to
flood of 2011. New
electrical/plumbing
/heat. New carpet in
living & family
rooms. Kitchen fea-
tures Corian coun-
tertops & stainless
appliances. Open
concept on main
level with garage
level family room,
laundry & storage.
Nice size backyard.
Come take a look!
$130,000
Call Christine @
332-8832
613-9080
WEST WYOMING
FIFTH STREET MANOR
Two building lots in
beautiful, estab-
lished development.
Call for information.
570-814-1316
WYOMING/EXETER
BUILDING LOTS
FOR SALE
$35,000 - $39,900
Build your new
home here. 2 new
developments,
prices range from
$35,000 to
$39,900. Public
water sewer & gas
available. NOT in
flood zone. Lot
sizes range from
50x100 to 80x105.
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
CALL CHARLIE
570-829-6200
915 Manufactured
Homes
COUNTRY LIVING
105 COUNTRY
VILLAGE.
Mobile home in
Dallas School
District. All new
appliances, Full
length deck and
shed. Central air,
must see.
$14,900. or best
offer.
570-991-7028
GOULDSBORO
EAGLE LAKE
FOR SALE
This is a 2008 Park
Model in beautiful
Eagle Lake. Walk to
the pool, tennis
courts & basketball
courts. This is the
most beautiful
Community in the
Pocono's. Swim in
the huge pool or lay
in the sand at one
of the lake front
beaches.
$45,000
Call Tom
516-507-9403
570-842-2300
HUNLOCK CREEK
2 and 3 bedroom
mobile homes for
sale. Newly reno-
vated, move in con-
dition, located in
Country Crest
Mobile Home Park.
Lot rent $307.
Homes start at
$20,000. Call
570-477-2845
PITTSTON TWP.
RENT TO OWN
2 bedroom, clean,
needs no work.
remodeled through-
out. Minutes from
I-81 and PA Turn-
pike. $9,500
570-471-7175
610-767-9456
927 Vacation
Locations
AUBURN, PA
Cottage on
Crescent Lake.
Furnished, walk out
basement, air con-
ditioning, laundry,
oil, propane, dock
deck, $125,000
607-729-8206
FLORIDA
WINTER RETREAT!
2 Bedroom 2 Bath
home in gated
community on
Lake Yale in Grand
Island Florida. 1128
sq ft of living
space, fully fur-
nished. Paved
driveway with car-
port. 8x8 shed.
$20,000
negotiable
(570) 690-3621
930 Wanted to Buy
Real Estate
Business Owner
seeks Lease/Option
on Executive
Mountain Top
home;
3/4 Bedrooms.
440-836-2150
938 Apartments/
Furnished
WILKES-BARRE
FULLY FURNISHED
1 BEDROOM
Short or long term
Excellent
Neighborhood
Private Tenant
Parking
$600 includes all
utilities. No pets.
570-822-9697
WILKES-BARRE
VICTORIAN CHARM
34 W. Ross St.
Fully furnished,
1st floor, 1 bed-
room, all appli-
ances and most
utilities included.
Secure, private off
street parking.
Historic building is
non smoking/no
pets. Base rent
$700/mo. Securi-
ty, references
required. View at
houpthouse.com
570-762-1453
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
AVOCA
Modern 1 bedroom,
off-street parking,
washer/dryer hook
up, appliances,
dishwasher, built-in
bookcases. $435/
month + utilities.
Call 908-310-3900
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
BACK MOUNTAIN
2 bedroom, large
modern eat in
kitchen, bath, car-
peting, large deck,
ample parking, No
Pets. $595.
570-696-1866
DALLAS
2 bedroom, 2 story
house for rent.
$700/ month plus
utilities. Gas heat.
Off street parking.
One year lease, first
months rent, secu-
rity deposit and
credit check
required.
No smoking and
no pets. Call:
570-675-8776.
DALLAS
2nd floor, 2 bed-
room. Includes heat,
water & garbage.
off street parking.
No pets/no smok-
ing., $650/month +
1 month security.
570-690-1591
DALLAS
HI-MEADOWS
APARTMENTS
1075 Memorial Hwy.
Low & Moderate
Income Elderly
Rentals Include:
*Electric Range &
Refrigerator
*Off Street Parking
*Community Room
*Coin Operated
Laundry *Elevator.
*Video Surveilence
Applications
Accepted by
Appointment
570-675-5944
8 a.m. - 4 p.m.
TDD Only,
1-800-654-5984
Voice Only,
1-800-654-5988
Handicap Accessi-
ble
Equal Housing
Opportunity
DALLAS
MEADOWS
APARTMENTS
220 Lake St.
Housing for the
elderly & mobility
impaired; all utilities
included. Federally
subsidized program.
Extremely low
income persons
encouraged to
apply. Income less
than $12,450.
570-675-6936,
TDD800-654-5984
8 am-4 pm, Mon-Fri.
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
HANDICAP ACCESSIBLE
EXETER
2 bedrooms, 1 floor,
car port, no pets,
no smoking, sewer
included, available
July 1st.
$470/month.
570-362-8989
FORTY
FORT
AMERICA
REALTY
RENTALS
570-288-1422
Compact units,
courtyard ent-
rances, total
electric, appli-
ances. Beautiful,
Economical.$590
+ utilities. 2 YEAR
SAME RENT
LEASE, APPLICA-
TION, EMPLOY-
MENT VERIFICA-
TION REQUIRED.
NO PETS.
GLEN LYON
1 bedroom, 2nd
floor apt. Living
room, kitchen, full
bath, heat, hot
water & garbage
fee included. Tenant
pays electric. $575/
month + security.
Call or text
201-304-3469
GLEN LYON
KEN POLLOCK
APARTMENTS
41 Depot Street
Low and Moderate
Income Elderly
Rentals Include:
* Electric Range &
Refrigerator
* Off Street Parking
* Community Room
* Coin Operated
Laundry
* Elevator
* Video Surveilance
Applications
Accepted by
Appointment
570-736-6965
8:00 a.m. - 4 p.m.
TDD Only,
1-800-654-5984
Voice Only,
1-800-654-5988
Handicap Accessi-
ble
Equal Housing
Opportunity
HANOVER TOWNSHIP
1st floor
2 bedroom,stove,
refrigerator, private
deck, washer/dryer
hookup. Heat,
garbage and
sewer included.
$660/month
570-842-1264
HANOVER TOWNSHIP
West End Road
Clean & bright
3 bedroom apart-
ment. Heat, water,
garbage & sewer
included with appli-
ances. Off street
parking. No pets,
non smoking, not
section 8 approved.
References, securi-
ty, first and last
months rent.
$725/month
570-852-0252
HANOVER TWP.
1 bedroom with
large attic for stor-
age. Off street
parking. Sewer &
appliances includ-
ed. Pets consider-
ed. $400/month + 1
month security. Call
570-606-7884 after
9am & before 9pm
or 570-256-7837
before 9am & after
9pm.
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
HANOVER TWP.
2 bedroom, 1st
floor, with back
room for storage.
Off street parking.
Private rear
entrance. Water,
sewer, hot water &
appliances includ-
ed. Pets consid-
ered. $550/month
+ 1 month security.
570-606-7884 after
9:00 a.m. &
before 9 pm.
570-256-7837
before 9 am &
after 9 pm
HANOVER TWP.
Brand new, 3 bed-
rooms, 1 bath, 2nd
floor, terrace, wash-
er, dryer, stove &
refrigerator. Off
street parking.
Water, garbage &
sewer included.
$700 + electric. De-
posit, security and
references.
MUST SEE!
Call 570-417-5977
HANOVER TWP.
LEE PARK
Freshly painted,
spacious, 3 bed-
room, 2nd floor,
washer/dryer hook-
up in kitchen, no
pets. $625/month +
utilities, 1st, last
& security.
TRADEMARK
REALTY GROUP
570-954-1992
HARVEYS LAKE
1 & 2 bedroom ,
wall to wall carpet,
appliances, Lake
rights. Off street
parking. No pets.
Lease, security and
references.
570-639-5920
INKERMAN
55 Main Street
2nd floor, 1 bed-
room. Stove, refrig-
erator, water, heat,
garbage stickers
included. $450/
month + $400
security.
570-654-9520
KINGSTON
116 or 118 Main St.
Near Kingston Cor-
ners. 2nd floor,
newly remodeled,
4 rooms, bath, laun-
dry room. Walk up
attic, water, sewer
& parking. No pets.
No smoking. $525 &
$575 + utilities.
570-288-9843
KINGSTON
1st Floor, recent-
ly renovated, 2
bedrooms, with
washer & dryer
hook-up, $650
per month, plus
utilities, water
and sewer
included. Off
street parking.
570-443-0770
KINGSTON
27 First Ave.
Large 5 room
apartment, 2 bed-
rooms, 1.5 baths,
kitchen appliances,
washer/dryer in half
bath. 2nd floor. No
pets. $750/month
+ utilities.
570-288-5600
or 570-479-0486
KINGSTON
E. E. W Walnut alnut St. St.
2nd floor. Located in
quiet neighborhood.
Kitchen, living room,
dining room, sun-
room, bath, 3 bed-
rooms; 2 large & 1
small. Lots of clos-
ets, built-in linen
closet & hutch.
Hardwood & car-
peted floors. Fire-
place. Storage
room. Yard. Washer
/ dryer, stove /
fridge. Heat and hot
water included. 1
year lease + securi-
ty. $950
570-283-4370
Let the Community
Know!
Place your Classified
Ad TODAY!
570-829-7130
KINGSTON
Available July 15th
Renovated, large
kitchen & living
room, 2 bedrooms,
all appliances, dish-
washer, laundry.
Hardwood floors,
private parking,
deck. Quiet, con-
venient neighbor-
hood, soundproof-
ing. Close to Col-
leges, Montessori,
Sem, stores, high-
way. $810. No
smoking, cats con-
sidered. No Section
8. 610-389-8226
KINGSTON
Deluxe, quiet, airy
3 bedroom, 2nd
floor, 1.5 baths &
office. All applian-
ces, washer/dryer
in unit. Wall-to-
wall, C/A, garage,
attic, no pets/no
smoking, lease.
570-287-1733
KINGSTON
Wyoming Avenue
3rd floor, 1 bedroom
offstreet parking.
No pets. $450/
month + utilities. Call
570-287-9631
or 570-696-3936
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
KINGSTON DUPLEX
Beautiful 1st floor. 2
bedroom, 1.5 bath,
5 rooms. Conve-
nient residential
location. Hardwood
floors, natural wood
-work, French
doors, laundry with
washer & dryer
included. Refrigera-
tor, gas range,
dishwasher, oak
cabinets, off street
parking, fenced in
back yard, storage.
$695 + utilities
& security.
570-690-0633
KINGSTON
E. WALNUT ST.
Light, bright, 3rd
floor, 2 bedrooms,
elevator, carpeted,
entry system.
Garage. Extra stor-
age & cable TV
included. Laundry
facilities. Air Con-
ditioned. Fine
neighborhood.
Convenient to bus
& stores. No
pets. References.
Security. Lease.
No smokers
please. $785 +
utilities. Call.
570-287-0900
LEE PARK
Hanover Twp.
2nd floor, 1 1/2
bedrooms, living
room, rear porch,
washer & dryer.
Water, garbage &
sewer included. No
pets. $450/month.
1st, last, security &
references.
570-606-3256
LUZERNE
1 bedroom, wall to
wall, off-street
parking, coin laun-
dry, water, sewer &
garbage included.
$495/month +
security & lease.
HUD accepted.
570-687-6216 or
570-954-0727
LUZERNE COUNTY
RENTALS
Available Now!
Available Now!
1 Studio Apt.,
2 Bed, 3 Bed and,
$475, $600, $650,
$725 and $900.
Call 570-901-1020
option 4.
MINERS MILLS
1 1/2 bedrooms,
washer/dryer hook-
up, recently redone,
heat/water includ-
ed. Quiet neighbor-
hood with yard &
screened in back-
porch. No pets.
$475 + security. Call
430-0175 after 6:00
MOUNTAIN TOP
1 & 2 BEDROOM
APARTMENTS
recently painted &
carpeted. $600/
month & up includ-
ing some utilities.
570-854-8785
MOUNTAIN TOP
IMMEDIATELY
AVAILABLE 2ND
FLOOR UNIT!
1 bedroom apart-
ments for elderly,
disabled. Rents
based on 30% of
ADJ gross income.
Equal Housing
Opportunity. TTY711
or 570-474-5010
This institution is an
equal opportunity
provider &
employer.
MOUNTAIN TOP
IMMEDIATELY
AVAILABLE 2ND
FLOOR UNIT!
1 bedroom apart-
ments for elderly,
disabled. Rents
based on 30% of
ADJ gross income.
Handicap Accessi-
ble. Equal Housing
Opportunity. TTY711
or 570-474-5010
This institution is an
equal opportunity
provider &
employer.
MOUNTAIN TOP
1st floor. 5 rooms.
Sun porch. Wall to
wall. Off street park-
ing. $800/ month -
heat, water,
sewage & garbage
paid by owner. NO
PETS! 474-5568
MOUNTAIN TOP
WOODBRYN
1 BEDROOM
IMMEDIATELY
1 & 2 Bedroom.
No pets. Rents
based on income
start at $405 &
$440. Handicap
Accessible.
Equal Housing
Opportunity. 570-
474-5010 TTY711
This institution is an
equal opportunity
provider and
employer.
PITTSTON
Quiet neighbor-
hood, 2 bedroom,
hardwood floors &
ceramic tile, all new
appliances, no pets.
$600/month +
utilities & security.
(570)357-1383
Motorcycle for sale?
Let them see it here
in the Classifieds!
570-829-7130
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com MONDAY, JUNE 17, 2013 PAGE 9D
CALL AN EXPERT
CALL AN EXPERT
Professional Services Directory
1006 A/C &
Refrigeration
Services
STRISH A/C
Ductless / Central
Air Conditioning
Free Estimates
Licensed & Insured
570-332-0715
1015 Appliance
Service
A.R.T. APPLIANCE
REPAIR
We service
all major
brands.
570-639-3001
1024 Building &
Remodeling
1ST. QUALITY
CONSTRUCTION CO.
Roofing, siding,
gutters, insulation,
decks, additions,
windows, doors,
masonry &
concrete.
Insured & Bonded.
Senior Citizens Discount!
State Lic. # PA057320
570-606-8438
ALL OLDERHOMES
SPECIALIST
825-4268.
Remodel / Repair
Kitchens and
Baths
CORNERSTONE
CONSTRUCTION
Roofing Siding
Carpentry
40 yrs experience
Licensed & Insured
PA026102
Call Dan
570-881-1131
www.davejohnson
remodeling.com
Baths/Kitchens
Carpentry A to Z
570-819-0681
FIND OUT
HOW TO
BECOME A
MEMBER OR
CALL FOR A
QUALIFIED
CONTRACTOR
Building Industry
Association Of
NEPA
411 MAIN ST.,
KINGSTON, PA
18704
Contact:
Janet Campis
www.bianepa.com
570-287-3331
For All of Your
Remodeling Needs.
Will Beat Any Price!
BATHROOMS,
KITCHENS,
ROOFING, SID-
ING, DECKS,
WINDOWS, etc.
25 Yrs. Experience
References. Insured
Free Estimates.
(570) 332-7023
1024 Building &
Remodeling
Shedlarski Construction
HOME IMPROVEMENT
SPECIALIST
Licensed, insured &
PA registered.
Kitchens, baths,
vinyl siding & rail-
ings, replacement
windows & doors,
additions, garages,
all phases of home
renovations.
Free Estimates
570-287-4067
1039 Chimney
Service
A-1 ABLE
CHIMNEY
Rebuild & Repair
Chimneys. All
types of Masonry.
Liners Installed,
Brick & Block,
Roofs & Gutters.
Licensed &
Insured
570-735-2257
CHIMNEY REPAIRS
Parging. Stucco.
Stainless Liners.
Cleanings. Custom
Sheet Metal Shop.
570-383-0644
1-800-943-1515
Call Now!
CHRIS MOLESKY
CHIMNEY SPECIALIST
New, repair, rebuild,
liners installed.
Cleaning. Concrete
& metal caps.
Small masonry jobs
570-328-6257
1042 Cleaning &
Maintainence
DEB & PATS
CLEANING
SERVICE
We Are Bonded
& Insured
Free Estimates
570-793-4773
DEB & PATS
CLEANING
SERVICE
We Are Bonded
& Insured
Free Estimates
570-793-4773
1054 Concrete &
Masonry
A STEP-UP MASONRY
PA094695
Specializing in All
Types of Masonry.
Stone, Concrete
Licensed & Insured
Free Estimates
Senior Discount
570-702-3225
B.P. Home Repairs
570-825-4268
Brick, Block,
Concrete, Sidewalks,
Chimneys, Stucco.
New Installation &
Repairs
AAAAAAHH!!!
Why Scream?! Call
UNLIMITED!
MASONRY CONCRETE
CONTRACTORS
call today for your
Free Estimate!
570-582-4719
1054 Concrete &
Masonry
D. PUGH
CONCRETE
All phases of
masonry &
concrete. Small
jobs welcome.
Senior discount.
Free estimates.
Licensed & Insured
288-1701/655-3505
NEPA MASONRY, INC.
Stonework - stucco
- concrete - patios
- pavers - brick -
block - chimneys
www.nepa
masonryinc.com
570-466-2916
570-954-8308
WYOMING VALLEY
MASONRY
Concrete, stucco,
foundations,
pavers, retaining
wall systems,
flagstone, brick
work, chimneys
repaired. Senior
Citizens Discount
570-287-4144
or 570-760-0551
1057Construction &
Building
GARAGE
DOOR
Sales, service,
installation &
repair.
FULLY
INSURED
HIC# 065008
CALL JOE
570-735-8551
Cell 606-7489
1084 Electrical
SLEBODA ELECTRIC
Master electrician
Licensed & Insured
Service Changes &
Replacements.
Generator Installs.
8 6 8 - 4 4 6 9
1093 Excavating
All Types Of
Excavating,
Demolition &
Concrete Work.
Lot clearing, pool
closing & retain-
ing walls, etc.
Large & Small Jobs
FREE ESTIMATES
(570) 760-1497
1099 Fencing &
Decks
ACTION FENCE
SPRING SALE:
Discounts on wood,
vinyl, chain link,
aluminum and
more! Call today for
a FREE ESTIMATE!
570-602-0432
Motorcycle for sale?
Let them see it here
in the Classifieds!
570-829-7130
1129 Gutter
Repair & Cleaning
GUTTER CLEANING
Window Cleaning
Pressure washing
Insured
570-288-6794
1132 Handyman
Services
EVANS HOME
IMPROVEMENTS
Lending a hand
since 1975.
All types of
remodeling projects!
570-824-6871
1135 Hauling &
Trucking
A A C L E A N I N G
A1 Always hauling,
cleaning attics, cellar,
garage, one piece or
whole Estate, also
available 10 &20 yard
dumpsters.655-0695
592-1813or287-8302
AAA CLEANING
A1 GENERAL HAULING
Cleaning attics,
cellars, garages.
Demolitions, Roofing
&Tree Removal.
FreeEst. 779-0918or
542-5821; 814-8299
A CLEAN HOUSE IS A
HAPPY HOUSE!
ALL KINDS OF
HAULING & JUNK
REMOVAL
SUMMER CLEAN UP!
TREE/SHRUB TREE/SHRUB
REMOV REMOVAL AL
DEMOLITION DEMOLITION
Estate Cleanout Estate Cleanout
Free Estimates
24 HOUR
SERVICE
SMALL AND
LARGE JOBS!
570-823-1811
570-239-0484
A.S.A.P Hauling
Estate Cleanouts,
Attics, Cellars,
Garages, were
cheaper than
dumpsters!.
Free Estimates,
Same Day!
570-855-4588
ALWAYS READY
HAULING
Property & Estate
Cleanups, Attics,
Cellars, Yards,
Garages,
Construction
Sites, Flood
Damage & More.
CHEAPER THAN
A DUMPSTER!!
SAME DAY
SERVICE
Free Estimates
570-301-3754
Purebred Animals?
Sell them here with a
classified ad!
570-829-7130
1135 Hauling &
Trucking
KARPOWSKI
HAULING
We Do Clean Outs,
Basements, Attics,
Garages & Trash
Removal.
Free Estimates.
Wilkes-Barre & Sur-
rounding Areas.
570-266-9364
Mikes $5-Up
Hauling Junk &
Trash from Houses,
Garages, Yards, Etc
826-1883 472-4321
WILL HAUL ANYTHING
Clean cellars,
attics, yards &
metal removal.
Call Jeff
570-735-3330
570-762-4438
1162 Landscaping/
Garden
BITTO
LANDSCAPING &
LAWN SERVICE
25+ Years Exp.
Landscape designs,
retaining walls,
pavers, patios,
decks, walkways,
ponds, lighting,
seeding, mulch, etc.
Free Estimates
570-288-5177
FOLTZ LANDSCAPING
Skid-Steer
Mini Excavating
New Landscapes/
Lawns. Retaining
walls/patios.
Call: 570-760-4814
KELLERS LAWN CARE
CLEANUPS
Landscaping,
mowing, mulching,
trimming, planting.
Commercial
& Residential.
570-332-7016
PA Landscaping &
Lawn Service Inc.
Lawn Cutting
Shrub Trimming,
Mulching
Landscaping
Services
25+ Years Exp.
570-287-4780
palandscaping@
verizon.net
TOUGH BRUSH
& TALL GRASS
Mowing, edging,
mulching, shrubs &
hedge shaping.
Tree pruning. Gar-
den tilling. Spring
Clean Ups. Leaf
removal. Weekly &
bi-weekly lawn
care.
Fully Insured
Free Estimates
570-829-3261
1165 Lawn Care
AFFORDABLE
LAWN SERVICES
Greater Pittston
Area.
Mowing, Mulching &
Deck Washing.
Call 570-885-5858
or 570-954-0438
for Free Estimate
1165 Lawn Care
GARDEN TILLING
Aerate &
De-thatch Lawns
Starting at $49
SENIOR DISCOUNTS
Call 237-2609
1189 Miscellaneous
Service
WATER DAMAGE
Restoration,
Mold Testing and
Remediation
Service with Integrity
TEEM Environmental
Services, Inc.
Old Forge, Pa.
570-457-1894
or 457-6164
PA#085152
1195 Movers
BestDarnMovers
Moving Helpers
Call for Free Quote.
We make moving easy.
BestDarnMovers.com
570-852-9243
1204 Painting &
Wallpaper
A & N PAINTING
SUMMER SPECIAL
$100 + materials for
average size room.
18 years experience
Exterior Painting,
Power washing,
Deck Staining.
570-820-7832
DANIELS PAINT AND
WALL COVERING
Lic. PA100671 & Ins.
20 YEARS EXP.
570-604-2961
DAVE WITKOSKY
PAINTING
Interior/Exterior
Free estimates,
30 yrs experience
570-826-1719
or
570-704-8530
JACOBOSKY PAINTING
Need a new look,
or just want to
freshen up your
home or business?
Let us splash your
int./ext. walls with
some vibrant colors!
Reasonable prices
with hard workers.
FREE ESTIMATES!
570-328-5083
M. PARALI S PAI NTI NG
Int/ Ext. painting,
Power washing.
Professional work
at affordable rates.
Free estimates.
570-288-0733
Serra Painting
Book Now For
Summer & Save. All
Work Guaranteed
Satisfaction.
30 Yrs. Experience
Powerwash & Paint
Vinyl, Wood, Stucco
Aluminum.
Free Estimates
You Cant Lose!
570-822-3943
1213 Paving &
Excavating
*DRIVEWAYS
*PARKING LOTS
*ROADWAYS
*HOT TAR & CHIP
*SEAL COATING
Licensed and
Insured. Call
Today For Your
Free Estimate
570-474-6329
Lic.# PA021520
1252 Roofing &
Siding
FRANK J.
CONSTRUCTION
Roofing Specialists
27 Years Experience
Licensed & Insured.
570-709-9180
J.R.V. ROOFING
570-824-6381
Roof Repairs & New
Roofs. Shingle, Slate,
Hot Built Up, Rubber,
Gutters & Chimney
Repairs. Year Round.
Licensed/Insured
FREE Estimates
*24 Hour
Emergency Calls*
Jim Harden
570-288-6709
New Roofs &
Repairs, Shingles,
Rubber, Slate,
Gutters, Chimney
Repairs. Credit
Cards Accepted
FREE ESTIMATES!
Licensed-Insured
EMERGENCIES
SPRING ROOFING
McManus
Construction
Licensed, Insured.
Everyday Low
Prices. 3,000
satisfied customers.
570-735-0846
1336 Window
Cleaning
PJs Window
Cleaning &
Janitorial
Services
Windows, Gutters,
Carpets, Power
washing and more.
INSURED/BONDED.
pjswindowcleaning.com
570-283-9840
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
NANTICOKE
LEXINGTON LEXINGTON
VILLAGE VILLAGE
2 bedroom, 1
bath apartments.
Refrigerator,
stove,
dishwasher &
washer/dryer
provided.
Attached garage.
Pet friendly.
Water, sewer &
trash included.
59 Agostina Drive
570-735-3500
NANTICOKE
Very clean, nice 1
bedroom. Heat, hot
water & garbage
fees included.
Washer/dryer avail-
able, stove, refrig-
erator, air condi-
tioning. No pets/no
smoking. $525 +
security.
Call 570-542-5610
PITTSTON
Modern 2 bedroom
2nd floor apartment
with gas heat. New
deck. $500. month
plus utilities. Conven
iently located. No
Pets. No Smoking.
Call Rae
570-714-9234
PITTSTON
Modern 2 bedroom
air conditioned, 2nd
floor. Includes
stove & refrigerator.
Laundry hook-up.
garage available, off
street parking.
Heat, sewer, water
& garbage included.
$695/month + sec-
urity & lease. No
smoking or pets.
570-430-0123
PLAINS
Modern 2 bedroom,
1 bath, 2nd floor
apartment. Kitchen
with appliances.
New carpet.
Conveniently locat-
ed. No smoking - no
pets. Call Rae
570-714-9234
PLYMOUTH
Large 1 bedroom
apartment. $500/
month + security
deposit. Heat,
water, sewer, fridge
& range included.
Call Bernie at
ROTHSTEIN REALTORS, INC.
288-7594
655-4815
SHAVERTOWN
One bedroom, living
room & kitchen
apartment. Security
required. No pets.
$500/month + util-
ities. Call
Jolyn Bartoli
570-696-5425
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-696-1195
SHEATOWN
NANTICOKE AREA
2 bedroom, 2nd
floor apartment for
rent. Call
570-333-4627
SHICKSHINNY
(1 mile north of
town) Efficiency, on
Rte. 11. Includes
heat, air, garbage,
satellite TV & water.
Coin-op washer/dry
er available. Tenant
pays electric. $575/
month + security.
Appliances. Plenty
of parking.
570-793-9530
TRUCKSVILLE
TRUCKSVILLE MANOR
APARTMENTS
170 Oak Street
Low and Moderate
Income Elderly
Rentals Include:
*Electric Range &
Refrigerator
*Off Street Parking
*Coin Operated
Laundry
Applications
Accepted by
appointment
570-696-1201
8a.m. - 4p.m.
TDD only,
1-800-654-5984
Voice Only,
1-800-654-5988
Handicap Accessi-
ble
Equal Housing
Opportunity
WILKES-BARRE
Clean & comfort-
able front apart-
ment of front & back
duplex in nice area.
$600/month in-
cludes washer/dry-
er hook up, eat-in
kitchen, refrigerator,
stove, dishwasher,
front porch &
shared storage
shed. Plenty of off
street parking. One
year lease + security
required.
Call Michael
570-760-4961
570-675-5100
WEST PITTSTON
2nd floor, 2 bed-
room, washer/dryer,
fridge and stove,
dishwasher, central
air, electric heat, no
pets, $600 Call John
570-654-1909
WEST PITTSTON
Beautiful LARGE
2nd floor efficiency.
Washer/dryer, hard-
wood, full kitchen
and bath. Access to
full attic, spacious
closets. Great loca-
tion, pets nego-
tiable. Out of flood.
Must see! Gas,
heat, water and
sewer included in
rent. $550.
267-745-8616
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
WEST PITTSTON
GARDEN VILLAGE
APARTMENTS
221 Fremont St.
Housing for the
elderly & mobility
impaired; all utilities
included. Federally
subsidized
program. Extremely
low income persons
encouraged to
apply. Income less
than $12,450.
570-655-6555
TDD800-654-5984
8 am-4 pm
Monday-Friday.
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
HANDICAP ACCESSIBLE
WEST WYOMING
425 West 8th Street
1ST FLOOR. 2 bed-
room with off street
parking, washer/
dryer hook up,
stove & refrigera-
tor. No pets.
$550/mo + security.
Sewer & garbage
included, other
utilities by tenant.
570-829-3752
leave message
WHITE HAVEN
Route 940. Large 2
bedroom near I-80
& PA Tpke. Fresh
paint, w/w carpet,
stove & refrigerator.
Water, sewer &
garbage included.
No pets. $600 +
electricity & security
deposit.
570-443-9639
WILKES-BARRE
Mayflower
Crossing
Apartments
570.822.3968
1, 2, 3 & 4
Bedrooms
- Light & bright
open floor plans
- All major
appliances included
- Pets welcome*
- Close to everything
- 24 hour emergency
maintenance
- Short term
leases available
Call TODAY For
AVAILABILITY!!
www.mayflower
crossing.com
Certain Restrictions
Apply*
WILKES-BARRE /
KINGSTON
Efficiency 1 & 2
bedrooms. Includes
all utilities, parking,
laundry. No pets.
From $390 to $675.
Lease, security
& references.
570-970-0847
WILKES-BARRE
1 bedroom, large
living room, eat in
kitchen, closets,
fridge and stove.
Hot water, sewer
and heat included.
$550 + security
Section 8 accepted
570-301-8200
WILKES-BARRE
2 bedrooms, 1
bath, refrigerator,
stove & dishwash-
er, washer/dryer
hookup, off-street
parking, No Pets
$575/ month, plus
security and
utilities.
Call 570-650-1575
WILKES-BARRE
21 Catlin Ave
2 bedroom. AC,
Heat & hot water.
New range, stove
and fridge.
Tenant pays elec-
tric. Close to school
and transportation
$700 a month.
570-825-3360 or
646-391-4638
WILKES-BARRE
264 Academy St.
1.5 bedrooms, new-
ly renovated build-
ing. Washer & dryer
available. $650/mo.
includes heat, hot
water & parking.
646-712-1286
570-855-4744
WILKES-BARRE
2nd floor - 4 nice
rooms. Only one
quiet apartment
below. Has stove,
refrigerator, washer
& dryer. All widows
are newer vinyl
thermal pane. Steel
insulated entry
doors with dead-
bolts. Excellent pri-
vacy. Small back
porch. Water &
sewer included.
Close to town & bus
stop. $525/month +
heat & electric.
570-650-3803
WILKES-BARRE
2nd floor, 2 bed-
room, freshly paint-
ed, washer/dryer
hook up. $475+
security and utilities.
No Pets.
570-822-7657
WILKES-BARRE
3 bedroom, 1st
floor. All appliances
included, washer/
dryer in basement.
Lots of storage, off
street parking,
hardwood floors &
new windows.
$650/month + utili-
ties & security.
Call Brian at
570-299-0298
WILKES-BARRE
First floor, 3 bed-
room, 2 bath, secu-
rity system, gas
heat. $525.
570-825-0394
After 5 p.m.
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
WILKES-BARRE
425 S. FRANKLIN ST.
APARTMENTS
FOR RENT!
For lease. Available
immediately, wash-
er/dryer on premis-
es, no pets. We
have studio, 1 & 2
bedroom apart-
ments. On site
parking. Fridge &
stove provided.
24/7 security cam-
era presence & all
doors electronically
locked.
1 bedroom - $450.
2 bedroom - $550.
Water & sewer paid
1 month security
deposit. Email
obscuroknows@
hotmail.com or Call
570-208-9301
after 9:00 a.m. to
schedule an
appointment
WILKES-BARRE
447 S. Franklin St.
1 bedroom with
study, off street
parking, laundry
facility. Includes
heat and hot
water, hardwood
floors, appliances,
Trash removal.
$580/mo Call
(570) 821-5599
WILKES-BARRE
CENTER CITY
200 BLOCK OF
S. FRANKLIN ST.
Newly renovated
in historical build-
ing. 1500 sq. ft.
luxury apt. 2 bed-
rooms, 2 baths,
granite kitchen,
dining room, liv-
ing room, laundry
room. off street
parking. No pets
$850 month +
utilities. 570-905-
7234 after 5 pm
WILKES-BARRE
For lease, available
immediately, 1 large
bedroom, 1 bath-
room, refrigerator
and stove, washer/
dryer provided.
$550/month plus
utilities, references
and security.
570-735-4074
Leave message
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
WILKES-BARRE
HISTORIC WHEELMAN
439 S. Franklin St.
Two apartments
available.
(1) 1 bedroom,
hardwood floors,
A/C, marble bath.
security system,
laundry, off street
parking. $675 $675
(1) Unique studio.
Sun porch, hard-
wood floor, security
system and laundry.
Off street parking.
$550 $550
570-821-5599
WILKES-BARRE
LAFAYETTE GARDENS
SAVE MONEY THIS YEAR!
113 Edison Street
Quiet neighborhood.
2 bedroom apart-
ments available for
immediate occu-
pancy. Heat & hot
water included.
1 Bedroom$550
2 Bedroom$650.
Call Jazmin
570-822-7944
WILKES-BARRE
Newly renovated 2
bedroom, 1 bath,
refrigerator & stove.
washer/dryer hook
up, $650/month +
utilities.
570-237-5397
WILKES-BARRE
PARK AVENUE
2nd floor, 1 bedroom.
Water included.
$500 + utilities,
security & lease. No
pets. 570-472-9494
WILKES-BARRE SOUTH
SECURE BUILDINGS
1 & 2 bedroom
apartments.
Starting at $440
and up. References
required. Section 8 OK
570-357-0712
WILKES-BARRE
STUDIO NEAR WILKES
Wood floors, park-
ing, no pets, short
term OK. $425, all
utilities included.
570-826-1934
WILKES-BARRE/SOUTH
Near Wilkes U.
1 bedroom apart-
ment. A lot of closet
space. Hardwood
floors, water &sewer
included. Coin Op
Laundry. $465 +
security &references
570-908-9720
WYOMING
FIRST FLOOR
One Bedroom
Apartment. $435
dollars/mo.plus utili-
ties. security
deposit required, 1
year lease. No pets
or smoking New
gas heating system.
Large yard, nice
neighborhood call
570-760-7504 for
appointment.
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
WILKES-BARRE
1 bedroom
water included
2 bedroom
single
2 bedroom
water included
3 bedroom,
single
4 bedroom,
large
HANOVER
2 bedroom 1/2
double.
4 bedroom
double
LUZERNE
1 bedroom,
water included.
PITTSTON
Large 1 bed
room water
included
OLD FORGE
2 bedroom,
water included
PLAINS
1 bedroom,
water included
McDermott &
McDermott
Real Estate
Inc. Property
Management
570-675-4025
(direct line)
Mon-Fri. 8-7pm
Sat. 8-noon
LINE UP
A GREAT DEAL...
IN CLASSIFIED!
944 Commercial
Properties
COMMERCIAL RETAIL
PROPERTY FOR RENT:
900 Sq. Ft.
STORE RETAIL
SPACE
Will be vacant
as of
January 1, 2013
200 Spring St.
Wilkes-Barre
Great for a
Barber Shop!
Call Michael at
570-239-7213
944 Commercial
Properties
DOLPHIN PLAZA
Rte. 315
2,400 Sq. Ft.
1,200 Sq. Ft.
Professional office
space. Will divide
office / retail
Call 570-829-1206
GLEN LYON GARAGE
3 bay garage, new
roof & new garage
doors. Over 1,200
sq. ft. $395/month.
Call 570-881-0320
KINGSTON
Commercial Garage
with office. 1,250 sq.
ft., 12 ceilings, 10
garage door, office
area, bathroom.
$550 + utilities.
570-947-3292
KINGSTON
BUSINESS PARK
Almost 1/2 acre
fenced for outdoor
storage of cars,
machinery equip-
ment, trailers, etc.
Includes a job trail-
er. $850/month +
utilities.
570-947-3292
To place your
ad call...829-7130
PITTSTON
COOPERS CO-OP
Lease Space
Available, Light
manufacturing,
warehouse,
office, includes
all utilities with
free parking.
I will save
you money!
SWOYERSVILLE
NEW LISTING
Busy, high visibility
location. Body
shop, garage, car
lot. Situated on
over 1 acre with
9,000 sq. ft. of
Commercial Space.
$389,900
Call Joe
613-9080
613-9080
944 Commercial
Properties
PITTSTON TWP.
$1,750/MONTH
3002 N. Twp Blvd.
Medical office for
rent on the Pittston
By-Pass. Highly vis-
ible location with
plenty of parking.
$1,800 sq. ft. of
beautifully finished
space can be used
for any type office
use. $1,750/ mo.
plus utilities.
MLS 13-098
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
315 PLAZA
1,750 SQ. FT. &
2,400 SQ.FT
OFFICE/RETAIL
2,000 FT.
Fully Furnished
With Cubicles.
570-829-1206
WILKES-BARRE
BEST $1 SQ. FT.
LEASES YOULL
EVER SEE!
Warehouse, light
manufacturing. Gas
heat, sprinklers,
overhead doors,
parking for 30 cars.
Yes, that $1
sq. ft. lease!
We have 9,000
sq.ft., 27,000 sq.ft.,
and 32,000 sq. ft.
Can combine.
There is nothing
this good!
Sale or Lease
Call Larry @
570-696-4000 or
570-430-1565
947 Garages
KINGSTON
5 car garage, 1,500
sq, ft, bathroom,
electric possible.
10 CEILINGS,
BLOCK WALLS, I-
beams, new roof.
great Area. Avail-
able Immediately
$500/month.
610-389-8226
947 Garages
KINGSTON
REAR 57 SHARPE ST.
Garage bay for rent.
26.5 long x 11.5
wide. Electric lights.
One over-head door
& individual entry.
$100/month.
570-760-8806
950 Half Doubles
ASHLEY
3 bedrooms, 6
rooms total, carpet-
ed, nice basement,
porches, fenced
yard. Off street
parking, $525/
month+utilities,
Security Deposit
570-824-7354
Line up a place to live
in classified!
EDWARDSVILLE
HALF-DOUBLE
Myrick Street, 3
bedrooms 1 bath,
Large eat-in kitchen
with modern appli-
ances. Semi- fin-
ished basement,
walks out to back
yard. Washer/dryer
hook up. $650/
month + utilities,
gas heat. Pets OK,
additional rent for
dogs. 570-798-7051
HANOVER TWP.
6 rooms, 3 bed-
rooms, wall to wall
carpeting, fenced in
yard, newly remod-
eled. $510/month +
utilities & security.
Call (570) 472-2392
KINGSTON
3 BEDROOMS, 1
bath, new carpet
and appliances,
$725/mo. No pets
no smoking.
352-255-8011
KINGSTON
87 W. Union St.
2 bedrooms, 1
bath, W/W carpet,
Washer/Dryer
hookup, off street
parking, no dogs,
not section 8
approved. Security,
lease, references.
$575/mo. plus utili-
ties. 570-256-3199
MOCANAQUA
2 bedroom, water
& sewer included.
$525/month. Sec-
tion 8 considered.
Call 570-592-3497
950 Half Doubles
KINGSTON
3/4 bedrooms.
Convenient location
in quiet residential
neighborhood.
Heat, utilities and
outside mainte-
nance by tenant.
No Pets or Smok-
ing. 1 month securi-
ty, 1 year lease
ROSEWOOD ROSEWOOD REAL REALTY TY
287-6822 287-6822
PLAINS 1/2 DOUBLE
with 2 bedrooms, 1
full bath; quiet
neighborhood, close
to everything; walk
in closet, large living
room, eat in kitchen,
includes refrigerator
& stove, washer
/dryer hookup, off
street parking; ref-
erences, credit and
background check;
no smoking/no pets;
$625/mo. + utilities
and security; Call
(570) 408-4848
PLYMOUTH
2 bedroom, com-
puter room, gas
heat, all appliances
included. No Pets,
no smoking. $650
plus utilities and
security. Available
June 1. After 6pm
570-474-5989
WEST PITTSTON
Quiet street, off
street parking. 1
bedroom, computer
room, washer/dryer
hookup, dry base-
ment. NO PETS.
Non-smoker.
$624/month plus
security and
1 year lease.
Call Mike after 4PM
570-760-1418
WILKES-BARRE
Double Block for
Rent. 1 or 2 bed-
rooms available.
Includes heat, hot
water and sewer.
Off street parking.
Security required.
Background Checks
570-706-1197
950 Half Doubles
WYOMING BORO
2 Bedrooms, off
street parking,
stove included, very
clean & modern,
NON SMOKERS
only, no pets. Avail-
able 7/1/13. $650 +
utilities and security.
690-0168 or 855-
4108.
953Houses for Rent
AVOCA
2 bedrooms, 1 bath,
Manufactured
house. Remodeled,
wall to wall, stove,
refrigerator, wash-
er/dryer, air, off-
street parking, yard.
No pets. $475. Call
570-947-5113
DALLAS/
BACK MOUNTAIN
TOWNHOUSE
3 Bedroom/2 baths.
Reserved Parking.
Refrigerator, dish-
washer, microwave.
hardwood floors,
plenty of closets,
large unfinished
basement. Large
outdoor deck. Very
private, very quiet.
$1,300 per month, 1
year lease. No pets
/no smoking.
570-762-3640.
Available 15 June.
Edwardsville/
Kingston
AMERICA
REALTY
HOMES
570-288-1422
REMODELED
PERFECT TOUCH!
White kitchen,
center island, all
appliances &
laundry. 1.5 baths
2 enclosed
porches, gas fire-
place, more
more. Clean. 2
YEAR SAME
RENT $900 mo +
utilities. APPLI-
CATION, EMPLOY
-MENT VERIFICA-
TION REQUIRED.
HARVEYS LAKE
2 small bedrooms,
All appliances.
Security & first
months rent.
Available July 10th
NO PETS. $700.
570-762-6792
953Houses for Rent
EXETER
Wildflower Village
3 bedroom Town-
house, end unit with
garage. Gas heat,
central air, kitchen
with appliances.
Hardwood floors,
fenced yard. No
smoking. Garbage/
yard maintenance
included. Approved
pets allowed with
security $1,200/mo.
+ utilities + security.
570-407-3600
HARVEYS LAKE
Enjoy living in this
beautiful 2 bedroom
ranch home. Includ-
es Sandy Beach
Club access within
walking distance.
Front porch,
stream, sunporch &
private back yard
surrounded by rho-
dodendrons. No
pets. Credit check
required.
$1,000/month.
Call Donna Klug
570-696-5406
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-696-1195
KINGSTON
3 bedroom, all
appliances, finished
lower level, garage.
$1,050/month + utili-
ties & security. No
pets. 570-675-3712.
MOUNTAIN TOP
4 bedroom, 3 bath
house. Newer
kitchen, hardwood
floors, deck & patio.
1 year lease. No
smoking or pets.
Credit check
required.
$1,350/month.
Call Pam Soucy
570-715-7732
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-474-6307
SHICKSHINNY
2 or 3 bedroom,
deck with view,
fenced yard, sec-
tion 8 welcome.
$575 month.
570-814-8299
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
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in classified
is the best way
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944 Commercial
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944 Commercial
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944 Commercial
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944 Commercial
Properties
944 Commercial
Properties
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
962 Rooms
KINGSTON
SDK GREEN
ACRES HOMES
11 Holiday Drive
A Place To
Call Home
Spacious 1, 2 & 3
Bedroom Apts.
Gas heat included
FREE
24 hr. on-site Gym
Community Room
Swimming Pool
Maintenance FREE
Controlled Access
Patio/Balcony
and much more...
570-288-9019
www.sdkgreen
acres.com
Call today for
move-in
specials.
Marlboro Place Apts.
803518
1 x 2.5"
941
wilkswood
813548
1 x 1.5"
941
melodymotel
813786
1 x 2"
962
E. J. LIPPI
MD COMMERCIAL PROPERTIES DAILY
821581
5 x 3.5"
944
PAGE 10D MONDAY, JUNE 17, 2013 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale
412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale
8
2
1
4
7
4
197 West End Road, Wilkes-Barre, PA 18706
570-825-7577
YOMING VALLEY
AUTO SALES INC. AAAA
SERVICED, INSPECTED, & WARRANTIED
FINANCING AVAILABLE
www.WyomingValleyAutos.com
MANY MORE TO CHOOSE FROM
BEST DEALS PERIOD!
07 SUBARU LEGACY 1 OWNER.....
$
8,950
05 MAZDA 3 79K.............................................
$
8,250
08 NISSAN VERSA.................................
$
7,950
07 CHEVY COBALT 75K......................
$
7,425
04 NISSAN ALTIMA................................
$
7,450
04 HYUNDAI SANTA FE 63K..........
$
6,975
07 KIA SPECTRA EX 79K...................
$
6,950
05 CHRYSLER SEBRING 68K.......
$
6,850
06 CHRYSLER TOWN & COUNTRY 88K........
$
6,475
07 PONTIAC G5..........................................
$
6,450
01 VW JETTA 72K........................................
$
5,950
08 SUZUKI FORENZA 81K................
$
5,925
01 FORD ESCAPE XLT......................
$
5,225
03 HYUNDAI ELANTRA GT MOONROOF.......
$
4,950
01 MITSUBISHI SPYDER CONV....
$
4,900
02 VW CABRIO ..........................................
$
4,475
01 KIA SPORTAGE.................................
$
4,475
00 BUICK CENTURY 72K....................
$
4,450
00 MERCURY SABLE LS ...............
$
4,175
02 PONTIAC SUNFIRE .....................
$
3,995
00 HYUNDAI SONATA 86K................
$
3,975
99 VW BEETLE Low Miles......................
$
3,950
98 SUBARU LEGACY GT ..............
$
3,950
02 HYUNDAI ACCENT GL .............
$
3,825
1553 Main Street, Peckville, PA 18452
PRESTIGE
ONE AUTO
WEBUY
VEHICLES!
Call Dan Lane @ 570-489-0000
*Tax, tags & license fees not included.
2003 Audi 225hp Coupe 87791 ................................. $11,990
2004 BMW 330Ci Convertible 80128..................... $13,499
2002 Chevy Corvette 19123....................................... $23,999
2011 Chevry Equinox 42062 ....................................... $18,888
2004 Chevy LS Ext. MiniVan 90840................................ $5,400
2006 Chrysler PT CRZR 63774 ................................... $6,999
2003 Dodge Ram 1500 quad 83805 ...................... $12,890
2007 Ford e350 pass 56256...................................... $13,999
2006 Ford XLT crew 4x4 72345................................ $17,999
2005 Ford Must GT Convertible 32500................. $18,999
2006 Ford Must V6 Convertible 110258.................. $9,376
2007 Ford Must GT Coupe 32569............................ $18,498
2005 GMC Canyon Z85 crew 70275....................... $13,999
2005 Harley-Davis 1200 cc Other 10622................ $7,899
2011 Honda CR-Z EX 6M Coupe 5870.................... $16,650
2007 Hyundai Sant Fe SE 80013.............................. $11,999
2010 Mazda CX-7 Grand 19752................................ $19,999
2012 Mazda 3i Sport Sedan 3963.......................... $15,995
2003 Mercedes-B C230 Coupe 84555...................... $9,499
2008 Mercedes-B C300 Sedan 87884 ................... $17,999
2007 Mercedes-B CLK550 Convertible 45000... $26,999
2007 Mini Cooper S 46153........................................ $14,568
2005 Nissan 350Z Touring Convertible 27203... $18,999
2006 Nissan Frontier SE 75941................................ $14,999
2006 Pontiac Grand Prix 58656 .................................. $8,999
2003 Porsche Boxter S Convertible 26998.......... $24,998
2009 Subaru Impreza AWD 2.5i Wagon 54935 . $12,980
2009 Suzuki SX4 AWD SUV 30482............................ $12,999
2012 Volkswagen Beetle 2.5L 30751.................... $15,999
2012 Volkswagen Jetta SE 32392 .......................... $15,899
2010 Volkswagen Tiguan SE 22065........................ $17,599
2006 Audi A4.................................................................. $18,989
timesleader.com
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953Houses for Rent
WILKES-BARRE
Clean, 2 bedroom,
duplex. Stove,
hookups, parking,
yard. No pets/no
smoking.
$475 + utilities.
570-868-4444
WILKES-BARRE
Single family, 3 bed-
room, washer/dry-
er hookup. Fenced
in yard. $750 + utili-
ties & security.
570-814-7562
WILKES-BARRE
Very clean, cozy
remodeled house. 3
bedrooms, 1 bath,
all appliances,
washer/dryer
hookup, pets ok,
small fenced in
yard. $600/month +
utilities & security.
570-831-5351
959 Mobile Homes
JENKINS TOWNSHIP
Affordable New &
Used Homes For
Sale & Rental
Homes Available.
HEATHER HIGHLANDS
MHC 109 Main St
Inkerman, PA
570-655-9643
962 Rooms
KINGSTON HOUSE
Nice, clean
furnished room,
starting at $340.
Efficiency at $450
month furnished
with all utilities
included. Off
street parking.
570-718-0331
WILKES-BARRE
1 room. Security
deposit required,
back ground check.
$350 month.
347-693-4156
965 Roommate
Wanted
NANTICOKE
2 males looking for
3rd roommate to
share 3 bedroom
apartment.
$75/week. Call
570-578-2644.
971 Vacation &
Resort Properties
HARVEYS LAKE
Furnished Summer
Home. College stu-
dents welcome in
Sept. Lake rights.
Weeks still available
for July & August.
570-639-5041
LINE UP
A GREAT DEAL...
IN CLASSIFIED!
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
SPRINGVILLE, PA
Lake Front Cottage
Simplicity on
Schooley Pond
Fishing, Boating,
Swimming & Relax-
ing. Boats included.
$700/week. Call
570-965-9048
WYOMING COUNTY
Vacation cabin for
Summer Use near
Tunkhannock. Must
have All Wheel
Drive, Room for six.
Weekly or Monthly.
570-836-3752
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
962 Rooms
IN THE HEART OF WILKES-BARRE
1 BEDROOM
APARTMENTS AVAILABLE
MARTIN D. POPKY APARTMENTS
61 E. Northampton St.
Wilkes-Barre, PA 18701
Affordable Senior Apartments
Income Eligibility Required
Utilities Included! Low cable rates;
New appliances; Laundry on site;
Activities! Curbside Public Transportation
Please call
570-825-8594
D/TTY 800-654-5984
EAST
MOUNTAIN
APARTMENTS
The good life...
close at hand
Regions Best
Address
1 & 2 Bedroom Apts.
822-4444
www.EastMountainApt.com
1, 2 & 3 Bedroom Apts.
288-6300
www.GatewayManorApt.com
KINGSTON
SDK GREEN
ACRES HOMES
11 Holiday Drive
A Place To
Call Home
Spacious 1, 2 & 3
Bedroom Apts.
Gas heat included
FREE
24 hr. on-site Gym
Community Room
Swimming Pool
Maintenance FREE
Controlled Access
Patio/Balcony
and much more...
570-288-9019
www.sdkgreen
acres.com
Call today for
move-in
specials.
WILKES-BARRE
EXCELLENT
DOWNTOWN
LOCATION!!!
STUDIO, 1 & 2
BEDROOMS
Equipped Kitchen
Free Cable
Wall to Wall Carpeting
570-823-2776
Monday - Friday,
9 a.m. - 1 p.m.
1 & 2 BR
Apts
2 & 3 BR
Townhomes
Wilkeswood
Apartments
www.liveatwilkeswood.com
570-822-2711
MELODY
MOTEL
From - $39.99/night
$189.99/week + tax
2530 East End Blvd.
Rt. 115 S Wilkes-Barre
570-829-1279
themelodymotel.com
Wif Microwave Fridge
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Wanna make a
speedy sale? Place
your ad today 570-
829-7130.
Wanna make a
speedy sale? Place
your ad today 570-
829-7130.
944 Commercial
Properties
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Properties
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944 Commercial
Properties
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Properties
THE OFFICE CENTERS
5 Kingston Locations
Full Service Leases Custom Design Renovation Various Size Suites Available
Medical, Legal, Commercial Utilities Parking Janitorial
Full Time Maintenance Staff Available
For Rental Information call 570-287-1161
Purebred Animals?
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classified ad!
570-829-7130

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